.-AN INDIANA COUNTY NEWSPAPER THAT SE R
Y MEMOIR Of THE PAMILY-i
ft
WKATHIM
Mwtly clotwly MMt snow
In MUtti portion tooty,
day, ptobtbly snow an* not much
ohang* tninnflCfaitiM, wy tnt
Weather
. :-,J
,
IF WEST CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA
COVERING THE WORLD FROM THE CO
INDIANA,
VOLUME 84,—NO, 97.
Ttoftkt
fhlladetphta
«n this morning, W
hate to go to wot* In tht
see who to spWk to-
TWO1
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1937
OTE TO JAPAN Will
RCE INDEMNIT
I U. 8. Bunbort That Japmm Sank on Yangtii |
PANAY CASUALTY
El EN MAI
JURY
Wants Suarantii
POSH RESCUE Against Any Falur
ORCHIDS FftOM PANAY
*
NEW YORK, Dec. 14.-(/P)— *
Katherine Brown Hughes had or- *
chlds from her husband for her »
* birthday but she would rather*
* have a personal message to reas- *
* aire her that he came through *
* the sinking of the gunboat Panay *
* near Nanking, with nothing more *
serious than a fractured leg.
* Th6 otchids, with a card writ- *
* ten months ago by Lieutenant * tanking Is in Flames;
Two Women arid
* Commander James J. Hughes for *
bride of 19 months, stood on *
Form New Sine
Men to Decide Fate ** his
a table beside her as she talked *
Government
* last night, shortly after her arriv- *
of Mrs. Karmendi
* al from Atlantic City.
*
EBENSBURG, Dec. 14.—(flV^A jury * "It is terrible not to know- * SHANGHAI, Dec. 14.—(*)—FiftyLONDON, Dec. 14.—(AP)—Japanese Ambassador SI
.Whether he is safe and being giv- * two survivors of the bombed United
t'
-„,' ^ .. ".->' v"- ''*'rtV&^^'t^fWW*V&&ff?#*-**.'Pof two women and ten men h«jard ** en
proper medical care," she said, * States Gunboat Panay today made Yoshida today apologized to Foreign Secretary Anthony
opening testimony today at'thi jhird * with a wistful glance at the flow- *
Most critical International Incident e( ihe Sfno-Japanese war respited when the V. S. gunboat Panay
for Japanese attacks on two British gunboats in the Yang
WM bombed and sunk in the Yanfise river, where l» Is pictured above, by diving Japanse war planes. Amermurder trial of Mrs. Margaret jftar- * er's.
* their way from an Inland refuge bac.s
river
Sunday.
toward the Yangtze river, carrying
ican authorities, striving to find and aid survivors, (eared many had been killed. One seaman was known
mendl, twice convicted and; iwice
dead and the commander and executive officer were wounded. Several V. S. emkwsy officials were aboard
This
was the second official apology in two days for
their
two
-dead
and'
eight
seriously
sentenced to death for participation
the boats. Three €. S. merchant vessels, owned by Standard OH Company, also were bombed. One was
wounded.
incident,
a
military attache having expressed regrets to,1
v
in the slaying of her three-yeaf-oill
missing and believed sunk, one was burning, and the third was beached. Japanese accepted responsibility
Awaiting their arrival from Han- British war office yesterday.
son,
Matthew,
Jr.
£..''•
shan, some 20 miles inland, the United
(or the Incident.
Attorneys completed selection o& the
The ambassador said his government was nqt yet.in J
States Gunboat Oahu, the British
jury, most of whom are parents, late
Gunboat Bee, three Japanese warships possession of the facts, but was actively pressing inquries.' '
yesterday. Prospective jurors who exand a Japanese airplane stood by at
The gunboats, the Ladybird and the Bee, were not <
pressed conscientious objections tb
Hohslen to aid the injured.
capital punishment were dismissed.
The two known dead in the Japan damaged.
The 25-year-old defendant ^escaped
ese bombardment Sunday of the
Despite the apolocies, Britain was understood to be,
death in the electric chair twice when
Panay and three other American vesthe State Supreme Court granted new; Committees Chosen; Tests sels were Charles L. Ensiminger of paring to dispatch a severe note to Toyko, and Eden. indfca
trials.
Beach, Calif., Panay storekeep- he would make a new statement to the House of Commons^a
In Reading and English Ocean
Both convictions were in Blair
"Mary Good!" called Clerk of Courts
er,
and
Sandro Sandri, Italian news- in the day.
o
where juries decided she was ;
paper
man
who had sought refuge on
There were growing indications that the British gov*
Earl Long in Criminal Court late yes- Requiem High Mass in County,
Show High Marks
equally guilty with 25-year-old Roy
Daily Predictions H e r e terday as President Judge E- E. Creps
board the vessel.
ment
would look to President Roosevelt for leadership in
Lockard for the slaying of "Sonny"
O
Available information of the attack
St. Bernard's Thursproceeded to the first trial on the list
Karmendi, who died April 1, 1936.
Made By Geography
Members of three important com- which endangered 79 foreigners, most- next move if protests fail to gain full satisfaction for the
The Commonwealth charges fhe two mittees were named last night by Dr. ly Americans, was that two were tacks on British and American vessels.
after disposing of pleas and motions.
• •'"
day Morning
Students
hit the boy on the head with a raildead,
eight
seriously
wounded,
two
Two women walked toward the jury
The
British
nation,
aroused
by
the
Oriental
situation,
road spike because they feared he Charles H. Bee, president of the In- slightly wounded, eleven foreigners
box. Halting, they looked at each
THOMAS HOOK. A requiem might disclose the "dates" of Mrs. diana Board of Education, in its re- and 81 Chinese missing, and probably parently had no intention of letting the matter rest
When all other topics of conversa- other wondering which was mistaken. MRS.
v
dispatch of a routine protest.
high mass in St. Bernard Roman Karmendi and Lockard, her WPA gular monthly meeting,
tion are exhausted; there always is
a total of 66 saved.
Summoning
them
to
the
bench,
worker
admirer.
The 'Panay -party had fled to Hanthe weather to fall back on.
Catholic Church at 10 -a. m. ThursRalph W. McCreary, chairman, and
.,-'-. " o.
9
'-oThe third trial was moved to this Harry W. McConh were named to the Shan to ayoitChinese-Japanese fightSo a new activity at Indiana State Judge Creps learned each was a day, has been arranged lot iMrs. Mary Cambria
County seat because, defense Finance committee; Guy Kanable, ing on thfc river banks.
Teachers College brings a new fea- "Mary Good," that the one who lives Catherine (Keifline) Hfabk, 80, wife
There Was -no word of the 68 missture to the Indiana Evening Gazette. in White Township near Indiana, had of Thomas Hook, and whose death attorneys contended, a fair trial was chairman, and B. Dwight Ray, Buildin Blair County.
ings and. Grounds committee, and ing Chinese members ol the crews of
Classes in climatology and meteor- been summoned by the sheriff and occurred in ' the family home, 427 impossible
Matthew Karmendif Sr., an Altoona Raymond Smith, chairman, and Mrs the Meiari, .Melnsla and Meiping,
er that the other, a resident of Indiana, North Fifth street, at 7 a. m. Monology have been studying weather
silk'aiprer
and "Sonny's" father, de- ~
~~
' "~ '"""«cornmittee\ Standard Oil <<2oropany boats destroyday/
The
Rev.
Father
James
Brady
conditions and now through the ac- had seen the jury list in the paper,
trial that "I don't
:hpols Normar ed in the bombing attacks for which
uisition of the latest improved scien with her name in it and when she will officiate and interment will be in claref^'tlte yfuist
do with her," but
S. Hoffman, re- the Japanese Navy has accepted full
tiflc equipment, daily forecasts are
•re did not receive a summons, presumed St Bernard Cemetery.
lyChe<*at in the cpurtroottv
Allege, has inform responsibility. It ww believed, hpybeing made.
.. had been lost and decided it . A A daughter of Louis -and RoaeSchool that the up- ever, that most of them had
amia
'JKuhn)
Keifline,
the
deceased.
