Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 249, Decatur, Adams County, 19 October 1934 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
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SHOOT PLANNED THANKSGIVING Shooting Match And Coon Dog Field Trials Will Be Held Here Plans are being made for the shooting match and coon dog field trials, sponsored by the Adams county fish and game conservation league, which will be held Thanks, giving day at the Charles Magley farm north of Monmouth The gates will open at 8 o'clock in th® morning. Admission will be 25 cents lor adults and 15 cents for children under 12 years of age. I The following men have been named chairmen of the target I shooting committee: Fred Schurg er, chairman. Have Dubach, Roy i Dubach. Bert (.age and Clyde Beery. This event will start at 9 o’clock Twenty-two and 30 caliber ' rifles and pistols will be permissable. Iron sights only will be permitted. telescopic lense being barred. The shooting teams will be or- I ganized on the grounds The prizes , will be turkeys, geese, ducks, chick- , ens. and picnic hams. The trap shooting of clay pigeons will be for 12. 16, 20 and 410 gauge shotguns in charge of the follow , ing committeemen : Ben Baumgart- ; ner, Berne, chairman. Burl John son. W. A. Fonner, Charles Bailey and Alex Wilhelm. Shooters will be required to furnish their own ammunition of which there will be a supply on the grounds. This event will start at 9 o'clock. The coon chase will lie in charge of Joe Geels. Decatur, chairman. Ross Hardin. Rolandus Leichty, | Berne. Harold Barger. Magley. | Harold Harvey. Decatur and W il. liam Johnson. Convoy. Ohio. The tiist heat will be run at lb a. n:.
LADIES and MENS SHOES nVt?D ANY COLOR U I *SI/ YOU WISH Shoe Dying A Specialty. Hats Cleaned and Blocked. SHEETS BROS.
CORT >IA "X^ TrE '- < Watch Our Ad Daily, Your Name May Aopear Next. Hello Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bentz. You are invited to our theatre Saturday night as our guests. Please bring this ad with you. Not transferable. I IT’S GAL-ORIOUS! ITS G \L-ITTERING! HBSbSKSm IT’S G \L-OSSAL! DICK POWELL ||||K Rl BY KEELER BW.. DAMES Mfl JOAN BLONDEL — ZASU wSjjk - PITT< — (,l 5 KIBBLE — ; HUGH HERBERT A Worlds Fair of Beauty, Song. Laughter, with hund- ■ reds of Glorious Busbv Berkley Girls. FOX NEWS and “BETWEEN YOU and I and THE GATE POST” and all fun dog nove’ty. TONITE “TAKA CHANCE NITE” SATURDAY DARE DEVIL JOHN WAYNE “WEST OF THE DIVIDE” Plus f'omedv and Noveltv 10c —l5 c SATURDAY — Matinee Onlv Chapter 11 — “YOUNG EAGLES.”
ENDS SATURDAY — Shop Today or Tomorrow For Your Needs. Buy One Article — Get Another W Hk IsL Jw Ok K#s > « Sfc J3k | .Bi- One Cent. It Will Pay You To Stock Your Shelves Now. Psi * V remember: Saturday last day: B. J. SMITH DRUG C<*
The entry charges for coon dogs I will bo $2 with 90 per cent of ths fees going to the winning dog own | Milton Brown is general chair- ■ I man of the day and anyone desirI ing information should get in I touch with any of the above com ! I tnitteemen. The next meeting of the conservation league will be held in the American Legion hall. Wednesday night. November 7, a: 7:30 o'clock. Monmouth Opens Season Saturday ' The Monmoieth Engles will oen | their 1934-35 basket'tall season Sat-j urday night, playing the Concordia; academy turn from Fort Wayne j •it Monmouth. Boh first and se ■ I i n 1 tea.i.« will play, the first game 'starting at 7 o’clock. CONVENTION OF WOMEN’S CLUBS I (CONTINUED FHOM PAGE ONE) j i .**.«•** ■ • * • •••♦• ••••••• ; governor of Indiana. Mrs. Laura Waples Mi Mullen. R. E. Cavonaugh. l ! Indiana university extension divi- | sion. Miss Leila Galdis. Purdue ex-; I tension division. 1. H. Hull, man-.; I ager Indiana farm burotu coopera-1 | tive association. Ralph F. Gae -. past etale commander f Ameriom L,g* n. and Dr. William G Spencer ' president Franklin College. 1 o |; Wreck Fries 108,000 Eggs Lisbon. 0.-tU.R) —lt took a heavy I rain to wash away the last rem I ■nants of 108,000 fried eggs which l 1 were scattered over the highway 1 near here when a truck trailer, f carrying 300 cases of eggs, caught ] I tire. They were en route from I Kansas City to Pittsburgh. —o All Silent Funeral Services Norwood, Mass*- (U.PJ —All-si; ! ent funeral services were held for. t Michael Jazukiezas. deaf mute.', The deceased's wife, the pastor. | Rev Stanley Light, who conducted t services, and the six pallbearers I ( also were deaf mutes. Services t were conducted in sign language. ' a o Oregon Town Ba r s Barmaids ; Astoria. Ore.— (U.R> —Barmaids. , buxom or otherwise, are not desir- , ed by at least one local group. The ( Astoria Culinary Alliance has petitioned the city council asking that • ! barmaids be banned in beer par lors. The council, composed of ~ 'men, is undecided on what action;; should be taken. Surpritv Is a Warning A bold surprise at a belief is Sometimes the best argument sr»tn«» '• T-ai n
