Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 252, Decatur, Adams County, 24 October 1935 — Page 5

' ST TWO ON f’ AnK ° nk ' .n <•>' «»’ «"• “ • “ |iad won with NO 6344i,v I * .„. r el numbers in the ■ uprMW r |at I J*®** WORT YniJ Last Chance M lour •ueUi toSe< - ',« Ku I ROGERS i* Steamboat Abound The Bend ~ Und Shirlev - Irvin S. Cobb '■ iVstepin Fetchit. U piialtodeo Davs & Cartoon 10c-25c pint Evening Show at 6:15. htt Saturday 111 rainbows end k “I pius-C >medy and Cartoon; and Chap» 5 -PHANTOM EMPIRE.” . _ ♦ Kidd aatinee Saturday at 2 Children A ISun. Mon. Tues. ■■ r rut BLEa ■ N W~ ■■■■wwwi^ ■

1 ATTEND THIS GREAT I FIRE SALE ■ Os General Store Merchandise — " Women’s & Women’s $1 Value 73 ct \ upvn Children’s HOUSE SLIPPERS I uroup VI JHAinrraJ RITRRFRQ Leather Soles with Heel. I TINWARE rnftl¥J 15 ’ Assorted Colors !I ! , , , 4 uuvilj 85c Va , uc while Th Last p? O', onderful Assortment 4 ... . 41 ~.. , MU Os Items. Sil « h,l > So,led < ! Values To 35c Values To 25c /ft % « 33* jra Z £ /§&. iE r 49C 49C «. * KEYHOLE SAWS mens 20c 14 oz. I P EA - EA - IXII L 1 KNAI’OUT QUILTED (Eadies Beautiful |Q C n( | A,S ° ‘ d MITTENS ■IAYONHOSE kitcHEN WARE O |»d Assortment of Colors Egg Beaters, Spoons, Soup ■ R| 11 ■ T| C v * And Sizes Ladles, Milk Skimmers, etc ■ |ll_ ■ “ 1 VU JLvv ■1 Qa Cfl ± 2L |JL Ladies Fine TOILET GOODS Chamois Suede w „ lderful As »or<m™i MB ■-— GLOV Eb Qf \\ e i| Known ■ Mens Splendid Black & White toothpaste, etc. Bather belts SEWINGTHREAI) 0(1 p ■■ ■ Luu 3U ■ 4 !'«■ 7 Aa CHILDREN'S $1.50 large size =&WV SP()OL % SOCKS BOTTLE CAPPER EA SPOOL c? . , Dark Colors ra M “3 ' A Real Bargain JH f R Dr. Denton’s Childrens >■■■<> ■ SLEEPING FINE HOSE JJq H Ml | garments ’ “W ■Warm & Comfortable 25c and 39c Values • ~~ Values To $1.50 TOILET GOODS 10c Can | jp- ’sOjL Values To 50c METAL POLISH P9cl9c 10c 5c B— EA. CAN

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. Ing” the hox with duplicates to 1 discredit thu theater. Detectives said Anderson ad ■ mitted he had withheld placing tickets in the box for three weeks and they said they found several tickets turned in yesterday which had not been placed in thu box. o AMATEUR HOUR CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE Elzey. Guitar duet: Betty Hoop, Phyl i lie McFarland Guitar: Kuby Miller. | Guitar: Kathleen Shackley. Guitar: Leo Chamberlain. Guitar and vocal duet: Donald and Betty Zinsmaster. I Reading: Carolyn North. Reading: Dick Hakey. Poem: Margaret Handler. Jokes; Betty Shook, Maxine Millisor. Jokes: Dick King, Buster Ahr, Bob Ahr. Riddles: Edith Baker, Ruth | Hammond- . Song: Marilyn Bonifas, Betty ( i Brown. I Song: Wanda Brunner, Betty' i Foughty. Song: Dick Linn, Junior Strick ’ i ler. Sting and dance: Winifred Skiles. Tap dance: Betty Marbach. Tap dance: Billy Howell. Tap dance: Evelyn Graber. Dance: Billy Howell and Joan Miller. Saxaphone: Roberta t'oftelt. Accordion and saxophone: Marjorie Miller, Kathleen Fryback. Banjo: George Henry Clark. I Cornet: Lawrence Rash. Annes May Merriman. Violin: Don Gage. -■ -o [Trade in a Good Town — Decatur:

