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The Tribune from Seymour, Indiana • Page 3

Publication:
The Tribunei
Location:
Seymour, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 1 ps. SEYMOUR." SEYMOUR, IICLC3 1 fc suddenly in the "vicinity of Buck-b'jrbnm Palace' when a lv'eiied servant drew the blinds of the tretklaht room to pive the iutimation the day was otiic-iilly under way, i tellers did a land of ASEI.Ul rVilVtN OTT N.Y. Cianti teOROiK COLEMAN Winner. 13 Ndlwnal LI SCUUINQ lU MH.LER 4 Timw Notional Sculling Chamojion S2UASH IACCVETS JOHN t. SKIUMAN 1435 fro Scuaih Racqwvti Champion Gzni haa smoked Came! for year.

ti IASKITIAU Jim Lancaster 1934, N.Y. U.Vntloti I i The mild cigarette the athletes is the mild cigarette for YOU! A cigarette so mild you can smoke all you want oa my Miller, oarsman; Jim Lancaster, that's what athletes say about Camels. N.Y.U.'s 1934 basketball captain; John Skillman, pro Gene Sarazen says: "Playing as much as I do I bate squash racquets champion hundreds of sports stars to keep in condition. I smoke Camels steadily, They smoke Camels regularly and report that Camels never art so mild they never get my 'wind never upset get their "wind" or nerves. my nerves." What this mildness means to means you Other athletes back him "I smoke all the can smoke Camels all you want! Athletes have made Camels I vant, and keep in top condition," says Mel this discovery: Camel's costlier tobaccos are so mild, Ott, slugger of the New York Georgia they can smoke all they please, without disturbing Coleman, Olympic diver, says: "CamEls don't cut down their "wind" or nerves.

i COGTLIEIl If. I 'i am Statistics. Yv Associated Prea. Chicago Warden Frank Ik Suin of the Ciok county jail re 6 Camels ported the are made from finer; (OSE EXPENSIVE TQ3ACCOS Turkish and Domestic than' any 'other popular brand. SitJ) R.

J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, V- -a-r Chief Justice Dennis K. went ten yeara better by reporting that the. 218 eases constituted the smallest (lock et years. eight 550 in criminal court A checkup fr years showed a to 1.4C0 that hi f85 "guests" were fewest iu thirty years an incontrovertible statement because comparative figures were lacking- Regular of the Seymour city pnrd of Works and Safety war held at 10 o'clock, this morning ia the office of John Ilauenschild, city clerk-treasurer.

Bills were allowed iiul. tra nsacted At meeting of the board on X'y 20, -which will. held council chamber, Temoil-t ranees will be heard, if any, unst the jiavinj? with bitumin-o retread material of pnrt of feymonr streets. The Seymour city council will ireet at 7 o'clock tonight in the council chamber for, its regular semi-Bionthly session. So far as be learned today, no business of particular importance is scheduled, U.i.LH I (IL.L.C.U DI (Continued from page one) was 1ft loose.

Scores of young men 'ud women, muttering their displeasure the disrespectful act, seized the banner And ripped it into fhreVteT section of it was rescued from, the mob aid stored away for tsafe keeping tonight when it, will be placed on top of a huge bonfire in Hyde Park to be ignited when the King presses an electric switch -in Buckingham Palace. V. 1 and devoted subjects filled London to overflowing to honor their monarch on the completion of a quarter centujy of his Teign. Weary -eyed thousands, who had spent the night along the projected route of the silver jubilee procession to St. Paul' Cathedral, were joined at ddwn, by additional "''throngs pouring from buses, trams and underground The sixty-nine-year-old sovereign aid his consort, Queen arose at their usual hour, 7:30 a.

m. They found the day warm, with the city bathed in mellow By 8 a. the main thoroughfares and side t-treets along the route of the Toyal procession were packed from shopfronts to the curbs. A carnival spirit pervaded the multitude, intermingled with a deeper, more solemn note of reverential loyalty. Fourteen thousand soldiers, Bailors and members of the royal air force and 12,000 poJie struggled to keep the crowd within bounds.

Scotland Yard put uniformed men on the streets in addition to nearly 1,000. plain, elothesnien. In the city of London, where St. Paul's is situated, the regular force of 1,100 police was augmented by picked officers from the provinces and 500 special constables. Seventy special trains poured an estimated additional celebrants into the city' in the earlv morning.

