Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 37, Number 191, Decatur, Adams County, 14 August 1939 — Page 5
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I Mage Scars in Labor Fight • * » ■ fIfTW ’ -* 1 gB» h»r ( •> |, . ■r r '•' L- 1O ? HSp' 1 h; • ’ - '' jte •>'■':' we* Xw>J i KLjL t fwiTla \ J I ojWCRSPr -i 4 ’ ' * L ‘X* 1 USJBLI wt i i • i Harry Ki< hnian aad Sophie Tucker th. AUar.tic Oty. N. J., beach aan la. Stage Flayers Harry RichMfiind Sophie Tucker lay plana for their labor junadictional fight 1 •wi threatens a nation-wide amusement strike. The Associated and Ar Mats of America, an A F. of U affiliate, charges that ” yelled Am<x|can Federation of Actors, of which Miss Tucker • prsadwt, *aa issued a charter by the International Alliance of • n •—»HcaJ stare Emnlovcs Soviet Sailors Show How m ■ ~Z ~'R r «***e-~ ..-L~4‘'4 *i» ■''■ I W M : 111 • nn J r equipment, a landing party of Soviet sailors, headed IhwnJ” 1 ?' nrt ® 400 meW> during celebration of first Navy Day in 'Mi aflelr* , r ' ai arkable fe»< '•itneaaed by thousand’ who heard deelars the Sone? «*’'• rebmaruMO than any other uaUpn ipSJu ’grid. _
in iglii held when the ffaptom her report would cancel It. I I Through thia change In dates, the ■ announcement of a referendum I ■ will be made at any time prior to | September IS. and the date for announcing the results of the referendum October 10, a month later • In each case FOURTEEN DIE • (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ON KI chief pilot. 1 King. Capt. George B. Miami. • second pilot. i Jenkins. Runsell, radio man I Trujillo. Julio, steward. t Valtmso. Emanuel, Belgian. ■ Imarded plane at Bahia, Bratil. i Uevin. Pablo, boarded at Bahia. Oliveira. Edgardo. boarded at 1 Bahia l Santos, Alberto, hoarded at Vic-1 • toria. Brasil. Santos. Lucilla. boarded at Vic-1 toria. • Milauda. Evaristo, laiarded at I ' l*enambuco. Brasil. I I tied in hospital: I Ammundsen. Autuon. boarded at I “•W*- » \ J Survive: I I Lyra. .Mario, boarded at Bahia. I Hlrth. Unwaldo. boarded at Per-1 I nambuco i J Lyra, still dased. told the Vnlted i Press that he believed the Belgian i Valenao was carrying SIM.OOO iu diamonds with him. Valenao was i a diamond merchant. The dia- - monde and moat of the plane's I mail were lost ■ Asked if he bad a clear impresi ston of the crash. Lyra, speaking .with difficulty, said; ’ | "I saw It coming The plane I I started to drop suddenly. I knew something was wrong and unbuck-1 i led my safety belt." 1 Lyra's weak voice dropped to a I mumble. lan he resuin<*d: "How I got out of the plane 1 I i don't know I didn t remember I anything until I was hauled from » ’the water into a launch." I The plane was a two-motored
DECATUR DAILY. DEMOCRAT MONDAY, AUGUST 11, 1939.
Flaming Pyre for Nine Army Fliers * ■ inn. a_ ■** m •* r . W I J - Tkis flaming wreckage was once a proud, tvrin-motored Army bomber. Taking off from Langley Field, Va., on a routine flight, the plane crashed, carrying nine men to death. The roaring flames balked attempts to rescue tbs trapped men. Failure of ship's motors was blamed for the plane's dive after it reached 200-f oot altitude.
S-4S Slkorksy flying boat. Chief Pilot Person, a world war ace and' a former army instructor, had been flying for Pan American for more than 10 years. Ke was thoroughly familiar with the Rio De Janeiro landing Co-pilot King also was a veteran, making a test flight on the fatal run. REPORT ITALY — I lOiiN'TiNUEn FROM PAGE ONE) ferenec. Poland bad delivered an I official memorandum to Italy. I making its attitude plain. In the Orient, negotiations at Tokyo for a settlement of the Japanese blockade of the Briliah concession at Tientsin lagged | Four Japanese army officers who went to Tokyo from Tientsin for the negotiations returned to Tientaon today, announcing they would streugthen the blockade British sources. however, said they did not regard the negotiations as having broken down An armored car unit of British j concession volunteers was mobilised at Tieutsstn as delegates to a Japanese-sponsored "national" an-tl-British congress pataded in the Japanese-controlled area of the city. The mobiitcaiion was precautionat? and no attacks were reported. SIX GUARDSMEN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) tng a young man not to d'ive al 70 miles per hour." Another official said iuat Hart a veteran of several years In the service, had refused to touch the shell and was Injuted on'/ tecaus - ’i« was standing near the entrance of the tent when the expl-;siou occurred. Tyndall said the shell, used in the 'French 75" which proved to bej one of the most ettectlve weapons during the world war, might have been on the range for a week or several years. He said th* range had been in use 17 years Thu blast tore a three-foot hole in the ground near the vl.'ihns' tent. John I] Rose. Louisville car veteran who was at the fort visiting hU Deuces Wild! ■ t : : ? .• : f* • • am—l m e And why wouldn't they be wild; for they apparently have been given no representation at all in this charming costume worn by June Nelson at Lake Mohawk, N. J. The strapless ivinuuit it made of plastic playing cards which have the virtua of bulug waterproof.
