Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 122, Decatur, Adams County, 21 May 1936 — Page 5

fc J OW.Fff jllii BASSE Assistant Is .■Kj With Killing Wife — ''Kt 1 >" !..,. jkl ■Ea'. i ,; - v ... I ...

me and going THE CIBSON FOR J TOPS' IN LUXURY KazO ■

M « #MS J9SOITH JATtTL. ARGEST IN ICINNATI OAUAIIbGEN.MGR.

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Two Celebrities to Marry? Q-l < ;» /I 1 \ -*■ BMIb v . Sa ws* 71 l J 1 . WRQIZ lib ‘ | Ell a > a~Knidijgjjg|||S|y? ■ • Si JI Elissa Landi, stage star and member of European nobility, and J. F. T. O’Conner, controller of the currency, will be married the latter part of May, according to observers who base their prediction on the fact that the screen star obtained her divorce May 11 and O’Conner is planning a Hollywood trip May 22.

iand her husband already had discussed the possibility of a divorce led investigators on the search for "other women”. The policewoman said Mrs. Tallmadge complained to her that her husband was "running around with other women.” Mrs. Tallmadge was slain Tuesday night on a lonely gravel road while she a.nd her husband were returning from a visit to Chana, 111. They had attended a birthday party for Mrs. Tallmadge there and her husband had gone to collect rental on a house which she owned. Tallmadge told police two ba.n-

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1936.

• dits stopped him on the road and ■ that one of the pair, a shabby i man, stepped to the automobile and said: “This is a stick-up.” The pair obtained several hundred dollars in cash from Tallmadge, he said, and then ripped a glove from Mrs. Tallmadge's hand m order to get her rings. It was then, he said, that one of the pair ordered her into the bandit car. "He was prodding her with a gun,” Tallmadge said, “pushing ' her toward the car. Suddenly she streamed and started to run. "He shot her through the back of the head and I thought she was dead”.

RECALL ITALY ARMY LEADER Marshal Badoglio, Hero Os Recent War, On Way To Italy • Copyright 1936 by United Press Rome, May 21 —(UP) —Marshall Pietro Badoglio, hero of the east I African war. hastened to crisis-rid-I den Europe today—l 2 days after I hie appointment as viceroy of Ethiopia. No reason was apparent, on the surface, for his sudden, unexpected start. But it seemed e'ear that it meant early developments of major importance to Italy and Europe. j Sent to retrieve the Italian for-' tunes in Ethiopia last November, Hadogli- electrified the army and entered Addis Ababa in triumph May 5 and in a statement indicated that he intended to remain for a considerable time. | On May 9he was named Viceroy. of Ethiopia I Sin e that day the League of Nations council has voted to continue penalties against Italy for its war on Ethiopia, to premier Benito Mussolini’s open, fierce rage; the Italian delegation to the league has left Geneva and it has been anr.ouncmed that Italy wiP not participate in any League activity until the penalties are removed; Chance-1 lor Kurt Schuschnigg has seized 1 power in Austria. Ousting Mutssol-I ini's protege and satellite, Prince I Ernst Von Starhemberg; There has been a somewhat mysterious Italian-British exchange of discourt- ’ esies over charges that British firms sent dura dum bullets to At-' rkatalian newspapers for days past] have talked more and mere of the danger—almost the certainty—of war in Europe. News that Badoglio had left Addis ' Ababa less than two weeks after his official appointment an Viceroy . came unexpected'y and laconically in authoritative messages from the capital. | These dispatches said that .Marshal Rjdolfo Graziani, commander- 1 in-chief in Eastern Ethiopia, arrived | at Addis Ababa frem Harar at 1(1 j A. M. yesterday. Badoglio at once handed over authority to Graziani, his second in command in Ethiopia, to rule tlie .ountry as “regent.” The Badoglio quietly left the capital, the dispatches said —in an airplane piloted by his own son. Lieut. Mari Badoglie, who has been at his side with the plane at each headquarters Badoglio has had in Ethiopia, it is reported. o THREE EMERGE ■ not show on the face of the tabuJ lation available here. Shrewd poll- | ticians predict, however, that Knox will appear at the Cleveland con- ; vention with more votes than his opponents are willing to concede. Landon's showing has been so strong that a stop-Landou movement is reported to be developing. I principally among leaders who can’t quite make up their minds whether to try to lick him or join him. If the current, front-running candidates are turned back the most likely legatees of convention strength would be three senators: Steiwer of Oregon, Vandenberg of Michigan and Dickinson of lowa.

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Steiwer has been named temporary chairman and keynote speaker, a place of political potential- 1 ities if he makes an extraordinary speech. Vandenberg probably would be Borah's choice. Prisoner Inks Station Monrovia, Cal. (U.R) —Luther . Smith is serving a 50-<lay sentence. While being booked at a police station he took the sergeant's ink well and distributed the contents over the walls. , o , Dessert Protection Taken Walla Walla. Wash.—(U.R) — To ' prevent repetition of a 1935 stu- ( 'dent food strike against desserts at Walla Walla college, a huge new 40-quart ice cream freezer was installed at the school's dairy. o Fruit Varieties Total 386 Riverside, Cal.—(U.R) California < now boasts of 386 varieties of citrus fruits, according to officials of the Citrus Experiment station of c thp University of California here. 1

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ALLOCATE FUND TO AID RELIEF Allotment Os $137,000,000 Eor Rivers And Harbors Washington, May 21. — (U.R) — Thousands of jobless will find work, to accompaniment of the hiss of steam dredges aud the clatter of pile-drivers, as a result of a $137,000,000 allotment made by the war department today to improve America s rivers and harbors. Portions of the vast sum will go , to every nook and cranny of the nation. Allotments run from the $23,800,000 ear-marked for improve- , ment of the upper Mississippi riv- ■ er to a few hundred dollars for some back-water creek. Os the $137,000,000 allotted to- I day, $103,458,839 will be used for i new projects while $34,408,150 will i

be spent in maintaining ports and waterways which already have been Improved. The money poured out today was provided in the annual rivers and harbors act, passed May 15. which appropriated $120,750,000 for new port and waterway projects and $88,677,899 for the maintenance of I existing ones. Funds not allocated now will be apportioned later I by the war department as the army corps of engineers decides they may be spent advantageously. In making the allotments, the war department explained that in some cases work may be done for less than the present estimate. When that happens the balance may be turned back into the general fund Also in other instances the amount set aside today may prove insufficient. Then the general fund may be drawn on further. As all of the projects for which money was set aside today have been approved by the corps of engineers and detailed plans for them I drawn up, actual work is expected I

PAGE FIVE

to begin shortly. Calumet Harbor and river, Indiundu and Illinois, new work, $600,000; maintenance, $142,000. Indiana Harbor. Ind., new work, $27,599; maintenance, $75,000. Michigan City Harbor, Ind., new work, ♦80,000; maintenance, <4,000, o Lands Plane Safely Despite Losing Wheel South Bend. Ind., May 21 —(UB) I -Carl Jordan safely landed his airplane carrying three passengers last night despite the loss of a ' wheal on the takeoff. Learning that the wheel had been ost, Jordan signaled the ground i crew of his plight and asked that 'the emergency equipment b‘ readid for an attempted landing. Easing out of the darkness into i lie flood lights of the field, Jor- ' lan set the ship d*wn to a two-point I landing and his passengers Emery I Nemeth, Paul Hykes, and Benjamin I Mersch, Studabaker coriporation I engineers, were unshaken.