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Cumberland Evening Times from Cumberland, Maryland • Page 2

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Cumberland, Maryland
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2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

EVENING TIMES, CITMBBELAND, JUNE 1I8T ISOLATION OF SPANISH CIVIL WAR IS PRESSED France and Britain Seek to Bring Germany and Italy Back Into Non-intervention Fold WOULD WIDEN SCOPE Such a Move Would Bring In Soviet Russia as Well As Lesser European Powers in Bioutude Paris, June 5. of France and Great Britain, seeking to mafce effecUva policy of Isolation of the Spanish civil war, pressed hard today to bring Germany and Italy back into the nonintervention committee's fold with promises of safety for naval patrol vessels. At the same time French foreign office sources disclosed proposals which the government of Premier Leon Blum hoped would widen the naval cordon's scope and also make easier the fixing of responiJ- hility for any untoward Incidents. AH Represented France will ask that all members of the 21-natlon committee be represented in the naval patrol which had been composed only of French, British, German and Italian ships. Such a move would bring in Soviet Russia as wall a a lesser European powers to tighten blockade against men and munitions bound for war-torn Spain.

Ift addition, the French government was to neutral observers aboard each patrol ship to, moke it easier in the future to fix responsibility for such Incidents as the bombing of the German pocket battleship Deutechland which resulted in the deaths of 36 German seamen at Iblza. May Create Guaranteed Beauty Reigns at Naval Academy Beauty has lie day at the U. 8. Naval Academy. Annapolis, Md with Janet Cunneen of Washington, 1937 Color Girl, presenting the colors to Company Commander H.

B. Halm (left) of Brooklyn and Rear Admiral David Sellers, superintendent 'erf the academy, while the corps of lr, dms uniforms, present arms, "ny mony la one of the colorful spectacles of commencement week MIBSTERS COMPETE NO ENCEPHALITIS FOR COUNTY CROWN EPIDEMIC HERE Champions From 42 Schools Trading Shots Today In Community Park Rings. The day of days for the creatn of the county's marble players, who France was believed ready to ac-j opened play for the championship rf this afternoon at Communlity Park, cede to British proposals to create guaranteed zones Sn which nsutral patrol would be assured of safety from any attack. With this promise, the two nations hoped to bring Italy and Germany back into the committee from which they withdrew after the Deutechlind incident It was Indicated, however, that the patrol membership expanded so that Russia will not be "frozen out" of the Spanish neutrality efforts. The patrol of only four powers, the French foreign office was believed to hold, might be used as an opening Italy to wedge by Germany ad attempt negotiation of a four-poww pact which would alienate from her Soviet and Little Entente allies.

PERSONAL Harry K. Duke, LaVale, returned from vliitlng her son. John professor of music. Smith College, Northampton, and friends In Baltimore. Mr.

and Mrs. O. H. Furtney, 313 Saratoga street, ara in College Park to attend the graduation of their eon, Shirley, from the University of Maryland. Mr.

and Mrs. Max Salm, of Neuss 1 Rhine, Germany, guests of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Stetnberger and Saul J. Berg, 158 North Centre street.

Rabbi and Mrs. Aaron H. Lsfko- vite, Lewis apartments, are In New York, where tho former will do graduate work at the Jewish Institute of Religion. They will return early in Augisst. Dr.

William R. Johnson, ton of Mr. and Mrs. James T. Johnson, Washington street, has returned fcfltn a number of years' study of aedicln-c In Munich, Germany.

Mr. and Mrs. Day tana Beach. sister, Mrs. Webb Long, Vale.

Mr. and Mrs. Darnell are enroute to their summer home on Lake Erie. Mrs, Mary Byler DlckYm and Virginia Long and Helen Eyler returned from Pittsburgh. Mra.

William A. Morgart. formerly of this city, it ill at her home, Jennings, near Grsntsvllle. Mrs. John Glover, Morgan town, W.

it visiting Mrs. -Otto O. Smith, 813 Mt Royal avenue. Mr. and Mrs.

T. Holland Brotemarkle, accompanied by Mrs. Ellsworth Brotemarkle and Mrs, James R. Smith, aU of 703 Oldtown Road, are in College Park attending the graduation of thefr son, Martin Luther Brotemarkle, from the Uni- of Maryland. Dr.

