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The Windsor Star from Windsor, Ontario, Canada • 14

Publication:
The Windsor Stari
Location:
Windsor, Ontario, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

f'AGB rOllllXCV THE BORDER CITIES STAR, WINDSOR, ONTARIO, MONDAY, MARCH 25, 1935 IlLate Election $350,000,000 For Dividends Son Face Court The Theatre and Its People Skeleton Is Discovered 1 League Is Told Czechs Will Fortify Frontiers GENEVA, March 25. League of Nations Circles heard Saturday Czecho-Slovakia has decided to begin fortification of her frontiers because she is apprehensive over a possible Nazi putsch. A spokesman for Czecho-Slovakia here said his country has lost interest in making any kind of pact with Germany since Germany repudiated its signature to the Versailles Treaty. Comber Debating Team Will Travel to Dresden COMBER, March 25. Comber A.

V. P. A. has completed arrangements to send a debating team to Dresden on April 2. when the finals of the Kent; Deanery contest ill be lieid.

Tne subject will be "Resolved, that universal disarmament would promote the welfare of mankind," Comber to have the affirmative. IsAntieijiated End of August, Early September, Probable Vote Date Is Identified as Farmer Who Disappeared In 1926 Mactemple Both Are Accused of Murder At St. Thomas 54 NOW PLAYING TWO FEATURES A SHOW FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY Constable Killed Iii Tuscola, Mich. J- Sha fought ior th right of bar bora Police Murder, I Ta- arH- -r, I T2. and cirla lo lii I Hi! If' i i Canadian Total in 1934 Is More Than Twice That Of Year Before OTTAWA.

March 25. Dividends paid bv Canadian companies during 1934 totaled approximately compared with about $150,000,000 for the previous year, C. Fraser Elliott, Dominion commissioner of income tax, stated yesterday. Mr. Elliott was questioned on the effect of the 1935 budget proposals covering investment incomes which are to be subject to the new surtax rate.

"It shows a distinct improvement in business conditions throughout the Dominion during the past year and likewise indicates confidence by the business executives and shareholders who authorized payment of such dividends out of the earnings of Canadian said Mr. Elliott. "If they had not this confidence they would not have paid out the money but would have retained it in the treasury as added strength against future needs." he added. Mr. Elliott could not make an estimate of the possible total of interest payments for 1934 by companies and particularly by municipalities.

He thought, however, the total would be about the same or less than the previous year. Tfc. Tories Want Delay Government Is Expecletl To Decide Time Of Prorogation TORONTO, March 25. "How long is the present ses Ot-. if V.

1 i ill ma -i i Wa- at I rv JlXJ sion of the federal Parliament com Yr likely to last?" The question Alleged to Hate Been Slain liy Pair At Their Home ST. THOMAS, March 25. Frank Mactemple and Fred Mactemple, father and son, go on trial at the assizes opening today charged with murder. Justice W. T.

Henderson is presiding. 1IAI NO GIN 'PHEY are held responsible for the death of City Police Constable Colin McGregor In St. Thomas May 7 last. The trial of th pair will likely be held separately. The ease of the elder Mactemple is expected to start Search Swamp For Weapon MAYVILLE, March 25.

The nine-year-old mystery of Francis Blasius disappearance was solved partially yesterday with the finding of a skeleton less than a mile from the farm house where he had lived. DEATH CAUSE UNKNOWN JJE WALKED from his home the morning of May 16, 1926, a sunny Sunday morning, was seen by his housekeeper to stroll toward his barn and so far as ever has been learned never was seen again. A man in his sixties, Blasius was a prosperous farmer and known to hundreds of Tuscola County residents. "THE BAND PLAYS ON" vtilh Robert Young Stuart Erwin Betty Furness ROAD CHIEF NAMED MALDEN CENTRE, March 25. Ainslie Sellars has been appointed road superintendent for this township it was learned on Saturday.

was put to the prime minister some weeks ago, shortly after the Speech from the Throne had been accepted and acknowledged by both Houses. DEPENDS OX LIBERALS R. BENNETT smiled. "That ques- tion." he replied, "should be asked of Mr. King.

