Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 292, Decatur, Adams County, 11 December 1935 — Page 5

jITINGTON TO House-lights Ipmaiiciul Dllicullies LatI e*l Woe Os Militant I Mayor 11-tU.H) |^K rl 111 iii'- <i<y <>f <iiini ujil lie turned off tonight I late W. II Bangs conEK'<> : 11J11 agaiUHt tll, ‘ No " 11 Power Company. | ft,l fund Hom which the city pny» ,he ll « ht >< e Purt ' m’reitt üße ' l 1,1 overhead ■ Hru.m.' n'al light post bulbs is Bangs explained. -aid. however, that B.JT' u,v electric plant. Bangs' weapon m his tight against B'K :: , , . utility, will continue . and i c tal < on- ■ ft, nt also will supply curthe pumps at the city k and will furnish pow ■pfcr the city builuing. i i k Treasurer Walla, i a bill from the city p. ' lll,'nt to the city ask current consumed October in street lighting, appropriatibn.” Ila> asked Reed .. ~,> Kg, n un o\. rdraft ' on the fund ■p tin buying of electricity for K Hreet lighting system. ■Bi fund had a balance of 45 witli ih. October known bill unknown November bill to Kft. s'i ■ uliling <!■ partinenl u.ii.OO ■ the end of 1934, it was To force tts expenditure v city council put ■AKE UP YOUR ■IVER BILEAnd You I! Jump Out of Bed n Bl the Mor.iiaj Racin' to Co liver should ix>ur out tw > pounds of Km bile your bowels daily. If this bi> your food doesn’t diges’. decay < in the bowels. Gns bloats up h. You ret constipa ed. Your |Hbßsy ’< :n is poisoned and you feci sour, the world looks punk. K L» • ’ nre only makeshifts. A mere doesn’t get at the cause. It rood, old Carter’s Little Livef’ •• two pound ; <>f bile flowing - H- ■ vi feeCtcpand ;p”. Haw* amazing in making bile fb>>. A r C.Trte- s I.iicle Liver Pills hv . uly retubfe anything ve.-'c. c ■LIVE CHRISTMAS TREES ■ ALL SIZES. ■ Buy Now’ 2nd & Jackson Sis. S Open Evenings.

IWE HAVE THE CAR I YOU WANT! I WE’RE CRAMPED FOR SPACE I THE WAY THEY’VE BEEN TRADING I ’EM IN ON THE 1936 ¥-8 HAS US I ON THE SPOT I FORDS! CHEVROLETS! PLYMOUTHS! I OTHER POPULAR MAKES I ALL IN TIP-TOP SHAPE MECHANICALLY I RUBBER, UPHOLSTERY, PAINT 100% I WE’RE OFFERING ’EM NOW! I At The Price You Want To Pay! I AL 0. SCHMITT MOTOR SALES “■fc® nr Al P R Decatur I IM II VOCK LOCAL. OBI) ULALBK

f. 15 ’?, 00 “2 tho budKet for »treet ! Ightlnr this year, making the toly S“t aVa,Ublc bang, entered office Jan. t 1935 which !" . e ’ ec,lon on » Platform which included the promise t 0 fight the Northern Indiana Power company and supply a municipal plant for Buntington. He Immediately ordered connection of hundreds of domestic and commercial lines to the city's -toyplant, in violation of a temporary utlUty' 0U Obttti,leil by the Private Bangs has been in litigation throughout the year, and during the summer served 101 days in Jail when he refused to post an appeal bond to a contempt conviction. The appeal is pending in supreme court. — — accept alibi CONTINUED FROM fAGE ONE BUbslantiated~"the~ felons' story. They were registered within 15 minutes after the shooting, and Anderson and Hamilton are more than two hours' automobile drive apart. Pierce and Joseph were captured at a Rush county farm home early yesterday, ending freedom obtained last Oct. 4 when they walked away from the Indiana state prison farm. They had been sentenced to 10 year terms for auto banditry. The prisoners admitted participation in a gun battle in an apartment on the near north wide here Dee. 7 in which two Indianapolis detective sergeants were wounded. They also confessed stealing' a.n automobile in Anderson on the night Levy was slain, state police •aid. The men will be questioned further today regarding numerous robberies in Indiana and Ohio Their photographs have been’ identified tentatively as the men' who participated in robberies al I Warren and Canton, Ohio. A pay roll amounting to Y 4.000 j was taken in the Warren robbery and $3,100 was seized in the Canton holdup. The men also have been connected with a $2.0U0 robbery in Anderson on Thanksgiving night, state police said. Joseph and Pierce told state police they have stolen seven automobiles since escaping from the prison farm. BOOST LANDON ■Y>NTTNUED from page one I’attersoii arived in Topega yesterday- in three private railroad cars. “J knew him only by his record,” Hearst said. "Governor Landon’s record is a platform in itself. "Today I met, the man- His char-1 acter is also a platform. “He coxes from the heart of Am- i erica, and in a campaign where the I 'preservation of the American spirit and the American system is to be a dominant issue three could be no better candidate to represent that issue than Gov. Landon." Another of Landon’s assets, the publisher said, would be an ability i to unite, the R pubican r, arty.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1935.

