Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 54, Decatur, Adams County, 3 March 1936 — Page 5

Ktiws illffS SHIN V Capone M |IU H Mv.rv ui '' A '“ K p, „ ~ hl s - - u. fail »eM*' 1....’ «». .a. ds -rni-i'i'ation hall. M?\ld !v nmst Ha'.cdted M' ; ~ >■ .■:!:■: J-sa-l'is teattalk- I” 1 '’ l,, ' v " aS W" , . ,!!> - ™;; ■?L‘ Wl ne- that brough* ■L ■ fame .us a U.w maIW. .. «a> ’ ‘‘ n !,l,> d , r ?■! Ilia’. ” ul<l -■•an! - *v. na.- h>< K nwchine-gitn death and K. him vn a career L.at K. Bm KITES ■ Merest costs ■ reduced nearly ■ ONE-HALF -LOCAL” always loans ■t,Ail loans made at ■L’--r maximum rate Kitted by No in ’ Htnsrs required. ■yc- cut borrc '' amount-: ■ Io K r AS FOLLOWS: ■ iOOO now costs only M Si.CO per month now costs only M $2.00 per month ■iM.GO now costs only B| $250 per month ■®.a now costs only ■ $3.00 per month ■SC.OC now costs only H $4.00 per month Ktsn • ether amounts are m proportion as this Ktw low interest rate govil! loans. ■ YOU SAVE THE E DIFFERENCE rg to investigate. ■ Call, write or telephone. ■ Special Time Plan ■ for Farmers, local Loan Co H Over Schafer store 2-3-7 Decatur, Ind.

[Public Auction ! OF LIVESTOCK | FRIDAY, March 6 ... 10 A. M. W ■ HORSES - 40 I 10 — HORSES — 10 yw Brood Mules, Several Matched Teams. Sorrels and ■loans. Extra Good. ■®od Milch Cows. Heifers and Stock Bulls. ■rood Sows. Gilts and Boars. g 1 ' I'■ 1 '■ hcstnut Fence Posts. Blue Grass Seed. ■i't', Superior Grain Drill, Grain Grader, miscellaneous articles. DECATUR RIVERSIDE SALES E. J. AHR and FRED C. AHR—Managers "so" 4 Doehrman, auctioneers. A J Yoh Tell Us d ). How You / Wish to Pay j H is our practice to ask the ' ' an bly how they wish to meet i ’heir obligation, rather than to / ( dictate terms. We have abundant J , evidfn ve that this f V pj ca | Zwick r v ...TPolicy is very much appreciated. ' i i __ :.. p Ho N E U 1)1 NRJHT 800 dH '

Where Ice, Floods Threaten Middle West .^———————— ..—■■■ ..— - ■‘ r W? 4. v ■■. - I- ~■ jfß j&fr- ■ mW y>■ «‘£_ 4-.- ’ '** El 'dX * il t £ .V*» - - “TO?.. * •• a a* t.,««» » w * With many sections of the middle west reporting flood conditions and heavy damage following an extended thaw this graphic photo shows an inundated suburban ■ ction near Joliet, 111. An ice jam in the Kankakee River caused a 15-fout rise of the water and threatened to sweep summer homes down the river should the • iam hraair

brought death to at least 22 men. Tony. 24 when lie died, abandoned the family name. De Mery, when lite I mother married a second time. He and his brother took theier stepfather’s name. Gebardi. Jack changed his to McGurn when he tried prize-fighting. Tony was the only.orc of tae family—there are three other brorhers and a sister - to testify at the i inquest into McGurn’s death. He I testified that he did not know the i men who shot McGnrn to death, i Feb. 15- But that was not enough ! security for the assassins. . Last night, as T ny eat in a ’ ;iool room playing cards with two frieneds. two men strode up to their table. They held handkerchiefe to their faces. j “Stick ’em up.” one of them I . grunted. The men at the table, rise. I ' handii shoulder high. A rolling pall I.licked- Then the guns crashed. I nine times- Four slugs smashed in- i to Tony's body—into his jaw, his 1 : wrist, his shoulder, and below the 1 heart. I Is tony crumpled to the floor, the slayers backed away, waving I their guns across the hall. At the I exit, they spun around, fled through ths door, across the sidewalk, and ; into a waiting car. Tony’s younger brother. Joseph. I was playing pool when tne asuas-1 1 sins entered, knelt at Tony’s side. Th n he helped others carry Tony : into an automobile. At the Mother i Cabrinl Hvspital, doctors eaid Tony wouffl die. Police tried to get him 1 to talk, but failed, and in an hour (Tony was dead.

