Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 279, Decatur, Adams County, 25 November 1935 — Page 5

Modi honor j I BOLLS LISTED I rtrrfr 1 ' Students At CathI <sc High. <• rall e I KhaoU Announced ■BwMmT ruil I' 1 " K " ,,< " ltl V 11. ratin' Ciilliolk ■ Sb• in ' l ,l "‘ Sl amu.'iiK . d l.xl.ii officials. ■ ... an.l. nt:* were ria* ■ 'ln' crade h< ""”' " ,l! ■ TH|(|'> ,| l’ |p,r llst of honor 3tU ■ dents ■oll ( ’ WR: ■ High School I A « B ' S ■ Brown 0 ■ Jane Foos 5 1 Wertzberger Kmiisclilag ■ \gnfli|schulti 5 I Ma^J r,, ' ll,z 5 ■ ( , lefjt Heimann . .................. 5 ■ pjjbef Kleinhenz 5 ■ Helen 1 iohne » ■ uurt*' Lengerich •> I Vera E 1,1 — 5 Faurote .. ■ drace Miller - 5 '■ cjj-1 gchnltz a ■ Drinns Leonard 4 2 Wolpert -1 W Baker -4 • 1 Daniels Heimann 11 ■ Luefla Harun 4 1 ■ TereJ Lengerich ............4 1

■ ’vVlffiatt A Mill* r ....... 4 1 ['■ jesiwtte Rmnschlag ... I I *■ Schmitt - 4 1 IB ■I mmb “ I. I ' .32 >■“l® - 3 ■ NadmßSchultz 2 3 I Ambrose Geiiner 2 3 Kintz ■ Her« Rumschlag , 2 3 Grade School ■ Maryl :n.- Rumsihlag 6 3

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I Toni i M and Tuesday i) - RK ANGEL' wKfeFPEDKIC MARCH. .K>i RLE OBERON K iJjiEi’I’ERT M \RSH MJ W ' Thelma Todd and (Jimedy. 10c-25c Wed. & ■ MATiIIEE THURSDAY at 2 P. M. ijf Ist »u■■■':<, Eve. Show at 6:30 FOR TONIGHT" with RING |F CltsßY. JOAN BENNETT. ■ | MARY BOLAND. K AddJ LATEST ISSUE of MARCH ■ OF®ME: A MICKEY MOUSE ■ Cartoe HORTY (The GOES SOUTH. 10c-20c | ■ CRUSADERS." ’•p'tws .JMWwaw’wwF a I IjDISON Theater |lTSffht and Tuesday MhtING YOUTH’’ rWMIi H \S 1 -A‘WELL lun.> II i,. 1 V " ( * v Clyde, L FarK re, l IJacDonald. ■ Wed th- |? mho I'oq’ES. $1 Rr ° F tomorrow . . . Broadcast. ■ Fri - 4 Sat.—TOM TYLER in '■ r ORN TO BATTLE." ■ IACK HOLT in te. lipORT I |s> !S THE LIFE" Met, Hire - |B|^B t<,l ” , '<i' NfWh. ’ 10-JJc IljKgH ROBERT DUN AT R picture since W Madeline Carroll in |pi us lu7 Ht 39 BTEp s" ■ T A. Cnry Arm etta in an all ■ Comed y "Romance of F pJK/ est with Dorthy Dare, ■ and an Oddity. I f ;f Thursday at 2P. M. I dSu "' G| cnda Farrell. Rob Everett

Japan Moves to Annex Huge Portion of China I I Lpi l lllllllllllllll ITWIK ' iHB / Ur* uN 'i --■''“7MANCHUKUO6>* clash Maj. Gen, Doi” * 'H ® ® THE FIVE 4. L\ WHICH HAVE BEEN UOW6ANHEO v ' I WX-- s jyi ,4A «'. < 'v’ h * T * 0 fnw o KEy W * N S ' S h **6HAI PACIFIC JET. Russian TE??tTotkY . etsT EO3 jAMNeseTwsiTofcv w \v chiha t ociah CHINESE TERRITORY - j A\w'anusha\ » new vassal state _|m\\\\\\W\\<? (ft, I——— —| Map of propoted new North China nation! .

Japan’s designs in North China took definite form when Maj. Gen. Kenji Doihara, political expert of the Japanese army in China, demanded that an autonomous* state be set up comprising the five provinces of Hopei, Shantung, Chahar, Shansi and Suiyuan, an area nearly one-third as large as United States. Although nominally an independent