The collegiate forecasters1- nave would be proper to report.
...,,.
7
youi
<The -Mary Good,- of- White Town,
hinlWei
^
«Mttn8f«land
County,
eligible for admissiol
the Gazette, the first of wi
ship, was assigned to the jury box to
to State College next ously wounded were; not known here, delivered a formal note „.—„ ^—, —
printed today on Page 2. This feature and the Mary Good, of Indiana, was been residenVin Indiana for seventy- announced an attempt would be
States govern$enr
Available information thus far listed principle, major points of President day tp<rerenfotc« tylih a
will continue daily on the same page. ordered given one day's pay "for her five years. She was a devout member to bring Lockard from the
Commenting on tests made in read' ames of 22 survivors, including Lieu- Roosevelt's demands for-, satisfaction
of the St. Bernard congregation and County jail to testify for Mrs.
It should be interesting to compare trouble."
•
ing by fifth grade pupils in the enant Commander James Joseph for the sinking of the 'United States Presi«en,t?Roosevelt's den, ^.
took an active interest in the work of mendi.
the local forecast with that made by
satisfaction ,from JaJ?an for the,
The jurors are:
Horace Mann School, Superintendent Hughes, Lieutenant Arthur F. Anders, gunboat Panay.
the congregation, especially in the
the United States Weather Bureau at
ing of the. American punboaV
Miss
Bertha
Brady,
retired
Ebensuid
Jim
Marshall,
Colliers
magazine
Ladies'
Aid
Society.
A
faithful
wjfe,
Koontz
said
their
average
median
Is'
Foreign
Minister
Kbkt
Hirota
sent
Pittsburgh.
and three Sttndard'Oil snips.
burg
school
teacher,
and
Mrs.
Ella
writer,
all
of
whom
were
wounded.
to
United
States
Ambassador
Joseph
6.0
as
compare
with
the
national
ava
loving
mother
and
a
firm
friend,
Instructed by Paul Boyts, of the geSecretary Hull waited only .«.„
Zimmerman
of
Conemaugh,
F.
Hayden
Vines
of
Roanoke,
Va.,
there will be mafly kind and fond
erage of 5.3 or seven tenths of a year
C. Grew the note which:
ography faculty, members of the cliJohn Davis, an electrician and in advance of the standard for their arrived at Wuhu with a slight injury.
memories of a long, useful life.
1. 'Expressed apologies and regrets; complete official information on;
matory class make observations every
actual number of casualties and =
Captain C. H. Carlson of the Meian
Surviving are her husband; two father; Henry Gooderham, farmer and grade.
2. Promised indemnification;
morning at 8 o'clock. Official college
conditon of survivors before dispj
father
of
11;
Otto
Cook,
fireman,
and
was
unaccounted
for.
Tests
also
were
made
in
English
sons:
Torrence
W.
Hook,
who
lives
3.
Stated
measures
to
prevent
a
reobserver is John Kuzmiak, of Frankfather
of
two;
Frank
Callihan,
un(Continued
on
Page
Two)
Funeral services for two Johnstown in the parental home, and David
at the high school, the superintendent
currence of the incident already had ing to Tokyo a vigorous written
lin, who is assisted by other students.
,
.
been taken.
Kuzmiak, a Secondary Education stu- hunters, who were killed in Somerset Richard Hook of Butler, and a dau- married liquor store clerk; H. W. reported, the senior class, to which
note was expected to ems
The note was presented to Ambas- in The
dent and geography major, is a mem- County Saturday in the closing hours aghter, Mabel, the wife of C. E. Fis- Davies, former steel company offi- the tests were given, showing for the FOUR - ALARM
greater detail and vposslbly in. t
cial and father of four; U. G. Custer, upper half of the class 160 aa comsador Grew before the gist of Presi- forceful
ber of the Alpha Omega Geographers, of the deer season, will be conducted cus, also of Butler.
language the^oral repre
FIRE
THREATENS
retired
farmer
and
18
times
a
grandpared with a standard average of 151
dent Roosevelt's memorandum was tlons conveyed
on honorary scholastic fraternity in at the same hour tomorrow afternoon
yesterday to Jap
and the lower half 121 as against
and both will be burled in the same ANGELO SGRO, 77 died in his home father.
presented to Emperor Hlrohito. One Ambassador Hirosi
geography.
Saito on
Lester Spangler, a farmer-widower standard of 108, with the class averPITTSBURGH, Dec. 14. — (/P) — A of the highest government officials
in NuMine Sunday.
Most conspicuous of the instruments cemetery.
instructions from the President
with
10
children;
W.
H.
Black,
67;
UOO.OOO
four-alarm
fire,
following
an
age
137
as
against
the
standard
class
Surviving
are
his
widow,
Mrs,
Rites
for
William
Frick,
22,
who
was
said
it
was
received
quietly.
used is the new thermometer shelter,
Mr. Roosevelt demanded, tin
explosion, destroyed the two-story
President Roosevelt's memorandum the Secretary of State, full inde»
a box-like affair, three feet sqiwre. shot with a "pumpkin ball," fired Lucy Sgro; six daughters: Mrs. Rosy Reed Krug, father of two, and Paul average of 120.
Jones,
32-year-old
miner
and
father
furnace
building
of
the
McCulloughhad asked that the Japanese governwhich stands five feet off the ground. from his own .16-gauge shotgun near Mats of Anita, Mrs. Mary Marra and
Dalzell Crucible Company in Thirty- ment consider for presentation to the for the loss of life and property':
Nancy Pinnizzatto of Nigora of two.
Louver boards leave the delicate me- North Fork dam, will be conducted at Mrs.
volved, formal apologies from
Sixth street today.
(Continued on Page Two)
government of the United States fuil Japanese government, and gua
chanism housed within open to the 2:30 p. m. in the home of his sister,
Flarr.es
plumed
100
feet
in
the
air,
expressions of regret and proffer of
REGIMENTED SANTA
air but protect it from snow and rain. Mrs. Lillian Abel, 237 David street.
SWOC MEETS
threatening a nearby refinery of the full compensation and methods guar- against future "indiscriminate
A double roof wards off the heat of The Rev. Theodore Buch, D. D-, pas- SEES LIGHT
FOR
FIRST
TIME
Standard dil Company of Pennsylva- anteeing against a repetition of. any ing" of American shipping.
* NEW YORK, Dec. 14.—</P)—
the sun. The shelter is placed above tor of Zion Lutheran Church, will ofThe President transmitted at
nia, where thousands of gallons of similar attack.
THRU
GIFT
EYE
*
Santa
Claus
is
being
menaced
by
ficiate
and
interment
will
be
in
,a grassy plot to shield it from radiasame
time to the Emperor of Ja
PITTSBURGH,
Dec.
14.—(/P)—The
gasoline
ware
stored.
Another
Japanese government an expression
* afoot to regulate the length of his
tion from the ground in summer. The Grandview Cemetery.
of "shock and c
more
than
900
delegates
to
the
openNEW ORLEANS, Dec. 14.—W—
* afoot tor egulate the length of his
statement was issued in connection Only in rare instances does the
Services for Robert Russell Shank,
Indiana shelter is situated on tha west
with
the
fall
of
Nanking.
campus near the library entrance to 25, of 74 duPont Place, who was killed Physicians reported today Frank ing session of the first steel workers' * beard.
TRAFFIC TOLL
a state address a message
Premier Prince Fumimaro Konoye of
John Button Hall. The instrument in- with his own gun near Shanksville, Chabina, 19, had seen light through organization convention were asked * The sponsors of the idea, which
ally
to another ruler in
OFJDEATHS
2,538
today
to
delegate
to
their
officials
full
*
will
be
placed
before
the
first
issued
the
document
which
declared
side the shelter is a thermograph, will be conducted at 2:30 p. m. in the left eye donated to him by John
cidents
between nations.
powers
to
negotiate
wage
agreements
* annual convention of Department
that "birth of a new China will serve
which gives a graphic record of the Second Presbyterian Church, Mox- Amos, 67-year-old hospital companion.
