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Lansing State Journal du lieu suivant : Lansing, Michigan • Page 9

Lieu:
Lansing, Michigan
Date de parution:
Page:
9
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

THE STATE. JOURNAL, LANSING MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1935 UNITS PLACED ON BUDGET Roosevelt Orders Agencies To Curtail Expenditures; 'Peak Has Passed' HYDE PARK, N. Sept. 4 (P)- President Roosevelt Wednesday ordered all emergency federal agencies under control of the budget bureau for curtailment of personnel with the assertion that the peak of the emergency has passed. executive order Mr.

Roosevelt placed the following seven government units under the budget for control of administrative expenditures: The agriculture adjustment administration; the federal emergency relief administration: the national recovery administration; the Tennessee valley authority: the public works tration: the commodity credit corporation, and the railroad co-ordinator. This move completed the placing under budget control of all emergency agencies outside regular executive departments. The President in announcing the order at his regular semi-weekly press conference, held Wednesday in the tiny den of the family house, explained that action contemplated prevention of overlapping and a reduction of unnecessary personnel. He said it means the emergency work of the agencies is over and they must budget expenditures. Asked if he regarded the emergency AS over, the President replied that he Mr.

Roosevelt announced Wedthought the peak, was passed. nesday that about one million dollars would be made available for uance of the Chicago sewerage disposal project. Allocation of the funds was made known Wednesday just before the rival of Mayor Kelley of Chicago who came here to discuss 8 number of works projects. Discussing the Chicago river proposition, Mr. Roosevelt said he had found that the supreme court decision on waterways calls for a limitation of water in this area by 1937.

Therefore, it would be necessary to allow funds immediately for the sewerage project. To Conduct Autopsy In Death of Boy, 16 An autopsy was to be performed Wednesday afternoon to determine the cause of death of Robert Cairns, 16, who died suddenly at his home, 1128 East Saginaw street, early Wednesday morning. The Cairns boy, a student at Pattengill junior high school, was found dead in his bed Wednesday morning. apparently a victim of A heart attack. He is survived by the parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Everett Cairns: four brothers, William. Donald, Elwin, and Norman; one sister, Helen: the grandmother, Mrs. Ella Ziegler, and the grandfather, W. F.

Cairns of Lansing The body was removed to the Gorsfuneral home to await funeral services which will be nounced later. FISHING BOAT AGROUND WITH 12 MEN ON BOARD NEW LONDON. Sept. 4. (P) The 65-foot auxiliary fishing schooner Edith T.

of Boston, with 12 men 011 board, was reported Wednesday by base four of the New London coast guard to have gone aground off Lynde Point, near the Saybrook harbor. A 75-foot coast guard patrol boat was standing by, Births Born. August 10, to Mr. and Mrs. Henry Eggers, 305 Howe street, a son, Bruce Emmerson.

Mrs. Eggers was formerly Miss Greta Bensinger. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd A.

Vanderbeck, 2401 Forest avenue, announce the birth of a daughter. D'Anne Kay, August 31 at Sparrow hospital. Mrs. Vanderbeck was formerly Miss Thais Hendra. Deaths Everett Rapplyea Everett Rapplyea, 30, died Wednesday morning at the home, 1045 McCullough street.

Surviving are six brothers, Edward and George of Williamston, William of Flint. David of Lansing, Walter and Willard of St. Charles: three sisters, Mrs. Dora Slater, Mrs. Laura Favreau of Ianand Mrs.

Carrie Richmond of Saginaw. Funeral services will be held Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the Neller Funeral home. Barbara Ann Patrick Barbara Ann Patrick. 2-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Patrick. 129 South Francis avenue, died At a local hospital Tuesday. She is survived by one brother. Norman, the grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.

Frederick Simmons, of 1 Chippewa Lake, and Mr. and Mrs. John Patrick of Eagle. The body was removed to the Gorsline-Runciman funeral home where it will remain until Friday, when it be taken to the farm home of Mr. and Mrs.