The government decides the date for opening the sessions of Parliament and the opposition determines the time for closing them." In so saying. Harry W. Anderson states in an Ottawa dispatch to the Globe, the prime minister reiterating a recognized political dictum. But this is an unusual session and unusual things are happening. Indications are that the government and not the opposition will determine the date of prorogation.

From the outset the official opposition has been "speeding up." It has been endeavoring to expedite much of the government legislation. It has presented practically no contentious resolutions. It has submitted few amendments. It has refrained from launching private members' motions. It has pursued a policy of silence when extraneous debates were projected.

It II lilt I I III Sunday's find, made by two farm hands, consisted of a skull and scattered bones partially buried and covered by undergrowth. With them, though, were found Blasius' watch, ring and wallet. What fate overtook him still remains a mystery, however. Sheriff George F. Jeffrey, who took charge, began a search for a rusted weapon (Advertisement) Help Colitis Beware Drastic Stomach Drugs There are thousands of small, delicate muscles in the stomach and intestines, which may be endangered by drastic or irritating- drugs.

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Nixon's Kolade has endeavored every way possible pi MtMIiLR Dennie Moore as May Harris of the "Scandals" when Ann Hardin; was on trial for her life in "The Trial of Mary Miss Moore now has the leading: feminine role in "Three Men on a Horse, current at the Wilson Theatre in Detroit. She has appeared in a host of Kroadway plays, including Sigrmund Romberg's operetta, "East Wind." along- with Joe Penner; in "Torch Song," with Guy Kibbee; "Anatol," with Walter Connolly and Miriam Hopkins; "Cross Roads," with Sylvia Sidney and Franchot Tone; "Jarnegan," with Richard Bennett, Joan Bennett and Wynne Gibson; "Conflict," with Edward Arnold, Spencer Tracy and Frank McHugh, and "A Lady In Love," with I'egfy Wood. r-owaers. ynicK, triple action sootties and relaxes sore irritated to cut to tne minimum the tune ex pended on the consideration of esti bowel and stomach muscles, helps mates. It is anxious to- see Parliament ucHi mucous itifmuranes and checks Acidity.

It must fix you up or cost nothing- under the fair-play agreement of money back on return of "get through" as quickly as possible. EAGER FOR ELECTION Th nnrirtsifivn it If Via- woy Tuesday. Constable McGregor vas wounded during a gun fight at the Mactemple home when he and Sergeant Sam McKeown had gone to execute warrants charging the men with a minor theft. When they arrived at the house McGregor went to the back door and McKeown to the front. McGregor, it is alleged, was disarmed when he entered the back door and when Mc-Keown, admitted at the front door by Frank Mactemple, walked into the kitchen, he was confronted by Fred armed with two revolvers and the father with a revolver In his right hand.

They ordered McKeown to "stick em up" and liand over his gun. but the sergeant argued and knocked the guns out of Fred Mac.temple"s hands and grappled with him. FIRING STARTS As they struggled on the floor the elder Mactemple opened fire it is alleged by police. One bullet entered the stomach of McGregor as the officer made to assist the sergeant. A second struck McKeown on the wrist and then lodged in the throat of Fred Mactemple.

McKeown still holding Fred Mactemple. then got a gim into play and wounded Frank Mactemple as he escaped out of the back door. McGregor died in hospital a few hours later. Fred Mactemple. also taken to hospital, recovered and was later lodged in jail on a charge of murder.

The chase for the elder Mactemple lasted for 40 hours. It appears he had hidden in a foundry a block from the scene of the crime, then under cover of darkness, took to the Michigan Central Railway tracks, hid next day in barns and woods 20 miles west until at dark on the second day Clifford Anderson. 18-year-old farmi hand the farm of Malcolm McNeill, near Button, prodded the fugitive out of a bundle of hay In the McNeill Just after midnight May 9. he was located in the home of an old friend. John Carnegie, on the outskirts of West Lome.

With th; aid of Carnegie he was caught, disarmed and brought back to St. Thomas. Sergeant McKeown and a ballistic empty pacKage ir not satisfied. Don't suffer from delay. Ask vour drug- store for Dr.

