Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 57, Decatur, Adams County, 7 March 1935 — Page 7

lifHWE ■pf Siam ® B' l„ ;I , -.lking ■ Kt : t"’ ■VnMlK.v.k ■J--. ..f K k '■■"‘‘' ll,i ’ M..... <a !,mit’ B'b ■ -n r B, are- “ ■several nwn'-h---aw. Bf ■ " Kriv I—--’ ” K’l i;.ed to deathB, i">'‘»“ ne - Bud a" 1 regain »'»■■■'■ horn KL < Ha --a K ir Kphant* ftmi !n“ ro > a B‘' He hove 8 Bicdr:—' h -' 2 • a yach " a ■rlilway train, m< 'W:i go t Bud bis own I'-"*’’” movie K in !,M , ■ K P.<.rt. caa boast. Begro liven Bdiid> she repulsed. . : .. ir.ji.ied '■<■ slruggi Bkr' and stabbed her. s’l’ B-.J Her face was stabbB»i '" r rißht eyf and the handle Boko, of: wl ■ 1 a powerful Bin !lfr inouth ’’‘"''led her B&i ths point >t l> k 111 ’he sill "as dead, the Braced her to ih< l»aseBed tod lle 11,1 1 I M ’ live - Bthe nietal shaft of the ice B' : B*'' Bta ,u «s extracted. B* 2 -* traced • ■ Plainfield. B lndianapolis 0:1 S. road a (heck ui taxicab

I The Last Word in SPRING SUITS a ixi I greatest enjoyment in select- ■sssmsJ I ing your new spring suit will be I found in the large stock we have . to offer. i JT7 1" -'-iiiL .■ All new—so comp ete as to style and tailoring that you’ll be correct- yX ly dressed no matter which you >■ choose. Come in — look them ? over. Our prices, too, will p’ease A ' JO J you. p VFfW. ’ Vj ■i /"1 >7 /W ‘ SIOSO $9 ASO Rf 7 ff ; <<aßawSr .■— ■■„■■■■,.<»-.mr.~i.-r-. » J <'• STUDENTS SPRING |i*( SUITS HATS £.> ‘* S J ’ ' new Snappy new hats in &*•-•"' —(fly ■ e rns • Just what the new brims, colors k j * -■ .tSsa wan?° UI1 *’ * e » ow and shapes. Buy A early! |1 fl^JMffjlr'; z ,. , zz ;;>•«••-'WSJfr-- ’ ! w, - s2 -°°- KF $12.50 (W? $5.00 a ~r — 1 -' ’4V -II - *■??-*. >Tv s </V 'Y*> imflNMbufc Iffli Fff'F |vance & linn

Government 1 ightens Barriers Against Aliens IMBI ~ jAgjZ 7S»- * 1 WM, ■•-■•■• dr"" I ■ bt / < ' 7 ' P - i wJr 3/- • ■ * ; ■■ ' IFefiwJsS ■ . . W. WSUtAof liberty Wggj'-’Jh A ?»•■s*>„ '- • f ->■ of-ife

Economic conditions abroad have stirred a new wave of migration among foreigners throughout the world. Most of those who seek entry to United States are barred because their quota is filled. Others arc unable to meet the strict financial requirements. As a result, a greater number of aliens are attempting to make illegal entry each year. In 11)34 more than 20,000 who were trying

■ companies. The negro had purchased a ticket to St. Louis and ■ was waiting tor a Inis when arrested. The negro had been employed by Miss Storey's father, J. J. Storey, on a farm near Aurora since shortly after his release from the Kentucky prison. He came to Indianapolis to work for the Alford family three weeks ago. o More Measure Are Signed By Governor Indianajolie. Ind., March 7 —(UP) —A bill authorizing establishment

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THU AY, MARCH 7, 1935.

to -muggle themselves across the border were interCepted. Colonel D. W. Mac Cormack, chief of immigration bureau, estimated that 200,000 aliens are illegally in this country. More than 20,000 were deported last year. Mac Cormack urges changes in the immigration laws which will “humanize” them and also make possible deportation of additional "undesirables”.

of a judiciary council in Indiana to study court procedure and recommend changes whs -igned lai. yesterday by Gov. Paul V. McNutt. The governor also signed measures which will: Require I'.i-at all coal minor b equipped with first aid and safety appliances. Permit corporation for profit to file voluntary bankruptcy petitions on approval of thr.’e-fourths of the voting shareholders. Allow S3OO annual expens s to judges whose circuits comprise more than on - county. Requfw? a surety MJml -,;f s3,uuu. for all persons engaged in collecting accounts tor others.