John Patrick near Eagle where funeral services will be held at 2 o'clock Friday afternoon. The Rev. W. G. Flowerday will Burlal will be in the Simmons cemetery.

Simon Peter Warner Simon 1. Peter Wagner, 69, of R. F. D. No.

4. Mason. died Wednesday morning at the farm home of his sister. Mrs. Henry Ferley, East Willoughby road.

P. D. Mason. Surviving are four brothers. Earl.

John. and Emerson Wagner, all of Lansing. and Dan Wagner Mason, and two sisters. Mrs. Ferley, at whose home he died.

and Mrs. Olive Dietz of R. F. D. Mason.

Funeral services will be held Friday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Ferley, with the Rev. William S. Ross officiating. Interment will be in Okemos cemetery.

The body will remain at the H. Joy funeral home until Thursday evening. 'SCOTTY' NAMED MARSHAL DETROIT. Sept. 4 William (Scotty) Montelth.

veteran fight promoter, was deputy United States marshal Wednesday. Marshal John J. Bare announced his appointment Tuesday, to succeed Robert M. Roberts. Colorado contains 43 mountain peaks which rise more than 14,000 feet above sen level.

WHERE EYES OF WORLD WATCH GRIM DRAMA PorT ALEXANDRIA SAID SUEZ CANAL CAIRO: MEDINA LUOSOR ASWAN MECCA EL DAMER SHENDI SEA KHARTOUM GREAT IMPASSABLE GORGE OF ASMARA WAD MEDANI THE RIVER TAMASSE MASS AWA TARASS BARENTU GOON MARES UG-RI MARS A JAGU FATMA ONRER MEGINA AMHARA ANGLO GARAMO GONDAR TIGRE WISHO D. HIGH METAL CHARAI MOUNTAINOUS MOUNTAINS A 6ARDAR country COLIA GOJJAM EL FODIO CHOKE REGION OP CHOMEN DAMAASH DEBRA' DESSIE DENSE TROPICAL SWAMPS MARMOS NEG O- FOREST. SAIO TO PLAINS SHANO ADDIS SHOA ERRER PLAINS AMORO TROPICAL AND AWASH A R. PLAINS JIMMA MOUNTAINOUS COUNTRY. TO SHERADA BOKOL ARUSS1 LAME HORA GIRNIR MAJI SHALA ABAYA DINDE R.

LAKE BAND LANE CHAMO MOUNTAINS KAFFA I AND GORGES I WEBI-MANA ANGLO EGYPTIAN SUDAN LAKE BORANA STEFANIE LUGH NUBIAN DESERT ITALIAN BASE HERE RED COUNTRY OF VAST WATERMENYA RUDOLF COLONY WITH TALL GRASS AND LESS PLATEAUS COVERED scruB. Here, As under a magnifying glass, you see the whole of the African hastily granted to a country on which a terrified world has glued its eyes for weeks, The dark cisely defined area from land is Ethiopia, whose principal physical features a are clearly shown. of Addis Ababa, and north there should be an Italian invasion, its course may readily be followed east Africa and India, by reference to this map, which shows the obstacles as well as the actual as are the European location of towns and physical features. The oil and mineral concessions PROSPERITY LODGE PLANNING Entertainment Sept. 17 to Link Local I.

0. 0. F. with Nation- Wide Affair An entertainment and speaking program sponsored by Prosperity Lodge No. 564, Pride of Ingham Rebekah Lodge No.

496, and Liberty Encampment No. 68. I. O. O.

will be held in the I. O. 0. F. lodge rooms in the Veterans' Memorial building.

213 South Capitol avenue, Tuesday evening, September 17, at 8:15 o'clock. In addition to a program of instrumental and vocal music, tap dancing, and talks by local I. O. O. F.

leaders, the lodges will also "listen in" at 10:30 o'clock on a special Odd Fellow radio program over the Columbia Broadcasting system. Announcement of the coast-to-coast broadcast has been received here from Burton A. Gaskill. New Jersey, grand representative, and also chairman of the committee on arrangements for the Sovereign Grand Lodge session to be held in Atlantic City. The broadcast will originate at station WPG in Atlantic City and will include addresses by United States Senator M.