LEGALLY SPEAKINGf • fyjAO » _ Mh t\ ST"* -I teslnxT A. W “L 11 /faitfil '■ A mini HKrrM llwM jC’O/QA/OS’tAS' WAS TRIED AND COWVICTED OF PAPAL USURPATION! •• EIGHT MONTHS AFTER ME HAD DIED. Hand Syndicate Cleveland. 0 His corpse, clad in papal arraignment, was propped up on a witness cliair in the council-hall. In order to properly comply with the laws of the living, the late Pope was legally represented by a deacon who had been appointed by the synod to defend. After a lengthy trial, conducted strictly along legal lines, the decedent was adjudged guilty. Sentence was passed declaring his pontificate invalid, but many years later was set aside and the memory of Formosus legally vindicated and icstored.

JAPAN DEMANDS I CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE |cd Japan's refusal to unfold her naval constrtiction plans until the conference has determined the total tonnage to be allotted to each power and had also agreed to limitation of individual types of warships and the calibre of their guns. Nagano puzzled his listeners once with a declaration that “once Japanese views were accepted." ;the conference might study the relative vulnerability and the varying security needs of each power Lind that, m this connection, "slight ! adjustments” could be made. I The conference, holding its sec- • ond business session in Clarence House, adjourmd after Nagano finished exposition of Japan’s case i for parity. o FARMERS FAVOR ■nVTTNTTRI' e.«»M PAGE ONE i the processing tax, federal soil erosion projects an dottier farm meat- > urea sponsored by the administraI ti .n and concluded with an endorse--1 m nt of President Roosevelt, and 1 and his whole far uiorganizatiou. it was also urged that the PresiI dent be allowed to control the price

of gold for another year and establish a policy of currency management to maintain stable price levels. Other resolutions included; Endorsement of the farm credit act reducing interest rates on farm mortgage loans. i Continued construction of farm to market roads, and free opportunities for railroads to meet competition. A balanced budget “within the . next few years.” Expanded rural electrification. Modernization of regional and ter- ■ niinal market facilities. Approval of the child labor alueudmeut to the constitution. Consideration for the consumer in . industrial tariffs. , Extension of neutrality legisla- , tion and authority for the government to conscript wealth and industry in time of war as well as ■. take over manufacture of munitions. Concluding of reciprocal trade agreements. Hunter Finds Prey at Home Leominster, Muss. —(UP)— iAJ- ■ exander Lafave, deputy tax collec- - tor. went several miles to hunt racI coons without success. Reaching home two of the animals were dis- • covered treed in lii-s back yard. He e shot both of them.

NERVOUS BANDIT I SHOOTS VICTIM Fort Wayne Man Shot Twice Bui Bandit Flees W ithout Loot Fort Wayne, hid., Dec. 11.—<U.R) '—A nervous young bandit shot William J. Barth, 42, proprietor of the Barth electrical shop, last night in the second of two holdups which netted S2OO. Police were working on the theory that the man who shot Barth was one of two bandits who robbed the Indiana recreation purlar here yesterday noon. Barth was shot as he started to | comply with the gunman's order ’ to "stick ’em up and move over.” “I didn’t have a ehance to move before he started snooting,” Barth said. "The man cocked his gun and tired once, cocked his gun again and fired a second time.” Painfully wounded in both legs, l Barth lunged at the bandit as he , started to cock his gun a third I time. The man then turned and i rati. The Indiana recreation parlor stickup yesterday noon was the i work of two men who carried shotguns. Two hundred dollars in currency and checks was taken. REGARD ETHIOPIA CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE tions on the Ethiopian crisis. "A unilateral British ban on munitions exports, including oil, to the combatants would be directly contrary to British policy,” he said.

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Mo expressed regret that it was i "not in the public interest” to ! publish at present the Franco- | British correspondence concerning the support tusked from France

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-t l in ease the British fleet is attack- > j ed is the Mediterranean. i- 'Baldwin declined to amplify ■the statements which he and Edeu made to comtuona yesterday

PAGE FIVE

-, on the peace plan. In connection with the oil embargo especially, he re-emphasized I Britain's adherence to collective '' tuition.