Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 180, Decatur, Adams County, 30 July 1934 — Page 5

Ml HEADS M BE TRADED ■L Tt , Trade Peru And B,bart School Heads gE Suggested ■ In.l' -<UI’)-A M t |,Juu> and Peru ww B , result K„.' b :o ou>t l«>t» n ‘«’ n - , , M 1 . member of the | ~o.aled that he M" iveii 11- ■ ll!<S' s ' ion from I ■ r " , . ..-tarv of the HoliKo io have your |K ’,> the suggestion ■7 "w ,tiate an superintendents, wrote. ■ ■" dene the quesM ...all be disposed ■7 7 ■ •..! of one year the H ' ~mid make auch ■7 ' . their judgment B interest of ■ UI . however, that G. ■ I' '" superintend.|M tub interested to Hobatt. v . i.blainisl a ■ i r to prevent the •■! from removing » ,p ek- ■ oM) WHEAT ■ PAYMENT SOON Hp-wpi FttOM <AGF. W’V”'* ■■ "Because M ,|,.|i'li<l work of local Kuzauen to farmers for the 'o'" nig completed. |M I 7 k e ., ;i , chief of the ad|K..;p wheat K "I that "the wheat , „ .-..;k smoothly year." ■(’IDENTS in H IXIH W \ TAKE I 13 DEATH TOLL from page osri |, 70. also of Walt|Vfrcm a burning truck near |> ri . . : limned to death, persons were killed in an M accident at South Bend. Hv ».!<• Mi mid Mrs. Edward ■jankowski. both 26 years old. others were hurt in the Thornion. 5". Elkdin! a f-w hours after an worker. »S 8 struck by a fr-ight train while walk a; along the tracks, in a Itanville. 111., hoswere severed, an automobile Anderson. Glen tripolis, suffered Hr*- a collision near ■' l.o> Turner. 20, ol Indianapolis and Dellie sad. were injured B";-' -Ml v ere taken to an ■krson hospital. bh — — ■ILONY MOURNS I MARIE BRESSLER FROM PAGE ONE) '' -‘'lu-s at the funerals Mk '1 . hi". I.ilyan Tashami „i|." screen favorites. body was brought here by 1 rar trem Santa Barbara by M and Mrs. A. B. Walker, inti■ft Irieml.- l> was taken quietly mortuary, there to await the set 111 ’ s a: 9 a - m - tomorThi' Rev. Neal Dodd, pastor !in,,! ‘’io i.imoiis "Little Church the coiner", will officiate MWam'tioe. the services will admitted by card only. ? 'l'" services draw to a close.

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ais Photo shows the once-peactful city of Graz, i^? u ’ ca P’tal of the province of Styria, which “ stn the scene of fierce fighting between govrtl®ent troops and Nazi forces in the civil warfare

Minneapolis Learns Severity of Martial Law

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How strict military rule can be under martial law is being learned by residents of Minneapolis which has been placed in control of troops as a result •f th» truck drivers’ strike. For one thing, before

Indiana Beauty Queen Sees Fair • j wnu..£ <F s > -K. V W*: >«r v V W> 3 x vs f ill r- s p B & t-t >■ Ski ißy tgL BSsx, 4 s wl iw Wfl ’■■ Us 'JSUffftMWhiTT -“T- < *Ol AkXwwMk

Louise Schwartz, 16-year-old win-i ner of the beauty contest conducted I by the American Legion at Vin- • cennes, Ind., Is a bathing queen in I every sense of the word. While on l her first visit to the World's Fair, In Chicago, as guest of the Vin-1 cennes post, Louise said she’d dear-1 ly love to see some of the famous swimmers. She was forthwith in-1

Jeanetie MacDonald, screen star, will sing the star’s favorite hymn —"Abide With Me.” Others of her favorite songs will be played on the organ. 546 Billion Feet of Lumber Salem, Ore. (U.R) — Commercial timber in Oregon and Washington totals more than 546 billion board feet. A survey made by the state forestry department showed

• resulting from the Nazi putsch and the assassination of Chancellor Dollfuss. In one skirmish, 180 persons were killed in Graz. Casualties in other sections are reported heavy.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, JULY 30, 1931.

any food trucks could be driven, military permits had to be obtained, and this photo shows the long lines of applicants for truck driving permits, while soldiers stand by prepared for any emergency.

troduced to several who were appearing in springboard exhibition dives at Swift Pool. Here you see Eddie Alvarez, champion diver of the Hawaiian Islands on the left; Queen Louise, herself, in the center; and on the right, Marshall Wayne, of Miami, Fla., National A. A. U. highboard diving champion.