ITALIANS MAY CONTINUED FROM 1 AOE ONE typical "trial balloon" was issued In Paris by an inspired report that the British government is prepared gradually to withdraw the homo fleet from the Mediterranean, beginning with one or two ships, "provided" Mussolini r-moves all menace against Egypt and gives certain other platantees to Britain. Repulse Attack London, Oct. 24 — (U.R> — An Ethiopian attack on an Italian line between Aksum and the Sudanese border wae repulsed early i today ajter loss of more than 100 ! men by the attackers, according to an exchange telegraphic dispatch from a correspondent with the northern Italian forces. Haile Selassie's warriors, reportedly under the leadership of Ras Siyoum. were attempting to 1 cut the Italiui right wing and also to divert Italian troops to AkI sum from points further ea»t on I the Italian line. | Several forays were made ! against the Italians and it was ' believed that renewed attacks , were being planned today. There I were about SOO men in Ihe Ethiopian force that advanced against outposts west of Aksum after fording the Setit river. o — TOWNSEND PLAN CON TINUED FROM PAGE ONE trine which already lias swept a large portion of the nation. I "We lielieve,” he said, "That if we cease taxing ourselves for the tremendous cost of maintaining 20 to 30 million ptwons in idleness that is destructive to the growth of deI cent citizenship, and used that

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1935.

money in retiring the aged of the land, only insisting that they distributed the money through the purchase of commoditise. that we should at once be able to etart all the whorls of Industry into activity and ma ini aiu that activity as a perpetual thing.” JOCKEY FREED CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE Saundere said: "I don’t know whether I will stay in Louisville, go to Hal Price Headley's farm at Lexington, or to Baltimore to ride ” Commonwealth detective Frank Fitzgerald ordered him to stay in Louisville. Sought since Monday, Saundeiw came here from Lexington yesterday and surrendered. He said ho did not know he was wanted until , he read of Mrs. Slivinski's death | in Baltimore newspapers. His story of the fatal ride differed sharply in several respects I from that told by Mrs. Machison I who said Mrs. Slivinski was run down deliberately. He also denied that he or Schaffer were intoxicated and said he did not beat Mrs. Slivinski as Mrs. Mathison had charged. —. — o Gives Administration Credit For Recovery BBlooinington, Ind., Oct. 24 — i UP) —Credit for national recovery was given to President Roosevelt by Gov. Paul V. McNutt in a address at the Indiana University convocation here yesterday. “The nation is showing unmistakable signs of economic revival. an d I believe it is based upon a series of sound and significant fa-c---toivs." tlie governor said.

STATE BANKERS IN CONVENTION Savings And Loan League Meets In Annual Convention Indianapolis. Oct. 24 — (U.R) Banking officials of the state assembled here today for tho opening of the 45th annual convention of the Savings and Loan League of Indiana. An intensive advertising pro1 gram in behalf of members of the association was included in a 1 resolution which was presented ' at today’s session. The executive 1 committee adopted the resolution at a special session last night. 1 Members of the committee include George A. Schaal and Om r 0. Rhodes, Terre Htuite; George 1 H. Padgett, Princeton; C. E. Bag.ley, and Merritt D. Metz, Hat.i1 mond; Mark L. Dlckovcr, Valpar-i also; Harry V. Somes, Vincennes; Hugh G Keegan, Fort Wayn?, | and Frank M. Boone. South Bend. Speakers on today’s program included J. M. Rountree, Washington. D. C„ E. Boucher, state i building a,nd loan supervisor; Fred T. Greene, federal homeloan bank president; and T. W. Atkins, Chicago, director of field service of the United States Building and lx>an League. Morton Bodfish, Chicago, executive vice president of the Nation-: al Building and Loan League, will, be principal speaker at tomorrow’s session. Q

