Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 145, Decatur, Adams County, 19 June 1935 — Page 5
jgUOR f URGE HUES ARRESTS .diana Excise Police Enforcing State Liquor Law Rigidly - ■ — (?!»>< lai ,h 0 democrat) .lune H* Violator-. X Indiana liquor law during past «'<k felt the teeth in ne w law as ex.iee police In , enforcement division made proximately 20 arrests. Hinkle, chief of the enfcement division today called , entire force to headqiiartors Indianapolis for further inpctions in the law and in meth- , pf procedure based on actual fences of the men after a iek in the field. jlore common violations inctuil„les on Sunday, and eale withl permits. Ope of the important cases iich may involve the Indiana series Inc., in difficulties with alcoholic beverages comm'sup wss the arrest of Oscar Chespfifld. Clinton. Chesetrfi.ld opL lw the Clinton Bottling Works Lis alleged by the excise police kbe warehousing and to be sellg beer at wholesale and retail hout a permit. Police cont'isHed a truck and 115 cases of L shortly after Chesterfield d left the, Indiana Breweries, Lite to Clinton. He is ehargj with illegal possession, transiting without an excise tax and Bns the highways in violation | the liquor law. Chesterfield its not have a permit and the lewery is Involved for selling to person who does not hold a beer pmit. Chesterfield’s case as set r trial in municipal court of Irion county, June 16. The excise police also seized a ick load of beer containing 56 which had been transported hi Danville. 111., to Cayuga b. Adams of Cayuga was arrest-
im I COLLECTION I CHARGES S ON YOUR ■ELECTRIC I LIGHT I POWER I BILLS S BY PAYING ON S OR BEFORE I June 20 ffl’he following collecBon charges on all Blounts not paid by Bth of month followB n tfthe meter reading ■nave | )ccn authorized: on sums up to $3 ■ on sums over $3 I tin LIGHT i, j Meh office I CITY HALL
ed and charged with selling wllh . Ou ’ “ permlt and transporting without lin excise pennlt U “ K | Another cnee which likely win k be important In setting a preeef dent was Mb a ,.,. Voight, alleged to be the nro- . prletor of the West Lake Terrace dance ball near Indianapolis. This place does not have a permit and Voight Is charged with operating a nuisance. Marion county deputy sheriffs aided the excise police s in this case. ( To date the alcoholic beverages 1 commission has Issued 73 retail „ liquor permits. 181 retail beer per- » mits and 91 retail wine permits. Thousands of applications are (Pending. The department has col- ’ lected. from January to June 1, ‘ approximately $1,000,000 in tax " alone. This amount is divided >5112,000 in whisky tax. $400,000 j in beer tax and $2,500 In wine tat. HOPE FADES FOR CONTINUED FROM PAGB ONE a search over several Illinois counties.. . Porter said he was not near the ( scene of the attack. Vincent Pilgrim. suitor of the girl, likewise established an alibi. The only clues to the murderer's f identity, police said, were a blood- , stained fragment of a man’s shirt and a pink slip found in the back . of a rented automobile. Dr. E. C. Burhams, who examinf ed te body, saJd the girl died of a I broken neck. ■ o PLAN PROPOSED ! CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) i food industry to enter politics as a I means f (protection. s Final action on the resolutions • will be taken at the closing business • session tomorrow. : Courteous and cheerful service ’ and high quality goods are the two chief qualifications f a store housei wives prefer, R. H. Gifford, Swift ; and Co., executive, told the grocers. I He cited a qquestionnaire submit- . ted to housewives in 15 states. Price ■ • was voted the third most important ! factor in food buying. Newspapers I are the most effective advertising I medium, toe questionnaire showed. ABYSSINIA IS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE grimly determined to repeat the triumph of 1896 when an Abyssinian army aaniihiliated an Italian expedition of 12,000 men. Streets of Addis Ababa, customarily lined with idling loungers, ring continually now to commands shouted at little groups of men drilling on every corner. Under orders of the emperor, all government employes are devoting much of their spare time to drill. Of— CITY COUNCIL CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONB parks. The request of Rev. Elbert Morford, pastor of the Monroe Methodist church for his Sunday school class to sell home-made ice cream on the court house corner on [ Saturday night, was referred to . the board of public works and j safety. , Councilman H. M. Gillig. chanman of the street committee, reported that work has started on the Improvement of North Ninth street, between Nftttman and Dayton avenues. Mr. Gillig aleo •' ported that the pipe for *he water line extensions had arrived and that the projects would be started next week. The council and Mayor Holthouse discussed the public works subject, ft was pointed init that on any of the large improvements. CONSTIPATION NOW CORRECTED Savs It’s Almost Unbelievable MRS. MARY L. GRAPER, of 105 S Kentucky Ave. . Indtanapolis. Lid- “My bowels were alInd., said. . constil)a ted. In fact, this bowel j rouble had got- • n 'HR"* a d b e c o m e « ■OHIP ! INSTANT 1 S- ’ of laxatives lOLnd physics, and WWhad to take some- , thing for my bowjHgels nearly EVNIGHT. I , j||tori r ied ALL KINDS medicine. was the GRAPER only medicine I MRS.osa gver {OT)id that , , he what I needed. It turned out tobe thgt , regulated m> Hmm at never needed anj th g^ f of Ja that EVER CAME HERE the kind tba. D ,,biic»y endorse 1 SIS— “““■
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19, 1935.
