Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 220, Decatur, Adams County, 17 September 1935 — Page 5
WORK 11 S^BJ^-— h<‘ concluded, county »tul township ■Bmsz!’* 1 ’ 11 ’ n'<’' el ' H« fii,ls h "',L.H of the striker*. “ refused 30 and 36 ’ 'p 11L front the trustee h ‘."" t.e.vnstup constable I, "'“ i i nt forth cents " S' del is red he would MS TdtttnMntn given by Coy M";;* striking workers should M' ' ••ne.'-s.nv .not proper retax payers behind me Mjlcanne' "- k RttUl i^B" l r'“’"of Coy at Indianapolis in conditions in the township B'od be made .f the ultimatum disregarded ■ i.om; leaders I CONTI MT.: 1 I T.' iMj'AGE ,pk-T7'.i . dT.el.y nil.- the election |^B, k . \lt. • ! ' T'-iemt Tharpe, accounts. Hiles half r ' VP "".' s^R ( | audits books, whim «HK citizen may Ms . ' '.or. mor. Mjlt ,|>i. ■• ■ appointment of public S. hool teacher, and ■L <,,,,1 any one without cause. j governor may call out the at his pleasure. He is the judge of cause. court may enjoin the gover-, ; r oni using troops. No court books-rolls] ' " r '~ Tlieater _ M Last Time Tonight - *■■ U C. HELDS and tM MARY BRIAN * in WinE MAN ON THE ‘ ■II.YIXG TRAPEZE”. ‘^Bdded—l " o Cartoons. and ■fraramount Pictorial. 10-20 c .^■r,.4 sat. - NOAH BEERY. Jr. -FIVE PAD MEN" with Wally Buffalo Bill, Jr.. Art M.x, Morrison. B II Patton, Mon. Tues.—"THE RAVEN' (FRANKENSTEIN) KAR KLofc and DRACULA, LUGOSI. B| Poe's WEIRDEST Shudder ■ Story comes to life! I CORT ■ Last Time Tonight - ■lames Cagney • Pat O’Brien ■ Frank McHugh ■ THE IRISH IN U§” DeHyvOand Allen Jenkens Bpius— Ail Color Silly. Symphony. K and Fox News. B- Wed. - Thurs. E Bette Davis - Geo. Brent ■ -FRONT PAGE WOMAN" ■>lu*-Hal Leßoy "MAIN ST. FOL and Woild War Pictures ■•the YANKS ARE COMING." B all AT ICc-15c B Coming—- ■ Joe E. Brown BRIGHT LIGHTS" ■ | Patricia Ellis - Ann Dvorak B William Gargan. ■ Last Time Tonight - S H. RIDER HAGGARD’S £ M ondrous Romance I “SHE” SI with Helen Gahagan. Randolph £■ Scott. Helen Mack. Nigel Bruce. ■ A dded—WALT DISNEY'S . WHO ■ killed cock ROBIN" A Silly ■ Symphony m COLOR. 10c-25c - ■ V3n ' Joel McCrea in "WOMAN H| WANTED" with Lewis Stone. Edgar Kennedy, Adrienne Ames. ■ JHE SEARCH IS ON . , for ANN ■ CRAY! Watch A|| Cars , She . s beauty . . hut don't be fooled . . ■ She's DYNAMITE! The Under ■ world wants her for reasons of SI.. 5 own ■ ■ ■ but a dashing young ■I u 9 |tlve ’rom love, wanted her ■’Tost Os all! 10c-15c ■I - GEO. RAFT <B. ALICE ■ *" " EVERY NIGHT AT ■ with Patsy Kelly, FranE '-Word, and the Three K tdio Rogues'
trans for Inspection The governor may remit sentence* for contempt of court, inj eluding the eentencea of the suIpreme court. Gen. L. F. Guerre may increase ' hi* state police force to an army unlimited. East Baton Rouge parish, of which Raton Rouge, the capital, is nrat, can elect only half of its 26 police jurors county commission era- the governor names the other half. New Orleans receives no state road funds. State agents collect the city'* texee and keep jrercentages for the state. Stats tax commissioners may change a city's tax aseenments afiter bills are rendered and paid by ' the citizens. These are the chief lawn—dox ens of others sharply limit power of localities over ail governmental function. One set prohibits the expenditure of federal funds unless ] under supervision of a state board • and a set passed after Long's death makes it a criminal offense for a federal official to perform a function not directly authorized by the federal constitution. The women's committee of Ixmisiana, the Militant Square Deal Association, the Jackson Democratic clubs headed by Francis Williams. Mayor T. 8. Walmsley of New Orleans, all political enemies ■ of Long, and many private citizens, including two leading newspaper : publishers, have enlisted in a war I to repeal the laws that began when Long was buried. Whatever else happens in Louisiana. the influence of Huey Long : will survive in its taWs. The constitution of Ixmisiana, ' which Ixmg amended, slighted and {rose above, was drafted in troublesome reconstruction days. After 60 years, it still provides, for example. that the legislature is vir tually impotent without the governor. That is lyecause negroes once ran the legislature, but could not elect a governor in statewide voting. — o— — LIST PROGRAM I -— , CONTINUED