* — > Adams County Memorial Hospital Baby Frederick Allen Evans, son I of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Evans, 3111 Oak street, major operation Wednesday. Virginia Myers, daughter of Mr. i and Mrs Arthur My-re. too:! Mercer avenue, dismissed Wednesday. MAYOR BANGS TO . CONTINUED from uagh one surplus which had been held in the city light fund since 1930. The hearing was another one of j the many phases of a two-year I | fight which the militant mayor has , I conducted in an attempt to rout | the Northern Indiana Power Company from the utility business, here. BLOODY GANGLAND CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE I to detain him while his assailants perfected arrangements for the shootTng and the get-away. Police immediately sent, out a; new genera lalarm for Al Stern, I mad 21-year-old gunman believed responsible for at least seven killings in the last two months. He had been tentatively identified as the gunman who emptied his pistol ai Krompier and Gold. A general round up of criminals ! ‘ also was ordered, but brought; i scant results. Almost all persons ; I connected with the rackets, from the "big shots" to file “punks” seemingly had gone into hiding, hoping to miss the Schultz lightning. Stool pigeons brought the alarm of the underworld to New York and Newark detectives. They re-. I ported that tho- Schultz, gang of the Bronx and the Amberg gang! of the tough Brownsville section of Brooklyn were locked in a war of extinction and that Schultz and Krompier had been shot in reprisals for the murders of Louis (Pretty) Amberg and his brother, Joe, whose deatths had been listed as reprisals for the unproved I but almost certain demise of tho' | mean Schultz mobster "Bo” Weill- ' berg. L - Last Time Tonight - “THE BISHOP MISBEHAVES” 'with Maureen O'Sullivan, Edmund Gwenn, Reginald Owen, Norman Koster, Dudley Digges. Added—Selected Short Subjects. 10c-15c | Fri, 4. Sat—“HERE COMES THE BAND” with TEO LEWIS and His Orchestra; Virginia Bruce, Ted Healy, Nat Pendleton, Harry Stockwell (your NEW Singing Hero) Donald Cook, Spanky McFarland. Its got Music! Its got Laughter! Its got Romance! Sun, Mon, Tues. — "ANNAPOLIS FAREWELL" with Sir Guy Stand mg, Tom Brown, Richard Cromwell, Rosalind Keith, A Glorious. Thrilling Romance of the men who sail the ships tor Uncle Sam!

FEDERAL FUNDS , CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE celved »7.795,886.294. Project values approved by President, 42,702,918,117. Project value* approved by McCall, $1,762,728,630. Projects approved by President for construction $1.004,072.98!>. Projects approved by McCurl for construction, $902,709,27(1. McCatTs approvals revealed his office has turned its sole attention to the works progress administration, the quick, cheap proi jects compiled by Hopkins to I employ relief roll needy at a per job coot of SSOO for nine months. o— Camera Snaps Six Presidents Portsmouth, N. 11. — (UP) — Arnold Belcher, an East Kingston cameraman, snapped a picture of Colonel Theodore Roosevelt with I the same camera with wlif-eh he , holographed his father during his administration a»- President. Belcher has photographed five other president* with the same camera. —_ 0 Five Coal Companies Oppose Guffey Bill Pittsburgh, Oct. 24—(UP)—Five larg - coal companies have decided to oppose the Guffey coal stabilization law, the Pittsburgh Preus said hero today. Tile five, headed by the Pitt*burgh coal company, largest independent producer of soft coal in the j world, will ignore the Guffey act be- | cause they "cannot afford to g

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along with it.” | The action may result in court at-| lacks constitutionality of the act. ' designed to stabilize tprlces and bring proseprity to the soft coal industry. Great Britain Calls Naval Conference Loudon, Oct. 24 —(UP) Negotiations of a seven power naval treaty Including Germany anti Russia to supplant the Washington and Loudon pacts of 1922 and 1930, may be under consideration iu London, it' was disclosed today by Sir Bolton Eyres-Monsell, flnst lord of tho admiralty, before the house of commons. Announcing that Britain had sent an invitation to the other signatories of the existing naval treaties — the United States, Japan, France and Italy—to a naval limitations conference here December 2, Sir Bolton added: "The purpose of the conference will be to secure agreement on as many aspects of naval limitations i as possible with a vie wto conclu- i sion of an international treaty in j place of tlie two naval pacts expiring at tlie end of 1936”. 0 —— Tree Oddity Amazes Nebraska City, Neb. —(UP)—A foot-high mulberry tree growing out of tho crotch of a big -cotton wood tree on the lawn of the Glenn Pope residence here is vouched for by the Roach brothers, tree surgeons who assert it is tlie first such oddity they have seen.

PAGE FIVE

Memphis Grows Bananas l Memphis, Tenn — (U.R) Union Avenue in Memphis has taken on a tropical atmosphere now with the growth of banana trees which have borne fruit this year for the first time. The fruit, still green but of good size, has attracted much attention. | i -O Estate to Aid Cripples Tiffin, O. <U-R> Nearly SIOO,OOO from the estate of Mrs. Julia M. , Weller is to be turned over to tho city of Tiffin to be administered for the benefit of crippled children ' and the blind. .—. o - • Jefferson City, Mo. (U.R)— While undergoing treatment for a severe I scalp wound, on an operating table here, a Wichita, Kan., man turned Jon the surgeon and tried to throttle him. Herb Kern went to Fort Wayne Wednesday to attend an Oldsmobile school for two days. ■——Will I !■ — ——

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