Oregon forests contained 300,792.549,000 hoard feet, Washington 245.245,056,000. Douglas fir led all pther species, with 231,821692,000 feet in Oregon and approximately 9'J billion in Washington. Sold Fillings From Teeth El Paso, Tex., —(UP) —An aged El Paso woman went to a dentist and had gold fillings removed from

hertooth. She sold the gold and applied the sum thus obtained on her rent, which was overdue. Relief authorities, when they learned what she had done, gave her a work card. o 4 <, | Many Reunions Scheduled For Summer Months Sunday August 5 Magley family reunion, Laiwton Park, Fort Wayne. Ninth annual reunion of Shaffer family, Legion Memorial Park, Decatur. Venis family reunion. Sunset park, east of Decatur. Brunner family reunion, Sunset park. Decatur. Dettinger reunion, Sunset Park, east of Decatur. Johnson family reunion, Sunset 1 Park. Sunday, August 12 Feasel-Ruby reunion, Legion Memorial Park. Martz reunion, Lehman park, Berne. Dailey reunion, Lehman Park, i Berne. I Annual reunion of Dtinbin family Legion Memorial Park. Tumblcson reunion. Legion Mei mortal Park, Decatur. Hitchcock reunion, Cora B. Miller I home on the state line. Rettig and Reohm, Sunset Park. Beinz family reunion, Sunset ' park, east of Decatur. Steele reunion, Sunset park, rain or shine. Dellinger family reunion. Sunset Park. Sunday, August 19 ■ Brandyberry reunion, J. N. Burki head home, 1% miles west of Mon- • roe. McGill reunion, Sunset Park, near Decatur, rain or shine. | Butler family reunion, Sunset i Park, Decatur. Smith reunion. Sunset park, rain or shine. Sunday, August 26 Hakes reunion, Sunset Park, east of Decatur. Droll family reunion, Sunset Park. Schnepp and Manley reunion, Sunday, September 2 Urick reunion, Sunset Park. Sunset Park, rain or shine. Monday, Labpr Day, Sept. 3 Sixteenth annual Stalter reunion Legion Memorial Park, Decatur. Lenhart reunion, Sumset park, Decatur. Harper family reunion, Sunset Park. Sunday, September 9 Bowman family reunion. Sunset Park, Decatur. Rockville, Conn. OJ.R) — A pure white pup except for a black stub by tail, was among a litter of five born to Queen, 'pedigreed Boston bull dog, owned by Mrs. Benjamin Lisk. A white Boston bull is considered rare.

Berne.

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REPORT NELSON IN WISCONSION Resorts Searched After Public Enemy Number One Is Reported Wausau. Wis.. July 30—<U.R) Northern Wisconsin re-sorts were searched today for George (Baby Facet Nelson, diminutive machine gunner of John Dillinger’s desperado gang. Nelson, who Inherited the bloody title of publie enemy No. 1 when Dillinger was shot and killed a waek ago, was reported to have been seen in three separate places over, the week-end. None of the places was aware that the others had reported Nelson's presence, authorities said. Wisconsin resorts have been a favorite "playground" of the Dillinger gangsters for several months. The first report came from a druggist here who told officers that a large sedan bearing two men and two women pulled up to the curb in front of his store. While the driver remained behind the wheel a man lesembllng Nelson entered the place and ordered a meal. When he finished he returned to the car and took up a vigil while the driver went in and ate, police were told. Later a tavern on the outskirts of the city and a drugstore at Merrill reported similar occurrences. In all three reports the resemblance to Nelson was noted and the same system of watching and eating was reported. The women always remained in the car, according to the reports. Chicago July 30 —(UP)— The remnant's of John Dillinger’s bloody gang have separated and are wandering the middlewest, looking for new underworld connections, the United Press learned today. Other gangs, finding the Dillinger outlaws "too hot to handle” are refusing to have anything to do with them. The United Press informant, a character never directly involved with Dillinger with any of his murderous raids but nevertheless on intimate terms with the desperado, said the survivors of the gang arcbroke. o— _____— SUSPECT HELD FOR SLAYINGS (CONTINUED rAGW ver similar to that which ballistics tests had jsho-.vn to be the type of weapon used in the mysterious murders The killing:' occurred in the plant of the big steel company, and in each case shots fired from ambush mowed down the "phantom’s” victims, apparently with no

