Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 131, Decatur, Adams County, 3 June 1935 — Page 5

a AMOS KETCHUM >-' F» f)M FAOt; ONP 7ward pl“> ground where the |^E r vi»etl I’!*? wil > be llel(1 ' grciuHils arc open to any |K |WI pupils Os the public- or IKuhial silioolu. oil the hours announced. |K„ os uHsoii.it ion Soulli "aril school has . .poiiHoring tin- sup l'l-i' " hlrh |M beil,g , tin- Hist i |m « lh|B y eai '- |K, h, I, slated that tennis ■H ||llo i„ oi.mined from him any the week. |HH — — B ■ Adams County ■I Memorial Hospital lint . olid Jean Myers, \\ Ohio. operMonday morning. Va. I'. .HUI. dismissed to MEI —— £1 YOUTH IS HELI) I'liOM PAGE ONE} im d ait li rifles, forced mail mto their ear ami , Maple said he and his returning home from ti-hl south of Nevada when was made. I'jelft-II said he was with the Maple family and; heard of any extortion or i attempts in this district. Hf Refuse Comment June 3. —(U.R)--At-. federal bureau of inoffice here declined to-

Bnad Dress For Home, Porch, Garden Ilfi One-Piece and fashioned H So Quickly, Too <■? B By Ellen Worth - J B ' ' \ ■ /■ '< a,,rar{ * ve little model is B*n: over, and consequently very dipped into. Opening out flat, J 9 ®Z Bl easily laundered, too. L —f lirI ir frequent tubbing, naturally /-s/ 1 i cottons will be nicest for this f 'y. IJ - ~ l/n / I s. Percale print as sketched is \. 2>(p "Wil / smart looking with pique col- « / and cuffs, edged with rick-rack r—C f / i OAI c-GIQ - / ■ / aid gingham, checked seersucker, / ed linen, pastel pique, multi- ■-'G/O/ / I red dotted dimity, etc, are also I ly and inexpensive for this J i \rfiTlal a No. 566 is designed for sizes -X ~ A 1- I years, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44- I bust. Size 36 requires JU Zp'O Ojfl of 39-inch material with 1 ts.Q.- ! ,*l of 39-inch contrasting and 3J4 0 ‘♦Al ■ rais of lace edging, LjO. -H —- In*■Blbr Summer Fashion Book Is k,O* r J? 4 (“ KM Off the Press! Qrder Your IQ-0 ; i ).T I B^" 1 k?s®ia MBice of BOOK 10 cents. of PATTERN IS cents in I*;'’ or coin (coin is preferred). |v'b- Jal I I K .**, , DgC gU h J Mail Address: N. V. Pat- t£x N4Ln^ J AW’ Bureau (Decatur Daily Demo- II | a 23rd Bt. at Fifth Avenue, Ik Jew York City, W J 366 W JJ Vainting Your Barn llhis Year? B Our friendly “tip" to you is to use ■excel barn red ■ g j THE Improved Soya Bean Oil paint SB i (containing 30'< Soya Bean Oil). B I lasts longer and withstands the eleB | mints much better than the regular B linseed oil paint. ■ Soya Bean Oil paint is the most £ I durable oil paint made. It is NO I ev B pensive —in fact it is cheaper than B j regular paint—and is gaining in popuE! larity daily. H I Come to our shed and look at it. B Our building is painted with it and the B I proof is in seeing it. B I Help yourself by usng your own B ■ product — Soya Bean OilKocher Lumber &Coal Co K: -.tS”

day to discuss tile reported arrest of Donald Maple, Tipton county farm youth. ■ “This office never gives out information at any time,” newspaper reporters were told. ’ Vai Nolan, U. B. district attorney, said the arrest was not made through his office ami he was not familiar with tho name of the youth. i I VOLNEY DAVIS I CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE ' terms. Meanwhile Davis will be questioned in connection with the Weyerhaeuser kidnaping. Intense Manhunt Tacoma. Wash., June 3 4U.R>— Peace officers of the government and state placed Washington under a virtual state of siege today as they colloborated in one great effort to apprehend the gang that etole George Weyerhaeuser, 9, and turned him back to his millionaire parents for 1200,000. Every highway leading from th ■ state was patrolled by deputy sheriffs and state police, rifles unslung, ready for use. Coast guardsmen roared back and forth along Puget Sound, scrutinizing every boat. British Columbia ■ authorities added their aid with : a blockade of their shoreline and 1 ports against unidentified strangers. This was the outward manifcsI tation of the determined search for the newest kidnap gang. I Quietly, but with sureness that | has brought nearly every big time I gang to book, the agents of the bureau of investigation, depart-

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, JUNE 3, 1935.