SAMRAYBURN BACKS GARNER House Majority Leader Endorses Garner For Presidency Washington. Aug. 14 — dJ.PJ — i House majority leader Sam RayI burn's endorsement of Vice Presi- . dent John N. Gamer for the 194U' | Democratic presidential nomination was believed today to raise J the possibility of a showdown between conservative and new deal Democrats at the nelt session of , congress. | It was emphasised. however, j that such a showdown on the Ray-1 burn issue was only |iossible, not I probable A fight could be made in the I I house to displace Rayburu -a L-l- --| low Texan of Garner's- as Presi- | dent Roosevelt** spokesman in the chamber. Ruch a fight admittedly would be virtually without pre-! cedent . Re-elect ion of a congressional leader In the past has been ' almost automatic. *< One factor which might deter- 1 mine whether a fight will be made.-I •bMrvers believed, is the exteut i to which Rayburn was influenced I by local political factors In Texas. < It his support of Gamer is in the-’ son. witnessed the tragedy. He wag 1 sending only 50 feet Imm the 1 scene. * It was the worst sight i ve seen since the world war." ho said. |“Even in the war It was seldom as bad as what 1 saw today. The vic- ; ■ Urns were badly mutilated by the j biaet. It was horrible." *<
Nation’s Top Public Enemies v' v Bk 1 *** V< * r T • •; t ’ /■r" ■ nr* • Those four criminals were named by the FBI as the nation’s top publie enemies. Enemy No. 1 is Irving Charles Chapman, escaped Texas bank robber, under 14A-y«ar sentence. No. 2 io Theodore Cale, 27. kidnaper who escaped from Alcatraa federal prison in 1937 with No. 3. Ralph Roe, 33. a bank robber. No. 4 is Louis (Lepke) Buchslter. 42. wanted in New York for conspiracy and extortion. A t?n<>oo reward is offered for suchaltar t 40a4 or alive. (
I nature of a homestate move to protect his congressional seat, the administration la hardly likely to I raise any issue against him. A I fight would be probable, it was i believed, only If Rayburn openly I moves out against the new deal—- ■ a highly Improbable event. Whether new dealers could tee successful in ousting Rayburn, under any circumstance, probably would depend on the amount of strength they could muster to off- • set the anti-Roosevelt trend in the | lower house. They might atgue I with recalcitrant colleagues that the president holds the key to l»4o and that the Democrats' only hope Is to unite behind him or some other new deal candidate. Rayburn announced Saturday that he was "for that outstanding Texan and liberal Democrat. John I N Gamer" as presidential nom I iuee next year. LISTS PROGRESS ‘Continued frqw page one» membership of 4.097 last quadrennium; thia qtladrennlum 5.054 new Nazarenes were listed in the district during the past eight years. Os thia number only 522 transferred to us from other denominations. Four years ago we had 9.535 active m*-mbera in the Sunday School; today we have 15.921. Four years ago we had 1.509 members of the WFMS in the district, now we have 2 290. Al that time we had 1,47<» in the N'YPS; today we have 3.352 members in that department." DAVISON YOUTH (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE! Davison will be arraigned before Judge Fruchtc* to answer to the charge.
