Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 36, Decatur, Adams County, 11 February 1937 — Page 5

Imeocw ■ntWLESOON in Fe w Days U ■. - »- ■. u .„t ■ : today in a >‘" ,r f,on ’ h ug.'nt ■ „ lim'd ava <>nla liiali feeding . ...i will l’ 1 ’ red'i< e<l. letter states: K n-nnt "f the hazard o ,roeii.'d inland, it tn e. t vuri ’ V .hrengh barges. But. ■ ; .. water recedes (hat rhe corn .an be ■ the highways ■ F :,. r either v temporary m wagons, this "el cotn ML available ■ .station to advise the' K...> of this corn through ■ n;i ® v ,mnrv agents of the H .’ where and when this ■ cc.m will be available. At ■ ttoon mid a' 30 P «1. each ■ ml": ’nation will be given as K. points at which wet corn v beans will be available. price or. corn can not be Kiiteiv given because non ■til! Coughing? ■c matter 1. w many medicines ■ save tried 1 -r your cough, chest Morbruncl.i.d irritation, you can W relief now with Creomulsion. ■jo'U able may be brewing and K -anno’ afford to take a chance K'anvthir.g less than CreomulK* which goes right to the seat ■ the trouble to aid nature to K 3- and r. al the inflamed memHues as the germ-laden phlegm Kwsened and expelled. ■twn if other remedies have Kri don't be discouraged, your i Kg;- is auth prized to guarantee ■Snrjlsion and to refund your Kiev if vou are not satisfied v hh Kilts from the very first bottle. KCreomulsion right now. (Adv.) Registered Chassis Lubrication 75c ” d SLOO RUNYON GULF STATION Monroe at Fourth

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thia corn is only very slightly damaged. Cribs that were in high current have no dirt or sediment on the corn. Other cribs, comI pletely submerged in quiet water, uhave corn heavily covered with sediment. "The committee is negotiating I with the city of Evansville to wash this corn delivered here with a tire nose, after It has been loaded on a, truck. In short thsi salvage picture will be some complicated and will chai.go so much hourly that it can be directed only by radio control.” County Agent Archbold today wired Evansville to inquire whether hay is needed. Several truckers have stated tha,t the only way the corn could be returned to the county cheaply Is to have a load both ways. — o .... PETITION FOR < CONTINTimT FROM PAOB OWW) meat, but is part of an issue against the city as a whole. These two issues must be deducted from the credit of the school and civil cities. Details pertaining to preparing the financial statements will be compiled by the school board aud Attorney De Voss, and submitted to the PWA. The outcome of the application depends largely on the action of PWA and the school and civil city’s ability to finance the proposed project. - — —o GIVE FIGURES j I 1 A - qE granu the director said. Figures for the nine months ehow payments made in the county were divided as follows: Old age assistance: county share $.3,825.30: state share, $5,737.95; federa.l shara. $9,563.25. Aid for the blind: county share, none; state share, $210.50; federal share. $210.50. Aid for dependent children: ■county share. $8.35.47; state share. $1,253.20; federal share. $1,044.33. In December the number receiving public assistance checks in I Adamis county, by classes, was: j the aged. 193; the blind. 6; dependent children, 109. The county welfare department determines the eligibility of those applying for assistance on the basis of their ' needs, after investigation. It is ! therefore improper to refer to these grants for assistance to the aged and the blind as "pensions,” the director stated. ROOSEVELT TO X’ONTINrt'Kn FROM VAOII OMB) the president's plan. The unyielding White House attitude was revealed in the face of sputtering and spreading revolt in both house and senate against the supreme court phase of his plan. Leaders insisted that a margin large enough to ignore passage remained. The White House sources said further that Mr. Roosevelt is not considering ajty plan involving a 'constitutional amendment as a means of giving the administra

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1937.

