LAUNCH PROGRAM TO CUT RELIEF ROLLS BY TWO-THIRDS heb OF THE STATE OF WISCONSIN THE WEATHER Snow tonight Thursday partly cloudy followed by colder VOL XXVI NO 275 SHEBOYGAN WIS WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER FINAL EDITION PRICE 3 CENTS Kentucky Follows Thirty-Six Others In Repeal Column By The Associated Press Here are Tuesday's election results at a End of prohibition assured as Utah becomes state to repeal Pennsylvania and Ohio also vote for repeal North and South Carolina reject it Kentucky's vote count started returns favoring repeal H LaGuardia elected mayor of New York in fusion victory over Tammany hall and Recovery party Vare republican machine beaten in Philadelphia by crats Mellon organization loses Pittsburgh mayoralty to crat Bridgeport Conn elects socialist mayor first time in ton of the state Buffalo elects democratic mayor first since 1914 Frederick W Mansfield republican elected mayor of land over Kay T Miller democratic incumbent Philadelphia and Pittsburgh vote for Sunday baseball and football Republicans retain control of assemblies in New York and New Jersey Most Jersey counties legalized horse racing Washington the country has turned away from national prohibition as a solution of the age old liquor problem and within 28 or 29 days that problem will be bark upon the With an irresistible impact of ballots yesterday's elections again showed that the hope and confidence with which the 18th amendment was put into force almost fourteen years ago were by events of the passing years to something far different Although the unanimous succession of states favoring of repeal was broken by the opposition of North and South Carolina margins in favor pyramided to the and westward in Ohio Pennsylvania and finally Utah North Carolina went more than two to one against a change while South Carolina's majority was less than Utah Is Thirty-Sixth Pennsylvania rolled up more than four to one repeal with Ohio following by a two to one advance and Utah was somewhat less than one with about half the precincts reported Latest returns Total For Against Precincts Precincts Movement Is Gaining Strength Black States Kill Eighteenth Amendment In S STATES THAT HAVE VOTED FOR REPEAL Roosevelt Takes New Relief Step Expands Program To Take Four Million From Relief Rolls By December 15 The above map depicts in black the states which have voted lor repeal of the Eighteenth ment The states In white either have not voted as yet or have voted against repeal The only two to vote the latter way are North and South Carolina 662 Pennsylvania Kentucky 43 Carolina Carolina 798 For Repeal Repeal Thirty-three states had already voted to obliterate the Eighteenth amendment So only three more were needed to it into history as the first amendment repealed and to the Twenty-first to the constitution as the first one proved by state conventions Kentucky In Wet Column The Kentucky votes are being counted today If claims the dry laws are borne out there the Ohio Utah conventions of December 5 will signal the for- of inasmuch as the Kentucky convention Qf Texas on November 27 Kentucky upholds the present set-up then the Maine con- Continued on page 17 Co To Okay Station Stop Milk Truck Near West Bend Wis UP About 25 farm strike pickets stopped a Luick Dairy company truck bound for Milwaukee near Germantown today and dumped 20 cans of milk The federal sheriff Joseph Kirsch of was asked ton county said the pickets had h application of when deputies arrived acho Station to operate Mrs Anderson's Appeal Is Heard By Personnel Bureau La Guardia Is Elected Mayor By Large Vote Tammany Dynasty Suffers Severe Blow As Fusion Candidate Wins By Margin First Hearing Is Held At Capitol Further Testimony Will Be Given At a n at Sheboygan Wis hearing before the August G Gut- 1 fnp the Sheboygan the company's as an aid to whose boats ply Wisconsin port ti opposed by the Attorney For Milk Pool Is Threatened Green Bay to get out of the Milk Pool or we will dynamite your was made over the telephone here this after- noon to Raymond J Evrard ney for the Wisconsin Milk Pool and former Brown county district attorney By B L LIVINGSTONE New The Tammany dynasty in New York City has from power in day's elections which gave Fiorello H La Guardia the by a plurality and crushed the candidacy of Joseph W McKee Never in the recent political tory of Tammany hall has the wreckage of its city-wide machine been so complete Tammany salvaged from the tion upheaval only its New York county ticket In victorious fusion quarters the assertion was made that Tammany had passed the word to vote from the knife Mayor John P O'Brien and trade him in as a desperate attempt to save what it could from the fusion landslide The Tammany mayoral candidate failed to carry one of the five and finished third in the three-cornered race On the other hand the fusion its opponents be- fore it under the rush of the fiery La com- plete control of the municipal by winning thirteen of the sixteen votes on the board of estimate the body of the city The mayoral vote gave Continued on page 6 By W J BOLLENBECK to his knowledge no complaints had been made against Mrs Anna Anderson deposed superintendent of dah until July 1 1933 was the testimony today of George B 1 ris a member of the state board of control that ousted her Calling of Harris at the opening of Mrs Anderson's hearing before the state board of personnel was a f Hull Begin Talks On Soviet Problem Washington IP dent Roosevelt today ed an expansion of the federal relief program aimed at taking four million men off public re- lief rolls The plan involves the ation of a civil works tration and the use of of public works