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The Morning Herald from Hagerstown, Maryland • Page 8

Location:
Hagerstown, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

KKJH1 THB'MORNINtt HKRAM), HAGBRSTOWN, MARYLAND IS HIT Women Spect a i ors A plaiul Attacks on Liquor Laws a i i A i 5 1 i i a i to a Senate nn uir before rnm ill rr i packed i i I lors i i flJVAAA Our Kxpc'rt Fitters can fit. 1'onr f'onf. nicety that frnrrs tintliitif! to be desired is the most important thing about any shoe! Style is desirable, Price to important, but 1 1 is a necessity HEEL HUGGER hare truly fine fitting qualities pint ttylt, at the two modest prices and McCardell Bros. the, women's i i i i a for nation- nl prohibition rotorin which is nmelinj; in Washington. (Inn of lh! i ivns Mrs, a M.

Sabhi- a i a of tho orpanlr.allon, 'Die friends of i i i i he heard I a I a a a nf the i i a i i I en snld Mm session: Iiojied a i would lend favorable report nn inonMire I inj; tor roKiibmisfMon of I he Kipb- i i A lloth wet a dry a loader 1 Imvp apived on a prohfhllion ni i session. It is expected to 1 on proposed i i a I ment probably i i a lo a ready fn HOIIPC. also nf measures jicnd- I Throe wMnrsf-os a I i i i inony a to i i by Mrs. Sablti. drum ml hit: a in tho i i i laws.

i i a i i i i i i i i a a a i i of Now York, natd liquor liiws i an i nnd a i was for eriinoinic serial rrastm.s. A. K. iloland. t'ciiri'sentini: tin 1 A i a A i a i of i i 1 i i States a Oiinnda, I i tiod i i i a i (lie food htislness of hotels I (--peak- easier, Mrs.

Sahin said "The i i anieiuiment is poisoning mir a i a i and it must bo repealed." "Thosn ctiurches and IIio nni-e i i a i i i port It 11 he i A slio said, a become ril uriconsciously, the c.hie.f niu friends of tho a classes and the Mine hns come to end Ibis alliance." ELECTRICITY WILL SUBSTITUTE LAMPS Plymouth, April 14. The kerosene lamps by light cf which the lite John minlflcrcd the oath of office AS Prefttdrnt to his son, Calvin, nine yean ago, no longer will service In the Coolldge summer home. Modern workmen, skilled in modern methods of lighting, today began the task of supplanting the domestic Illumination of another era. They are wiring Ihr. century-old farm house and will install a small electric plant.

DEATHS Mrs. OKELELE BAND ILL PLAY HERE SUNDAY Boys and Girls Brun.swick to Play at Church of God inlerest Is a i in coming of Ukelolc Hand to Hagerstown on they 1 nppfiar at the Church of. God on Summit venue nnd Baltimore street, The band Is composed of twenty-flve small children of Brunswick ftud iiR brought here as one of the cini attrnclious of the church anniversary. The concert IH scheduled for 2:30 p. and Hev.

I I rpich, of Brnnswiclt, i deliver the address of (he afternoon. Other special features will include nuisic by the High School a for the piiinR service. The pastor, Rev. F. H.

Suavely, will deliver the morning and evening a that will lift in keeping with day. The flay will mark the i anniversary of the (inn of housfi of worship, and vlces will he held fn the morn Ing, afternoon and evening. At water-Kent Radio NEW COMPACT with Pentode $69.50 Complete HOFFMAN ELEC. CO. Mrs.

Clara Taylor Clitni Taylor, widow i (JporBO Tiiylor, died lit tho Was ins I on Con i a ye.stcrdii i i al 11 o'clock of compile; i i i a a year's illiH-HK, ntfe. She Js i i i by Hie i sinters. Mrs. S. A.

Concord si i she mad her Mrs. Louis Karl hoi OH a i i a Mrs. a i I i son. Tim a sp.rvie.ps i he, hoi nn a a a at 4 n'docl from I IIP. i a homn of A.

K. Coff man by (lie 11 r. U. I. i i I in Host Haven remet Sabeus B.

Main Sabeus a i Security, droppoi dead sL 1 o'clock yesterday at ScijiirHy plant of North Amor can Corporal Ion from a a a at ngo of f8 years. Hi had been foreman of i dc for the, past, 20 lie wn'H a member of Mm Odd Fol lows of RoUesburg. W. Va, Siirviv iiiR am hlfl wife. a daiiRli Mrs, Myrllft HeesocUcr.

Camden, sons, i at home; Clark Chp.wsvllle; Frederick, "Raltiniorr, Mrs. Ashby. Norfolk nrtistllH. Hnndrml, W. Va.

