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The Daily Capital News from Jefferson City, Missouri • Page 8

Location:
Jefferson City, Missouri
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Angry Parents Liberate Hallowe'en Pranksters RICHMOND HILL, Nov. 3. parents who Saturday night stormed the jail and liberated six youngsters arrested for Hallowe'en pranks today threatened legal action, Town Constable Roscoe Case- fcoent and School Board Chairman p. C. Sanderson explained the arrests were intended merely as "a warning." The children, ranging in age 6 to 12 years, were locked up with four tramps.

Their parents advanced on the jaili forced the door open and took the pranksters home. Dies In Plane Crash NICE, France, Nov. jJMarius Maxwell, British pilot, his French mechanic were foiled today when their airplane 'crashed in the Var river along- Jide the Californie airdrome. ENJOY EYE COMFORT With Glasses Fitted by Dr. Phi) A.

Dailmeyer 218 E. Hifh Optometrist of all kinds COOK PAINT AND VARNISH CO. PlATt ROUGH WINDOW MUKOItS AUTOMOtllt STRUCTURAL 215 Jefferson E. Capitol TOLIN'S BAR CAFE Open Today After 7 P. M.

213 East COMMON Relieve the distressing symptoms by applying Mentholatum in rubbing on chest. MENTHOLATUM Civet COMFORT Daily BuiM Endurance vifkDOG Marine Strike Tightens Grip on West Coast Number of Strikt-Bound Vessels Reaches 145 as Others Scheduled to Be Tied up SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 2 paralyzing grip of a general maritime strike closed tighter around coast shipping tonight, sympathy walkouts spread in Atlantic and Gulf ports, and jthe maritime commission indefinitely postponed an investigation here after union representatives walked out. The number of strike-bound ships along the coast had reached at least 145 tonight and others were due for tie-up as they reached ports from San Diego to Seattle. Cancel Sailings Sailings of two large liners, one i trans-Atlantic deluxe cabin ves- the other one of America's largest merchantmen, were can- in New York after "sit down" strikes by seamen.

New York shippers called a con- to discuss the crisis, which spread of sympathetic strikes in Gulf ports. Up and down the coast, 37,000 union maritime workers were on strike, and the jobs of 20,000 lumbering employes were threatened by the tie up in the Pacific northwest. Rear Admiral Harry G. Hamlet, U. S.

maritime commission representative, postponed a fact finding inquiry when no union delegates showed up for an afternoon session, and employer representa- tatives present said they had no statements to make. Marine union representatives walked out of the session this morning and protested Admiral Hamlet had allowed employers to enter "controversial issues, which, they declared, he previously had stated were "not within the purview of the investigation." 'The unions cannot recognize the authority of the maritime commission to determine any of the issues in dispute, or to deprive the membership of the unions of their legal rights for collective bargaining in order to determine wages, hours and other conditions of labor," said a union statement. Protest Statement The walkout was started this morning by counsel for the sailors union of the protested an opening statement by Employer Counsel' Gregory Harrison in which he charged, unions had many times violated terms of agreements made after the 1934 coastwide strike. This afternoon Admiral Hamlet polled the employer counsel present, but none wished to make CITY PRODUCE CO. 116 Harrison Phone 124 SPECIAL! SOUTHERN ILLINOIS COAL $K25 TON HAWES cc CLEAN- NO SLACK! MEANS RAY You can rest assured that our insurance will supply all the protection you need for your home.

MONEY TO LOAN On Real Estate between employers and unions ap- DAILY CAPITAL NEWS, JEFFERSON CITY, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3 1936 Train 'Cut in Two' in Fatal Wreck Hurtling along the main line of the Pennsylvania Railroad near Princeton, at 64 miles an hour" a wheel flew off one of cars of. the crack "Clevelander" train." The damaged car toppled over and broke free of the forward of the train, but not before it upset the car ahead, piling up those behind, and creating wreckage pictured above. When the speeding engine came to a halt a half mile on, one passenger was foun decapitated, 19 injured. Phone (all Adds to Mystery of Killing of Youth Last January Body Identified Only Yesterday by Grief-Stricken Mother BIRMINGHAM, Nov. mysterious telephone call, seven months after the "love forever" killing.in Kansas City of a youth identified here as Artemus Ogletree, 17, added today to the perplexity of authorities investigating the case.