CRUCIAL GAMES ARE SCHEDULED Purdue, Notre Dame And Indiana Face Tough Opposition Indianapolis, lad.. Oct. 19 (UP) —Crucial games for Indiana. Pur-l-due and Notre Dame are outatiind Ing on the week-end football e hed | tile of Hoosier Colleges and Univ. r sities. A victory at thia stage of the campaign will mean much t each of the members cf lnd.'»na's big i tree, while a loss probaoly would foretell further Jiffi ulties. Notre Dame will m et Carnegie j Tech at South Bend tom rrow. I while Purdue and Indiana re engag I ing in Big Ten cons rence games. I The Hoosiers will play >it Chicago, land Puniue will enter.ain the Wis-! 1 c nsin university eleven. It was a 7 to 0 victory hy Carnegie tech last year which started ' ' N >tre Dame on Ita long loosing I I -Ir.ok. Notre Dame will fa-e the jinx i ' which each Howard Harpster has I exercised over the Irish, both as a ' player aw l o coach. In 1926 and I 1928 he was quarterhack of the Car I negie elevens which defeated Notre Dame. 19 t. 0, and 27 to 7. respectively. I The first defeat robb .1 Notre I rkime of a National championship. I The second was the first def at suffered by the Irish on their h me, field in 23 years. Purdue will pen its big ten com ' petition when it meets Wisconsin j at Labtyette. Defeated in both of • its pre- - onference starts with N ’tre! Dame and Rice, the Roilernvik ra hop-e to make a better start in th- - Ten before their alumni in th- ' Homecoming game. FARLEY, COLE URGE SUPPORT OF DEMOCRATS (CONTINUED FHOM PAGE ONfc> take up the slack, but whatever, we must do to keep every one em- ■ ployed and happy, should and will I be done." said Mr. Farley. The ' congressman said he hoped to at- ( tend several other meetings in Ad ants county during the campaign I Support Asked "If you believe the work that I has been started should be carried , on to completion, if you believe that we are better off today than we were on March 4. 1933, then it's your duty regardless of paid partv affiMuti ns. to vote the Democratic 1 ticket at this coming election." Harvey Cole of Peru, stated in his ' address. ' It's been only 18 months since j Franklin D. Roosevelt took office. I As we look back over that period t we regard a tragic picture. On ' March 4. 1933. every bank in the ' country was closed; business was] stagnant, industry was stopped; , agriculture had sunk to its lowest 1 level in the history of the nation; ' ;every basic Industry was virtually! dead, and grim despair gripped the ■ entire country. "Roosevelt was confronted with; the composite of these problems the day he took office. He courageously met the banking crisis by closing every bank in the country and it was a comparatively short time until every sound bank was i re-opened and plans made to liquidate banks which never should , have been permitted to remain in business The President had a definite program for agriculture.” o PART OF STOLL RANSOM MONEY IS UNCOVERED CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) spread across the Alleghanles to the eastern seaboard today. Behind him at the scene of his I crime his wife, imprisoned on I charges of aiding in the $50,090 abduction, screamed that she had been doubleerossed by government agents. Reports that Robinson, onetime 1 insane asylum inmate, had been seen came from at least a dozen states but the search was concenI trated in eastern Pennsylvania and Delaware. I Police teletype systems flashed i a report that Delaware state police had vainly pursued three men. one of whom answered Robinson's description. The car. a Ford V-8 sedan similar to that known to be carrying the fugitive on his flight, escaped Into Pennsylvania. Previously the car had been reported at Reading, Pa., and at Wernersville. Pa. The department of justice, today provided state policemen, sheriff's deputies and village marshals with a description of the man. Cards bearing Robinson's
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1934.
