Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 237, Decatur, Adams County, 7 October 1935 — Page 5
IfiniPHOLDS protl’MTION Three Judges I 1,, Haute. Ind’. <>< t. -<U.» K-.l H* I" 'l'* 1 Vlg ° r OU " V I federal court. | for » temporary in- > ' , .le - iitorceme'i’ a“ Uw ■" “T n !r* • ’ smaJM and Labor I’" league, was denied by th " declared in Kcounty after a strike Enameling and . ~>ni|>any plant Imd I" 1 ' MK 1 .-' .1 '- ’ which Mpd .... »nikers and purindustiy area. ruling handed down by |K Kl)bP1( c Baltzell or the ills'll I federal court. UK',,: with W mi' l "' 51 s l’ ark : . | nd Tie'll..is W Slick. |K.' I-' i'idiaii.v dietri- t *t the hearing I ' ’ d< n hv States attorneys to] KX-s the petition. scintilla of eviuil , ( i. ■ f.es the teirv" ,llis sa.id Judge Baltzell. .illi'i-" fll ‘ d "" bobulf <!<’:• slants entirely p rtin< nt and theren.o'i' "f the complaint-,-irikr the same will be K-' defendant to the bill will he overruled the application of the com-] Hu: • f.: a. t niporary injum -1 Hi .aided. he concluded i pt-mon was filed in the 1
you In. ,- H«<! 1 ■*"■£• . r.llrf with ADI K- !■ •■ -'i in actiou >cl ta« ren'l. »»f». ■fdl »] w? ■•<[<■ Iwl w || B. J. Smith Drug Co. s (ADISON Theater might and Tuesday THE VIRGINIAN” with RY COOPER. RICHARD LEN. WALTER HUSTON | MARY BRIAN. M| Added—Se lected Short £ Subjects. - ■'.4 Sat. - TOM TYLER in j J thru." — BEHIND GREEN ™^^RHTS "—with an All-Star Cast. ICORT LB'onight - - Tuesday I “RED HEADS ON V D | PARADE” rstßl John Boles. Dixie Lee, Vi ■>. J* ll '* 4 Haley. im>s Over Mt. Ever- ' and Fox News. 10-25 c Wed.-Thurs. Arthur - George Murphy ■ I "THE PUBLIC MENACE" nuH Coming—- ■ ■"BROADWAY GONDOLIER" ier|B D,ck Powell - Joan Blondell || .M ol P h Menjou William Gargan Fi <> Rita's Orch. - The Four and cast of hundreds. —z ~~ , OSES '-■wight and Tuesday || “CHINA SEAS” ■ ( -ABLE. jean I\«LOW. WAI.L AC K R akir 1 * s"Hif’l(osaand COLOR Cassie I” 1 DUMBBELL letters. I . W-25C Kgrp T ■ ThUI ' 6, -“WITHOUT Wly ■■|NT t 7rr i ’ Sed ° n tHe Sta ° C tally d.H fcRF tRuNCE”- a dar- |® y different drama! ■th "co? "ANNA KARENINA" Bar ßi -. REDR,C MARCH. GRETA Ktw FREDDY BARTHOLCopperfield.)