, EJood Takes Thirteen Lives in Texas, '[ IMI L <> I : nfli Bam i v I . .c. .' ■ f --W- ' SzSUißetsy ..... S
Rising flood waters of rivers in southwest and central Texas caused the loss of 18 lives and resulted in huge property damage. Scores were reported
such as remodeling the light and power plant, the building of a sewage disposal plant, new sewers or a community building, that engineers and architects would have to be employed. Retainer fees for making the preliminary applications and other data required for such projects have been quoted from SSOO to SIOOO. The council thought that the matter should be continued, waiting to see later developments in the government's plan to create public work. The government is now making granto ( of 45% on approved projects. Bills were read by Councilman Albert Miller and allowed. The meeting adjourned. o MAYOR FREED TEMPORARILY Bangs Released Temporarily To Attend Court Hearings Huntington. Ind., June 19. —(U.R) . —Renewal of litigation between city officials and the Northern ln- ■ diana Power company today made i possible temporary release from ■ jail for Mayor Clare W. H. Bangs. The mayor was subpoenaed as a i witness a.t the hearing on petition of the power company for a permanent injunction o prohibit the tiny municipal electric plant from selling current. Bangs has been in jail since May 8 on -i contempt conviction for violating a temporary restraining order granted the power company. Hearing on the petition for a permanent injunction is expected
Tfi Ho!LYWOD
By HARRISON CARROLL < Copyright, 1035, King Features Syndicate, Inc. HOLLYWOOD.— Such brave plans , don’t always go through, but Leroy Prinz, once a wartime ace, and Hob- . ert S. Holloday H n ex-lieutenant r ' 1 of the U. 8- I ' marines, alm to I tiy 10 Hollywood j» celebrities to ■ "'Wj Nlc a r a gua to R. shoot giant Hz- E, ' ! i aids and to ex- ■ ' 1 plore Aztec ruins. K « 11 The romantic > ['venture is Baid to have the apI proval of the £■'&'*: . president of the southern republic, where ■ Lnoday flew for the marines in the Stirring days of 1927 and 1928 _ He holds the medal of honor and the navy cross for his bravery. Prinz and his associate would ’ Charge each of the Hollywood adventurers a pro-rata share of the expenses of the trip. They have got ho d of a three-motor Fokker plane and have lined up the necessary equipment. All they need now a e the hunters and Handy Scott may be On TheV l, ran’t leave anyway until . PHnz finishes dance numbers for "So Red the Rose” at paramount. Tt may relieve Dick Powell fans to know that Johns Hopkins doctors t mid nothing serious the fnatter .XX"' whv lie suffers so many headaches. The report gave no cause for alarm ■ and th« Star writes he is feebnq: flne and hating the time of his life at Annapolis. H« wants to have Admiral Seifers on his next radio program mM he has met President Roosevelt. A ".swell guy’’, the president, he says. Kemamber Robert Frazier, the ..d„’k and handsome" leading man o ,Z veers ago? He turned UP at mro-Gddwyn-Mayer playing he ro u nt a criminologist in The Mur der Man". The odd thing Is he has Xme ore durirtg b* absence from screen. He « an expert on criminal identification, finger prints,
rawtilg-.'- :»: ■ . SxiXSf ■'X T ? 5 > i’fex* V missing. Photo shows remains of a railroad bridge near Crystal City, Tex., destroyed by the raging waters of the Nueces river.