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photograph, finger prints and I general description were spread ■ I over the nation. An arrest at Wilmington. Del..: which for a time promised to l bring a climax to the kidnaping i faded today when a suspect estale ' lished that he was not Robinson. The swing of the search to the eastern seaboard started yesterday when an automobile, posii tively identified as Robinson's by i means of finger pt ints and Indiana license plates issued in his wife's name, was found abandoned at Springfield. O. A $5 hill, revealed hy federal I agents to have been part of the I $49,450 ransom money carried by ' Robinson when he fled a hideout lin Indianapolis Tuesday after-' i noon, also was found at Spring-1 ‘ he'd. The kidnaper's father, T. H. Robinson. Sr., was under arrest at Nashville, Tenn., on charges of aiding his son and the latter'.i i wife in the kidnaping of Mrs j Stoll. The cider Robinson, to whose I home the ransom money was sent by the victim's millionaire husband. was at liberty under $25,000bond pending a hearing on his removal to Louisville. GROSS INCOME TAX FAVORED ' (CONTINUED FHOM PAGE ONE) I schools thrown back into the finanI cial chaos in which they found 1 themselves in 1932." 1 Phillips also warned the teach- | ers to be prepared to defend the teacher tenure law in face of re ‘ ports that a determined campaign I will be made at the general assembly session in January to repeal I the law. The gross income tax resolution ' was one of ten preesnted to the convention for action today. Prior claim on gross income tax collections for the purpose of fulfilling the state administration’s promise that it would pay school units up to S6OO on every teacher's salary, was asked in another resolution. The teachers were asked to approve a resolution urging the publishing of a complete financial statement of the Indiana state teachers' retirement fund annual in the Indiana Teacher, official organ of the association I' o SENTIMENT FOR NEW DEAL LESS ______ (CONTINUED FROM PAGE OVEi setts, Michigan, .New Hampshire. , New Jersey, New York, Ohio, I Pennsylvania. Rhode Island. South Dakota. Vermont, Arizona and Wyoming. In 1932 only four of , the 17, Connecticut. Maine. Penn ( sylvania and Vermont went for ! Hoover. _— o Expect Judge’s Decision Saturday Indianapolis, Oct. 19 — <U.P> —A i derision on the legality of Lieut. Gov. M. Clifford Townsend holding his elective office as well as being head of the state department of commerce and industry rested today with Henry Seyfried. local attorney. Seyfried sat as a special judge yesterday in a hearing on the ■ state’s demurrer to a suit brought , by Don B. Irwin. Republican state chairman, asking that Townsend’s -office be declared vacant and that the name of Joseph B. Qyle, i Gary. Republican nominee for the
post, be placed on the ballots for the Nov. 6 election. Judge Seyfried took the case under advisement with indication a decision would be announced tomorrow. o Baptist Convention Adopts Resolutions Franklin. Ind.. Oct. 19—<U.R> • Opposition to the use of radio for advertising lianor and approval of the legion of decency's campaign regarding motion pictures were recorded today by the Indiana i I Baptist convention in resolut'ons adopted at the close of the llllst annual meeting here. Other resolutions condemned war as a means of settling international disputes and extended congratulations to Franklin colIfee. which celebrated its centennial anniversary in a joint program with the Baptists. | The Rev. W R Seat. WashingI ton. was elected president of the convention, succeeding the Rev. J. F. Rake, Evansville. o Pierpont Funeral Services Saturday Lakeville. Ind.. Oct. 19—(UP) — The b -dy of Harry Pierpont, electro- ■ utel in Ohio State prison Oct. 17 as "trigger man" for the John Dillinger outlaw gang, lay in his par ents' combined tourist oimp and; I filling station here today. Funeral services will be conduct-1 ed tomorrow and burial will be at : Indiana;, olis. j —— o Albert Free Heads Teachers Association) Indianapolis Oct. 19—(UP)-Al-bert Free superintendent of schools ' at Spencer and chairman of the ex- , ecutive committee of the Indiana '.sta'e teachers association, wae ’ chosen unanimously f r the 1936 president of the organization in the 81st. onnual convention h re today. Miss Goldie Milner. Crawfordsville, was elected vi e(president; elct. Harold Moore. Terre Haute, and Miss Josephine Shea. Whiting. - were chosen members at large ofI the execu'ive committee. . o— Ge* the _ Teerte •« Home
