Dothan Eagle, The (Newspaper) - December 1, 1934, Dothan, Alabama THAN Heard Them Let Go To VOLUME 17 DOT TURDAY DECEMBER Dothan Spots Strict Strict Low Middling NUMBER 59 r f R aby i l- y r ri FAMILY FEUD MAY BE CLUE TO 5 DEATHS Far Says t of Calif Fond Slab Widi After HERO FOR THREE YOUNGSTERS r Sisters of Elmo Noakes Draw Sentence In Recurrence Of Row At Probe Moves Dec 1 A new clue to the mysterious deaths of Elmo his niece three in the cropped up family feud trouble in the said R U of in possible ex- planation of tbe migration across continent of the five lonely and the tragedy befell Mountain Burial Place With seeking to confirm a motive for the the foothills of the Blue Ridge where the three little were miles from railroad shanty in which and his niece were shot to reckoned them back for- American Legion arranged burial of the children In a cular spot of land set aside for in the rugged hills The mony was one usually reserved for the nation's hero dead A crowd of more than 300 gathered at a funeral parlor in a drenching rain for the funeral at the town market were other buying week-end provisions without re- gard to the closing scene in the mountain tragedy that gripped the nation for days after the little bodies were found carefully tucked between blankets along a State highway patrolmen and Boy Scouts were on hand at the morgue to direct but appearances were that moat of automobiles had the market house rather than the morgue as their destination while the dead man's in offered his explanation of the the dissension in the family of the five victims came to the surface again Women Draw Sentences Two sisters of Noakes were given in last night after Rusell brother of the Winifred them WUi disturbing the and hia Mrs Pearl Pierce 1 The aroused to an when the Justice of the peace sentenced the women to 90 days in was quieted when the sentences were suspended The women were ordered not to at- tempt see Mrs Pierce again during the 90 days of probation Mrs Winnie and Mrs Kate they had called on Mrs Pierce to help establish Identification of dead girl in Identification of the dead man as was established to the of state police by United Marine fingerprints De- of the others tallied with those of his and three dren Police worked on the theory that the five deaths were TOUNG NEGRO FUGITIVE HUNTED FOR MULTIPLE KILLING AND WOUNDING i county officers were tog thia section today in a spread search for Floyd 21 old who they said trent a an entire family of four and seriously wounding three on ILL Dec you can always re- to two weddings and I once heard Lady Astor y two things get the house tax on liquor tax on landed estates Then oM lords really come to about the only time you can Pt our houses of in- wetted is to start talking about that dollar up into little big fellows we think you mean art wrong and we fc to play with to ybo with in 88 think you still playing hangs your and n It's Just a printing all government t Dont tlam door M 10 Mother Arrested As Children Tell t Of Fiery Torture You Have as Muy Wor ries As I Yon Sometimes Do Things Sorry For Says Woman INDIAN Dec 1 A mother waa held day by police who listened to tales if strange punishments which in- cluded burns on the arms and legs of a and a head wound on a 12 years of age Mrs Jean sat in a chair at police headquarters and told de- that you are as nervous ami have aa many ries aa I you sometimes do things you are sorry for after- Her and were cared for in nile Detention after the tle girl had been treated in City Hospital for burns on th arms and the right leg which she said her mother with a curling iron said she ate a jar of mayonnaise because she was and that when Mrs Heitz dis- covered she hated the iron and drew it across the child's hands and arms and between the fingers Joseph reluctantly admitted that a scar on his temple was the result of his attempt to escape while a stick was being twisted in his hair Police Mrs Heitz on a vagrancy charge yesterday and held her under bond after neighbors had lodged complaints The woman said her husband has been dead several years and that she bought the children here from Chicago four years ago JEALOUSY BLAMED IN BLOUNTSTOWN FAMILY SHOOTING f Ernest f Deputy In Hospital With Ballet In Thigh f Ernest sawmill operator and a former Jackson county deputy was in a Dothan hospital today with a bullet wound In his thigh McCIellan was shot by his according to Deputy Sheriff J who described the motive as Mrs McCIellan fired at her husband but one of