name of Otis Cox, secretary of the Enameling and Stamping Workers Union Defendants in the case were Gov. Paul V. McNutt, Maj, Earl Weimar, commanding officer of I tho national guard troops in the ' area; Mayor Bam Beecher of Terre Haute, and other civil and state authorities. The three-judge court held that Gov. McNutt was within his rights in ordering the national guard troops into the area to on- , force the martial law. HITLER ISSUES PEACE WARNING Warns World Peace Os Germany Must Not Be Disturbed Hamel, Germany, Oct. 7 —(UP) — —Reichfuehrer Adolf Hitler had warned the world today that the peace of fascist Germany must not , be disturbed. Hitler said Germany was like “a peaceful island’’ in a world racked wtih revolutions and wars for which "democratic systems" could be blamed. “We do not want to harm anyi body.” he told the farineTs of the Bueckeberg mountain country at their annual Thanksgiving ceremony yesterday. "But," lie added, "we will not suffer anybody to harm us.” Germany does not need wars “to cover up internal dissensions," he said with great emphasis. Hitler reiterated the neen of discipline for people and urged the farmers to stand behind their government. He described at length ] Germany’s crowded condition, its , lack of colonies and raw materials. Referring to the achievement of ] equality under his bold international thrusts he said “no commission, no League of Nations could protect us—we ourselves are chosen to protect the Fatherland." "Where is the statesman who dares to walk among his people as I among you?” he shouted. o TWELVE KILLED I CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE the ahaittered cabin of the plane, others lying at intervals along the ground All were inangled and bruised. Army ambulances and soldiers from Fort Francis E. Warren aided in the search. A wrist watch pu the arm of one of the women had stopped at 3:15 o'clock, an hour after Collison had reported his position. Officials said this might indicate an hour elapsed between the time Collison communicated with the ground and the time of the crash, but were unable to explain the lapse in time. Jt was pointed out, however, that the passenger, flying through to the east, might have set her watch ahead an hour to correspond to central standard time befor going to sleep, and that thus the crash actually occurred within a few minutes of the time Collison last reported. The plane’s radio apparently was in good condition and had Collison remained aloft more than a few minutes he would have checked back with the ground office, it was oelieved. o Traffic Clubs To Meet Oct. 14-15 Indianapolis. Ind., Oct. 7 —(UPI More than 1,300 delegate* will represent 63 cities at the 14th Annual ton vention of the associated traffic clubs of America here Oct. 14-15. Among the speakers on the convention program will be H. W. Roe. Tulsa. Okla., traffic manager of the mid-continent Petroleum corp.. Luther M. Walter, Chicago, Henry A. Wheeler, Chicago, President of the American business association. Dr. L. C. Sorrell, transportation protwsor at the university of Chicago. and M. A. Palmer, Chicagoeditor of the traffic world. Gov. Paul V. McNutt and Mayor John W. Guru, of Indianapolis, will welcome the delegates. o—- -■ - ——— Wine Party Costs Two Years Ottawa, Ont—iftJ.R)—Elzear Bar rettc has been sentenced to two years in Portsmouth penitentiary for stealing 53 bottles of wine from the home of Justice Hibadeau Rin fret, and giving a party in a hobo jungle. o Trade In a Good Town — Decatur SPEC I A L I FOR THIS WEEK SB.OO w ave A. for l z T' $3.00. >* $2.00 V WAVE ( a $1.50. " Shampoo and Set included. Cozy Beauty Shoppe Phone 266 K. of C. Bldg.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1935.