Eugene Welker 6 2 Robert Kulmle 5 3 Robert Anderson 5 2 Phyllis Lose 5 1 Richard Lose ,4 5 Max Johnson 4 5 Grace Flough 4 5 Etheldreda Miller . 4 4 John Tcrveer 4 4 Joan Wemhot'f 4 4 IW lores Geels 4 3 Thomas Terveer 4 3 James Holthouse 3 6 Marcella Gass 3 5 Virginia Spangler . ...34 Harold Keller 2 7 Irene Braun 2 7 Justine Brito 2 7 Josephine Daniels 2 6 Lucille Baker 1 8 BOURBON MAN <»NTINUEI> i-HOM PAGE ONE cover. Authorities at Bourbon said that I a "feud" had been in existence I for some time between Friebley and I Miss Mendel and her “boy friends.’’ Fribley attacked Kinzie on the I Main street of Bourbon a short time ! ago and according to witnesses atI .empf . r -i choke hint to death. Friblay .leaded guilty to a charge I of assault and battery in Marshall I Circuit court in connection with tae .ase and was assessed a heavy ' fine. Miss Mendell, a teacher in the , Bourbon schools, said today that. ; Fribley had made advances toward her for several years but that she “had paid no attention to him.” A. F. L. REPORT ,'UNTINL'ED FROM PAGE ONE I ages had developed in houses, automobiles. railroad and machinery J equipment during the depression, and estimated that tin Nation today ,oul.l absorb 9,000.0?6 automobiles and t 3.600.000 new homee. The federal housing administration. meanwhile, reported a sharp pickup in employment in the building trades since Jan. 1 on the oasis of a survey in 99 cities. Up to midNovember. 34 cities reported all skilled building trades workers were regularly employed; 31 said all special workers, including carpenters. painters, plumber,*. roofers, and seamfitters, were employed; and IS reported an actual -shortage of workers. LEAGUE OF NATIONS oNIt.NUEI' FROM PAGE ONE ’ chance to seek a basis tor diplomatic. negotiations befon the league takes a stop which it is known would enrage Premier Bonito Mussolini and seriously jeopardize his war on Ethiopia. ! Claim Victory (Copyright, 19’35, by I 1' i Addis Ababa, Nov. 25. ■ (UK i Ethiopia claimed tin: rout of three Italian battalions on the northern front today, with more limit WO (Italians killed. An official communique, said Hie light occurred near Hawaii', not Hi of Makale on the northern front. The three Italian battalions, it was asserted, had plundered a village and had encamped preparatory io feasting on captured ca'tb Ethiopians under Hu; DedjuzI match Wor-ess, it was said sur 'priced the Italians in a detile in the mountains, attacked furiously and killed the commander anil more than 109 men. No Hunting —will be allowed on the i-nm | known aa the Win. Drake farm.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1935.

state, the new nation would be dependent upon the Japanese army. General Yen Hsi-Shan, govemoi of Shansi province, was reported the choice of Tokio as Japan’s vassal ruler. Nov. 23 was given as the deadline for consent to the move by the Chinese national government at Nanking, headed by Gen Chiang Kai Shek.

l the estimate of those preseflT. The : rest of the Italians were put to I flight, it was asserted, and eight horses and 13 mules laden with ammunition were captured. This claimed victory was impossible to confirm, as usual. Leader Killed Rome. Nov. 25.—KU.R) —An unconfirmed dispatch from Makale said - today that Ras Siyonm, Ethiopian commander-in chief of the north, was dead. Reports reaching the Italian command at Makale said Ras Siyouin died of wounds received in the Italian bombardment of Maiinesisc on Nov. 18. Tile Italian command was doing its utmost to confirm repeated reports of his death, which came from deserting Ethiopians in the Tembien sector of the north. Ethiopian deserters also reported that bombs, hand .grenades and machine gun lire from Italian planes in the Nov. Is air raids killed 1,000 who were buried secret- • ly in small groups so the Italffins could not learn the extent of the casualties. SUPREME COURT CONTINUED FhOM PAGE ONE that taxpayers must pay first and then sue in the courts for a refund. Such a procedure was specifically provided in the AAA amendments, but taxpayers contended that a provision against refund unless the tax had not been passed on made tue guarantee without value. o SIOO,OOO Available For Corn Crop Loans Washington. Nov. 25.—<U.R>—Reconstruction Finance Corporation

LEGALLY SPEAKING ( RpKiAtrrrd U. S. Patent Office) O 6 k 4 Iww WC the inca r it I Trf J INDIANS I Ift OF PERU I 71 KEPT \ L ( RECORD OF THEIR- ly LEGAL Jfl 11 , hTi t DECISIONS * w BY KNOTTING STRINGS 1 A. IK! THIS FASHION — JAfr

IN I ' y;..' Tim imx were a civilized people formerly inhabiting the country . which is now Peru. Before they were extermmated by the Spaniards in ‘l6th century, history tells us that they had developed many arte. AUho they no system of writing. they did keep records of their i knotted strings All e.idenee of this unique method. of iKotdatiou was done away wl’U when Finarro and. lu* Spanish followers conquered Peiu. ©

