Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 77, Decatur, Adams County, 31 March 1937 — Page 5
SKon man in GANG Warren Man Sr H ISm bI ■ "JBt'-r'r—> s , r ■ ;,..< \ ■ f» JH ■ '. liH./' - m.- ■ ... ' " “ / H / . widow ■ tS^^K... * and Nor » each. :< .he f .....-■_ X i'i- ' incorporated in ... . .. d -“ r Indiana ~^H C . .. ;y .\. '..,-;j|tlg Ills Stock ■ in Indiana .. ;■ lln alloy d . .- . • , \ |Ha:..• Mair. Hollywood movie ■TAKE This COOPOI M Holthoine Drug Co. '6 tft G« ft a >LW Rottk «f ■Wa-Hoo Bitters r. FOR 25 CENTS • OH Indian Pl Nerve, Stx>mLiver and k.dney Remedy on .2 t.vk.- f-e : - This t a trial . for a few days only. loaitive.y not over three (3) bottles « p*-' • u . I .~h r ■ tv—timonbut ask you to try this Old K ■• r- t 10>rb Tonic. A meiicf r».< -,, P merit and natural - , n >■. • —tx. ycneraticns. lure It bears the name C. K. II I I nrm.mil ■» alM MM MMnMaaa ■»*»««*.■ ■Tonight <x Thursday Show Starts Tonight at i) :.;tt. Come Earlv ! ■ Thursday Matinee at 1:30 |M Box off.ee Open until 2:30 V ■ LET YOI RSELF GO! comes the screen's )■[«« scream team! stars cf -Swing Time”— radio laugh favorites! howling case of murder the mirth degree! H Mcroi HIltN ■MOORE ★ BRODERICK l?ilr B \lyM_y ■ HUSTON K LOUISE LATIMER ■ VINTON HAWORTH ■ ROBERT MeWADE o Direcltd A* firn Holmu K Produced by Jot ph Htnry Stull K KOJADIQ PICTURE Bcnm?7~ . C ’ nema Circus” Musical ■ h,u' y,n col °r. with a host of K - stars, & Novelty. ■ 10c-25c ■ r o—o ■ t > Special! ■ Sidney t LIVE ONCE " Sylv,a ■ Ma-i T nr y Fonda, Barton ■ Chic Sale. ■ s o—o ■ Joan r°"' , Tue »—William Powell, ■ Cry P ra * ford - Robert MontgomI 0F Mnl „, Mor 9 a "' “THE LAST K Ul MRS. CHEYNEY.”
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, actress. Minn Della Wall, Marion high! I school teacher, claimed aho paid Marr 11,400 for 2tt ahares ot the Grand American stock, filed an attachment on *2,560 cash and securities taken front Marr when he was arrested in Marion Monday. Marr was convicted in Santa Ana. Orange county, California, in March 1!»32 on charges of grand theft and violation of the Californ 1 ia securities act, actording to state police. They said be was given one ' year on probation. NO AGREEMENT tCONTINL’KD FROM waUK ONE) point substitute proposal to Ap-| i palachian coal operators, replacing earlier demands of the U. M. W. A. The propsal, offered yesterday, was reported to abandon union demands for the shoter day and shorter week, the 200-day work guarantee and two weeks vacation. The eight-point program included: 1. A 10 per cent increase in, the pi< k mining rate. 2. A 10 cents a ton advance for cutting an dloading in the mines. 3. A 10 per cent increase in the yardage and loading rate. 4. A 70 cents a day increase in the scale for mechanized mining. 5. A 50 cents a day increase to all day men. 6. Time an da half for overtime. 7. No change in hours. 8. A 60-day clause permitting I either side to reopen the aggreeinent for revision upward or down- : ward. No formal strike will be called if a contract is not signed, the Journal reported, but work will be I suspended automatically unless Lewis grants an extension of the present agreement while the negotiations continue. MILITARY LOSSES. (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) relations, quiescent for a week, became as strong as ever. Report Revolt I (Copyright 1937 by United Press l Casablanca, French Morocco, | Mar. 31- (U.R>—A Moorish eorpor,ai s tip to authorities brought into the open an anti-nationalist plot that might have threatened th»entire Spanish insurgent cause, news from Spanish Morocco said today. Reports reaching Casablanca were as follows: The revolt centered at Tetuan Plans called for an uprising there I Then there was to be uprisings at Lerache at. ’ El Ksar. F’nally it was intended that the revolt , should spread to Spain proper. Leaders in the plot were 150 Spanish officers, mostly aviators. i They believed confidently that they would have the support of army troops—who are impressed into service and never have been promI inent in the civil war. So serious was the movement regarded that Gen Francisco Franco, nationalist commander in chief and dictator, went personally witn his staff to Spanish Morocco to taku charge. Indicat-ions were that for the moment at least the revolt had I been suppressed But picked men of the foreign legion were posted , at airdromes and it was apparent that the situation in nationalist I Morocco was still an explosive one France Warns Pat is, Mar. 31—(U.R) —France has I warned the Spanish nationalists not to interfere with French ship i ping, a cabinet communique an- ! pounced today , Franc*, it was said, will take the same measures as Great Briti ain to protect ships. These, it is understood, will be to keep fast warships patrolling tn waters off Spain, in the Atlantic , and Mediterranean, ready to dash 'to the aid of any merchant ship with which a nationalist warship interfered. In several recent instances naj tionalist warships have halted ! French and British merchantmen. One French ship recently appealed for aid as it was being escorted | CORT TO NITE - THURS. , Thrilling Jungle Drama Warner Baxter “WHITE HUNTER” June Lang - Gail Patrick Alison Skipworth PLUS—The Sisters of The Skillet in “Practically Perfect;" Porky Cartoon “Porky's Romance;" and thrilling novelty 'Steeple Chasing. 10c-25c FRIDAY I “TAKA CHANCE NITE" -10 c ♦ Matinee Friday starting at 1:30 • ————♦ Sun. Mon. Tues. JANE WITHERS “PEPPER" 4 ♦ FREE! Sunday-Beautiful autographed photograph of Tyronne ■ I Power. —— i
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31, 1937.
