Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 87, Decatur, Adams County, 12 April 1938 — Page 5

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Padiant W ■* Wli P ■ ■ • - - gp ;Sg;|| | I HOTEL JWf» til I fort i ? #i 1: Every room bright end new in Fumiihingt end decora- ■/; tons All public (pace thoroughly modernized. Better eervice - Finer Food - with rate economy etill the Feature. \ NEW - popular priced Restaurant Hath \ Modern Cocktail Lounge. feu BIJREN STS '

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Those ’who raised an eyebrow at the swim suits in ' "dence last season may be even more conscious he streamlined effects this season. Advance mgs of resort wear indicate that the silkworm ~un't have to work overtime as far as the modern

were injured last Wednesday in a I series of hand to hand fights bej tween A. F. of L. sympathizers and 1 CIO pickets at the plant. The A. F. of L. refinery workers union and the CIO warehousemen’s union have agreed to the peace proposal. It remained only for the CIO sugar refinery workers union, which established the first picket line around the plant, to ratify the proposal before the way would be cleared for the plant to reopen. o HUGE STILL IS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) 1,500 gallon recooker, six 5,000 i gallon vats, 220 gallons of alcohol, i 20,000 gallons of mash ami a 35 horse-power steam plant. All of i the equipment was destroyed. Kouchis was arrested when he drove up with a load of coke. The keeper of the dogs was questioned ' but released later. Scanlon indicated other arrests would be made later He asserted the contraband equipment was the property of a Chicago Heights mob. . —o— Rural Directory Racket Exposed LaPorte, Ind., Apr. 12. —<U.R>~A rural directory racket in La Porte county was revealed today with the arrest in Fayette county, Ohio, of G. C. Ogden of Indianapolis, who allegedly sold advertising in a fake directory to seven LaPorte ■ county firms. Investigation of Ogi den's license plates revealed they I were issued at a non-existant address in Indianapolis. Sheriff Joe Wolf said he might take steps to I extradite Ogden. A warrant for his arrest already has been issued here. DALADIER ASKS i (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I tax increases which will not hinder • production. 4. To increase taxes on enter-

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, APRIL 12, 1938.

maid is concerned. New materials are also much in evidence. Such creations as hammered bronze, rubber, glass texture and other equally odd materials are being displayed. Some of the mere novel designs of leading stylists are here shown.

i prises carrying out national de-1 - tense contracts. I 5. Tariff revision. 6. Repression of fiscal fraud. -I 7. To increase taxes on enter- . prises enjoying a monopoly. > | S. To decrease taxes on enterr i prises reinvesting their profits in ; ; equipment designed to increase • production or to provide work. , I 9. To facilitate credit. , i lb. To enable companies fulfill- , ing defense contracts to discount I ' paper in order to obtain the neces- | sary cash. j o Give Final Approval To 10 Wl’A Projects , Indianapolis, Ind., April 12 —(UP) Final approval has been received , for 4 » Indiana works progress administration projects totaling sl.- J 525,198 state administrator John K.' i ■ Jennings announced today. < Largest allotment was $808,047 I for improving roads throughout Lawrence county not a part of the i 1 federal aid highway system. I o , COOGAN SEEKS EARNING SHARE Jackie Coopan Sues Moth er, Step-Father For Millions I . | Hollywood, April 12—(UP)—Mrs. Lillian C. Bernstein, mother of Jac-, i hie Coogan, and her second hus- ' •band, were indignant today that j Jackie had sued them for the $4,000,000 which he earned as a child actor and which, he contended, they I were withholding from him illegally 1 "I am hurt and deeply shocked,” Mrs. Bernstein said. ‘‘He says he ■ has nothing and that il refused to give him any part of the estate. No promises ever were made to give him anything.” Arthur L. Bernstein, who was the ) Coogan business manager for years and who recently married Jackie's i mother after Jackie's father was killed in an automobile accident,, | issued this statement through his ; . attorney, Charles J. Kratz. | “His mother was entitled to all; his earnings until he became of age. j The young man is suffering from , hallucinations. He has teceived everything he is entitled to, and! more.” The mother and step-father did j not go into the details of Jackie s allegations They will make a de- I tailed reply, their attorneys irdicat- ( ed accounting of the fortune he I earned as a child. I Jackie, now 22, shiny-haired and nearly six feet tall, filed suit yes- I terday. He said that when he came of age he asked his mother for some part of his fortune. He said | she replied: —■ "You haven’t got a cent. There never has been one cent belonging j to you. It's all mine and Arthur's j Superior court judge Emmet H. i Wilson ordered a receiver tor Jack- ‘ le’s assets, including his film pro- | during company which he accused | his step-father of turning into a ( ■ beer establishment. Jackie informed the judge that j (