Lloyd W. Patterson remains ill home of hla parents, 220 Louis F. Darnell, are visiting at the Mnrth I Mr. and Mrs. John C.

Wolvcrum returned Thurrxlay night from New York, after attending the commencement Bt Columbia University, where thslr son John, received his degree. He hus accepted a position as pro- rtuc.fion manager with the Adiron- rturfc Log Cabin and will reside in New York. Mr. urul Mrs. Wsda H.

Poling, Indlanapolli. are vlsiUng Mrs. Pollng's mother, Mrs. E. Miner, at the home pf Charles V.

Rainy. i dsiishteir of Mrs. Miller, as SIS North street. Mrs. Poling will remain for several weeks.

was ushered in this morning with a luncheon at the Fort Cumberland Hotel, attended by champions and runnersup from 43 schools, and officials who handled this afternoon's tournament to determine a representative to national meet at WHdwood, N. J. Following the lunch, the boys were serenaded by banda from Fort HiU and AUegany High Schools and then the mlbsters, led by one band with the other bringing up the rear, marched from the hotel to the most talked of spot among the sharp- shocwrs for tha past month or so. As boys arrired at the hotel this morning, the Marbles. Editor presented each champion with a jaunty while yachting cap with gilt and anchor and black peak in order that crowds which viewed the finals this afternoon would be able to distinguish the school Utleholders.

runnersup received white sailor hats. CK) UNIONISTS TURN DOWN STRIKE TREATY Agreement For Workers In Richmond, Ford Plant Rejected By 2 to 1. Richmond, June 5. The membership of the CIO suiion of striking United Automobile Workers turned down by a 2-to-l margin early today a. proposed agreement under which they would have returned to work Monday In tho Richmond assembly plant the Ford Motor Company.

The tentative had been proposed leaders. Dr. Franklin Says Cases Not Related and There.Is No Cause For Alarm, Although two persons died iri as many days at Memorial Hospital encephalitis (sleeping sickness) there is no epidemic of the disease in this section as the cases have no connection, stated Dr. Joseph Franklin, city and county health officer, this morning. William C.

Loechel, Grantsville died Wednesday and James Edwarc Serf, 613 Greene.street, died yester- tiay. It Just so that the cases developed at the same time according to the health off who said there are several different things which may have caused the condition. The deaths have not been reported to the health office as required in the cases of contagious diseases and these cases axe not contagious, Dr. Franklin. There Is no cause whatsoever.for alarm, he stated.

of agreement by their strike Frank Slaby, president of the U. A. W. local and CIO leader In the East San Francisco Bay district, tisd predicted the proposal would be accepted. He prcssaed at the meeting.

On heels of the union nago- itorn 1 offer, officials of the strike- Bound Ford plant had announced plans to reopen their plant next Monday. SOCIAL Duke Home On Furkujgh From India MIM Margaret H. Dulce, who. as a missionary of the Presbyterian Church, has been working iu Kol- hapur state. India, for the past nine and one-half years, is visiting her mother, Matilda Duke.

LaVale. She a daur.hter of the late Harry K. Dulce- Duka urrived in the States on a special furlough. May 10, and hnd since been visiting her brother, John Smith AT SALISBURY STATE Tasker G. Lowndes, State Education Board President, Presents Diplomas.

Salisbury, June 5 G. Lowndes, president of the State Board of Education, awarded the to eight graduates of State Teachers' College at commeneement exercises today. The degree of Bachelor of Science in education was conferred upon each by Dr. J. D.

Blacbrveli, president of the college. Dr. Albert S. Cook, state superintendent of schools, accepted the graduates into the teaching profession. Wendell D.

Allen, a state board member, made the address to Fire members of the state board, Dr. Lido. Lee Tall, president State Teachers College at Towson and other state educators attended the exercises which marked the climax to the commencement week activities at the institution: B. AND 0. SHOPS AT BALTIMORE CLOSED Chevrolet Plant Also Shuts Down As Steel Strikes Cause Material Tieup.