SUCKLING COLT SHOW AT BERNE Fourth Annua! Show Will Be Held At Berne Saturday » Protestor L. F. Bentley, head of the animal husbandry department of the Pennsylvania State Agricultural college, has been selected as judge of the Berne fourth annual suckling colt show which will be held Saturday, October 12. The show will be one of the largest events of its kind ever held in Adams county. A total of 129 colts have been in the Gold Medal Club and are eligible to show without further fees. Noil-members may show their suckling colts by paying 50 cents entry fee at the show. The committee selected the judge with the purpose of advertising Adams county horses throughout the year. As the best Adams county horse sales are made in the East an eastern judge was obtained who will advertise the horses of this community. The first class will go in the ring at it a. in. and will be the class of pure bred Belgian stud colts. The second class will be of pure bred Belgian mare colts. The other classes will be: stud percheron colts, mare percheron colts, grade stud Belgians dropped prior to May 15. grade Belgian mare colts dropped prior to May 15; grade Belgian stud colts dropped after May 15. and grade Belgian mare colts dropped after May 15. Sweepstake ribbons will be offered for both pure bred and grade Belgian colts and percheron colts. o— Fire Destroys Celina Factory Celina. 0.. Oct. 7.—(U.RF Defective wiring was believed to have started a tire which destroyed a two-story frame building housing part of the Brandt Furniture factory here today. The loss was estimate between $75, ”00 aud SIOO,OOO. The Celina tire department prevented the flames from spreading to adjoining factory buildings and houses. The building which burned housed the stock aud cutting rooms, in which 75 men were employed. Donald Dibble of Celina, Ohio, foreman at the plant, is a brother-in-law of Mrs. Fred King of this city. Mrs. King’s father, Ferdinand Smith, assistant fire chief of Celina, was overcome by smoke while fighting the flames but quickly recovered. LEAGUE MEMBERS CONTINUED FROM V AOE ONE troops thousands upon thousands of other troops and guns have crossed the Mareb river and have been pushing steadily southward, night and day, building bridges and blasting roads across rocky mountain cliffs which never knew wheel tracks before. With victory achieved in the first phase of their campaign, the Italians are consolidating their gains aud preparing for new thrusts against the enemy. War paraphernalia of all sorts is arriving in vast quantities, carried by foot soldiers, mounted soldiers, on mule back and packed into heavily-laded dust-grey lorries. Battalion after battalion of native and Italian infantry with mounted machine guns and mountain gun regiments with 105 millimeter (4.1 inch) field pieces, mounted on rubber tires and drawn by tractors arc pounding southward tn a steady stream. Dismisses Victories (Copyright 1935 by United Press) Addis Ababa. Oct. 7—(U.R)-Em-peror Haile Selassie in a telegram to tho League of Nations contemptuously dismissed Italy a victories in northern Ethiopia today a.- mere clashes between frontier guards and isolated detachments. Ethiopia has not begun to fight, the emperor indicated in his message. He said that his men, by eider, did not resist the Italians who "stormed" Aduwa and he said that (here had been no real clash since the Italians began their drive Thursday. Italy used 20 airplanes in its bombing attack on Aduwa, the emperor asserted. "Italian aggression, prepared for months against Ethiopia—to whom the arms for her defense have been systematically refused—was thu: plainly consummated in a region where frontiers have been plainly defined by treaty aud are incontestible," the telegram said. It was said officially, in this connection, that the Ethiopian army has not yet entered into action. in accordance with its plan to permit Italy to advance until it bad been established defiuitely a.s the aggressor and the League of Nations was left with no legal
“Peace Bonds'’ OfferccHor Sale Senator Gerald P. Nyg MM liiKMi NO MORE ‘ Ac- < ~ deanelte Rankin Peace societies in the United States arc taking steps to insure peace. Coming at a time when Europe allegedly is on the brink of war, ,ind when war talk pervades the country, the action of the National Council for Prevention of War in issuing "peace bonds” is receiving wide acclaim. The bonds have been offered for sale in Milwaukee. Senator Gerald P. Nyc of North Dakota started the campaign off by buying the first bond from Miss Jeanette Rankin of Montana, first woman elected to congress and one of the nation’s most ardent peace advocates. The bonds, ranging in denomination from $1 to SIOO, bear the pledge “that the sum represented hereby will faithfully be used for the development of a more adequate peace movement throughout the United States, having as its objective the prevention of war.”
