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The Daily Times from New Philadelphia, Ohio • Page 10

Publication:
The Daily Timesi
Location:
New Philadelphia, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 tfi ii It- nc DAILY I A C. 9 A9 BAKQAIN COLUMN Effective Immediately, best ice cream 39c quart. 5-tf Attention Mothers, why not include a permanent in the preparation of getting the girl ready for school. A souvenir with each permanent during August and September. West End Beauty Shop, Dial 35671.

2-2c Household room suite, 4-piece wicker living room suite, rugs, fernery, gas range, ice box, radio, sewing cabinet, lamps, garden tools, lawn mower, porcelian kitchen table with chairs, cooking utensils and many other articles too numerous to mention, cheap. Inquire at 524 Ray any time Friday or Saturday. 21-3p HALT BREAK FROM YOUNGSTOWN JAIL Youngstown, Aug. 21, Police today were attempting to decipher a code which may give them information as to when a wholesale jaU break designed to permit 26 prisoners to escape from the county jail was to have taken place. The intended delivery was frustrated when Mrs.

Peggie Peters, alias Margaret Begnall, 22, was arrested at the county jail while she was waiting to see her husband, Paul Peters, alias John Begnall. Begnall, who escaped from the Cuyahoga county jail in Cleveland July 5, is held here on a burglary charge. The woman was arrested by city detectives here for Cuyahoga county detectives who came here Wednesday afternoon. She is wanted in Cleveland on a charge of aiding and abetting the escape of Begnall there. The code which was to be delivered to Bagnall together with saws found in his possession was on a little strip of paper one inch wide and about one foot long, police said.

It read: Tues and Fri to 4074747H 359428 519H 4505590 The saws were discovered after the detectives became suspicious of the girl and Lottie Mitchell of the county Jail staff waa summoned to detective headquarters to search her. Following the discovery that Mrs. peters had attempted to smuggle saws into the Jail, deputies made a thorough search of range and found several knives which were shaped into keys to unlock cell doors. FIX DATES FOR FARM INSTITUTE Dates for four county farm institutes, which are to receive state aid, were set at a meeting of farm institute leaders in the Tuscarawas Savings Loan Co. building, New Philadelphia today.

An institute will be hid at Strasburg. Dec. 1-2. Speakers at both institutes will be H. P.

Miller of Columbus and Mrs. Paul Young of Warren. An institute will be held Feb. 11-12 at Stonecreek and at Pleasant Valley, Washington-twp. Feb.

9-10. S. B. Stowe and Mrs. J.

E. Miller, Columbus, will speak at each. Independent institutes, which will not receive state aid, will be held at Wolf, Westchester, Dundee and Oldtown, according to present plans. J. P.

Schmidt, state supervisor of farm institutes, gave a short talk to the leaders Tuesday. PROBE STORY COAST GUARD REFUSED AID New York, Aug. 21. Capt. John M.

Kelley, master of the yacht Sabolo. from which Van Lear Black, wealthy Baltimore publisher, wras lost Monday night, testified in a hearing before the U. S. steamboat inspection service today that a vessel which hailed him during the search failed to offer aid. Kelley said the boat appeared while he was scanning the waters off Shrewsbury Rock with searchlights for some trace of Black.

He believed it might have been a coast guard patrol boat. A man on the craft shouted, "What are you doing at this hour with your Kelley said. "I answered: have lost a man overboard and am searching for The stranger then switched off his lights and the boat disappeared in the darkness without further word despite the four blasts blown by Kelley as a call for help, Kelley said. On the basis of these charges, two Inquiries are expected to be started at once to ascertain whether a coast guardsman violated not only an ancient rule of the sea, but an unvarying tradition of the service as well. The steamboat inspection service and officers of the coast guard will both make Investigations.

