Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 185, Decatur, Adams County, 4 August 1934 — Page 5
'KNOWERS ■ 10 GET A!D , Lll ■!" i' iu " l . ii>' ■
I NEWS OF THE DAY AS TOLD IN PICTURES
Daughter PM . <sfe : #W->, •» • ■r V. MF **. ■ K l : s ■ WL .fe gjl| 1 ■ |p* r K’c "Stuart, 2S-ycar-old employe of a relief commissary, has been at Houston, Tex., on murder charges after allegedly eon- ■ nr that he killed his five-year-old daughter, Dortha, right, to KL° a sioO insurance policy in order to g't money for the support ■ of the victim's twin sister, Dorth. ■ohn Dillinger’s Last Hideout IS S' .<4£&x. I I i IJ b wte. I It.. e oy Ip I I &&-'”■ ';■ y ■> ■ I I e ■Thi.- photo shows the dining room of the apartment in Chicago s ■ortii side where John Dillinger, Indiana arch-criminal, lived for Ivseks without detection while police scoured the country for him. I The hideout was uncovered after the gunman was slain by federal I agents on a Chicago street. Route for Roosevelt's Return k'- | if'W* ‘ ftt . • Gift *' I Lm (• •- - •- • * Ir j-. ■"• - - * xis '» ,' > «><**>•< *<*■ =£ M- ■ jillW^W^-'«• ■■ X i " ****•> ■ -e^.^...x w —-■ ** U S * ' ?r 7‘ m ap in the above layout shows the route to be followed by rs ident Roosevelt on his return trip from the Hawaiian cruise. En| iiTtg his water journey at Portland, the president proceeds east*ard by train, stopping at various points along the way to inspect ”5i projects and parks, including, top the Cou’ee dam project, on ’’'Columbia river, near Spokane, Wash., and below, the Fort, Peck dam, flood-control project on the’ upper Missouri.
I ipeeinl measure* now being intro-’ duced by tho goveriutient of Zan 1 i zibnr to protect the island clove- i 1 growers. The producers of the plant in . I Zanzibar were reported to be in u precarioua position. Many of them had fallen into the hands of nioneylendera and were faced with financial ruin. The prospect that this might i le id to a catastrophic alump In the
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, AUGUST L 1931.
.supply of doves was viewed with I some upprchenalon by those who : hud occasionally resorted to one to : cover up a "hangover." It Is recalled, however, by Britons of a historical turn of miud I that this is by no means the first i occasion on which such a crisis has cropped up In the clove trade. 1 The clove teo, orEugenia earnphyllata, was certainly known to tlte Homans and Chinese some
7S rAw z ” f l yH j ■ , *-v »kv gaji attack drill | L J ——— ... m ~ jA. ,>ii' An English combat plane Ty — - ‘ » - ’7 i _1 **- - fef" c^’ s> ' 1 ’ Italian seaplanes | , [Soviet Russia's squadrons |~
Europe has turned to the air with feverish interest and each nation is pouring out millions to build up powerful military aviation fleets. Since the rise to power of General Hermann Goering, Germany’s minister of air, the Nazi regime has quadrupled Its expenditures for "civil” aircraft, an<i*many schools for flying have been established. England has appropriated almost $100,000,000 to double
Nations Study Plan to Form Near East Union i Ss2S TL ire. -*■! i - » i '< i‘JP ' V s IB x >_~.LJ w ? <■'7! ,> ■ '. 1 --y'Wsi XwW am 4 4 <^^^X^T« Riza Kahn Pghleviaaa * *4>x ? bMHBIwE Mustapha Kemal Conatantinople, former Turkish capital, overlooking Strait* ,
Seeking to recall the spirit that once carried the Moslem crescent almost throughout the Mediterranean basin, the nations of the near east are beginning t<> stir again with agitation for unity in Turkey Persia and Arabia, strong national influences are tending towards union, which eventually might create a new power in Asia Minor. Riza
Two Die in Oklahoma Mine Blast -,, -, _, -. ■ i-, , ,I,J_. I. - ■■■ IWI J I■! Cl - ' ~ ■~S ' g — « y -y z- ’ a > r" : iW* P • "•"j kkhp* * v- : * ww/ £■ o. . s ’» '-■** , $c E> ■ ? !■ ■'■ .--. ' ‘ :" -.X.-iJ $4 ->» -a rwoly w-yh'-y \xx-x <u»gO W* -. < These photos show scenes from the coal mine disaster on the Oklahoma state penitentiary farm west of McAlester, in which two men were fatally trapped by an explosion 1,200 feet below the ground, destroying the mine so badly that rescuers toiled more than two days, reaching them too late. _
2,000 years ago. In the 10th Century the clove trade with the East Indies was a monoply In the hands of the Portuguese. When the Dutch in the 17th Century took over the Portuguese possessions in the Fur East . they destroyed clove shrubs whole'sale and limited their cultivation rigidly to the Island of Amboyna. By these means they hoped to keep up the price of doves.
