Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 186, Decatur, Adams County, 7 August 1935 — Page 5
■IDE ISLAND I VOTES G. 0. P. tion N<* w |)eal Test « 1 "• <u,r> ~ Republican forces W*V. ,te.l t’>e "W ,I, ' al by a Q* than nine to seven, W '' - - - Bfe e Fran"- RiA «R> 46.921. »"toNovember sent M Wer ~,.. t>. rar to congress ' urill o ot '.'l. votes yesturned an anti-new deal an with a plurality of conML|r more than 11.000. ■ „ . proclaimed TO* „f t. • tn--, District Judge W r Ri.k as a sweeping ri ,|.jit Roosevelt , !>, !> national ad- " f ' h< ‘ " P " 1 ’ M'T ~.4da- Treasurer .,,nested Risk's but insts'.'d tile results v national beating. Mu ,ampa an-'d a* 811 ,l,lconl ' ■ L, £ new d-’a.l opponent, and at'.ok,.| the process|Hu, nf the a.:-ml'iire adjust-fK-'attm-tit' ♦'•aniitic '' many • -d cotton mil's Hl rph.f r. ,ip ents are noremployed. a 'i appeal for the Te teran' pledging him- ... •d at payment bonus. MFlc.-:.. ■ ’ ' indicated an bond '--lie to cover a |K.. ; ■ «■>-)< program that financed to the „f 55 " nt by the feder«a- dfea.ed. This hl Republicans as an : President policies. ,j.r "f $.1.0110.000 reb.t of unemployed, to hav won approval. ■Mj;. ?,<;'■! . tory was con|Kp, , n nit>an a.nd rural ,-v.epl all cities hut In y. w-’. the mayor's let RT jlToniffht - Thursday II KARLOFF Biases! Thriller Since — ■THE BIACK ROOM’ Derr,tile ■ Robt. Allen Marion Marsh. Snrmp Howard - Daphine Ba: HIS FIRST FLAME" *H Color Cartoon, fl ALL FOR !oc-15c Be one of the first to see |Bi marvelous picture, as it is one *3 the first Indiana showings. SH Sun. Mon. Tues. Boles - Jean Muir - Chas. ®Hten.; : ORCHIDS TO YOU" U " — i Bonight & Thursday || “SCHOOL FOR M GIRINS” B l .'. I ’. ANN SHIRLEY, star of Ann of Green Gables,” n c e \ and Paul Keliv W ‘ ,N and SEE What Goes On W’lnd W Walls of a- GIRL'S hORM SCHOOL! Bhiov).? °^ v ’* Revue and ■RANGER TH A N sicW U '\ 10c-15c K * Sat ~ ' MEN W'THOUT ~with Fred Mac Murray, Evans. Lynne Overman. - Jacl< Hol *’ Government K Crack Do "n •. . their barkcalling the role of Gang K,’ ' ' lhe name of* a Public M yon every bullet. 10c-15c. RjVE" On ' Tucs —"HOORAY FOR H..... Gene Raymond, Ann ■ob’T-a Pert Kelto "- bill ■ • The CHAMPION K« S m EB ° f the WORLD! 3re swe «ping the HL, ' ' Re " T ” n =e that will your heart! Bittn!, IN anfl enj OY A GOOD 4 ! B-n T'" PEACE and QUIET ■ th,,. *' R CONDITIONED | Hcocii where 11 18 always y COMFORT ABLE!