HANGS SELF IN STATE PRISON Columbus, Aug. 21. (UP) James Raymond, 30, sent up from Summit county for burglary, hanged himself in his solitary confinement cell in the state penitentiary some time during the night, it was revealed today when his body was found. Raymond fashioned a rope by looping his overall suspenders. Prison officials said he was placed in at his own request last evening.

No motive for his act was immediately learned. Officials outside the prison were inclined to link the suicide with investigation into the Easter Monday penitentiary fire in which 320 convicts lost their lives. Raymond was serving 10 to 15 years for burglary and larceny. He was received April 8, 1925. His rec ord reveals he served terms in San Quentin prison, California, and in the industrial school, Lancaster.

The cell in which Raymond hang ed himself is reserved for convicts requiring discipline. Officials said request to be confined there was considered "very un HOLD SIUDER RUTS SATURDAY AT DOME Ftmeral eerrloee for Mrs. Idella Studer, 68, who died at her home in Shaneevllle yesterday at 8 a. m. following ten days illness with complications, will be held Saturday at 1:30 p.

m. at the residence. Burial will be made in East Lawn cemetery, ShanssvUle, by J. W. Oeckler.

Mrs. Studer was bore in Madison. but had resided in Shanes- vllle for many years. She was married twice, her first husband dying many years ago. Surviving are the husband, Frederick Studer and the following children: Mrs.

Laura Broarecht, Galena, HL; Mrs. Irene Fair, Dundee; Leroy Nolan, this city; Fred Studer, Mina, South Dakota; Rev. Ethel Bishop, Lucas; and Mrs. Etta Wingard. Sugar creek.

Twelve grand children and two great grand children also survive. RAIN CAUSES WRECK Wet pavement was blamed today for the collision between a Dodge truck and a Whippet sedan at the Intersection of Third and Water streets in Uhrichsvllle this morning. The running board of the truck was mashed and a fender was damaged on the sedan. PARKED TOO LONG Dr. D.

B. Bebout, this city, cited to appear in traffic court, this city, on a charge of parking overtime in West High avenue, and Elmer White, this city, was ordered into the same court for parking too long in the public square. CHICKENS STOLEN Mrs. Frank Henry, 517 North Fourth street, Dennison, reported to Dennison police this morning that nine Plymouth Rock chickens were stolen from her pens last evening. FAMOUS FEUDIST IS SERIOUSLY ILL Baltimore, Aug.

21. The condition of William Anderson (Cap) Hatfield, last of the famous Hatfleld-McCoy feudists. termed critical at Johns Hopkins hospital today. According to Dr. B.

D. Smith, personal physician, who accompanied the 67-year-old feudist from his home in Logan. W. Va. Hatfield has been in a coma for three days.

Dr. Smith yesterday conferred with Hopkins specialists and several tests were made in an attempt to diagnose illness, which is said to have bafflM other physicians. The feudist was accompanied by hla son, Coleman A. Hatfield, and a daughter. Hatfield, it is said, was 17 when the feud began in 1880, as a result of a lawsuit over the sale of some pigs.

The family battle waged several months, resulting in many deaths to members of both families, and even drew into the controversy the governors of Kentucky and West Virginia. The Hatfield family claimed victory when the McCoys retreated to Kentucky after guerilla warfare which kept the residents of that section of the country In arms. SHIPWRECK VICTIMS FACED DEATH DANCING Samoa. Aug. 21.

the ugly spectre of death hovered over them, passengers aboard the stricken vessel Tahiti danced to lilting jazz tunes and heard a description of their plight being broadcast from a radio station at Sydney, Australia. This was learned today from the crew of the ill-fated vessel brought here with the Tahiti passengers by the rescue ship Ventura. Officers of both the Tahiti and the Ventura declared the doomed ship would have sunk with all on board had the Ventura arrived an hour later than it did. Thrilling tales of bravery and gay acceptance of an uncertain fate were pieced together from tales told by members of both vessels After the Ventura had reached the scene in the South Seas where the Tahiti, bound from Australia to San Francisco, was floundering considerable difficulty was met in getting the passengers into an or derly position beside the life boats Many Insisted upon dancing until the dance number was Vnished, while others repaired to their staterooms to shave and otherwise prepare for the transfer to the waiting Ventura. The lart to leave the doomed ahip was Captain Toten, following an nge old custom of the sea.