'» its airplane squadrons, and acting Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin states the new boundary of England, because of the air, is, now the Rhine river. France, Italy, Russia and the smaller countries aLo possess powerful aviation corps, and each is planning even stronger forces in the air to keep its defensive power on a par with neighboring nations.
Kahn Pehlevi, ex-Cossack soldier, now king of Persia; Ibn Saud, "Napoleon” of southern Arabia, and Mustapha Kemai, dictator-president of Turkey, are leading the rp-w- -oiriL
Intimate Glimpses of the Life of Movieland’s Marie Dressier
LURE OF GOLD CALLS AGAIN I I Seattle (U.R) — In IHH7 a ton of gold was taken out of Alaska [valued al |4SU,OOO and the world [ was startled. In 1934 more gold will be taken i
'3 r -v L .i* ‘ | eKwW’ Hs ■ >?■ - • j *i” < ’ u*v£ U* KWlrti ** * SB Born in Cobourg, Ontario, on Nov. part in amateur theatricals at the ag at 14. there to remain until motion and fortune. Making her start durin she gained moviedom heights in 192'
out of tho rich territory than ever before ul a value of S4o,t>oo a ton. News of strikes, hundreds of prospectors along the old Yukon Trail and old,: idle mines yielding big returns at the new price of $35 an ounce, was brought to Seattle by persons returning from Alaska. Capital has been thrown into the new hunt for gold and expensive machinery Is taking tho place of the pick and shovel, l.il-
Radio Photos of Civil Warfare in Austria .. J Iraw' .'n || fix iMKtejlw w *< * ' ' 1 xW u ife Ji i w jf ‘ . 1-. ; / ■p W < 7 ”* v t * ,v /s fy *■ ’■* & A ® f/wflßi < ■.t ■ ’-sa-'1 ■ s ■ ■ < :f " z ' MW ■ r ■* - -~W., ut ’ - itfeSk i f fef ; ■O —- % - S .... . ' 5 mjK**.-. .v.-.-. •- • • Ay 0 " 4pfi •'■'c r I - VKW / > ■ ' w< . fx> :»v s^r ;/ ' A, ’■■ ’ - B B»x -- - - IP ■-■■■ " 1 ■' v • *••• ~yt- _ ■- ■ -
The nation wide abortive Nazi coup which began in Vienna with the assassination of tiny Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss, amidst bloody forays in various parts of the capital, brought civil warfare in which hundreds were killed and thousands wounded. Here are radio transmitted pictures showing the federal
W ■ ll WK " 1 awKZEjfajg; .$? I *-• ■. -* I u i a \\ ■ // \\ ' // \#w 'ApF fey r«4Ef 'teg iBBS m Norma Shearer presenting acting trophy to Marie Dressier.
v. 9, 1573, Marie Dressier took ge of five, and went on the stage i pictures beckoned her to fame ng the days of the silent pictures, 27, and in 1931 won the coveted
’ tie hus been written about it be'cause mine operators and prospectors don't want "the world to ' move in on them." Unusual activity was reported along the White Pass and Yukon Railroad, near Bennett, Carcross and Whitehorse. Carcross, easily readied via Skagway, is booming. So is Atlin and Dawson, where prospectors are reported along every creek
troops after attack on Vienna radio station, seized by Nazis who broadcast tho false downfall of ths Dollfuss ministry; top, Hcimwchr men with uplifted arms receiving a wounded radio official; bottom, Nazi prisoners led from the station they had captured. o
trophy of the Academy of Motion Picture \rj alu j Science,, for lit? best acting of the year. A scries of intimate glimpses of the star, from her first photograph as a stage actr. ;.. tr> h<--r mo;+ recent picture as a film luminary, are >, KII ln the film-fashioned strip above.'
with gold puns nnd sluice itoxes. North and east of Fairbanks n "new" gold field was opening up and scores of prospectors were along the Tolovanu River district. Atliens. Ohio (U.R) — A study of the action of materials within an atom, made by use of an X-ray. l is being carried on in Ohio University laboratories here by Dr. 1.. M. Hell and .1. E- Edwards, of the 'department of physics.
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