FROM X AUK ONE work both in America and in distant parts of the world 4:00 Adjournment. Evening Annual keung People's rally of! the Salamotiie Association. Miss i Louise Jameson, president, presiding. Song service. Business meeting — roll call, rei poi*ts. election of officers. Special number. Devotions. Special number. Address —Miss Elsie Root. Special number. Installation of new officers. Closing song. Benediction. o RENEW SPECIAL CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE portant obstacle to participation in the federal program. Under the Indiana law, the various boards of county commissioners m > A / - I f Mil 11/' fill I' / J l , Ma ■CISd !■ | V VAN HEUSEN "Country” QU IDT Model Ullin I i (WITH VAN HEUSEN COLLAR ATTACHED) Here ... at last... is a col- ' lar-attached shirt with a collar that STAYS smart... a genul ine Van Heusen collar. Yes, gentlemen, and in your favorite colors, and in swagger pencil stripes and regimentals. Drop in and see them. Peterson & Everhart Company
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1935.
100,000 See Boys of ’6l Parade in Grand Rapids
twl 11 In '' ffilT N 1 / & i ol w ■abWll 41 L i &
More than 100,000 persons lined the sidewalks and streets in Grand Rapids, Mich., to witness the parade of the Grand Army of the Republic during
dictate the size of the pensions. The slate reimburses the counties for half of their pension expenditures up to $7.50 per person, making the total pension sls. Meager pensions have betyi pajd in many counties, and as a result there is a large balance in the state's “matching" funds. The law probably will be < hanged to permit the state to pay the entire pension and Ihus get the maximum sls matching pension offered by the federal government. — o NO OBJECTIONS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE and Adams county. Tie board con-! vened at 1 o'clock this afternoon to hear these budgets and to begin the final draft. The hearings held this morning were for: township; Monroe corporation. Geneva corporation. Deca tur corporation. Berne corporation, the Decatur school city, and the Decatur library. All members of the board were
Hollywood
By HARRISON CARROLL | Copyright, 1935, King Features Syndicate, Inc. HOLLYWOOD—After spirited bidding. Nelson Eddy, the new idol of the movie tans, gets possession of the musical library of Louis Graveure. who startled the world by transforming himself from
L. c j ■ ;"\I KhlW j| Nelson Eddy
a baritone to a tenor and again, by deserting America for Europe. As his first gesture of ownership. Eddy Is returning to Eleanor Painter, Gravetire’s divorced wife, some 200 pieces of music that once belonged to her.
The Graveure ( collection, numbering about 8.000 songs, scores and orchestrations, is rated as one of the most important in the country and, along with what Eddy already owns, will give him j one of the flnest privately-owned musical lAraries In the world. The blond singing star, who is off to Lake Tahoe to make "Rose Msrle” for M. | G. M. will erect a building on his Beverly Hills estate to house thi collection. > — Gene Markey's postponed trip to England is on again. He leaves Hollywood soon to adapt his own story, "The King's Pajamas", for British producers. Movie jobs again prevent Joan Bennett from accompanying him. Fhe Is working for Darryl I Zennck in "The Man Who Broke the Bank at Monte Carlo" and Is contracted to Walter Wanger for a picture after that. If Wanger will set back his starting date, the blondest of the Bennetts says she'll join Markey In England. Leo Morrison, the half-pint agent who handles Max Baer's movie engagements. is burned up. He can't understand who started the rumor 1 that Maxie's next picture will be a "colored short”. You Asked Me and I'm Telling Yon! Marge Cassidy. Hollywood: Hey. I • can't read the future In a crystal ' ball I The odds on the reconciliations you mention, however, might be 1 about like thia: Virginia Bruce and Jack Gilbert, five to one against; Adrienne Arties and Bruce Cabot, flve to three against. His pals la Hollywood will be surprised to hear that illness »ay force Richard Boleslawskl, the director, to ■ i
A glimpse of parade
their annual encampment there. Surviving veterans of the G. A. R. trudged through the street! amid thundering applausa of the spectators.
