Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 27, Number 226, Decatur, Adams County, 23 September 1929 — Page 3
■ SENATE HEARS I MANY REPORTS | Os COMMITTEES w ‘ Supplant® H m uoiSSE MEETS II"" 1 wp \d.iourns ■ S.-P.’ « -<U.R)~ The 1 „,. nt to work today on a Mi * W ' ngram that temporarily nt H”* Jb-n.rgml the tariff debate to ■ *. or third place in significance. it* the senate ■ T L attention to a variety of ■ ’’bi ranging front the Shears S'*to an investigation of a labor ■ 'tfwhde the house met briefly 9 an d immediately recessed for three » X as it wiil <‘ onlin " e ,0 do untll 9 loiter 14 "f longer ' 9 °' Two senate committees met today 9 m addition to 'he naval affairs sult- ■ “nunittee which is hearing the b|B cm^ 1 - 9 The jndii iarc committee went Into 9 .wtltive session to consider charges 9 filed against Senator Deneen. Repn S m which ate understood to contend 9 be ehtsdy associated with a Chi--9 taso gangster. 9 The judiciary committee also was 9 lo consider the resolution offered by 9 Stator UE’ollette. Repn., Wis., to 9 authorize an investigation of the in--9 jumtjon p*tt./l in Philadelphia ref 9 cenlly to prevent clothing workers 9 there from organizing, and a bill in--9 trodttced by Senator Vandenberg, 9 Repn. Mich., to save the press from ■.“ judiciary tyranny." ■ The Vandenberg bill would allow B defendants in direct contempt cases B to Mk f° r a transfer of judges. B The finance committee met to conB sider which financial secrets of corB poratioue seeking increased tariff it B wants. The treasury department has B reported it cannot furnish all the B information previously asked for. B Tomorrow and for the remainder of B the week probably, members of the ■ Federal farm board will appear before ■ the senate agriculture committee. 9 Senator Brookhart, who has announc- ■ ed his opposition to some members ■of the board, has been invited to ■ question them. Chairman Legge will ■ be the first called. B Hearings on the nomination of Al- ■ bert L. Watson to be a federal judge ■ in the middle Pennsylvania district ■ also will be resumed tomorrow. The ] ■ same subcommittee, headed by Sen- ■ ator Borah. Repn., Idaho, which held 9 hearings on the Watson nomination ■ last spring, will conduct the new B bearings. ■ The senate is beginning its sesB sions this week at 11 o’clock instead B of 12 o'clock, in order to speed up B consideration of the tariff bill, which B has been lagging recently. ■ O ; DELEGATES ARE ELECTED FROM LOCAL CHURCH tCOMTUVXJED FROM PAfig OW rural work. The opening session of the Synod will be held Tuesday night at 8 o'clock. The Liturgical service will be in charge of the Rev. George P. Kehl of Indianapolis. The sermon Tuesday night will be delivered by the Rev. J. A. Michael of Maywood, 111. Rev. Kehl’s title will be “What Shall We Preach Today and Tomorrow?" Fallowing the opening and sermon the Synod will be organized and a president will be elected. Rev. Michael is the retiring president. Greetings will be extended by Mayor C- W. Snyder of Huntington and Dr. John F. Edwards, pastor of the Huntington Methodist church and president of the Huntingon Ministerial association. The Rev. R. B. Meckstroth, pastor of the St. Peter’s church at Huntington and a brother of Mrs. A. R. Fledderjohann of thi.s olty, will then welcome the Synod members on behalf of the local Re-, formed church. Wednesday's Program The Wednesday session will start. at 8:45 o’clock a.m. At each session I the devotional hour will be in charge . of the Rev. R. S. Beaver of Fort 'ayne. The Rev George Stibitz of i Dayton, Ohio, professor at Central j Theological Seminary will epeak nt I each devotional on “The Story of | Salvation from Israel.” Following the, opening hour a business session will I be held at which time committee re-' Ports will be heard and disposed of. • ! 11 o’clock a Communion service Participated in by the Women's Missionary Synod will be held. The Litargical service conducted by the Rev. ■ • B- Bloom of St. Joseph, Mo., will 0 ow. The Communion sermon will , ( ’ eii by the Rev. E. N. Evans, or Indianapolis. In the afternoon session Wednesday, the Rev. W. E. Huckeriede of e!) e Haute will be the leader and e Rev. Mr. Stibitz will deliver aner address. After, reports are 'eaid during the afteriioon two con--rs*e’’ one by the committee on ..„5, a Secvice and the other by the nuttee on Rural Work will be
“Lindys” Reception Enroute Enthusiastic BEB■B9EKffi^S'/ , W -Fy - iiffii i iTHFaw ■will
A view of the enthusiastic throng at San Juan, Porto Kico, which gathered to pay honor to Lindy when he nade his good-will flight to the West Indies in 1928 This scene was duplicated as the flying colonel and
— ■ ■ - International Nowar—l Coolidge-Trumbull Wedding Party pl i1 n Hi. - 9 ' iK * * f *v v * j > - - ' Above are Mrs. John Trumbull, John Coolidge, Florence Trumbull and Governor Trumbull of Connecticut. Young Coolidge and Miss Trumbull were united in marriage this afternoon.
