Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 34, Number 237, Decatur, Adams County, 6 October 1936 — Page 5
Iff BI HOUSE I PROVES FATAL. *H S County Mau Dies Injuries Inflicted |F By Horse W o„,n Edward S. t^B. 1 Nottingham township and brother-in-law of Wil ‘ Srl tlP former Indiana bureau head, died Monday at ■E’n-HS 'ounty hospital of m- . ..... ived during the Bluffton «■' fair when he wag kick H,';., Settle's horses being ■* H at th'' K - vl< ‘ barn 0,1 EaSt B Pp . street. right tom was crushed , t „. elbow and shoulder number ribs were fracj|, injured on TuesSept 22. when he walk <’f ,|1, ‘ stall while ng In- great granddaughter. y jane Baird, daughter of Mt W*ti/'eeett Baird, of Domes in arms. ■ T>. ... win. I: kicked him and same farm WS. pptim a’ each other and HM|i : < kt. ked With one hoof only. other horse, hut ■ st 11 th, hoof stunk Wolfe on the he was whirled around so that th, animal kicked viciously both hoofs his back was to ■£, unmiai Both hoofs struck his and arm directly back of the T! . ' threw the little ■ X; forward out of Wolfes arms, landward S Wolfe was born in county on July 20, 1867, a son a: I lam l.acy Wolfe. His ■g, , t . i. Anu,i S. tile took pla, , uffton on October 27, 1892. |Mk- cil- l . sides the widow are Mis. Oscar Price, of ■ Adams lo.iity, a granddaughter, l-'r.mces Baird, of Domestic, . •«., g urandc luldren. Mary and Phyllis Ann Baird. EHone daughter. Leia Wolfe; a I 'Bother. Melvm Wolfe, and a sistIda Wolfe, are deceased. Mr. was a lifelong resident of county. sMfi. Will be held at ■f ■ s'lay at th.- I ion,, sti. n Chri.-t in charge of the Wayne Piety. Burial will be the Albergon cemetery. U REBELS CLAIM i y. , ’?b- FWQM- pa ar f>Nwt> gun bullets, the miners the aqluai city limits of ami resumed their attacks from the neighborhood of lIGET UP NIGHTS? Make This 25c Test iriitatt -l or weak bladder causes up mehts. frequent desire, flow. burning or bat ka he, lots of , boMed or distilled You know what hard water to a teakettle. Algo help flush .i-ids. waste and deposits little green Bukets, a bladder Two of the 3 time tested are buchu leaves and oil. If you are not pleased in days, your druggist will refund g-Wi'ur .’V . Holthouse Drug Company.
i KiynoTcßs Ukfz '"Wo WE "point with pride/* ourselves — to what OUR candidate has done for the PEOPLE! To thousands of homes made comfortable — and KEPT SO. regardless of sub-zero attacks! To house work made much easier — with soot practically eliminated! To heating expenditures GREATLY REDUCED — to the thousands of family coal-budgets neatly BALANCED! On THAT record, we predict a landslide of popular votes electing that great champion of the American Home — MANHATTAN Regi»<m.d U. S. Pat»nt Otfac. That Well-Behaved, Economical COAL Prapttly prtpvretf, lit sires for feriraee, barter er jrrte. Ast n abort WASHED Manhattan for reuses. Cash Coal & Supply Phone 32 Frank Krick Coal Co Phone 42
Recreational Building To Be Built By General Electric »y.”’ 05 ' ILi I apt* 1 . *1 »«- ■* ■' / -io *■’ v-> x / Final nlans have been approved for constructing a recreational building at the General Electric plant. North Ninth .street. The new addition will be 45 by 120, the latter front age being on Ninth street eouth of the present office and club room extension. The building will be constructed and equipped with dining room, bowling alleys and other recre fttional facilities for the use of G E employes. The assembly room will seat 275 persons. Work will start in the near future and the building probably completed by Jan. 1.
the north railroad station, which is in the northwest section of Oviedo. At Burgos, ft was announced that Gen. Francisco Franco, dictator of the insurgent provisional government, had completed his cabinet list. He will be the sole commander of the administration forces, as he is of all the rebel armies. Continue Attack (Copyright 1936 by United Press) With the Loyalist Miners, Oviedo. Spain, Oct. 6—<U.R) —Asturias miners, spurred on by bitter hatred, fought their way into Oviedo today against murderous machine gun fire. Opposed to them was a desperate rebel garrison which has held out against all their attacks since the start of the civil war. For the third day the miners hurled themselves against the rebel fire, seeking to penetrate to the center of the city where, in selected positions, the rebels are strongly fortified. The miners’ losses have been terrific; those of the rebels slight. But the miners kept on, wave after wave, in successive attacks. Their attack, latest of score.'..