Hoods in Southwest Leave 10,000 Homeless |jH J ’ ** ’ ? v .... t t 1 t / z "W?.. i 1 —- frSWtc?-:-;-. . ~ |] A W. , . - . «? - I— —ll r „ x , rMBBiBL*- • T-U-* ...... <■ L —- ‘ Wt' ’ z , * W-- ’** 4 ’ j «' • t ’ S -U I 2

Here are two striking aerial views of the flood I aiea m southern Texas where..the' Brazos

ment of justice, pursued their secret clues and leads. Officers seemed confident their quarry still was within the limits of the state, probably in the area where they released George Saturday morning with a dollar bill, b'lankct>4 and an admonition to wait for his dad. While the area was so bottled up that none could leave without being identified or questioned, federal agents spread another trap--the seme one that netted Bruno Richard Hauptmann in the Lindbergh case. This trap was lined with $5, $lO and S2O federal reserve notes, the money paid by F. R. Titcomb, uncle of the kidnaped boy, for his release. Booklets arrived by airplane from Washington listing every one of the bills by its serial number. These were to be distributed to banks throughout the nation with . the request that the nearest de-1 partment of justice office be noti-1 fied should one of the notes ap-' pear. F. D. R. MEETS CONTINUED FROM PAGE} ONE up. Realignment of political parties has been discussed on the stump and in Washington salons since the new deal arrived with its experiments and a sprinkling of Republican or nonpartisan office holders. But no issue of the magnitude necessary to rock parties to their foundations had developed until last week when the supreme court outlawed NRA, which at one time was the Roosevelt recovery keystone. President Roosevelt was under

Queen of Portland’s Rose Pete ■ MW sHlljfe-# .3 ? * zatfo, /Ob* w * 4 w. ill w ?' ' | ®- ' ' ! in competition with brunettes, blopdfi und redheads, plqtinam- ( haired Irene Hegeperg. 17. above, was chosen queen to reign over the pose Festival in Portland, Ore., June 6,7 and 8, celebrated by pageants and parades. 1

I went on a rampage, inundating more than 250,00( acres and leaving nearly 10.000 homeless.,'

some pressure to accept the court's decision in a cooperative spirit | which meant trimming new deal plans to meet the constitutional pattern. But instead of taking that advice, Mr. Roosevelt made a direct issue of the decision and invited the people of the United States to ponder the desirability of living under a constitution as defined by the court or a broader instrument which would annul some of the rights which the court | and many persons insist belong to ( the states. o Gottschalk Submits Consolidation Plan Indiannpoli.l, June 3 —(UP) —A plan of township conm didst ion that w ,ul(l ■ one million dollars the lowest iprtperty valuation in any taxing unit in Indiana wa<s submitted to the legist itive tax study com- i niittee today by Thuriwm Gott-1 ! sehalk, of Berne. , Gottschalk proposed that the re-1 ,organization be done by county! | commissioners and go into effect I January 1. 1939. He suggested that ea.ll of the,' new townships have a property val- 1 nation of at lenst one million dol-1 lars and a population of at east 500 ' persons. St. Joseph’s To i Graduate 55 Men Fifty-five, men will be gradual-j| ed from St. Joseph's college, Rens- j selaer, tomorrow. Most Rev. i Bishop John F. Noll, of Fort ■ Wayne, will preside at the gradu-1 ation exercises Tuesday morning. Attorney Timothy P. Galvin of

Hammond, a member of the supreme board of the Knights of Columbus, will deliver the address. Bishop Noll will also award the Conroy gold medal to Eugene Beeler of Glendale, Ky., for oratorical merit. —o 300,000 Tomato Plants Set Out p. M. Gepliart. field manager for the Decatur Packing Co., new tomato processing industry which is locating here today stated 300,0D0 tomato plants have already been set out. Mr. Gephart announced that more plants would he received this week. He s lid the- company would accept contracts up to June 6 and anyone interested should n tify him. 0 National Steel To Stay On NRA Scale New York June 3—(UP)—Present hours, wngeu, and working .conditions in National Steel corporation plants will not be affected iby the supreme court’s ruing against the NRA. E. T. Weir, board chairman, announced today.