Informed observers said only
Reported
by
the
Revenue
Departwith
445
firms
to
replace
those
ex*
Store
Santa
Clauses
next
Sunday,
to
safeguard
foreign
interests
in
the
Dr.
George
Halk
sald.it
was
a
good
ham,
by
the
Rev.
H.
A.
Bailey.
Intertemperature for seven days.
sire to impress the entire Jap
ment today:
* affirm their faith in full, flowing
Far East."
Other apparatus used is a standard ment will be in Grandview Cemetery, indication that the operation, by piring February 28.
nation as forcibly as possible withl
Philip
Murray,
white-haired
chairKilled
20
*
whiskers
of
traditional
style,
yet
It
summarized
Japan's
contention
which
a
portion
of
the
cornea
of
rain gauge, which measures the
(Continued on Page Two)
man
of
the
ClO's
industrial
unit
in
Injured
387
* they insist there is virtue in their
that she had pursued a policy of "nonAmos' eye was transferred to Cha>
amount of precipitation in 24 hours; a
Since January 1:
steel, made the request near the end * claim for a uniform length.
aggravation" and said the Nanking
bina's eye, would be a success.
sling psychrometer, which measures
Killed
2.538
of a lengthy report detailing activities * The beard should not be so
government had been reduced to a
relative humidity; the Beauford Scale,
Injured
58,897 mere local government.
of his union since its establishment ut * long, they argue, that it will get
Attention
for recording wind velocity, and both
Lion*' Governor
* tangled up in the gears of electric
Earlier today the premier and the
V F. W. and Auxiliary members July, 1036.
aneroid and mercurial barometers,
Indiana
Eventnc
Gaiette
*
trains;
nor
should
it
be
so
short
cabinet
council
had
heard
Hirota's
rebe
present
at
Club
Rooms
this
evewhich measure the air pressure.
Make your Christmas shopping port on the Panay incident and the
V. F. W. Club
* that it will not convince young
ning at 8 o'clock to assist in our
The temperature readings as reST. LOUIS, Dec. 14—<#)—By meet- "Peace For America" program.
easy. Mail the Indiana Evening report of War Minister General Gen
Dutch
Campbell
and
his
band
to*
skeptics.
corded at the college are not reduced ing after midnight the Republican exGazette.
tf. Sugiyama on the capture of Nanking.
night at 10 o'clock.
97x
07x
to sea level readings as they are on ecutive committe pushed well past the
The premier's statement said in
U. S. Weather Bureau maps.
half way mark today in its strenuous
part:
sorting of 1,000 nominees for a policy
Continued on Page Two
committee of 100 while the party's
National Chairman, John D. M, HamJUonn lashed vigorously at his office.
The conferees made a preliminary
canvass of 000 names in alphabetical
order in a nine-hour session behind
closed doors.
Outside observers speculated upon
Coroner John Woods today set
at-least four names as possible choic- Every Major Law of
Thursday at 7:00 P. M. as the time for
es tor chairman of the steering group:
an inquest at the Courthouse- into the
President C, M, Hopkins of Darth.
1937 Legislature
death of Joseph Lutman. aged 28, ol
mouth; James Trusiow Adams, the
Ebensburg. who was fatally injures] in
Is Affected
historian; Senator Frederick Steiwer
••-". O "•'
an automobile accident in Route |23
of Oregon and John H. Wigmore,
(Editor's
Note:
Governor near Nolo early Saturday.
Cfeicaie legal authority,
HARHISBURO, Dec. H.-W)—Legal
'.'" ... 0Charges ol involuntary manslaughtGeorge H. Earle's decision on his
cannon pounded away today at almost
every major law enacted by the 1037
return from Sweden this week er and driving while under the inlegislature.
whether he will retain or dis- fluence ol liquor were made by
Attorney Qeotral Charles J. Mar.
charge Karl de Schweinitz as sec- Pennsylvania Motor Policeman H. Agiotti personally lias taken eommand
retary ol the Department ol Pub- Stephens yesterday before Justice of
A. F. Haas, manager ol the Pitts- in the battle over the 44-hour act,
lic Assistance is just one angle the Peace Walter H. Jackson ugainst
-0burgh agency of the Mutual Life shifted last week toward the Supreme
of the relief picture that will John Urick, aged 81. of Revlw.
Urick was driving an automobile m
HABRISDURG, Dec. 14.—OP)—The E, C. Stockdale, of Saltsburg, was
change January 1- The Indiana
Insurance Co. of N. Y>* mn,QWvptnj Court
Lutman and four others were
that John tteft of Indiana led In Dauphin Gwjwty's historic old little corner grocery shared interest placed on trial in Criminal Court to- Evening Gazette presents the first which
riding, police reported, when the
the agency in paid for annual prem- courthouse, Jofep V- Scott, youthful with it« big competitor in Dauphin day before President Judge E. E. of a series ol articles on another machine
bit a guard rail aud was
ium business and in number ol lives deputy attorney geueral, fenced with County court today in the fight over Creps on a charge of operating a mo> phase—what the county commis- torn apart.
He was arrested in his
tor
vehicle
while
under
the
influence
constitutionality
of
Pennsylvania's
insured lor November.
skmerfare
doing
(0
take
over
the
counsel for the Aperkan Stores Com.
o| liquor.
work o| the abolished poor home a short time after the accident
paoy, ajjgaiUM t§f chain store tax. chain store tax law.
boards.)
Dine and Dance—At Eorke GrillThe hub-bub over the Mihour law The American Stores Company, op- District Attorney Edwin M- Clark
King's Guaranteed Bill- raids
Try our new Hoar.
afx alsuvt drowMd t^ff clamor yggi
is presenting the case ol the COBJposing
the
graded
levy
of
$1
to
$500
Silk boxed sets, calf, pig. goat,
HABBISBUBG, Dec. 14.— WP> on each store based on the number in monweaitb against Stockdale who is
the -'*wtfi*'l*inn3U^y ol other acts
Stag's Guirajitefd Bill Folds,
the Long I83t SMKJOO. but a panoram a chain, submitted photographs of in alleged to have been under the in- Painstaking research by a commission steer and ostrich. Your name in geld
bo*ed lets, ca& pi& vaA, steer, ol the legal trout showed many other dependent grocery stores competini fluence ol liquor when he was driv- of citizens, loag debate in the legisla- free. On sale at Johnston's News
ostrich- your DABM iu gold tree. On laws threatoaed with suits, already with Us units in Philadelphia, Norris- ing an automobile in Indiana. Attor ture, and ftghte in the courts brought Stand, Hall's Book Store, Indiana;
George J. Felt is counsel tor the close to fulAHmeat today the proposal L*vwoaon'«, Clymer. Pa«t Jxtatae'i, ttUi's L
fW
under &r«, or having bad their day in town, Cleaside and Lancaster.
to let 67 hoard* ol county commisUse ol tb* pictures was challenged
court.M-Amo fnt
tf awn nun at,
Pee**** Sctvei
t h*arings next month by John V- Scott, special deputy at- Another Criminal Court jury con- sioners handle Mi» "inside relief
Mail
tee
Indiana
Evening Gatttt*
work
ol
494
poor
boardsvicted
Edward
Gullaee.
aged
13.
c-l
torney
general.
George
Ross
Hull
are aeteduted tar the act to rip out
€**•** it U fr »
to
tri«nds
and
relatives
away tea*
But
leas
than
tcu;«*
weeks
from
the
Cn*vy
Chase,
ol
operating
an
auto
G**rh*rt
poor boards in tfc* state's new reii*l counsel tor the American Stores, saw
— a letter a day.
If
(Continued on Page Three)
87*
on
St.
on Page Three.
«o Pap Two)
LISTMOUNTING:
.
0
•'•-
Bombing of Shippi
COLLEGE MAKES TWO 'MARY GOODS' PLAN SERVICES ^
ANSWER JURY CALL FOR MRS, HOOK
WEATHER'CAST
- .(.•
SCHOOL
BOARD^ DUTIES
Nippon's Note
Meet Profcst
Of U.S.
