Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 27, Number 235, Decatur, Adams County, 3 October 1929 — Page 3

I PANTAGES FACES I; I CRIMINAL COURT I — —” 1 Theatre Magnate Appears I Worried As He races l I Assault Charges I Angeles. Oct. 8-(W«>-C»" k of |' | K 0 " 1 " nd Sl,r, ‘ l I< "” thter ° f , I dunce '»*" B ‘ rl * WerS overton ’”' ,0 ’ I day in ,rlal ° f AlPXun, ”‘ r fc Pa,b Bl - millionaire theater man, chargII Eunice Pringle. 17I who knew Pantages | I when he a «oM mocker and a I ha.keeper an dshe waa a dance halk B \n in Dawson City, waa in Loa B TLles II *•'* expected she would I Xtd the trial, perhaps to testify. I “X appearance of Kate Rockwell. I with whom he ia said to have quarI reled "»'*' rlv whlle they "T, P I of the mad whirl of the gold boom I ( .|,v would perturb Pantage a. Mid i f| those who knew the strange story of ■ SB fhp’r livpn. I I District Attorney Buron Fitts, said I whether the one time northland dancI er would testify In the trial depended B on developments. / ■ Now in her fifties, tall, medium II blonde and with lines etching her face. I Rate Rockwell is “Aunt Kate" to her I neighbors in Bend. Ote.. whence she I came Saturday. | Sourdoughs remember when Kate I was the gayest of the gay in Dawson II city in Nome, and Fairbanks, flauntI ing iter tinseled skirts on rough dance I floors with miners in from the icy ! creeks as her partners. I Pantages, it seemed certain, will I be upset by other things during the I day. including probably the appearI ance of Miss Pringle, who was sc.hedI uled to take the witness stand and tell | the jury of six men and six women I that she was criminally assaulted by I the 54-year-old multimillionaire [ The jury, composed entirely of > middle-aged persons, was selected [ late yesterday after two days of I bickering. The district attorney said t Miss Pringle and her mother would ! be among the first witnesses called. Interest in the sensational details II of the trial was shared with curiosity concerning Kate Rockwell and the part she played in the theater magnate's early life. Many here who joined the Klondike gold rush remembered the pair and pieced out their story. Pantages, then 18 years old, went into Alaska with a pick and shovel. He quickly changed to a barkeeper's apron and later he became the premier showman of Alaska—with seats at $12.50— gold dust preferred. Kate Rockwell had an interest in the ventures, it was said. After the Klondike rush. Pantages weut to Seattle and opened a show house there. He soon became a millionaire with theaters in a score of cities. Kate Rockwell went to Bend, Ore., to live. , —•———io LOCAL CHURCH WILL BE HOST (CoxTiM Ftn rnnw rcr.E onki “Our Library’’ Mrs. C, E. Fredrick Solo Mrs. R. W. Stoakes : Spring and Seed Time. "Mrs. Tree Village Receives” Decatur Kings Heralds Benediction Rev. N. P. Barton Young People's Banquet, 6 o'clock. Evening, 7:30 o'clock Prelude. Hymn 388. Invocation Rev. B. M. Bechdolt I “The President's Reverie” Solo Mrs. Walter Krick "Service” Marie Blough “China's Challenge Today” Miss Ellen M. Studley Offertory. Hymn 38. Benediction Rev. R. A. Shumaker Tuesday Morning, 8:30 o’clock Hymns 510 and 419. "God’s Smile of Approval" Mrs. Nellie Oman "Our Library" Mrs. C. E. Fredrick Special Music Decatur Ladies Quartet District Extension Courses the Light of the World” "This Week Only” Mrs. Floyd The Open Dooi” ... Mis. Werklng Consecration Service.. Rev. J. T. Bean Afternoon, 1:30 o’clock Hymns 452 and 407 Preparation". Mrs. B. C. Chapman Through the Telescope’’ Mrs. O. F. Gloyd Special Music Ossian Ladies Quartet Glimpses of Your Work in North China Miss Ellen M. Studley King's Highway” Monroe Auxiliary Benediction. great diplomat OF GERMANY IS CALLED BY DEATH rn,,M PA«F! <lfK> W Which he lived and died." The unemployment insurance bill 1 ’’as passed by 238 votes to 156. Under the agreement manipulated by ' ‘ ' r ® Be ®an with other folks party , lenders a few hours before his 1 death, ! 1 members abstained from voting. Stresemann's last day ranked in 'Haniatic quality with other high’ '8 >ts of his picturesque career. “*' r a day of conferences with • Mueller and Foil's patty chiefs, he 1 in , ered an apoplectic stroke at 10:30 o’clock last night. I® beautiful ypung wife, Kaethe, i

