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The Tipton Daily Tribune from Tipton, Indiana • Page 2

Location:
Tipton, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Jb. loaf, 2 for i5c Ib. 29c LH. 'Continued from Page 1. iniDtbe evening, with his boiled shirt' and perfectly tailored black an American would probably-tie-a piece of string around Ills; waist rather than go to.

thd trouble of putting on sad." Speaking of the object of her visit to New York, Miss Campbe'll said she had come over to see American women were wear- Ing in daytime. I 4 NEW'JMILLIONS. Continued, from Page 1. fornia. At present market prices these shajces would be worth $366,829.544.

JTHJie only other publicly reported Rockefeller interests at the 'present''time are 78,456 shares of preferred stock of Ohio Oil Co. held by Rockefeller Center Inc. and common and 15,000 stock of Standard Oil dTOhio held by the Rockefeller Foundation. cpartt and torelfBera and adjudicated by mixed i If Italy, refused any measure of compromise, France and Britain were said to be agreed that the? must for their own sakes take the problem before the league council with a recommendation for fall discussion, and a decision OB responsibility for war. PROFIT.

Continutd from Page 1 the amount of counterfeit notes and coins seized during the depression, secret service men said there was no indication that makers of bogus money were getting rich. On the contrary, William H. Moran, chief of the service, insisted that it was a poor business for the average counterfeiter, what with the risk of getting caught, the penalties and the capital necessary to get started. Most of the government's gold and silver profits are expected be used in time for debt, ment. Of jKold profit about been set aside for that purpose.

Continued from Page 1. major concessions. There is a measure of extra-territoriality In Ethiopia under consular treaties, ncludinciJiat of CAPTURED BANDIT. Chicago Policemen Injured in Chase After Former Convict. (By United TVess).

Chicago, Aug. policemen were injured today when' a bandit with whom they had en. gaged in a running gun battel lost control of his car and crashed into a pole. Rounding a corner at high speed, the ibandit car crashed into an electric light pole, weighted down by a large transformer. As gaged in a running gun battle lost wrecked car the pole fell to the Car Load of Litwar in It Over and Let Us Fill Your Hinkle's Coal Yard Phone 48.

1 1 "tf iro Phyricaf Washington, Aug. anthropologist today 1 revealed recent measurements of Jesse Owens to the popular belief that negro athletes' anccess In track, i is due to physical differences tfom their white rivals. Dr. Montague Cobb, associate professor of anatomy at Howard university, measured the. negro sprint and broad Jump champion -while doing research; work In anthropology at Western Reserve university this "The physique of champion ne- gro and white, sprinters in general, and Jesse Owens in particular, reveal nothing to thai negroid physical characteristics are anatomically' concerned with the present dominance of negro athletes in national competition in the short dashes and broad Jump," Dr.

Cobb said. "There is not a single physical characteristic which all the negro stars in question have in cbinmon which would them as negroes. Jesse Owens who has run faster and leapt farther than a human being had ever done before does not have what is considered the type of foot and heel jbope." Dr. Cobb said one recognized study showed the average white male's -lower limb was 50.9 per cent of the total length of his leg and the average -negro's lower limb was 52.5 per cent of his leg. Owens' lower limb was 52.7 per cent of his leg.

Owens has a short foot in contrast to its. width and surpasses the average for negroes and whites. For the average negro tho foot breadth is 35.5 per cent of For the average per cent. For OWens it is 36.25 per cent. X-ray photographs of Owens' feet showed a heel bone which matched a number of those of white men filed in the laboratories at Western Reserve university.

Dr. Cobb said. Dr. said the reason for Mme. Maria Jer.itza, top, famoui opera singer, and WinfieldSh.ee- han, former vice presi lent of Fox films, were married in the Old Mission at Santa Barbara, Cal.