Steve i a i half brother. Thomas, W. Va. Funeral Sunday 2:30 n'riock Shllnh U. R.

by Mr Ilowder. I In Rose. Hil eemfiterv. Funeral Sunday The. nil of Mrs.

Ida a runs i be held Sunday afternoon leaving liomn of her daughter Mi's. Hood KiHlier. at 2 o'clock witti sorvlcca In tlio eluirch SharpBburR. i Her. D.

0. Chap man officlnl.infr, assistnd by Rev Ashby. Inte.rmenl in Mt. View r.em eterv. a Kmmamtel V.

Hartle, died at SOfi South Pot.om«c street ear- Thursday i of compli- cnlloiiP, a an illnops of i 7J). One daugbtor, Mrs. K. Deloster, sou, Hurry i Hagerstown; brother, flGorge, near inrslown and threo grandchildrPn survive. Funernl a a art or- loon, nicelitiK at the house at 4 5 ilock, services in the i C-htirch at Beaver Creek at o'clock, Rev.

Paul Holdcraft. "offleiat- i 1) fill anil i i a he entered and home today on fre- short i He did not, ever, a progress, If any. hn had made. He was asked If he Hie i a local men because (hey seemed KO a i i a i a section nf New York; and ho replied: "I i-nn't, a yen or no, but ,1 a to yon we are i i the shrewdest, a over organized In i States, a i Colonel Brecklnrtdgc appeared to consider the discovery of one of the ransom bills In New York hint week so important a e.lim a he held a long conference i New Ynrlt jmlife. Pollen Commissioner Mulrooney a i the lawyer's re- (Mioat detectives would a to trace the bill hy 'interviewing each of 3.000 of nn a who a deposits on April 4 and S.

Rear A i a (Jny H. Rnrragr. ret i and John Hughes Curtis, two of tho Norfolk (Va.) intermediaries, i absent' from i homes. BARBECUE IS ROBBED BY THREE BANDITS (Continued from Pure 1) parked In ini automobile not far from the Always. The aulo Btolen was a Chrysler conpo and belonged to W.

D. Snoop, near Hoonsboro. Tlu license was 27J'875. (Jorulsh obtained only meagre description ot the- three men. He said (hey nil were youiiK a th" ones armed with revolvers appeared i The hnrheciic stand proprietor said hn (lie men were merely playing a prank at flrst, but wheu one of them stuck a revolver In bis ribs and ordered him to "slick 'em up," lio ho knew a holdup was on.

The negro employe was licl.l a a by the other armed man. Cimilsh he bad a in establishment but declared he feared one of them would open lire If ho a to reach for It. PROBE STARTED OF ROOSEVELT'S NAVAL OFFICER ing. Ing. I i i fn ceinclery i i a M.

Tabler i i a Tablei', a i 10ran of Hie Civil War and one the oldest residents uf i sect ion, died at o'clock" Wednesday (ornoon at home of bis son, Charles i'ahlor, PiiiRsthurg, aged liJ years, ti bad licen ill three weeks. iMr. Tab- lei- wa.s a member of Mt. Neto ge of Masons, nf Sliepherdstuivn. and served (lie Civil War as a i a in a a a a volunteers, a a i i i H.

Hitochew. Mr mi October J2, hS(i2, for three voars and was honorably disuhargC'J on August 8. 1865, Richmond, Mt. Tablbr was born in Berkeley county, W. where he lived.lor many years.

lie Is survived hy i sous, and a Clayon, Marlowe, 1 W. Tltdtpit, iMnr- tiu.sburff; Naomi. Washinpt.oii, Mm. Sadie Snyder, (Ircensboro, N. From Page 1) Mrs.

H. Hill rlcK, Pineabiirg. Marlowe, and He also leaves step-sister, Mrs. John R. Miller.

ihepberdstown, aiut stop-brother, Edw a Tabler, Ohio. Tiie body will bo a to ionic of his dariglUcr, Mrs. at Marlowe, from where the a will be held nt. 10 o'clock Saturday Harmony Methodist. Protestant Hit rial In Hie S'moketown cemetery In Berkeley county.

Funeral The funeral of Mrs. MarRaret Haw- laker Trumpower i be held on satin-day al'ternooti, lenving tjie se, near Wilson's, at 1 o'clock. lcea.will bo held in the Broad ording church. Interment In ceme ery adjoining. face often was distorted as It In pain an he talked.

