Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 179, Decatur, Adams County, 30 July 1935 — Page 5

11l LEADERS ■'»-« strike Recurrence vjH lixl. July 30- (UP) 'MtM ~t tl .!u-!< ill leaders "*»W ■' -to restore and - ", .11. I order in Terre her ■ ..nd \ —and to prcH . , of a paralyzing eM^Hpr>l" ,rik '‘ uK principl were ganimtion formed pedons. <s ' ' ■ II,IV rule and believe regardless aing-. Hum about. he k !i ''' ''' ,ry <itiz ' ,n IBM .1 from any aeti|HV " i>> m ans of violIjM, cordon io r P> a> dully going [. ;,.s dad' work." 1 • ■ bank a ES month strike of ~ |H offii-kl- and a , in ~,i ■.l <be strike .March c MADISON Theater T’liu 1 Tonight - h fcllKl I■' TEMPLE |H in b ■Sow and Forever” ■Bnith (inn Cooper and Bl Carole Lombard. ’ ■«)- \ STERLING IIOL- < uined'. Itle-lSe t VI 4 Sat ~ REB RUSSELL in : WARFARE" — and The NEW COLORTONE. Saturday. 10c and 15c Mon. Tues. "HIGH SCHOOL. Ml It turns the SPOTLIGHT Jjrßl-o cn MODERN YOUTH! P RTi I- Last Time Tonight - I WILL ROGERS I DOUBTING I THOMAS” E I 10e-25c Wed. - Thurs. ■ ■James Dunn Mae Clarke ■She daring young man" l.*V 3 ■ "Singing Silhouettes" a ■ W d *L* Brevity with Olga Bacand All Color Merric Cartoon. BS Coming—- ■ I Guy Kibbee • Zasu Pitts ■ Edward E. Horton I I "GOIN' HIGH BROW” E W *- ■—-raft- -<-+ -> | - l ast Time Tonight - 1 “COLLEGE 1 SCANDAL” ■ Arline Judge, I B} 1 ’ ‘•’lyloi, Wendy Barrie. I S®'* 1 : 4 °nu‘dy and I B *'Wt.EK THAN FICTION I I 10c-25c |B I « Thurs— MAY ROBSON & |^M STON POSTER in “STRANGII Story of your next W' neighbors . . which proves a, f °f us are crazy! rtf’.PT 0 "’ TU **’ ~ “ BREAK OF ” ~ wi *b KATHELINE 7* ORN, CHAS. BOYER, John i W Jean Hersholt. M MATTER HOW hot it* i<Fi?n 1 TSIDe ' ,Vs ALWAYS I ■RIGHTFULLY cool in I M. THEATER! A Complete | W’nge of pure WASHED Mir. ■5, Very Two Minutes, fl DRAFTS .. NO ODORS. 2 a —S 3JWT4J I

FRENCH LICK BECKONS HOOSIER DEMOCRATS TO FUN FEST; PARTY LEADERS ON DINNER PROGRAM AT EDITORIAL OUTING I 0 ■ ■< 'wr™” * V EDITORS Kj M PARTY ’ OUTING ADEQS . > *w CALLS ■«* IF TO SPEAK "L jS DEMOCRATS Sgsl& f AT ANNUAL ’JH |‘ K f BANQUET V* — • s -. HHBBc JSuSHH ' <• U.S. SENATOR SHERMAN MINTON GOVERNOR PAUL V. NUTT US SENATOR FREDERICK VAN NUYS ''aftflLKu ill'£&« ■ 4 ■■S<<■* Jr JSI £ T :.! - Bk BBBHBwMI ■■■ OMER STOKES JACKSON M RS. EMERY SCHOLL DEMOCRATIC STATE CHAIRMAN DEMOCRATIC STATE VICE-CHAIRMAN n CABARET AT v. 'L '■!■■■ FLOOR prench wr V r I sH ° W W 8 LICK , ‘ «.M ? DAN £! NG HP SPRINGS W GOLF Hk HOTEL f M T A AUG. r X W r- great pr ■ A y/ LOVE w > iu j" FEAST FF-y-\ KbHM PMTERTAINFRS JOHN WILLIAM BOEHNE MISTRESS OF CEREMONIES ENTERTAINERS member of congress