Baltimore, June 5 Baltimore and Ohio Railroad's Mount Clare shops and the Chevrolet Motor Company plant here remained closed today because of a materials tie-up resulting from the current steel strikes. Approximately 3,600 employes were furloujhed. The railroad, which laid off 1,500 men pending settlement of the strikes, announced "Inability to secure regular of certain steel a five-day furlough effective June 7. OBITUARY Junec Edward Serf, 24, of Greene son of Mr. aad Mrs Alvin died late at Ksspitfii with William Clarence Loechel, farmer, died at hospital UM day of the diaeaae.

Mr. Serf wOl cooduflUd. Monday at p. m. at Kmmanuei Church.

rector," Rev. David C. Clark, of- The vested chair, of which Mr. Serf 'once a member, will sing. Intertntnt will in ROM Hill his are: his widow, Wllma Jean Serf of Mauariiir Ifcwonae to Definite Liftit orator Flickering Lfcht -ending' a' 'to deelamj.

mrthod of looaUnt brain faime-ra by pMaaurinc aocurate- Ij the reacttona the to Hgfct WM announced today by Dr. A. KUberg of New York City before the American Neurological Association, Some tumors of the brain hate sssrssr aiid Stweft Ice Serf. Mr. Serf, who was an employe in the dye research laboratory of the Celanese Corporation of America, was a graduate of Allefany High School.

Evelyn V. Bamce Funeral for Evelyn Virginia six-year-Md daughter of Mrs. Robert Jay, Artemas, who died yesterday at Hospital, will be conducted tomorrow at 10 a. m. at tlw Falrview, church with interment in church cemetery.

Leonard the Meyersdale, Pa, June Pugh, 4T, unmarried, instantly tilled Thursday night about one west of Meyersdale. He had left his in town about 9 o'clock and was walking horns by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, going through Broadway where the accident occurred. His body, mangled slgiwt beyond recognition, waa turned over is Joe Reich, undertaker. Pugh had one arm. He survived by his widowed mother, Mra.

Mary PUgh; one brother, WUlUua, and the following sisters: Mrs. Edward Staub and Mrs. Edgar Bolden, Meyersdale; Miss Lillie Pugh, Cumberland, and Mrs. Stella O-Bryon. Mra.

Mrs. Margerette Weknan, 75, naive of Germany, died this morning at her home, 417 Fayette street the widow of John Weiman, who was an employe of the city. daughter, Mrs. Mary Blasi, survives. Mrs.

Wetaaa was a member of SB. Peter and Paul Catholic Church, from which the funeral will be held Monday at 9 with burial in the parish cemetery. W. Cfc-renoe Granteville, June of the, me- chanifm of. eya, to react to light, be but the new method of measuring 'to a high degree of accuracy the to.

a definite light intercity or to a flickering light which 7 eye. VUion is a complicated chain of involving the retina with its cella at the back of eye, the. nerve leading to the back of Uvt brain, and. a' connection with the frontal part ot the brain', where the of memory and thought are In addition to the commonly accepted ttepa of perception, discrimination, recording and have proved that a fifth 1 step ic brain by fact determined it is tha meaaunmenia light intensity and flickering to de termlne the location of brain which interfere jnth the proctjses of because the eye responds to the light according to where the tumor, is obstnictlng the "chain The flickering ieets also hare In- dlcated that the familiar phrase. -'my eye are.

tired" ik not true, the New York specialist saia, because the nerves of retina and the optic nerve do not grow with use Instead the brain icaelf and fails to send back responses to the light meesages. it receives. Experiments with light intensity naye shown, he went on, that straining the a heavy log or at night actually enables a person to see- better. Persons ware asked to distinguish letters under a known Intensity of light in which they were barely visible. They were then told to concentrate on seeing and strain their eyes.

The light was then diminished and they still were able to distinguish letters. services joechel, for 56, William Clarence farmer, who died Thursday afternoon of encephalitis at Memorial Hospital, Cumberland, will be held tomorrow at 3:30 p. m. at the home. Rev.

5. D. Slgler, lastor of the Lutheran of which he was a member, will officiate. Burial will be In the Grante- lie Cemetery. Edward J.

Rater Bayard W. June funeral service for Edward J. luger was held in the Methodist Church Thuwday afternoon, with Rev. Oliver Hatfield charge assisted by.Rev. J.