Nixon's Kolade would have prorogation take place by fowaers today. taster, it as eager 10 get to tne country to have the general election VirrHItT hf- nri n-ithnnt Halirr "EVvw. vVta opposition is confident that it is go ing wj win aim wui oy a xiuge majority. The pnvpmm rtr i rtViot hand, is playing for time. It recognizes mas conaiuons are against it.

it realizes that something more in fact, 1 1 1 1 1 1 i i iri iria rtAna j-v t- vi it, vi. tto tpmntJTl if fgpoe t)io AlarM-ota It is seriously handicapped by the ill oi aw leader, ine man wno set By Annie Oakley OP THE "Three Men on a Horse" mentioned in the title of the John Cecil Holm-George Abbott escapade which Alex Yokel led into the paddock of the Wilson Theatre in Detroit Sunday evening-, the most important is the fourth. WELL, something like that. He is a meek and enervated bard of greeting-card verses; when he is riding on the bus from Ozone Park to New York his hobby is picking the horses. It is "mental betting" in his case; he never bothers bookies.

But quite by accident he fails in with a trio of professional pony pickers in a barroom, gives them the right horses for every race and becomes more valuable to the United States than Huey long. A ANY rate. Mr. Holm and Mr. --------w uv.a woiv s-n.

Biaypim with existing stressful conditions and revising and reforming the capitalistic or some other clue, but because of the nature of the ground he held little hope for success. Among those he summoned to assist him was James Kirk, former sheriff and an officer who had worked on many of the clues by which, from timo to time, it was hoped the mystery might be solved. NEAR LUMBER CAMP The swamp in which the body lay Is on the property of W. S. Rundell, a Vassar attorney.

Until last winter, it has remained virtually untouched, but during the winter a crew of men were engaged in lumbering operations there. It was found yesterday that the workers had lunched regularly within 25 feet of the spot where the skeleton lay and had cut down three trees wathin 10 feet of it. The finders were Aingus Campbell and Archie Lobdell. Why Blasius, who had eaten a leisurely breakfast, i i gated his housekeeper's complaint that a wood-chuck was burrowing near the house and played a few hands of solitaire before going on his Sunday morning stroll, should have penetrated the swamp is another aspect of the mystery which the discovery did not solve. ESTATE SETTLED In the years that have intervened, acquaintances of Blasius have been divided on whether he was alive or dead.

Late last summer, however, he was declared legally dead and his estate settled. On various occasions skeletons have been found and tentatively identified as being the missing farmer's remains. Always, however, definite proof has lacked or another identity established. Mrs. Eliza Cregg, Blasius' housekeeper and the last person known to have seen him alive, was held for questioning at one time, but w-as released without charges being preferred.

Later she filed a Circuit Court suit seeking possession of a part of his estate on the ground that she was his common law wife. Kirk's investigations led him to believe that Blasius had planned his disappearance and perhaps had enlisted the aid of friends to make it the complete mystery which it has been. He was one of those who held Blasius was still alive. Blasius' body was found about 9 a.m., the same hour of the same day of the week that he dropped from sight. bymxiu.

is no longer on tne bridge. Weeks must, elnnse era Vio to ohU ms more to assume vigorous Dersonal direction of affairs. He must rest ana recuperate. YOUR HEART And everything you've got besides fi when her smile brightens your life in the meantime the report of the Tf I f1 CnmmtcciM, v. handed to the minister of trade and of its three acts and six swiftly moving, revolving-stage scenes.

There a.e labored moments, but most of it is shrewd and jocular horseplay, with Jack Sheehan recer'y brought back from London to play the bedeviled pony soothsayer putting up a swell performance. IN ADDITION to Mr. Sheehan, there's Matt Briggs, who is dynamic as the most feverish of the feed-buyers; Martin Gabel and Owen Martin, excellently cast as to type for the other two men on a horse; Harry Davenport, doing an outstanding characterization as J. G. Carver, the greeting card mogul; and blonde Dennie Moore, who is absolutely perfect as the loyal moll of the chief gambler.