or moral ground for evading a declaration of Italy as outlaw. "Aduwa fell yesterday without resistance after Adigrat had been occupied without resistance previously. Our troops are outside the towns still." the emperor said. It was recalled at once that Ethiopia’s plan not to defend Aduwa had been announced publicly long before the Italian arrival. Indications were that any real fight would not come until the Italians had penetrated farther south. Significant of this was the announcement today that Dejazmatch Avaro Kassa, second son of Ras Kasea. the country’s strongest military figure, have moved 30,04)0 trained men northward from Fiche toward Gondar, key to Lak.’ Tana and the Blue Nile. Has Kassa himself already is on the way to take command of all northern forces, and the emperor may go northward. Heavy Toll Paris, Oct. 7 (U.F.) —The Addis Ababa correspondent for the newspaper Soir estimated the death toll of the Italian invasion through Sunday was 800 Italians and 6.018) Ethiopian civilians and warriors. o RURAL CARRIERS ATTEND MEETING DecatiTr Carriers Attend District Meeting Saturday Decatur rural route carriers attended the fourth district convention of tile rural letter carriers’ tssocialion held Saturday at Fort Wayne. Russell Collins of Hudson was elected president of the association. Other officers are, Fred A. Stuck of Ashley, vice-president and Call Brown. Ot land, secretary. The ladies’ auxiliary which niei in conjunction with the men's organization elected Mrs. Russell Collin- as president; Mrs. Clyde Bu.rry of Freemont a- vice-presi-dent. and Mrs. Carl Brown as secretary. Mrs. Charles Maloney of Decatur was among those selected for the nominating com-i niittee. Clyde King o£ Lagrange served] as toastmaster at the banquet.; The invocation was given by W. F. Beery ot Decatur. L. G. Elliugham. Fort Wayne postmaster, gave the welcome address Saturday afternoon and W. F. Beery made the response. I T. WAYNE MAN — CONI'INUKD I'KOM PAGE ONE) mtu.ed alter firat aid treatment was given him. Mr*. Horwitz'who was suffering from minor lacerations
i aud bruises was dismi**cd this afternoon. Miller formerly resided in Adam* i county and is well known here. CHICAGO FACES ‘ MILK SHORTAGE Strikers And Non-Strik-ers Battle Furiously Sunday . i i' Chicago, Oct. 7 —(UP)—A milk ; famine confronted Chicago today a* t Northern Illinois and Southern Wisi cousin farmer* etriking for higher i prices cut the city’s supply far be- ■ low noruial. ■ Violence, which has flared in the 1 destruction of milk shipments by the strikers, "will be met with viol- ’, ence,” according to an ultimatum i*I sued today by law enforcing officj ials of Kane county, center ot the 1 strike. ’: Officials of the pure milk association. (producer*’ organization op- : posed ta the strike, said there was 1 : "plenty of milk in the city for all I deliveries.” This conflicted with a ' report of the association milk dealers, Inc., which said the supply had ] been cut to 50 per ceut of normal ] and that only hospitals, orphanages ! and home* with children were asj sured of milk today. I Violence reached a new peak Sun- '; day when 100 strikers engaged in a I pitched battle with non-strikers I at the Lisle receiving depot of the : Union Dairy company. Picket* threw bricks through window* of the depot but were held off by state policeman b'lank Long, who drew a revolver and stood, at the door. Farmers armed with clubs and baseball bats dispensed the pickets after a furious battle in which dozens suffered cuts and bruises. Fifteen private guard* were unable to combat a gang of pickets who raided a Northwestern railway car and dumped 22.000 'pounds of milk at Gardenprairie. Deputy federal marshals reached the seen; just after the strikers loft. Every picket who attempts to halt milk shipment* wjjl bp arrested, state’s attorney George D. Carbary announced. Hopes fora truce centered today <:n a “peace” conference with Gov. j Henry Horner and representatives I of both factions in the price disj pule. Tennessee Cuts Infant Deaths Memphis. Tenn.— (U.R) —The inflint mortality rate here, once the ] highest.in the United States, lias been reduced from 112.4 per cent to 80.3 per cent. df 0 FOR SALE — Freeh Jersey cow.| choice of six. 1 Guerueey, freshen soon. Frank S. (Doe) Johnson, ; Monroe. Its