the bullets Deputy said The wounded declined to prosecute his wife in the which took place near the edge of the Blountstown city limits about 7 o'clock last according to Us MRS LELA MONEY PASSES FOLLOWING BRIEF BURIAL AT SHORTERVILLE Mrs Lela of route died in a Dothan pital at 3 p m following an illness of four days She was a member of the Union Primitive Baptist church and had been a dent of that community all her life She is survived by her Bud seven Robert of Shorterville route John and Loris Money of two Mrs A L Aplin bia route and Miss Ella Rea Shorterville route four Mrs Carrie Abbeville route Mrs Ella Ashford route Mrs B S Hatfield and Mrs LilUe and four W M Clarence Col- route Aubrey and Walter Funeral was to be held at 2 p m today at the Union Baptist near with the Rev Mr pastor of the Abbeville Methodist officiating ial was to follow in the church Fellows and Forrester in charge VANDALISM USHER SECOND WEEK OF STRIKE LOS Dec 1 Marked by ism and partial interruption of the Los Angeles Railway Company's strike today entered its second week with officials ing tbe hope the Jab or controversy soon would be ended A mob of nearly and women was routed late yesterday at Seventh street and the city's busiest intersection when police fired of tear gas LAST RITES SUNDAY FOR JOHN J ESPY 4 Alto V and P Injured in the of two were wei at local hospitals today John of In will te tomorrow Helps Conduct Saar Plebiscite f WAMBAUGH A little-known American woman fills what probably is the most im- portant feminine job in current international affairs She is rah Wambaugh of a member of the tional plebiscite commission named by the League of Nations to conduct the all-important tion in the Saar on January 13 This is one of the rare pictures of her FRANCE PRESENTS GERMANY OPENING TO WIN BACK SAAR Possible Decision Of League To Restore Territory Won't Be Opposed Dec 1 Minister Pierre Laval today offered to Germany a second chance to regain the Saar territory if the January 13 plebiscite favors remaining under League of tions jurisdiction 1 Flandin gained a sweeping victory today in the Chamber of being corded a decisive vote of dence on his demand for secret funds for the ministry of the In- The chamber voted confidence in cabinet 457 to even more overwhelming than the vote by which the chamber expressed confidence in his inet when it entered office He told the chamber of deputies that France was not opposed to a possible decision of the league council to give the Saar to many if after voting to continue the league the later wish to return to Germany Wants Socialist Deputy Leon On Back MRS EFFIE BATTLE FALLS INTO LONG REST AT HOME OF HER SON ON ROUTE 4 Mrs Effie died at the home of her C than route yesterday afternoon following a short illness Besides the son at whose home she Mrs Battle is survived by eight other of Fla J Dothan route R Henry and H Dothan route and Battle two Mrs Sallie and Mrs Mottle C than Funeral was to be held at 3 p m toffey at the Smyrna church with the Rev J C of and Fellows and For- rester in charge SPECIAL MESSENGER TO LEAVE ADDRESSEE NOTICE OF MISSIVE Mrs A Y M Dothan announced today that the special delivery messenger will leave a notice when he cannot find tbe addressee at the address on special letters The system is similar to the one used by telegraph tag left on the door or stuck un- the door After finding the tbe person for whom a letter is being many claim the missive at the postoffice Should the letter remain un- claimed will be delivered to the address in the next regular mall MBW RAILROADS ABB PROJECTED TOKYO Dee L for three new two of them strategically Important through carrying the Japanese controlled rail system closer to the Soviet were announced day by tbe legation GANGLAND ARMS SEARCH LAUNCHED BY SENATE GROUP Anns Want To Know Where Get Cheap Machine Guns KILLING TO HAVE ECHO Pope Of Idaho Calls National Dec 1 A spurt in the manufacture of cheap machine guns engaged the attention of Senate munitions in- today as they sought to learn gangdom gets its im- of war Echoes of the shots that killed Federal Agents Samuel P Cowley and Herman GUHs will be heard next week when the senatorial committee resumes its inquiry Noting an increase in the out- put of gators believed many of them were manufactured piece by piece in small machine shops and then shipped to certain concerns in Brooklyn to be assembled While representatives of larger and better known manufacturers have been subpoenaed to appear next none of them