«-
^^M^ -'^
BURY HUNT VICTIMS
IN SAME CEMETERY
HALF-WAY MARK
ON GOP POLICY 100
Legal Cannon Fires /Wt I_aws$
SETS INQUEST
Counties Prepare mewTask WOODS
IN DEATH OF LIITMAN
P r o bLITTLE CORNER CRIMINAL LIST Commissioners
ably Will Handle
GROCERY RATES IN COURT HERE "Inside Relief"
JOHN NEFF
LEADS
•
-„.»,.—>AGENTS
Shares Interest As Chain Saltsburg Driver On Trial,
Chevy Chase Boy
Store Protest Heard
Found Guilty
In Harrisburg
BV3NWC GAZETTE.
IVER SCHOOLS
WITH WPA CASH
lOOO to Get Work Jobs
According to New
Setup
Memories
LOCAL COLLEGE
WEATHER
Editor Gazette. Sir:
Th*? pho;o2;-;iph on pag? fourteen
Friday, December in. is very f a m i l i a r
tn me. Five Points, whorf. t went, to
:-.rhool and Sunday «c-ho:il; Sugar
creek, where I r;ii,-.«h* the l l - i n r ) i
m u r k e r : M a r l i n pond where I skated
?nd took thr fli-M chew of tobacco neve- have t n k r n a n o t h e r one: the
country More of P. H. Tnisal where I
rarriPd the cpa basket and sold eh"s'niit.'-- to b u y shoe-si the sir^r cam"
wl«'re ivwmy a picnic "•r's held; fl sham
b a t t l e nf C i v i l War veterans such as
P a p i a m Mai'Im. Noah Seanor, J o h n )
p p n k i n . W i l l e i t WHS Mir name of t h e ,
TV tnfTicP There "-'fis ,TII fild grist j
n i i l i H I P '\v wrt'er power t h a t g r o u n d ;
cvir br,r!,"-i-tfil fnr c.ikrs. Thanks for I
p r i n t i n g t! - e photograph.
Foster ,T. Park.
Clarksburg. Pa.
Conllnnel e*lm with probubl*
snow flurries. Wednesihs—••MMdttiMft with eecMlenal mew flurries.
Temporal tire ttt 8 ft. m. today «•«.*
six ricgrm atoeve tere. l,tnv(**t
for 24 hour* previously «•«.« si*
deitrfiM nh»f« tere: tilthest was
20 Affrets nfceve tera.
. MS1WA,
Where Panay Sank Near Nanking
APOLLO YOUTH Horse Laugh INTRUDER SLAYS
DIESASUICIDE
PRETTY WIDOW
Edgar Lee KcIMng, 19,
Had Been Moody,
Coroner Learns
MARRtSBuRG, Dec. 14,- (/P) ~
Whtt's all. this talk about fl 44<hour
weak, rtmarked a Philadelphia horse
to a* Pittttrurgh mule today.
"Why, we've had a 18-houf day and
90-hour week since 1913," the beasts
of Burden asserted in} unison, "and
that goes for maces and oxerl, too."
"Yes, sir, we've had the horse laugl
on our masters these 24 years. Of
course, we never Insisted on it much,
except maybe there wm an occasional
sit-down strike by a mule."
And that's tight.
The taw still is on the books, tt Is
up tr a policeman, constable or agent
of a Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals to check up on the
driver and, "upon his own view of
such offense" or somebody's warrant,
arrest the violator.
0
Police Say Youth Calmest
Killer They Ever
Knew
Orient, paid he might propose a conDeath by suicide came to an Apollo
Dec. 14.— (#> — A
PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 14.-(>P)-A
gressional inquiry.
by which Pennsylvania would flyouth after eating ft pleasant dinner
youth who shot an attractive young
Senator Borah (D-Idaho) interrupt*
ICe Its proposed $2.000.000 motordivorcee and attempted to assault he*
*d drbat* to comment he was uncerwith his parents Sunday afternoon,
tiaining school system thro-igh
comely companion was described by
t a i n \vhather the Panay had been reArmstrong
County
Coroner
M.
M.
funds \till be laid before Govpolice today as one of the calmest
moving American citizens or "policBanks revealed this morning.
Qeorgfl H. Earie when he rekillers they ever had known.
ing for the Standard Oil Company."
Edgar Lee Kelling, 19 years and 20
from Sweden late in the week,
The dead woman, Mrs. "Wllma V.
recommendation will en mo
days old, shot himself at the resiCarpanter, 38, was found last night in
Commissioner Percy W. Foote nf
the bedroom of her fashionable.Camp
dence of his parent! it 7M Warren
Otor police, father of the t r a i n Hill home ofter Miss Mary Oriflln, 22,
avenue,
Apollo,
Sunday
afternoon
at
aystem idea. The schools, he
A fine of $10 to $50 can be imposed. a beauty shop operator, broke £r#i'
1:30 o'clock, flanks said. Young Kell- The law forbids any person "to lead, from the- bonds the Intruder used to
:i, strike right at the heart nf tlv
Continued from ptgi One
Where the U. S. gunboat Panay and three Standard Oil Company
lm of the state's enormous t r a t - ! prelude <*f the t'h.na question and
ing was said to have attended church drive, ride or work" animals for long- tie her to the bed.
tanker* were bombed, oy Japanese planes, killing at least one
11, which yesterday passed the 1
The I t a l i a n embassy said its ChiThe man, Miss Griffin related, conin the morning with his parents, eat- er hours than 15 a day and 90 a week
American seaman and creating • Mrious international "incident"
in Pittsburgh and Philadelphia.
mark for 1937.
l m a r k s the b e g i n n i n g of real, protract- nese secretary. Albert Roh, was befronted
them with a pistol as they
en
a
good
Sunday
dinner,
then
retired hostilities against China."
as Japanese troops closed in on Nanking, is shown on the above
Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins entered the Carpenter home. After
lieved to have brsn aboard the Panay
16 revenue department reported ;
ed to his room. A half hour later a
map.
A
British
gunboat,
speeding
down
the
Yangtze
to
rescue
surO
f
f
i
c
i
a
l
,vic!
iiMofTieial
sentiment—end that n o t h i n g had been heard from
2,518 persons have been lulled '
shot was heard and his parents found Cited the law at a Pennsylvania Labor taking all their money—about $2-^she
vivors of the 66 or more Americans aboard the Panay. ran a
56.570 injured to date this y«?sr. the I f t t t " ! i n c - l ' i d i ' i g oven personal ex- h'tn.
him dead, a bullet wound in the cen- and Industry Department dinner Sat- said he drove them before htm-up*
gauntlet
ot
snell
tire
to
reach
Hohsien.
several
Americans,
in*
pressions t o w a r d Americans from the
stairs.
It was learned in Shanghai that the
ter of his forehead. A 22-calibre re* urday.
total for Pl! Jl?3fi was 2.4H.
eluding Lieui.-Com. J. J. Hughes of the Panay were Known to Dave
using WPA funds for the pro- Japanese man in the street—seemed Jpprnesc? planes made five separate
pea
ting
rifle
was
found
betide
the
"He got a- length of rope from the
been wounded, Survivors were hurried to Wuhu.
to indica'p 'i readiness to accept the attacks on the Pansy and Standard
schools. Foote said, the cost to responsibility
the body, the coroner said.
kitchen and ordered Mrs- Carpenter
and
to
make
all
possible
Oil vessels. The Panay did not sink
Kelling had occasi6nally shown
State at the outset would be about amends for the Panay bombings.
to tic my hands," Miss Griffin added.
for 90 minute?, leading to the hope
moodiness about personal affairs, the
1,000.
Mrs. Carpenter, whose husband died
Produce
This
unofficial
a
t
t
i
t
u
d
e
brought
t h a t all on board had at least a chance
In this way, the WPA would furnish
Coroner learned. 'The young man,
several years ago, while they were
PITTSBURGH,
DSC.
