Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 35, Number 158, Decatur, Adams County, 6 July 1937 — Page 5
FAMILY HAPPY owing problems for the homemaker. Selecting Hot da {’, a L 0 . t her in easy if you will consult the booklet "Cold menus for . y. an d Desserts" which our Washington Service Bureau Dishes. " rl , . VOII nis a book of unusual recipes for tasty dishes has ready ' ol ' ' ' iterator delicacies, ice creams, ices, sherbets I for 1,01 nX and cold drinks of all kinds. | ‘" ld Send the coupon '*’ low for yOUr CO, ’ y: CLIP COUPON HERE i. _ mo Washington Service Bureau, Daily Democrat, Dept. B Thirteenth Street, Washington, D. C. iv copy of the Booklet "Cold Dishes, Desserts and Drinks," ! nnclose a dime (carefully wrapped) for return postage for whicn i ,u '‘ . ,nd handling costs. j; A M STREET and No. .< STATE I CITY I in a reader of the Decatur Dally Democrat. Decatur, Ind.
wloSnus CUT BY STRIKES ndustrial Strikes Drastically Reduce State Payrolls Indianapolis. .Inly «— (U.R)—lnustrial strikes in Indiana dras iw lly reduced the volume of enttorment, payrolls and man honrs orked in the state during June. Isrtin F. Carpenter, director of! be Indiana employment service, nnounced today. Reports from 1.881 state inanu itiuring and non-manufacturing stablishinents. employing 153.935 >ersons. showed decreases of 6.1 ►er cent in employment, 10 per , ent in payrolls and 9 per cent in nan hours/ worked during the nonth, Carpenter said. The sharp decreases, he pointed ,ut. were largely attributable to itrikers throughout the state vhich shut down some of the nost important plants during the Lonth. Other plants were serLiisly retarded fine to lack of ■ haterials supplied by the closed toncerns. In a survey of 22 major groups b( manufacturing and non-manu-acturing industries for the month, 13 showed employment and waybill increases while only nine relented employment and payroll decreases. The principal losses (centred in the iron and steel [roup where reports from 78 Hants showed employment 42.3 ►er cent and payrolls 48.5 per cent lower in June than in the precedManufacturers in the durable ing month mods industry reported decreases | if 1! per cent In employment and I 11.3 per cent in payrolls during lune In seven major groups: itudied. five showed employment j pins and four registered payroll j ncreases. Respective increases of 1.2 per' ent and 0.2 per cent were regis-1 ered in the non-durable goods Toup Indices showed employ- 1 sent 3.7 per cent and payrolls I 59 per cent ahead of the same period a year ago. Indiana coal mining operations runtinned to expand during the j month with increases of 8.7 per | tent in employment and 9.9 per rent in payrolls. Other changes Recorded in the manufacturing industries were generally in accord I with seasonal expectations, accord- j NEURITIS Rheumatism, Arthritis, Periodic pa.ns, Neuralgia, Lumbago, and all pther aches and pains are quickly re-I lieved with Alt’s Cempound Winter. I’-en iablets. Positively guaranteed. JPcice |l. at all Drug Stores.