GROCER ADMITS MURDERING MAN Lafayette Grocer Admits Slaying Frankfort Bakery Salesman Lafayette, Ind., Oct. 7. <U.R) — Harman Wohl, 46-year-old grocer, told Tippecanoe county authorities today he committed the robberyslaying of Luther Wells, Frankfort bakery salesman, to obtain funds to organize a Townsend old age pension club in Delphi. Expressing a desire to die tor | the crime to which he confessed, ] Wohl asked officers if it could not he arranged to have the case over quickly. Meanwhile, the state prepared a first degree murder charge against tne grocer, who said he ambushed Wells on a lonely road east of Delphi late Tuesday. He said he lured Wells to the death scene on the pretext of having the victim’s opinion regarding some land he proposed to trade for property in Delphi. Wohl told authorities where they could And $78.57 obtained in the robbery and the gun used in the slaying. The money was hidden in a bucket at the garage ot his home in Tielphi, and the gun was secreted in the wall of the home of Theodore Weiland, in Delphi, to which he had access. The grocer was arrested Saturday night by state police on suspicion, and he confessed after two hours of solitary confinement. ROOSEVELT IN CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ed the United States against any complications growing out of the Italo-Ethiopian conflict. His warning that those who conduct any sort of trade or commerce with either belligerent must do so without this governments blessing or protection was expected to put a damper on American exports of wheat, cotton, copper, steel and other commodities to Italy lAntfr ican trade with Ethiopia is negligible), which might bring about international complications. As matters now stand the league ( powers are assured in advance of an imposition of sanctions that the, United States will not insist upon the right of American vessels to I trade with either belligerent. Any I American vessel which does make | the attempt probably could be stopped by any warship of tho lea-' gue powers without incurring the displeasure of Washington. Although the president’s procla ' mation legally applies equally to Italy and Ethiopia, the practical' effect is to involve only Italy be-1
Barton Electric and Gasoline Washing Machines HIGHEST QUALITY ■ LOWEST PRICE ARE NO LONGER ENEMIES! The BARTON is not only a very attractive washer but it is just as ,J —L'W&yirai good as it looks. H has the best of mechanical construction throughout. 1 Machine cut gear teeth. fe- Gear running in oil — constant and perman- * < ent lubrication is provided for. -jarp The wringer is a Genuine Lovell with complete release and hand rest to make it easier to feed MsC clothes into the wringer. —'"’’Sw Has 2*4” balloon rolls, *4 horse standard 1W motor and improved 3 vane agitator. MW/W If you are interested in buying a washer come jl ** B * n an< * these “bargains” over. t \ Ma We w ill he glad to give a free demonstration at any time. We have washers at prices to I® meet any demand. Barton Electric Washers Range in Price from $26.50 up. HARDWARE and HOME FURNISHINGS
Mrs. Housewife--Here’s The Help You Want The Daily Democrat’s Washington Bureau has produced for you. Mrs. Housewife, the kind of handy reference work you have always wanted—THE HOUSEWIFE’S MANUAL—a readable and understandable compendium of ueetul hints on housecleaning, care ot furniture und floors, laundering, cooking, and miscellaneous hints and suggestions for making the housework easier. The Booklet contain:! 24 pages, attractively bound in color. Fill out the coupon below, wrap up a dime, and send for your copy. . . CLIP COl I’ON HERE Dept. B-121, Washington Bureau, DAILY DEMOCRAT, 1013 Thirteenth St., NW., Washington. D. C. Here is my dime. Send my copy of the HOUSEWIFE’S MANUAL: NAM E- - & No. —• CITY STATE 1 am a reader ot the Decatur Daily Democrat, Decatur, Ind.
cause this country has practically no commerce with Ethiopia. American exports to Italy normally average about $8,000,000 a month. Ethiopia has no ships on which Americans could travel, whereas Italy has a number of palatial liners and intermediate I class passenger boats which call ' regularly at American ports. Few Americans ever have been to Ethiopia, but thousands of American j j tourists flock to Italy every year . and spend huge sums of money.
QUARTERLY WATER BILLS -are again due and we ask you to pay them at the city hall Avoid the ag ear | y as possible, penalty by paying on or before O 4 90 Your attention in paying’ UCI. Zu city bills promptly will ■ ■' relieve both yourself and city hall employes of unnecessary delay on the final day. City Water Dept.
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Amateur Contest At Berne Friday An amateur contest will be held in Berne next Friday night at 8:30 o'clock in connection with the colt show program. The contest will be open to the entire county and anyone wishing to take part is asked to send in his name before Friday noon to the Berne Review office. o Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