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1936.
I was the more ferocious because today us the second anniversary lof their revolutionary uprising, part of the general Socialist-An-archist-Syndicalist uprising of Oc- | tober. 1934, against right wing repression. GENERAL ELECTRIC — (CONTINUED FROM r*GE ONE) proposed. Recently the company informed the local employes’ ori ganizations that it would construct [the building and equip It. More than 400 persons are now ! employed at the local works and production schedules have been in- j creased to a new high peak. SWEDISH PILOT STARTS FLIGHT Starts Trans* Atlantic Hop; Leaves Baroness In Lurch — Floyd Bennett Field, New York 'October 6—(UP) —Kurt Bporkvall,l [Swedish pilot, took off on a project-' I ed non-stop flight to Sweden at 7:351 | A. M. today, leaving a disillusioned I land bitterly disappointed baronees I behind. I Holding back her teaers, the Baro- ! ness Evan von Blizen-Fineeke watched the Bellanca monoplane lurch down the runway and lift itself into a hazy, sun-streaked t>ky She had spent hours trying to per-1 suade Bporkvall to live up to Ills I agreement and take her along. He refuned. He needed her space for; gasoline. For week* the Baroness and Bjo-| rkval have waited at Floyd Bennett 1 field for good weather to begin the ' flight, sponsored by the newalpaper, I Tlie Stockholm Tidningen. Yetter- 1 day .he newspaper withdrew its sponsorship, believing the season made ouch a flight risky. Last night, she was at a party at. the aviation country club at Nicks-' ville, Long Island. She was informed [ that Bjorkvall wan preparing tot take off at dawn. "It is news to me.” she exclaim-J ed. "it is most extraordinary. 1 am I going light over to Brooklyn. 'lt seems he is going without me.” A few hours later she appeared at the field, dressed in her modish , flying togs She and the pilot went, into a 'ong conference. After it was • over, she announced, trying to smile that she was not going. Some time, she said, she was going to fly the ocean—next year perhaips. She would buy her own plane, she said, and, to forestall such a , personal tragedy as today’s, she! would have an automatic pilot. | ; Bjorkvall purchased the plane I from the newspaper after it with- ( drew its support. He altered the , cabin so a<s to carry more gasoline. j making up the room that had been reserved originally for the baroness. She waved and eried good luck ( as he stepped into the cabin. Hei ( hoped to reach Stockholm in 34 • ; hours. He carried 745 gallons of ; gasoline to cover 4,359 miles. Weather reports said he was likely to encounter favorable conditions most of the way across. < The little 28-year-old noble wo- j man who (lew to this country on the i Hindenburg expecting to thy back I across the Atlantic with Bporkvall, t
was angry. “It’s a dirty trick." she exclaimed. "He refused to take me. I expect he wishes to have all the publicity. "I'm mad, but I’m a lady and cannot swear.” “It's a great misunderstanding,” she said. “I'm afraid it might change public opinion against me in I Sweden. Remember. I’m not scared. ! I may make the solo flight *o Sweden later.” She even refused to shake hands with the pilot and wish him “happy I landing.” “There’s a limit to sportsmanship," she said. i 0 FRANCE LEADS (CONTINU ED FROM v AGE ONE) [ breaking down of trade barriers and talked of a real drive for ! economic disarmament. Members of the late European 1 gold bloc generally talked of freer trade and increased exports now that their currency was being brought into line with that of such countries as the United States and Great Britain. o HUNGARY PARTY LEADER IS DEAD Prime Minister Julius Gomboes Dies This Morning Munich, Oct. 6 —(UP)— Julius ' Gomboes, prime minister of Hun- ; gary, died early today in a sanitarI ium. The premier's family was at his 1 bedside when he expired. He was I 60 years old. Death was due to ■ a kidney ailment. A soldier and a diplomat of the old Austro-Hungarian school, Gomboes played an active role in the national and international policies i of the New Hungary, split off from the empire by the Versailles treaty. Sou of the distinguished family, he was educated in military schools at