who was first lady of the land since I President Hindenburg was a widower, I remained at his bedside. Stresemnnn never regained consciousness. At 5:25 a. tn., today ho died. The foreign minister, anxious to! preserve the present coalition cabinet so he might carry to fruition his plans ' for effectuating the Young plan of I reparations and seeing the last allied soldiers leave the Rhineland. roue I | from his sickbed yesterday in his last (effort at compromise. The Folks ptulj had refuneAl to abet the government's policy of delaying consideration of the unemployment insurance bill. Yesterday, after Mueller’s threat to resign. Stresemann hurried to a meeting with fellow party leaders and Induced them to insure passage. PREMIER PLANS FOR CONFERENCE MacDonald Appears Anxious To Start Negotiations In United States By Norman Smith. (With Premier Ramsay MacDonald's Party) Aboard S. S. Berengaria. Oct. 3.— (U.R) -The last day of the voyage to New York and the approaching nearness of an important mission aroused Premier Ramsay MacDonald and his daughter. Ishbel to a state of keen anticipation today. With the stdieduled arrival of the Berengaria in New York less than 21 hours distant. Miss Ishbel talked quite enthusiastically of her visit to the United States. Her father, although not expressing his feelings as visibly, neverthless could not conceal the spirit of eagerness with which he looks forward to his approaching conferences with President Hoover at Washington. The premier, in contrast to the comparatively leisurely days of the first part of the voyage, is spending most of his time at work now. appearing on deck only briefly. He spent most of yesterday in his stateroom in conferences with members of the British delegation. —o Ludlow Protests In Census Appointments Washington. Oct. 3 —(UP) — Rep. Louis ludlow. Detn. Ind., made public today a letter to President Hoover in which he asked that the chief executive “take immediate steps to prevent an inpending scandal" in the appointment of census supervisors Ludlow said that unless the President interferes, all or virtually all of the war veterans who are to be appointed to take the census will be chosen from one political party. The Indiana congressman insisted ihere should be "no discrimination between veterans for political reasons in distributing census appointments as a reward for military service and sacrifice." KIDNEY TROUBLE QUICKLY ENDED DI NEW KONJOLA Happy Lady Had Great Change In Health After Taking Famed Konjola •W H MISS MARY R. COOKE “For five years 1 suffered from stomach and kidney trouble," said Miss Mary R Cooke. 1921 Elwood avenue, South Bend, Indiana. My kidneys gave me the most worry as they were weak and caused continual night risings. After meals I would suffer intense misery from indigestion and food would sour and ferment. My whole system was rundown and I could not find a medicine to help me. “Konkola proved to he the very medicine I needed. 1 was amazed at the relief it gave. Before I finished the third bottle, the pains had begun to leave and my kidneys were a lot stronger. Stomach trouble disappeated and I can now eat whatever 1 want without suffering in the least afterward. In fact, my stomach and kidneys are absolutely normal and do not cause me the least trouble. Konjola is certainly a wonderful medicine and I praise it highly.” Konjola is sold in Decatur, Ind., at Smith. Yager & Falk's drug store and by all the best druggists in all towns throughout this entire section.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1929.