Model’s Murder Baffles Police I a &»<* —I .<Veronica Gedeon J
Only a few fragmentary clues encouraged police in their efforts to I solve the battling murder of pretty Veronica Gedeon, artists' model. 1 her mother and a boarder in their New York apartment. Here is a new and exclusive photo of the 20-year-old model in typical pose. -
toward the Balearic Islands, and I was freed when a cruiser re-1 ' sponded. | Britain warned the nationalists j yesterday against interference with j its shipping. o .IDE ROBINSON (C[>N TINUEl> FKOM DAGE/iNE) the pages of the congressional reclord to 1930 to assert that both | Borah and Glass in opposing con ! tirmation of Chief Justice Hughes i had sought a supreme court per- ■ sonnel “that would reflect their . economic views.” He asserted that President Taft, in campaigning for the election of' Warren G. Harding, was motivated I by his desire to “pack the court ■ with conservatives and reaction-, aries.” Ho cited the words of Associate I Justice James C. Mcßeynolds in | the minority gold clause case dei cision as evidence that "nowhere | iin legal literature does a judge j stand more emphatically condemn-' ed by his own test ot' a sportsman.' | Mcßeynolds, at a recent informal I dinner, said that losers in court eases should be "good sportsmen In the gold clause case, where his was the only dissenting vote, the! jus,ice said that “the constitution l is gone." Robinson's speech was designed i in part to counteract a series of charges directed at the president s ; court plan. He said that those who view it as “packing" the court, as "indirect amendment" of the constitution or as establishing a dictatorship were "compelled to rely on imagination ratler 'han facts ami reasonable arguments.” But in particular, he criticized the "bitterness" of the opposition speech delivered Monday night by lite 77-yearatld Glass "Vindictiveness and denuncia lion are indicative of weakness in argument.” lie said. "Sen. Glass added nothing to the argument. He i simply denounced. "In his heart is nothing but contempt and bitterness x x x his argument was submerged and destroyed "(jn the very day that Sen Glass was denouncing the program in such extravagant language, the su preme court itself proved that the president is right by completely reversing its stand on the subject
His Father Was the Pilot
wm ” € ili if 'll I Mle I I I- ■r ' fey y '... II Is jsi ' —
—— Little Jerry Bohnet holds a picture of his father, Capt Lawrence Bohnct, who was the pilot of the TWA Douglas airliner which crashed near Pittsburgh. Pa- Capt. Bohnet and twelve others were killed. The child is pic- ; tmed at the Bohnet home in Jersey City, N. J.
lot minimum wage legislation." Robinson referred to Glass' | speeches in the senate opposing I the confirmation of Hughes, when ’ the Virginia senator said: "The su ! preme court has gone far afield | and has constituted itself a com’ | in economics and in the determinai tion of social questions.” In the same debate. Borah oppos- | ed Hughes in an effort to prevent j strengthening of the court majority ■ viewpoint and at one point suggested that the only alternative to a constitutional amendment to ! solve certain problems was to "amend the court." "Everyone will recall that sicn outstanding senators as Borah, Glass and Burton K. Wheeler, 1)., . Mont., in fact everyone who exopposition, grounded their {arguments on the personal pre- | dilections of the great lawyer , I predilections assumed to be the ] ; natural outgrowth of his professional service," Robinson said. "Stripped of fallacy and incon I I sistency, the arguments against ( <the court bill) are inconsistent! | with precedent and with the funda- ' mental law which never authorized any judicial body to exercise control over public policies." 0 —: Rev. Paul Schultz At Pastor’s Conference i Tlie Rev. Paul W. Schultz, pastor of the Decatur Zion Lutheran church, is among the approximate I 135 pastors and teachers attend- ' ing the Northeastern Indiana Luth- I eran teacher's and pastor's conference at the Eininanual Lutheran I church in Fort Wayne. During Tuesday s session of the conference, W. E. liffelman, teach;er at the St. John's Lutheran school, north of the city, read the paper, ‘‘Composition Writing." Tlie Trinity Lutheran church on Huffman street and St. Mary's ; avenue iu Fort Wayne, was select- | ,ed as the site of the 1938 spring convention of the conference. —o Jennings Nomination Is Sent To Senate Washington. March 31. tU.RX — I President Rffosevelt today nomi ! nated John M. Jennings to be new works progress administrator for Indiana. Jennings’ name was sent to the senate for confirmation.