Just before he climbed into the life boat he unfurled the British ensign and hoisted it to full mast. As he boarded the Ventura he unfurled the American flag amidst cheers from both British and American passengers and crews. All stood in silence with hats removed as a few minutes later the Tahiti took its final plunge to disappear beneath the waters. WILLIAMS WILL FLY TOEUROPE Hop for Germany Before Saturday Washington, Aug. 21, Q.

Williams, trans-Atlantic aviator, expects to leave from Old Orchard, before Saturday on a flight to Germany, it was learned here today. Williams has informed commerce department 'officials of his intention to make the flight in an Emsco monoplane, accompanied by William Marshals, co-pilot, and Ted Lundgren, navigator. Lundgren recently arrived in New York from California with the plane. Williams called at the commerce department today and obtained the approval of assistant secretary for aeronautics Young and director of air regulations Budwlg for hit, flight. He then went to the state department to make necessary arrangements to enter Germany and land in Berlin.

In talking with Assistant Secretary Young, Williams revealed that he planned to continue from Berlin to either Japan or Gtiina. If the fliers are successful in the hop to Germany, they have indicated they intend to fly on to Tokio. This would be third flight over the Atlantic, he and Lewris flew from New York to Rome more than a year ago, making a stop hear the Spanish coast. Then only a few weeks ago, Williams flew to Bermuda and back without a stop, the flight causing the commerce department to suspend his license for a week because he failed to get permission to fly over the British island. REPORT CASES OF PARALYSIS Two additional cases of infantile paralysis were placed under quarantine today, on the anniversary of the epidemic three years ago which claimed a total of seventeen lives.

The new patients are Clarence Buehler, 21, son of Lewis Buehler, Oldtown Valley, and Everett Berkshire, 3, living in Oxford township. Lydia. 9, daughter of Max Bill, Parral, was quarantined for the disease a week ago. LABOR FEDERATION RE ELECTS OFFICERS Columbus, Aug. 21.

Harry McLaughlin, Cleveland, president of the Ohio State Federation RELIEF BOARD (Continued rrom page 1) Robinson, member of the Dawes reparations commission, has been called here by President Boover to direct establishment of financial credit relief for drought-stricken districts. The Los Angeles banker who sat with Charls G. Dawes and Owen D. Young in the formulation of the European financial set-up will ar rive Monday for a conference with Mr. Hoover.

Robinson is a member of the federal relief committee appointed by the president. The meeting here of banker representatives on the state drought re lief committees has been delayed un til next Tuesday in order to enable Robinson to get here from Los Angeles. Friends of Mr. Hoover believe the same credit plan used in Arkansas, Mississippi and Louisiana during the Mississippi river flood will be employed. The federal flood committee agreed tentatively upon this general theory in a conference at the White House late yesterday.

Under this plan, bankers and leading citizens of each state would organize groups to endorse ones which would be accepted by the intermediate credit banks. The banks would issue debentures to cover their advances. The federal committee is agreed, according to Secretary of Agricul- ANNOUNCE NEW TRUSTEES HEAR AIRPLANE LINE jjjx UT pLEA Pittsburgh, Aug. 21. is believed to be one of the largest of recent national aviation deals was announced here yesterday with formation of a $4,000,000 aviation corporation to operate a new transcontinental air service through Pittsburgh with mail offices and headquarters here.

The new company, to be known as the United Aviation Company, will operate a transcontinental air line from New York to Los Angeles, via Pittsburgh, Columbus. Indianapolis, St. Louis, Kansas City, Albuquerque, N. and under present plans. Merger of three large operating companies and another aviation Opposition to County Auditor J.

