Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 113, Decatur, Adams County, 11 May 1936 — Page 5
■h CHANGES pINGE ON OHIO Primary May | 1U jJ3c Chances For I Bromination lh - <l. b-gat.'S th'' .... i' llllll Jlinc u ’ h , wind up the g?., JEi ~1 i.impaign Three of tin 1 < ■ '■K, ■Alt jtW l ''"" "' Kausaß ' ■ will I,ike place toniorF, ia f, >i.d West Virginia. ■T ... : M sale lor Borah. i |,. riod on ■ ' ■florid*. B’ 1 ' ' -' l ’ 1 " " ls ‘"“ l,i ;l ■ Ohio ts ■ . maß- ’'•’’ 1 ’einoi ratle bolt « a. 11 > < -. * I 11110 Kgsindßlu ■ 'l'.lll of the late waß I ,ut “P by Uh '° ■rezulars inoiite son c.imii■dele al I"" l "' 1 "" l ’’"’ ■ : o-ra s 11 I'" ' l ’ l ' ! ' ‘•‘ , ■ parade V join. ■ SUMP' et Landon. Frank ■ jlooveniii'i •< no'ing of Oho. ~ i hi .1. Dickinson Ititle.. join ” e ' dii" .rein ti" ■wtnide. air- It■ •■..>l moi no o' ■ pears * "|| effort oi" .’i.up KK tKig- . a’lon from an ■other Mp m group than an) ■ thing* Borah's anti old guard Ohio Io .11 tack the ■the “tabs fighting under the ■ Borah bit ner. K The re ■ ered (Beal !| of the 52 seats to ft »bieh Ct i> will he entitled at the Rrpahß® convention. Reports >■ as MBa i d‘ i. u.ites and sonu of aikiy as 15 would be a real Borah The Ohio primary
Decatur Hatchery s Ahroe Street Phone 497 ! MAYTAG DEALER ■ I Sales and Service I James Kitchen, salesman.
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1 1* binding upon delegates. | The senator must make an Ohio | showing if he ia to go into the New ' . Jeraey primary and the national 1 I i convention with sufficient preatige i to accomplish hia avowed purpose j nomination of a liberal Republican candidate, preferably himself.' I He had a chance In Illinois April! 14 but ran almost a dead heat with' FtaitK Knox. Knox polled a mJ jorlty. rolled up lu Chicago, and Borah carried the Illinois farm i ' lands. i o— __ i ; HOUSE PASSES > page one) lan conservation corps appropria-1 - tion to allow Continuance of the I -| CCC at a strength of 350,0001 members. ti Provisions of the bill in. add!- • i tlon to work relief: 1. $458,631.860 for the social . | security set up, including $2(8,-' 000,000 for the treasury old age . I benefit account, and $157,000,000 I | for grants to states for unemploy-, , nient insurance, dependent old age i pensions, blind and dependent i , children aid. 2. $808,000,000 for continuing the I I civilian conservation corps at a : , strength of 350.000 with an aver-. age of 2.066 camps. , I 3. $39,900,000 for the Tennessee j j Valley Authority to be used main-1 ly for construction of da,ms and | . reservoir* in connection with i ..flood control and navigation. , 4. $63,350,000 for a public httild-l , ; ing construction program, build-1 L ings to be selected from a list of ' 1,189 by treasury and post office departmental heads. In Committee 1 \ Washington, May 11—(U.R)—The senate finance committee got down i ' to the job of revising the $803,000,- : ’ 000 tax bill today and summoned ' high new deal officials to confer ' on persistent demands for modifi- ’ cation or abandonment of the proposed levy op undivided eorpsra ' tion earnings. After a two hour executive ses- ; 1 sion. in which the committee dis- ' cussed with tax experts the effects of the president’s proposal to force corporations to pay out' I income in taxable dividends. ' Chairman Pat Harrison, I).. Miss.. ' announced that the committee had summoned: II (Secretary of Treasury Henry ' Morgenthau. Jr., to reply to a re- ' quest of Sen. Harry F. Byrd. I)., 'i<Va., regarding the number of large concerns which would escape with little or no taxes under the ! bill. Herman Oliphant, general coun- ’ sei for the treasury, to reply to • charges that the bill would foster 1 monopoly and would work hard--1 ships on small concerns. Oliphant 's appearance was considered of spe- ! eial importance because he will discuss the issue which capsed a strong bloc of Democratic inem- ’ hers to demand substitution or
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MAY 11, 193(5.