Parents, Teachers To Meet At Purdue Lafayette, Ind., March 7 —(UP) — Hoosier parentis and teachers will meet here at Purdue University April 3 and 4 for the parents institute, which Ik to be held in coopenition with t,.w Indiana congr; is of parents and teachers with th; school of home economics in charge of the pr.gram arrangements, it was ann unced today by 1) an Mary L. Matthews, head of the school of honk; economics. , TL -nr Ming will open at 10 o’clock, Wednesday morning, April 3. with Mrs. Ralph Ar.Uer. Terre Haute, state historian for the Indiana CongresK of Parents and Teachers, presiding. Dean Matthews is then aoheduled to talk on homing • ind children and Dr. Harriet O’Shea.. . f the department of education is to talk on the adolescent and bis problems. During the noon hour, following luncheon, motion pictures are to be shown in th- home economics audit- riuin. HOLD SIX FOR CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE estate. The alleged pl.t was uncovered by probate Judge John F. O’Conr. =ll, whose suspicions were aroused by a privision of the will that John Bagdonas, 43. an undertaker, be paid $4,503 f r a funsral. “1 wouldn't authorize $4,500 for a funeral for Al Capone without an inve itigation,” the judge said. P lie? obtained confessions from Rev. Paul G Zalin:k, 45, a ri< -l of the ’ Old Catholic Church,” and John Dailyde, 54. that they signed he will uu wiuusaes after Kelly Jied. Dailyde eaid he was certain Mrs- Butman did not Know Kelly prior to th. time he becamo a room?r in her home. He and Zalinck, he said, received SIOO each for their signatures. Ct er benaficiarias of the will arrested were attorney Julius P. Naitches, a 1332 candidate for mun--1 ipal court judge. Eagdonas and Nicholas Radis, his assistant. Dsteetives wera unable -to learn where Kelly obtained his fortune. I At one bank where he had $25,000. Ihe opened th- account in 1900 and gavs the -street nun.l: r ol the joliet p. uilentiary an his address. So far as records show, he never was in 1 the penitentiary until 1920, wh?n he was sentenci d to 14 years for burg- ! lary. — o —■ Cincinnati Maid is Brought Home Dead Cincinnati, 0.. March 7 (UP) llel n Milner, 21-yeur-old maid, k.-pt l an all day tryst with her sweet eart ! y sterday, and was brought horns ‘ dead by him last midnight. j The man knocked at the do.r of i the home wh; re,Mi -s Milner is -•■tni ployed b.til night. ‘'Helen is outside, she has faint, d, ” he told Mrs. Alli rt Malenfaiit, her employer. "Please help me carry her inside.” After the ;air brought, the girl I inside, the man left, saying he was ( 1 going for a do.tsr. Mrs- Malenfaiit | then dkseov rod the girl had b.-eit j shot through the head. The man did i not return. Later, coroner Frank ' Coppock announced she also cad t been attacked.

X-RfIYS MAY USE IODINE New York —(UP) —Applying iodine to Internal of tihe human body hy means of X-ray traat- ■ nient ie a poswlbillty that soon may bet in ■ accepted practice in the . field of medicine," Dr Robert F. I James, reaearch physician of the i WcHtinghouise Limp Company, t Id i members of the Accident and H'-alth Club here rec.ntly. "Internal antiseptic treatment truly be done by injecting a nontoxic conpi’ound of iodine into the infected ssctlon of the anatomny.’’ Dr. James said. "When this spot is thru irrsdiated with X-rays,' U 1 1 mpound is broken down and releases free ,r nascent iodine. The iodine tihen performs its germicidal action. “This process continn e only so long as the X-rays ar® present and ! as .soon as they are removed the free iodine returns to the compound and is carried away through the bh od stream. “The s >condary nfdiation-s themIvers hav3 a germicidal effect." i Expetlments on rabbits have' proved the feaeseibility of this prac-, tice, he said. B< fore it can be us d on the >hu-< m n body, however, years of res ar 11 will be necessary in order to leorn the exact conditions affect-] ing the ability of a person to withstand the pr.ssnce :f toxic k.dine in his system, and for how long. ONE-ARM WOLFE CONTINUED EFtOM PAGE ONE i holdup. Working almost alone in an es fort to gain Wolfe's release, Mrs H. E. Brown. Indianapolis, a friend f the prison r. uppfared before the-clemency board today with affidavits to support charges of mistaken identity and that Wolfe was illegally convicted. Affidavits fropi Dr. F. L. Thorn-1 burg. "Middleton, and Ralph Niblock, ambulance driver, who were with Hance when lie died, said the farmer did not mention Wolfe’s name in bis dying statement. Another affidavit, signed by W. (). Gamble, Eaton, garageman, said he .had visited the Hance farm several times during the time the Chapman gang was supposed to have been staying t,here and that he never saw Wolfe on any of his visits. In an effort to further snlistanti-