held. The night service will be in charge lof the Women's Missionary Society lof the Synod. Superintendent Stucki of the Winnebago Indian school of Neilsville, Wts. will deliver the chief address. Thursday Session At the morning Devotionals at 8:45 o'clock the Rev. Reuben Schorer of Goshen will act as leader and the Rev. Mr. Stibitz will deliver the address. Another business session will be held and committees will continue to make reports until the noon hour. The afternoon devotional hour will be in charge of the Rev. L. Harrison Ludwig of Sioux City, la. and the Rev. Mr. Stibitz will address the gathering. Committee reiports will continue until 4:30 o’clock Thursday afternoon at which time a series of conferences including meetings for pastors and elders will be held. At 6:30 o'clock Thursday evening the annual Synodical banquet will be held with the Rev. M. E. Beck of Chicago presiding. One of the most important meetings of the Synod will be the public meeting Thursday night at which time Church Union will be discussed. Both sides of the important question will be discussed by members of the three interested church denomina-l tions, the Reformed, Evangelical and United Brethren. The closing part of the Thursday night meeting will be an address entitled ‘‘The Future of the Reformed Church in the Light of Church Union.” The Rev. C. E. j Schaeffer, president of the General Synod will deliver the address. Friday Program Following the Friday morning devotional hour in charge of the Rev. C. H. Schmitt of Louisville, Ky., a I report of the rail call clerk of the ' Synod will be given and the rest of ’ the session will be devoted to final I reports and business. The Synod will adjourn at noon Friday. Runaway Boy Has Both Legs Severed Chicago, Sept. 23. — (U.R> - Walter Baren, who at 13 ran away from home and school with 80 cents in his pocket to see the world, fought for his fife today in the county hospital. "Guess I’ll have to stay home now," were his first words after the anaesthetic wore away and he learned both his feet had been severed by the j wheels of a train. Gay as any vagabond, Walter lelt . his home Friday. Early yesterday he slipped onto the railroad platform at | Rochelle. 111., in search of kindred spirits. Two youths of 15 chanced by and Walter proposed he join them. I ‘‘l'm out to see the world too,” he confided. "How much money have you?" one of the other youths asked, and Walter, unsuspecting, displayed his 80
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 23. 1929.
his wife again stopped there, enroute to Latin America. Inset shows J. T. Trippe, president of the PanAmerican Airways who accompanied the Lindberghs on the trip.
Arab Revolt Seething i ■ Ml.i m' t LI AAI y \i£sc- J • | Fresh outbreak of the tribal warfare which was causted in 1927 by the establishment of military outposts on the border of Iraq is again threatening Ibn Saud, above, King of Hedjaz. Ibn Saud refused to war with Iraq over these borders but the Mutair confederation of tribes demands war since Ibn could not affect a settlement through diplomacy. They are reported revolting against the rule of Ibn Saud who has gathered an army of 20,000 to 30,000 men to do battle with those who would usurp his rule attained by thirty years of conquest. International Newsreel cents. Threatening and bullying, the older i boys demanded the money. Walter, I half crying, gave it to them as he backed away. Just then a train rumbled into the station and Walter ran toward it. One of the youths is said to have pushed him. Somehow he slipped. There was a scream and passengers ran to find him beside the track, both feet cut off. o 125 lbs. of Anaconda to the acre is equal to 300 lbs. or more of any other fertilizer. Decatur Produce Co. 18-20-23 o — 1 No. 1 Michigan Elberta Peaches Tuesday morning $2.49 bushel. Fisher & Harris. Fresh Oysters.—Schmitt Meat Market.
Columbia City Man Assigns His Property Columbia City, Ind., Sept. 23. —(U.R) —Assignment of property is being made by Lloyd Z. Crouch, mayor of Columbia City, in an effort to cover a $65,000 shortage in his accounts as assistant secretary of the Provident Trust company here. Included in the property offered are life insurance policies for $25,000; a 170-acre farm valued at SIOO an acre, mortgaged for SII,OOO, and a cottage at Round Lake valued at SI,OOO. Crouch is expected to resign as mayor before night. Dr. B, F. Pence, republican candidate for the office in the November election, will probably succeed him. Appointment pending the election will be made by the city council. o Charles Waggoner Starts East to Face Fraud Charge Cheyenne, Wyo., Sept. 23. —(U.R) — Charles Waggoner, Telluride. Colo., banker, started back to New York in irons today to stand trial for operations that last month cost six New York banks $500,000. In custody of Hugh Patton, U. S. marshal, and F. M. Bruner, a special deputy, Waggoner left here on the Los Angeles limited of the Union Pacific railroad at 8:15 a.m. He will reach Omaha at 8:35 pin. and Chicago at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow. Waggoner was in good humor. He smiled and waved his hand to friends who gathered at the train. — o— ———— Unheard, Unseen In the old days it was said children should be seen and not heard. Lately the maxim has been applied to the old. . , . And wise old people aim to be seen as little as possible, in addition. — E. W. Howe’s Monthly. Much Flour U«ed for Cake (me out of every twenty-four barrels of Hour manufactured In the United States Is used for making cake, one barrel making about 700 pounds of cake. o Prehistoric Restaurant No doubt that archeologist digging In the Near East who found himself in a prehistoric restaurant surprised the patrons. They probably mistook him tor the waiter bringing the second cup of coffee.—Yakima Morning Herald. —— o-— Straw Headgear Old Straw hats where first worn in the Eleventh century. They had mushroom brims and round tops trimmed with colored materials, with a finishing button that later developed into a peak.