EXCELLENT acting is also provided by Marjorie Lytell, as the verse writer's trusting wife; by Hugh Ren-nle, as his super-efficient brother-in-law: by William Foran, as a bartender, and by Eleanor Audley as a newspaper reporter. The authors have staged their own show expertly and paced it at a Bluebird rate of speed. The laughs come in the right places, and last evening provided great merriment for the race track experts, who filled the Wilson Theatre and were indistinguishable from the regular Sunday opening-night audience. commerce possibly before the end of nc ikw wcrn. Aliu 1' Hi.

xi. 11. OLeV- ens is still on th nntsiriA Wirvi -Ktr- Stevens outside and Mr. Cahan in- expert will be the chief witnesses called by the Crown. W.

M. Blain. St. Thomas, who will defend Frank Mac sioe alter the sharp clash of these gladiators in the House the other day the Dublin is nnr. lik-dir tn Dr.

Scholl's Zino-pads the new improved dpuble-acting treatment relieves pain instantly; ends the caust: shoe pressure; prevents sore toes and blisters; soothes and heals irritation; makes tight shoes lit with ease, and quickly and safely removes corns and callouses. Sizes for Corns, Callouses, Bunions and Soft Corns between toes. Get a box today! At all drug, department and shoe stores. foundly impressed, no matter how lauiuai uie recommenaations may be. TORIES WANT RECESS For these and other reasons tVio A1 ministration is anxious tn HpIov nrnrn.

Oh, What A Show! Three of the nation's gation and arranep a penernns Pncter. temple. and Fed Barnum. defending Fred Mactemple, have not indicated their defence. However, the fact the cases were adjourned from the October assizes at their request in order they might secure fcinds to engage a ballistic expert for the defence, leads to the belief they may endeavor to show the bullet that struck McGregor might have come from one of the other guns figuring in the fight.

A third murder trial will be that Ernest Cornelius, Indian, charged -ith the death of Ms uncle, Iian Elijah, fatally stabbed February 16 at Elijah's home north of Dutton. tide recess. We are living in uncertain FLESH COIO WATERPSOOF I Abbott have built him up to those proportions in a topsy-turvy comedy that proves to be quite as funny as advance notices promised. The authors shoot their humors helter-skelter across the stage, entrusting them to an excellent cast which has been assembled for the purpose of making Chicago laugh at "Three Men on a Horse" us loudly as Broadway has been laughing at it for the past seven weeks and will continue to laugh well Into the summer. Meanwhile, Detroit Is fortunate to be able to laugh for a week.

IVEN a mild little suburbanite and nmes, ana, as one government supporter put it, "anything may turn up any time." During the prospective interlude, it is surmised in Conservative circles that developments may transpire. Mr. Bennett, reinforced and benefited by a sea vovacp to F.nirianH rt favorites The Goiden fahfJi Kiiri wun ine onver Song, and America's 5 m.Bt Dancing Stars, in and with the prestige of his experiences at the Royal anniversary celebrations in the Motherland, may come back prepared to put dramatic and effective force behind his reform legislation. He may later be able to appeal in ocean-to-ocean radio messages for a traveling campaign at the moment appears impossible to his fellow citizens in all provinces. And the government cause may be salvaged, if not saved.

Sees No Need For Revolution North Beats Frank Pease 1935's miracle usical age hit ten times as fon-; talizing on the screen Rendezvous Hotel RIVERSIDE DRIVE Dancin? Every Night Exrrpt Sundaya Art. Turnbull's Band Such a to Conservatives at the moment as the best nartv tactics Anri such 4c Explorer Seeking Records Of Franklin Is Forced To Turn Back WINNIPEG. March 25. Turned IliEiYE DUNNE the course the government is likely to adopt. It is not a popular procedure with the members, but political considerations must dominate personal desires.

FEELING MEAN AND NASTY? WELL IT ISN'T YOUR SOUL IT'S YOUR LIVER CET THE POISON OUT AND THE SUNSHINE INI The best of jieople get "outof -sorts" from time to time. No calm disposi-! tion, sound stomach, and strong nerves can -fight a clogged up system. Don't carry these poisons around with you. If you do, you are bound to have sick headaches and nervous indigestion. Let ULIECIIAM'S clean out your system and put liver, and stomach, and bowels unct ioning regularlv again.

are so mild and effective they are purely vegetable and quite harmless sale to give to children. So inexpensive only 25c a box. Perhaps you don't think you are in need of BICECHA.M'S today. Well, just try a couple tonight and see how different you feel tomorrow. That ill prove how much you were in need bnflr hv A i r-I-1.