DECATLR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, 5

POLfIICAL WEB 7ANGLIN6CASE I Hauptmann Hope For Second Reprieve Dimmed By Politics II Trenton, N. J . Match 3 —(UP) — •i A estrange web of polities in keepI ing with the bizarre tradition of the | Lindbergh case enmeshed the fate 1 of Bruno Richard Hauptmann today A session of the state legislature . last night served to dim the fore- ‘ cast of a seoond reprieve made earI lier by a responsibl ■ state official. 'ln the maneuvering of tlie state ' assembly on a bill seeking to divert 1 highway funds to relief and an- ■ other to prevent the interim ouster lof Cd. 11. Norman Schwartzkopf, 1 head of the state polio ■. . nlitical .-x-! perts protassed to see an alliance 1 between Republican governor Harold G. Hoffman and Democratic bess Frank Hague, Mayor of Jersey , City. The Governor, it was said, had agreed to continue against Lite high- ' wa’, a ill—A measure on which 'he j addressed a joint session last night in return for aid in denying extension of the term of Col- Schwartzkotpf whose handling of the Lindbergh case he had characterized publicily as “the most bungling” in history. They are political and personal enemies. ; The aliance became evident to 'ebuervers when the young bill which would keep S. hwartzkopf i temporarily in office after his term expires June 7 wae passed on the I Calendar on motion of its sponsor. I Thi-s action was taken, it was learn--1 ed. because Hague had ordered the

Cook Renews Claim to Discovery f ft ■K a r* =>r Ki Jm lit ' v P-'.4 s. «i Roland L. Redmond^- * WK <•. * ' f—" “ ” ‘ ' J Frederick A. Cook ifeaE. | 23 > iF j aJftß** ■ J A -4R 1 ***X |fcs '■' Congratulated by Ki n ISH Echoes of a controversy which once shook the scientific world were revived when Frederick A. Cook recently renewed his claim to having been the first to discover the north pole. Cook seeks vindication from charges that he faked his discovery. Although Admiral Robert Peary is credited with having been first to reach the pole, Cook contends that he made the discovery a year before, in 190?, and has a?ked Roland Redmond, president of the American Geographic society, to consider the case at the next meeting of the council in April. He explained that he sought vindication ‘'before I die”.

I Democratic minority to side with i the governor on the bill and pro--1 ponente feaered its defeat had it been brought up. STRIKERS ASK ' (CtMfTINUED rii-'M PASS j conversation. Mayor Fiorello 11. LaGuardia, ' who proclaimed a state of emergency yesterday and ordered police- . men. firemen, and health board em- . ployes to replace strikers where tthe health of the public was endangered, summoned union leaders and building owners to a new . conference. Bambrick, working on the third floor of one of the buildings where elevator operators had quit, said 100.000 men and women would be on strike today. He said 70,000 were out yesterday in approximately 6,000 buildings. Building owners disputed his , estimate and said strike breakers hired yesterday, with more to be employed today, would restore service nearly to normal. Twelve thousand patrolmen on i 24-hour duty arrested only 64 persons in the strike's first two days, i principally because pickets made few attempts to prevent strike ■ breakers from entering buildings. One casualty was Mrs. Peggy Chamberlain, a hotel chambermaid. I < Fingering a purple eye. she said: :! “the manager biffed me when I ; tried to organize.” Pickets did use “persuasion" on i strike breakers at the Mayflower hotel. Twelve hours after a crew to replace the strikers had been employed, the replacements walk- . ed out. "I think it ain’t healthy,” the substitute doorman told the manager.

ARCH 3, 1936.