present today. They are: James A. Hendricks, me-mber of county council, president of the board; Mayor Arthur R. Holthouse, Decatur; Chris Stengel, member of the Berne school board; Trustee Howard Manlier of Union township; Ernest Reicheldeffer, Geneva; Frank Johnson. ißerno route, and Theodore Ewell of Preble township. SEVERE STORM CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE moving under her own power or in tow. It added that three of the crew were injured. Two ships, one believed an AmI eriean vessel, were reported standimg by, but the wind and waves ' made the lowering of lifeboats un- ! thinkable. While the Mary Kingsley fought to keep afloat the steamer Brompton Minor, 1,735 tons, bound from Cardiff for the Baltic with timber and carrying a crew of 17, wirelessed that she was in distress off Ovens lightship. Isle of Wight. A destroyer and' a tug, sent to
ask far a six months’ leave of absence from M. G. M. An old shrapnel injury from war days has been talking back recently and Boley wants to go to England to consult the specialist who gave him relief once before. The director would have mado tho trip some time ago, but for ths expected baby in the family. A | series of operations may be necessary. Gertrude Michael and Ralph Bellamy have joined the sprained ankle club at Paramount. She gave I her foot a painful twist while hiking | at Lake Arrowhead and Bellamy suffered his Injury when he slipped at the door of the commissary. It's the third time for him in a few months. Luckily for the studio, he plays a cripple in "Hands Across the Table” and does all his scenes in a wheel chair. Director Norman McLeod and Arltne Judge were the other Paramount casualties. Incidentally. Arline is up and around and won't lose that role in "The Bouncer”. The admirer of what English actress followed her from London and will stay In Hollywood as long as she does? HOLLYW'OOD 11CKER-TAPE— Claudette Colbert, new free to marry, moves into her new home
about Christmas. Will there be a doctor tn the house? . . . Author Leon Gordon escorted both Peggy Fears and the Princess Paley to the Trocadero the other evening.. . James Melton, the radio star, now making a movie at Warners. turned cook for his guests.
Peggy Fears
He prepared spaghetti, a la Melton, and also southern spoon bread. ... i Success cracks up many a Hollywood marriage but Rosemary Tlieby and Harry Myers, after all kinds of tough breaks, still are together. Both are working In the Colman picture a: 20th Century-Fox. . . . John Boles can't wait to get away on a two weeks’ motor trip to the north . . - and Edward Arnold, the brave one. sailed for Honolulu Friday. Sept. U. DID YOU KNOW— That Joe E. Brown is a teetotaler and has a Seda fountain to supple, meat the bar in his house? He's crazy for ice cream soda*
her aid from Portsmouth, located ■ her this afternoon and began tow-' ing her into Portsmouth. Evary craft at sea between the | the southeastern coast of Ireland end the southwestern coast of Eng- • land wa«s menaced by a derelict , submarine, the Obsolete L-52. which broke loo«e while being towed from Portsmouth to Llanley. Wales, I to be broken up for scrap. The ad- j miralty flashed a warning that thei ■hulk was adrift 6 miles northeast of Lundy Island o WAR CRISIS EVENTS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE cruiser. 11 destroyers, and a minelaying tender which arrived there a yesterday. The Hood and Renown are the i home fleet’s battle cruisers. The ' Achilles. Neptune, and Orion are I of the second cruiser squadron of ; the home fleet. At least five of: the destroyers are of the home fleet's sixth flotilla. Athens dispatches disclosed the Greek ministry of marine had announced that 26 British battle ships and cruisers. 45 det'royers and auxiliary units would arriv-j in Greek waters between Sept. 15 and Oct. 15. visiting Corfu, Navarino and Agrostoli. Uneasy For Safety (Copyright 1935 by United Press) < Addis Ababa. Sept. 17 — (U.R) — The Italian legation in Addis . Ababa became increasingly uneasy i
NcwJDeal in College Curricula
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The collegian of the future will know more than his three R's and the classics A new deal in education has begun Instead of the natural sciences and humanities which were taught to the college man 300 years ago. more practical subjects make up college curricula today The University of Wyoming has introduced a course in dude ranching Demands for instruction in this field was insistent enough | to urge the faculty to try it Miami university in Ohio .offers « I course in marriage relations which is proving highly successful. Chicago is experimenting with a course tn practical automobile I driving for high school students E”efl the Indians have a flew deal Instead of the three R’s the Indian today is learning fertihaation, soil erosion and sheep sheering.
