Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 298, Decatur, Adams County, 18 December 1935 — Page 5

OUNDS FATAL TO DETECTIVE ,dianapolis Officer Dies nf Wounds Suffered In Gun Battle h ,d M apo!is. Ind., Dee. 18—(UP) irvllls Quinette, lßdi*na.polia de.tlve aergeaut. died in City Hasal today from wounds suffered in pin battle with two escaped few from the state pri*»-n farm here Live Christmas Trees ivergreen Grave Blankets Wreaths Cemetery Bouquets Potted Plants Cut Flowers complete selection. Reasonable Prices. Open Evenings and Sundays. fey it ' ECATUR FLORAL CO. uttman Ave - PHONE 100

j3b ■ • B Last Inch Goodness insures ■ JSBL-' full value in every IHF tear B BrOSs Because they are made straight B ® and evenly By HAM) the *V\ Hi IE B STAG’ draws perfectly and POSIB TIVELY WILL NOT UNRAVEL B IN THE MOUTH. I ■ “WHITE STAG" FILLERS ARE B ALL LONG. UNBROKEN ANO |1 PROPERLY LAID LEAF and !B t JSfe' ro akes “EVEN THE LAST INCH MILD AND MELLOW.” f i J Now Popularly Priced and for sale by t/v all dealers. ! I I ! HSM December 20 Final Day lor Paying November City Light Bilk ! Only two days remain to pay : light bills for the month ol November. I Stop in tomorrow and ioli‘ y yourself of the last day rush. PAY CITY BILLS AT City HALL OPEN L NTIE 5 FOR YOUR CON'ENIEN* L.

. December 7. | Paul Pier:. aiMj Doiwl(1 j 1 both of mdianapolis, contaaaed ■ "hooting Quinett. and R(JMell ’ bm an,Jtll ‘ r <»«i ctive sergeant 0 -a near north aide apartment I Tile police .ought to quwtkn the men in conn ction with numnroua 8 « bb «rtea >n Central Indiana and concerning the slaying of Prank M Levy, Anderson patrolmad, Nov. 25. : , 6 bigitlvea escaped after the | shooting but were raptured several ’ day* later by .state police at a farm i-, home near Milroy. 1-1 Prosecutor Herbert M. Spencer tt said Piarce and Joseph will be h charged with murder. They formerly were held on . chargee of assault with intent to - I kill. Pierce and Jose»: h escaped from the Indiana state prlacn farm last October 4. They were sentenced ' from Marion county in 1934 on chargee of automobile banditry. — —o— WPA PROGRAM 1 -JS9XTUJ- page one) Indiana would be carried out. Logan has recommended extension of time to complete plans on a number of projects including improvement of the. river front at Evansville, construction of a new gymnasium at Clinton and a new civic auditorium at Michigan City. Total value of buildings to be constructed in the state undes PWA will be approximately 515.000.000, Manion said The $6,364,310 worth of projects now under iontrait, include s:'oos 028 in outright grants from th federal government under the 4b per cent arrangement. It provides that 1 cal sponsors furnish the remaining 55 per cent in revenue bonds. Manion pointed out that a significant feature of the program r was the fact that only 5275,250 of the allocations were requested in loans. He said that In most cases applicants were able to sell their bonds at lower interest rate than that asked by the government. Actual construction on most of

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1935.

[legally speaking 4 — mg,---_ r 11 n '' /i* • HHB HH ' ’WO FT) BW’C? |Lj vflSßhyßY ORDER OF A K .V T SPANISH COURT- [&> V SITTING IN HAITI — ■—* WAS irffe BARRED FROM RETURNING TO THIS I HEMISPHERE .... "yaguiftga 0 - This was in October, 1499 Columbus had been charged with the crimes of excessive cruelty to natives, venality and aspiration to royal rank. Francisco de Bobadilla, a favorite of King Ferdinand of Spain, acted as judge. After hearing the evidence, Columbus was found guilty of all of -.the charges and forthwith sentenced to be deported back to Spain, “never to set foot again on the soil of the New World.” By virtue of the decree, the great discoverer lost all of his rights and privileges as well as his property. 4?