PEACOX TRIAL IN SECOND WEEK Defendant Might Take Stand In Own Defense During Trial White Plains, iN. Y., Sept. 23 -XU.R) --Earle Francis Peacox, youthful radio expert, who choked his wife to death and then set fire to her body, legan the second week of his trial here today, prepared to convince the jury that the killing was a justifiable episode in a purely family row. The state was expected to wind up its case today with the calling of one > or two more witnesses. There was a| likely possibility that the defendant I would take the stand aw the first | move In his defense. Mrs. Adelaide Helnzelmnn, mother] of the dead girl, was questioned last week by the prosecution but her cross ; examination by Sidney A. Syme, defense attorney, was left unfinished by i the week-end adjournment. Syme regards Mre. Heinzelman ns | a highly important witness in his' efforts to save the youth from the, electric chair. It was evident from ] his cross-examination last week that I Syme was trying to impress on the jury the details of Dorothy Peacox’s mode of living after she left-her husband. He managed to make her admit that she knew her daughter had lived! with a Carleton Carroll or Carroll Carleton. The mother also said she had heard that her daughter once lived in the same room with two other men. o JOHN COOLIDGE MEDS FLORENCE TRUMBULL TODAY (CONTiNfED FHOM PACK OVKI the guests are relatives of the Coolidge and Trumbull families, and thev are ready to help receive the 400 guests who have been invited to a reception in the large tent pitched on the Trumbull lawn. Young Coolidge fidgeted today, nervously seeking the aid and comfort of Stephan Brown, Northampton. Mass., who was his room-mate at Amherst and who is his best man. As the young couple attended church yesterday, it was apparent that Miss Trumbull was the usual radiant bride, unworried by the prospect of walking ■ down a church aisle in a white dress. She even broke through the elaborate plans which were made to keep re-: porters away from her when she ad- ’ mitted on the sidewalk in front of the church that she preferred to “be > married among her own people” rath- : er than in the White House. I Weather conditions for the bridal ■ day were ideal: a warm sun shown i out of a cloudless sky. Rain had|
Be sure to get your money’s worth IT’S your money. You’ve earned it. It will be spent. For fuel, clothes, furniture, food, all sorts of necessities ... and if there’s ary left, for luxuries. The way to make that hard-earned money go * farthest is to purchase products of certain value. Products backed by well-known manufacturers. Products that are widely bought and used, that are carefully and painstakingly kept to high standards of quality, and that have been found over and over again to give full worth. Advertised products! When you buy a watch or a rake, a set of china or a radio set that is advertised in this paper, you are buying a product whose maker is willing to talk about it, tell about it, put what he knows about it in print and sign his name to it. When you buy advertised merchandise by name, you get the utmost of purchasing value from every dollar. Because it doesn’t pay to advertise poor products, it does pay»to buy those advertised. Decatur Daily Democrat
been feared over the week-end. John and Florence arose early and took u stroll In the garden after breakfast. They examined the lawn tents and nooks where 40(» guests will be ehtertaineu at it reception utter the wedding. All morning a steady stream of guests poured into town. State policemen were on <luty to control traffic. Where the honeymoon will be was conjectural. It was generally believed u motor trip would be taken — probably In Miss Trumbull’s roadster - but plans were carefully guarded. Coolidge has obtained a two week leave from the New Haven railroad office where In' Is a clerk. Miss Trumbull will be attended by
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h»>r younger Mister Jean and four bridesmaids Mias Esther Trumbull, a cousin; Miss Dorothy Clark, another cousin; Mrs. Philip Moorehouse, New York: and Miss Dorothy Rogers, Pittaburgh. Pa., the latter two having been classmates of the bride at Mt. Holyoke college. Just for old time's sake, the organist will play the Mt. Holyoke vesper hymn during the seven and a half minute ceremony. After the honeymoon the couple will live In a four and half room apartment In Westville, a suburb of New Haven.tnd spend the first year trying to find some place to put 110,090 worth of wedding presents. No. 1 Michigan Elberta Peaches Tuesday morning $2.19 bushel. Fisher & Harris.