14.—(^-Deand
strange
scenes
in
Tokyo
streets
to swim ashore.
ill but one fifth of the cost of s e t t i n g
graduated from the Apollo High
getting a divorce, was killed when sha
Nagotiations were reported under
tip tight "colleges" at strategic points. public places where Americans met
School in 1936, had had occasional mand slow.
screamed
wildly as the man, about 20,
4 cars, market steady. Bush- slugged Miss
way between Japanese and British auThe original draft of the system. the Japanese public.
work with the Apollo Steel Company, el Apples,
Griffin with the butt of
baskets No. 1 Pennsylvania Hub- his gun.
The Japanese stopped Americans in thorities to remove the possibility of
but was not working in the period bardstons
Which Foote completed before Earle
76-85,
Baldwins
90-1.00.
immediately prior to his death.
left for Europe, would provide each their rounds, removing their hats and f u t u r e attacks on British ships. The
The youth then continued his efWASHINGTON, Dec. 14.—(*)— A ! to complete the farm bill by the time No inquest into the death will be Staymens 1.00. Black Twigs 85; New forts to attack the younger woman,
school 10 miles of test roads on which snively expressing t h e i r sorrow for aim of the negotiations was said to
York
Mclntosh
1.S8,
Jonathans
85-90,
The
incident.
The
fact
that
most
of
the
House
finished
the
wags-hour
de<
small
group
of
rebellious
northern
be to permit any of the approximateheld. Coroner Banks stated.
every type of travel-risk would con65-75. Kings. 80-90. but she struggled fiercely and he fint h e Americans failed to. understand ly 30 British vessels upstream on the Democrats displaced southern col- bate. Senator Barkley, Democratic
Edgar was born in Brookville on, Mubbardstons
front the driver.
Bpldwins
90-1.00:
Maryland Delicious ally left her alone.
Yangtze to proceed downriver to leagues today at the spearhead of floor leader, announced he was pre- November 22, 1918, the son of Mr. 1.25*1.35. Virginia D?liclous 1.15-1.40,
A traveling faculty of traffic- experts was no deterrent.
Detective Charles Eiler, of Mont-^%
I House opposition to the administra- pared to insist on night sessions if and Mrs. Robert Kelling. His parents
tiftuld lecture at each school.
Average Japanese citizens visited Shanghai.
~
Staymens 1-10-1.15; Ohio Rome Beau- gomery County,
said the slayerV
tion's
wage-hour
bill.
necessary.
are
the
only
surviving
relatives.
Prospective drivers would get 10 numerous American business offices,
F.ffoits were under way to locate
brought a bottle of antiseptic ind
ties 1.00.
The
first
major
attempt
to
revise
Four
members
from
north
of
the
A private funeral will be held at
hotU*s of concentrated instruction and tendering their regrets. Taxi drivers nossible straggling survivors along
oPtatoes. 18 ears, market steady. cleansed the wounds on MiSs Griffin's
jput in 30 hours of supcrvissd road and even waitresses conveyed similar the rivorbanks. The Oahu wirelessed Mason-Dixon Line proffered subs:i(i.te the wage-hour bill was expected from the Kelling home Wednesday after- No. 1 100 Ib, sacks Maine Green head. She was not seriously injured.
Rep.
Dockweiler
(D-Calif),
sponsor
of
measures
which
would
impose
inflexnoon,
December
15.
in
charge
of
the
.Work on winding, hilly highway, with expressions.
that its plan was to bring survivors
Mountains 1.25'1.30: Idaho Burbanks
The young woman said she hear.l
Kpeed stretches here and there.
A million persons, mostly school and daad to Shanghai with the aid of ible wage-hours tandards on firms en- a substitute drafted by the American Reverend E. P. Harper, of the Apollo 1.75; 15 Ib. sacks Maine Green Moun- the shower running In the adjoining
gaged
in
interstate
commerce.
Federation
of
Labor.
Methodist Episcopal church, of which tains 21-22; bushel crates Florida
At motor police headquarters, it children, paraded in Tokyo celebrat- ths Japanese destroyers and the unbathroom as the youth took a bath
The House may vote on t'lem late
\fiiS estimated today that each school ing formal occupation of Nanking.
He would impose a uniform mini- the young man was a member. Inter- Bliss Triumphs 2-00.
derstanding of Japanese assurance for
before leaving the house.
today
or
tomorrow
after
deciding
ment
will
be
in
the
Apollo
cemetery.
*WOUld cost $250,000 to set up. The cost
mum
wage
of
40
cents
an
hour
and
a
safe passage downstream.
PITTSBURGH, Dec. 14—(/P)—Hogs
Fred R. Kingman, a New York adwhether
to
place
administration
of_the
40-hour
work
week.
The
labor
com,tt maintaining the eight would bs
The more seriously wounded may
600, market steady to 0 cents lower; vertising executive, who told Eiler he
u der a
$1,000,000 a year.
be flown to Shanghai on board the V™&™ "
" '"dependent five- mittee draft would let these standards
170 to 220 Ibs. 8.60; 230 Ibs. 8.50 250 was the dead^woman's fiancee, hurried
Some of this expense could be
.TRUPnete planes, one of which carried ™.n. bf°»rd or on « labor department be set by industries. Minimum wages
Ibs. up 7.75-8.25; small lot 120 to 130 to Philadelphia when informed of the
ndled by restoring the $2 opera'ors
could not exceed 40 cents an hour, and
doctors, nurses and madical supplies. official.
Ibs. 8.80. Sows steady to weak at 7.00- death.
Continued
from
Paae
One
Although
the
proposed
substitutes
ise fee. The rate in 1938 will be
the maximum work week could not
77.25 for good grade.
Air Reduction
49
Eiler said there were indications
differed in some details, none would be under 40 hours.
dollar.
Nanking In Flatnet
Cattle 50. Steers yesterday slow, that the youth had spent the afternoon
155
Al
Chem
and
Dye
permit
any
wage
or
hour
d'fferentials
estimated that 625 instructors Falls, .Mrs.. Antennetti Marino of
SHANGHAI, Dec. 14.—(/Pt—Japan's
steady to 25 cents lower. Top 10.50; in the Carpenter home, reading and
If Dockweiler's proposal failed.
73 Vj
Am Can
Curtisville, Mrs. Carmetti Ross of Nu- Rising Sun flag fluttered at each cor- between the north and the south
"$Would be required.
bulk 9.50 down. Top heifers 9.10. Cal- drinking while Mrs. Carpenter wag
16i.il
Am Coml Alco
Some
of
their
proponents
admitted
j
Hejw.
Lamneck
tD-Ohio),
Grlawold
Mine
and
Mrs.
Calherni
Howe
of
Ani4
35,000 To Get Jobs
ner of Nanking's walls today and
ves 150. market steady. Good and shopping in Philadelphia and Mis*
Am and For Pow
4Vi
Connery (D-Mass) and PhilyHARRISBURG, Dec. 14 — (ff) — ta, and lour sons: Anthony Sgro of within the ancient stone battlements frankly the purpose of the revisions :!1<D-Ind).
choice
vealers 12.00-13.00.
Griffin was working at the beauty
lI)s
Co
) sa
1 ey
U
d m
13
U
Am
Had
and
St
S
iylvania directors of the WPA Indiana, Angelo Sgro, Jr.. of Dayton the abandoned capital of the Chinese was 10 alienate members who would . _°: ""_ j' Jl ! _*'u J;?.. 5hcep
600. Lambs 25 lower than yes- shop.
47
*i
Am
Smelt
and
R
support a more flexible measure%g$eied on to 35,000 jobless men today and Dominic and Samuel Sgro, both government was reported in flames.
terday's close. Good and choice 9.00
A oottle of liquor and a glass stood
Am Tel and Tel
148H
Other portions of the President's
Administration forces gained some
cheering news that the federal at home.
to mostly 9.50; Throwouts 3.00-8.00. on a living room table beside a copy
Meager reports from Nanking said southern support for the bill last legislative program were advancing
63 V4
Am Tob B
'ernment had ordered work for
Funeral services will be conducted several Chinese detachments were!