BITTER FIGHT FOR HOME RULE Pleas Greenlee Against Curtailment Os Local Units Power Indianapolis. Mar. 3.--((J,R)—Pleas E. Greenlee, candidate for the Democratic nomination for governor. today sent an open letter to Gov Paul V. McNutt promising a bitter fight against curtailment of powers of small governmental officers in enactment of the security program. Greenlee, however, promised support of the administration s security bills to be considered by the legislature which convenes in special session Thursday. The former patronage director of the administration denied that he would again take an active part in "political machinations” in an effort to guide legislation through the general assembly. Greenlee was instrumental in enactment of most of the administration bills in the 1935 session. "I want to assure you,” Greenlee wrote the governor, “that 1 i am as much interested in seeing ■ ‘he people reap the benefits of so- : call security as anyone and I will , do all in my power to bring it I about.” “However, I am definitely committed to the idea that local units

Wei Good Seeds Make Good jIL GARDENS WE HAVE AGAIN THIS YEAR UN£USUALLY LOW PRICES ON QUALITY BULK GARDEN SEEDS. NOW IS THE TIME TO YOUR (GARDEN SEEDS. BUY SEEDS IN BULK AND SAVE MONEY”. CHECK YOUR GARDEN SEED NEEDS FKOM ITEMS LISTED BELOW: CHINESE PE TSIA CABBAGE 15c oz. TH’ TOP MUSKMELON 10c oz. EARLY FLAT DUTCH CABBAGE 20c oz. FORD Extra Early HACKENSAtk MUSKMELON.. 10c oz. -.-.rAwiv vrr r nvcic-rcvT' HONEY DEW MUSKMELON 10c oz. " ,S^?^, ? r -i ELLO " RLsISTANT .... , OSAGE MUSKMELON 10c oz. CABBAGE JOc oz. KLECKLEY SWEET WATERMELON 10c oz. SNOW BALL CAULII LOW ER % oz. 35e TOM WATSON WATERMELON 10c oz. EARLY DWARF ERFURT CAULIFLOWER INDIANA SWEETHEART WATERMELON. 10c oz. % oz. 35c LARGE RED WETHERSFIELD ONIONS... 20c oz. DANVERS HALF LONG CARROTS 10c oz. ' ?2 C ° Z ’ OXHEART CARROTS 10c oz. SOUTH PORT WHITE GLOBE ONIONS .... 20c OZ. t.MnixrtiTt'r, r rv%r/- r-iTr’iriUUUVU -Ml PRIZE TAKER ONIONS 20c oz. IMPROVED LONG GREEN CUCUMBERS... 20c oz. HALLOW CROWN PARSNIPS 10c oz. IMPROVED WHITE SPINE CUCUMBERS.. 20c oz. EARLY SCARLET TURNIP RADISH 5c oz. BOSTON PICKLING CUCUMBERS 20c oz. SCARLET GLOBE RADISH 5c oz. SNOW PH KLING CUCUMBERS 20c oz. SCARLET TURNIP WHITE TIP RADISH ... 5c oz. EARLY GREEN CLUSTER CUCUMBERS ... 20c oz. FRENCH BREAKFAST RADISH ’ W.':i.' !c ot WHTTE WONDER CUCUMBERS 20c oz. CHINA ROSE WINTER RADISH 5c oz. CHICAGO PICKLING CUCUMBERS 20c oz. DWARF STONE TOMATO oz. 10c PENCIL ROD BLACK WAX BEANS 20c !b. EARLIANA TOMATO % oz. 10c BURPEE S STRINGLESS GREEN POD BEEFSTEAK TOMATO i/ 4 oz. 10c BEANS 20c lb. GOLDEN SELF BLEACHING CELERY 20c oz. RFH VALENTINE BEANS 20c lb. WHITE PLUME CELERY 20c oz. BEANS . 20c tb. BROADLEAF’ BATAVTAN ENDIVE 10c oz. rfd KIDNEY BEANS 20c tb SIMPSON LETTUCE 10c oz. WHITE MARROW BEANS .'..... '. 20c lb. jl RA *’ ) i rrTTvr v } C ° Z ‘ IMPROVED GOLDEN WAX BEANS 20c »b. 5L^ K ,t ,EEl ?*' 1 I l.^L S ?P‘;P N LET TUCE 10c oz. KENTUCKY WONDER WAX BEANS 20c lb. Ko • lE C " Z ‘ BURPEES BUSH i.I.MA BEANS 20c lb. } v ° Z ' KENTUCKY WONDER BEANS .. . 20c lb. S 7F?i°Xvk E IJiN C ArM 1 C ° Z ‘ LAZY " IFF. BEANS 20c lb. p A iiHvcr u ! C ° Z ‘ COUNTRY GENTLEMEN CORN 20c lb. m-m.) i”KEARLY EVERGREEN CORN 20c lb. !» UL v -mi. ‘ ? ° Z ‘ GOLDEN BANTAM CORN 20c ft. L eo! ui-r£’iu Y-i? h \\ F u AF i ‘’ - C ° Z ‘ STOWELL’S EVERGREEN CORN 20c ft. KLVwvln ”in C ° Z ‘ WHITE RICE POP CORN 20c lb. n C T’ NOTT’S EXCELSIOR PEAS 20c ftrw JUn LU SWLEI EAS 10c oz. AMERICAN WONDER PfiAS 20c ft. um’ S A S ii J! A a RD r C OZ ‘ PREMIUM GEM PEAS 20c Ib. EXTRA EARLY EGYPTIAN BEETS .......’. 5c o£ * ALASKA PEAS 20c lb. IMPROV ED BLOOD TURNIP BEETS 5c oz. DETROIT DARK RED BEETS 5c oz. | t - s Garden Time! . . There’s still I f EARLY BLOOD FURNIP BEETS 5c oz. a frost in the air, and March winds F,(i(i PLANT •• 10c oz. w m j )t . blowing .. . bitt Springs DWAR! SIBERIAN KALE 10c oz. almost here! So now’s thetimeto CTL, MAMMOTH ROCK RED CABBAGE 20c oz. st(>ck up uu all gul . d ,.„ ne( . (ls . A nd W a EARLY WINNING STADT CABBAGE 20c oz. ir we - vc , )llt that puhn across. A A here’s another for you to remem- «■ 19 /*\. / /"I/I |■l*E“ f” X I,el "■ You eaiti buy everything you’ll dMfJ v/he, SC lAF F R <=?Wg CSSSSSSax ’’ u <u u wwwwwo early opportunity tor you garden 1; ■ ■ ■>—> HARDWARE and HOME FURNISHINGS enthusiasts. I liiWbll 111 I