H. Sheets of the United Brethren Church. A native of JambrU county, Mr. Rager iad been a. resident here for He la survived by his widow, daughter, Mrs.

Wesley Schaffer, Gormanla, W. one brother, A. Wellsburg, W. and ne sister, Mrs. O.

H. Brtdley, Up- ser Reese, Pa. Among those attending the fu- icral were Mr. and Mrs. A.

O. Rager and family, Wellsburg; Mr. and Jin. Homer Evins and family, Mrs. Pearl Miller and family, Pierce; and Mrs.

Wesley Schaffer, Gor-i mania. Flowerbearers were Glenora Lee.Nine, Florence and Lucille Vlllis, Freda. Cade, Dorothy Casteel, Dorothy Kelly, Helen Poling and Mrs. Wayne Burial was iayard Cemetery. Pan! Cornish Frostburg, June Lese Cornish, 42, died this morning fter a lingering illness.

Mr. Cor- ilsh was a native of tlnldntown, where the funeral will be held at p. from tha ohnson Chapel, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery, there. The funeral be private and it is asked that owers be omitted. Mr.

Cornish, who came here from t. Paul, was a son of John W. Comlsh, proprietor of the Hotel MIDSHIPMEN READY FOR SUMMER CRUISE Five Destroyers to Take IVIem bers of Ntw Second Class Out For Practices. Annapolis, June 5. destroyers moored off the Naval Academy today ready to take mem bers of new aecond of midshipmen on short prac tice during the summer.

The destroyers J. Fred Talbot. Roper. Fairfax and Jacob Jone dropped anchor, off the Seawall joining the Claxton which arrivec several days ago. The destroye Manley, now at Norfolk, will join the division.

The destroyer Decatur which has been stationed at the Academy fo several months will leave Mondaj for Norfolk. She will not return second class will be divided into detachments, each group make a practice cruise off the At Untie. coast during the summe months. The groups not on cruise will study aviation at the Academy or work aboard the submarine R-13 Members of the new first (senior and third (sophomore) classes are enroute to Europe ships New York, Wyoming. on the battle- Arkansas and unter here, and besides his par- nts, he Is survived by a son, Wilam, who is attending school in Donald, Elyria, Ohio; Herbert, umberland, and Nicfc, home.

and five brothers, Carl, Lewis, Becldey, W. Chevrolet officials said the plant experienclnK difficulty obtalninu of motor in view of the Inter Northampton. Mass. (deoendcncv of the assembly Members class will of the graduating forrtcl shut thn of honor down. Employes ttli return to work WEDDINGS A socUtion they morning.

Thn will foiTj AIR REPRISALS low the 8:10 mass Peter Paul church. I Briefly The Awemtioo of the first Presbyterian Church will meet a'. 8 p. m. in the hHi.

St. John's Episcopal. Second Sunday after Trinity. 8 a. Holy 9:30 a.

church school. 11 a. the of Maryland will make his annual visitation and will confirm, preach. Benncli-Twlgt Mn. John TwlBg, 33 Fifth ttr-et.

nd administer marriaec of herimunlon. Evelyn ta Lot-nan Dr. W. W. Davis.

Baltimore ihe THREATENED BY MADRID FORCES of province, of Ma4ri4 near tha tier, ac a result of the iimjrgent bombing of Vlllaneuva Don Benito. The defense minister that was impossible to protect all government territory with anti-aircraft guns. He said similar re- ih, r- 1 ucst nftd received from Val- ihf Holy Com- pnclB Cnirango CITY BRIEFS W. A. Pfeiffer, Willow Brook, reported yesterday ths visit of an apparently rare bird to hia funu.

II had the appearance of a sea gull and it may have been a bittern. At yesterday's session of the Orphans Court, letters of adminljtra- tion granted M. Bosenberg on the estate of Fred Reaen- berg, to Lucy C. Chapman on the estate of Alfred W. Ceoper.

District Forester H. C. Buckingham hia received word that CCO camps AT, at Sang Run, aad at Swaateti, fcoth, in Ganett csuaty, are to be by Abttit 300 men have been other The will turned over to the state. INDICT CHAMBERMAID ON STABBING CHARGE Florence "Third Degree Case Figure, Linked With Attack On Wall. Uniontown, June Florence Dean, young chambermaid companion of Prank C.