Top sheep yesterday 5.10, today steady of a detective story magazine, open at
Anaconda
30%
agreeing to include diff-ar- -'lowly. Both Senate and House bankto prevent overloading of re- at 10 a. m. Thursday in St. Gable's traoped within the city but continued
to weak.
a story called "Honor Slaying."
39'i
Atch
T
and
S
F
Southerns contended that! ing committees continued their study
Church. N u M i n e ' a n d interment will their virtually suicidal struggle with entials.
rolls in the dead of winter.
Grain*
Eiler said Thomas McNutt, 50,
All Rsflnmg
of
the
Housing
bill,
the
Senate
group
without
them,
industry
in
their
reaion
le order was to increase the num- be made in Punxsutawney.
CHICAGO, Dec. 14.—f/P)—Notable chauffeur for a neighbor, volunteered
the Japanese in fierce street figh*in*> would be hampered by the legislation. beginning final consideration
Bald Loco
ot
of Pennsylvania project worksteadiness
characterized
Chicago the information he picked up a youth
or had barricaded themselves in
Bait and Ohio
House leaders, buoyed by their suc- amendments. Senator Barkley told
to 193,000, and carto at a Mmp JANET LUCILLE, three-months-old buildings to delay the conquerors.
wheat
prices
early
today.
Fluctuaanswering the slayer's description and
Bcndix
Aviat
cess yesterday in defeating efforts to reporters the bill might be finished
daughter of Mr^and Mrs. Leroy
Ten appeals for aid wi-ie pourina
tions were limited to "4 cent range, drove him to a railroad station.
Meanwhile, it was said, the Japa- prevent consideration of the long-de- late in the day.
55
Beth Steel
many unemployment if lief quar- Stineman of Homer City, died at 3 p- r>e°e continued "mopping up."
with indifferent export demand about
14-%
Beth Steel 5 Pf
layed bill, expressed confidence it
The House rivers and harbors comchiefly in the soft coal and steel m. yesterday in Indiana Hospital afoffsetting unfavorable Argentina crop
Chinese sources admitted that the would pass late in the weak without
Briggs
Mfg
mittee went ahead with hearings on
ter a few days' illness. Surviving are Jaoanase occupied Pukow, terminus
!e*as of the western ? 'tin Lies.
advices.
Budd Wheel
ministrator J. Banks Hudson the parents; the paternal grandfather, of Tientsin-Pukow railway into North substantial change. They were more legislation to create seven regional
Opening unchanged to % off, DeBurr
Add
Mach
"the increase would represent the Harry Stineman of Homer City and China across the Yangtze from Nan- concerned about sentiment for send- planning agencies. The merchant macember 94V4. May 92-92"4. Chicago
Calumet
and
Hec
ing
the
bill
back
to
the
labor
commitrine committee resumed the taking
;one State's quota of the SSO.OUO the maternal grandfather, Lyle Ma- king. Chinese troops were reported to
wheat futures then rallied. Corn
8
Canad Pacific
(Continued from Page One)
ordered put on WPA jobs haffcy of Ernest. Funeral services have withdrawn to a railway station tee for revision than about the pro- of testimony on changes in the ship
started unchanged to *« higher, De93
Case
(Jl)
subsidy act designed to rehabilitate
will be conducted in the family home at Puchen, about a mile north of Pu- posals to revise it on the floor.
iughout the country.
cember 55^-*4. May 58%-v£
Cerro De Pas
mobile, owned by Leroy Nicholson,
(
The Senate, meanwhile, was trying the American me/chant marine.
E. Solenberger, assistant re- at 2 p. m. Thursday, in charge of the kow.
u-fifW.
38'«
Ches and Ohio
in White Township Sept. 28 without
J
c
' "V h director of the department of Rev. Lester Case. Burial will be in
54 U
While tremendous clouds of smoke
Chrysler Corp
the consent of the owner. Young
iblic Assistance, which controls state Greenwood Cemetery.
115
shrouded the fallen city, a new proCoca-Cola
playmates of the boy were called by
., _ , Wjef, said that the WPA job increase
7*»
visional government for China—under
Coml Solvents
the state to testify to having seen
wife
of
MRS.
ANNA
NASTUK,
48,
* /'-.Would bring the total to "the level of
2
ViComwlth and South
the Ae?is of conquering Nippon—was
him
drive the car or to riding with
Samuel Nastuk of Homer City. R- formed at Peiping.
June, before the recession began."
24%
(Continued from Page One)
Cons Edison
him after the owner had parked it
Put, he pointed out, "while any in- D., died in her home at 9 p. m. Sun9
they were meant to show there was while he transacted business nearby.
The guiding principles otf the new
Consoil Oil
a native of Austria,
;ease in the WPA program means a
no difference between th« corner in- tiinal disposition 'of the case will be
Corn Product*
' j
reported' Dome"! "(Japanese
the husband are three regime,Agency),
'ftpalier relief roll, a lot will depend
dependent and an American Store.
were
Crane Co
made later.
sons:
George,
Michael
and
Paul,
all
at
,
„„.
,
..
.
'jHlfJbow .soon these jobs become availH
The United States Civil Service
Gilbert Fye, 48, of Ivory Hill,
8'i
Hull said the independent stores
Dei Lack and West
Marino Palcinl and Eugene Luscini,
home: and five daughters: Mrs. T. J- ueneralls
be^raH.imo
Kai Shak , UD Nant-y-GJo, was sentenced to serve Commission has announced open com37',,
mo cChtan.?
hlan
shown were operated by retailers who both of Young Township nleaded to
Douglas Aircraft
* Kai-Shek, supludson told his associates in the Hi Kaiser of Detroit. Mich., Mrs. A. H .! nression "of communism
petitive
examinations
as
follows:
112
joined in group advertising and owned unlawful possession of liquor. Palcini
and coopera- seven and one-half to 15 years in the
Du Pont De N
Ite districts to put the men to work Cain of Culp Creek, Ore., Miss Sophia tion with Japan and Manchoukuo,
Cambria County Jail by Prcsideri: . Naval architect, $3,800 a year, U.
stock in wholesale grocery businesses. was fined $300 and costs and Luscini,
Eastman Kodak
and
Miss
Margaret
Na'stuk,
both
at
a jioon as possible. He figured the inJudge John H. McCann yesterday aft- S. Maritime Commission.
Hull attacked the tax on ths ground $200 and costs.
El Auto Lite
Among
the
officials
of
the
provisionJce&se would boost the monthly WPA home, and Miss Julia Nastuk of Indi- al regims were two former presidents ernoon, after pleading guilty to hav41 Vi
Gen Elec
it was conflscatory. He said his comAssistant marketing specialist (meat
Scheduled for trial tomorrow are
i of China, three former premiers, five ing slain John Emery, 49, also of grader), $2,600 a year, Bureau of
(jyroll $2,175,000 or 10 per cent of ana,
31
Gen Foods
|
pany would be taxed $795,070 during George W. Clark, charged with ashe $23,000.000 nation-wide incrase.
The body was removed to the Rob- i former finance ministers and four Nant-y-Glo. The plea was entered»aft- Agricultural Economics.
Gen Motors
the yesr June 1, 1937 to June 1, 1938. sault and battery; Charles Trimarchi,
fie added that the boost did not ne- inson Funeral Home. Funeral ar- I other one-time cabinet officer*, the er Cambria County District Attorney
25'i
while net profits of the chain for the selling malt beverage to a minor;
Gen Refract
Physiologist (poultry), and senior,
flily mean beginning of new pro- rangements will be announced later.
Stephens Mayer agreed to have the associate, and assistant physiologists
first seven months of this year totaled, Walter McAdams, violation of license
Gillette
Jananese News Agsncy said.
BtB.
22 '/i
Harb-Walker
$357.809.
The communique on the occupation penalty fixed as provided for second- (poultry), $2,600 to $4,600 a year, Buprovision; R. J. Smith drawing worthJOHN GURA, 67, father of the Rev. of Nanking gave no word of the 18 degree murder.