A. proposal for Tuscarawas county boards of trustees to cut their road levies for 1931 was expressed at the meeting of trustees held this aft ernoon in the common pleas court room. Loren Beans. Union township, asked why the cut is not made from the top state and county. Neff, who presided over the meeting, suggested reduction of the road levy in preference to reducing the poor fund, which be done in the face of general suffering and want among the unemployed.

C. A. Wright, Uhrichsvllle, sug- scarcely an ache or Bayer Aspirin promptly. It remove the but it will relieve the pain! aches. Backaches.

Neuritis neuralgia. Yes, and rheumat Read proven directions for important uses. Genuine Asj depress the heart. Look the Bayer cross: A concern resulted in formation ofgested that if Prosecuting Attorney the new company, according to J. j.

recommendation that D. Cordon, president of Pittsburgh the children be sent to the chil- Airways, who will serve as treas-1 home and their parents to urer of the new company. Ifche infirmary in event that the poor Pittsburgh Airways, United States fund is depleted, that they may be Airways, Southwest Air Fast Express I committed at the start instead of and Ohio Air Transport Company are parties to the merger. Paul Wick. Youngstown, head waiting.

Wright is opposed to slashing the poor levy. Auditor Neff pointed out that the concern. of Labor, and all other officers, ture Hyde, that credit is what MASKED GANGS IN KANSAS MILK WAR Kansas City, Aug. 31. Gangs of masked women and men who allegedly Intimidated truck drivers and a rifle skirmish between snipers and guards marked the day in Kansas between rural and city distributors.

No casualties resulted. The entered its second week today. It began when suburban producers of raw milk demanded a price increase for their product sold to city wholesalers, pasteurizers and distributors. RETURNS FROM CAMP Robert Coleman, son of Dr. and Mrs.

H. A. Coleman, has returned home after spending the summer in training at Camp Gridley, Knox, Indiana at the naval training camp. Washington, Aug. 21.

Col. Amos W. W. Woodcock, director of the federal prohibition bureau, will leave Sept. 4 to investigate enforcement conditions in Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Michigan This is the first inspection trip the director has made since he took office a few weeks ago.

ggf3 Ardrey McTlvaine, daughter of Earl Mcllvame, West High avenue extension, underwent a tonsil operation today. Lucille, 14. daughter of Mr. ajrd L. C.

Murphy, Walnut street, Dover, underwent a tonsil anekasle- fioid operation, todajr. COUNTY STUDENTS ENTER WITTENBERG Five Tusqarawas county boys and girls will enroll in the Freshman class at Wittenberg college this fall. They are: Joe Price, 236 Seventh street this city; George Marsh, 133 Seventh street this city; Raymond Low, 321 East Seventh street, Dover; Mildred J. Rea rick, 115 Grader avenue, Dover, and Arlene Bahler, Sugarcreek. CHARTER SPECIAL TRAIN FOR BAND A special train which has been chartred especially for the occasion will transport approximately eighty members of the Philadelphia high school band on its annual outing to Cedar Point and Cleveland next Wednesday morning.

The special train will leave this city Wednesday at 9 a. m. and will not return with the excusioners until Saturday evening. Sonny Schenk band director, announced today that there will be plenty of room in the train and that anyone wishing to make the trip can do so for $6.80. round trip.

Those wishing to make the trip are requested to communicate with Mr, Schenk Immediately. The festival and dance which was to have been held at Mt. View Park this evening to raise additional funds has been postponed until Friday evening. were re-elected today at the closing session of the annual convention. They will serve for three years, instead of one as heretofore.

Resolutions fixing the new ofil- cial terms at three years, were adopted session convened. The election was to have been held this afternoon but was; advanced by resolution so dele- gates could return to their homes. Officers re-elected besides Me- Laughlin were: Lee Hall, Columbus, first vice president; William M. Morgan, Newark. second vice president; Stanley Ogg, Hamilton, third vice president; James F.