Monaghan on the eve of the Uniontown "thirc degree" slaying, indicted yesterday by the Fayette county grand Jury on charges resulting from the stabbing of County Detective John C. wall. Miss Dean, 18, was charged with assault and battery, aggravated assault and battery, unlaw cutting and asaault and battery with Intent to kill. Wall accused Miss Dean of grabbing his right arm and preventing him from protecting himself when he was slashed by Monaghan last Sept. 11.

Miss Dean was a state witness in the murder trial of James A. Reilly, district attorney of Fayette county. Bcnnm, of W. The black quart In beer were scarce In 1790 that voted an appropriation of MOOO to assist in the reconstruction of a factory destroyed by fire. about 13 per 10W.

operaung the system of municipal in the werid be- longa to Detroit, uieh. STOCK MARKET on topside much as or so of tune- several retreated before the wera J. I. Case, Deere, International Harvester, Marshall Montgomery Ward. Coca-Cola, Allis Chalmers, Yellow Truck.

Inland Steel, American Steel Foundries, Republic Steel, Briggs West- em Union, Consolidated Edison Howe Sound, Anaconda, Kennecott, Cerro de Pasco, American Smelting, Phillips Petroleum, duPont, General Electric, N. Y. Central, Southern Railway, Chesapeake Ohio, General American Transportation, Air Reduction, Loew's and Liggett Myers Inclined to slip were U. S. Steel, Bethlehem, General Motors, Chrysler, Goodyear, Sears Roebuck, Woolworth, Boeing, Douglas Aircraft, Worth American, Electric Power IJght, Phelps Dodge, Seaboard Oil, Amerada, Certaln-Tewd, Westtng- houae.

Santa Southern Paclfis and Great Northern. New York, June 5 WV-Stocks got off to a good start In brief market session but, aside from favored specialties, moat fell back under week-end profit selling. The overnight grist provla- nothiajt startling aad 01411; IwUwlng ywter- late rally largely 4ue drying up orferiaia decliae, cash te aotna af their and wait for what may happen next week. Bonda, although quiet, dU rather well with a number of secondary rail loans edging forward, commodities were uneven. new.

jiy l.U'v 1 li'i-V old 1.HJ4: 3IS; l-B: 1 I.US; CELANESE WORKER CRUSHED TO DEATH Mearl F. Elliott, 21, Instantly Killed When Struck By Elevator, Mearl F. Elliott, 21, of Route 3, Cumberland, was Instantly killed at 10:40 this morning when struck by an electric elevator at the Ceianese plant. The accident occurred when Elliott, employed on tha second floor of Block 3, Textile, put his head through a sight-glass opening, of the shaft of the three-story building. The elevator, descending from the third floor at the time, struck Elliott's head as he was apparently looking down the shaft.

Company records show Elliott was married but other details were not available early this afternoon. CONVICTED POISONER JUMPS TO HIS DEATH was reported that following NEW ARCHBISHOP OYERCOUQflJN Hrst archbishop of Detroit and Immediate superior of Ohas. E. Coughlin, is Archbishop Edward Mooney, 'above, elevated to the high post by order of Pope -Pius'. Formerly fourth bishop of the Rochester, N.

diocese, Archbishop Mooney has had a long and varied career as prelate of the Catholic hurch since he was ordained a priest in Rome in 1909. INDEPENDENT UNION BY TAYLOR EMPLOYES Workers Who Desire to Return Hope to Plant Opened June 14. An Independent union of N. G. Taylor Company employes is being "ormed here and it is stated it is the intention to open the plah'l on Monday, June U.

The plant is a of the Republic Steel Corporation and following sin appeal CIO organizers the employes walked out. It was claimed at the time that the majority of the men were opposed to a strike. Known-as the Independent Union if N. G. Taylor Company Em- iloyes, the applicant for membership voluntarily authorizes the officers ind representatives, of said union -o act for me as a collective bargmin- ngr agency In all matters pertaining ,0 rates of pay, wages, hours of em- loyment, or other conditions of em- union is not affffi- ted with any organization." Organkers of the independent group declare tha'company in has any connection with it.