The massed throng of humanity presented a picture of moving color, many wearing carnival hats of red, white and blue and multi-hued cravats. Picturesquely 'gpwned Indian women rubbed shouHers with tur-haned Indian men and dark-skinned colonial, giving a cross section of the mighty empire upon which "the sun never sets." From Whitechapel, Bennondsey and other Cockney strongholds, cockney feathers anJ mothers trooped into the inner city, leading their children through the crowds. London's elite chose another method to witness the rpcetacle. They paid from three to twelve guineas ($13 to $00) to view the procession from the comparative comfort seats along the roof. Hundreds of spectators brought satchel bulging with food and drink, for they had come to frpend the day.

One groun, which camped for the night on the steps of the Victoria Xfemorial before Buckingham Palace, set up spirit lamp pand teapot' in which they brewed early morning tea shout the time the King and Queen were breakfasting. JLjtfO the Toval proeesHon twin were closed to traffic and police began clearing the way for the car riage. A loud speaker at Char-. ing Oro blared nwrry tune to entertain the crowd, which burst into cheer at the lst provocation. The Volume of eherw increased i fice business.

Scores of people bought boxes from hawkers from which to witness the proceedings, only to have them confiscated by the, t. Itftvas against the law either to stand oa boxes, chairs or pKable, stands or even to ride horseback within rds of the procestiioa route. Ambulance men in iib nd white unifonns scores of fainting Truckloads of into the palace com -tj of (henL frpmjhe royal black treated rolled many gardens at Windsor Palace. The marble arch section of Hyde Park," usually the focal point for communists, was noticeably void of any sign of them. A complacent bobby, surveying the scene where communists har angued crowds last nijht, eom-tnented with, an air of finality, there will be no more of them." o.

o. Anders (Continued; from. "fge t- the' equally selfish'; r'a lical or jself-seekirig r.f The diepublicao' leaders declared, every major promise made by Presieut Koose velt ha4 been "broken and shamelessly and said hi pCpiH "presents such political perfidy as to shock the conscience and rock the very foundations of Democratic party, as it has been known by, Ha history, policies and declarations has ceased to exist," said jthe announcement. "It has completely and abjectly ignored its obligations and abdicated in favor of Mr. Roosevelt and his retainers" "Through Mr, Roosevelt's, confusing, contradictory and uncertain policies," it continued, "fear and a sense of insecurity have destroyed the confidence of the people and our mighty forces capable of producing recovery are bound and fettered.

As proof of these statements, we have but to refer to the fact that our relief rolls have grown to the tre mendous total of over 20,000,000 of our people. "In admission o. is failure, we find Mr. Roosevelt demanding, and obtaining, from a fertile Congress the gigantic sum of $4,880,000,000 to be spent by him and his experimental advisers largely for undisclosed purposes. "Never lefore has king, potentate or emperor been clothed with such vast and dangerous power.

No other president hn ever desired such unrestrained authoritv." OITTKER IS ELECTED Will Head Junior Class at Franklin Collese. Avery Ihttmer, former Shields High School basketball Haver, ha been elected president of the Junior class at Franklin College, where he is a Sophomore. Young Dittmer will lie head of his class during the college term. His election is a distinct honor and is proof of the esteem in which he is held by his cln.s mates. Averv, who' is the son of Mr.

and Mrs. John Dittmer, this city, was recently initiated into the Sigma Alpha Kpsilon fraternity on the college eainpua. MAY TERM CPEN3 I i IB CCU3TY COURT (Con tinaed from page one) er of said deceased chikl and a such would have been entitled to its earning to the time of its majority lyd jt Jived, subject to the proper care, maintenance and support sail child. That by reason of the premises plaintiff ha-t been damaged in to the sum of $10,000. Plaintiff demand judgment for and costs and all proper relief.

Brucr rleetwood as Admr. va. Thos. A. Staanconibe et al, com plaint on aote.

Cfnereus. Tlr Ak iat-r Pre. St. Panl When a strange old man visited the- children's hospital here last summer, no one gave it a second thought but today it developed that the visit was worth Lo eighty, of Mankato, who asked to be shorn thronsh the hospital nearly a year ago, died mently. and he-rineefhed the hospital $25,000, it vift diclofcd by Dr.

Walter Hamser. medical director-founder of the institution. and Olympic TiflM 2 i a 4 A of these bunds was pursued by Gen. John Titoif, who afterwards moved to the more north-' cin part of the state. Tipton vountv was named for him, mid he represented Indiuna in the Senate of the I'nited Stutes, dying in office.

Jlewai a relative of the Shields family. Dr. J. T. Slut Is was named him.