TinrtVilanrt Pranlr FUNDS ARE SCARCE Members Of the HmiSP nf Cnrnmnnc Pease. 29-year-old geologist-explorer, who set out from here last October FRET) A A I II GINGER ROGERS on a lone dash to Franklin Land to have just earned or, possibly more accurately, have just qualified for search for records of the lost Sir John t.Hh'.TX fi.tHBO THE PAINTED VEIL Snllr Ulnnr harlen Stnrrett THE SILVER STREAK tHAItl.KV CHASE COMEDY three tough race-track mugs, and perhaps you understand the general plan of the skit. On the day when he must complete his Mother's Day verses, the mugs discover that his Racing Form improvisations are sheer genius. The play unfolds the story of how they shelter him, humor him, nurse him, appease his poet's temperament and clean up op the races so that every bookie in town trembles in his boots. TPHE secret of Erwin's genius yes, Erwin Trowbridge is his name is his utter unworldliness.

He can pick the horses so long as he never bets on them himself. The phenomenon may not be entirely unknown to the reader. In the last act the r-ugs, fearing they are being double crossed, force little Erwin to put a'! his money on a horse of his own choice, a thing he has never done before. And the whole mad set-up almost comes to grief. How it ends is for you to find out.

npHREE MEN ON A HORSE" is spontaneous for the greater part Franklin Party, arrived here over the week-end from Churchill. wieir sessional indemnities. Regular attendants have refisrerert their Slush ice and storm swirls in numb ence for the program of social and ing sub-zero weather drove the young British adventurer back to Churchill on four successive attempts to reach Chesterfield Inlet, 400 miles north of Churchill and first objective on his Cro i Oi I TO Buo-mue trek. Plans for the future. Pease said.

WALLACE BEERY In "THE MIGHTY BARNUM" with Adnlphe "WHITE LIES" Walter Connolly Kay Wny were indefinite. He was undecided whether to outfit here and make another attempt in the spring or to postpone his mission until next fall. He set out from England last summer W. J. Says U.S.

System Corrects Own Vicious Errors DETROIT. March 25. Americans take more in their daily stride than any revolution has ever achieved by its most violent efforts, William J. Cameron, speaking at the Ford Symphony Hour Concert, said last night at Orchestra Hall. "To start a revolution you must have a people so stupid, so ignorant of their rights, that they can be thrown into panic and quickly brought under bondage by a small and desperate group," he said, "or you must have a widespread condition so calculatedly vicious that an intelligent people rise unanimously to remove it.

"Our people are not ignorant or stupid enough to be stampeded by any coterie of destroyers, and we permit no vicious system to become so strongly entrenched here that we must burn the country down to get rid of it we handle it before it reaches that stage. "Americans are too practical a people to be thinking about revolution. This very hour the American ideal is of more vital value to mankind than all the precarious revolutionary experiments now being tried on this planet. 'Economic liberation win already have arrived by the American system while revolutions are still stumbling around in the dark trying to find their way out." Americans have not authorized any group to do their thinking for them, and those who sensationally assault the popular ear do so only momentarily. Cameron asserted.

Sophistries and subsersion are only eddies and ripples on the stream of national life, he said. Randolph Scott, Helen Westley, Victor Varconi, Claire Dodd and Hollywood's stateliest beauties in with his small terrier. Jil, prepared to spend three years in the Arctic to test his theory of the last days of Frank NIXSS PILLS THE GREAT REGULATOR ecuuumic reiorm witn tne added revision of the capitalistic system has left both old-time political parties practically without campaign funds. "Big interests" of all kinds indicate no eagerness to "come across" this time. What prudent party managers may have laid aside for "emergencies" will come in very handy, but there is no prospect of generous financing of candidates.