funds these additional funds the administration in- tends to increase the part time work of men now on relief rolls so that they may be put on a self sustaining basis It is intended that two lion men shall be put on a self sustaining basis by November 16 and that an additional two million men may be put on this basis by December 15 Hopkins Directs Work Harry Hopkins the federal relief administrator will direct the civil works administration The president has laid down the principle of a thirty-hour week for the workers he in- tends to employ Mr Roosevelt believes that by this one stroke at least two- Farm Picket Is Hauled To Jail Merrill Wis UP Albert Jacobson 25 a farm strike picket stopped a car near the city You hauling any farm he demanded replied Sheriff Harold J Getchell whom Jacobson had failed to recognize we're ing a farm-bred picket to town right now Jacobson paid a fine on a charge of unlawfully obstructing traffic Strike Activity Quieting Down In Wisconsin Walter Singler Renews Charge Agricultural Ad- ministration Is Too Slow With Relief Vote To Oppose The Strike Three Counties Are Represented At Bir Meeting At Kiel 0 Tuesday Night Preliminary Discussion Of Phases Leading To Recognition Pleases Russian Envoy thirds of the country now of by Frederick the ground that the in operation on provided sufficient company seeks a WSK which was eight of commission Land Bank Loans Set Speed Record St Paul IP The local federal lard bank is loaning to farmers of North Dakota Wisconsin Michigan and Minnesota at the of 000 daily Leo T district Farm Credit Administrate agent said today The loan IB he added Press Club To Honor Editor For Dry Law Fight C E Broughton who fought incessantly in the public press and on the public platforms to preserve the people's rights from the time the prohibition ment was proposed until it was restored will be the guest of honor at a state-wide Prohibition Repeal Victory banquet which is to be staged here on the ning of Dec 6 by The Press Club of Sheboygan officers announced today Other plans for the event will be announced later surprise move on the part of ney T L Doyle her counsel The witness proved to have a poor memory throughout his tion Most of the complaints against Mrs Anderson were minor ones he admitted It was also brought out at the opening of the hearing that of the list of 35 names submitted by Mrs Anderson in support of her cause only 13 had been called by the board of control Madison of both sides present the hearing of Mrs Anna M Anderson who was deposed as superintendent I of by the state board of control got under way before the state personnel board shortly before 2 p m today Among those present were Mrs Anderson and her counsel Attorney T L Doyle of Fond du Lac His daughter Celia Doyle is acting as in the case Members of the board of control present were Col J J Hannan chairman Mrs Katherine Sullivan George B ris anj A W Bayley secretary of the board of control A J Bieberstein chairman of the state personnel board is presiding at the hearing and other members of the board present are Miss Janet Syverson and John Campbell Attorney Doyle's first act at the hearing was to file all of the letters in the case as a matter of record Members of the personnel bureau who are conducting the appeal hearing A J Bieberstein chairman Madison Janet son Tomah and John Campbell Dodgeville The cent appointees first two are of Gov A re- G By JOSEPH H BAIRD United Press Staff Correspondent of State Hull and Foreign Commissar Maxim Litvinoff of the Soviet union after a two hour talk today issued a joint statement indicating gress in their attack on problems concerning tions The conversations were described as a friendly private discussion preliminary in nature which will be resumed at 4 p m at the state de- After meeting newspapermen the American and Soviet officials went to the White House for luncheon with President Roosevelt where the chief executive for the first time had an opportunity to begin serious dis- with the visiting Soviet official They met formally last night Resume Talks Late Today The communique There was a very friendly vate discussion of some of the out- standing questions involved in the matter of relations between the families in the receiving relief will be removed at least in part from relief roles Great Reduction Already Approximately three million families are now being cared for by public relief agencies under White House estimates This is a reduction since April of families The president has been informed that during September alone 250.000 families were taken of relief rolls representing about one million persons Other recovery signs noted today at the White House A rise in farm prices for the week ending October 25 from an index figure of 50 to 52 A rise in prices paid by Continued on page 6 Steps Taken For Purchase Of Steel Rail outburst of violence which accompanied sin's entry into the current farm strike had definitely subsided today but rumblings of discontent kept county authorities on thu alert As an aftermath of one instance of violence earlier in the strike Frank McCorison charged with first degree murder in connection with he slaying of Gunder Felland farm sicket was bound over for trial to v 27 at a hearing in Madison late yesterday Leaders of two farm J Singler president of the Milk Pool and B J mann president of the Society of outspoken in criticism of the national administration's forts to bring about better farm conditions Counsels Against Violence Gehrmann speaking at the annual meeting of the Society of Equity at Chetek counseled against violence Continued on page 6 Continued on Page 17 Roosevelt To Discuss Repeal With Officials