TRAFFIC TAKES SEVERAL LIVES U eekend Accidents Take Several Lives In This Stale Kokomo. Ind, Aug. 14.— (U.K) — Three persons were in serious condition in a hospital hero today ' from injuries received in an automobile crash Saturday which j claimed the Ilves of three others. Nine-year-old Lloyd Ford died yesterday, third victim of the collision. His father. Reeve Ford. 3<>, and his younger brother, Marvin ,T.. were killed. Mrs. Vera Felknor of Indianapolis, was in serious condition with a multiple fracture of the pelvia *and internal injuries. Mrs. Ford xuffered grave internal injuries, a ' fractured leg aud cuts. A third child. Donald Ford. 3, was released front the hospital yesterday but was returned when .hemorrhages developt-d The accident occurred on U. 8. highway 31 near here when the car driven by Fay J. Felknor. bus- . band of the injured woman, struck I Ford's machine. Felknor refused medical attention and waa not believed hurt. One Killed Michigan City. Ind . Aug. 14.— I <U.R> <Wie person waa Injured fatally and three hurt yesterday when <t wo automobiles crashed head-on on V. 8 12 near here. Mrs. Francis 8. Kerr. 54-year-old i Chicago woman, died enroute to a hospital of a skull fracture. Her son. Robert. 27. driver of one of the cars, received serious head injuries and Miss Margaret Hollla. 19, of Cincinnati, riding with them, suffered from shock and bruises. ,« I‘aul Arnold, also of Chicago, driver of the other machine, was < ut on the arm. They told police an unknown ' driver crowded Kerr Into Arnold's i car. Farmer Killed U>gansport. Ind.. Aug. 14. <U.P) ■ —Henry Vri< h. 49-year-old farmer, was Injured fatally yesterday in an automobile collision on Indiana highway 219 near Walton. He suffered a punctured lung. Other occupants of the two cars involved in the crash escaped serious injury. AL D. SC HMITT I ICCNTINUEJU FROM PAGE ONKA I car He suffered a broken collar I (Mme and fracture of the ribs. I They wen- on their way to the I northern Indiana lakes for a vaj cation. The collision occurred four and one-half mile* south of Winchester. The Bclunilt car was prac-1 tically demolislied from the im-1 pact. Mr Schmttt and Mr. Archer I ' were returning home from a bustI iieaa trip to Richmond when the! I accident occurred New Orleans .lurt Files More Charges — New Orleans. Aug. 14 ■—4 UPI — J i The federal grand jury today In | i dieted George Caldwell o a charges of mail fraud and Eugene Barks-! dale, who briefly succeeued Cald : well as Ixiuisiana state university | < -instruction supervisor, on a charge I of diverting Wl*A latior ana mater-! tals. The 3uo-pound Caldwelt was ac--.-usi'd of mall fraud In two indict- ’ meins. In the first, Clifford A. King.! New Orleans eons'metivu advisor | Sues Chrysler Frank P. Roger-. Charging alleged breach of contract. Frank P Rogers. Mamaroneck. N. Y.. builder, has ftled a S.IOO 000 suit against Walter P. i Chrysler, the automobile magnate Rogers charges that the Chrysler I children induced their father to i discharge him from the position as manager of the Chrysler building which she helped to build. Chrysler ts critically til at his Long Island home with a cu-cula-Urj AilmanL
I waa named as < (x-onsplrat<r, but he waa not charged. In thu second A. J. Colfry, head of an art and tarir«Mu firm in New Orlasni, was uamed as ctxonsplrator aud was I not charged. - ( oaey Island Train Derails, 21 Injured N.-w York Aug. 14—(UP)—Two i-iveatigatlons Into the w.'vck of a Coney 'lsland elevated train, in which 21 persona were injured, were underway today by police and officials of tb« Brooklyn-Manhattan: 'raiisit corporation. • The train, loaded with Suudayh
Action in U. S. War Games "UR’’ r v i Mwjftter■see ■ Ca..iera catches some action in the United States war games at Manassas. Va. The photo shows field artillerymen firing a field gun in defense practice on Signal Hill, a famous Civil war battleground. The Aussies Have Their ~ fflij Wl 111 B . It fcF*** *iLjd ■*** . x w < — Hera js tho acene in front of the Australian pavilion at the New York World's Fair, as the Australian Commissioner General. L. R. MaeGregnr. delivered the principal address at ceremonies marking "Australia Day '• Sailors from tho viaiting Australian eruiser Pert* participated in the eeremoniea. Dixie Davis, Wife Oblige - - ■ " if / ** fIE •*■**■- Hope Dare and Dixie Davis Posing for the flrat time since released from jail. Dixie Davis, former •mouthpiece" for tho Dutch Schutt.2 mob kitses hts bndv the former Hope Dare, showgirl, tn New York. Authorities f*<u* for Dixie's life He to constantly under guard as s key federal gnypt Jury witn»M.
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pleaaure aevkers returning from the resort, waa believed to bare been d trailed by a defective switch which allowed the front of the first car to move on to an adjoining track but kept Ito rear wheels and the five coaches tolkrwlug to the original track. o— — ARRIVALS Mr. nnd Mrs. Wesley Titus. 225 North First etreet, are tho parents of a baby girl, born at .he homo I Sunday morning at 8:30 o'clock. ' rhe girl weighing seven pounds, Ims been named Janice Kay.