(icn. Tipton pursued the Indian-, until they crossed While liiver ut Tipton's island, lew miles above Kockford. He supposed the Indians would lie in ambiisU for him on the other side. He had his men dismount, and leaving the horses in charge of a few soldiers he crossed ft the head of the Island on the drill, striking the Indians in the flank, and rear before they knew Tipton was across the river. Several Indians were killed, but not a white Hum was hurt.

The Indians scattered ami it was found iinMissiblc to pursue them. This was the onlv battle ever fought in the county, and General Tipton's strategy was highly praised. The beginning of the spring of 1S15, found the war over, and settlers began to flock to the county, so that in the latter part of that vear Jackson county was organized, and a'tout one. year afterward the stute was admitted into the L'nion. The settlements extended all over fhe countv.

The first settlers oil Salt were Jesse Isaacs, and the Winklcrs. James Shields, the grandfather ut the Shields boys, settled in the northeastern prt of the countv; ami sooiu. immigration gave the county four or live 'thousand teoph. It grew gradually in population, nothing worthy of anv notice occurring until the completion of the railroads in the county. Formerly the surplus produce of the county, consisting almost entirely of corn, rork bacon, was shipix-d in flallum! down the river to the south, where it was sold for fair prices.

There was a sinnir trade -whh Louisville by wagons, the goods consumed by the iMople except what they made themselves, all being hauled from This gave employment to a large number of (cams. The most noted of the teamsters was Cnpt. J. Iaac and John Waddle. The completion of the JefTersonville road gradually turned all the trade of the country to Louisville, but when th ('.

M. road was completed, trade was attracted to Cincinnati, and nor the latfer place is the principal market of the country. I's Tribune (1niflcd Adver-tioemciits for Quick Kenults. Tfie'Advertfaoments Will Gat Yen If You Don't Watch Oat K. J.

tUrnoldi Too. Co. History of Seymour and Jackson County (Fourth Installment) Hinton and Van Buskirk were the only men killed by the Indians in Jackson count Zink. v( Wahinuti'ti county, in Bartholomew county, ami died at a Mnin near where Sturgeon was killed, which for many vearK was Zink's (i't. Dawalt was M-outins: northeast of the county, beyond Sand Creek, lie had gone through the "fallen timber," that nt that time, extended from an indefinite Miut wct nearly to Urookvilic.

This timber wa diflieult to jfet through on horsehiick, antl on the return of ('apt. Daualt's h4iiad, they met riifht in the niidnt of thii timber, the body of ImlLiiis who had uiUHsacred the 1'itrcon ftoobt KCt-tlcrn. in Clark county. The Indians seemed desirous of away, ami the whites nttucked theui a vigorously as they could. Zink was shot in the bowels, ami van carried on a litter to the sprinsr Iwfore mentioned, where In' died.

lie wa about eighteen years old, and his death was much re Kretted, for he was a promminj; vonnir man. The Indian droed the trreater part the plunder they had carried away from the Purvon ltooMt, and mo-V of it was identified and carried back to Cbtrk county. It whs not known if and Indians were killed. David HavH, the father of (1. W.

Ilavs, of Hartholomew countv, was mortally wpiuided, Iatr in fhe war. He was with a scouting party of p-rliaps a hundred men, who went op fo attack the Indian villages-in the central part of the state. The villages were all deserted, except at one of them two Indians were found. The company gave chase, but tho Indian separated. Hays' horse, in jumping a small run, burst his saiiiije' girth, and Hays got "oft" to fix it.

As he was getting on again he was shot by one of the Indians, who bad flunked the pursuing party. He was brought to Vallonifl, where he died. He was buried near Sturgeon in the Villoma graveyard. The war left the settler very Por, nearlv nil tb-ir horses being taken, and their cattle and hogs nearlv all killed. Small bands of Indians, who rendezvoused on one of the branches of Salt Creek, in iJrown count would go through the M-ttlemeti't stealthily, destroying and stealing everything that promised not to bring them into an actiun with the whites.

One IF YOU don't watch out, advertisements will save you money by showing you where to buy the best things at the lowest prices. you don't watch out, advertisements will protect you i against inferior products! If you don't watch out, advertisements will bring you the lat- est, straightest news from many manufacturers! If you don't watch out, advertisements will teach you the secrets of great beauty specialists, give you health hints of rcl value, tell you interesting true stories about foods, furnishings, what-not! If you don't watch out, advertisements will sell you give you suggestions on how to CHOOSE wisely tnd wisely. 0 But, if you DO watch out for the advertisements, they'll out for you! Tribttn C'lasiScd Ada. Pa jr. ixiyrOVM fVT rn4 fcJt.".

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About The Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
529,645
Years Available:
1896-2024