Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 78, Decatur, Adams County, 1 April 1935 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

Strike Threats in 1 hree Industries Harass New Deal *" ■-: . . . i i -_ a 1- t-.. J. h :„ ...L.:,.u

Strike threats in three basic industries employing .nearly one million workers have loomed up in op--2 'position to the Roosevelt recovery program. New -u, alert, led by Donald Rubber*, NR A chief, right, have taken steps toward peace plans designed to ftirett wholesale labor trouble, btriko tirreats ha.e

Highlights Os Sermons Delivered 3y Decatur Preachers On Sunday

It Ji. Charles M Prugh, pastor of the IJJpn Reformed church, preached m*. “Religious Persecution in Mexi£j>" Sunday evening. Kxcerpts from hi< s.rmon are: •‘Protests against the church pjl-, i.y of the M vtcan government dur-, ing recent m,nt*.is have beeu heard in all parts of the United States and hav • recently reached Washington., where they luve been heard in the halls of Congress. Resolutions have been introduced urging suspension of trad, with Mexico, the breaking off of diplomatic relations and re- _ tsaW-td Ambassador Joseph Ltaniels. Thus far the President ami Congress have not token any steps in the direction of protesting or intervening in tile* situation in Mexico. "A revolution has ween in progress in Mexico for nearly a hundred years. After throwing off the Spanish yoke, the people su.cecded in overthrowing the rule of the mix- , ed race which hold the cower under President Diaz until IWI7. In nival year a revolution comparable to the i RiHsion r volution of the same year j look place- Toe history of the coun- j try since that time lias been mark- j ed by a rising tide of the nation- 1 ali sm and an awakening of the j Indian masses of the p pul'ition. "Mexico for the Mexicans" is th ■ j slogan of til.- new movement. Th " effort is being made to bring every organization directly under state control. Edcatian is to be in hands i of the state, which is insisting that it possv ss and tmin the mind f tlie child. In this resp.ct, the aims of the government furnish a parallel to those of the Hitler government in Germany. "The two objects of th* moat recent attacks bv the government are _ i .. — NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS ; In ihr « irvnit « oiirt f*>l»r«i»ry , Term, IJKIS. i omitlnini \u. 15115 ~ Till; ST.\TK OF INDIANA A HAMS I'UI NTY The Feileral Ldntl Hank of Houis- ** ville vs. Otis K. KYrtley elal. Now comps the plaintiff, by Arthur ** Vogkwprti' attorney, ami files its t '■mpiaint herein, together with an m affidavit of non.residence. that said (defendant* Byron Roy Hunt. Mar- ** p;aret B«»ml Hunt are not residents of the State of Indiana; that sabl ** action is for Foreclosure of mort- * *?ag-o and appointment of re * iver and that said non-residents defenclants are necessary parties thereto. Notice is therefore her-oby , m said Hcfcndants, last named, that unless tltey he and appear on the ** 271 h day of the next term of the Aft unis Circuit. j'otirt, to be holden on >Hav J! A. L). at the Court •* i louse in Decatur in said County ajid - State, and answer or demur to said m complaint, the same will Ik; heard and determined in their absence, a* Witness my name ami tin- Seal of said Court, affixed at Itpfiwnr, India iana this H*U» day of March A. D. 1 1935. •••* J »AVII> IX DKVK * ’lerk Mru 114-25 Apr.11 1

THIMBLE THEATER NOW SHOWING—“PALSY-WALSIKS” BY SEGAR T fmTvool cT“~ Z v* ' Vep^.plehtv'.too mo £3 ft wt got nothin' \ Kme mo vou be p&l<s - '-v - <>> v, quick i /V«. ha,o \ vou uck r^e.uo»v aomnst vaxeptin y* woks) pekty sujtu. Guy-he uke u ""■ '. >i~i i •.^-».» .t■. _l. \

come to a head in the textile trades, in which Francis Gorman, lower center, is spokesman; in the mining industry, where John L. Lewis, upper center, is chief, and the automobile industry, which William Green, left, president of the Federation of Labor, has been attempting to organize. C