CANADIAN FLIER LDST IN NORTH j War Ace Searching For Me-1 Alpine Party Fails To Reach Point Winnipeg, (’an.. Oct. 3 <UP) Roy Brown, war ace who shot down thy famous Baron Von Rich'hofen, was ■ missing with two companions today In ! the barren wastes of the northwest . territoiy which two weeks ago swal- , lowed up Col. C. D. 11. McAlpine and his party of seven aerial explorers. Accompn|>led by pilot WiVliam Spence and ('apt. G, S. Blanchette Brown took off from Baker's lake base early Tuesday on a 150-mlle flight to Bevetly latke. He flew a pontoon--1 : equipped plane and Intended to retrace 'he route of the McAlpine party to 1 Bathnrst. No word of his atrlv.il at Beverly lake had been received by Dominion j explorers, in charge of the McAlpine search, although the flight should have taken less than two hours. Even if Brown continued on tu Batmurst without a stop he should have completed the trip Tuesday afternoon. The flight was under dken after Blanchette reported he had traced the ■ McAlphine party’s two planes as far

« itw—rwnmnwraaaaarTtmaaManiaaMaanßnMMaaiiiMMßamammßnanaMaaaa—■—iwu: r~~~ißr (nar-rwe-™-’ - n-- -iv i a assuaae . . •*. —i minnaMM i nil MB • I Women Are Free! AN ANCIENT PREJUDICE HAS BEEN REMOVED Legally, politically and socially woman has been emancipated from those chains which bound her. AMERICAN INTELLIGENCE has exploded the ridiculous theory that forced the stigma of inferiority upon a sex. IHL/HE S'? - \ V . ■ Yu ■■' • m * s= l / H did it ff - SGone is that ancient prejudice against cigarettes—Progress has been made. We removed the prejudice against cigarettes ,| when we removed harmful corrosive ACRIDS (pungent / v \/ | irritants) from the tobaccos. § j F i YEARS ago, when cigarettes were made without the aid of s f < • ||| I modern science, there originated that ancient prejudice against K ’ I C fi I I Hl' I all cigarettes. That criticism is no longer justified. LUCKY Mr I STRIKE, the finest cigarette you ever smoked, made of the choicest \ toas^ ed *» y/I tobacco, properly aged and skillfully blended —“It’s Toasted.” | ‘TOASTING,” the most modern step in cigarette manufacture, ||^|^ —I removes from LUCKY STRIKE harmful irritants which are present g m ft in cigarettes manufactured in the old-fashioned way. t € Everyone knows that heat purifies, and so ‘TOASTING’’— f~~w LUCKY STRIKE’S extra secret process—removes harmful, — — corrosive ACRIDS (pungent irritants) from LUCKIES which in the old-fashioned manufacture of cigarettes cause throat irritation and «i t ’ s Toasted”—the phrase that describes coughing. Thus “TOASTING” has destroyed that ancient prejudice the extra “toasting” process applied in the against cigarette smoking by men and by women. manufacture of Lucky Strike Cigarettes. The finest tobaccos—the Cream of the Crop i —are scientifically subjected to penetrating heat at 26O°—maximum, 300°, ■■! Utah,. IS me w m H Fahrenheit. The exact, expert regulation of such high temperatures removes impurities. More than a slogan, “It’s Toasted” is | No Throat Irritation-No Cough. Zc- modem TUNE IN—The Lucky Strike Dance Orchestra, every Saturday night, over a coast-to-coast network of the N. B. C. j, | ©1929, The American Tobacco Co., Mfrs.