M. Logan, past grand sire of the Odd Fellow order, and other national leaders in the Odd Fellow fraternity. The nearest stations to sing over which the program may be heard are CKLW. Windsor, WBBM. Chicago, and wowo, Fort Wayne, Ind.

It is said this will be the largest fraternal broadcast ever attempted and all lodges and all branches of the order, numbering some 26.000. with a membership of upwards of 2.000.000 persons, are requested to "listen in" to the program. Similar rallies are being planned by lodges throughout country for the purpose of hearing program. the CITY IN BRIEF REGULAR SUBSCRIBERS: Journal has not arrived by 7 o'clock, call The State Journal your office. Prompt delivery will be made, Dial 21431.

A meeting of the German cial union will be held Thursday evening at 8 o'clock at the Hofbrau. A Baha'i meeting will be held Friday evening at 8 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Mary Jersey, 410 Liberty street. The Cosmo Drama club will meet Wednesday from 7:30 until o'clock at the East Side Community hall, East Michigan avenue at Hayford street. The club is open to those interestedwho are above the age of 12.

All democratic precinct workers in the third ward are requested to meet Wednesday evening at 7:30 o'clock at 626 West Kalamazoo street. John McLellan, former city judge, will preside the meeting. Septem tomatoes, appropriate to September, were found Tuesday by Mrs. Hazel Van Epps of 523 South Magnolia avenue. She discovered seven tomatoes, all grown together out of the same stem.

while working in her garden. Protest against city council's denial of a beer license to Oscar Baker, 835 West Main street, was referred to bonds and contracts committee Tuesday night. The communication objecting to the action was signed by 130 persons, The sun is losing weight at the rate of 300.000.000 tons minute, merely by shining. ALL -YEAR SAFETY CAMPAIGN FAVORED Gov. Frank D.

Fitzgerald Frowns on Limited Drives; Rejects Jersey Bid Gov. Frank D. Fitzgerald was on record. Wednesday drive, in as an which the exponent states of would participate, to reduce the number of traffic fatalities. The Michigan executive refused to join in a plan of Gov.

Harold G. Hoffman of New Jersey to proclaim a state safety campaign for a limited time. He explained that he recently had issued a safety proclamation and feared repetition might lead to a mis- apprehension that caution was necessary only certain days. "We public officials issue proclamations galore," Governor Fitzgerald wrote, "and our good citizens faithfully assist us in carrying on safety promotion drives. The drives end.

there perhaps is a reduction in the number of deaths and injuries, but soon all is forgotten and the slaughter goes on again. A year around program participated in by all the states, seems to be the only way out." TOUCHES POWER LINE. FARM WORKER KILLED ONSTED, Sept. 4 (P) Marion Schultz, threshing machine operator, died" Tuesday night of burns suffered when he touched an 11.000- volt power line in a harvest field accident. Straw, being stacked beneath the power line, caught fire when it reached the wires.

Schultz climbed the stack to extinguish the flames and his head 'Ford Plan' Termed Surer Road To Recovery Than Defunct NRA But Son of Motor Magnate Admits Scheme Is Based on Principles of Roosevelt's 'Blue Eagle' Program LOS ANGELES, Sept. 4 (UP)-The "Ford plan" is a surer road to economic recovery than the defunct NRA, Edsel Ford, son of Henry Ford of Detroit. asserted here. Views of the heir to the Ford fortune were expressed freely at a luncheon for newspapermen. He summed up the Ford plan of recovery briefly as follows: "Pay a workman more than just enough to live on.

He's got to buy 8 few things extra-otherwise some industries will have to shut down. "Give him 8 40-hour week nowmaybe a 30-hour week later, but that's in the future. A man's got to live as well as work. Remember. keeping men employed is the cure for most of our troubles." Speaking of the NRA.

Ford said: "I have a fundamental objection to being forced to do anything. with purposes of the plan, with one He agreed that his dove-tailed exception: tell's how don't to do want it." the he said. government "Indus- to try got to find out these things for itself. "The 40-hour week is already here. We adopted it years ago.