INNGONIN Baltimore Asks Court to Restrain Board Of Public Works From sing of CLAIM ACT INVAiJD Pointed Out It Does-Not Provide for Retirement Of Bonds, as State 'Stitution Baltimore, June S. Baltimore-group today asked the CircuH Sourt of Baltimore city to restrain the Board of Public Works from selling- bonds for the construction of a state office building in Annapolis. The request for an Injunction raised two objections to the sale of One is that tho. act authorizing the building is invalid because does'not provide for the retirement of the bonds, as the Maryland constitution requires. SuBJect to Referendum It Lefal The other is that even 'if the act is valid, it is subject to a referendum and cannot go into effect untii after the voters have passed on it at the general election In, the fall of .938.

Nearly 16,000 persons ilgned petitions asking a-referendum on the bill. The constitution provides for referendum on the request of 10,000 persons. The petition for Ian injunction, li lock construction of ths building was Sled by Hsrvey C. Sickel, former magistrate of the Baltimore through Attorney Eighth Floor N. Building.

Ypnteers, 5 3haag Soo Lee, the Korean house boy convicted on a charge in con nection with alleged attempts tc joison two persons, Jumped to his death today from a window In th chambers of County Judge Sidney Byrne on the eighth floor of the Park Building. Chang had been brought to Judge iyme's office hearing on labeas corpus petition. Although guards were present managed tc get to a window and leap out. He anded on a concrete path in City Jail Park in the rear of the build of the most congealed sec tions in Yonkers. The houseboy was convicted in tht Uleged attempts to poison Mr.

anc Mrs. George Beeves, guests of Mrs Churchill, his employer. He was serving a five to ten-year term in Sing Sing prison. The state charged that he eslous of the Beeves snd feared they might be left the legacies he elt were his due. At the trial Chang admitted purchasing quantities jolson but asserted it was for use in killing vermin and small game.

SHOTS FIRED BY OFFICERS IN GAINING ORBS (Continued From Page 1) to win signed bargaining con- Republic Steel Corp. tracts with Youngstown Sheet and anc nland Steel returned to hla headquarters after a peace conference in Columbus with Qov. Davey. The result of the conference was i secret guarded closely by both Murray and the governor. There were indication, however, that the oor to peace was still ajar in the overnor's remark that "naturally 1 lis next move would be to make another contact with the heads of he steel corporations in Ohio.

He ad previously conferred with Tom Girdler, Republic board chairman, nd C. Argeteinger, Sheet and Tube vice president. Inland has no Ohio plants. Tytnjj Up Ore MJtwa Tha SWOC's flanking movement up mine supplies of the truck corporations by unionizing several thousand ore miners jn orthern Minnesota and Michigan, wag regarded iu definitely under- ay. Two Republic ore mines on the OcfeWe range in upper penih- ula af Michigan were shuf.

By trike as te. aeoept Buffalo wiu a clash of ever of the Speaking far RepuWic Steel, UarUn H. Steams claimed men were fttng back to in the picketed plant "and frarn all Indications the O. I. O.

about to aid." In Chic.go where police and maintained a peaceful vlgl- nce, the citizen's rights committee msrie arrangements for a muss meeting Tuwiday night to demand an exportation "of police action" In last riot which eort icvcn N. G. Taylor tinplate mill, that pickets would be placed at the plant this morning, but so far no attempt at picketing has been made, nor has there been any attempt on the part of the company to resume work. The management announced that the plant Is closed indefinitely and it is practically deserted. The office force is still on duty.

CLAIMS REILLY TOOK MONAGHAN INTO HIS CARE (Continued Prom Paje 1) former judge and a minister- as character witnesses for Reilly. They said that RelUy'a reputation was "excellent," "good," "very The character witnesses were President Judge Thomas H. Hudson of Fayette county common picas court; Former Judge S. John Morrow; Rev. F.