the projects is scheduled to start soon after .tan. 1, giving several thousand men employment through the late winter and early spring months. “The program not only means actual employment for I’WA workers. but other thousands will be i involved indirectly in manufacture of building materials,” Manion said. School buildings predominate the projects. Municipally-owned water; plants at Gaston, Patoka, Lyons, j Pennville. East Gary. Lawrence, Carthage, West College Cornerj ami Bulin are included in the program. Sewage disposal plants and sewers will be constructed at Fowler. Franklin, Lafayette, Bluffton and Hagerstown. Shelbyville will be given a new court house costing $269,216 and Terre Haute will build a new city nail at a cost of $232,420. The state government, exclusive of Purdue and Indiana universities, has live projects under contract with PWA. to cost $632,500. The state is working under the 45 per Lent plan, only cost to taxpayers being $356,301. State projects include a men's. hospital at the Central State hospital for insane at Indianapolis. $175,000; a testing laboratory for, the state highway commission. $70,000; a dormitory at the Fort Wayne school. $147,000; a physical culture school at tne state inIstitution. $70,500, and an addition to the schools at the Tlidiuna Soldiers aud Saildren's Home, Knights-, town, $170,000. , Five projects, two of which al-' Iready are under way. are on the

DON’T pull the wool over your own eyes, Mr. Car-Owner. You’re risking ruin unless you have adequate Automobile insurance. /ETN A-IZE p oUcy _written to cover every tasurable risk of motoring. Aetna Casualty and Surety Co. Aetna Automobile Ins. Co. Aetna Life Insuranoe Co. SUTTLES-EDWARDS CO. j Agents Decatur, Ind. Phono 358 lllllil lnlllllll

Indiana university building program. Total cost is $1,066,416, of which $460,587 will be granted by the federal government. Purdue will build additions to the memorial building at a cost of $140,500 and a new administration building at a cost of $337,500. Government grants total $208,978. BRITAIN, ERANCE I <• ’ONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) o£ aggression. “No league member, even the most powerful, is free from the 1 danger of attack." the note said on the Paris suggestions’ let "Before pronouncing an opinion every member ask itself whether, if it were the victim of an attack, it would accept 'suggestions’ such as those submitted today for the approval of the league." Defies Enemies (Copyright 1935 by United Press) Rome. Dec. 18— (U.R) —Premier Benito Mussolini and Queen Elena led the nation today in a poignant "day of faith” on which Italians sought to demonstrate i their unity against the world. Mussolini, in a symbolic ceremony at the inauguration of the new town of Pontinia, which fascists have erected on the site of the old disee.se ridden Pontine

| CORT| i" Give Cort Theatre Christmas Book Tickets for Christmas this year. $1.20 in Admissions for SI.OO. Tonight & Thursday REMEMBER "BAD GIRL "? I SMB > J aA M jiH ‘ A rOX p,ctui,e IK T o y aPIHIw I’iutj • ■ The Yacht Club Boys “The Vodka Boatman” and I Looncv Toone Cartoon. lOc-ZOc SUN., MONContinuous bunday from I.lb.

. marshes, used all his powers of oratory to justify Ms course in I East Africa. But he did not disclose his attitude toward British-French proposals for settlement of the Ital-ian-Ethiopian war, which he will discuss nt tonight's secret meeting of the fascist grand council. Queen Elena’s part was to Mad millions of women who dropped their wedding rings into melting pots In every city and village to swell the country's gold reserve. Mussolini defied Italy's enemies and promised the country victory In its search for a place in the sun. — o FORMER LOCAL (CON TINCP) FltOM PA GE ONE > Fort Wayne Friday afternoon at 1 o'clock and the body will then be brought to Decatur for services at the United Brethren church at 2 p. m. Burial will be made in the Decatur cemetery. —O ' 1 K. Os C. Continue Persecution Fight New York, Dec. 18—(UP)—The Knight*! of Columbus restated today, in a letter to President Roosevelt, their demand that the United States remonstrate aganist “Persecution of religion by the Mexican government.’’ The letter, signed by Marlin HCarmody, supreme knight, and Wiliam J. McGinley, supreme secretary lenied that in a letter dated October 25 they had asked "intervention.” "When you say that your admin'stration will pursue a policy cf nonintervention. . . You are either talking about something that is enirely foreign to the subject matter of our correspondence or you are

