Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 152, Decatur, Adams County, 27 June 1935 — Page 6

Page Six

Western Grain Harvest Heavy

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Despite the du.-t storms which struck the midwest, the 1935 grain crop promises to be one of the largest in the past 10 years. An Oklahoma farmer is shown harvesting wheat on his farm near Okla* homa City.

Father And Son Are Executed St. Thomas, Ont., June 27. —(U.P) —Ontario hanged a father and his son from a jail yard gallows early today. Frank Mae Temple, Sr., 54, and Fred Mae Temple. 21, were executed for the murder of a constable. Both died stoically, receiving spiritual solace, declining alcoholic stimulation. The father died first. Twenty minutes later his son plunged through the trap. The Mac Temples killed Constable Colin Macgregor and wounded Sergeant Sam McEwen in a gun battle May 7, 1934. Two years before, while police sought them for bicycle thefts, they fled to the

I Time to Replenish Towel Supply er Requires Just f *'° ts an( i * x)ts °f N r 42 \d gMh Wt" And When You Hffy Reopen Cottage at the Lake | ■Fj; X 1-\\. or go on Week-end § f ' Trips You Will •v< \ > -iL A* JjkYM Need Plenty of i / ,\X•= .. W Towels. f J» • W 25c 22”x44” F # Ki ii W HEAV ' ■’ - iKW •*' wh 1 towels < 1 Sale Price JOJ 1 11] 19c $ i BBBMBaI 0 ', V. wit Each. 1 wWr W BrWllllilß , i o- h I f f Urge Size “Cannon” Fancy i > f Colored i 4 I T 0 W E L S ’I Special M 29 c ./. . Each. x ' -WL ; 'l : S Fine Quality ■R I Colored Hand > <wbwM« fl TOWELS 29c .;J Each. HARDWARE and HOME FURNIS'HINGS H ■ B

1 United States, going first to Erie, Pa., then to Canton and Sandusky, , Ohio, where they formerly lived. Returning to Ontario, they found police waiting for them and the gun fight ensued. o Legion Committee Proposes Changes Indianapolis, June 27. — (U.PJ —A total disability rating for veterans suffering from pulmonary tuberculosis, regardless of whether the disease was contracted in the war, was proposed in a resolution adopted by the aifttual conference of the area D rehabilitation committee of the American Legion here. Other resolutions adopted provided that simpler and standardiz-

ed procedure ba established for veterans’ claims; that all regional offices of the veterans’ administration have three-man rating boards; anti that general reforms be made In presentation of claims and taking of appeals. Delegates from Indiana. Illinois. Michigan. Ohio and Kentucky attended the conference. o Says Nation Able To Produce Needs Lafayette, Ind., June 27 —(UP) — The United States is able to produce al) its necessities for living and eels deft nee. Walter D. Pithin author and economist, eaid yesterday before the Purdue University i science institute. "We will be the first notion to stand on our own feet, for we can grow cheaply almost every food and clothing product necessary,” he Mid. “For continental self-sufficiency North America stands at the tetp , and for regional self-sufficiency the Mississippi valley is probably I the best example. PIQUETT GIVEN CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE merely those of an attorney to his client. The government brought the charge of harboring Van M«ter since Piquett had denied that he was Van Meter’s lawyer. Testimony at both trials revealed that Piquett arranged for face-lifting and finger mutilating operations on Dillinger and Van Meter in the attempt to change their appearance and make identification difficult. DRIVE FAMILY (CONTINUED ON PAGE THREE) with it. “We decided definitely to give up the house.” The farm. in southwestern Brown county near Belmont, is owned by Walter Rogers, Monroe county farm agent. He said he was unable to explain the attacks. Sheriff Walter Childs of Brown county said he had asked the

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, JUNE 27,1935.