Pecs and Vienna. He took part in ths Serbian and Russian campaigns of 1914-16. Following the war, in 1919. he became president of the Hungarian though a staunch Hungarian nationalist. he opposed the restoration of monarchy with the same fervor that he employed in putting down the communist dictatorsip of Bela Kun, against whom he organized a counter-revolution. He also iplayed an important role in preventing Charles ilV’s attempts to return to th ethrone. From 1923 to 1938 Gomboes was leader of the race-defense party, but in the latter year gave his allegiance to the Unionist party and became minister of National defense. He became Prime Minister in 1932. He despised Fascism and once wrote a long and liberal prospectus of legislation aimed as a blow against "totalitarian)” theories of government and a revival of feudalism in Europe. o Brothers Apart 43 Years Martinez, Cal. — (U.K) Warren C. Smith. 70, of this city, and Elam B. Smith, 75, of Mexico, brothers and sons of a father who crossed the plains in 1846, met here for the first time in 43 years.
McNUTT BACKS THE PRESIDENT J — Governor Os Indiana Defends Roosevelt's Policies Grand Rapids, Mich., Oct. 6 — (UP)—Gov. Pau' V. McNutt of Indiana, in a fiercely Partisan address before a Democratic rally last night, , defended the party and principles of President Roosevelt. ‘‘Whenever the nation has been confronted with unprecedented situations," McNutt declared, “Calling I for unprecedented willingness to ' consider unprecedented policies, it has placed the Democratic party in the seats of government, in every instance, the party has proved its capacity to meet crises » » » the last three years give adequate proof.” McNutt credited the new deal and Mr. Roosevelt with the recovery of the nation three years aco calling it a “triumphant achievement under the leadership of one of the truly great men of the country, Franklin Delano Roosevelt.” The Indiana governor defended the President against charges he |
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had betrayed the party platform of 11932. "The facts are that he had performed the platform pledges, as an open-minded study of the 1932 Dem--1 ocratic platform, and the party’s record since March 193", will clearly reveal," McNutt said. —- —o ' ■ Jury Selected For Trial At Huntington Huntington. Ind., Oct. 5.—<U.R> — The murder trial of Raymond Fortune, 29, Marion, proceeded today before a jury of seven farmers and five housewives. Fortune is charged with the slaying of Orris M. Dokken, Kohler. Wis., during a poker party holdup at the home of C. J. Stier, in Fort Wayne. Fortune has been held in solitary confinement in Huntington jail since May 13, after an ati tempted escape from Allen county i jail.
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G. E. ADOPTS WAGE PLAN Wages Will Follow Increases In Living Costs; Applies Locally Schenectady, N. Y., Oct. 6 — j The workers council of the General Electric company announced last night that the company had agreed to a stabilization plan under which wages of 12,000 workers here will be -maintained in line with the federal cost of living index. A 2 per cent upward adjustment on all hourly and piece work earnings will be made effective October 22 and 23. The company has agreed to use the United States department of
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labor index for the cost of living , now standing at 82, the council added. For every point of Hats in I the Federal index, which is corrected quarterly, the company has I agreed to automatically adjust 1 wages until the index reacbea 90, ! the announcement stated. The • adjustment also affects salaried employes receiving up to $4,01)0 . yearly but It will be paid only on the first $3,000 of such earnings. E. W. Lankenau. superintendent I, of the Deca.tur G. E. Work*, stated I that he had not yet received com- ! plete details on the new wage . plan, but that the 400 employes of > the local factory would benefit by ; I the Increase. - o —— Highway Toll Reduced St. Louis—4U.R) —St. Louis' trial safety campaign, entailing enforcement of a strict 30-mile speed 11m- ■ it, has reduced traffic fatalities 45 t per cent and injuries 16 per cent.
