Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 27, Number 60, Decatur, Adams County, 11 March 1929 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
New Hoover Cabinet Pored for First Picture W>w yA /\/A f vML-i '&> \ 1/ a > MHT iBk AL > \ „<\ --<> . \l ■ '■' >'. • • *. ■<*^Pwr > iW' *' • " ..,* pypl \ *% r g|..>.*W w - iMMk gHSf - jmMB v Bi § a j> 4BBbWiF& •BBm ■ Shßo^bjli •*Sr Jt jM jL-QK £' 3pS /AVdiftff xlk ,w jft ■*J K Bw f '*' IK 'Ss&'hm W- * W-. ”X * . - DAVIS LAMONT HYDE CURTIS WILBUR ADAM.S ROWN GOOD KELLOGG HOOVER MELLON -MITCHELL This hi-iiic the first time Hooter and his Cabinet have gotten together, they Curtis al°o is in lite gathering. The only member absent is Stimson, posed before their initial meeting and here is the result. Vice-President Kellogg holding over until he arrives
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The ill-fated airship Italia, top, about, to take olf from Spltzberge.i. The real cause of the disaster which ended in the wreck ot the ship, and lamentable loss or life, was found to be the crew's lack of trust*in the commander, accordifig to the official commission of investigation. The report scored Geneial Nobile for his poor
Rothstein Shadow Darkens New Murder f-FX JU - - IPF Jftst ' 4HI " ’ 'WjfeWf «, « . r ’ ~* t * * * * • •• ■* * I “ * «X4l ’! - w >'y4 * t a • r i T*r /To « W* |i h *><<' B*l 5». *J y ItW* *-* JbahJllitl ■ ' : '"' 'V '" ■ ■'-” =jt " - ', ■- , £•. T^" 1 . i-^*" ' ARNOLD ROTHSTEIN INEZ NORTON “FATTY” WALSE
Ed Wilson. New York and Chicago gambler, is being sought in connection with the killing in Coral Gables, Fla,, of Arnold Rothstein's ex-bodyguard, Thomas Fatty Walsh. Many pages have been written since Arnold Rothstein was slain but the chaptei is for from closed, according to the police version of the slaying of "Fatty"
OBIAURARY i Orah Auice Whit ten barger Deßolt. ' was the daughter of Isaac and Sarah , Whlttenbarger, and was born in Van Weit County, Ohio, on February 14, i 1877. < Ou April 12, 19(X3. she was united in marriage to Jesse Deßolt and to this t
judgment in assembling a heterogeneous crew, and added "the commander was fully responsible for this mistake." Ixiwer left : The survivors, grouped about the famous "little red lent.’’ Uiwer right: General Nobile, who faces possible court-martial. (International Newsreel Photo)
Walsh, Arnold's ex-guard, and the wounding of Arthur Clark. The tragedy took place in the fashionable Miami Hotel shown above. Police would like to question Inez Norton, heiress in the Rothstein will now being contested. (International Illustrated News)
union was born three children, two daughters and one son, namely. MrsJoby Werst of Decatur, and Mildred and Wilbur, at home. Immediately following her marriage she came wdth her husband to this community and has here since resided. In early wmauhood she united with the United Brethren Chtirch at Woods
DECAI PR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, M ARCH 11. 1929.
Chapel. She is pteceeded in death by her parents and her two sisters. Myra and Margaret. She is survived by her husband, the two daughters, one son two grand children, and three brothers Walter Whlttenbarger and Willis Whittenbargtr and’ Wjlllis WHiittenbarger ot' near Decatur and John Whit-
Will Lead Green H J- M,k jffiw . jnBI I f ’ A it <:*• .. , j i » al < iin tift WiAo ~S' r.tti.gl Jackson L. Cannell, above, will take over the job of football coach at Dartmouth College following the resignation of Jesse Hawley, Green mentor, who is forced out of the game by pressure of business. (international Hawaii’s Next Chief "i ,w v f ">»• I /< ■' A' I h r jt Lawrence M. Judd of Honolulu is being boomed as the next Governor of the Territory of Hawaii, to replace Governor Wallace R. Farrington. James P. Winne, Republican Nation- ! al Committeeman from the Islands, ' will lay Judd’s name before President '. Hoover at the earliest opportunity. \ — tenbarger ot Middlepoint. Ohio, besides many other friends and relatives. Card of Thanks We wish to thank our friends anti • neighbors who so kindly assisted us i during the sickness and death of our i husband and father. We also wish to i thank those who sent spiritual and floral offerings Mrs. Joseph Eyanson.