Mother Weeps for Slain Child i > .< ; wp| ■* 1 $ 1 i ** i < > i Vldi J I v A x .«’ • > » < 5/ | ’ / T !’ I i A '®K / »' If < « >fIlU , *** \~*»»~— • •>•’' /■■* - ""’ 1 i UIS '■ - « ' \ wk • ■ / r ' J> ,m,,m -'- ■-- “ ~~ ~'- " — [Mm, Floyd stepht>n»|J«nettp* d J >y Brief over th * »’*y»ng of her *ight-y«ar-old daughter, Child 3 utti r 'l Flo V d Stephens of Inglewood, Cal., treasures her Madeline r™ °?' sbove5 bove - Jeanette and two playmates. Melba, and 1 ~' "*“• 9 7, respectively, were slain after having been ~ . into the hilU by a criminal degenerate. |i
HUGE THRONG -(.CONTI NUED FROM PAQg ONE) Legion, state police patrolmen i and members of the Adams county sheriff's department. Climaxes Celebration , The display climaxed a noisy two-day celebration of the Foutrh. Somewhat quiet on Sunday, a bedlam of noise broke loose I through the city last night, when retailers of the fireworks made drastic reductions in prices to move the leftover stock. Long past midnight celebrants j in a gala mood set off scores of j the firecrackers at one time, not ■ content with the explosion of one. ' As far as is known no major injuries were suffered by celebrants. Smoke from the countless ' number of firecrackers aud fireworks hung over the city early this morning, the last evidence of one of the most enthusiastic cele- ' brations In history. -. o 1 CONFESSES TO I CON 11N UKD FKOM MUB 1 'sins and what 1 have done’." Then the slight, dark-haired WPA school guard, told police he ' j walked home over the hills stir- 1 rounding the hidden ravine after slipping off the girls' shoes and lining them neatly on the weedy ground. “I began to feel sorry for what I had done,” he told officers. "I; felt sorry so rthose kids " ' i Dyer, who used his job as WPA school crossing guard to gain his i victims confidence, was given an opportunity to retract, if he wish ed, his first confession to slaying i Jeanette Stephens. 8, Melba Everette. 9, and her sister, Madeline, 7, whose bodies were found in a I ravine a week ago. "Before God I swear 1 killed 1 those three little girls and attack ed them," he answered. Then he ' ■ retraced, with changes and elaborI ations, the story of the killings. "I planned this thing a month ! ago," he said. “My wife and I I went up the ravine and I thought ' then what a fine place it would be 1 i to take the kids and attack and • murder them.” Major dtange in his confession was that, after luring the girls to ■ I the ravine in the Baldwin hills to i hunt rabbits, he garroted them - I with rope instead of choking them 1 with his hands as he firs! said. Parts of his confession were corroborated from other sources. , George Reiiey, real estate operat--1 or with an office near the Baldwin I hills, told of seeing the three girls ; ! and Dyer trudging tow’ard the , i ravine. Mrs. Kaneo Mizutani, owner of a grocery where the girls j bought candy, also saw them go , toward the hills. Neither had ven- j lured the information previously , i because heretofore the girls were ! to have driven away in ; an old Ford. | Dyer's wife, Isabel, stoutly insist- , — j
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, JULY 6, 1937.
Ing upon her husband's innocence, « was still held in jail as a material witness. Authorities said this was for her own protection until feeling in Inglewood cooled s bit. —o HOLIDAY DEATH FRtm PADE ONE) - the nation's highways. Hundreds of thousands fled to vacation-land lakes for fishing, boating and swimming parties. In cities, falls, suicides and murders added to a I "miscellaneous" death toll of ap- < proximately 100. The safety coun- t cil had expected 75 deaths from, t accidental falls. < o |t MORE PERSONS FILE RETURNS e I I Decatur Residents File i 29 More Tax Returns Than In 1935 i Washington, D. C., July 6. (Special)—Decatur residents filed 29 more income tax returns last year than in 1935, according to a ( report made public today by the ( internal revenue bureau. The number of persons in Deca- ( tur who paid income taxes last year was 204. In 1935, the number . of income tax returns filed in Detur was 175. In Adams county, the number -. of income tax returns filed in 1936 1, was 276, as compared with 237 in ', 1935. Comparison between the number , of returns filed in 1935 and the , number filed in 1936, in other Ad-j ams county towns, follows: Berne increased from 35 to 41. ( For the state of Indiana, the number of income tax returns filed . increased from 71,150 in 1935 to 84.049 in 1936. The number of in ' dividual income tax returns for the entire country jumped from i 4,201,859 in 1935 to 4,666,504 inj 1936. o FORD WORKERS i'P_^T l -Y T - T J r - T - 1 -h'B.