Mrs. Ogletree, with grief after identification yes terday of the victim as her" son, said she talked 30 minutes telephone with a man who called 1 -s her from Memphis, 'in' n. a Will Wallie Wakh Ed ward Open Session of Parliament! London Asks the Question LONDON, Nov. depending on which comes first, possible presence of Walk's War- I The coronation has been set for xi 11 field Simpson in the distinguished visitors' gallery to watch King Edward open parliament Tuesday was the main topic of London's table conversations tonight. Some.

Londoners she would, be 'there, while others said she wouldn't. One unconfirmed report circulated through the city was that she would spend the day in Paris "because neither she nor King" Edward wished to attract undue-public, attention. Those who said- she 'would' at- teri'd' the recalled the by August, 1935. Young Ogletree was-killed in January. He was" found; nude and fatally injured, in his hotel room by a bellboy.

The man who called "her from Memphis, Mrs. Ogletree said, informed her Artemus was'-ixi Cairo, Egypt, unable to write had lost- a a fight in which he sayfsd th'e jailer's life. Mrs. Ogletree man "talked, wildly" but revealed some knowledge of her son. She supplied police the name the caller gave.

Not Found In Cairo A check with steamship and consular authorities in Cairo any statement. failed to reveal any trace of "Tomorrow is a holiday," said young Ogletree, and. he was re- the representative. "This hearing ported -as missing to J. Edgar is postponed indefinitely." Hoover, head of the federal bu- Any possible peace conferences reau of 'investigation.

during the proclamation 'of Edward' "formar ascension throne 'last. January. to thc All-; were on point; there would be no precedent to prevent from witnessing King f. Edward's appeara.nce in parliament if should" be He is-to make -the declaration of protestant faith required-of all Britijslv' According" to law each BritishVruler must make the' pronouncement either duurig; the coronation ceremony or at his initial 'meeting''with parliament, next May. Speaking from the throne in the house of lords, King Edward repeat the centuries-old is to oath: "I do solemnly and sincerely in the presence of God profess, testify, and declare I am a faithful protestant, and.

that I will, ac. cording to the true intent of the enactments which secure the estant succession to the throne of my realm, uphold and mainain the said enactments to the best of my powers according to law." As the, king is a bachelor, it is planned to have him alone on the dais. The throne which Queen Mary occupied on the occasions when 'Edward's late father, King George, opened parliament was removed several months ago. party because there is no con- said. sort, it is understood the Duke of Beaufort, Master of the Horsa, will ride with him in the state coach from Buckingham Palace to Westminster.

The coach is the one in which King George rode to his coronation. Parliament faces a heavy program. One of the major items is the task of financing the government's plans for large-scale rearmament. Fascist Air Raids Bring Death to 33 Field Botteries Shell Environs of Spanish Capitol Adding to the Toll of Lives Taken MADRID, Nov. children were killed and eight adults injured in Fascist air and land bombardments of Madrid suburbs today.

Insurgent warplanes dived on Madrid's outskirts in four separate visits, bringing the total of! their daylight raids in the past' four days to 21. The deaths of the children in the Vallecas district, raised the total death toll to 216 since last Friday. (Eighteen children were among the 33 persons killed in the first air bombardment of Madrid Friday.) Fascist field batteries at the same time shelled heavily environs of Madrid, whose inhabitants feared the range shortly might be lengthened and their homes and plazas bombarded. The quiet suburb of Leganes, seven miles southwest of Madrid, felt the brunt of the insurgent bombings and shellings today. The terminal of one of Madrid's street car lines in Leagnes was bombarded, but escaped serious damage.

Government gun crews blazed back at the insurgents, shot for shot. Reinforcements were rushed from Madrid to government lines facing repeated insurgent assaults from Valdemoro, 13 miles south of Madrid: and from Parla, Fuenia- brada, Southwest, and from Cas- cist-captured Brunete, west of tho capital. In the early evening, two Fascist planes which made the fourth sortie on the capital today were still dipping and wheeling overhead, in clear view of an Associated Press correspondent dictating part of this dispatch to the London bureau. Heavy Fighting Near Capital With the main line of the Fascist attack on Madrid arcing from the south to the west, the govern- Disappearing Sedalia Man Returns to Home SEDALIA, Nov. R.