As he stepped from the witness chair at the end of the session Mrs. Fortescue wont forward quickly and grasped his liand. smiled weakly. Massle' testified he was 27 years it arid a lie was married when 22 and his wife IB. Then he phinge'l into slory which the defense has steadfastly withheld since Massie.

Mrs. Kortesciie. E. and Albert O. Jones were arrested on the day of the killing.

8. Tells Of Assault The i a said there was a crowd nt the inn where Mrs. Massjp and he had Kone with- friends to "a dance the night of the attack. ''Was 'there a drinking?" Barrow asked. rlr." Massie said he had been mm bio to find Mrs.

Massio when the party way ready to break up and had telephoned several places in vain. MR said lie i a phoned his own home and Mrs. Massie answered. "Come a once; something horrihle has happened," Massie said his wife informed him. He said IIG rushed home in a car and she met him at the door after he heard her sobbing i i tho house.

"She collapsed in my arms," Massie said. "Her lips were bruised, her face swollen, her clothes torn and her nose bleeding. "I thought a a run over her. She said it. was too horrible to tell and roiild only sob.

She said she wanted to die: Finally she told me some men had taken her in a car and carried her i the hushes and ravished her. "I then (-alied the police and tol-1 them my wife had been assaulted." Massie's gaze was on the floor. Mrs. Fortescue and her sister, MM. Helen Ripley, sobbed.

Jones and 1 exhibited sober faces. Darrow Inquiry Into New Yorl State Government Opened A a N. 1 April 14. (fP)-- Hepubllcftn legislative liivosllsallo of Governor Franklin Roosevelt' Democratic a i i a i was be Klin today and produced, In the firs few minutes of the, inqnry, a state ment a more, a four millio dollars could bo saved hi ono deport men I. This was only a i resul nt the, opening day of iiiquir; into the cost of.

State government. Wilh a preliminary tiling of state eleven of the depari ment heads, (lie legislative commit lee. under the direction of a vet era Republican legislator, started oiit 01 Its study of IS State departments scores of bureaus, 30,000 employe! and a of a thousand a i i i Colonel Stuart Greene ex-arniy officer and for 12 year: bead of the huge State Dcpartmcn of Public Works under former Governor Smith and (lovcrnor Roose veil, was first witness. Colone Greene, reading rapidly from a pre pared statement, listed savings which he said could JIB accomplished in his department to total $4,327.121, rOight, other department' chiefs ol Mr. Roosevelt's cabinet took tlu chair, -one after the other, and told bow the duties and of the.i: departments had multiplied so vastly a they were uwable lo rccommaml cuts.

(Continued From Page 1) Something to think about Exictins and nard-to-please buyers use Budwciser Milt. They know from where it comet who mikes it. Then, 75 yetri of malting experience it behind every 3 Ibs. in the big red can. It comes from the largest plant of its kind in the world Sold and used everywhere.

Budweiser MALT Btl-59 A I Our pftnt It to public for fatptttion Jfity fiftpf Sutieltyt stood by the jury box, folding and unfolding -arms and moving hid hands in and out of hia pockets. Massie said he carried his wife to a hospital for an examination and next day he. took her there to stay. He said her jaw was broken a she was suffering- from severe mental and physical shock. Men Questioned The witness said lie we.nt home a tried in vain to sleep.

Next he said, four men were brought 1 before Mrs. Massle--Kahahawai, Horace Ida, Henry Chang and Ben Ahakeulo--for identification. "She questioned them all," Massle went on. "She seemed to concen- a on Kahahawai. After thei; left us she told me they were (he ones.

I asked her if she was sure and she said 'Darting, do you i I would ever draw another honest breath unless 1 were sure?" He then related the story of the attack which he said Mrs. Masste had fold him. The i a said he was awakened one night after the attack by Mrsy Massie crying "Don't let him get Massie said he assured her there was no one else there but she answered: "Yes there is! a a a a i is here!" "I couldn't seem to get it out of my mind." Massie said. "Did you over get it wit of your i Darrow queried. "No." story was i by i i i i i for Ihft day.

TO VISIT TRACK RnlliuiotT, April 14 -Federal officers said i would ap- ear tomorrow nt the Havra'-de Grace rack to question employes, espec- i a In the parl miituel a who liavo b.een engaged' to work during the spring meet opening Saturday, Similar tactics were followed at Bowie two weeks ago and a number of Canadians were found and they offered to leave the country at oncfi, They were said to have been in the country illegally. heavy ornamental bronze doors of the building were wrenched from their biiiflcs and window frames torn from the casings. Workmen said the building wns "twisted" as high as the twelfi.ii floor, while reporters making a hasty investigation reported that the interior of the building seemed entirely wrecked Construction of the imposing edifice has been surrounded by an almost constant pall of labor troubles, and early speculation on the pan of some officials was toward the.the-, ory a a bomb possibly had caused the damage. Fear of another blast led polled reserves to ropo off wide areas surrounding the shattered building to keep the thousands of curious out ot the way. Vivid Pictures Vivid and horrible pictures of the blast were painted, by survivors.