* *_m ?age nNE>_ the reporter persisted in taking notes on “off record” proceedings. The trial examiner reprimanded Ballard for "contumacious conduct" when the attorney took re- j sponsibility for the reporter's actions. The hearing is on complaint of j the steel workers’ organizing committee that Inland violated the Wagner act in refusing to sign a contract on wages and hours. The ' case is expected to go to the U. B.' supreme court. Inland counsel had engaged a private reporter after suffering re-, peated reverses in rulings by the! examiner. Wood had excluded the steel company's defenses that the - SWOC was not a “responsible" bargaining agency for steel work- l ers and that a written contract would lead to the closed shop and checkoff. o Sixteen Injured At Vincennes Carnival Vincennes, Ind., July 6. (U.R) — Sixteen persons, most of them children. were recovering today from injuries sustained yesterday during the American Legion carnival when faulty mechanism on a chair plane ride wrapped the swinging chairs around the central shaft. Bdtty, hope, 16, received a frac ! tured pelvis and was the most! seriously injured. Others were j treated for cuts and bruises at a I local, hospital. Authorities are investigating the ! accident. o Canada Improves Roads Ottawa. Ont. (U.R) — Tile Canadian government will spend approximately 82.100.000 building and improving roads leading into mining areas throughout the coun- : try this summer. — — j Law Comes to Gold Town Goldfields. Sask.—(U.F9—Civilization has caugftt up with this tiny newly-discovered mining common-: ity. The inhabitants have been ad- 1 ■ vised that they will be provided with a jail and will have to pay schoo Ttaxes. | High Schools Criticized Kent. O (U.R) Arden L. Allyn, dean of the college of business ad- ' ministration at Kent State univer- < sity. says high schools no longer : attempt to turn out students pre- 1 pared to take jobs immediately. o . Baby Stages “Siege” 1 Canton. O. (U.R) — Firemen had • to climb through a window to cap- ■ lure a two-year-old boy who locked himself in the bathroom at the apat tment of Samuel Kotsen, turned on the w'ater in the tub and defied all comers? The water was flooding the room when they entered. — o- — Vegetables Fed Chemicals Berkeley, Cal. (U,R) — William Arragnos, 19, has succeeded in raising vegetables using chemically treated water instead of earth and predicts he WfW have tomatoes j nine mouths of each year. 1
TWO AIRPLANES CROSS ATLANTIC American, British Ships Complete Ocean Flights New York. July 6 (U.R) Two huge flying boats —-one British, the other American—landed on opposite sides of the North Atlantic today, completing "without incident" two survey flights preliminary to the proposed establishment of regular transatlantic flying service. First to land, at Foynes. Ireland, was the Pan-American Clipper 111 i which reached its west-east des filiation at 3:41 a. m. CST. 12 hours and 31 minutes after leaving Botwood. Newfoundland on the 1.994-mlle flight. Less than an hour later st 4:07 a. m. CST., Imperial Airways' fourengined flying boat, the Caledonia, landed at Botwood. It made the east-west crossing from Foyues in 15 hours and 10 minutes. Pan-American Airways reported that the flights, which were over the often stormy groat circle route, were made "without incident.” The Clipper sfarted its survey flight from Port Washington. N. Y„ last week. It arrived at Bot wood Saturday and took off for Foynes at 3:11 p. m yesterday. The Caledonia left Southampton, marine base for London, at the same time last week and took off . from Foynes at 12:57 p. m. yes- 1 terday. The Clipper, flying high above v clouds at around 11.000 feet, av- f eraged approximately 155 miles an I hour. The Caledonia flew at [ about 135 miles an hour. , Both ships carried a full comple- t inent of officers and crew but neither took any passengers