c today made available SIOO,OOO to o the Commodity Credit Corporation t to enable the latter to make the t 45 cents a bushel loan on the 1935 corn crop. “ At the same time, RFC chairman Jesse H. Jones said that current loans on the current cotton i- crop being made at 10 cents a 1 pound wore virtually nil because t of the current market price of coti. ton. Corn loans are to be made only i to producers who have executed - tthe 1935 corn-hog contract. The i interest rate will be 4 per cent. :- If further funds are needed the RFC will increase the SIOO,OOO. ; i o Progress Amazes Miner Fairbanks. Alaska —'CP' —Faira bankri was a metropolitan city i population 3.000) of surprising mechan- .- ical devices to A. 11. Crcecy, SpanI ioh-Amcrican war veteran, brought i here by airplane for medical treats pent after 35 years spent in the Kuskokwim River gold country. s o Anglers Urged to Try Song Chicago.-tU.PI—J Manley Phelps, professor of speech at DePaul I ni versify, advises a bit of lyric if the fish aren’t biting. He told a class that he fished for weeks in Wisconsin last summer without catchI ing a thing. Finally he started to sing and caught a 25-pound nutsj kic. e O Bandage in Head 16 Years u Shenandoah. Pa.— (U.K —Edward Culton, of Detroit, recently had 36 inches of gauze bandage removed from his head. It. had been there for 16 years as the result of an S operation. Having had severe headaches for a long time, Culton - consulted a physician who made n the discovery.

REV. COUGHLIN 1 ATTACKS REDS Radio Priest Attacks Capitalism And Communism Sunday Detroit. Nov. 25 - (U.R> —An attack on capitalism and communism featured the weekly Sunday radio address of the Rev. Father Charles E. Coughlin as he reprimanded the Roosevelt administration for interfering in Mexico, "by comforting’’ the Red campaign. “Recognition of a, professed communistic government.” the militant radio priest declared, "is not in keeping with the doctrines of neighborliness nor in harmony with the constitution of our nation which is opposed to atheism, communism and to all such subversive doctrines. "Unfortunately, we have an ambassador in Mexico and a secretary of state in Washington who eeem to welcome the presence of a harlot ou our back-door steps." Coughlin said that he did not want the United States government to interfere in Mexico, but that the National Union for Social Justice did want it to stop interfering "by comforting and caressing the communists to the dis- i

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I paragement of 95 per cent of the j population who are opposed to them.’’ Coughlin reiterated his charge l of three weeks ago that Britain , and other foreign nation* nought I to entangle the United States in I league of natioue activities. He charged a "seini-seeret agreement" had been made in regard to America’s attitude toward sanctions, and that si h sanctions are only placed against Italy because the United States’ attitude was known. "A semi-secret ambassadorial agreement," lie said, "was made with the league of nations In 1933 that America would support the league in its sanctions against any aggressor. On his visit to Geneva this year Norman Davis, i fugitive from Cuban justice, a representative of the bankers of Wall street, our ace, number one ambassador, made this agreement contrary to the will of the American public and evidently at the behest of the American president." The priest tlien turned his attack to President Roosevelt's reply to the request of Michael Carmody, Knights of Columbus bead, for a congressional investigation of conditions in Mexico. "Mr. Roosevelt’s answer,” Coughlin said, “is nothing more than an open invitation so Cardenas and the rest of the communists in Mexico who control the money, the munitions and tho arms to do whatever they want to

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■ 1 religion and Its followers.” i; Coupling his verbal barrage on i communism with capttolism, > Coughlin said that ho hoped that , if he had bocomo notorious for opposing the Injustice and exploii fatten of modern hankers "which , creates want in the midst of plenty" he hoped that he would be- , come equally notorious in oppos- . ing communism. o — Improve 75 Miles Os State Highways I Indianapolis, Nov. 25 —<U,RI— Improvements of 75 miles of roads : were placed on the 1936 state highway program today with the an nouncement bid* would be received by the highway department Dev 17. The projects, located in 22 conn ties, will have an estimated cost ! of nearly »2,006,000. The letting is the third scheduled tor next month bids of J 2.000.000 worth of highway work heing scheduled for Dec. 3 and on $1,000,000 worth of bridge and grade separation work Dec. I 10. The projects in the Dec. 17 lett ing will include those in Lake. “My Skin Was Full of Pimples and Blemishes” Sayx Verna Schlepp: "Since using Adlerika the pimples ara gona. My skin is smooth and glows wlfli health." Adlerika washes BOni bowels, rids you of poisons that •ausc a bad complexion B J. Smith Drug Co.

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PAGE FIVE

Porter, Allen, DeKalk, Lawrence, Gibson, Jay, Madison, Warrick, White, Pulaski, Marton, Monroe, Brown, Rush, Henry, Grant, Perry. Daviess, and Martin counties. — — o— ■■■—i N — ROGERS, Ark. (U.R) — Cowboys at a rodeo here had been making excellent showings at roping j steers until an 1,800-pound animal btn-st through a fence and across a field. It. took a dozen cowboys an hour to subdue the steer. $«>oo ROUNDTRIP CHICAGO NOVEMBER 30 Visit the INTERNATIONAL LIVE STOCK EXPOSITION iGo on any train November 3<i arriving Chicago not later than 6:00 P. M. same date. Return any time until midnight Dec. 1 COACH SERVICE Consult Agent for details Pennsylvania Railroad ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■Bi

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