tin Bakwr’a lake on their ill fated flight from Coronation gulf on the Artic oeean, and wan convinced they hid| been forced down within 200 miles of that point. He obtained -permlsHlon from tlie Dominion explorers to take one last look for the miaslng man befoie winter set in. and selected Brown I and Spence as his co-pllots. To reach Bathurst the aviators would have had to surmount the "Height of Land," remnant of vast mountain range which stretched A cross North America in precambrain limes. An almost constant fog, shroud Ing this eminence, added huza d to an ilreudy <1 mgerous flight over partially frozen lakes and impenetrable forest. TEN BEST SELLERS Fiction 1. The Uncertain Trumpet. By A. S M. Hutchinson. i 2. All Quiet on the Western Front By Erich M. Remarque. 3. Johnny Reb. By Marie c. Omler i 4. Black Roses. By Francis B Younr 5 Whiteoaks of Jalna By Mazo de la R( che. General 1. The Specialist. By Charles (Chic) ■ Sale Specialist. ’ 2. Ex Wire. Anonymous. 3. The Tragic Era By Claude G. Bowels. 4 Cross Word Puzzle Book. Series 13. 5. The Art of Thinking. By Ernest ■ Dim net.

SOUTHERN CALE IS SUBSIDED Streams Still Running Wild; Hurrican Danger Past Atlanta, Ga„ Oct. 3. — (U.R) South Carolina and all of Georgia except! Augusta, were relieved today from heavy floods of the past week, caused by the tropical hurricane which swept the states. An unofficial check revealed the flood damage amounted to more than half a million dollars. Cotton, tobacco and grain crops were ruined and bridges, highways and lines of communication destroyed. Telegraph Hues suffered the greatest loss. Railroad schedules on some lines wsr halted for several days. Augusta's safety from a flood damaging the main part of the city rested in strength of the levee there. Hundreds of men have been working in the past few days to build up the ievee. Langley and Graniteville, both near Augusta, were threatened by flood 1 waters, a result of the Caucluse and Graniteville dams breaking. Water several feet deep remained in the streets of Hamburg. S, C-, which ne-

cessitated reroutlug the Southern railway trains from Cincinnati to Jacksonville through Charlotte. N. C. Weather observers, however, believed the crest of the walers was passing. The Tiger river bridge, 12 miles west of Union, S. ('.. was swept downstream yesterday, and the Wilming-ton-Atlanta highway was threatened by large washouts. Power lines In Georgia and South Carolina were badly damaged. Textile plants In the union section reported only small damage. Ordered To Pay Rent Chicago, Oct. 3 —(CP) N. H Freedman, a great admirer of Mussolini, felt that like II Dace he should do something to encourage iaige families. So he announced that the patents of any baby born in an appartment building he owned should have lwo months free : . Ten babies -were born In the next six months and Freedman reneged. Morris Rudkin, proud father, brought suit. Judge Howard Hays ruled that Freedman's offer, helny vetlial. was not binding and ordered he lent paid. OSSIAN MAN DIES Bluffton. Oct. 3. —(U.R)— William Harrison Zellner, of Ossian, a retired farmer, died at noon today. He is survived by a widow and four children. A brother, Wallen of Van Wert, Ohio also survives. Funeral services will be held Sunday morning at 9:30 o’clock at the home, and burial will take place at Greentown, Ohio.

PAGE THREE

MERGER FORMED DY DR) FORCES • ——————— Will Make Strong Drive Against Organized Wet Influences Washington, Oct. 3. — (U.R) —Prohibition leaders of the country have started a campaign to bring prohibition to the front "by actual facts and figures,” in an effort to actively combat wet Influences which have organized themselves on a large scale recently. These lenders, representing every prohibition organization in the United States, met here yesterday and form'd a co-operative committee of 20 for prohibition enforcement, the first... merger of the country's prohibition forces ever accomplished. I’. H. Callahun, Isiuisvllle, Ky„ • representing the. association of Path ’ olics favoring prohibition, was elected chairman of the committee: Dr. A. J. Barton, Atlanta, vice cliainnan; E. . Dinwiddle, Washington, D. C., secOlli! Vic? chslrn??.?!* Winwlnw Hartford. Conn., treasurer, and Mrs. L. L. Yost of the W. C. T. U., secretary. . ■ ■ o — ■■ - . get tne Habit—Trade at Home. It P«ye