E. Grother, 36, cashier of the City Light and Traction Company here, who disappeared Friday night after leaving home to mail a letter, returned today and said he ment also reported heavy fighting on the Guadalajara highroad, about 15 miles northeast of capital. The "zero hour" for the final insurgent attack was. expected momentarily tonight. The suburb of Getafe, bombed from the air over the weekend, already had been evacuated as the government forces preparing to alunch a mechanized counter-attack should their foes approach closer tg this sector.

The harassed government, striving for governmental as well as military consolidation, considered inclusion of the Syndicalist federation of labor in the cabinet, but the ministers postponed final decision until next Friday's session. Silk and wool robes Beautiful designs, better fitting- Buy now for Xmas. $5.95 up SCHOTT CLOTHIERS 116 E. High would "explain after few sleep." Company officials said an au of Grother's accounts showed thei! in satisfactory shape. He been affiliated with the company for 12 years.

Why let someone experiment with your Re-Upholstering OR REPAIRING when we have had lifetime experience? among the ARTISTIC UPHOLSTERING CO. 50K E. Dunklin Phone 728 The Morning AfterTaking Carters Little LiverPil POSITIONS Await those trained In Shorthand, Stenotypy, Typewriting, Comptometer, Bookkeeping, Filing, Civil Service, Salesmanship, Public Speaking. DAY AND NIGHT CLASSES CAPITAL COMMERCIAL COLLEGE PHONE 961 2 E. HIGH than nor bolt your ticket," he "Remember there are more 600,000 independent voters The telephone Ogle- peared to be awaiting final out- tree said, followed by four months C.L*.

tu uc wcL.li.Lljg J.JJ..IC11 UUV TT come of the maritime commission the receipt of two letters, both inquiry. typewritten, purporting to be from The commission, recently organized, has administration of $100,000,000 in ship subsidies and power to establish minimum wages and working hours on subsidized shipping lines. Artemus-and saying he was "sailing" for Europe. Mrs. Ogletree! said her suspicions aroused by the letters because Artemus Members of the Ogletree family Juneau Residents lo Face Restricted Diet JUNEAU, Alaska, Nov.

here faced a limited diet today as the S. S. Northland, last commercial ship of the season, sailed for Seattle without unloading a cargo of 200 quarters of beef, butter and eggs which striking longshoremen refused to handle. Even drugs and medical supplies were left on board. There was no immediate danger of a food shortage, however, for the city was stocked with staples sufficient to last three months.

Only mail was taken from the Northland. Seamen were willing to work the ship if pickets were removed from the harbor. The pickets would not leave. Mayor I. Goldstein conferred with union leaders for several hours without success.

The union men claimed Seattle headquarters had ordered them not to unload the Northland. Delay in construction of the new federal building at Sitka was threatened when 25,000 feet of lumber loaded at Wrangell also was returned to Seattle on the Northland. Still Coughing? No matter how many you have tried for your cough, chest cola or bronchial irritation, you can get relief now with CkeomuUon. Serious trouble nay be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with anything leas than Creomul- sion, which goes right to the aeat of the trouble to aid-nature to soothe and heal the Inflamed membranes the germ-laden phlegm loosened and eipelted. Even If other ham filled, dont be dtououraged.

your crugglat aathorteed to guarantee Creomulston tt to refund your itUfledwtth bottle. money if you are not from the very, flpt bottle, high above the fiamrunaai mfltMfc The African gerenuk has littlt difficulty in reaching tree leaves above the heads of all ani- said they did not expect to go to Kansas City for a conference with police authorities there. The youth was buried in; a Kansas City cemetery at the expense an unidentified persbii who wanted him "near my sister." For eleven weeks the body lay in a funeral home in Kansas City while police sought to unravel the mystery. Just 'before the -planned funeral in potter's a call came requesting that the be interred in a cemetery. It was followed by.

money for the funeral. Cured of fear of Open Spaces Then Disappears NEW YORK, Nov. For seven years John He wins Korn suffered from agoraphobia morbid dread of open and would not leave his home. He was cured recently and- today he 'was reported to police as missing. Psychologists told Korn only a woman who resembled his mother could overcome the nervous quirk which -caused his condition.