23 to ens r. ? demands of Union recognition and a closed shop. A general vstrike was called in sympathy to their dennanda that company guards be removed from the plant. o RURAL SCHOOL CONTINUED FROM I ACTE ONE pupils, Europe and Australia; eighth grade pupils, Asia. Eastern and Western Hemispheres, and all grades from fourth to eigh h, maps of Adams county, showing townships, railroads, towns and rivers. Compositions will be entered by pupils from the third to sixth grades. Third grade compositions may be written in pencil. The others niusit be written in ink. Compositions filom the seventh and eighth grades are limited to three pages. They may consist of business letters or friendly letters and must be written in ink. There will also be an exhibit of hobbies. They may consist of coin or stamp collections or any other hobbies. FRENCH DETERMINED CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE 81 freight ships, 103.000 troops and 7,900 civilians. Djibouti itself has been changed greatly. Years ago this important French colonial port was peopled with bearded veterans of the service, who sat enjoying their wines. Today one is struck by the; youth and energy of lhe white men. with white open necked shirts, white shorts, bare legs and white j shoes. The French women are j smortly, if simply, dressed in white I dresses and frocks. — 0 — EVELYN SMITH CONTINUED FRCTM PAGE ONE for New York a.nd Harry went — well, I don’t know where he went."; After she confessed to the horrifying crime, Mrs. Smith joked with) photographers and reporters. "1 would rather you didn’t all take pictures at the same time, , she said smiling at the cameramen.; "You’ll all get a chance.” She was arrested Saturday in New York a.nd was brought here, bv plane last night. She and Mrs. Blanche Dunkel, j 43-year-old grandmother w-ho con-; fessed a strange love for Lang, the i husband of her dead daughter, | came face to face soon after Mrs. Smith arrived in Chicago. "That's the woman.” shouted Mrs. Dunkel, pointing at Evelyn with a quivering finger. "She's the one to whom I paid $100.” Mrs. Smith readily admitted her identity but at tirat denied any knowledge of the crime. "I'm glad to come back and clear my name,” she had said. And then , when her stories conflicted, she said she guessed she was “in a jam.' When she heard Mrs. Smith had confessed, Mrs. Dunkel seemed

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, JULY 30, 1935.

Attorney Sentenced ■FgSSBHwMWK ■ W'WI I / - 'r’k Ben B. Laoka. Denver attorney, convicted of conspiracy in con- 1 nection with the disposal of the $200,000 ransom paid in the, Charles F. Urschel kidnaping i case, was given a 10-ycar prison sentence by Federal Judge Edgar ' S. Vaught in Oklahoma City. greatly relieved. "See,” she said wearily, “I was telling the truth all the time. She's such a terrible woman that Evelyn. I’m glad to know its al! over now.” Mrs. Dunkel had told police she had hired killers to “get rid” of Lang because she "would rather ’ see him dead than marry another I woman.” Lang’s battered and legless torso ! was discovered in a Chicago gangI land “cemetery” July Bth. Mrs. Dunkel was taken into custody i shortly afterward and admitted she ) wanted her son-in-law out of the j way because she was jealous of him. j After hfs wife, Mal.'le, died a fewI months ago, Lang met and wooed j Josephine McKinley. 24, and would ; have married her this fall. "Blanche was always jealous 'over Ervin,” saJd Mrs. Smith, who once was Mrs. Dunkel’s bosom friend. "I think she killed her daughter so she could have him to l herself.” Dougherty said the complete confession w-ould be made public later, today. 0 LEAGUE MEETS 1 CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE ; — - ' Ethiopia w-ould resume negotlaI tion of responsibility for frontier clashes without even talking a boir j the much bigger problems which

are the real reasons why war is imminent. The league already has decided to consider the whole dispute if there has been no settlement by August 25. Between now and then Italy would be able to make further big scale preparation for attack, while most of Europe's arms exporting nations are refusing to supply Ethiopia. ■ '■ —o TEACHERS WILL CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE s bools will talk to the Berne teachers. It is probabl' that the institute will be held again in the Decatur high school building as has been the custom in the iiasit. —————o SPECTATORS AT CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE dustrions.” Sprinkle was hissed by the crowd when he drew his conclusion bf insanity after telling of Thompson’s boasts of his affairs

WORLD’S NEWEST BIG SHOW TO BE NEAR HERE AUGUST 8

The world's largest ckcus, travel-1 ing on three trains of double-length steel rai'road cars, with 1,080 people, 5 herds of elephants, 812 menagerie animals and 500 horses will exhibit.in Fort Wayne, Thursday, August 8 and throughout this section plans are perfecting for the attendance of every man. woman and child so it seems —a.t one of the performances. Everybody wishes to see the Cole Bros.-Clyde Beatty Circus this year, which recently returned from a triumphal five-year tour of Euorope. and it is a foregone conclusion that the world's largest tent, seating 10,000 persons, will be fi'led to the las,t chair afternoon and night. Six rings and stages nnd the hippodrome track, to say nothing of the vast maze of the earth’s foremost arenic talent —four hundred acknowledged kings and queens of daring, grace, skill and incredible agility. Fifty clowns will project ten times that number of minth waves. Countless new foreign features and innovations new to America are introduced on the gigantic program of the world’s newest big show this year. Clyde Bmutty’s gigantic trained animal exhibition will be presented in the ■main performance. Throughout circus day the three gigantic tented stables of the Cole Bros.-Clyde Beatty organization will be open to the public free of charge Here lovers of fine horses may view at random hundreds of the world’s most beautiful thoroughbreds. Perfect specimens of almost every known strain will be found in the big show’s great free horse fair which also includes a congress of tiny Shetland ponies to delight the little folks. One of the largest, finest and costliest street parades will be seen at 11 a. m. Hundreds of horses, five herds of elephants and two caravans of camels from the great desert will be seen. In the pictur-