E. Duffield, retired Presbyterian minister; Judge Harry A. Cottom; Judge H. S. Dumbauld and Judge J.

w. Dawson. Rellly Given Aid Night PoUce Chief Charles Malik, one of the seven persons who were indicted on charges of murder in the case, came to RelUy's aid yesterday, denying several important portions of the commonwealth testimony. Malik today was scheduled for stiff cross-examination by Special Prosecutor Charles J. Marglottl, state attorney general.

testified yesterday that Reilly never gave him "shoot to kill orders" in asking for Mohaghan'x arrest And he denied the story of Florence bean, who testified Reilly threatened her unless she told the truth about Wall's cutting. The detective was nearly fatally Btabbad by Monaghan after he and Reilly had stopped Monaghan's lutomobile on the ConneUsviile- TJnlontown road. Miss Dean, 18-year-old chambermaid in Monagnan's hotel, testified that Reilly told her In office: eople's Court, WUUs R. Jones. Long Litigation Foreseen The request for the injunction Is the starting point in a suit which will be carried to the Court of Ap- acals.

Opponents and proponents the bill agreed to have it passed by the final court. Not only the office building ref- rendum, but also the referendum ths $9,000,000 state bond issue depend on the outcome of the case in the Court of Appeals. RIVAL TO AUTO UNION AT FORD PLANT STARTED (Continued Prom Page 1) Ford Motor company are at last being brought out into the open," the letter signed by President-Homer Martin charged. "The whole country by this time knows that "Fordism" is reaily gangsterism, fascism and feudalism: In fact, everything but Americanism." "We have no "hired gangsters," Bennett replied. "On the other hand the union has used gangsters from the start.

If anyone wants proof their gangster methods, I refer thet to the trouble at Flint during thl General.Motors Strike." Tne Ford service chief referred to the riot last winter during the prolonged G. strike in which more than 20 persons were Injured in a battle at Chevrolet plant No. 4. POULTRY, PRODUCE MARKET Baltimore, June 5. IfFj and Carolina and Virginia barrels, cobblers, U.

S. Is. 2.83-3.25; ungraded, 250-75. Carolina, barrels, cobblers, U. S.

Is. 2.15-3.00. Others unchanged. "If you don't soon talk well do with you what we did with Frank." "Where is Frank? What have you none with him?" Miss ies- she asked Reilly and quoted him as replying: "Youll damn soon find out If you don't talk soon," Malik testified he was in the dis- attorney's office while Miss Dean was there and Reilly never made such thieaU. He denied that Dean screamed once or twice while in the attorney's office ac she had testified.

early cross-ez- an admission Malik that lUUly was in the rsssi ssd had a cwnveraa- with Menaghan after he removed tfcere fmn the police station tor questioning. Malik, who said he knew Konag- lan for a long time, testified that he hotelman drank habitually was drunk for weeks nt a time. He vieioiw when drunk, Malik tes- ifltd. On Malik that Monjihan, althoujh Irunk, submitted to arrest without Sroust, taken from police station to the BwtiUorj room wlfch- any difficulty and at BO Margibtti in his farced night or early morning did Malik see Monaghan act viciously. Call Character Witnesses Following completion of Chief Defense Counsel John Duggsn said ha planned to call a group of witnesses to prove the defense's eon- that Monaghan was when drunk.

One of the mmt important witnesses, Anthony Sanute, dismissed state policeman who -was acquitted oh a charge of murder Monaghan's death, has to reenter the case. Sanute has expressed an unwillingness to testify for either side. However, he remained in the city under a cotn- monweaJth subpens. and is subject to call at any time during the trial. Sanute was in court yesterday but Informed Duggan he did not want testify.

Asked if the defense would call Sanute despite his unwillingness, Duggan said: "I cfon't know at UiU time. It on hoH case develops." An important witness scheduled for appearance is Stucey Gunderman, dismissed state policeman who was convicted of second degree murder In the case. The youthful Gunderman was brought to Pittsburgh from Somerset, where he had been awaiting arguments on a motion for a new trial He It in custody of two deputy sheriffs. Gunderman in his own trial testified that he beat Monaghan in the room when man allegedly made a vicious attack on him he prepared to He aJooe in BcrttilPn room at the time, The defense baaing much 'of on tfte contention tliat ReiUy was not in the Bertlllon room during the beating'or when Monaghaa allegediy fell in the shower room. The defense also will to show that Reilly unaware of what WM going on in the BertlUor.

room and fit not in a poutlon to hear aad coming fan room..

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About Cumberland Evening Times Archive

Pages Available:
213,052
Years Available:
1894-1977