AT OUR STORE! 1r c/in now ouy xjgj, Yo '‘ I , KE tVINATORSj, I gpy« I hß’aday | ( I S We have made it possible for And after the Kelvinator is paid ■ H every family to own a Kelvinator for the METER ATOR is g 1 —the finest in electric refrigera- removed, and the Kelvinator is fe tion. yours to use and enjoy for many K n . - years to come. For as low as only 15 cents a day you can own a Kelvinator Follow the Crowd and enjoy it while it pays for Takc advantage o f this generoua, itself. casy p a y meTl t pj an now. You W The asy ay W -J| never mlss the money and All you have to dot is select the you will find you can save more *" fl i model you want. We install it. than enough to cover the small ‘ a You deposit 15 cents a day in amount. Come in soon. Do as a day and you use the : the METER ATOR (slightly hundreds of women are doing— ' c '* Pay ’ for itsclf ' No ■ more on some models). This get your Kelvinator on the ac arec for the meter, money is collected once a month. METER-ATOR Plan. L- HMM■ 1-4) fl | AUGUST WALTER I 254 N. Second St. Phone 207

Johnson Blasts Long, Coughlin I B| < »en. Hugh S. v ■ ;

■ ■ y - ? " ■• t V rvf 1 v J ... Rev. Charles E. Coughlin

The* Rev. Charles E. Coughlin, lower left, of Detroit, declined to comment. Senator Huey P. Long, lower right, of Louisiana, characterized it as a "political trick”. These were the immediate reactions of Senator Long and the radio priest to the vitriolic attack made upon them by Gen. Hugh S. Johnson, former NRA chief, in a radio address at a dinner in New York in his honor. Asserting that there was an “open alliance between the great Louisiana pedagog and the political padre", John on characterized them as "two shadows which have fallen athwart America’s faith in Franklin D. Roosevelt.”

ate mistaken Identity claims, several Muncie residents testified they saw Wolfe in Muncie at about the l same time the crimes were com-' mitted. The scene of the murders I is approximately nine miles from M uncie. Proceedings of the. famous impeachment trial of former Judge' Clarence Dearth, of Delaware cir-l cilit court before the Indiana sen-

«b! Bi Hl *-** ® ay Mi —ft? sfcf"®®, .4 1 ♦ /o - , laMr Senator Huey P. Long

ate in March, 1927, also were aired i before the commission. Dearth I presided at Wolfe’s trial in Munich). The judge was tried am! acquitted by the senate on charges of 1 illegal selection of jurors in the Wolfe trial. He had been charged ' with selecting talesmen from a' | telephone book, instead of from j tax duplicates as required by law.

Page Seven

NEW VACCINE FOR PARALYSIS Washington lUJ’I—A new vaccine designed to prevent Infuntile paralysin in being tested on monkey« at the George Washington 'University Medical School here. • The vaccine conaiota of a mixiure, living infantile pamlysls viruses of low virulence with' a small anrannt of smallpox vaccine. The latt-er acta as a (pathfinder into the interior of cells, which must be reached if effective renult-s are tu be obtained. It was pointed out that infantile paralysis is a nervous disease which tends to became epidemic during tha summer. It results in a high death rate and leaves its victims disabled. * Scientists eaid excellent results have been obtained from the experiments. Further experimental work uowever, they said, will be n-eces* sary before the vaccine may be tried on human beingu. New Spring Millinery arriv- ! ing daily $1.50 up-Deiningers. WHY GET UP NIGHTS? THIS 25c TEST FREE If It Fails. I Use this bladder hixative to drive i out impurities and excess acids I which cause the irregularity that I wakes you up. Get buchu leaves jun- : iper oil, etc., in little green tablets | called BU-KETS. Works on the bladder similar to caster oil on the I bowels. Poorly acting bladder can i cause scanty flow, frequent desire, burning: or backache. In four days if not pleased, any druKKist will refund your 25c. Get your regular sleep and feel “full of pep.” Holtnouse Drug Company. 1-" 1 — r —- j n We Have WRINGER ROLLS for Any Make Washer. Replace your old, worn-out Rolls at very reasonable prices. _ KLENK’S Washer Service Phone 791-E