The diva bad been separated from Baron von Popper, no divorce was granted until the recent rise of outstanding' negro athletes, would (o be found in fields other than I anthropology and suggested jttat it might be due to additional experience and better nurture as as certain phychological factors. Starts Hopeless Effort on I Tat! Bill for Antii i Inflation. HE WON FIGHT ONCE I (Washington, Aug. Bob" LaFollette, earnestly determined in hla fight for a greatly broadened tax program, began today what appeared to be a hope- leas effort to' mould the new deal tax bill into a comprehensive, anti-inflation movement. 4.0-year-old Wisconsin Progress ve, proposed amendments wnich would lower normal tax exemptic n's and dig into the lower brackets for revenue which! he considers vital to off thej threat of uncontrollable inflation.

jwith. preliminary debate out the way, this! senate proceeded to take up the! proposed 250,000,000 tax bill section-by section. The changes which LaFollette was attempting to make concerned the fore-part of the bill and were next In 1 line for! consideration. A possible barrier to uninterrupted tax 'debate arose with the demand that Howard C. Hopson, utilities magnate, appear before the senate I to defend himself on a i contempt citation in the lobby LaFollette, in his proposed brought to the senate floor the fight which he won and then lost in the finance com- nilttce.

He obtained approval last Saturday of an amendment lowering exemptions to $2,000 and $800 for married and single persons exemption, only to have the position reversed when the committee met! agaii Monday. He suffered the same fate on his plan to lower the surtax schedules so that they would- apply to net Incomes 06 more 'than $3,000. On both issues he plans a strenuous i floor fight. It appeared! likely that lie would be defeated. InCB 'Are BeporUia.

i New Aug. J15. the most-exclusive yet revealing social functions of the season.wil be given, this week end. The nnd ists are having a supper danc for 250 guests. The; Roxanna Health Club, and the Nude Cnl fure Club, Joint hosts, assured guests the dance floor was "specially Presumably it is splinter proof.

Phoenix, state entomologist's office here wa avoided today by capitol visitor as though it plague-ridden after 50 iblack widow spiders es caped from a glass case. Only a few have been recaptured. Chicago, Aug. A Giannini, proudly identifie himself as "a cosmic was unable to provide- $10,00 bond a theft "Well, you're going to have lot'of lime to practice your pro ess 1 ion, fheri," George P'pr ter said. Giannini went to jail.

Bloomington, Aug. Mrs Betty Ann Kinser, 109 years ol and in "tbjable good health," sal today she has given up chewin tobacco and hard liquor. 'Maybe folks are right; mayb they aren't good for your health, she said. Mrs. Kinser, on farm, never' has.

seen a train an hasn't been to town in 35 years Joliet, 111., Aug. 16. J. Parker employed a crew wreckers to tear down'his bous on 12 of a subdivision. mistake ttiey razed a home on lot.

NO. 11. John J. Cleary, owner of the wrecked house, sued-his bor for $5,000 today. MORE TROUBLE BREAKS.

Have you driven this ear's Labor Unrest Climaxed at Terrc Haute by Another Strike. i Haiite, Aug. 15. Approximately 400 union em- ployes of the Terre Haute Malleable and Manufacturing Company went on strike today, returning the acute labor unrest which precipitated a I paralyzing general. walkout weeks ago.

Both moulders and laborers of the Malleable walked out. Company officials refused to discuss the Union leaders could not be located immediately to learn thje -cause of the walkout. i T. N. Taylor, American Federation of Labor representative who aided in conciliation of the general walkoutl said he knew noth- 1 1 1 Official in Chicago Bark Department Found Dead in Automdpue.

NOTE FROM A WOMAN (By United Press). Aug. today slaked their solution of the murder of Kenneth A. Morrison, Chicago parks official, or a cryptic note in a -woman's handwriting containing tlie words, 'You are creature God ever made." A.horrified child found Morrison's body sitting upright in tho rear seat of his parkec dangling from and his straw hat lipped bile yesterday, a half-burned ci- his lips, at a rakish angle. Blood trickled from a- wound in.

the right-cheek, where one of three bullets had imbed led itself. Chief of Detectives Jo in L. Sullivan said 'the scrawl found on the body of the 46-year- old comptroller, had bam signed, but the signature was torn away. Investigators, 'leaning automo- Boneless Wnil Chajmelj JK 5. Halitint Steak, Seaplane Fish, Ib 25c Haddock Fillet, bone- less.Ib.

12 Years sd note, toward a GRANTED LENIENCY. Man Leaves Prison to Spend Rest of Life in Infirmary. Indianapolis, Aug. serving more than 20 murdering ing abo'ut tlie unrest at- the Mal- A leable works. Weimar of the Indiana -national guard, in charge of martial- la proclaimed during the genen li said' he cautioned unlit I leaders last night against picketing and reminded them.the military rule still is in eWt.