, — 1 ■ — | CORT Tonight and Tuesday “AIR HAWKS” Ralph Bellamy. j Wiley Post, Tala Birell. Phis—Tom Howard comedy, Terry Toon Cartoon, Fox News. 10c -25 c Wed. ■ Thur. • “SPRING TONIC” Lew Ayres, Zesu Pitts. Jack Haley Mitchell. Durant, Claire Trevor. Coming Edward Eggeleston's famous Indiana classic — i “The Hoosier Schoolmaster” I I 'I Tonight and Tuesday JEAN HARLOW and Wm. POWELL in “RECKLESS” with Franchot Tone, May Robson, Ted Healy, Nat Pendleton. The- BIG SHOW of 1000 WON DLRS ... A Giant Melody Drama packed solid with laughter, sensational soul-thrills, music, dancing ... the Entertainment Triumph of 1935! ADDED—“THE TSN MAN” with Thelma Todd & Patsy Kelly. 10c -25 c Wed. & Thurs.— Randolph Scott* Kay Johnson in 'VILLAGE TALE' from the novel by Phil Stong—- ; author of STATE FAIR. ' Coming—"THE STAR OF MIDNIGHT" with Wm. POWELL and GINGER ROGERS. ANOTHER BIG HIT!

1-H Crop Club To Sponsor Program Thajne'e Aecoiidian club of Fort Wayne will present a program of solos, duets ind group numbers at the Decptur high school auditorium Thursday evening ut k u’clock. The program is sponsored by tho 4-H Crop dub, which will present a comedy sketch during the Intenmin»ion. Admission will be in and 20 cents and the public in invited to attend. o Drags Woman From Auto, Murders Her Robinson, 111., June 3 —(UP) —iA! len E. Flynn, unamiployed married man, dragged Mrs. L. Pieraoll, mother of two children, from her automobile, shat her to death, and then killed himself on the main street of the bueiness district today. Flynn's wife, Mrs. Anna Mae Flynn, left him several months ago when she learned that her husband and Mrs. Piereoll were having a clandestine love affair. According to witnesses, Flynn jumped into the path of Mrs. Piersoll's tmt.imobile,

Schafer’s 61st Anniversary SALE OF DRY GOODS Bargains Galore —Don’t Fail To Attend This Great Sale SALE OF THE FAMOUS . “Quadriga” Prints XlWt /?"•! You can tub them, scrub them and boil j w thcm a,H ' lhcy wi " ,ooli ,ikc nt>W * uy ' ou ect ' " s * ° w * >r ’ ce wSS lo c KOyd Buy Early — Bargains Can’t Last In Some Cases Quantities Limited Mens SI.OO Dress 40 ” I’rinted SHIRTS MARQUISETTE White — Blue — Tan And X* SALE PRICE Fancies f '■ Buy All You Need At / This Low Price I 'V ft |I I A fiQrtiw -IrL I. , Hit and Miss Patterns Mens $1.35 Mill Shrunk Seersucker Pants (J Cool And Comfortable I SUMMER PRINTS r—of SILKS SS. > MAKE SUMMER WABBROBES EASY! . NjK/ : A F ,t| |(|| These Gay Prints are better than ever this sea- 111 ft /«ll jiji jn son, for every hour of the day and for all types JP ■ |W4Ur ji of smart clothes. / \- POLKADOTS — SMALL AND LARGE — PRINTS AND FLORALS As 9c vd SI.OO VALUES fcV j 39c “Lacy Lou” & “Nub Pon” VOILES And BATISTE DRESS MATERIAL Beautiful duality Beautiful Printed O Fabric lor Cool H Patterns. Ideal for gO jl Summer Dresses Sheer, Cool Dresses | |j

forcing her to stop. Whifc she wcreamed for help, wltnestiew iwld, Flynn dragged her from the car and threw her to the pavement. He took a revolver from his pocket and fired one shot, the bullst entering her mouth. Ho turned the gun on hlmeelf and pulled the trigger. He wax dead when police arrived. Mrs. Piersoil died a few minutiw later. None Injured When Two Autos Collide No one was injured when an automobile drive by Carl Mainline of Celina side-swiped one driven by .Mine Margaret Townsend of Berne Saturday night at 11:30 o’clock. The accident occurred four and one-half miles south of Decatur on U. 8. highway 27. Tho cars were only slightly damaged. o - Rejected Suitor Kills Sweetheart Indianapolis, Ind.. June 3 —(UP) — Mary Elizabeth Ferguson. 20 year old divorcee, was killed in her home here today, shot through the heart

Page Five

by a rejected suitor. •> Ntlghbora said they heard her r call for help, a shot was fired and B a young man, known only as “Tom--11 my” ran down the etairs from the B girl's apartment. The victim had complained re--1 cently that "Tommy" wus molesting '* her with undeaired attentions, neighbors wild-

MADISON 'll s || 2 - FEATURES - 2 ; 1 i Today & Tuesday < » : EXTRA SPECIAL I ; Feature No. 1 f i LEW AYRES and , I GINGER ROGERS in i ‘Don’t Bet on Love’ i Feature No. 2 t ; 808 STEELE in ; “Land of i 5 Missing Men” ■