Malley. Cleveland, fourth vice president; Michael Leyden, Youngstown, 5th vice president; O. B. Chapman. Dayton, 6th vice president; Charles Stolf, Cincinnati, 7th vice president; Thomas J.

Donnelly, Columbus, secretary- treasurer. Resolutions condemning the importation of prison made goods into Ohio and the use of prison laborers on public works, were among passed late Wednesday. Similar resolutions have been passed at former conventions. A warning to beware of which are seeking to amend the Ohio compensation law, was sounded by G. W.

Savage, Columbus, secretary of the Ohio union and Arnold Bill, Cleveland. needed most now7. Farmers must have money to get seeds for planting fall pasturage, as as sufficient funds to purchase immediate feed for cattle, he said. of the Ohio Air Transport Com-; road program has been prosecuted pany, will be president of the new vigorously for the last five years, and that there will always be somebody a hundred yards from an improved road no matter how much money is PROSECUTOR ESCAPES PLOT OF ASSASSINS I represented at the meeting. I Lexington, Aug.

21, City Prosecutor Harry B. Miller narrowly escaped death at the hands of would-be assassins today i as he was fired on from an bile at an intersection on the out-! I skirts of the city. Miller, who said; he had received several letters threatening his life, returned the fire and his assailants fled. Several bullets punctured the automobile. He was returning from a visit with friends w7hen occupants of the car, which was parked near the intersection, opened fire.

Miller has been conducting an anti-vice crusade here. Country Dance Biggest In Ohio SPANISH BALL ROOM DOVER SATURDAY Herb Accordion Wizards We Lead and Others Follow CROWDS! D-A-N-C-E at Mt. View Park Friday Night for the Benefit of THE HIGH SCHOOL BAND ROYDEN MOORE SYNCOPATORS Look on the Classlfiied page. ARREST MINISTER WHO DESERTS WIFE Monroe, Aug. 21, Charged with having deserted his wife and five children, including an infant, the Rev.

Robin McCay, 35, recently arrested in connection with a bible school probe in Pontiac, was in the county Jail here today. Mrs. Vala the wife, w7ho preferred the charges, told authorities her husband who "is not a deserted her in Whiteford township, near the Ohio line June 10, 1929. She lost track of him until he was arrested recently at Pontiac with the Rev. Elmer C.

Johnson in connection with alleged irregularities of the Johnson Bible school at Pontiac. Justice John Foucher here issued a arrant on the non-support charge. Pontiac authorities will claim the Rev. McCay if he is not convicted here. Charles Wilson, assistant prosecutor of Oakland county, advised Monroe officials.

DIES TRYING TO SAVE WORKMAN MAYOR STUCKY GIVES STRANGER RUSH PROMISE MORE RAIN IN COUNTY Government Weather Forcaater John Dllger. Dover, today predicted that Tuscarawas county will be visited by additional showers within the next twenty-four hours. Records at the Dover weather plant reveal that five-hundredths of an inch of rain fell last evening and twenty- five hundredths fell this morning. The rain did not cause any noticeable rise in county streams but did check any further decline. ADVERTISES TO FIND WIFE WHO SKIPPED A.

Covic, Newcomerstown, believes in the power of advertising. Covic today sent a communication to The Dally Times asking for the insertion mt an ad to find his wife, Mary Elizabeth Covic. who left her home and five little children several days ago. would also like to know whether she mtends to return to Covic stated. A Times AS vfli it COUNTY DEMOCRATS MAY RE-ELECT HEAD The county central committee of the Democratic party will probably meet nxt Wednesday afternoon to organize and to elect a chairman and secretary for the executive committee.

Re-election of R. N. Nussdorfer as chairman of the executive committee, is believed to be agreed upon. PICK SUPERINTENDENT FOR XVILLE MINES Lester Paul Young, Pittsburg, a former employe of the 6. Gypsum today was employed superintendent for the clay and coal mines of The Evans 8ewer Pipe Uhrichsville.