FEARMISSIN6 YOUTH KILLED State Police Fear Youth Slain By Holdup Men ('apt. Matt Leach ot the state police said today Lawrence L. Paris. I 22. missing a week had been slain I by holdup men. Leach said absence of any word regarding the young salesman made bim positive “he can't be alive.” The police captain believed Paris might have been a victim of two ; bandits who killed Clayton Potts, foundry company executive, in a $2,000 holdup March 23. Paris dis appeared the following day. Ray Duval and Leonard Jackson, i former convicts, are sought by po lice as suspects in the Potts shoot lug. Circumstances surrounding the ' Potts slaying and disappearance ' of Paris the following day were matched against "customary ci im- ' Inal activities.” by Leach in arriving at the conclusion that the , young salesman had been killed. ! “There were no automobile I thefts in Indianapolis bet wee* Tuesday, day of the shooting, and I
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I last Saturday, except for the disI appearance of Paris In his car," I Leach said “The robbers who shot Potts j damaged their car in the getaway j and obviously had their escape | plans disrupted. Leach described the next event ' as paralleling the slaying in Janu i ary of William II Bright, Indian-1 i apolis druggist, for which two ; youths now are on trial In Shelby 1 county circuit court. Bright was J i killed and his body thrown into a j ' creek by robbers who halted his ' ear at an Indianapolis traffic light. “The men who shot Potts were J trying to get out. of town and prob- . ably stopped Paris as he drove along in his automobile Wednea-! day morning." Leach continued. "Paris was more than six feet : tall, weighs about 190 pounds and was an amateur boxer and wrest- : ler. "They couldn't hold anyone like that a captive and attempt a getaway so they killed him and disi posed of the body to hide the direcJ lion ot their escape.” Leach said police found Paris’ reputation above reproach and I friends said the youth would be likely to pick up a hitch hiker upon being hailed. Paris lived with his parents at Bargersville and drove daily to hie work in Indianapolis. Trade in a Good Town — Decatur
Murder Trial Date Set For April 12 Kokomo. Ind., Mar. 31.—<U.R> — Judge Joseph Herron today set April 12 as date for trial ot Hoy Stansberry. 42, Logansport, used car salesman, on charges ot mut'dI ering Mrs. Ruth Kloos, Logansport, at her home last Labor Day. Stansberry is accused ot shooting Mrs. Klooz after she rejected his attentions. After wounding the woman, Stansberry took her to the Cass county hospital and then shot himself in the shoulder. The trial was brought to Howard county on a change of venue. o Food Distributed In Adams County In the past three months, the Surplus Commodity Department has distributed 390 dozen eggs, 2,702 pounds of grapefruit, 672 cans I of milk, 720 pounds of prunes, and | . 1,002 cans of roast beef in Adams' I county. William Wolfcale. commodity supervisor of both Wells and Ad-| ams counties, states that at present time there are 234 t° llß ot ‘ grapefruit in Port Wayne to be | 1 distributed in these two counties, 1 1 and that he is expecting to receive r shipments of prunes and rice with-
PAGE FIVE
in the next few days. Thfs department, which on April 1, will have been in operation in this county for two years, considers itself sufficiently rewarded for Its service by the appreciation expressed in the past by quite u number of the clients. Cupid Flies with Stewardesses San Francisco —(UP) —If at) attractive, wall-edueabed girl fe looking for a husband, she’s likely to find him if an air line stewardess. United Air Linet* officials marked up the 128th conquest of cwpld—that representing the number of 1 sky hostesses on the New Yorkj California route who have married since the stewardess were employed seven years ago.
WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILEWithout Calomel—And You’ll Jump Out of Bed io the Morning Rarin* to Go The Wror should pour out two poundo of liquid bile into your bowels daily. If thia bila la not flowing freely, your food doesn’t direst. It just decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up your stomach. You <et constipated. Your whole system is poisoned snd you feel sour, sunk and ths world looks punk, Aaxatives are only makeshifts. A mere Dowel movement doesn’t ret at the cause. It takes those rood, old Carter s Little Liver Pilis to r<*t these two pounds of bile flowinr freely and make you feel “up and up”. Harmless, rent Is, yet amazinr >n making bile flow freely. Ask for Career’s Little Liver Pills by name. Stubbornly refuse anything else. 25c. ■MMMMMMMMMMM————