foreign capitalism and the Roman j Catholic Church. A large part of the ; natural rjaour.es of the ocuntry. I ; chi fly oil and silver, are in the!and-) of foreign investors). Approximately half of the laud of Mexico was heid by tile church, which had become the greatest land-owning establish mein in th-- Find- Since 1917 , , all land and property is considered ( to belong to the state, regardless . yvlio controls it or inak w use of it. Serious conflict has resulted between the church aud the state on , this matt r. ( “It appoim that the reaction in j . Mexico is against institutional reli- ( j sh)3. Atheistic aud Communist- . tic .teudencics are present lmt are not iii she majority. Religious teach- . ing in he home and in the church . , have not been severely interferred with. The Nittiotial Council of the j . B.ipiscopal C-’iirch recently issued a j statement- declaring “We are )»■ -t ( 5 yet convinced that there is actual j, persecution by the Mexican govern- i j j ment on purely religious grounds." j !» —♦ Test Your Knowledge ! ft 11, | Can you answer seven of these | ( ten questions? Turn to page Four for the answers. 1* —♦(] 1. What i-i tlie Spauisli form of ' the Englh- t name James? 2. What is eugenics? 3. What is chlorine': 4. Name the capital if Bulgaria, j 5. in which country is the Lake of Bienne? 6. At which university was Kunte i ' Kockne live fonlall coach? 7. What is an ibis? 8. What i-.s the name fjr the pro-j CCS-) by which an alien becoffi«s a: ‘ citizen? | ( 9. Name the green coloring mat- 1 ter of ordinary foliage. 10. Who was William Makupea e | Thacheray? 1. In which stale in the city of j Chippewa Falls'.’ | 2. Name W*e capital of Tennessee.;, 3. Nam-.? the founder of Eagltah 1 1 Unitariani-m. j i 4. Where is >l l . Etna'.’ j 5. in a court trial, what is a hyp- | 1 othetioil question? f 6. Which stale H nicknamed the Lone Star Stale? 7. What L an tiier name for ,al kilry? 8. What event U called The Na- j tivity? 1 9. Why is Bieia’s Comet so nam- f ert? 1 It). F r win 11 name is THlie a nick-J) name? 1

TRAFFIC TAKES LIVES OF TEN At Least Ten Killed In Traffic Accidents Over Week-End Indianapolis, April 1 — LU.R) Traffic accidents caused the deatlo-) of at leant ten persons in Indiana over the week end. Two pedestrians were killed at Anderson. Thomas McConnell, SO. former Ijailiff of Madhton circuit court, was killed instantly at a street intersection. Robert McCollum, 69. died a few hours later as result of another accident. Frank Cole, 54. Indianapolis, was killed when struck by an automobile while walking, i Rodney Wampler. S. wa< killed and his brother. Richard, was injured seriously when struck by an automobile while skating in a street near their home in Bloomington. Another boy, Anthoulis I avelias. 13. was killed by a motorist in Gary. Ruth Ellen Foster. 18, Newcastle was killed instantly when the automobile in which -he was riding with Burtis Martin. 21. hurtled into a utility pole and overturned on state road 38 near Newcastle after grazing the fender of another machine. Injuries suffered by Miss Josephine Beck. 23, Coalesville, when the automobile In which she was riding overturned near Clayton, caused her death in an lmiianapolls hospital. Raymond Delicti. 23. Clayton, driver of the car. said he swerved to avoid collision witn a coal truck which lxire no lights. Charles Walker. 52, Shelbum, was killed while walking along U. S. road 41. near Shelhurn. Pastor Weds at 73 Troy. Tonn (U.R) The Rev. H. Y. Lastey. superannuated Methodist minister waited until be was 73 to many for tlie first time and honeymoon in Kentucky. Mrs. Maggie Joyner, a few years younger than Lasley, was the bride. Her two former husbands — botli ministers —died. Knee Was Hoodoo Sacramento, Cal. —Riff) Frank Jordan broke liis knee. A month later, on the road to recovery, he gathered friends for a celebration. Hobbling to the head of the stairs lie bid them good night, slipped, fell, broke his knee again.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, APRIL 1, 19.'U

Woodwork WoTh SBO,OOO Milwaukee -4U.fi) —Woodwork in 1 the Robert A. Johnston mansion, once one of the showplaees of Milwaukee which now is being wreck-! od. is valued at ISO,OOP The house was built a half-mile from the lakej shore which llie wealthy families of the time ahunued as unhealth- i, ful ■— "--O- — Forgetful Hu»band Seattle. (U.R) —When her bus-; band passed her up on Christmas, ■ Mrs. Astrid Nougic was pained. When he failed to remember her birthday and their wedding anni- i versary, she was more pained. When St. Valentine's day came and i

