Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / April 18, 1935, edition 1 / Page 6
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OUio.CG.' .J, SEC. ON renfc i. 2 Lives of Little Mai ;r FBf f decide to play - THE FEATHERHEADS Br Pit The Noes Have It FELItf.DEAR M&U POUT LIKE To HAVE ME . LOOKING- SHABBY 50 roa Y AND XOU REALLf WOULDMT PLAIN f FANCY THAT NO ' 7 PLAIN - f : ) r .1 ibU WOULDN'T MIND IP-IP I WBRB TO HAVE A LOT T OP NEW CLOTHES f I . J nun I ... I , untie fX UAMP A LOT tr" .. r: ' n p new ctoiHKi 1 -t ) 7 .... i I . VJV I 1 If ' I . . 1 -TH&M, PEAR, Do) 'V we to eay ' SOME" New, CUOTHgdZ ssaneneasjsae- -new w YsoV a - l FINNEY OF THE FORCE -No Pinch TKi'SM JSlllIlff OW-HULL0.PAT-T.S llir . MAKES A MNW1J I Ifl l MAKE THIS OTrtftR. GlTf " j-rv 1 1 If T L,J,'l1rHg,s Tl plamb.luuiu XL Har mam. 1. j Expense of L i ing Censure. i. N. J.More man IV i spent to solve the i baby, murder Including a and conviction of Emtio 1 auptmann. Toll estimate iiia by Assistant Attorney Tre ooo.o j Lindi the ci-Rlcb-. 1 was c Gene: 1 Josenh A. Lanlgan. He made t " i estimate when the joint leglshi .ive appropriationa - commit tee a-iroved a anpplemental appro pria..on of $80,000 to defray the remaining expenses of the recent trial at I lemlngton. , i " Mt nimafi.M. said Lanuan, "takes In two and ene-half years of Investigation by the state of New Jersey, the city of Hew Xork and the federal governmenL" ;r The cost of the trial aione was extraordinarily ' high more i than $200,000 and caused Attorney Gen eral David T. Wllenti tat fume, spotter, .whistle and turn, red of face, i Routine expenses he could do nothing about hut the expenses dealing with expert witnesses are something else. - "I'll whittle some of them down with a blue pencil," WUent warned savagely, as be scanned the "expert" fees totaling Kosher Dinners, i ' ' . - Among the charges listed were $68.50, and S40 for special kosher dinners for the family of dead Ml. dor risen, brought here from Ger many to testify v against Bruno Richard Haoptmann's story., ' Only one member of the family, Hannah, a sister-of Ialdor, ever testified and she only for a few minutes. Dr. Charles H. Mitchell, who tes tified about the autopsy he per formed o the murdered baby, Charles Lindbergh, charged the state $500. and Prof. George a Priest, of ; Princeton, - asked iiou for reading his translation of a letter Baoptmann wrote ' to the risch family la Germany. District Attorney - Samuel Foley, of the Bronx, charged $807.80 for going RUFFLE NECKLINE cnatn incaoiAS V same the face: the throat with frilly minings, pleatlngs and shlr- ringSi Such is one . or lasmon s lattat vdirts. In the neckwear oe- partment. Uiey are showlnt boge rnehea a la Pierrot and bleh Medici collars of stiffened lace and tall Elizabethan pleatlngs oi sneer iao rlM. Ths necklines of coats and frocks are also frequently trimmed with voluminous minings ana men Ings, Tbe huge ruffled silk collar on th dress olctured is very flat. taring. Hatching ruffles on the sleeves add to. the attractiveness of this gown. Note the tucks which hold m the fullness of the bodice above the walstllna Designers are using great quantities of tucks as well as fancy snirnngs, in lasnion- ing spring and summer apparel. to Flemlngton , during sev.'i-iil v s ' j of the trial Of the handwriting expert i, I r. Wllmer Souder, tbe government ex pert from Washington, charged ou!y JJ3.15, travel expenses.' Eut pon derous old Albert S. Osborn val ued his opinions as a pen seer at no less than $12,000 and his son, Al bert D. Osborn, asked $3,6S3. Fees of other handwriting experts, were: Elbrldge W. Stein, $4,800; Herbert Walter, $456 Harry 10. ua sidy, $3,636; J. Clark Sellers, $838, and John f. Tyrell, $3,807. Angered, the cansUc little attor ney general, said , ;-f "AU these bills will be meat. tired by the same yardstick as In the case of a private litigant. No one ''will be permitted excessive fees merely because the state Is the debtor. Some of these bills are outrageously high. They 'will not be approved by me." S t. '' Expert Asks $4,130. ' , A ; German - medical expert, ! Dr. Louis Bchulbofer, was- never called as a witness, yet be blued the state $4,130. The Hlldebrecht ho tel In Trenton asked $4,130 for housing and feeding, state's wit nesses.. - ' -s-'A 'HiV'-i Meanwhile, Hauptmann still re mains In ; death row In Trenton prison,, having little to; do " with other prisoners,'- looking - forward to, visits from his wife, Anna, and his lawyers. His little son, Mann- fried, he may never see again. On her last visit, Mrs. Hauptmann was r.: Belolt. Wis. A . derwater plunta L. 40 "coal scoop" d- . i preserved their prmiiuric t tons until ages later w!