on t the trail blazing flights. Passen- | ger space was utilized for special ( instruments and fuel 8 The flights, while independent, | i were jointly planned by the two ( I air lines to make possible the ex- t change of facilities on either side of the Atlantic and of technical i , advice and data. The Clipper | ; planned to go on to Southampton , , Thursday. The Caledonia is due . , at Port Washington Friday. j, o ONE KILLED NEAR — CONTINUED FROM PAOE ONEt I cause of their condition. Three Occur Sunday | Three of the crashes occurred I Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Davis were hurt Sunday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock ! when the car in which they were j riding crashed nearly headon with an auto driven by Ralph Cain, of ’ Middlebury. Ohio. While Mr. Cain I escaped with minor bruises and ' cuts, his wife and the Davis couple ' were all brought to the local hosi pital in an ambulance. i The accident occurred three and | j one-half miles south of the Coppess filling station on federal road 27, between Berne and the junction of roads 124 and 27. The two cars were completely deiAplished from the stunning impact nf the crash. Sheriff Dallas Brown .'uvestigated. Eight Fractures of Hip Mrs. Rober* Hoffman, of Geneva. sustained a frpetured pelvis at 3:30 o’clock Sunday afternoon when the car driven by Walter Sullivan collided with an auto manned by Noah Sheets, of this city The accident occured on federal road 27, one mile south of Geneva. Mr. and Mrs. Sullivan escaped with minor injuries, as did Mr. and Mrs. Tom Sullivan and Mr. Hoffman. Bobby, six year old son of Waiter Sullivan, sustained a lacerated lower lip and Joan, sixmonths old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hoffman, sustained a lacerated forehead Mrs. Hoffman's hip was fractured in eight places. She may be released from the hospital this evening. Mr. Sheets escaped with minor injuries. Both of the cars were badly damaged. The accident occurred when Mr. Sullivan lost control of the car on the slippery pavement, and the Sheets auto hit the Sullivan auto from the rear. Young Zeke Summers, of this city, escaped with minor injuries late Sunday when the car he was driving overturned one mile south of the city, falling into the ditch. Sheriff Dallas Brown had the auto towed tn the jail Returning From Game The Berne ball players' were hurt Monday evening about 6 o'clock as they were returning SORfrS ARKET Wednesday Specials CALF BRAINS „ Oftf BEEF STEAK - 19■ [ BEEF BOIL llljc I HAMBURGER --- - 12</k PHONE FREE PHONE 95 DELIVERY 96
Scouts Do Themselves Good Turn at Jamboree Bo? B headquarters|
This Cleveland patrol lived up to the tradition of * ’ doing a daily good turn by doing themselves one when they stowed away a hearty meal at mess during the annual national jamboree of Boy Scouts
from a ball game at Convoy. Ohio. Milford Balsinger, 26, of Berne, was driving. As tie attempted to pass a car, the auto skidded in the loose gravel and upset. Lores Lehman. 25. also of Berne, escaped with Balsinger, receiving only minor cuts and bruises. Braun and Sprunger received more serious injuries. They were brought to the local hospital from the crash scene between Willshire and Convoy in a Willshire ambulance and the auto of Harve Riesen, of Berne, who also attended the game at Convoy Harold Lautzenhiset. of Bluffton, escaped injuries, when his car and one driven Ity a man whose identity was not learned, collided near the north bridge here. The care wore only slightly damaged and the occupants unhurt. Married Five Months Mr. and Mrs. Davis were married only five months ago. After winning a car in a nationally advertised grocery contest, the couple decided to combine’ a holiday trip and belated honeymoon. No one was informed as to their definite destinatiou on the trip, the couple stating that th°y were going touring. The couple was en- I route north at the time of the i crash. Mr. Davis. 77-year old retired I resident of Alexandria, has no : other immediate living relatives 1
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' at Washington, D. C., above. More than 25.00® Scouts from all parts of United States and sizeable delegations from other countries were present for the conclave. , »