| his late father, Jack Coogan, Sr., j gave him an allowance of 16.25 a week while he was in his teens so he would grow up like boys with less money. Jackie said this allowance con-' tinued until he was 21 years old, when it was stopped. He was courting the film star Betty Grable, w horn he has since maried, but his mother and Bernstein would give I him nothing, he alleged. o Body Os Drowned Man Is Recovered Angola, Indiana April 12—(UP) — ■ A group of Angola men found the ' body of Edwin O'Shaughnessy, 24, Fort Wayne, at Lake James, near here, last night. O’Shaughnessy, a laundry truck driver, drowned Sunday when his motor boat capsized and sanik out of sight. Other city, county and state offivers and firemen assisted in the search for the body. Most of the searchers were off the lake at the time the body was found in 25 feet of water, 700 feet oft shore. The boat and motor were located. ______o One Man Arrested In Evansville Bombing Evansville, Ind., April 12 —(UP) Charles F. "Pat” Weaver, 45, formerly of Indianapolis, was arrested and jailed in default of J5,COO bond today on charges of possessing explosives as police investigated the bombing of the city dry cleaning plant early last Saturday. Weaver, who came here last January, is managing director Os the Evansville cleaners club. It was understood that a search of his room led to his arrest. — o - Operatic Star Dies In Paris Paris. April 12 —(UP)—Feodor Chaliapin, whose magnificent voice and equally magnificent stature swept him to world fame as the most celebrated Basso of modern times, died today of pernicious, anemia. i

NOTICE The following doctors announce the closing of their offices on Tuesday evenings, beginning April 12 and continuing until further notice: G. J. Kohne, M.D. R. E. Daniels, M.D. F. L. Grandstaff, M.D. B. E. Duke, M.D. P. O. Eicher, M.D. C. C. Rayl, M.D. H. F- Zwick, M.D.

INLAND STEEL DEFIES ODDER Will Not Comply With 1 Order Unless Upheld By Federal Court Chicago. April 12—(U,R)—Inland j I Steel company officials said today | they believed the national labor board'! order for the company to . negotiate and sign an agreement with the steel worker! organising i committee wan "erroneous," and that they would not comply with the order until it has been upheld by federal courts. The board's ruling, announced j April 6, said the company's refusal ! to bargain with the union, an j affiliate of the committee for fndusI trial organization, and to sign a i contract if an agreement was reached, was a violation of the i Wagner act. J. H. Walsh, Inlaud works manager. said the company would ask the U. 8. circuit court of ppeals to set aside the ruling. His stand was revealed in letters to Leonard I C. Bajork, NLRB regional director,; ' and Van A. Bittner, SWOC reglon- ! at director. , He said the company would be | | glad to continue to meet and deal! with the Amalgamated Association ' ! of Iron. Steel and Tin Workers of North America as representative of ; its members only. "We have reason to believe." he , said, "that the amalgamated represents less than a majority of our | employees and we therefore have no duty or right under the national j labor relations act to recognize it 'as the representative of all Aci cordingly the question of a written I ■ agreement does not arise.” o ROOSEVELT PLANS ' (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I dent planned to cover a wide range I in his message and explanation. | I Usually, he takes no more than 20 i to 25 minutes for a fireside speech. The White House minimized reports that the President and Vice President Garner clashed over re- ■ lief and pump-priming proposals ; yesterday. "I was there," Early said, “for a considerable part of the meeting and I found no tiff in the conversation.” Broad outlines of the president's I recovery program, details of which still are unofficial, indicated he