office haa heen hold by Democrat* for 17 yearn. Henry Stevens Wheeler. a Republican, defeated Jeremiah F. Mahoney, Democrat. Risk auct-eeda to the aeat vacated by Francis H. Condon, who re-Hignr-d to a/tcept a 4>lace on the ataite supreme court. Condon waa elected laat November with a plurality of 21,000 over hia RepnbV.can rival. easterFohio CONTINUED FROM RAGE ONE county were under aeveral feet of water. The Tuscarawaa river at New Philadelphia was seven feet above its normal stage and rising rapidly. Lightning struck a cattle barn at the Tuscarawas county children's home, netting fire to the building and burning several head of livestock. Damage was estimated at $5,000. The Tuscarawas river was up seven feet, the highest in 20 years, and was etill rising. Telephone service was disrupted. Several railroad washouts were reported in the district. The bridge at Beach City dam. in the Muskingum watershed conservacy district, was washed out. Work on the flood control project was abandoned. Reports of animals being drowned or killed by lightning were numerous. A cloudburst accompanied by lightning struck Columbus at 7 a. m. More than an inch of water fell in an hour and several minor fires were reported. Flood damage in Ohio during the last two months hae been estimated at $5,000,000 by government weather officials. A storm of cloudburst proportions swept Ohio county, just across the -date line in West Virginia, causing crop and property damage estimated at SISO,fMW. Three houses near Wheeling. W. Va.. were washed away, highways were badly damaged. A ten foot wall of water rushed down Little and Middle Wheeling creeks. The heroic efforts of Frank Miller, a tourist, saved the lives of Mr and Mrs. J. W. Jefferson and their nine-months-old baby, Gloria. The Jeffersons, also tourists, were unable to swim, and Miller carried them to high ground just before the swirling waters carried their automobile ito destruction. Numerous summer camps wer* destroyed. Half a dozen bridges were washed out. At Newcomerstown. O„ flood waters put out of commission the New York-Chicago telephone cable affecting 10S circuits, the Ohio Bell telephone company reported. ■ o ■' -— Herbert Fensler Enlists In Navy Herbert Ellsworth Fensler. son of Mns. Rosie E. Fensler, residing at R. R. No. 7, Decatur was enlisted in the Navy Tuesday at the Navy Reruiting Station. 730 East Washington Street. Indianapolis. Indiana. He left immediately for the Naval Training Station at Great Lakes, Illinois, for a twelve weeks period of training in infantry, seamanship and other naval fundamentals. Upon completion of his training he will be eent to a ship of the United State* Fleet. HIS HEADACHES VANISHED SEVEN MONTHS AGO I — Another Indiana Man Tells How Indo-Vin Ended Liver Affliction; Lasting Relief MR. GEORGE WINE, of R. F. D. No. 3, Box 3, Marion. Ind., said: ‘‘You can't imagine what a relief
it is to be free Ifrom those spells lot biliousness and lawful headaches, Iwhich have never ■come over me ■since I took Indo|Vin SEVEN ■MONTHS AGO. ■My liver used to jbe sluggish and 1 ■was always hav■ing terrible sick ■headaches and my skin had turned almost yellow looking and 1 I. _ ... aw n iDzWltyllf
■> -f ". ' ' T i . J MR. WINE
guess anybody who saw me thought I was a at subject for the undertaker. I tried everything under the sun but nothing helped me until I got Indo-Vin and it has done me more good than everything else, PUT TOGETHER. My liver Is in fine condition now and the headaches do not come and my complexion is brighter and that former yellowish look in my face is gone. This medicine has almost changed me into a NEW PERSON and it has been seven months since I have had to take it. IndoVin is sold here in Decatur at the Holtbouse drug store, and by every good druggist throughout this section. —
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1935.