As Army Flyers Took OH on Alaskan Flight ■ W Jk mil "fT F \\ MF If

At least on» Roosevelt was around to bid bon voyage to the ten big U. S. army bombing planes when they took off from Bolling field, Washington, D. C., on the first leg of the long flight to Alaska.

other motive (han lust for killing. ' Fred Melsheimer. train service employe of the company, was shot to death on January 30. Two months later, March 25, James Barnett, also a train service employe. was shot three times, but recovered. On July 1. Raymond Kochendorfer, 36, and William Messer, open hearth employes, were shot and killed. Each of the slayings occurred at about the same spot in the plant. Many of the steel workers had been given permission to , tarry revolvers to work to protect themselves. Sheriff Ray Leng threw a heavy guard around the jail to protect . the prisoner after a muttering crowd surged around the jail all day Sunday. ’FRISCO STRIKE IS SETTLED BY PARLEY BOARDS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ed to bury two martyrs of a bloody strike. Twenty-six unions of Sheboygan, where the funerals will be held, voted to halt work during the ceremonies this afternoon and tomorrow. They demanded arrest and prosecution of Anton F. Brotz. 'president of Kohler village; E. R. Schuelke, who led 400 deputy sheriffs in an attack on strikers in which two were killed and two score others shot, and village marshal John Case. The shady, flower-bordered streets of this villas" built by form I cr Gov. Walter J. Kohler in an attempt to reach ideal relations be- j tween employer and employe were ' filled all day with sight seers from

BABES In The WOODS WE NEVER grow so old that wc do not recall our childhood concern as we thought of what might have happened to the two story-book children who wandered aimlessly into the forest and became lost We never grow so wise that we can walk blindly into the marts of trade and straightway find the shoes, car, ham, cleaner, rug, antiseptic or what-not that best fits our individual need, fancy or pocketbook. Without a dependable buying guide we are all Babes in the Woods... lost when it comes to judging qualities, values or styles. ‘'Know the reputation of the store,” is one rule. “Know the reputation of the product and its manufacturer,” is another. The two together make wise selection doubly certain. You can form a very reliable estimate of the stores which advertise consistently. So also of manufacturers. Only sound merchandise, attractively priced, ran continue to repay the retailer or the manufacturer for his advertising outlay. If he can risk the money it costs him to tell you about his goods, you can be reasonably sure that your path through the woods will lead to the best values for your buying dollars. The advertising pages are the pathway to Highest Quality and Lowest Prices.

Here are some of the giant ships leaving the field. Inset, Elliott Roosevelt, son of the president, being shown the “works” by Lieut Col. Henry Arnold, flight commander.

other towns. ‘‘Dictator" Rule Minneapolis, July 30.—((J.R) —Adjutant General Ellard A. Walsh, tightening the steel grip of martial law, today warned Minneapolis citizbzns that they will be imprisoned in a military stockade for any violations of his “dictator" rule. Court martial under wartime methods will follow any infractions of nearly 800 "military rules for citizens," he said. Previously citizens taken into custody were released after a warning. Military records revealed about l, persons have been arrested principally for violations of a 7 a m. to 7 p. m. downtown parking ban, since martial law became effective live days ago. Despite orders prohibiting pick ' eting, striking truck drivers con-| tinned to interfere with trucking

PEACHES For Canning ffe A A No. 1 Elberta Vj OU Freestone Georgia Ij ■ Basket ® > Dixie Queen Markets I Second Street it 1 —— ■ '■ —» ———r———■

Page Five

operations, it was said at military headquarters. Employers, whose refusal to ’accept a federal peace plan resulted in declaration of martial law by Gov. Floyd H. Olson, likewise violated military orders, General Walsh said. ———o Drowned in Bath Tub Avignon. Fiance (U.R) — Jules Chauvin, 72 lost his balance and fell into a bathtub while washing his hands and face. He drowned.

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