“Pin The Tail on the Donkey” When you were young, you played that timeless game. Blindfolded, you weaved your way to the painted donkey on the wall, and tried to pin his paper tail in approximately the right position. You hit his nose, his ear, his leg—or you missed completely, and your blind stab landed on the empty wall. Do you still “pin the tail on the donkey” when you go shopping? Do you make your purchases “blindfolded,” leaving your choice to chance? That is literally the “unenlightened” method. It wastes your time, your energy, your patience—and your money. Don’t buy haphazardly. Know ‘beforehand’ what to buy, and where to buy it, and how much to pay for it. Read the newspaper advertisements! Scan the shopping columns; compare prices, compare values — decide upon your bargain. Then go directly to the store which advertises it; make your purchase—and be content! No more hit-and-miss buying when you follow the advertisements. They lift the blindfold; they make it easier to find the best values. *

' will ask for $«.500,000,000 to coinbat the depression—one-third tor ' public works, one-third for r«lief, and one-third for loans to business. The "fireside chat," Whits House 1 Secretary Stephen T. Early said, | may be delivered Thursday evening, it Mr. Roosevelt completes his i relief message in time to reach congress that noon. It will be his I first informal radio address since | Nov. 14 when he appealed for cooperation in the unemployment I census. The decision to present his proposals to the nation personally 1 came as a surprise and was InterI preted here as further emphasis of , the critical state of industry and I unemployment. Indicative of official opinion was I the statement, of secretary of the i treasury Henry Morgenthau Jr., that “some kind of government aid" is imperative. Only last fall MorgI enthau was opposed to pump priming methods, favoring curtailed government expenditures as the most logical road to recovery. Mr. Roosevelt's plan to lay before the people the problem of the national economic crisis and his proposals for coping with it was announced l>y Early late yesterday after a full day of conferences with relief and spending-agency officials and congressional leaders. Early emphasized that the plans are tentative and that fulfillment depends upon the ability to get ■ the messages ready by Thursday noon. He said that all engagements for this afternoon would be cancelled. Senate majority leader Albeu W. Barkley, D., Ky., after a White House conference, revealed that the president's message will ask $1,250,000,000 for relief from next

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• [July 1 to Fab. 1, 1539 r Congressional sources said that this would maintain relief roils at ' 2,500,000, and that the president ( ' had agreed to continuance of the Woodrum amendment requiring ' that the money be spread over the entire period planned tor. 1 It also was indicated that the ' president plans to ask for 150,000,- ' 000 to continue the civilian conservation corps at present strength, $150,000,000 for the farm security administration, and $50,000,000 for the national youth administration. This appeared to make a three- ' fold program as follows: ’ 1. $1,500,000,000 for relief as . outlined. 1 2. $1,500,000,000 for public works, previously revealed through ' congressional sources. 3. $1,500,000,000 of loans to busl- ; ness through the reconstruction finance corporation. Q I ROBBERY GANG » 1 11 ■■■" (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) ■ i/eries in Paragon and Martinsville, s Indiana., according to Hinkle, i Hinkle said the state police have 1 been rounding up the gang for r several months. Fred Turner, broth--1 ■—■—————

Rural Light BILLS Madison and Monroe townships in Allen county; Root, Union, State Line and Mud Pike lines in Adams county — due and payable on or before APRIL 20 Avoid penalty by paying on time. City Light & Power Dept. M. J. Mylott, supt. ———

PAGE FIVE

er of Ed. was included among the gangsters sent to the Michigan City stale prison. He was sentenced from Franklin. Three men from Greensburg also were convicted of several breakins and thefts. Recently a sister of Ed Turner. Maude, was sentenced at Columbus, Ind., to the women’s reformatory but was placed on progation. At Turner's home, Hinkle said, tires and other stolen articles were found. LUTZ FUNERAL (CONTINUED FROM PAOB ONE) Homer D. Lower, Burt Gage, C. C. Schafer, J. H. Heller and French Quinn, all of Decatur. o Baptist Church To Name New Officers Officers of the First Baptist church will be elected tonight at the church. Polls will ibe opened from 5 until 8 o’clock. All church members are urged to come to the church during thoee hours and cast their ballots. ■ ■ o Trade In A Good Town — Decatur