"The Cold Finger Curse" by EDWIN DIAL TORwOEPuSON

CHAPTER XXXVI At headquarters they found Inspector McEniry, fuming with energy. - “News for you boys,” the Inspector greeted them. “We’ve got tho Jap. They found him at his lodgings over on the East Side. They’re bringing him in now. Great work, Montigny! I’ll never kid you again about your crazy leads.” “Jazzbo and whoopee!” exclaimed Sergeant Darden, who seemed strangely out of character when he was enthused. “We’ve cheeked all the steamship sailings,” McEniry went on. “There were none today. There are two tonight, but there's no passenger of Schurman's description booked on either of them. The boys nabbed three or four on suspicion, anyhow. We can't trace any railroad bookings, though that’s a devil of a job. Anyhow, with this Jap under our thumb we ought to get a decentlead.” The scared young Japanese, Hitsu, however, could not help them greatly— at first. He was intelligent, apparently, but not wholly intelligible. He could scarcely speak enough English to keep himself out of jaik Tho employment bureau manager through whom Hitsu had been traced had explained that Mr. Schurman had specifically wanted a Japanese chauffeur who could speak little English —he wanted lots of service and very littie conversation. Hitsu had filled this requirement admirably. He managed to make it clear to the police that he had never heard of Mr. Shimmer—which was the nearest he could come to Schurman—before being employed by that gentleman two weeks before. He had hoped the job would be permanent, but Mr. Shimmer had been called to Europe on business unexpectedly, had given him a bonus and dismissed him. Mr. Shimmer’s car was still in an East Side garage. It was to be placed in dead storage while its owner was in Europe. Hitsu thought his employer had sailed today. That was all Hitsu could tell the police. He did not become genuinely useful as a Witness until Inspector McEniry spread upon the desk before Hitsu a collection of photographs. “Mugs of eight or nine mildly suspected as fences,” the Inspector explained to Montigny. “None of them convicted, or even officially charged with anything. But we've had the eye on them.” Hitsu grabbed one of the pictures and jumped to his feet, his countenance opening in a wide and very gummy grin. “Missa Shimmer. Missa Shim mer!” he cried delightedly. “Be sure now, you!” growled McEniry “No guessing.” They shuffled the photographs, adding new ones and subtracting some of the old ones, spun Hitsu around on his heels and commanded him to try again.

Three successive times Hitsu unerringly picked out Mr. Shimmer. “What a break, what a break!” cried Darden. Inspector McEniry referred to a card index record. “Jack Calient I knew we’d get that sly old duck one of these days. ‘Wealthy retired diamond merchant.’ I know him. Used to be in business down in Maiden Lane. We've never pinned anything on him, but there’s always been a feeling about him. Listen to this, Montigny: ‘Frequently spends his winters at Palm Beach.’ Maybe that’s w here he's gone.” “Warm, don't you think, at this season?” suggested Montigny. “Perhaps he went north instead. Thorp is a sailing tomorrow morning from Montreal.” “We’ll check ’em both.” The mills of the police department ground not slowly but exceedingly fine that night. Montigny found himself with a blank evening before him. “I think I shall look up a chemical friend,” he told Sergeant Darden. “One Doctor Inman, of Hargett & Company—the manufacturers, as you remember we learned, of Pallet French Toilet Soap.” “Yeah?" said Darden. “.Mats yeah,” replied Montigny. But Montigny learned to his disappointment that Doctor Inman was out of the city and was not expected

he gave her no vuiehtioe, she eued him for divoree In superior court. —oMuny Plant Has Big Balance Cleveland.- <U.» - Cleveland « municipal light plant has a cash balance of 11.H4.949 a report by Utilities Director W. J. Rogers, has just shown. Though operating ox ponses have increased, this Is the highest balance In the plant's hie.tory. • —o Treasure T r ove Slutiehiun, Mass.~tU.PJ The foreman of an ERA project here was astonished by unaccustomed activity of his men until he discovered that Peter Meehan had discovered

to return until the following night, Montigny in the morning mail had a written report from the telephone company, to the effect that the mouthpiece which the police had found on the telephone in the bedroom of the late Mrs. Elderbank was not the mouthpiece with which that telephone had been equipped when delivered originally; and that the mouthpiece which had been found on the telephone in Glenn Thurber’s apjrtment, likewise, was not the original part issued with that instrument