factures the gun ored by desperadoes But the com- hopes to obtain from a lengthy list of witnesses some gestions as to how the underworld gets arms and ammunition In previous the arms companies have said they take strict precautions to keep their weapons from criminal hands But somehow or Investigator Stephen Raushenbush the un- has obtained at least 800 guns Expressing dissatisfaction with the that criminals stole some from Law Senator Pope want to know if these guns are being sold and who is selling them And we want to know what must be done to dry up the source of supplies The ruthless killing of peace officers in this country amounts to a national dis- President Facing Momentous Decision On Future Relief Dole Or Work Splits Aides MARY PICKFORD HEATEDLY DENIES FORMER AGENT'S CHARGES OF MISCONDUCT Whether To Call For More lions Or Taper Off tures Trusting In Business Re- vival Question Dec i With advisers pouring conflicting counsel into his President Roosevelt entered today the month in which he will make a decision regarded official Washington as one of the most momentous ever to face a chief executive Whether to call on congress to appropriate more a gigantic effort to conquer the relief and ployment or whether to taper off Federal expenditures in the belief that a business revival will do the is the tion Cabinet At Loggerheads It is an issue that sharply divides the the and sources the very cabinet itself Two of the foremost advocates of the Secretary Harold L Public Works and Harry L Federal ency Relief planned to thresh out their suggestions with the chief executive before the log fireplace at Warm Springs in con- starting this week-end Hopkins plan for a Federal work relief with an of to to abolish the in vor of Jobs and opportunities tis said to have di- vided the presidential advisers The more wore tif scribed as leaning toward reduced Federal with greater sis on stimulating private possibly by government Insurance of loans to speed up the heavy in- Ickes Carries Plan who like ex- presses little In the ity of private industry to solve the employment problem leaves tomorrow for Warm Springs with a plan to expand public works Smiling Chief Tackles Problem ROOSEVELT Though he was keeping tho figure a close usually well-Informed persons suggested that 000 to might be a good as to what he has in mind Hopkins Will Press Ad- Of Spending For Re- habilitation Idea Upon velt at Coming Meeting for immediate program Observers did not regard the Hopkins and Ickes plans aa a con- plan for a total tion of to but rather as two different approaches to the intertwined problems of recovery and relief But there was no doubt In most minds that many business and banking leaders and other cates of a process would be found in the opposing camp The Federal Emergency Relief has collected to show that the number of people on relief of all kinds has grown from in to last ber Moro than half were on direct officials call the dole Among the these things bulk More relief where the unemployed make goods for the Farm Industry Planned communities built with relief funds In them Hopkins hopes to evolve a com- bination of industrial employment and subsistence farming to provide security for thousands of families now living In crowded More money for rehabilitation loans to the destitute One quarter in Hopkins counts on reducing Federal in the future is the care of An increasing number of the states are being railed upon to resume their normal function of sheltering the aged and physically Though Ickes Is not disclosing his PWA he has said he could use as much as In a single year for slum clearance and low-cost housing He hinted that another couple of billion might be put to work ly on rural electrification and the of grade crossings Dec 1 stopping here on her way to California today denied and the allegedly scandalous charges made by Edward her former manager and who is suing her for ices I Conra Of denial of the ridiculous ami Courageous UI she said with is needless It is significant that the allegations were not made many years after my NEW YORK JURIST UPHOLDS SECTION OF NRA CODE who could refute them had In support of his had charged that he preserved her reputation during her early days in films Judge Black Rules In Union Suit 25 ABOARD FOUNDERING LAKE FREIGHTER SAVED NEW Dec 1 tion of the providing for collective bargaining between em- and upheld unequivocally today by Supreme Court Justice William Harman Black In the prolonged dispute be- tween the Doll nnd