| d rax tic modification of the bill. Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace, who presumably will ; tell the committee the reasons , behind the president’s suggestion i that processing taxes bo reinsert* ( ed in the bill to raise some $337,- > 000.000 annually over a two year ' period. Wallace also would be I expected to discuss protests [ against the proposed “unjust enliichinent" or windfall tax. llH’ chairman Jesse H. Jones, who will be asked to give the attitude of his department toward broadening of exemptions for debtridilen corporations, especially railroads attempting to get out of receiverships. HINDENBURG TO i (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) should furnish favorable tall winds las the Hindenburg races to Frank* : fort* n-maln, its terminus In Geri many. i The weather was fair here today and then the gates of the naval air ! station were opened crowds were wa'ting to come in to view the ship. One ton of Lubrlcatliig oil was i pumped into the aft tanks this ! morning and food nupplias were put I aboard ( The 50 passengers shceduled to j make their trip will he assembled | here at Sunset and will be put , ahcard while the Hindenburg still I is in its hangar. • o WATSON STILL (CONTINUED FROMjeAGE ONE) ment to change the state chairmanship has succeeded with many ’ votes to spare,” Gates sa,id. If Irwin does retain the chalrI manship when all the reorganization is completed it will be the second time he and other state committee officers, supported by the genial former senator, have withstood vigorous assaults on ! charges of "bi-partisaji-ism.” Likewise, it will show that Watson has retained control of the state organization even after lowing bis membership in the United ; States senate and virtually abandi oning his home in Rushville. Watson, beaten for re-election in the Democratic landslide four years ago. has remained in Washington most of the time anyhow and has announced his retirement from politics. QUESTION MANY ! (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) who brought it into Mrs. Guild's room. The knife, found beneath a fire , e scape below Mrs. Guild's window, j may have been dropped by the i slayer, although it was not employ- | ed in the killing, officers said. o ITALIAN WALKS I (CONTINUED FROM PAGE. ONE). I until the extraordinary session ' scheduled to convene about June | 15. By 5:25 p. m. the Italians had I quit the room. Aloist executed his threat when ■ Mariam was seated in a group of : chairs reserved for delegates to i the league who are not members i of the council. • The Italians acted when it was {made clear that Miriam would sit at the council table itself if the 1 Italo-Ethiopian case were brought i up for discussion. I As soon as Mariam and his com-
Unemployed Mother Loses Baby . A“t 'i*. ..jK aKa Nji ■F Stir v I z AbREks ' —————— Mr*. Dorothy Giaruto — Another drama of the depression was recorded in Chicago courts when Mrs. Dorothy Gtaruso. 19, unemployed mother, was forced to relinquish custody of her baby son to an orphanage She told the court that she had been forced to leave the baby in a bureau drawet while she searched vainly for a job The case came to light when it was reported that the child was being neglected
panions sat down, Aloisi won rec-' ognition and read a short statement in which he said: “No semblance of the Ethiopian state exists.’’ Aloisi expressed the Italian position briefly, saying: “1 have the honor to state that 'the Italian delegation cannot admit the presence at the council table of the socalled Ethiopian delegation. In effect, no semblance of the Ethiopian state exists. The only sovereign Ethiopian government is that of Italy. “In consequence, all discussion of the Italo-Ethiopian difference is without meaning. I therefore find myself under obligation not to participate.” Suffers Collapse Jerusalem. May 11- (U.R) Emperor Haile Selassie is suffering a nervous collapse, it was disclosed today while he sought to win world aid to prevent the absorption of his country into an Italian empire. Nevertheless the emperor continued at work and yesterday telephoned his minister at Paris, Wold Mariam, to attend the league council at Geneva aud defend Ethiopia's interests. In the afternoon he received a group of foreign newspaper correspondents at tea. His secretary read in French, in the emperor’s name, a communique which said that Haile Selassie fled his country to save his people from extermination by Italian poison gas. Everett Colson, American, long in Addis Ababa as the emperor's chief adviser, arrived yesterday from Cairo, Egypt. He told the
BEHIND THE SCENES IN NATION’S POLITICS r ''Wd| t:-. .< r; ' ’■ r * i | *' * | \ *• < ■ M ' K!w * w _ —» j gja CORRIDOR INTERVIEW-—Speaker of the House Joseph W, Brynes (right) is enjoying his stroll through the House corridors with United press Staff writer, Edward L. Lewis (left). But behind all of that joviality is a serious political note. When there is big political news you will find a United Press staff correspondent getting the story behind the story. WHh the Republican and Democratic conventions drawing near politics is front page news. The unbiased, comprehensive, accurate reports of activities of all political parties are printed in the United Press dispatches. Keep up with political developments by reading these reports in the Decatur Daily Democrat.