Further than that the company did not care to go officially on record, but the manager of the branch office amplified the verdict slightly in conversation with Montigny. “The mouthpiece on the Thurber telephone,” said the manager, “is a new one, of comparatively recent manufacture. The other one, which you found on Mrs. Elderbank’* teleEhone, is not new, though it should a because the instrument is new. By checking the serial numbers of the instrument with others of the same factory lot, we determined that the mouthpiece found on it should have belonged to an instrument assembled at least one year ago. Tho mouthpiece on the Thurber telephone, on the other hand, is a new one, and its serial designation checks with the extra parts which we have on hand at this office, to furnish subscribers who ask for them.” “In other words,” said Montigny eagerly, “it is a mouthpiece recently replaced—and one evidently issued by this office at a subscriber’s request?” “Yes, that seems to be the case.” “Splendid,” said Montigny. He described St. Gregory Vaicour minutely, and displayed a photograph which he had appropriated from Valcour’s rooms. “Will you please see whether anyone in the office recalls having given this man, within the past few weeks, a new telephone mouthpiece?” The manager made inquiries. He returned shortly with a young lady from the front office, one of the information clerks. “Miss Ethridge remembers your man,” reported the manager. “She did not take his name, but she made a memorandum of his telephone number.” Miss Ethridge, who had a brittle, businesslike way about her, promptly gave the date of the incident and Valcour’s telephone number. “Yes, I remember him,” she declared. “He wore a dark velour hat, and had funny little blue-green eyes and long sandy hair and a sandy mustache. He’s short and slim, about five and a half feet tall.”

“Enough,” said Montigny. “I thank you both excessively.” Montigny shortly thereafter called upon Inspector McEniry to impart this information. “The finger-prints at the scene of the crime, Inspector—l predicted that they could be explained away. Through this simple method one might have put even your fingerprints there.” McEniry listened in wry silence to the explanation. “Say,” he grunted, exasperated, "all you do is go around disproving things, Montigny. For a change, why don’t you prove a few?” “But yes. Inspector—elimination —proving by cumulative disproof. Your electrician has trouble with the mysterious unseen force he calls current. There are ten or twelve things that might have caused the trouble. How does he go about it? He eliminates, one by one, the ten or eleven things that could not have caused the trouble—and the twelfth is the answer.” “And what’s the answer in this mess of ours—Vaicour?” Montigny shrugged. “We are not yet through eliminating. He has not been rearrested?” “On the lam—not a trace of him. He and Jack Calleh. Callen checked out of the hotel where he has been living permanently, two weeks ago —left word there, too, that he was going to Europe. He must have known all about this Elderbank take, before it happened. Awful luck to miss him—but it was a real break that put you on to this fake picturebuying game. We’ve got to nab Callen to save our face. The damblasted newspapers are roasting the tar out of us. McEniry’s huge hand crumpled the news-sheet he had

six silver coins In a ditch. Ills fellow-workers immediately began swinging picks and shovels in hope of unearthing others. ——o Firemen Saved Baby With Collapsed Lung Lew Angela* - (DPI - A baby with a eolkipeed lung, today owed in* life to tlm efforts lan liihalator squad of the Wcwt Hollywood Kir© Department. Tlve crew was called by Dr. Lt»e D.ugla* and worked hi relay* continuously for 131 hours and 3J» minutes before the infant was out of danger. 4 ; i_