-a t: ' were found by Dr. Roy Cliapii i Andrews in tbe Gobi desert, tlie famed Belolt college alumnus re vealed here, -fh'-'y-'-1'-'- ' These mastodons who drew their f .ion name from their pecu 1 . " Jutting lower Jaw which e . 1 them to ecoop up plants fr a the soft mud of Inland lakes a found piled, skeleton . upon 8' .'eton by Andtvnn. t reconatructed their history la times win-a the desert was a place of plenty' of food and told how tiiey apparently sank In the mud where they were searching' to t:;ijti$:&i$;p i ; t , i-. 1 .ins In cmtii. ; l i i. tlie i t ,it St Is an o nJ v n, and whc. cimi- l to attcnu ii tluies uiion his liiforn.ii. , s!on of the general aveu formance. , Mi that she cannot bring the In fant to prison, that her husband can never - see him again unless he wins, a new trial , and Is ac qultteo.!.iv;!';"v;B'iU:U;';A?,. The newt ' disheartened Haupt mann, but be still Insisted be would triumph In his light for a new trial. The cost of his appeal will run to more than $10,00 and will not be borne by the state, as originally agreed, but by tbe defense. : By appearing at rallies In New Tork, largely before German groups, Mrs. Hauptmann has managed to raise several thousand dollars. . More over, the. defense fund has been swelled by . press and. radio ap peals. Barred from openly solicit lng funds In New Xork, Mrs. Haupt mann Is planning appearances In other. Iarg,dtles.;jf ,:;:'' vi; V i At nreaent there are eleht dog actors on Broadway. That number mayv not be a new nigh for simcu tumm canine staae aDDearances, but It certainly Is a season's rec ord. Of the octet, the most famous la rinah. thd cocker snanlel who appears with Catherine Cornell In -xno oanwi m iiiiuipwhi o Tula ' Is Flush's second Broadway nnearanee. ': Ha started with the original Broadway run of "The Bar retts and went right tnrougn to the finish. Then he took to the road with Mies Cornell ; and thus is known all over ' the 'country. Flush Is somewhat Tatter than when ho made hhv Broadway bow. but that may be due to the fact that his part cals for so little actum, ah ha haa4o do la to recline on a coucH and regard bis surround ings with dead-pan -boredom wmcn he does so wen all his notices have been flattering. - ' . . - ' ' . ' ' The greatest number of dogs ap pears in The Great-Walt a." four taking part in the first act and then being seen no more. They are Leah and .MUler. French noodles. Teddy, a spits, and Tite, a genuine stream lined dachshund. Eeiore taung to the footlights, Tlte was the prop rt at Pani whlteman and was In Hollywood during the making of the Whlteman picture but laiiea tn land a nlace In the movies. ) So he probably hates Hollywood. ,. ' : J. ',.'. '..! v5.A;.;-'-';.L Mr. Dooley, a handsome Bcotty, has a part in "Fly Away Home." He la a commuter, traveling to and from Forest ', Hill with Elmer Browne, the stage manager, ; and probably having a betebr time than the dog actors who Uve In town. Then there Is Fill, the French poodle who has quite a part In "Anything Goes" and, nnauy, xoto, the companion of Cecilia Loftus In "Times Have Changed." Toto is a blue ribbon dog from " a famous Connecticut kennel. Her registered name' Is Lassie. During winter's last, and most furious blast," ' reports - John N, wheeler, "when everyone was snug gled 'down -In coats with 1 collars turned up about their ears, I saw a man about arty years oia, poruy, hatlen. with dark elassea. a bath ing suit; running shoes and a dog on a string beading lor central park to take his dally constitu tional and show the world how hearty be was. 1 never followed him to see If he died of pneumonia. Knt fhmt Amerlpan ' arrested In Paris for going around In shorts. should have tried his , experiment in New Tork since no one would have paid any attention to him. The sophistication of New lora- m lm Inrilratnt h the fart that mr bathing suit gentleman as he went along Sixtn avenue, oiant even get a curious glance from .pedestrians, taxi '.drivers and others whom he passed or who passed him."