Now rest are coming over to it with the exception of a wild fringe." Ford shook his over government coercion, even for the "wild fringe." "We don't want anyone to interfere." he insisted. "This is something industry must learn for itself. We learned it at the Ford plant. We have SAYS LONG CHEATED AGED PENSIONERS Huey's Filibuster Blamed by State Official for Inadequate Payments SABIYAH BRI ERITREA ARABIA SANA LADEN ASSAB PERIM 1 FRENCH SOMALILAND ISLAND OBOCK cuisoun GULF ADEN OF KILLER BRITISH BULHAR BER BERA AUSSA PLAIN SOMALILAND PRAIRIE HARRAR BURAO JERER BORDO BO BOHOTLEM HILLS GODISSA HAUD CuRo OGADEN RADOWA BADWEIN SOMALILAND BENADIO OBBIA BURTI MAHADDE INDIAN MOGADISCIO OCEAN mysterious foreign company lie in a not-too-preLake Rudolf, lower left, northeast to a point east to Eritrea. The Mediterranean- Red sea route to vital both to Italy and Britain, is shown clearly, possessions which completely surround Ethiopia, STATE MAY EXPAND SERVICE AT STRAITS Highway Commissioner, 'U' Dean Go North to Probe Auto Ferry Needs Murray D.

Van Wagoner, state highway commissioner, and Dean Herbert C. Sadler of the University of Michigan engineering college were en route to the Straits of Mackinac Wednesday for an inspection trip which may result in expansion of the state ferry service to the upper peninsula. The commissioner said the ferries had a record season this year, which reached a peak over the Labor Day week-end. On Saturday, Sunday, and Monday the with 5,423 in the 6,920 automobiles. were ferried across same period a year ago.

The biggest day in history was Sunday, when the ferries carried 2,625 cars. An occasional railroad boat has supplemented the state ferries this year for the first time outside of the November hunting season. Big Mountain Ranges Worn Away by Time WASHINGTON, Sept. 4 (PP--Poets and others who talk about "the everlasting hills" may not be strictly accurate. Dr.

Wallace Walter Atwood. president of Clark university at Worcester, said here Wednesday that recent geological research indicated that three Rocky mountain ranges have formed and worn away during the past 30,000,000 years. "Three distinct ranges of tains." he said. "have into existence and passed away since the formations which we know as the Rocky mountains began. one great mass was pushed up from the surface of the earth it began to be eroded away by water and wind to form the soil areas about it.

and leave only the stumps of mountains behind. These in turn were hoisted up on the peaks of a new upheaval only to again wear away. The third upheaval came and again the lofty peaks were worn No exact determination of the height of the ancient mountains can be made, Doctor Atwood said, but they were probably higher than the present peaks. Asks Pulaski Day Be Marked Oct. 11 Governor Fitzgerald Wednesday proclaimed Friday, October 11, as Pulaski Day in accordance resolution adopted by the state legislature.

The proclamation read in part: "I request the observance of Pulaski Day by schools, patriotic societies, and civic organizations with a general display of the national colors. "The roster of crusaders who left their homes and kindred in foreign lands and came to our shores to mingle their blood with that of our native forefathers in the establishment of the republic is great, but none shines with brighter luster than that of Gen. Casimer Pulaski. "He entered the patriot army without rank, although of noble birth, rose to high command through gallantry and ability, became the trusted friend of Washington, and finally laid down his life at the siege of Savannah." FOOTBALL 'AD' BANNER APPROVED BY COUNCIL Michigan State college athletic officials were granted permission by city council Tuesday night to place banners across the 100 block of East Michigan avenue advertising Spartan football games this fall. Check These Advantages The local member of the National SoMEMBER lected Morticians possesses five outstanding advantages which merit your Naitonal Selected Morticians confidence.

ET INVITATION 1. Complete establishment facilities -equipment that is always up-to-date. 2. A high order of professional skill that is constantly benefitting from the latest research developments. 3, High standards of business honesty which include a complete contidential relationship between patron and mortician.