been scanning sourly when Monti*ny came in. “What do I do next, Montigny—turn Thurber loose, and give ’em all a deep belly-laugh on us?” _ * Montigny chuckled. “Quel dommage! It would be a shame to lose our valuable publicity man. lie is our earnest ally. He advertises daily the thought that the skeleton fingers of the Cold Finger Curse are reaching out relentlessly for the culprits.” “Horse-whiskers!” growled McEniry derisively. “That’s no way to catch a thief. Thieves don't read, and if they do they’ve got sense enough not to believe what they see in the paper.” “You forget. Inspector, that we have many thieves of education and refinement nowadays. It used to be unfashionable, ‘common,’ to be a crook—but no longer." “Well, all right. Have it your way. But what do I do with Thurber? If I don’t turn him loose the District Attorney will, in the light of this new telephone evidence of yours. There’s only one other thing we’ve got to hold Thurber on—the call to Mrs. Elderbank just before the murder came from Thurber’s phone.” "But not, provably, from Thurber. A duplicate key to Thurber’s apartment hangs, even now, in the pantry of the landlord's flat downstairs. Or — have you considered this, Inspector?—a call could come from Thurber’s telephone, even though there was no one at all in Thurber’s rooms.” “What do you mean?” “Tapped wires. It is outside wiring—an old house, built before the days of telephones. The wires enter Thurber’s top floor spartment Just below the level of the roof. With a lineman’s simple outfit the thief does his tapping. A call records itself as from Thurber’s telephone. The man on the roof with his lineman’s instrument appears to be talking from an ordinary phone.” McEniry stirred uncomfortably. "Yes—but we have no evidence of that. Guesswork, isn’t it?” “Purely. But it fits into my picture puzzle of the crime. Shall I reconstruct it for you?” “Sure. Shoot.” “There is a man—perhaps two men—on the roof of the house next, door to Mrs. Elderbank's. There is a confederate, an inside man, at Mrs. JClderbank’s party.” “Vaicour!” said the Inspector grimly. “That look* like a cinch, now.” “Let us call him, then, Vaicour. He is a friend of Thurbcr's, or has had access to Thurber’s apartment, where he has stolen the mouthpiece of Thurber’s telephone, quickly substituting a new one. He has this mouthpiece in his pocket, wrapped in paper to protect Mr. Thurbcr's valuable finger-prints. There is a prearrangement that the crime is to be committed at a definite time, in the course of the Zulu dance at Mrs. Elderbank’s party. No signal is needed by the man or men on the roof—when the African war drums begin to rumble, the call is to lie put m summoning Mrs. Elderbank upstairs to her bedroom.” “That's the done, all right—that’s the way it was done.” “The call is put in — from the tapped wires or from Thurber's rooms. Mr*. Elderbank’s colored maid, normally, would answer the telephone upstairs, so an attempt is made to throw suspicion on her—the stolen clothing, the missing suitcase.”

“By the way,” interrupted MeEntry, “I forjfot to tell you—we’ve found that suit-case. A track-walk-er for the Intcrbcrough subway picked it up this morning, alongside tho tracks away up at one end of the Times Square station.” “In the subway!” “Sure. They just heaved it off the platform to get rid of it We ident i. fied the clothes as Mrs. Elderbank's all right, but we didn’t have any luck finding finger-prints on the suit-case.”

“So! They do many things to incriminate innocent people. But it so that the maid is not at hand—she is in the basement areaway lending five dollars to her erapshooting friend, so that the butler Cupples, instead of the maid, answers the telephone.” (To Be Continued) OmUA 11)1. or IMwln B Torjtrwo PlstrtOutoS Or Kioo foolurr* Srnrilcato. tno

MARKETREPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL AND FOREIGN MARKETS Brady's Market for Decatur, Btrno, Craigvilte, Hoagland and Wiltshire. Closo at 12 Noon Corroded April 1, No commission and no yurdago Veals received Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday. lOt) to 120 lbs. - *6.o* 120 to HO lb* $6.95 HO to 160 lb* $7.75 l*o to 190 lbs $8 60 190 to 250 tbs *B.BO 250 to 300 lbs. $8.65 300 to 330 lbs ~.. $8.35 Roughs *7.50 Stags . *4.75 Veals - - *O.OO Ewe and wether lambs.— *7.25 Buck lambs — — — $0.25 New York Produce Dressed poultry firm. Turkeys 18-28%; chicken* 16-30; broilers 18-29; capons 27-34; fowls 16%23%; long island ducks 19%-20. Live poultry dull. Geese 7-11; turkey* 19-28; roosters 13; ducks 11-17; fowls 20-23; chickens 1525; capons 19-28; broilers 12-25. Eggs receipts 23493 cases; market firm; special packs including unusual hennery selections 2526%; standards 24-24%; firsts j 2134-221*; seconds 2134*211*; mediums 22%; dirties 21%-22; checks 21-21%; storage packs 23%. But’er receipts 7342 packages; market firmer. Creamery higher than extras 3414-35; extra 92 > score 34 first. DO to 91; score 33 V;- j 33% fimt 83 score 33 centralized. 90 score 33 V* centralized 89 score 33. Cleveland Produce llutter market firm. Extra 37; standards 37. Egg market firm. Extra white 20; current receipt* 19%. Poultry market steady. Fowls under 6 lbs. 22: ducks, young 2425; ducks, old 20. Potatoes: Maine sl-1.10 per 10) It*, bag; Ohio mostly 70-75; Ne*>\ York 80. FORT WAYNE LIVESTO* K Fort Wayne, lud.. Apr. 1 <U.R! —Livestock: Hogs, steady; 200*250 lbs., $9; 180-2 WI lbs., $8.90; 250-300 lbs., $8.85; 160-180 llis., $8.80; 300-350 lbs., $8.55. 150-160 Ills., $8.50. Hu--150 lbs., $8.25; 130-140 lbs., $8; 120130 llis., $7.50; 100-120 lbs., $7; roughs, $7.75; stag*. $5.50. Calves, $9.50; lambs. $7.75. CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE May July Sept. Wheat .. .94% .91% .90"* Corn .80% .74% .70 Oats 41% .39% .37% EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo. N. Y., Apr. I.—(U.PJ —Livestock: Hogs. 2,50i1: active, steady to 10c under Friday’s average; desirable 160-260 It**., averaging ISO-240 lbs.. $9.40 to mostly $9.50 aud $9.55: few 240-lb. selections, $9.75; 140-160 lbs.. $8.75-9.35; packing sows. SB.TUSB.SO. Cattle. 1.18*0; steers and yearlings steady to 25<: higher; quality rather plain; good offerings. $lo$12; mixed yearlings, $9.50; medium steers. SS.So-$10; liberal run of cows, market weak to 25c lower; fat cows, $6.50 down;; low cutter and medium. $2.25-$5.50. Calves. 750; better grade vealers 50c higher early; $10.50; some late sales only steady; common and medium. $5.75-18.50. Sheep, 4,600; lambs active, steady; good to choice, $8.50 to mainly $8.65: similar grades shorn lambs, $7.50-$7.75. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected April 1. No. 1 New Wheat, 60 lbs. or better 86c No. 2 New Wheat (58 lbs.). 85c Oats. 32 ibs. test 45c Oats, 30 lbs. test 44c Soy Beans, bushel SI.OO No. 2 Yellow Com, lot) lbs. $1.06 CENTRAL SOYA MARKET No. 2 Yellow Soy Beans SI.OO Delivered to factory. o CONGRESS TODAY Senate: Consider* Copeland pure food anil drag bill. House; Considers bill to permit negotiations between Mexico and United States over water rights. l GILLETTE \ Super Traction S TRACTOR TIRES ) For all makes of See them at — * * 2j POR T E R tireco, yr 341 Winchester St. In&L Phone 1259 ■§i&