j tion power to reach its labor, industrial, and agricultural legislative goals. Mr. Roosevelt was represented as believing an attempt to have the constitution amended would delay the enactment of liberal economic-social hiw« until the present generation of children become aged. 3”. ; th--of many years —- still without success—to procure a child labor amendment to the constitution. Mr. Roosevelt was represented as feeling any attempt to amend the constitution for adoption of NRA type and AAA legislation would be even more difficult. It was pointed out in official circles that majiy state leglsla-i tures would oppose ratification of the president's plan to reorganize | the judiciary. The Texas legislature, which overwhelmingly disapproved the administration's plan, was cited as an example. All but three members of the ■ Texas senate are lawyers, associated with bar associations, and many of them entitled to practice before the U. S. supreme court, it was said. Many attorneys in state legisla- 1 turee. the administration wa.s said to feel, would oppose ratification of Mr. Roosevelt’s program. In the face of this indication of White House attitude, Mr. Roosevelt called in an additional group of senator® to discuse the program. This continued the series of conferences he launched yesterday which were confined at that itme largely to senate judiciary committee members w-ho have not i committed themselves strongly against his plan. The renewed conferences ap- ■ peaj-ed to indicate that Mr. Roosevelt was placing himself personally in the forefront of the admitt- , edly stiff campaign to obtain congressional approval for his program. Scheduled to meet at the White House todao - were: Sens. William H. Dieterich, D., 111., Key Pittman, D., Nev., Robert F. Wagner. D., N. Y., William I Gibbs McAdoo, D„ Calif., and George W. Norris, I, Nebr. o CHURCH SURVEY < CON T1 NV KDFROMJMG E ONE) survey and visitation campaign are Presbyterian, Evangelical, United Brethren, Methodist Episcopal, Christian, Nazarene, Union Chapel U. B. and the Zion ReformedThe organization of the committees, together with other informa- 1 tion concerning the program, will be announced soon o Former Local Woman Dies In California Word has been received here of the death of Mrs. Edna Coffee Van Tine, 39. of Los Angeles, Cal., who died in that city Sunday afternoon following an illnees of two years. The deceased is survived by her husband, Ray Van Tine and a daughter, Rose Mary! her mother, ! Mrs. Jerry Coffee, a brother Vin- ' cent and three sisters, Mrs Agnes Robinson, Mrs. Dorothy Johnson and Celeste, all of Los Angeles. The family formerly resided in Decatur and have many relatives and friends in this vicinity. COMPANY PAID FOB ESPIONAGE Investigator Says General Motors Paid Detective Agency Washington, Feb. 11. — fJJ.PJ General Motors corporation paid the Pinkerton detective agency $419,850 from Jan. 1, 1931, to Juno 30, 1936, for espionage work, the LaFollette civil liberties committee was told today. Robert Wohlforth, committee chief investigator, presented a partial breakdown of General Motors payments to Pinkertons but emphasized committee belief that the whole picture was not presented. Wohlforth testitie dthat search of Pinkerton files showed payments to Pinkerton of: $121,480 from the Fisher Body Co.. General Motors subsidiary. $124,759 from the General Motors executive office. $119,545 from the Chevrolet division of General Motors. "I wish to emphasize,” Wohlforth said, “that we believe these figures show only part of the General Motors payments to Pinkerton. They were all wo were able to find in our search of Pinkerton files, however." Wohlforth noted that the charts showed sharp rises in payments in June, 1935, when workers in the Chevrolet plant at Toledo went out on strike. Pinkerton agents previously had testified that their work for G. M. in connection with this strike included shadowing of Assistant Secretary of Labor Edward F. McGrady, who was in Toledo attempting to negotiate a settlement.

