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The Akron Beacon Journal from Akron, Ohio • Page 11
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The Akron Beacon Journal from Akron, Ohio • Page 11

Location:
Akron, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2 BILLION LIE MEASURE DRAFTED ELEVEN Akron Boy Scouts Get Set For Year's Biggest Event to which boys will be the lucky winners. but also will take many side trips off the usual schedule of ordinary sightseeing events. day will be spent as guests of the Boy Scouts of the Washington area at their camp on the Potomac. Last year Just on the eve of leaving for the capital, the boys were disappointed in their trip because of an infantile paralysis epidemic which caused President Roosevelt to cancel the jamboree. This year two days will be spent at Camp Manatoc getting ready for the great Journey, and then "on to Washington." Illinois Republican Congressman Dies ROCKFORD, 111., April 24.

Iff) The death of Representative John T. Buckbee, Rockford republican and seed company owner, left Illinois today with only five republican members in the house delegation at Washington. Buckbee, who represented the 12th district, had been in falling health and was not a candidate for renomlnation in the primary election, April 14. Flavlna Carl son, his secretary, said heart disease was the cause of hia death, yesterday. He was 84.

LIQUOR RVLINO APPEALED COLUMBUS, 0 April 34. MR The district court of appeals received a request from the state board of liquor control yesterday to reverse a lower court ruling permitting retail permit holders to advertise with outdoor signs tha brand of beer and liquor sold inside. Probe Deaths The Washington Jamboree is scheduled for June 21 to 28. Its to be almost a week of sightseeing and celebrating, with headquarters at a hotel in the capitol city and Scout leaders and a large committee to take charge of the TrIE biggest activity of the year for Boy Scouts of the Akron area, is the Camporee which is to be held June 6, and 7, at Camp Manatoc. This year the Camporee is to be especially exciting since the three highest ranking patrols in the Camporee events will receive a free trip to Washington a gift of the Beacon Journal.

That means that the Beacon Journal is sending to the capital not only the 47 boys who were all lined up to go to the National Jamboree last year, but also the 24 who will win honors in the Camporee as the three highest ranking patrols. Every patrol has an equal chance to win this wonderful trip and excitement is running high these days in troops all over the city as ooys auring me trip and to see that everything goes over in A-l shape. The boys will visit not onlv the usual places of Interest the Smithsonian Institute, the White House and' Capitol and Mt. Vernon, 'AKRON BEACON JOTTCNATJ In 1 i I II II! i i i li I IS! Hi mtmm 4' jh it VS. I 'I Would like to know all about the new homes that can be built and financed on convenient terms? Or would you like to know how you can recondition your present home bringing it up to modern standards with modern conveniences? Or would you like to know just how you can refurnish your home or add some labor saving devices? Then i you will want to attend The Akron National Huge Sum Contained Deficiency Appropriation Bill, In Committee Thi AnUt4 Frtw WASHINGTON, April 24.

An appropriation bill, carrying more than $2,000,000,000, mot of It for relief In one form or another, rap-Idly neared the house floor today leaden aought to clear the path for adjournment of congress early in June. Chairman Buchanan, democrat of Texas of the house appropriations committee, said he hoped to close hearings by tomorrow on the huge deficiency appropriation bill and have it ready to follow the tax bill on the house floor. If the committee follows budget estimates, the bill will carry for next year's work relief program, almost half a billion dollars for the social security board, and last minute extras for other governmental agencies. Hopkins Files Data It will bring this session's total appropriations well over the mark, including the soldiers' bonus, which was not included in the original budget. Republican members of the committee were poring over an armful of statistics on the relief problem and administration of WPA.

The figures were provided by Harry L. Hopkins, WPA administrator, in reply to republican queries when he recently appeared before the committee. The minority members were planning to use the material as the basis for drafting an alternate relief program which would mantle the WPA, decentralize administration of relief, and return the job to the states Wlth-federal financial aid. Discretion With State Central Press MRS. VELMA PATTERSON Held In jail at Greenville, Texas, on indictments charging her with the poison deaths of her two children, Mrs.

Velma Patterson, reputed liquor queen, denied the charges and asserted her first husband, Vester Mc-Casland, might have been revealed. Meanwhile, the town of Commerce, 15 miles from Greenville, and the home of Mrs. Patterson, was a seething hotbed of gossip. Every sudden death in the past six years was recalled as authorities Intimated they might exhume the body of Mrs. Patterson's third husband, who died under mysterious HOME SHOW ii ii'i Mrs.