-'U'KRTIsfwtH WMXEsafIM I L s -\IeB ' “!:■! -J ___ ■ *'' s -ri,K ii n „ ' ' H : !i:s ' mi H."'i„r, •'.‘Hi l!H ; it,. 1 "'■ •' !'■ :..r * , ri , *■ ’ »•*; ■ \imSl Stat id 12f Krill MLK Jerse^T!™ ! " fi - jH 1 '--I M.:;,. ..... EH 'Hi K"i; s.\m. > ~,Ygi • 'I ' 1. J .VLa, i^H "Tm FriK SA. h ~H •4M> . 'Min \,, u SB ! Mimiij'.ii'ti <|SH Sale load :H HI wanieiTh WANT 1.1) MAN —S H Wa'lucs hH ■ V i H lunilm- oh;" WB WANTED It"' k. ; . - :aH rail MisH Mi':!■':itH FOR UENI I p. ; ! rwnß. M 5651. ■ Freak Calf H - of all ’> 6iH riinst,!*' , ■ -a-,Vj ; animal -• •' ■ its r,., • like those otlfl 'gator, h died eight birth. I Cow Massacre ■ Murphy Hi. amis of hi.>' k tro*'*- «»*■ to field .ind garden. hero in a -li.eglM rai| l and . , v.itioii ilepado*® tachcs. Dead crow* w* ■ waist deep in a bin 3u &*■ after the shooting. I Sea-Going Deer I Cltatli.ini. Mass. - hundred yards off Cape M.* guards I ' snieil a 'leer M| sea. Th. re was wiictlo r the deer, a had swam oyer Doth Island. 15 "ides »*•?• "J open sea,ou "H (Ivr u " clared. 1 NOTICE TO BREEDERS Major No. 17HL ••'-««« gian Stall.".) *'« * " south of Monroe. N. A. BIXIEB optometrist Eyes Examined. GlaW» Fil HOIBB- - 8;30 to 11:39 12. 3* *• Saturdays. 8 ‘ Telephone w»For Better Health S® Dr H. Frohnapfa Licensed Chiropractor aß<l N-^ropf^jrt Phone 311 Office Hours: ,0 ‘° 1 tosp- o'" ® 10 ° Neurocalo»«'* r X-Ray Laboratory Spring Sugff MA(iICLEA> No Odor-o'ly Suits, Hats. T P Dresses SHEETS 8808 Phone