LOYAL FORCES CLAIM VICTORY Government Troops Claim Recapture Os Rebel Territory (United Press 'Staff Correspondent Madrid, Feb. 11— <U.R>—Government troops recaptured complete control of the west park area today after furious fighting on the outskirts of the university city, loyalist headquarters reported. Loyalist artillery was pushed into positions where it dominated ' the most important road through west paj-k, leading to the Fonda- | cion Del Amo, foreign students quarters, on the fringe of University City. Alcala De Henares, 18 miles | east of here, dug itself from the wreckage of a nationalist air raid i today, ajid prepared for more attacks as insurgents redoubled ■ their efforts to disrupt Madrid's communications with the east ' coast. Alcala, on the hanks of the Henares river, is midway between Madrid and Guadalajaraina. and ntraddles the indirect route to Valencia. The direct Madrid-Va-lencia route is not ‘‘cut” as has been asserted, but some points are ; under artillery and rifle fire. An insurgent ajr squadron sailed over Madrid last night, ignored the capital and continued on to ■ concentrate its attack on the important Alcala road junction. About 20 high explosive bombs were dropped on the town, killing six persons and wounding scores, it was announced. A Red Cross hospital was reported hit and 20 houses wrecked. After dropping their bombs the airplanes sailed low over the city, machine gunned the streets, then returned byway of Madrid to their airdrome on the western side of the capital. Damage in Alcala wae widespread. Soldiers dug through the ruined houses today seeking more liodies. while others cleared the streets and repaired damaged highways. Two names were reported killed and five children injured by a bomb which, it was said, wrecked the Red Cross hospital. o BUTLER AWARDS SCHOLARSHIPS Butler University To Give Two Scholarships In This County Indianapolis, Feb. 11 —Butler Uni--1 versify, Indianapolis, will award ‘ two scholarships in Adams county for the 1937-38 school year according to an announcement tinlay byDr. Jamee W. Putnam, president of • the Indianapolis university. One scholarship will be awarded ': in Decatur high school by the iprin1' cipal and the other will be given to a graduate of a county high school 1 who is deemed most worthy by the ’ county superintendent Applications for the awards should be made with the high school principal and county superintendent. Each award will provide sloo' toward the recipient's tuition during ' the freshman year. The scholar ' ships will be renewed during the 1 sophomore year providing the students to whom they are given mainI , tain a B average or betterDr. Putnam has announced that I the applicants should rank in the upper fourth of their class scholastical'y and should have sufficient financial resources to pay the rest 1 of their expenses at the university. r Nominations for the awards should ' be on file with the university tschol- ) arship committee by May 1. .: o DRAG BAY FOR l iCONTINUED FROM FaGE ONEy ' bodies of Thompson, Do Cesaro. ! and stewardess Ruth Kimmel. Authorities said first examination 1 indicated that Fontana apparently 1 was alive after the crash but drowned while attempting to swim to shore. Still missing were the bodies ot Remo Margaroni and J. Franklin Gilmore, both of San Francisco. John A. Greenian and his daugh ter, Gertrude, of Berkeley; Myron Lorge and H. D. Freehlander, both of Los Angeles, and Roger Meyers of Ridgwood, N. J. It was believed that all the pass engers were thrown through the top of the plane, ripped open when the ship hit the water and carsaed over on its back. Safety belts were intact or broken, indicating the pasesngers had followed instructions to fasten them preparatory to landing, A preliminary coroner's report said that the pilots and the stewardess apparently drowned although Thompson and De Cesaro bore severe head injuries. One motor of the plane was missaud the right wiug was torn

from the fuselage. Grapplers full ed to locate the motor. Nearly all windows were broken aud the tn-1 ' terior was in shambles. A fbrmal investigation by the

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I department of commerce was exI pected to open uh soon uh the rej maining bodies are recovered or | abandoned. Coroner William Crosi by of Sun Mateo county said it

might Im a day or two befoii' Gm bodies camo to the Hiirfuee, ami I that they may never be found. The' title is strong in that particular i part of the bay, he said, and the! <

PAGE FIVE

bodies may have been carried into the marshes down the waterfront. Meanwhile, the United Airlines and local officials already have opened separate inquiries.