' United Press that the only course for the entperor to take was to retire from his country but to keep his claim to the throne by serving some other country, interested in Ethiopia, as a "nuisance value” ami thus preventing recognition of Italy's conquest. o Chorines Get Job Security Olympia, Wash. — (U.R) — Among persons who come under the state unemployment insurance act are chorus girls, vaudeville performers in a theater, professional baseball and football players and racehorse 11 jockeys paid a fixed price per race, I State Attorney General G. W. | Hamilton has ruled. __o Quintuplets Learning French j Callander, Ont. —(U.R) Soon the ''Dionne quintuplets will be talking , I —in French. Dr. Harold Williams. Toronto, who replaces Dr. Allan | Roy Dafoe when the quints’ regular physician holidays, says Yvonne, I Cecile and Emilie are already say- ’! ing a few words. ;| o_ Songs of Solomon Unknown ii San Jose, Cal. —(U.R) — Raymond • I Wallace failed to win membership ' in the San Jose State college Pega--11 sus Literary Society after reading I parts of the “Songs of Solomon.” Members of the society failed to • recognize the extracts from the . Bible but merely held that the lit- . erary qualities were not up to the ; necessary standard.. •o ■ — Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
Home Towners Mr. and Mrs. Jack Daily, Pauldlug, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Harve Smith, Paulding, Ohio. W. L. Lehne, Tiffin, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Koller, Kendallville, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Merry, Rome City, Indiana. Mrs. Theo. McClintoch, 36 Winthrop St., Winchester, Mass. Miss Gladys Kern, Red Bird Mission, Beverly, Kentucky. Mrs. Lynn Kern, 2419 Union Ave.. Wesleyville, Pennsylvania. Mrs. T. M. Reed, 4314 Pembrook Lane, Fort Wayne, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. Pat Parrish, 4314 Pembrook Lane, Fort Wayne, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Myers, 1407 College Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. William O'Brien, St. Marys, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. William Schenkel, 1811 Franklin Ave., Fort Wayne, Indiana. Mrs. Rose Moran, 1407 College Ave., Indianapolis, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Harrington, 830 West Jefferson St., Rockford, 111. Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Miller, 2432 Lillie St., Fort Wayne, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gordon, 6113 Commonwealth Ave., Detroit, Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gray, R. R. No. 3, Terre Haute, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Horton, 433 North Main St., Urbana, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. B. N. Covert, 401 Florence St., Kirksville. Missouri. Miss Gusta Cramer, I. O. O. F., Greensburg, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. William Kremers, 826 James St., Niagara Falls, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. James Westveldt, 1133 Fulton St., N. W.. Grand Rapids, Michigan.. Mrs. Arthur B. Ambler Jr., 1741 Lanier Place, Washington, I). C. Mrs. Carrie Sutherland, Peabody Home, North Manchester, Indiana. Mrs. Frank Pierce, 11 Prudent St., Kokomo, Indiana. O. A. Smith, 1839 Gruber Ave., Fort Wayne, Indiana. Miss Evangeline Sparr, 312 North Chestnut St., Barnsville, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Spaulding, West Baden, Indiana. Mrs. John Conklin, 1583 Perry St., Columbus, Ohio. Mrs. Marie T. Ferntheil, New Richmond, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Herb Lachot, 1210 Oakdale Drive, Fort Wayne, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Overton, 111 | Waldron St., West Lafayette, Ind. Mr. .and Mrs. H. C. Oaksen, 1701 Stephenson Ave.. Menominee. Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Pumphrey, 400 Taylor Ave., Bellevue, Ky. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. F. Davison, 116 West 4th St., Mansfield. Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Rice, 1916 Allegan St., Fort Wayne, Indiana. Mrs. Elizabeth D. Young, Belt, Montana. Mr. and Mis. A. E. Schirmeyer, 318 Harrison St., Middletown, O. Mr. and Mrs. Gaunt, 1608 E. Creighton St., Fort Wayne, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Kenueut Schnepp, 1618 East Wayne St., Fort Wayne, Indiana.. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Kintz, 2711 New Haven Ave., Fort Wayne, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Urick, 1107 Lavina St., Fort Wayne, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. Karl Kraus, 2115 Cortland Ave., Fort Wayne, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Castle, 1621 Fletcher Ave., Fort Wayne, Ind. Mrs. Catherine Koart, 1107 Lavina St., Fort Wayne. Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Foreman, 812 Lavina St., Fort Wayne, Indiana. Mr. anil Mrs. F. F. McCollum, R. R. No. 4, Box No. 268, Okmulgee, Oklahoma. o Flowers Form Memorial St. John, N B. —(UP) —A flower bed, portraying a soldier on horse back carrying a lance from which floats a memorial banner carrying tlie inscription. “In Remembrance. 1914-1918,’’ will be laid out in King Square here this summer. 0 Napoleon, O-, —(UP) —The crow, regarded by some as a table delicacy, has a price on its head in Henry County. As an enemy to crops, more than 3,000 of the birds have been killed and paid for at 5 cents a head. 0 HEAVY TRAFFIC CCONTINIIED FROM PAGE ONE) injuries suffered when an automobile driven by her husband, Verlic Robbins, 34, collided here with another machine driven by William Overton, negro. Overton was held on charges of having improper license plates and failure to nave a driver’s license. Four-year-old Patty Lou Waggoner was injured fatally at Fort Wayne when she darted into the street in front of an automobile driven by Arthur M. Wehmeyer, Indianapolis. Gerald Groves. 19, drowned in St. Mary’s river at Fort Wayne when he dived and apparently struck his dead on a rock or log. Earlier, Charles Penrod. 13. drowned while wading in the same river. The body of Clayton Ganger. 50. was found floating in the hydraulic canal at Goslien. Deputy sheriffs searched for* the body of Arnold Taylor, who drowned near Wash-1
HOB This Is Worth a Trial w.
Sentence for. Jaywalkers-* Instruction in a babywalker If grownup jaywalkers could be sentenced to five days’ instruction in a baby walker, In plain sight of everybody on the streets, no doubt it would change pedestrian habits over night. Jaywalking is the lowest form of dangerous practice —one which causes many pedestrians to
ington. Melvin Havens, 62. wealthy Shelby county farmer, was killed and six others were injured in a headon collision of automobiles a mile
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PAGE FIVE
be killed each year and thousand* f injured. Last year there were 4,500 pedestrians who wore killed while crossing the street In the middle of the block. When pedestrians in cities cross against signals and In the middle of the block they Indulge in practices that are extraordinarily dangerous. Just take the experience at intersections as an example. The rate of death t>er pedestrian accident involving crossing against signals, according to the Travelers Insurance Company, was 55 per cent worse last year than when crossing with signals. This single fact knocks into a cocked hat the theory that it is foolish for a pedestrian to wait at an intersection for the signal to flash “Go." Jaywalkers are asked to pay heed to the fact that the chance' of injuries proving fatal, when hit while crossing in the middle of the block, is twice as great as crossing against signals, and three times as great as when crossing at the Intersection with the “GO" signal.
north of Carthage. Henry Moore, 57, Colfax, died at a Lafayette hospital from injuries ' suffered last Monday in an automobile collision.