Various Legends Tell of the Origin of Music Music, most authorltlw agree, hud n vocal origin. Some believe man attempted tn imitate the sound* of bird*, others say hi* melody developed from bunting eulls or other vocal signal* employed In primitive life. A Chinese legend goes so far a* to declare that a miraculous bird provided the musical scale, while the Japanese say music was devised ( by the gods to lure the sun goddess from a cave where she had retired. The Arabian legend Ims It thut Modhar, a camel driver, fell from bls seat and hurt his arm. In pain he called out “Ja, Jodah.” His fine voice stirred up the camels so that they moved more quickly. So (who could not guess the result!) from that time all cumel-drlv-ers sang. It Is interesting to note that the Greek word from which “music” is derived was used by that people to embrace all the arts over which the Nine Muses were held to preside. Hence, ‘•Musk 1 ” In those 'lays included all those branches of education concerned with the development of the mind ns opposed to the body. What moderns specifically call music, they referred to us "harmony.” Morning Glory Blossom Saved for Count’s Eyes A legend tells of the introduction of the morning glory into Japan, says the New York Times. A Japanese prince heard of a vine that blossomed only in the early morning, and notified the foreign nobleman who owned it he was coming to see it When he arrived the vines no longer were trailing over the walls. The entire garden had been uprooted and there was no sign of the flower. Being angered, he started to leave. Having been invited to tea, however, his sense of politeness compelled him to turn back. On entering the tearoom he saw a single morning glory blossom in a vase in a raised alcove. Inquiring of the nobleman why the garden ' had been ruined, the prince received the reply, “I ruined the garden in order that you might really see the blossom. If it were In plenty, you could not really have observed it so well as you did this single last flower saved for your eyes alone.” Coleridge’* Expensive Innocence Material things bothered Coleridge little more than they do most other poets and it is said that as a result of his aerial abstraction lie came to attend Jesus college, Cambridge, as innocence personified. One of his biographers relates how the young man was accosted by a polite interior decorator requesting to be permitted to fix up the new pupil's rooms. “How would you like tlirm furnished?” the tradesman asked in his most solicitous manner. “Just as you please, sir,” replied Coleridge, thinking the man was employed by the college. The decorator took the young man at his large word and did a thoroughly good job of It. Coleridge moved In and was well pleased with his quarters. A few days later he received a bill, the amount of it making him gasp, but seeing where the error was he did not cotpplaln. Thought Star* New Each Day Metrodorus of C hios (not to he confused with the four other Grecian philosophers of the same name) wus a complete skeptic. He accepted the Democritian theory of atoms and void and also believed in a plurality of worlds, but he had a very Ingenious theory of his own by which he staunchly stood. He declared the stars were formed from day to day by the moisture In the air under the heat of the sun. His radical skepticism also is seen in one of his writings quoted by Cicero: “We know nothing, no, not "Even whether we know or not!” His theory about the stars drew a lot of contemptuous criticism but lie came back at his critics with, “Everything is to each person only what it appears to him to be.” Protestants’ First Church The first Protestant church west of the Alleghenies was built near the present town of New Philadelphia, Ohio, in 1772. A town was started there hi that year by Rev. David Zeisberger, Moravian missionary, and his band of 28 Christian Indian followers. Soon a larger body of Christian Indians arrived and the place acquired a log schoolhouse (also the premier one in the Middle West), the above mentioned church, about 40 cabins and the community thrived. Much religious and educational work was carried on, hut about five years later the town was destroyed by hostile Indians; Its location was lost and not rediscovered until 1923. Among the Best Sellers On the shelves of book stores in Paris, the New Testament, hound in paper covers is to be found. Its price is the same as that of any paper-cov-ered novel—fifteen francs. There is no preface and the matter Is not arranged in texts, but is printed solid. Cross heads give It a modern appearance and guide the reader through the Gospel. A table of contents ar ranged like the contents of a novel, ends the work. A Professional Man "Are you a doctor?” she asked the young man at the soda fountain. madam,” he replied, “I’m a tlxzlcian.”—Vancouver Province.