40
Hershey Choc
Scott denied Hull's argument that it less checks, and Oliver E. Ford, asreau of Animal Industry.
Fr. John Gura of Holy Family Americans still believed in Nanking.
7
Hudson Mot
was double tax. because the company sault and battery.
Principal consultant in child welwas shot and killed by Fye
Church, Colver, died at 6:25 p. m. Japanese spokesmen said they were enEmery
64%
Int Harvester
paid a mercantile tax of $87,383.
fare services, $5,600 a year, and prinOctober
10
while
participating
in
a
Monday in his home In Swissval?. without information concerning the
7V#
Int Tel and Tel
Altogether there are 40 cases chalcipal consultant in medical social
game
of
"tibet"
("button,
button,
Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Cath- Americans and the h a n d f u l of other
36%
Kennecott Cop
lenging the tax. That of the Am^ican
work
for
children,
$5,600
a
year,
Chilwho's
got
the
button")
in
the
horns
erine tSoltis) Gura and these child- foreigners on foreign-owned property.
15'.
Continued from Page One
Krcsge (SS)
Storss Company, was selected for a
of the defendant's cousin, Walter Fye dren's Bureau, Department of Laren: Matthew Gura, Swissvale; Paul
Vi
Cookport M. P.
Lehigh Val Coal
test suit.
In
the
communique
was
a
h
i
n
t
that
bor.
in
Nanl-y-Glo.
The
slayer,
who
is
said
Gura,
at
home;
Mrs.
Anna
Sima,
Char43
The revival meetings being held in
up; the teacher tenure laws, and
Int Nick Can
the conquering Japanese war machine to have been intoxicated, became enFull
information
may
be
obtained
I leroi; Mrs. Julia Nagy, Swissvale; Miss would thrust on into the heart of
6%
the Cookport M. P. Church by Rusfull crew law for railroads.
Lehigh Val HR
taged at Emery's actions. He obtained from the Secretary of the U. S. Civil
It? the lower courts are the "'Little Mary and Miss Pauline Gura, at home, China.
sell "Red" James will continue thru
Liggett and Myeni
Service
Board
of
Examiners,
at
the
a
.30-.3G
rifle
and
the
shooting
took
•47%
A" act to specify what used car j>nd Father Gura, Colver.
this week.
Loews Inc
The Japanese reported their foe was place in the presence of several play- post office in this city.
21
,lers may do and what they may j Funeral services will be conducted in flight up the zig-zag valley of the ers.
0
Mack Trucks
32%
it do; the motor convoy act which i at 9 a. m. Thursday in St. Anseim's Yangtze river and charged the ChiWASHINGTON. Dec. 14.—(/P)—The
College football players are merely
Montgom Ward
Following the shooting Fye fled, but
prohibit truckers, from carry ins i Church, Swissvale. The body w i l l be nese, retreating from their one-time
position of fhe treasury on December trying to maintain the Old Heidelberg
Nash
Kelvinator
17 Vi
over the driver's cabins; the j taken to Colver Thursday and placed capilal, had fired many buildings in was captured shortly afterwards near
traditions, and all they ask is some11:
Nat Biscuit
14
tgage deficiency judgment law, in Holy Family Church, where Father sn effort to carry out the "scorcned Mundy's Corner.
thing a little better in fellowships.
Receipts. $33.118,895.66.
Nat Dairy
of the new election code, the act Gura will conduct services at 9 a. m. earth" str&tesy of leaving nothing use21%
Senator Capper proposes a federal
Expenditures, $24,655,427.16,
Nat Distillers
HARRISBURG, Dec. 14.— (/P>— The
8'i
pawnbrokers fees, and sections Friday. Interment will be in the new ful for the Japanese.
statute on marriage and divorce—as if
Balance, $2,701,372,342.47.
Nat Pow and Lt
freight rale increase recently granted
Catholic cemetery, Ebensburg.
19
th* milk control uct.
Customs receipts for the month, enough wives weren't already laying
N Y Central
Chinese prass reports from HanPublic Utility Commission today sustruce has been declared in the
21
down the 'law.
$12,369,053.46.
Nor Amer
kow, one of the temporary seats of
pended for six months a 10 per cent
suit to collect an estimated
4%
Packard Motor
Chk'.ng's government about 300 miles
railroads on shipments within PennThere
will
be
a
meeting
for
d
a
i
r
y
i
.000,000 in liquor floor taxes.
21 >i
Penna RR
f u r t h e r up the Yangtze from Nanking men and cattle owners of West Ma- sylvania of paving brick, building
workmen's compensation law.
Mi
Phila Read C and I
and possibly one of the next Japanc'sj honing township in the social room of , brick, hollow tile and other clay prof(jjieduled to go into effect January 1.
38'i
Phillips Pet
objectives, said outsr Mongolian au- the Smicksbur? Lutheran Church at ducts, glass, sand, gravel and sewer
|g beset on two sides by the coal in10%
Continued from page One
Pure Oil
thorities had arrived to confer wit'i ,1:30 p. m. Tuesday, December 21. pipe.
Two bituminous companies
33 'i
Pub Svc N J
The commission made the suspenthe
generalissimo
on
plans
for
a
rear
County
Agent
J.
W.
Warner
w
i
l
l
tell
asked the court to prevent en- g r a v i t y of the s i t u a t i o n could have attack against the Japanese in Nort.i
6>a
Radio Corp
ubout the township area plan for te-t- sion effective December 20 and order, claiming tho ;ict would cost Komuted President Roosevelt to China.
17'g
Repub Steel
ed a hearing into the fairness of the
ing
cattle
for
Ban<?s
disease.
Naarly
tttore than they coilrl a f f o r d : tin- an- u d u u t such, u n u s u a l procedure.
41
Reynolds Tob B
(The Japanese h a v e invaded or eon- half the herds in the township are rates. The commission estimated the
fthfacite i n d u s t r y s e r i n s notice t h a t
57%
Officials did not a t t e m p t to disguise cuirred five North China province.*'. new tested. If 35 per cent moiv herd increases would have increased the
Sears Roebuck
Will depend upon courts and juries t h e i r belief that the i n c i d e n t present15
revenue
of
the
railroads
$750.000
a
Socony
Vacuum
Peiping,
scat
of
the
new
Japanese
wish to make application, the
jetl'c its claim-.
21%
ed the most serious s t r a i n on Japa- moulded provisional government foi owners
year. No date was set for a hearing.
Southern Pacific
Federal
and
Stats
Bureaus
of
A
n
i
m
a
l
ArJ'"thrr SUM in the Diuipbin court uc'>e-Amerii;in r e l a t i o n s since the out13 H
Southern Ry
filed by stau 1 banks se»kint; ex- l.rc:\k of the undei'ared war between China, is the capital of one of these Industry will proceed.
15 >/i
Everyone in the United States exSpcrry
Corp
five,
Hopeh.
Outer
Mongolia,
lying
rom p a y i n g u n e m p l o y n i e n . C h i n a and ,I;ipan.
At
the
meeting
there
w
i
l
l
he
n
a
m
e
d
104%
"ept
perhaps
our
State
Department,
Stand
Brands
Fhii coupon with four others, ell differently numbered, five «»o.
between Soviet Russia and Northern
ensaiion because they arc mem3'/«
A.iibciisiidur Saitu r o n v o x e d to Sec- China, is under strong Soviet influ- a committee to represent the s e v e r a l knows that a state of war exists in
Stand
Gas
and
El
gether,
entitle* the holder to one volume of the Indiana Evening
of the Fecieriil I\c.-erve System.
school districts.
28 '4
retary Hull verbiilly his s u v c r n m s n t ' s ence. )
China.—U. S. Senator Arthur Capper,
Stand Oil Cal
so listed ;ire su : l > '.'hallcn^iiig t h e .i|>
Gazette
Special Book-A-Week offer of the Standard American
Similar
meetings
are
being
planned
32%
ilogie? His \vords echoed expresKansas.