The "boys' will have to put up themselves. Hence there is keen desire to make even the elongated session as short as possible, and save as much of the sessional indemnity as can be tucked away. It may be needed in the strenuous days and nights of coaxing and cajoling votes. But all existing indications are that the government, for once will determine the time for prorogation which, in the present year must be followed by dissolution. If this surmise be sound, the general election may be looked for about the end of August or the beginning of fashion's most gorgeous gownsl lin and to stretch for records of the 4-3700 mm party lost 70 years ago while searching for a northwest passage.

SQBaaar Wnrnrr Oland Donald Woods "Charlie Chan's Courage" Wnlter Hnofon Kranoin llrr "KEEP 'EM ROLLING" With the Entire lth U.S.A. Field Artillery Raw, Worn-Out, Nerves Now Calm and Strong German Netcs JTrriter Is Expelled by Italy ROME, March 25. Paul Ullmann. a German newspaper correspondent. was ordered expelled from Italy today ior navmg written anti-Italian articles.

He was the second German A It correspondent to be expelled this i month. i )r. P. Astier's Amazing Preparation Restores Lost Energy to Tired Men and Women Warner Oland Mary Brian in "Charlie Chan in Paris" Frs.nci tedrrrr Hlnifrr Roicm "Romance in Manhatten" PA Lucy Minnigerode, 64, iYoferi U. Nurse, Dies ALEXANDRIA, Va, March 25.

Lucy Minnigerode. 64, superintendent of nurses for the United States Public Health Service, died yesterday. Miss Minnigerode organized the first contingent of nurses to go abroad during the World War. She was decorated by the Czar of Russia for her services "and in 1925 won the coveted Florence Nightingale medal of the Red Cross. New S-, King and SS fSh.

I Mm than ln.OOO.OOO bottlna of this wonderful preparation have been uned mostly as a result of doctors" prescription during the past liv years. And daily, letters pour in to the Astier telling of the wonders it has done. Kola Astier is truly a product of nature. Developed by Dr. Astier, it contains the purified active'principlea of the seed of the West African Kola Acuminata.

Physicians and scientists of Europe have declared this seed to be an extraordinary source of nerve-force, mental vigor and physical energy and endurance. Results Almost At One Th beneficial action of Kola Astier stsrta from the very first dose Slid, in most cases, one bottle produces noticeable improvement. New nerve-force speeds up the functions of every organ. Heart action is strengthened, blood circulation improved, liver and kidneys activated, digestion aided. Vim.

vigor and cheerfulness return. Kola Astier Must Help or It Costs You Nothing Ion't try ta bolster up your nervw and organs with false stimulants: don't drug yourself. Let Kola Astier restore your weakened system in a natural way. You don't have to take anybody a word for what it will do fot you. tVet yourself a bottle of Kola Astiet TODAY, ou won't risk a penny.

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lk Dance wld attest the wonderful invigorating ition of Kola Astier, the remarkable Jmulant-toniis developed by the dis-nguished pharmacologist. Ir. P. Astier I Paris, which restores run-down, ner-ous, deprrwd men and women to glo-oua health and atrength. Few ronditions are harder to overcome, ao disastrous to th whole ay-stem, as rvous exhaustion "bankrupt" nerves.

Bankrupt" nerves upset digestion, affect la action of the kidneys and other vital pans, rau naetless nights and are wponsiblw for that depressed, irritable, orn-out feeling, ao familiar to ao many nbitious men and women. Nature's Relief In th day of (train and worry, when inl ar tns and tem)Mrs on evry in-dowa, mrvom, dopmwrtl man or woman gain aw vibraat esaitit wita Kaia Astier. The Border Theatre Guild Presents "THE TORCH BEARERS" A Comedy in 3 Acts TONIGHT St. Alphonsus Hall Curtain at 8:30 p.m. Ticket on Sale at HEINTZMAN CO.

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Write today for free Azmo-Tabs, Knox Ji: Knox Spadina Avenue, Toronto. Out. Turner to Demonstrate SACRAMENTO, Cal, March 25. Col. Roscoe Turner, noted aviator, will demonstrate the use of a parachute in safely lowering a stalled airplane to the ground.

During an air show here May 18 and 19, Colonel Turner will demonstrate the giant "chute cf.

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Pages Available:
1,607,590
Years Available:
1893-2024