Seek Liberation of Baby * -jp* L Mi hl * Hr & -* * >3 c ' ’’a * tar* 1 I : v ■ w— 5 A *7 1 J n K ■ / W 1 ' <1 J a. : ' ’ 111 Mrs. Hudson and baby Humane officers have taken steps to free 16-month-old Dell Hudson, shown in the arms of his mother, Mrs. R. Dell Hudson, from the city-federal jail at Muskogee, where Mr. and Mrs. Hudson ..nd leeir baby have been held since June 14. The parents await trial and possible death sentences under the Lindbergh law in conueUiun with the kidnaping of Lois Eden of McAlester, Okla., who accused them of holding her captive on their Arkansan farm.

state arson department to investigate the burning of the barn. Mobley said he would keep his family here at the home of his father, Monroe Mobley, until they could fine new quarters away from their persecutors. TAX-RICH PROGRAM CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE the program through this session” said Snell. | Some Republicans, however, | were anxious to dispose of the ! program so that business would ! be rid of uncertainty regarding | it- i I House Democratic leaders, cha- 1

Oust Police in Sr. Paul Purge jss^^bbHßßl ! *M»I » es. . ■Bk V~s -<r —. 1 *W ...■.\7 jfl; I * j Alexander Jamie and wire tapper. Information gathered by a private espionage system directed by Alexander Jamie, former head of Chicago’s “secret six”, shown below with the wire tapper used to gather evidence, Jed to the di> missal of Michael Culligan, police chief of St. Paul, by H. E. Warren, upper left, public safety commissioner, who also demanded resignation of four other officials as part of a purge of the department. i Warren indorsed Jamie as Culligan s successor. 1 y . All Kinds of WTJ % Fireworks • a Glorious at FOURTH Jjt. "Tk 1 Bobs Confectionery

grined at collapse of the plan for prompt adtion thrbugh sh.e senate, said they would oppose bringing the bill up in the house Under a gag rule which would protect it from amendments. —o Waiters Union Embarrassed Gadsden, Ala. <U.PJ— When the Alabama Federation of Labor met for Its annual convention here there was not a union restaurajit worker in the town. Miss Thelma Black iof BirmingnSm. organized for the Restaurant Employes Union, got busy between convention sessions. Today there is a local of 18 members.

Association Aid To Many Farmers LoutevlDe, Ky.. June 27 The 44 production Credit Associations of Ohio. Indiana. Kentucky and Tennessee have financed wore farmers so far this year than during the entire year of 1934, according to Walter !•'. Gahin, president of the Fro- ■ duction Credit Corporation of Louisville, which supervises their activities. From January 1 to June 15 aasjciation loans actually discount- I .4 by the Federal Intermediate Credit Bank of Louisville number ed 11,514 for the four states named. | in amounts totalling 14.036.000, ‘ while the total of 1934 was 11,652 loann for 34.042.000. Loans since June 15 bring the total for thia year well above the 1934 figures, he said. WORK PROGRAM CONTINUED FHOM PAGE ONE signed on April 8. President Roosevelt also approved allocation of $4,395,159 to the war department for 50 army post and national cemetery repair projects; $1,172,500 to the department of agriculture forest service; $2,000,000 to the treasury department of agriculture forest service; $2.000,000 to the treasury department for program administrative expense; $1,000,000 to the war department for administration and SBOO,OOO to the works progress administration to meet costs of supervising the employment campaign. FLIERS NEAR' CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE first financial return from a stunt that cost them thousands of dollars. Al Key, talking to his wife over! the airport radio, told her he and Fred bad ’’about decided” to stay wp “two or three weeks more.” They would like to better the unofficial record of 648 hours set by Dile Jackson und Forrest O’Brien at St. Louis. James H. Skewes, Meridian chamber of commerce president, promised them SIOO today for every day they stay u>P after the rcord is passed. The Jackson and O’Brien murk, better by almost 100 hours, was not recognized by the National air federation because their barograph, only means of proving that they stayed aloft throughout the claimed time, was not properely prepared.

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