E. A * •M v B ■ i i \ I\jVJXXiUi! Bgßßyv, Au- J »“v> »■ , s The Coming Holiday Dinner will be made Enjoyable if the s *T?SSBL..,<Family is gathered around a Beautiful New Dining Table! * 8 Piece 35 B WSM Dining Room Suite 2 M.. I Large Buffet, Table and Six « pm Sa- Al — // ( hairs. Walnut and Gum. » WISIShi Beautifully Finished. « | ' Remarkable Value! 05 t gSafeftwl ©Thfe > BIvU 9 & X f* v£ T lit ® MR'1 B--XJ f 3 1 C- 1 pk®i’ V h c- 1 S A SUITE FOR THOSE WHO S PREFER THE “MODERN” Ml g TABLE, BUFFET djrj AA | LJUI Jl] I 2 C. I OUR CHAIRS, complete .... 1 Fil I i - • ' | g I- >■ • * i ® " * I I ** L V Refreshingly‘Different’ Suite, Distinctive tII $ it ' TFiij Jll z «» B’ !■ . i B I II I JT -2 S. Yet Not Extreme. Modern Stvling Presents , z*<r'r i/ti w “ m zi " - A Change From The Conventional. - 9 t r 2 »; 111111 ’f ■ ■' ™ “ * I A 5 PIECE DINETTE | | REASONABLY PRICED s i raffihswW $16.95 J C*- Il z 1 1 Made of Solid Oak in Light Oak and Fancy 2 is n A A v 11 Green Finish. Decorated. ’tf II R H ¥A <1 H II Table and Four Chairs. C ®Vr | j Q n J — -2 Cl. i ft EXTRA SPECIAL 35 fa; a 1 3 S 1.25 END TABLES—t ach Ot/C c J J *> • —— g i BEGINNING MONDAY, DEC. 16 OUR STORE WILL REMAIN OPEN EVENINGS. 5 I [ HARDWARE and HOME FURNISHINGS |

: endeavoring to translate into the sugestions of the Knights of Columi bus something which was not con- ■ tained therein and which you were • specifically advieed that the ■ Knights of Columbus are not askI fng tor and do not want," the new ■ letter eaid. 1 Slight Decline in Urban Relief Rolls 1 Washington. Dee. 18 — (UP) — Federal delay in getting the $4,000,1 000,000 work-relief program under way resulted in a decline of only 9.4 per cent in the nation's urban relief rolls between October and November, official figures revealed today. The November dole load listed

» I IN THE INTEREST OF BETTER CITIZENSHIP Adams Lodge 1311 Loyal Order Os Moose will show a one reel feature picture “THE GREATEST CRIME" J ■ ADAMS Theater Wednesday and Thursday r Reveals very graphically what can happen to any underprivileged child who cannot see before him such ‘ sanctuary as is offered by the Child City at Mooseheart. Picture has dramatic prologue with regular film actors. Produced at Mooseheart. No additional charge.

1.604,130 families and single ipcrsons, compared to 1.770,839 cases the month before, a deadline of; 186.609. Relief osetu dropped $9,888,13*' between the two month*. Direct relief coat $42,340,559 in November and $53,178,701 the month before. The figures were compiled from 145 I of the nation’s largest citlen. — Q. . . Ex-Follies Beauty Is Killed In Fall San Francisco, Dec. 18—(UP) — Olga Steck, 33, reportedly a former toiles beauty, was kilte dtoday when I she fell from a 12th floor window of i a hotel. 1 First reports by police indicated

PAGE FIVE

■ the fall was accidental. Officers said she fell from a ra in ■I occupied by Thoma*! L. Mathlne, . who reportedly Is a Los .Angeles ■ salesman for a San Francisco bond brokerage firm. He could not be • located immediately.

ED A MCI THEATER <J

Tonight & Thursday SYLVIA SIDNEY in “MARY BURNS, FUGITIVE” with ALAN BAXTER (new screen find), Melvyn Douglas, Pert Kelton, Wallace Ford, Brian Donlevy. WANTED by the police of 48 states! WANTED by a gang chief as his accomplice! WANTED by an honest man as his beloved wife . . WHO gets MARY BURNS? You'll find the answer in this thundering drama of MARY BURNS against the world! Added — An EDGAR KENNEDY Comedy; ISHAM JONES A. HIS ORCHESTRA: and an interesting MOOSEHEART subject. 10c-20c Fri. & Sat. —BARBARA STANWYCK in “ANNIE OAKLEY” — with Preston Foster, Pert Kelton, Melvyn Douglas, Andy Clyde. — A BIG SPECIAL! Sun. Mon. Tues. — F R E OR I C MARCH, CHAS. LAUGHTON, ROCHELLE HUDSON in “LES MISERA6LES.” CONTINUOUS ALL DAY SUNDAY from 1:15. ■■MKmUEMBKMnBB