Stand Oil Ind
All c o m m u n i c a t i o n from w i t h i n in other townships.
itutioimlny t,; the ac\ i p q i r n i i p .-ions
Encyclopedia,
when presented at the Indiana Evening Gazette Of43
i.f
regret
made
at
the
American
Stand
Oil
N
J
Nanking ceased Sunday at the time of
ine prices to bt |ionfd, and re- tmhj'-ijv iii Tokyo.
Never again! The cost is prohibiStudebaker Corp
fice, 843 Philadelphia Street, Indiana, Pa., together with the
the Japanese aerial a t t a c k on the gunauto O W P C I S 10 prove thai
Every t i m e the public gel' SPI for tive.—Tommy Manville, New York.
What f u r t h e r action m i g h t be t a k e n boat Panay. Americans and other forTexas Corp
purchase price ol 47c for regular binding and 6te (or the deluxe
42
in- the? U n i t e d Statss if its terms are eigners at N a n k i n g had bean using a pleasant little business cycle, it j married and divorced four times, who
Timken Roll B
binding,
turns
into
the
old
variety
of
t
a
i
l
.-pin.
10%
says he will never marry again.
i • > ) me', h t . w e v e r . f u r n i s h e d a sub- the Pf.nay's wireless as the last lin't
Trans-America
23%
j e c t for A J c i e speculation in the cap- w i t h a world separated from them by
United Aircraft
:';il There appealed to be l i t t l e dis- the holocaust of war.
3Ml
United Corp
10%
p n s j t i i ' i i n; any q u a r t e r to believe Dial
United Gas Imp
Occupation of N a n k i n g ended n
20%
» r e i p H i o n <,'. the American demands drive which started Oct. 27.
V«U S Indus Alco
(Continued f i o m Page One)
26 >»
; w o u l d Inaci U) a complete breaking of
U S Rubber
i editions.
60%
U
S
Smelt
R
and
M
\ \ : i l certain u n 55%
C'
i.yrrs.-icmal
opinion
ranged
from
U
S
Steel
posj'Jon as the oih
Vanadium Corp
ling force in e;i-ieni Asia. J h p - the s t a t e m e n t by C h a i r m a n Pittman
West Union Tel
A friendship candle-lighting cere- was ratified by Pennsylvania 150 years
not relax chas'isemem of the ' D - K e v i of th? Sc'nate foreign rela10H-/4
West El and Iffg
mony featured the Christmas p a r t y ago this week, and detailing a num
Japan«s«
adniinistration
(in t i o n s conimittcf t h a t "accidents tn
Woolworth <F W)
tendered the ladies of K i w a n i s last
l). Japan will cooperate w i t h n e u t r a l s are becoming intolerable" to
evening at Rustic Lodge, bcautuied ber of interesting slants on that bill
lv«r administration comes m'o ' t h r u.ssertion of Rep. Mass < R - M ; ' n n )
0',-it the United States "should get out I MANILA. Dec. 14--t#)-The steam- with a Christmas tree and other Yule of rights, which many are prone to
Ark Nat Gas "A"
<B China.
2
ier Pj-psient McKJJiley neared Manila decorations. The program u ax in overlook and even forget.
Cities Service
sympathize with the nationals ul 'lie Orient,"
la order th»t 1 may clip th* coupow to obtain th* 16 voJumn of
19H
Most s o n a f o i g w?re w a t c h i n g de- j i o i r i j i n with 453 passengers from the charge of Kiwanee M<uy St. ciair
El Bond and Sh
powers whose live* and proFlowers were given to Miss Bone
the
Standard American Encyclopedia, I want tee Indiana Evening
v
e
l
o
p
m
e
n
t
s
before
commenting.
Cog;
grounded
Dollar
Lined
President
King, assisted by Van Christy ul the to Mis. Emory Boyle who held slip 1
Penurosd Corp
h*Vf been a/fertcd by hostilities
Qaiett*
every day- Pitas* have the Indiana evening G»z*tt» <••
i
n
i
/
u
n
t
of
t
h
e
Senate's
influence
in
the
.Hoover while the city completed pre- College Conservatory.
th of * new China will serve
(even date) »nd to Miss Mary Bell
livered to my »ddrew for which 1 will pay your earrUr at to« mutt
lifeguard to foreign interests in ( o r m a i i o n of foreign policy, they said ' D u r a t i o n s to aid the shipwrecked rtEntertainment for the evening was (whose last name was not given) who
rat* of tic per w«t* or M* regular collection 4*y*>
t h e y did not want to complicate the hi fees
East.
given by a girls' sextet from the Col- held slip 25, which means Christmas.
,-iiuation.
The same committee which »rod lege. Their numbers were "Night
Nanking's fall is only the
Dr Harry Burton Boyd was the last
The little bloc of munitions coin- foi hundreds of refuges from war- Song," by Clokey and "Noon Market- speaker ol the occasion. Threatening
11*1*
NAME
*
•>
MEBCEH. Dec- U.—(4>)—Attoraeyi
mittee members was ready, however harassed China was prepared to ing," by Weaver. A chorus of mixed to give next Sunday's sermon, sug'
to protest any administration step Dial function, but a spokesman said he did voices sang "An Eriskay Love Lilt," gesting a number of other pertincni resumed questioning of venir«QMtO<
ADDRESS
i •i••••
w o u l d lend to break down American nut exjitct many of the Hoover ya^s- by Robertson and "Vanka 'n' Tanka," subjects, be compromised on the ruo* 4»y to complete a Jury to try the R*v.
n e u t r a l i t y . Th» group has ciilici/e'i enters would need help.
a Russian hill-billy song by Dargoii- exacting o/ »1J topics— "Woman." H« D T. Ttwmai. 4S-y«»r-ol4 ret
CITY
STATg.,.,
the administration foi noi i n v o k i n g
Salvage experts from Hong Kouj ijsky, and two Christmas carols. Miss centered on one woman tnd tiim»xe< ever.gelist, OB chargei ol alaytag
U you liv« wfcftre carrier service U not tvtilftbfe h4v« DM
the neutrality law in the Far Eastern wtrt «xp#cted to reach the Hoover, Bone directed and MISS Satovkh ac- his remark* with presenting
wri aa If*4 to*"*" "*
nt by owii
conflict.
to4Una
hard aground on 9 sm|H i.s'.ind off companied
Mary witb the customary Christmas
Senator Reynolds (D-N C), who be- Formosa, tomorrow. Company QfticiMe pe* wo*Ui (
)$i.oo tor i Moa*
Senator C. Gilbert WoHenden fur- leoiembraice, a slight token ol yet
Mail
Sate*
Sen»tt discussion yesterday •>b said they would decide if '.he $|,- nished the serious part of th; pro- Another lae v«»r ol service.
titvuUat. wlw c»rri*4 • M M
8
ow*.
<
>|9fi0 <«f
a denijud for withdrawal of 000,000 lu*wy liner could o* rello»i- gram, giviiif an exceptionally intertaU th« QMjitraon woyW |l*a4 Hilf
Kiwanis'
Christmas
party
(stag
military forces Iron (he ed.
esting Ulk on the Constitution, whicb
• I !•
PANAY CASUALTY
LIST MOUNTING
MARKETS
Four Northern Demos Lead
In Labor Bill Fight
OBITUARY
i * i t ( I I W i C t . t - l < ^ H i l ( r
** \ / M I f UC-*.*
*'
f
r
"i
i
J
•
J
»
J
ft
The Stock Market
CRIMINAL LIST
IN COURT HERE
NANTY-GLO MAN GETS CIVIL SERVICE
EXAMINATION
LONG JAIL SENTENCE
LITTLE CORNER
GROCERY RATES
;gVERY MAJOR
LAW OF 193
REVIVAL
TREASURY BALANCE
IS $2,701,372,342.47
FREIGHT RATE
BOOST CANCELLED
DAIRY MEETING
AT SMICKSBURG
HULL AWAITS
PARTICULARS
Book a Week Special
Concession Coupon
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MEETJPROTEST
RESCUE STEAMER
i
HEARING MANILA
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At Kiwanis Ladies' Night
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