SUSPECT SAVED FROM ANGRY MOB Frankfort Man Accused Os Attacking Girl, Taken To Indianapolis Indianapolis, Aug. 7.—<U.R>—Saved from an lr»te mob which stormed the Frankfort jail too late, Frank Mace, 50, was held on an npen charge In the Marion county jail here today pending outcome of injuries of a nine-year-old girl he aJlegedly assaulted. Mace was spirited ,to the jail here .by Sheriff FTdA Rodgers of Clinton county when mob violence was threatened. Dr. C. B. Compton. Frankfort, reported improvement in condition of the attack victim today. The child was grabbed while walking home from a motion picture theater last night, carried to a nearby cornfield and assaulted. Persons kvfng in the neighborhood were attracted by her screams and found her in critical condition. Mace, married, recently employ-1 ed by the city street dt-tiartment, . was arrested at his home less than an hour later on the strength of a ' record of two previous attack charges and the description given by the child. He was sentenced to two to 14 years in Lafayette in 1929 in connection with assault on a small girl and was arrested in connec- ■ tion with attack on an eleven-year-oki Frankfort girl three years ago. He was fined $lO and costs on an assault and battery charge in the latter case. Frankfort police said he admitted a’tacking the nine-year-old girl and took him to the Clinton county jail. . As word of the attack spread ■ through Frankfort an angry mob I gathered at city police station. j City authorities telephoned Sheriff Rodgers that the situation was becoming critical. The sheriff just completed arrangements for removing Mace when the mob arrived at the 60-year-old brick jail building. Handcuffed together, the sheriff and prisoner spirited across 'the jail yard a short distance ahead of the mob and sped out the alley. Confusion in -the mob enabled them to escape. Several automobiles loaded with men. believed to have followed the sheriff to Indianapolis, circled the Marion county jajl after Mace had _______________ ' ’ - «■
The Lesson Os Friendship
il to wl/j IB ■MWMWCjMMwafcyV * -U , -AM »twr pTiWYIt -afwMr BHLJBL 8 .g.-35 Photo Courtesy Edwards Studio A PYTHIAN DRAMA IN FIVE ACTS PRESENTED BY THE DRAMATIC TEAM OF KEKIONGA LODGE No. 65 DECATUR. INDIANA Prologue — Walter Elzey CHARACTERS Damon—A liberty-loving Senator of ancient Syracuse George Morris Pythias—His faithful friend, an army officer W. Guy Brown Dionysius—Commanding General, chosen to be King ...Roy Mumma Philistius —President of the Senate, and leader of the revolutionary imperial movement W. F. Beery Procles—Captain of the Guard, and Herald of the king Elmer Chase The Headsmen; eight Senators, and a number of Guardsmen and Plebeians. SYNOPSIS Act I. —The Intrigue to make Dionysius king. Act 11. —The Condemnation of Damon to death. Act lll.—The Substitution for Friendship’s sake. Damon returns to bid his wife and child a last farewell. Pythias gives himself as a hostage for his friend’s return. Act IV.—The Temptation of Pythias in Prison. ActV- —The Interrupted Execution. Programs by Courtesy Os CLOVERLEAF CREAMERIES, Inc., and MUTSCHL.ER PACKING CO.
Trace Flow of Silver Dollars r * -J TH'B I Utnirf lrS ‘ 111 f f r t if r '•• u lliii All silver dollars—and two girls. * •*»- - --a v. Looking over the first batch of the Standard Oil company’s 110,00 ft silver dollars given out in payrolls in a "flow-of-money” test. Employes received blanks on which they were to indicate how the dollars were spent. Five thousand stores in Cleveland, where the test was conducted, were urged to co-operate with the plan *and record when and how the money was received. The two girls, are employes of the tompany. ’
boon admitted but made no attempt to storm the more modern structure. o — SPECIAL TRAIN CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE j The other car will be filled with i product* of other concerns which are shipped fresh. There wil lalso he a miniature refrigv’tator on a truck which will be includ 'd in the Dairy Day parade. This will be a replica of the standard Erie r frigerat' r car. Captain R. P. Stein of th.' Erie police will have a force of men in uniform to assist th-e Decatur police t in handling the crowd. The Erie band of 35 pieces will be in Decatur Dairy Dry under the dire tion of Elmer Rann. This band i han been organized for 25 years and) 1 haa play d in cities all over Indiana.