4. An unusually broad schedule of charges, all of which are based upon accurate knowledge of costs. 5. Patron-satisfaction and true economy because quality service and merchandise are combined with reasonable costs. Lansing member of the National Selected Morticians The ESTE S-LEADLEY Morticians trouble.

Now the rest are finding out what we found out years ago. Speaking of business in general. he said: "Things were better during the past few months. I don't know why. but feeling is better.

"The labor situation is improved. Last year there was 8 lot of trouble. and now things are quiet, and men are working." Ford said his father's plants turned out 700.000 cars year, and have exceeded 1,000.000 the first nine last. months of 1935. "The next big development will be rear engine designs." he predicted.

"That will prevent the drive-shaft from cluttering a low -frame car, and will keep noise and smell out of the front seat." He said Ford had no plans for Diesel engines or "flying automobiles." Bing Crosby Scoffs At Divorce Rumors HOLLYWOOD. Sept. 4 -It isn't a separation the Bing Crosby's need--it's a bigger house. Hoping to quiet rumors of a rift with his actress-wife, Crosby declared it was just "another wild report" probably brought on when he put his Toluca lake home up for "That doesn't mean a salparation.said the singer. "We just need a bigger house, that's all." There are a few rare cases on record where persons have been able to see Philip Callahan, director of the state old age assistance bureau, said persons will be deprived Wednesday thousands of, Atichigan old age pensions because of the failure of congress to appropriate a 000 deficiency fund.

He charged Seriator Huey Long's filibuster dented these persons pensions large enough to meet living needs. According to Callahan the state cannot pay more than $15 a month from its own funds. With federal aid it had been planned to raise pensions to at least $20 when necessary. More Burglaries Bring Warning Lansing police Wednesday repeated their warning to local residents to keep doors their homes locked in order to guard against burglaries. Officers said that Lansing citizens should be especially careful to see that their doors are securely fastened while occupants of the houses are in the basement washing or working in their gardens.

Authorities said they received reports Tuesday that two residences were robbed while the occupants were in the basement. A prowler entered homes of I. W. Shoemaker, 314 Memphis street, and George H. Tibbets, 318 Memphis street.

stealing touched the power line. an 'open shop' and almost no labor Jupiter's moons with the naked eye. about $4 from each dwelling. Whatever Type of Equipment You Need! LET SEARS HEAT YOUR HOME. AND SAVE I AIR CONDITIONING Range Boiler INDESTRUCTO TO 30 gal.

capacity The Best Furnace at Any Price 18-In. Sears now offer the latest $695 achievement in modern Saves fuel, 63" the and which furnace Indestructo. firepot, take the construction. the The hardest grates parts ized. money sisting.

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a Seamless STEEL and Radiator FURNACE CIRCULATORS Body Leakproof 20-inch This "Good Cheer" Heats 2 to 3 Rooms 50 107 '59 95 $10 Month Cash Small Carrying Charges The Hercules Steel Furnace leads in $5 Down coal saving, and is outstanding in effront fective with heating. Has firing wide door attractive and $6 Month spacious ashpit. extra heavy gauge flange steel body, equipped with special automatic Small Carrying Charge humidifier. The new "Good Cheer' 1s "GOTHIC" RANGE cient large better than heavy looking ever and before. more effi- Its steel combustion Beautiful Porcelain Coal Range chamber and cast iron fluted dome offer extra radiation $59 95 ing and space, the efficiency.

smoke-tight. very It's highest Buy dust -tight heat- Sears' Stove Pipe $5 Down $6 Month Uniform blue steel; 28 gauge. Patented lock seams, pipe Small Carrying Charges snaps unnecessary together. Tools 16c Don't confuse this range with. light price.

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The entire inner chamber is finest gray cast iron, and of Heats 52 to 100 ample weight for good hard service. The outside casing is extra gal. per hour. rigid, doors are dust or smoke Firepot lined proof. See this heater at Sears with fire brick.

Second Floor. Open Until 300-306 9:00 P. M. SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. E.

Michigan Saturday Avenue.

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