Miss Elsie Clark, a leljow- writer, 'effected the cure. Once convinced he could travel without meeting violent death, Korn went out to look for a job. Last Thursday; he left home in Queens and hasn't-been. seen since, his wife told police. Arrest Capone Scion MIAMI BEACH, Fla-i said today 'they would charge Albert Capone, 18- year old son of the former Chicago gang overlord, with reckless driving because he sldeswiped 'four palm trees.

Botz Says BarreH Throwing Screen of Smoke for Publicity Soys 'Pendergastism' Is Child of GOP Parentage COLUMBIA, Nov. C. Botz, of Jefferson City, non-partisan, candidate for governor, tonight in a radio speech. that the Republican party lacked the right to make "Pendergastism" an issue in Missouri as it "became the present menace" under three Republican governors. Botz declared Jesse W.

Barrett, Republican gubernatorial nominee, had "to.resort to, a smoke screen of 'crooked elections', 'bossism', and 'Pendergastism''to attract attention enough to get publicity." He contended it was only after Paul O. Peters, his publicity director, uncovered evidence which 'two St. Louis newspapers used that Barrett.took the "ghost issue" into campaign. Describing.Democratic prospects in the campaign, as "a pitiful case at best," Botz asserted Major Lloyd C. Stark, candidate for governor, had "not even a platform on which to stand other than to point with pride to things which he as an honest citizen cannot point to with pride," The non-partisan candidate YOU CAN THROW CARDS IN HIS FACE ONCE TOO OFTEN you have thoso awful whtrv your out on aian you love.

Your hiuband can't possibly know how- you tttl for the 'jilmpU reason that ht li-a man. A three-quarter wife be no wile at all If nags her band wven out of every month. For threm uneraliona one wo- wan- bar told another how to to "tmlllni throuih" with Lydla Plnkham'i Vegetable Compound It helps Ifature. up the system thus JeascnlaR the from the functional disorders which' women, must endure in ordeals of life: i. Turning from ctrlhood to womanhood, a.

Preparing for motherhood. J. AD- preaehlrtf age." three-quarter take LTDIA I. PINKHAM'S STABU COMPOUND and urged his hearers to "vote the way you think." just as courageous, and intelligent enough to see through the smoke screens thrown up by these slick politicians and the misleading newspapers." Botz pointed out he had circulated printed copies of his platform to "nearly every home in the i state." He offered to cover these promises by bond "that if not keep all of these promises and do what I said I would and could, then I would pay into the state school fund all the salary I draw "You won't have to desert your as governor during the four years." UNIVERSITY CONCERT SEASON TICKETS NOW OK SUE! Nov. 18 The Moscow Cathedral Choir Dec.

Kathryn Meislc, Contralto Paul Althouse, Tenor Feb. 22 The St. Louis Symphony Orchestra March 4 Josef Hoffman, Pianist April 6 Albert Spaulding, Violinist April 26 Lily Pons, Soprano RESERVED SEATS UNRESERVED SEATS (Plus Missouri Sales Tax) Phone and mail orders filled in the order of their receipt. Make checks payable to Leslie Gowan. UNIVERSITY TICKET OFFICE JESSE HALL, COLUMBIA, MO.

2 Jackets, Double Cellophane, make Double-Mellow Old Golds doubly Fresh and Fragrant! NCE UPON cigarette makers didn't put Cellophane around a pack of cigarettes. And most smokers seldom got a cigarette that was really fresh. Then the cigarette makers took to putting one jacketof Cellophane around each pack.Thathelped. But not until OLD GOLDS originated double wrap' ping seal of two Cellophane jackets the problem of true cigarette freshness solved. What a difference now! Every Double-Mellow OLD GOLD Just sings to your senses with full flavor and fragrance.

Sings in a double-mellow voice that is the inheritance of prize crop tobaccos. Neither weather nor climate can put an OLD GOLD out of condition. And millions of OLD GOLD enthusiasts answer this new note in cigarette freshness in praiseful tones! INNERACKFT OF "CHIOPHANE" Opini from Top OUTIR JACKIT Or "CE110PHANI" 11)30, by P. UwllUnl lac. PRIZE CROP TOBACCOS.

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About The Daily Capital News Archive

Pages Available:
90,807
Years Available:
1910-1977