Schmedeman A E Garey tor of personnel is assisting the bureau in its probe Discouraged Entertaining The Anderson was ed by the bureau as a result of suspension and later discharge by the board of control after having been superintendent of the institution since 1928 The Continued On Page All phases of the repeal situation covered in a voluminous report from five cies will be discussed by President Roosevelt and experts either morrow or Friday the White House said today Declining to comment on the repeal victory the White House nevertheless indicated that it was a matter of prime interest and that the discussions would be pated in by representatives of the state and agriculture departments the attorney general's office and the commerce and treasury ments and the bureau of internal revenue Homecoming And Centennial Planned Here Executive Organi z a t i o n Formed At Meeting Of Men And Women Held On Tuesday Evening A large and enthusiastic group of men and women representing the organizations in Sheboygan that de- vote their attention to the civic and social development of the ity met at a dinner meeting in the Foeste hotel Tuesday evening and formed the 1934 Sheboygan nial and Homecoming association which is to conduct the huge com- munity celebration next year on the 100th anniversary of this city's founding Sid Kaye was elected president Arnold Steimle vice president Otto An strike movement In Calumet Manitowoc and Sheboygan counties got in full swing at Kiel last night when approximately a thousand farmers cheesemakers and others met at the Kiol city hall auditorium They voted in opposition to the strike and formed the Manitowoc County Farmers Protective League The meeting was called by Mayor Adolph Hingiss of Kiel George Mathes of Rockville was elected as chairman and Arthur H Thielke of Louis Corners as secretary Sectional meetings are being planned this week and next week and one is scheduled to bn held in Wagner's tiall at Francis Creek Thursday evening Nov 9 ers cheesemakers and the public in general are invited to the meeting officers announced Vote To It was unanimously voted that all cheese factories creameries con- and other dairy plants in Sheboygan and Manitowoc county should be opened at once and a resolution calling upon sheriffs of these counties to provide the protection that may he required was unanimously adopted Those at the meeting also ed a resolution asking the county boards to pry men who were em- ployed as deputy sheriffs in the May strike as well as the present strike District Attorney Edward S Kick of Calumet county was one of the speakers at the meeting In Kiel He stated that the law provides that individuals may transact ness as they see fit without inter- ference and that law enforcement officers are charged with the re- sponsibility of seeing that protection Is provided Two hundred county members signed up at the close of the meeting as members of Manitowoc County Farmers League Strike Sentiment Lessens Sheriff Ernst C Zehms stated that the strike situation in on page 6 Washington go Milwaukee St Paul and railroad requested permission the interstate commerce commission today to issue notes to secure a 818 750 public works loan for the purpose of purchasing gross tons of steel rails This is the first application which has been received by the sion for permission to issue notes to secure loans from the al lotted recently by the P W A to enable carriers to re-lay their tracks The loan will run for ten years without interest for the first at four per cent during years The Milwaukee also requested permission to issue cotes to the amount necessary to purchase fastenings to lay the steel The price of the fastenings has not been determined as yet The rails will cost a ton FOB the mill In its application for permission to issue notes the Milwaukee said the amount of steel rails to be chased with P W A funds was slightly less than the average an- replacement year Want Names and addresses of for- mer Sheboygan county residents and others who will want to come here for the Centennial and celebration next year are wanted by those in charge the arrangements Ar- thur F Winter general tion chairman will appreciate receiving them should be sent to him in care of Nye and Winter company 711 N Eighth street It is planned to send in- to all whose names are received Messner secretary William mann treasurer and Arthur F Winter general convention man These officers are to tute an executive committee which will appoint a general convention committee and act in a general capacity Tbe general committee will name the Continued on Page 8 Five Children Perish In Fire At Ohio Home Parents And Sixth Child Are Injured When Home Burns Down At McDonald Ohio Youngstown O dren were burned to deal n and their parents and another child were in- jured when a house occupied by Mr and Mrs John Pete Just outside McDonald in Trumbull county burned to the ground early today The Victoria Pete 6 Dan 5 George 3 Joe and an infant Mr and Mrs Pete and their son John Jr were brought to a hospital here suffering from burns The parents and John Jr badly burned staggered out of the blazing building and collapsed outside tbe door They were given first aid by Firemen said they thought an explosion had preceded the blaze The bodies of the dead children were recovered from the glowing embers of the house Physicians said Mrs Pete ably would not recover Her husband was badly burned about the hands and face but condition Is not considered serious John Jr also was burned about the face The boy said the nre occurred when his father poured coal oil into the kitchen stove to revive the fire An explosion threw blazing oil tbe place