A sister lives in Gilman. 111. Her a name was unknown to relatives: t who arrived here today. i cl The Strickler mortuary of Alex-' \ andria arrived here today to re- t turn the body of the victim. Fu- ; neral arrangements have not been t completed. 8 Mrs. Davis has two sisters liv- 6 ing: Mrs. Lulu James, and Mrs. t Mary Lazareth, both of Alexandria. Mrs. Davis' name before her ■ marriage was Demcher. , ‘ The relatives called here today: to return the almost completely demolished car to Alexandria. Coroner To Investigate Sheriff Dallas Brown stated to- 1 day that he would turn the investigation over to County Coroner Robert Zwick. Cain told Sheriff 1 Brown that he thought he was on the right side of the pavement ' when the crash occurred. It is possible that further investigation may bring out more definite de- 1 tails of the wreck. Sheriff Brown stated. o .Judgments Are Sought Against Mayor Bangs Huntington, Ind., July 6 —(UP)—! [Collection of two judgments totallI ing 84.0(H) against Mayor C. W. H. i Bangs was sought today in suits til--1 ed by the Northern Indiana power I company in circuit court here. 1 The judgments, cne for |1,500
1 and the other for $2,500, represent the personal liability of Bangs in depriving the power company of revenue through illegal operation of the city's tiny utility plant. The suits filed today are complaints on the bonds iposted by Bangs pending appeal of the cases to the state supreme court, which ruled for the company in both cases. More Than 20 Hurt At Fireworks Display Indianapolis, July 6. — (U.R) — More than a score of persons were ! burned, six seriously,-Fast night; when a defective aerial bomb exploded into a crowd of nearly 30,000 spectators witnessing a Fourth of July celebration at Riverside amusement park. Dozens of others were trampled in the panic that followed explosion of the bomb, which soared only a few feet into the air and burst in a sfibwer of sparks and flames. Sparks set clothing on fire and men, women and children started a mad rush out of the grandstand. o Four Brothers Wed Anna's Cleveland (U.R) — Four out of five Stoessnes brothers' wives are named Anna. To distinguish them, the “Annas" are referred to as i Carl’s Anna, Fred's Anna, John's Anna, and Art s Anna.
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PAGE FIVE
PAINT SCHOOLS WILL BE HELD Paint Schools To Be Held In Berne, Decatur This Week Free painting of a vase or flower jar Is being offered each person attending the paint schools in Adams county. Two demonstrations will lie given: one at the Berne high school Thursday at 9 am., and the other at the Decatur high school, Friday at 9 a. tn. Each woman and each girl of 4-H club age who attends this meeting and registers, may have a vase, jar, or jug painted free of charge and a second receptacle painted fre<». ■•provided w-piin'hasr of paint is made. Those attending must bring their own jars or vases to be painted. The painting is done with Cooperative Supreme quick drying enamel. Mrs. E. W. Busche announced that in addition to having a jar or vase painted free, cash prizes will be given at each demonstration by the Adams county farm bureau to the first three organizations of I women or girls of 4-H club age , having 25 or more representatives i registered. First prize will be $2.50, second prize $1 50, and third | prize SI.OO. There will also be a demonstration on stipling of linoleum, glazing of walls, and suggestions on interior decorating. o Tenth Torso Victim Found At Cleveland Cleveland, July 6—(UP)— Parts of the body of Cleveland's 10th torso victim in two and one-half years were pulled from the Murkey Cuya- ; hoga river today, apparently 10 days • after death. The body sections weer found ' near the place on the river bank : where discovered of a previous victim was made, scarcely more than ' one month ago. i Police Sgt. James Hogan said he believed the body, that of a man, unquestionably was that of another victim of the "mad butcher of Kingsbury Run,” (blamed for nine other Mysterious mutilation murders of which three victims were woi men.
; Free Sample of GID ULES —the vegetable mucin. whose protective demulcence •nd detoxification brought sg relief and correction to thou- S sands—at your Druggist: ■ Holt house Drug Co.