." ' Speaking of . taxi drivers, there was the couple. on their way to a masquerade at a fashionable mid town hotel. They. had their .cos tumes but were .wondering about their make-up. Finally the driver looked hack. "Excuse me tor buttln in," he said, "but maybe I can help yon out I was In Hollywood for ftn veara and von can tell bv this map I wasn't an actor." So they bad him peip tnem out ana who the aid of llDstlck. rouse and shav ing cream he did such a good Job that tney too a nrsc prue.,. "Taps," the greatest of the old- time song pluggers, is now a booking agent In a smart np-town offlce. In the old days .when song plugging was a highly specialised profession, Tana" was ao- well liked by or chestra, leaders and musicians that he could bring new music to a band, place the sheets on the racks of the players and the orchestra wonia swine Into bis songs, without a word from tht leader.' , ? . - One of the mid-town clubs baa a : Japanese princess said to be nthsntlfl aa an entertainer. 'She does a dance that defies descrip tion m tne ungusn language, u eenia to be a mixture of an Ameri can Indian war dance mingled with eastern svmbollsm. .,v,,, ' . v'.'i, :-f A BU STnaieata, WMt; sarrlaa. , Three Principal Fprces of the British Navy - Taliitiaa Girll Lat't I Peneete. Tahiti. em of I. seas, has one peculiarity 1 tlngulshes it from an or. Its natives do not rectv there is such a thing as l Tahttlan girls are chari- .. In face and fignre. Tin y laugh, dance and are ham y- yet love Is a quality on.iu. a their make-Tip. ; :.i &-r:" ' I..', Coppar Sold Silver . i Silver may, under certain c'.ro .t.nr :, be v coDuer. . Wben t - white metal comes out of a ern reflaery it is .soooo purev.ii i i. MnaiAernhlv higher than wi. ..t lil considered commercially pure s 1- vei1. So before it is BaiKKu, percentage of copper Is returned to the sUver. . This copper is sow as silver. fcS!,'?r:'i''v;'fi,'.;'-' :' . '.; . '.;'..:. .., . '. V-.' Progress of Corn rt. haa arnat DowerS of adapta- plllty. When the white man entered the North American plains he found tbe Indians growing corn from Mexico to Manitoba. The work of the Indian was continued and the boundaries of crop production ex tended beyond au expecwuuuo. m'' Cleopatra's Noedle m.. ' hiamirivnha on the obelisk aa r.innnatra's Needle ar- Inscrlbed In vertical columns whit, are read from the, top uuwuwtuu, the middle column Is In. honor of Thothmes, by whom the obelisk was first erected, ana we aiue wmuuu. In honor of Barneses JX , -Silver Sta Daebintloa - - ni. ciinf star ranks next be- low the Distinguished Service Cross ( as - a decoration for " Talon The Pnrple Heart ranks next below the Distinguished Service Medal, which Is the highest decoration for. meri torious service not involving p sonal bravery.- , , Use of Metal-CUd Warships ' Tka flrat naval battle In which metal-clad ships were' need on both ' sides took place in isai oeiw the Japanese and Korean navies. The opposing admirals were Clu-is-tlans, andHhey Wiled one anot'. : s CompetiUon of Marl ; Marl is defined as earthly,. ci Wing deposits.? consisting o'. mixed with carbonate of lime n varying proportions. It la em ployed as a fertilizer .for soils de ficient In lime. it'.' - i " .: . Prednctloa of Flaa' 1 Experiments In flax growing In dicate that California can produce two to three times as high a yield as Is obtained in other flax-growing legions of the United States. . :::ri'J - . ''i'tfii ' -Cos In Ohio Daring the excavation of a well near Fmdlay, Ohio, gas was found and carried by a wooden pipe to the owner's fireplace, where It was burned for more than 80 years. , , Food ia Camel's Hmp The camel does not Uterally eat the reserve supply of. food stored, In Its hump. This Is simply used by the system as It Is needed. t ; "w Monttar Print Cnrb Ston ; A sandstone1 curbing - on Llr Neb.'s main street, bears tlie s print of a prehistoric mom probably 225,000,000 years old. Snood of Lightning . f - Photographic teste by engineers Indicate that lightning travels 23 BOO miles per second, on the av erage. :'ry;'1'if';l:r J. r,v Danolngla Japan! .; ". ' In Japan tbe beauty of dancing la in the poses, not the movements. w; ft t
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 18, 1935, edition 1
6
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