today over the security of Its consuls in the interior of Kthlopla. Although war appeared more imminent dally and the consuls were given permission some time ago to leave their posts, not one of them has yet started for the frontier or the capitol. The Ethiopian government, the Italian consulaJe declared. Is continually denying the consuls permits to leave and "placing other obstacles in their path. This i* unimportant in the case of Adowa. wliich is near the border, and Harrar, which is close to the Addis Ababa-djebouti railway” the consulate declared. --o • — DEFENSE MOVE CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE for about nino minutM Mr. Ratliff was unable to give Its exact, duration. The plaintiff made The statement that during the years he was troubled with exzema he visited only one other physician. This was in 1924. four years before the alleged careless treatment. After this | last X-ray treatment he testified 1 that he was admitted as a patient ; at the Great Lakes Naval Training School hospital for veterans where I unsuccessful treatment* were given i him. He also testified that one of the i Drs. Caylor signed an application j blank for the hospital on which he I diagnosed the case as being ad- • vanced chronic exzema. Following a tiff between opposI ing attorneys, over the introduci tion of pictures, the counsel for I the plaintiff re-asked certain questions. Attorneys for the defense ; objected to the repetition. The plaintiff's attorneys staled that be(cause of the objections and ensuing arguments the important facts in the testimony might have been forgotten by the jury. A motion was then made l>y defense attorneys to dismiss the jury jimd deciare the case a mistrial be'cause of the alleged misconduct of I attorneys for the plaintiff in objecting to the right of attorneys to I make objections to the submission of evidence. Law firms in the case are from I four Indiana cities. Defense attor'neys are: Thomas. Townsend and Hilgeman of Fort Wayne; Smith ■and Parrish of Fort Wayne and lEichorn. Gordon and Edris of Bluff ,ton. Attorneys for the plaintiff are Sturgis. Stine and Sturgis of Bluff ton; Einshwiller and Weicking of ' Hartford City, and Clark Lutz of ; Decatur. — o Notre Dame Student Is Fatally Injured Logansport. Ind., Sept. 17. —(U.R) —John Sweeney, 21-year-old Notre Dame university athlete, died in Cass county hospital here late yesterday from injuries suffered when an automobile in which he was riding overturned. M. J. Ford. Indianapolis, driver of the automobile, and his son. John, suffered minor injuries. The party was enroute from Indianap-
olis to Notre Dame where the youth* were to resume studies. Sweeney suffered internal injuries when he was pinned beneath the overturned automobile. ■ ■< Trade in e Good Town — Decatur
h Everyone Doesn't — Know About It — Q So We Must Keep ££ On Telling You > *** S< * / Our funeral home is a facility \ with which only a few persons Jk Mare acquainted, hence we believe / we are serving the public's best t interest by repeating that this is S' k an ideal place in which to hold J l M" services, and that no charge is made for its use. / Sr;. 3 ZWICSCS £xt y FUNERAL HOME PHONE W DAY 61 NIGHT Please-Co-opcrate with us and pay your City Light Bills for the Month of AUGUST as early as possible. Bills are ready and can be paid any day. By paying city hills early, you relieve yourself and the city employees of unnecessary delay later in the month. Your cooperation will be greatly appreciated. PAY CITY BILLS AT City Hall To The PublicI wish to announce I have sold half-interest in the Mutschler Meat Market to CLARENCE HEIMANN and starting today, he has assumed active management of the market. I take this means of thanking all my old friends and customers for their past patronage and hope the new firm may continue to be of service to you. The market will continue to operate under the same name and no change will be made in the personnel. We will endeavor to render even a finer and more complete service than we have in the past and invite you to visit or phone our market for your wants. EDGAR MUTSCHLER Phones 106~10r freeDefivery
PAGE FIVE
Rabbit Floored With Fiet York, Nub —<U.R>—Claude Kingsley of York laid low a jack rabbit with his fist. The rabbit, pursued by hi* dog, veered close enough to Kingsley for him to land a left hook behind the ear.