1 to last a week aud Bangs hopes to - be permitted to attend each sessi- ion.. He is one of the defendants . I in the action. ;. The power company contends it t has an exclusive right to sell elec- . tricity in Huntington under a.n ini! determinate permit formerly held ~ by the Huntington Light and Fuel . company, which it absorbed. I i The city contends that right was I r 1 forfeited when the power company s abandoned Its Huntington plant for > more than a year. s o — Liquor Retailers To I Demand Enforcement •» I . Indianaipolis, Ind., June 19 —(UP) : Strict enforcement of the state i liqu- r law will be demanded by tho j retail liquor dealers’ protective asso I elation of Indiana, Inc., a newly or- > ganized body. The retail iiquor dealers seek to I "protect their own interests and -see for theme-elves at the liquor laws are obeyed," according t > articles of incorporation filed with the secretary of state. Dealers having beer, liquor and wine permits will be enlisted. John I) T. Harris, Washington, secretary, II announced. I Members of five association will ' make confidential reports of law! II violations to state headquarters ' here. The name of the a;cased deala er will be presented to the state en- I 11 foreem -nt police for investigation.' ' ■ o State Manual Skeptical n Annapolis. Md.— (U.R) —Former Governor Albert C. Ritchie of Maryy land has turned over his guherna- >• torial duties to Harry W. Nice, hut I- the new Maryland Manual appears ! skeptical about it. Ritchies’ pica I ture, instead of Nice's, appears on d the fruit of the manual. In addl-
etc., and intends to make this his business from now on. What film beauty Is saying If she ever gets out of this, her third marriage. she’ll never wed again in 50 yeats? HOLLYWOOD TICKER-TAPE— Katherine De Mille has the bad wishes of all the agents. She refuses to hire one and does the work herself . . . visits all the studios and tries to persuade the directors to borrow i her for good parts. . . . Cocoanut [Grovers are dancing to Freddy Martin’s band. There was a big official opening to welcome him. . . • A couplo of Kansas c O j|cp;e boys want George Haft to let thrrn live in his house during a stay In Hollywood. "Understand." they assure, "we are not professional bums or chiselers, just a pair of college boys." . . . Fine going. . . . That was Randy Scott with Virginia Bruce at the Trocadero the other evening. 1 . . . Virginia, by K i?- ’, the way. is headed for Hawait and 111 e £.'• ® J South Sens as '**> soon as she makes the Ted ' J l ewis picture at . iS M. G. M. The > W trip Is primarily WK ~ for her mother's health and they , rntty fie gone two 1""..— months. Which ' irg.ma Lruce will he bad news to others besides Randy Scott. . . . Chic Sale found there arc several versions of Lincoln's Gettysburg address (variations of a wofd or sc). He is finally Using a model in tM martyfed president’s own handwriting. ... And Prince Sigvafd Bernadotte. "Stggio" to Hollywood, recently celebrated his birthday. The Jean Hersholts, the Edward Sedgwicks and the Ben KuUera helped the festivities along. DID YOU KNOW— That Merle Oberon made her theatrical debut as a young giri w ith "The Cats", otherwise the Calcutta Amatdur Theatrical society in Calcutta. India, where she was reared as a child?
'■ ■ 1 I. "I 1 — < tion, the book contains a biograph- 1 leal sketch of the former governor, although it lists 1935 members of the legislature. Last Novembers’ ' election returns, however, are included in the manual — showing • that Goverry.r Nice was duly elect- > ed. i > .Q—- ( WORK PROGRAM RECOMMENDED Public Works Construction Program Approved By Committee Washington, June 19 — (U.R) — A public works construction program costing $175,509,000 w-.-b recommended to congress by the house appropriations committee , today. The public construction provided for in the $224,472,561 second . deficiency hill, reported out by the committee, included a pro- | gram for 433 buildings, one in probably each congress district, and for new national defense projects, mainly in the Hawaiian Islands. Cut out of the bill by the committee was an administration requested appropriation of $23,862,- > 750 to reimburse the Philippines | government for the effect of gold ! devaluation on currency reserves . I of the islands. The bill, last appropriation . i measure of the session, will be - brought up in the house tomori' row. It carries funds for de- . i ficiencies in government departi ments for the present fiscal year .! and supplemental appropriations I for the next fiscal year. ! The public construction pro ’ gram for federal buildings and j postoffices amounts to $58,900,000, j which will be allocated by the I treasury and postoffice departI ments for 433 projects out of 1,153 projects being studied. Marion Hospital Washington, June 19- <U.R) Tho public construction program tinder the second deficiency bill reported to congress today included appropriation of $400,000 for vpterans hospital replacement land construction at Marion. Ind. Norman Cottom To Coach Alexandria Alexandria, Ind., June 19 (UP) Norman Cottom, co-captain of the 1934-35 Purdue University basketLal! teim, has signed a contract as basketball coach at Alexandria higili school. Cottom graduated from Wiley high school at Terre Taute. He won the Gtmbel award at the state -high -school basketball toufßanient finals in 1931. WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE—WITHOUT CALOMEL And You’ll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin’ to Go It you feel sour and aunk and the world ' looks punk, don’t swallow a lot ol'salts, mineral water, oil, lasative candy or chew nz