Erie officials who will be present ar : W. L. Kendall of Chicago, geneial d-iiry agent; H. B. Rogers of Buffalo, N. Y. Central live stock agent. J lin G. Hill of Chicago general freight agent; H. T. Harlow of Chicago, general passenger agent; W. FJ Ross-r of Youngistown, Ohio, genet'll manager. R. K. Woodruff, Cleveland, vicepresident in charge of operations; F. C. MacCarthy, of Huntington, division freight agent; E. J. Beane, of Boston, Massa huttes, general agent. o Old Age Taken For Ride Cape Girardeau. Mo. (U.R) — Age has its place, even in speed. Fainter William Ray will testify. Three horses, 22, 21. and 12 years old, ran faway with Ray’s 32 year-old binder, Ray, 61. in the seat.
RUN-OFF VOTE FOR KENTUCKY Leading Candidate For Governor Fails To («et 51 Per Cent Louteville, Ky., Aug. 7 —(UP) — With a run-off primary election on September 7 assured, returns from K utucky's primary of la*U week showed today a lead of more than 1(1,000 votee for Thomas S. Rhea over Lieut. Gov. A. S. Chandler in the race for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination. Rhe,a received 152.855 vote* in 3015 of the state's 4219 precincts; Chandler received 142,136. Rhea picked up 400 votes in Logan county. However, Rhea did not have the 51 per cent of the total billots neccanary for the nomination. He will run against Chandler in the second primary provided by state law. Other candidates for the Democratic nomination for governor received the following vote; F. A. Wallis, 31,856; Slam Huddleston. 11,324, and B. P. Nootton 2505. Judge King Swope was assured of th Republican nomination for governor. receiving 81.228 votes in 2204 precincts. Two other candidates re-
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ceiv«d 15,287 voten. iln th* Democratic context for the lieutenant governor nomination, Keen Job neon led with 80,330 votes in 2560 precincts, to 39,426 for J, E. Wi»e. VISITORS TAKE CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONB> ■ented by Peter B Lehman of Adams county, winner of the cup at Huntington last year. Mr. Lehman eliminated himself by permitting his daughters to exhibit a number of the cattle from his herd. Breeders given prizes for cowe with excellent butterfat records which were entered in the judging contest were: Victory Noll, second prize aged cow, 558 pounds las five year old; Everett Beaty, first prize, four year old cow, 402 pounds, as two year old; Victory Noll, 397 pounds as two year old; Kelsey Lesh and son, first prize three year old, 414 pounds as a two year old. Awards made Tuesday afternoon by Professor Fitch were: Aged cow: Victory Noll Farm, first; Victory Noll Farm, second; Victory Noll Farm, third, of Huntington. Cows, four year old: Everett Beaty, first and senior grand champion; Victory Noll Farm, second; all of Huntington. Cow, three years old: Kelsey
Page Five
Lesh & Son, Huntington, first; Roy 1). Noaker. Huntington, second; Victory Noll farm, Hunffngton. third; Louis Koldeway, Adams, fourth; Victory Noll Farm, Huntington. fifth, and Peter B. Lehman, Adams, sixth. Cows, two year old: Roy Nosker, Huntington, first; Victory Noll farm. Huntington, second; W. H. Stultz. Adams, third: Victory Noll farm, Huntington, fourth; Peter B 1-ehman. Adame’ fifth; Juanita Lehman, Adams, sixth; Everett Beaty, Huntington, seventh. Get of Sire: Krlshy Lesh and Nosker, Huntington, first; Everett Beaty. Huntington, second; Louis Koldeway, Adams, third: Peter B. Lehman. Adams, fourth and fifth. Produce of Dam: Kelsey Lesh & Son, Huntington. first; W. H. Stults and Dale Moses, Adams, second; Everett Beaty, Huntington. third, and Juanita and Barbara Lehman, Adams, fourth. (Five club heifers from the different counties, Huntington, first; Adams, second. ... . o Odd Accident Injures Driver lY'abody, Mass. I UP) —Charles Murphy, 28-year-old milk truck driver, suffered a bmln concussion and other injuries when his truck struck a rut in the road. Several cases of milk bounc'd in the air and struck hint on the head.