i Please Notice 1 Prizes will be awarded here at our store Saturday night, October 20th for fresh vegetables, Home canned fruit and vegetables which was entered in our Fall Festival. r Also please remember, you can rote on the beau1 tiful quills on disp’ay. Each person entitled to one vote. Saturday October 20th last day to cast your ballot. i Come in and see this wonderful collection of 154 Quilts. You will never forget this sight. i ; HARDWARE and HOME FURNISHINGS
PLAN BUILDING FOR RURAL AID (CONTINUED FHOM PAGE ONE) federal funds will me sold during the first year, H<»pkins eaid. “Because the minute we sell, someone Is liable to come in and buy it fr tn the owner —There le ang r of ’ speculation in the handling of land. ' I Natl nsilly known industries, It ; was said, have made overtures to I the FERA an-1 Rural rehabilitation - corporations in the states spoils red by the government, seeding the I right to Install manutact tiring plant* in the new ■ ommuni lek. i Hopkins asserted that since th • ; government, in effect,had title to ' land on which rural c tnmunlties ar- being coimtru ted. It virtually i ! could se«»ct he Industries to enter . I them. S far active work has he-n start ed on three rural commumties, hi Woodlake. Tex . Mississippi county. | ! Ark., and at Red Hous . W. Va. at | Red House 150 small hon
AGAIN We Remind You - - This is October and We're Celebrating with a Host oi Values. 1 Richly Furred CnRFM coats ffiggUffc. jL >pc(i all /1‘( I (i roups Hl! $14’ 75 Eri S 2 Hand * Picked - ‘ ? f abrics. 1 lir ' :,n, f '. I a-hions ? ho I his ' Planned Lvent Back iwßßrrffi'Wgrl S-res *or t'JaeEp*! Women and jIMKraBEB Misses. You'll like the youtnful lines and gay colors of these NEW FROCKS $5-95 t „510.95 A grand collection, one more lovely than the other in cheery colorful woolens and those smart rough crepes. Sizes for Miss and Matron. Half sizes for the Little Women. MRS. LOUISA BRADEN Phone 737 3rd & Monroe
I boen built.sund Hopkln* xafd "There ll* room for 200 more." Several houses there have been conatrncted In 10 days, ami Include 10 acres per family. Experimental w.rk has revealed that rural honiea nwiy be bull’ for a* little as $750. Tho.se at Red IL,use . with land includ I, well for an average of $1.6'0, and Include 'electric llglits >.nd a bathroom. 11. if —— Q— — —• Action Approved By Church Congregation Indianapolis. Ind. () t. 19—(UPl i —Approval of the acti n of the Rev. E. Arnold Glegg. pastor f the cap tol Avenue M E. church here Io
Madison Theatel Sunday — Monday — Tuesday M HEAR THE SONG HIT_. ■ * - HU S 01 1 0l , 1., - | IMF I I f\ mUjlixßl'-l: WSk X picthbM Ba • _N ■ Sind tinneg ■ POUL LUKRfI LEILA HYM P DOnOLD DIUBjC'■ ruth DonnEwi'" GEORGE E. STORE■ S| joyce comtrooH Added — Comedy, “Clancy at the Ba!.” I ttiversalsi« s Contains ’atest pictures in Lindbergh kidnap. 10c — lx.Bti FRIDAY and SATURDAY ■) Moran and Mack, the two Black Crows in "ILpnotint® comedy feature. I' ADDED l —Episode 10. “Cordon of Ghosl ( il\'.—l ni'd®' News 10c —l5 c I ‘ yjr 4 m ■ y Jxj : I Sunday — Monday — Tuesday I Matinee Sunday 2P. M. 10c —25 c FIRST Sun Eve Show 6» ■ STEAMBOAT coming ’round the Bend. . . unloading Lou. . .with ten trunks of new clothes .ntw >ongs flWl .. .a joy-be’le of the Gay Nineties. . .with lots of, new IM ! dark and handsomes’ trailing her down the River. I j I Belle oi Hie Nineties A Paramount Picture with J TROGER PRYOR i John Mack Brown Mae „„ Duke Ellington’s d f OBCHBSTRA s i Added—A Musical Com- "Troubled W° ,,rl dy in Technicolor and and more. to* "Pro Football” A Pete Smith Oddity, with RED GRANGE and The Cn.caau ; Tonight and Saturday If You Raved about LITTLE MISS MARKER... l Take a Look at DAVID JACK HOLT! Te 9 isavs: “Watch DAVID HOLT . . . He’s the Male >hnie. D le”_The kid’s a MARVEL! You NEVER ’ ;1 " '[ lcn Tenip He’s got the sam** apn-a’ing sincerity that Shire) has! You'll See Him in “YOU BELONG TO ME’ With LEE TRACY. Helen Mack. Helen Morgan and Lvnne Overman. t-*__and* •DDFD — r ’l’ do Reattv in “THE LOST H N<> l b a WILLIE WHOPPER Cartoon. 19c ‘ 1)C J, * —
••• Sv ;; . , «i hmtt /WO ■ r:i(‘ U.-v have been erit| c! " S ■ Tb " ' ■ ’"'"'MS® |H()!i. ", l" n « Mount.,, ». The it la Joo.. 1 „ V