Toy Workers union and the Ralph A manufacturers of the Justice Black the ants a woek in which to compose if did not court would Dec 1 Twenty-five members of the whaleback freighter Henry Cort's to n that the provisions of tho crew reached shore safely this tjon are strictly enforced 11 hours after the ship in For Year struck the Muskegon harbor j Tho union and the company have water last night In a gale been in for over a PRESIDENT OF GLIDERS SOCIETY DIES IN CRASH Dec 1 E Eaton of N president of the Soaring Society of America anU a brother of C Republican man of New wan In- hero today in a glider Tho accident occurred while on nnd Pilot Harold of were being In gliders over the city by a plane containing Earl of who recently came here from N where he had conducted a glider Some said Eaton's glider went Into a spin ami crashed shortly after it and the one piloted by cut from tow SWEEPING REFORM IN GOVERNMENTAL Making their way to the hand over on a line shot to the freighter by coast the sailors fought their way over a mile of the ed breakwater to shore All were exhausted and ing from exposure Some had to be assisted to apparently in- jured The rescue of of them was considered an amazing feat in view of the high sea that was running and the tho plaintiff twion charging that the company tried to evade obligations of the protesting that the section bars the closed shop principle the plaintiff on page PARAGUAY HINGES PEACE OVERTURES OF BOLIVIAN HALT Asuncion Calls On New Govern ment To Cease Hostilities In Chaco UPPER ATLANTIC COAST STORM WARNING ISSUED Dec 1 The weather bureau today issued the following storm m Southwest storm warnings displayed Delaware water to Maine 9 a m Disturbance over New York and Middle Atlantic states moving ward will be attended by strong southerly winds and gales shifting to westerly and diminishing over south portion late this afternoon BR HASKEW TO PREACH FINAL SERMON SUNDAY Dr D W for two years the pastor of tho Street Methodist will preach his last sermons at 11 a m and at 7 p m tomorrow The recent con- ference in Pensacola Dr Haskew to the Andalusia con- and will leave day to resume hii work there By Dr Haskew will preach Sunday morning 8 sermon on and Sunday Christian Rec C S Talley will arrive in Dothan next Thursday with his family and will take charge of the LaFayette congregation for the en- Dec The Paraguayan ment today offered peace to Bolivia the new at La Paz stops hostilities by reports that the Bo- livian forces were retreating on all the ministry of sued a communique calling on the government at La Paz to declaring shall haws faith in thinks should bo discontinued an 1 BUDGET K SOUGHT Control Over Expenditures ed By Civic Body Dec I Sweeping reforms In the ment's budgetary will be advocated by the Chamber of Com- merce of the United States Tho chamber announced this day after conducting a referendum In which HB approved 13 proposals to Improve the budget One recommended was more active centralized control of would he obtained by ening the executive allotment tem of funds BO as to Include all ordinary and ency strengthening it so to avoid the necessity of deficiency This recommendation for er control by the administrative branch of the government suggested that ex- he reduced below Among other proposals approved That the executive budget be sub- mitted to congress about March instead of early th that estimates would be accurate if submitted nearer th of the fiscal That the Jn hia designate n That revenue estimates in the The warning was directed at I budget be BO expanded H- Former Jose Luis to present a complete revenue who took over the j gram That there should be a general accounting office directly under control of the executive and over north portion suing conference year Dionne Girls Busy Making Records For Weight Gains of the Bolivian nation days ago Meanwhile General In chief of the Para- two heads of a double drive straight nt and advanced defenses of the Bolivian communications Villa tes Lanzi of Bolivia wan re- ported to be holding a force of 000 troops In reserve well to the North of the Paraguayan and there were indications AGREEMENT WILL HASTEN END OF SILK AND RAYON STRIKE FOR MEN r Ont Dec 1 The five Dionne who amazed the world by mailing a Joint into it six months and three days now engaged in weight raising records Dr A R the country who brought them into the world and has supervised their care closely ever let it be known today that each of the quin- has practically quintupled her