I National Enforcement Commission [ I I 14 !' ipd 'SSw '“A/ ‘ iVAKj '' s *r zZ • 7- TFx^ 1/V... . , t —- MUIm. I Among the possibilities suggested as members of a commission which won] study means to enforce the dry law. Julius Roeenwald, left, George Whart Pepper, right, ami Newton D. Baker, below, are the most probably ,-hoic* Their duties would also inchid! the study of the enforcement of everv niiJ branch of Federal law.
MONTANA DEALS LENIENTLY WITH WOMEN SLAYERS Two Os Last Three Freed And Other Given Light Sentence Butte, Mont., March 11 —(UP) —Women contemplating murder mig'it well believe that Montana is an excellent state in which to carry out plans. Perhaps the old Western spirit, prevailing in this state to an astonishing degree, shows its effects on juries Perhaps the Northwestern “wide open spaces” reserve the old chivalrous, feeling toward women Perhaps tfie women who kill in Montana are well versed in the matter of drawing sympathy from jurors. Whatever the acuse, Montana, lately, has been an excelent commonwealth for women killers. Three in a row have gone to trial far killing men. Two were acquitted. A third drew a two-year prison sentence. The case which drew Hie most widespread interest was that in which Elaine Harrington, young blond, figured. She was charged with having sJiot and killed a negro, allegedly her pai amour. The shootin gclimaxed a long period of association with the negro. Miss Harrington, the daughter of a lay preacher, was formerly an ardent Sunday school worker. She was acquitted of the crime. A white man received a charge of both barrels of a shotgun in his chest. The gun was tired by a negro woman. She surrendered voluntarily, but maintained that the gun had been accidentally discharged. She was sen fenced to two years “to be given time to devise methods of being more careful with loaded weapons “ Mrs. Pauline Wall, of Auburn. Wash., was recently freed of a charge of killing Robert P. Cargo, her son-in-law, in Helena. She admitted that she fired the shot that struck Crago between the eyes, but swore that seh shot in defense of her daughter, who was, she alleged, being threatened by Crago, weilding a stove poker. The shooting climazed a family argument With these three cases fresh in their .Montanas are beginning to wonder if, by chance, tills state might
I Notice I I To Employes The Sewing department || will resume operation tomorrow morning, (Tuesday). Employes will please report at the usual time. I Waring Glove Co. j
uot be an excellent haven for worn J killers; or if the frontier attitude, p i a( J ing little importance on a shooting J two, continues to crop mu m t | lP SI J port of feminine trigger artists. I o H Breathe Deeply a A good circulation of air means i| good circulation of blood, it better nerves, better energies and bet-1 ter health, so when you resolve to take! at least ten deep breaths every day,l tilling your lungs to the very MtoaJ you are forming a resolution that is I going to mean a great deal to your I health. I o '' I Keep Cellar Whitewashed | Cellar walls should he whitewashed■ once or twice a year. Whitewash Isl a disinfectant. If the cellar walls ad- 1 mil moisture It is recommended tol wash them with a dilute solution of] hydrochloric acid (one part acid and | , five parts water), and then apply 1 1 plaster of oil-mixed mortur. I ' ■ — o — I Don't Pout I Things ure not always golny to go! lust right. You must expect ups and I downs, just the same as anybody else. I Rut sulking or pouting never made a bud situation atty better. It only makes It worse. Grin and bear It— Grit. o — Vast Fresh-Water Lake Lake Tanganyika, in east-central Afrlcn. is estimated to be the Ion? est frosh water lake in the world, measuring over 400 miles. Its breadth varies from 30 to 45 miles and the I nren Is 12.700 square miles. — —-o Why Fish Get Awiy “To go a-fishlng.” said Hi Ho. the sage of Chinatown, “is to serve notice that, even In the midst of public demonstrations. time Is required f' r sonnl, serious thought. And this why so many fish escape.”—Wash.af ton Stnr. 0- — atpos dJuqs put' puis S»l uunq oqt tuuJj iuai|l 1,1 B!1 “ uopj u| ijusop iqo-j am w-'° I luqt spHUU,’ aqi jo mo) oi|i m I’ ' oju s-iJ|) anqouioinu pi" I" ! " w ' d •»4ij ojny PIO ‘°i — —o — To Get Rid □( Mie To bullish mice put , •he places they frequent, should he stopped with pull) mustard has been mixed