Young is a graduate of the school of mining and engineering ar Ohio State University, PainesvUle, Aug. 21. futile attempt by Sheldon Harris, 26. of Perry to save the life of Kenneth Collier, 22, of Paine6ville, a fellow workman, when Collier was clinging to a high tension wire of the Cleveland Illuminating Company, for which they were linemen, resulted in the death of both men today. According to O.

O. Hausch, Lake county coroner, who investigated the accident, the men were installing a on a pole on the North Ridge road, a mile east of here, when Collier became caught on a live wire. Twow other workmen on the ground observed Harris hammering frantically on arms. He succeeded in breaking Collier loose, but the Utter fell to the ground. They looked up to see Harris hanging onto the wire.

One arm waa hanging limp at his side with the glove in fUmes. Other members of the line crew nearby were called and Harris was taken down. EATON TAKES STAND IN MERGER SUIT Younggstown, Aug. 21. Trial of Cyrus 8.

suit to block the billion dollar Sheet Tube-Bethlehem Steel Corporation merger, neared a climax today as the 46-year-old capitalist and Industrial leader went oo the stand to testify in opposition to the merger. Eaton was expected to be one of the last witnesses for the merger forces, which he himself leads, who charge merger terms are unfair and that Sheet and Tube shareholders will forfeit $46,000,000 if the consolidation is consummated. CUT TAXI RATES Uhrichsvllle and Dennison residents are reaping the benefits of a tgxicab fare war which wras brought about by Rudolph Dradt, Uhrichsville, taxi line operator. Dradt slasned fares from twenty- five cents to fifteen cents but makes an additional charge of five cents for extra stops. Stanford S.

Richards. Morgantown, West Virginia, who lost half of liis foot in an accident, was given fifteen minutes to get out of Dover this morning, by Mayor W. R. Stucky, who permitted Richards to keep his $1 for transportation. Richards, who was arrested at 6 p.

m. yesterday at Second and Factory streets, blamed an assortment of whiskey, beer and bay rum imbibed in Dennison for his pltglw. A begging card found in possession, was left behind by the traveler of his own volitAn. Mayor Stucky warned not to resort to the begging Richards promised to try to keep out of Dover, but with the reaerva- tlon that forever Is a long ORDINANCE NO. 1605 To regulate the trimming of trees.

Be it ordained by the Council of the City of New Philadelphia State of Ohio. Section 1. That all trees, located along the streets, boulevards, and drives and lanee, when necessary for the proper and most efficient distribution of lights enscted for the purpcwe of street-lighting, shall be so trimmed, that the lbnbe of treee shall not extend cm- such street, boulevard, drive or lane, more than twenty feet, for a height of twenty feet above level of such street, boulevard, drive or lane. The lunbs or branches, of such trees located as aforesaid, extending over side-walks shall be trimmed to a height of ten feet above the level of such sidewalks. Section 2.

The director of public service, shall trim, or cause to be trimmed, all trees provided for, In Section 1, hereof. All of such trimming shall be done in the most approved manner, at the time of such trimming; and in a manner that will not mar the appearance of the trees. Section 3. All such trimming, and the expenses thereof, for the purposes herein set forth, shall not be chargeable to the abutting property owmers. Section 4.

That an emergency exists, and council so declares, and that this ordinance shall be in full force and effect from and after Its passage. Passed this 18th day of July, 1930. Attest: ai-ath E. F. Shumaker, Clerk.

H. A. COLEMAN President of Council. FOR QUICK CLEARANCE SALE OF 90 SUITS 41 SUITS that were $16.75 to $22.50 39 SUITS that were $22.50 and up 12 Odd new styles, mosUy lighter shades, sizes 35 to 42 taken from regular stock. A few were a few $19.50 and the rest $22 50.

Guaranteed. You never saw greater bargains. Some were $22.50, some and others much more. Sizes 35 to 46. Mostly light and mosium Quality certain.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1865-1968