of government shall lose no part I of their identity and powers.” One of the three security bills > scheduled to bo enacted gives n i state welfare board wide powers i over county and district boards. [ ROOSEVEI.r SENDS 11 CONTINUED JFMOM- TAG It ONE by those in control of these cor- < porations. In one year alone, the ' government will be deprived cf revenues amounting to ovbr one billion three hundred million dol- ' i lars.” The taxew which would bo repealed under Mr. Roosevelt’s suggestion had the. following estimated annual yield: Capital stock tax $163,000,000. Corporate excess profits tax 15,000,000. Corporate income tax (estimated 1937) $826.600,000. Total $994,600,000. Mr. Roosevelt said the treasury believed the new proposed tax would yield that sum plus the $620,000,000 in permanent revenue which would be needed to finance a continued farm program and the increased amortization costs due to immediate payment of the £/?Z2 SALVF bob tO [ DS IJCll'in-T WI.KTH SALVK-WOHK price ,H,O, ’ S 5,10, 25c

t bonus. Mr. Roosevelt criticized present s j corporate taxes aw containing i "Inequalities" and "leaks.” ‘ "The accumulation of surplus in ! corporations controlled by taxpayers with laj-ge incomes is encouraged by the present freedom of uni distributed corporate income from . ' surtaxes," he declared. ; “■ o Mayor Glvez Pay to Library

i " ...... COKE CAR BASEBURNER AND FURNACE SIZE SEMET-SOLVAY COKE ON TRACK f ash Coal & Supply K. A. STUCKEY Home of Stuckey’s Hog Glad.

PAGE FIVE

|L. Teagarden is donating two years [salary us rent for the village's new library location. —-- 1 11 Use Fabrix mats al your I door and save your rugs. Special sizes made up Io 8 ft. long. Phone your order Io Porters or Mrs. Joe Linn our i agent. Porter Tire Co. > Phone 12K9 311 Winchester