with girls and his pride in photographs showing himself and a young girl in the nude. The hisses were, repeated when the next witness, Sam Huddleston. another factory worker, ami Huddleston’s son. Harry, said (hey believed Thompson to be insane on the subject of sex. OVER HUNDRED CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE ; ist red by William F.. Owens, 4is-j trict coordinator who will have his ) office in Fort Wayne. Counties in this district will be Adams, Allen, Wells, Whitley, Wa.iash. Miamai, Huntington, Giont and Blackford. o , Tent Pitched On Building Detr it —(UP> —C. G. Larrabee. ■1 cashier, solvul the (problem of hot summer nights in the city by piloting a tent on ths roof of the Recreation building. He intends to sleep there until the middle of September, he said. o Dance Wednesday Sunset

t ■ Ws ■ -J ■ - I r* 'wL 't f I ■ wkn 11 wR 1 / ■ I • — Betty Stephens and Tillie, i Fan Dancing Elephant ' esque line of march will be more i 1 than three score elaborately carved and gilded allegorical floats, tab- j 1 lean wagons and open dens and, cages displaying the Clyde Beatty, I menagerie. Doors to the big show < i and menageria will open at 1 and , 7 p. m. The big show starts at 2j > and 8 p. m. General admission, seats are provided with comfort-) • able foot rests.

SENATE OPENS CONTINUED FUOM PAGE ONE FremstOnid adjournment. The 96 page m«Mure. introduced in tentative draft by ways nnd means eonimittee chairman Robert L. Dotiahlon yesterday carried out in the main the premdent'a propoaal to congress six weeks ago for revenue legislation "to prevent un unjust concentration of wealth and economic power.” it proposes to raise through new inheritance and gift taxes, $110,000,000; through excess profits taxes. through a graduated corporation tax, $16,000,000, and through increased personal income taxes, $50,000,000. The man who will have to dig deeper in his pocketbook is the man who makes $50,000 "net" or more a year. Corporations which will have to pay more are thone which make more than 8 per cent profit and those with net in-

come of more than $15,000 yearly. The legislation was under fire from liberals and conservatives. House Republican whip Joseph Martin, MaNs.,, pqt'dict|ed almost a solid party vote against 17. "It doesn't mean anything” said Martin. “It doesn’t raise enough to be worth while.” (JLIDER CONTEST OF ALL SOVIET TO OPEN SOON ■ Moscow —(UP) — The eleventh i All-Union gliding meet will take | place in August in Koktebel Crimea, with the participation of first-elaee masters of Soviet gliding. Contests will be conducted for the best display of flying technique.

You Haven’t Long To Wait! GET READY FOR THE GREATEST THRILL * OF THE YEAR STARTING MONDAY THE BIG SPECTACULAR FREE STREET FAIR — AND — AGRICULTURAL EXHIBIT On The Streets of Decatur AUGUST 5 ° 10 6 BIG DAYS ft and Nights y Parades - Bands - Shows Exhibits of All Kinds Rides Amusements Spectacular Free Acts Prize Dairy Day Exhibits NEVER aIuLLMENT

Pilots are preparing eeteral gliders of orginal design to particlpote in con'wits. A two-seater hydro-glid-er is being built in beningrud, and alight on, water and laud. A giant many-seater glider Intended Tor flights in tow ulso is under construction. The- Mow'ow Glider Works Ls completing construction of eight new

> Distance W iped! Out Modern equipment and faciliZ 1 ties wipe out distance. It makes /I little difference from whence a x ■m ? call comes; we answer such calls r / promptly and efficiently. \ Even if a call comes from a town many miles away, we are L capable of caring for every detail. v D In such instances, our training r v _2Tand experience stand us in good J "' a<l ' < Ml < ZWUCICS > y FUNERAL HOME phone day6l

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gliders, Among them L the "tandem” glider with a double row of parallel wings. •ell Rings When Fish Bite Damariscotta, Me., —(UP) —Wilder Robinson has put fishing on a scientific Inals. After casting at Biscay latke, he leuvea his pole on a landing. When he gets a bite, a bell rings and he hauls in the catch.