They said the explosion, centering in the southwest corner of the building, lifted a section of the west wall 25 feet high and 200 feet long into the air. Great.slabs of marble sailed out over the Scioto liiver. The blast was followed by tienso clouds of smoke, which billowed forth from the gaping hole shattered windows. Designed Ih house all oF the offices of the state, with the fexception thosfl of the governor's office, the a a general's department, th-'' "secretary of slate, treasury and ami- tor and various sub divisions of their offices, the building covered in entire city block. The building was to have been occupied by the various offices In May.

Preparations had "already been mado .0 move the office equipment and- snpplies of the various departments I he new structure. was started During its. construction, whici; took almost two years, labor flghU" occurred among various workers who questioned the right of various building trade organizations to do various At one time the pias-; were on strike several weeks. a had they returned than the painters and ornamental iron work- ers quit because of differences opinion. I I H.

R. Rudy, Drufgitt Held Hamilton Corner STATE COMMITTEE ENDORSES RITCHIE Democrats Set May 12 as Date for State Convention nnUlinnrr. J1. Dem- i Contral cniiiiniMee Mar.vlnnd Intlny cndorKed Alhnrt liilchld Tor presidential i i nnd later heard him praisotl as "thp. best vote Better" nf any of those mentioned for the post.

Now On Display NEW SPRING SUITS Hoffman, Barnhart and Clopper "THB LIVE STORE" Used Ice REFRIGERATORS Cheap SCHINDEL-ROHRER A Inc. 28-30 S. PotomK 7M The committee, 'with representi- lives from every county ot tlie State, unanimously endorsed the four-time Maryland Executive, and net May 12 as the dato for State convention, which will narao and Instruct dele, nates to the party's national lug In Chicago In June. Howard Bruce, national committee, man for Maryland, lii a short talk praised The Eieciitlre' himself a solid Democratic front In tbt November election', gathered, Mid, at last night's Democratic iatherlni In Washington. He refrained from any comment'on Alfred Smlth'f address, construed a opening war- fare on Governor Kranklln velt's CLEAN HOUSE 'Right 'to Sor mug at 'tnone'ij-sauing Trices 60c Wildroot Hlir Tonic Elix.

Iron, Quinine and Strychnine .3: S. E. Blood Tonic 30c Modess I Sr.nitar: N.pkin 18C Cleaning Needs! Wnil Pnper CJennrr a fop 4ft in. 48 In. Tnr PapeiV 3 JUG! Dfalnfeotfint Crude CurhoHe pint Tnrpentlne P(.

IKh- Creohil DlKtnftcinnt, pt. Flat Liquid, pint T5c Ilethol. pint Hl.no I.nrrex Cnmbinntlon OxnfcH Cedar pnelcnxe OC' P.ur-0-iler Moth 3 for 40? 22t lOt 79t 25t 25t 49ft Spray It generously, It la hnrmlepa to 'liii- maiis and animals. Freshens trtft air; KILLS I instantly. T5c pint CUB in by 20 Inch The handy for cleaning win- iv mirrors a other household tasks.

Splendid value) real quality. Cinphor, pound READ'S FLOOR WAX Cleans, preserves, protects ahd pol- Ishea all. fvood Hurfaces. Easy to apply; quick dry Ins. Candy Specials Bite JerdBB Chocolate Covered ALMONDS fa Garment Bags Various styles with convenient nlde openings and fasteners that will keep them Jocked-tight, Safe-puck la.

it In, 57 In Kloxe-ptick 27 .17 Save-In 27 In. BT In plfifTH priced in 98c Mighty Low Prices! Joe 'Castor OH, tasteless, four JSc Glycerine, eight Extract Witch pint Aromatic Cascara Pebeco Tooth 'Paste Tooth Psste $1.50 Pinkham'i Vegetable 5Cc Ce.lecte Shaving Cream JOc Imperial Milk Of Magneeia Pint 3Jc Kleenex nn 30c Cuticura Tissues MwC Soap $1.00 85c Krua- Adlerlk. chen Salts 19c 25c 28c 19c 27c 31c 83c 31c 27c 17c 49c On The Square, Hagcntown! i.

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About The Morning Herald Archive

Pages Available:
338,575
Years Available:
1908-1993