gum I and expect them to make you suddenly sweet aud buoyant and (ull o( sunshine. i For they can’t do it. They only move the ; bowels and a mere movement doesn t get at I the -auro. The reason for your down-and-out teelir'e Is your liver. Itsahould pour out two I If this bile i» not flowing freely, your food ; doesn't digest. It just decaysi in the bowels. Gas bloat* up your stomach. You have a thick, bad taste and your breath is foul, akin often breaks out In blemishes. Your head gches and you feel down and out. Your whole aystem is poisoned. uranTER’S It takes those good, old CAKLEKS LITTLE LIVER PILLS to get these two pounds of bile flowing freely and make you Feel “up and up." They contain wonderful, harmless, gentle vegetable extracts, amazing when it comes to making the bile flow freely. But don’t ask for liver pills. Ask for Carter a Little Liver Fills. Look for the * Little Liver Pills on the red IsM- Resent a substitute. 2oc at drug stores. ©1931C.M.C0. I
STATE TO HOLD FIRE SCHOOLS State And Purdue University To Conduct Series Os 28 Schools (Special to the Democrat) Indianapolis, June 19. —The firm of a. series of fire schools, sponsored by Donald F. Stiver, director of public safety and under tho direct supervision of Purdue University, will be held July 1, probably at Kokomo, according to announcement todaoq There will be 28 schools, two each week, in fourteen regions and instructors will include John J. O’Brien, former chief of the Indianapolis fire department; Archie McCabe of Muncie, with twenty years of service behind him, and Emmett Cox, chief of the department of education in the state fire marshall department, with U yeaj-s experience as an active fireman. These fire schools were inaugurated under the sponsorship of Purdue University and the state department and are the first such scihools to be held in the midwest, culminating in a state-wide school held at Purdue University tinder th? direction of Professor W. A. Knapp, assistant de<fn of the university. The Indiana state school has gained recognition throughout the mid-west as the finest of its kind and wa.s attended by fire fighting officials from several other states. The school last year drew an attendance of 359 firemen attending the state school at Purdue. It is expected that the attendance this year will far exceed that of last. Instructions in hose laying, coupling, nozzle work, ladder work, first aid, hydraulics and actual pumping with a school iff inspection in 12 classes of buildings, will be given. The first meeting of the committees in charge of the schools will he held at the Harrison Hotel in charge of Professor W. A. Knapp, j assistant dean, June 24th. The meeting will be attended by repre- i sentatives of the Indiana Firemens ; Association, the Northern Indiana I Industrial and Volunteer Firemens’ Association, the Indiana Fire Chiefs Association, the Indiana Inspection Bureau, Purdue University and the state fire marshall department. The committees are: Indiana Firemens' Association; Chief Harry Williams, Richmond,
oi the extra Live Power—real working power—now at your command in Standard Red Crown you get long, low-cost mileage. But economy isn't the only big feature of this 1935 gasoline. The increased power output has a twofold purpose: (1) to restore, in older motors, a major share of their former speed, keenness and vigor; (2) to give newcar owners the full performance capacity of the 1935 motors. And Standard Red Crown, of course, also has an abundance of Tetraethyl Lead, the finest anti-knock agent—yet it still sells for the price of "regular." From any angle, it is the best buy in gasoline today. Stop for a tankful where you see the familiar sign of ...STANDARD OIL SERVICE. STANDARD RED CROWN Cttfr. IMS, Standard Oil C* jgy iW
Ind.; Chief Burr Hamilton, Marlon, ' Ind. I Indiana Fire Chiefs: Chief Wm. Claiborne. Logansport, Ind.; Chief I Albert Rowe, Terre Haute, Ind. I Northern Indiana Industrial and t Volunteer Firemens': Chief Leon- ’ ard Bumgartner, Berne, Ind.; Chief t Leroy Carouthers, Bremen, Ind. I Tho committees will have full charge in mapping out the program . for the regional and also the state J fire schools. . PRISON MUTINY IS CONTINUED FROM 1 AUJfI ONE under heavy guard, in at a time. The font of the mutineers ended a "strike’’ which started when the convicts went to work in the mine 1 yesterday morning. Nine mine officers, held hostage since the mutiny started, were released. Prison authorities, Jubilant that i the incident ended without blood- i shed, entered the mine to estimate i how much damage was done by < the mutineers. ( Thirty one guards, masked and I armed with shotguns, pistols and tear gas, descenued to the 720-foot | level of the mine, where the con- ‘
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victit were barricaded, shortly aftor the fans were revareed. Convicts and guards came within night of each others’ lamps about 100 feet from the shaft. A: the head of the convicts as shields were Jim Skahn and Jim Wilson, two of the guards who had been hostages since yesterday morning. —o — Minor Earthquake At I*oß Angeles Txts Angeles, June 1!) (UP)—A minor earthquake was reported Imre at 3:18 A. M. (PST today. The Shock wau .scarcely noticeable, but waj felt in scattered areas, according to reports at the shwiff'.s office. —, o Salt Lake City Reads More Salt Lake City, Utah — (UP) — Bookworms in Sdt laike City are reading more volumes and losing fewer of thsm, library reports ehaw. Circulation for the first four months of 1935 was more th in 4,000 greater than in the corresponding period of 1934. Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
