Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 306, Decatur, Adams County, 27 December 1935 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
MB.Everywoman.
SAYS STUDENTS LEAD ATTACKS Charge Chinese Students Influenced By Mission Schools Tokyo, Dec. 27 —(U.P) —Students in foreign mission schools of China — subject to American and British influence —are leaders in the present antl-Japanese demonstrations, a foreign office spokesman charged today. The charge was eloquent of Japanese feeling, now thoroughly roused by widespread student agitation in China against the recent Japanese move to force autonomous government for northern Chinese territory adjoining the Japanese-fostered state of Manchukuo. It came as the result of questions regarding the receipt by the foregn office of official information on reports in some newspapers that Americans and Britone In China seemed Influencing the student agitations. There was no information as to the participation of particular persons, the spokesman replied. But, he said, it was noticeable first that in previous antl-Japanese “riots” foreign mission schools took a negative attitude. In this instance, he said, the mission schools seemed to be taking the leadership. The spokesman was asked whether it was possible the new activity in the mission schools was due to increased Chinese con-
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j trol of them. Ah to that, the spokesman said, he had no information. The spokesman had no information, either, as to reports that I a division of soldiers had been i added to the Japanese garrison in i northern China. » Then he turned to the new activity on the Manchukuoan-Mon-golian border, which has brought reports of an intended Japanese drive Into Mongolia to extend the ; "buffer" area between communistl Russia and China. Manchtlkuoan officials. the spokesman said, desire a friendly i settlement of the dispute that has arisen as the result of border clashes. The success of the es- ' forts at friendly settlement, he I added, depends largely on the at- ! titude of the Mongolians. • The spokesman sa.'d he under- , stood that Manchukuo had sent a formal protest against recent border activities. Mongolia already had protested. Parliament, after a two day ses- ! sion. adjourned today until January 21. o CHURCH HEADS I j/vivnvnrn rnOM P»GE ONE) teetant churches flor this Insult from a group of Anglo-CMholics,” he said. Particularly incensed by a statement of the uinty octave council that the protestaut church is “bankrupt ethically, culturally, morally, and religiously." he said that the charge was “untrue in fact * and untrue in practice.” 1 Editors of two other porteetant 1 Epiecopal periodicals jointed him 1 in afaeking the proposal. < Clifford P. Morenhause, editor I of the Living church, Milwaukee, i
“Indignation Rites” Held for Flogging Victim IM z - ? HSr ‘"‘/A few
Funeral services designed to express “public indignation and penitence” were held at Tampa, Fla., for Joseph Shoemaker who died from effects of a flogging administered by a gang who seized Shoemaker and two other labor organizers who were flogged, tarred and feathered. President William
said the unity octave council “is not typical of either the Episcopal church or Anglo-Catholic movement both o* which reject the Roman claim to b n the only true church.” An editorial by Dr. Guy Emory Shipler in the Churchman next
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1935.
Green of the A. F. of L., has threatened to cancel the organization’s 1936 convention scheduled for Tampa; Gov. Dave Sholtz of Florida ordered an investigation, and Norman Thomas, Socialist leadt-r, announced a mass protest demonstration to be held in Tampa.
week will say that Clerkymen of the council “include not a name of any well known Anglo-Catholic in America.” Unison of Protestant churches, rather than of the Protestant Episcopal and Catholic faiths, was suggested by Dr. Ivan Lee Holt, President of the Federal council of Churches of Christ in America, as a more ipractical way to strengthen Christianity. 0 Grand Jury Indicts Township Constables South Bend, Ind.. Dec. 27.—(U.PJ — William Bushong and Otto Switzer, township constables, were under grand jury indictments today charging them with conspiracy, accepting bribes and impersonating state officers. The men were accused of accepting between S3OO and S4OO from liquor store owners, threatening raids unless payments were made. They were arrested by federal officers earlier this week on charges
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' of impersonating federal officers. ’ Bushong and Switzer said they were "victims of a frameup.” o To Test Strength On Currency Inflation Washington. Dec. 27 — (U.P.) —A direct test of presidential strength in the house will be forced on the currency inflation issue during the first two weeks of the session it was learned today. Supporters of the Frazier-Lemke farm mortgage refinancing bill, calling for a potent currency expansion of eight billion dollars plan to open the session with the immediate drive for votes. o Shirley Temnle Is Box-Office Favorite Hollywood, Dec. 27 —(U.P) —Shirley Temple was the biggest money maker at the box office during the 1934-35 season, Motion Picture Herald's annual survey disclosed today. The theater owners’ journal
listed the box office favorites in the following order: Shirley TernI pie, Will Rogens, Clark Gable, the Fred Astaire-Ginger Rogers team, Joan Crawford, Claudette Colbert, Dick Powell, Wallace Beery, Joe E. Brown, ajid James Cagney. Mae West landed in 11th place; Bing Crosby 12th, Norma Shearer ISth, and Janet Gaynor IGth.
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1 Arrest Additional Members Os Gang Rochester, Ind., Dec. 27 (U.R> Four more arrests in connection with a series of Northern Indiana holdups in which four mon are held under high bond here, wore disclosed today. Gary police and state offie.ertt raided the homo of Philip Rock,
61, Gary, taking intn r his son Joe, 23 ail(] I," 1 • Sinelko, 24. Three d Ed ’ . a <M«keyB t il lw e re ,;2 B ' i Tony Humphrey, 03 was arrested at Montpehe? brought hero on < har K e spiracy to commit a fei ony Trade In a Good Town - D|