weight This amazing he pointed is to be compared with the fact that children ordinarily double their by the end of first six months of life for weighed ex- N Dec 1 The strike of silk dyers In valley mills its end today aa negotiators reached an was moving with agreement m order to prevent a surprise I Speedy ratification by shop officially recorded seven Paraguayan forces of the Federation of Silk and days after birth was two the advanced pout of I Dyers and Finishers was 8 ounces Her weight is Fort consolidating their paving the way for the 12 pounds yesterday Her BRITISH JOIN U S IN TERSE NOTE TO JAPS Objections To Oil Monopoly Voiced In Conceit To Tokyo For Third Time In 5 Months By Powers JAPANESE ADMIT PRESENTATIONS Vigorous Words Of Great Brit- Communique Believed Duplicated By U S tin's Dec 1 ed States and Great Britain for the third time in five had conceitedly notified the anese government of their tion to the oil oly In diplomatic representations It was officially admitted today that Sir Robert the Brltiah gave a note on the to Foreign Minister Kokl November although the United embassy and the foreign office to give out It was authoritatively learned that Ambassador Joseph Grew of the United States de- livered a similar note to the for- eign minister's residence this week end With diplomatic the Anglo-American oil controversy against Japan was by ob- servers aa having entered a more ten HO stage The British which was reasserted Great Britain's contention that the violates the treaty rights of the principle of and Insisted that Japan cannot cape responsibility for the actions of The content of the American note were not in view of the clear concert which it known to be maintained between London and as well as between the and American embassies in Tokyo observers had strong reason to believe that it took a line similar to that of the British Dev 1 The possibility of a new year naval treaty waa seen today us a result of new proposals by Japan Ambassador Tsuneo of Japan told Norman H the American representative to naval that Japan was tag to try to reach an ing on the basis of recent British proposals the British suggestion that fight to equality in theory only be granted and that equality In fact be withheld was flatly rejected by the Japanese the new Japanese move brought little satisfaction to the delegates to the since It was made clear that yo insists on the abolition of the which the United States and Great Britain are equally de- termined to maintain All the Japanese are willing to it was stated Is to try to reach an agreement if the British and Americans are prepared to concede full equality to Japan GRADING Bros SOUGHT C C road supervisor of Houston county's highway de- today announced bids on the gracing of four acres of land at Cedar Ford be opened Letters announcing tbe Ing of th have been sent to local firms The cost of the Job expected to run around per according to The Weather frost in South portion Sunday partly warmer ate variable winds on the coast H lightly colder In extreme what warmer in extreme Southwest portion Sunday cloudy and rate Sunday night and In West and South in IN EXTREME NORTHWEST ture 32 to 36 degrees in Interior Sunday generally warmer WEEKLY WEATHER OUTLOOK Central and East Gulf Bains in Eaat and Central portions at beginning and rain again within latter half of week Cool first warmer and colder again at close ly more than five times the original i positions into recording Each of her sisters has Eaat of made proportionate gains Snows are not expected to block Dr daily visits to his charges this for 100 men are working on construction of a road from to the Dionne where the babies live in their own UNITED STATES TO KEEP WITH BOLIVIA WASHINGTON 1 The United States plans to con- reopening of the mills on Monday Signing of a two-year contract be- i tween employers and workers expected to follow ratification The agreement reached today recognizes the federation SLS the collective bargaining agent for the workers Mill owners are pledged diplomatic relations with j Bunion livia Just as if there had been no Marie 9 Ibs 8 9 i change in the government private hospital The quintuplets latest 13 11 6 Annetts 11 11 Yvonne 121 that 2 Yvonne 12 2 oz i change UU 54 Ibs oz It wan said authoritatively today States the entirely in accord I constitution vacancy In a position held by union the owner will re- place the employe with another union member 4 I 7 f fl 1 V V I I I i v r t c V 1 I r h 1 k r j V y i l f A v