Bertha Johnson Sues For $15,000 Widowed in a traffic crash, Mrs. Bertha Johnson, 1216 Pond View av filed suit for 115,000 in common pleas court Friday against Sterling Pierce, R. D. 7, Medina, whose auto allegedly was involved. The petition charges that James J.

Johnson, 45, was crossing E. Exchange at Kling when Pierce's speeding auto struck and killed him. at the The administration plan calls for continuing Hopkins' WPA as the chief means of providing relief for the needy jobless. It would EAST MARKET GARDENS APRIL 25Hi to MAY 2nd be administered as in the past through state administrators sub FUTURE VETS ELECT ject to the approval of the gov crnment here. COLUMBUS, 0 April 24.

UP) Frank Seidel, Lakewood senior, headed the Veterans of Future Wars chapter at Ohio State uni Under the republican plan, the detain of which have not been worked out, each state would be allotted a certain amount of federal money to use as it pleased versity today following the resig nation yesterday of William Jones, Youngntown sophomore, as commander. Jones said he acted in taking care of the unemployed at the request of his father. Republican sponsors of the Idea contend the states can manage their own programs better and more economically than they can be handled from Washington, and FOIL STRENGTH for Prompt Pain Relief that me plan would cost considerably less than the present one, Democrats, on the other hand, assert the plan was tried orlgl nally and failed. Buchanan has contended that under WPA the For those interested in the home and the development of the home, this exposition will be of great benefit. Materials of every description, equipment, appliances, designs, furnishings, lighting effects; model rooms, landscaping and complete information on financing, through local institutions and The Federal Housing The Show will be open daily from 11 a.

m. to 11 p. m. except Sunday. On Sunday the doors are open from 1 p.

m. to 11 p. m. THIS WILL BE THE GREATEST HOME EXPOSITION EVER HELD IN AKRON. Admission 25c administration is decentralized as much as it can be without the fed eral government's losing control "FUNNY hdw dsy It is to get fatso (mpi-esstdns.

I've always had the Idia that Dr. D. Redmond announce! the opening of new offices 1022 First Central Tewtr Bldf. Practice limited to extracting, minor oral surgery, turgical treatment of pyorrhea, diagnosis and X-ray. General and local anesthesia Telephone FR-0622 Akron, 0.

of its own money. Republican Club Gets Back On Feet CHICAGO, April 24. CP) South Side punsters had their inning today. "I hear," they commented, "the Eighth ward republicans are back on their feet." They referred to the theft of 30 chairs from ward headquarters of the party. Bond sells only $25 suits.

And I like to spend a bit more. Doggone, man! THREE LITTLE WORDS THAT DESCRIBE A GREAT WHISKEY VALUE: -your $30 and $35 RochesttjMailored clothes are right down my alley!" We're guilty -but we can't promise to completely reform. After all, our "TWenty- Fives" are causing so much talk around town that we really can't keep them out of thft headlines. But if you are like our friend up above -if you Jike to spend a bit more -this may have kept you away from Bond's. And bad business for both of us! ic You probably know that the finest clothes In these United Statel are made in Rochester, N.

Y. But you may not know this "Bond only tettdl clothier in the country who owns and operates a factory in RochHter, It's the largest plant of its kind in the world employing 1650 of Rochester's best hands, 52 weeks a year. It produces quality and style worthy of Rochester's best traditions -at a tariff of only $30 and $35. FFiere we to buy these clothes in the open market, tfe'dhatt to pay and charge you -of least $7.50 more! So don't catalogue us as only a $25 storet Take a good look at our Rochester-tailored "Thirties" and "Thirty-Fives" -and you're sure to fay to yourself "I've certainly had you folks all wrong." two trousers included with every suit Irlgodler hat lolved for many XflJrgZ ''h, VX. men the problem of how to get "'AV -vT v'VAVV good, substantial whiskey at very low prict.

LJrJ iUU "Ch arge It" the Bond way and pay weekly or twice a month, This popular service does away with large lump payment! and monthly bills, It is a most convenient way to buy good clothes-oncj it costs you not a cent extra. 171 S. MAIN ST..

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About The Akron Beacon Journal Archive

Pages Available:
3,080,691
Years Available:
1872-2024