Ill The Malleable plant is located In a neighborhood in tho northeast lection of Terre Haute the Columbian i Enameling Stamping- Company, focal general, strike. years on a hia wHe; Davis, 73-year-old life term inmate of the 'state -prison, was given his last the state clemency commission. Davis, was convicted in' Whitley circuit court April 1915, after he had beaten his wife tb death a stove poker. Although the commission's action meant freedom from the prison, Davis was ordered trans-, erred to the Whitley county Infirmary. The commission said it would have paroled Davis several months ago but.the convict -had no home.

Whitley county commissioners subsequently agreed to accept him at the infirmary. Two other "lifers" at the state prison were granted commutation of sentences i by the com- tnissionr, which also leniency to 21 others. Charles Gouts, sentenced to life in Vanderburg circuit court apfil 3, 1917, in connection with the death of Mrs. Allgene Griffith, was. granted a of 20 years to life.

He will be eligible for parole in 1937. Ely the Lanks, Jasper, who has served nearly 16 years: on a life sentence in slaying of bis sister-in-law, was granted a commutation of from 20 years to life. 1 Frank Jenkins, Lake county, who has served more than 12 years: on a life sentence, and Charles Born, Jefferson qonnty, who has served 17 years on a life term, were denied theory ot Jealousy In tlie bafflins case, said the "model" family, man -have, met death while keeping a rendezvous with a They accounted all on the night of the killing, except for a 40-minute intervals after he left his office. The widow, Mrs. Eths Iwyn Morrison, scoffed at hints hi T.

husband might has led a dual lite, explaining that he often worked late at his office on the. aband ined lakefront site of A- century of Progress. "But he always came directly horns, when his work was done," sh'e said! body- of the J5.QOO a yelr comptroller was found cln the hear north side, the Morrison home, is on the south side. police admitted- that, beyond the-note in a feminine hand, they had little to support the theosy-of a mors, in fact, than they had to corrt borate an earlier theory! of robbery. They found in nis "This is most balling case we've encoutered ia years," said Chief Sullivan, who led Chicago police in a whirlwii cleanup of a dozen sordid killings in the last dO days.

It was believed the cigarette was placed in Morrison's month by his slayers in order that per- 'sons passing the parked car would think he was alive, i ANOTHER TRV, Sir Malcolinn Campbell Will Race In memory of Joseph M. Thater, who departed this life one year, ago, Aug. 16, 1934. I have! lost my soul's companion- A life linked-with my And day by-day I jnias him morai As I walk through alone. Lonely wife; ANNA THATCHER.

August 15th. Ralph Ripberger was 'seriously, ill in Indianapolis with lead poisoning, contracted at the plant of the Prest-0-Lite Company where he was I employed. i The Ku Klux Klan had information booths for men and women at the Tipton county free fair. C. A.

Barnes, ipatrolinan- for the Hub Highway found a. roll of news print which fallen from some, truck just west of Elwood. I Mrs. L. M.

Bowlin 1 and her two granddaughters from Indianapolis were visiting with former's sister Mrs. S. G. Young on West Jefferson street. Jake Yarling of Randolph; visiting with relatives and friends in this county.

E. E. Newkirk and Allen Goodpasture and family returned from a visit with relatives in Michigan. Tnresheshers were at the farm of Henry Kinder and threshed a 19 which made bushels of wheat. Otto Kirtley purchased the Charles Esaig store in Atlanta.

Sere, Greeting Friends. jjjJBHly Waltz, former tenant on; the Richman farm south o'f Tipton was here Thursday attending to business matters and greeting friends. Mr. Waltz is now. residing on a farm east of Millersburg in Hamilton county.

He regretted he had forgotten about the big Farm Bureau meeting "at the Tiptou' park Wednesday night stating; he would have-brought his family the In Memorinm. Frikune Want Ads Get.Results.^ Bluebird in Utah (By United Press London, Aug. mighty racing Sir Malcolmn Campbei in whic'n hopes to on drive 300 miles an hour, was the high seas enroute to Americai today for another crack) at the mark. The machine, led and crated, was aboard the Aqultanfa, which sailed, last- night. Sir Malcolm, will leave Aug; 21 aboard the Ttfspestic.

-He -plans an attempt a mark of 276.816 miles his owir per hour on toe Utah salt flats spme time next month. YOUNO Con'tinuBd i the communities'and iCt 1. irohes in each to fftt. i I'-WS.

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About The Tipton Daily Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
224,526
Years Available:
1907-1971