Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 260, Decatur, Adams County, 3 November 1931 — Page 2
PAGE TWO
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, BUSINESS CARDS, AND NOTICES FOR SALE FOR SALE —3 day old calf; also good work horse; will trade for milk cow or heifer. Lawrence Heckman, R. 1, phone 860-T. FOR SALE One new trailer. Frank Schmitz, corner First and Jefferson Streets. 259-3tx FOR SALE -6 roll Appleton corn husker, in good shape priced right JR. Knapp and Son. 259-3 t FOR SALE—Apples, discount on picked stock this week. Others 25c. ■Phone 869-H. 258t3 FOR Sale —Good soft coal burner. -yarve Rice, 216 N. "th st. —« 259t3x FOR SALE — Manure suitable for garden or flower bed. L. W. Murphy, Phone 22. 258-3 t FOR SALE— Kiefer hand picked pears. 50c a bushel. Phone 5261. t t . 253-6tl FOR SALE -Jersey cow with calf by ’stile. Otto Hartman, 1 mile north of Magloy. Preble phone. 260-3tx -— o FOR RENT FOR RENT — 2 furnished lighthousekeeping rooms on first floor. Private entrance in modern home. 310 N. 3rd St Phone 511. 258-3 t FOR RENT -Six room modern flat. So t and Hard water. Large back ' porch. Phone 437 J. Bernstein. FOR RENT — Modern six’ room house, close in. ini-1 mediate possession. $17.501 per month. Phone GOG or FOR RENT—3 or 4 room apartment on first floor, private entrance. All mode.n. 611 North Second street. -260-3 t LOST AND FOUND COURT HOUSE Marriage license Thomas Martin. Geneva, Route 3 laborer to Mae Miller, Ceylon. Real Estate Transfers John Thomas et ux in lot 1015, out lot 84. Decatur to Charles E. Barlett for $150.00. Eli C. Dickerson, in lot 203, Genexa. to Roe C. Dickerson for SI.OO. Jane Booher, in lot 59, Geneva to Ivan Booher for SI.OO. John E. Heimann et ux 80 acres in Washington township to Rose Nesswald for SI.OO. Rose Nesswald, 80 acres in Washington township to John E. Heimann etux fa.- SI.OO. EDISON WROTE SCHOOL ADVICE St. Louis. Nov. 3 (UP) —Among I the many bits of advice to youth.!
given by Thomas A. Edison, the following, given 23 yea s ago at the request of a high school principal, was made known on the great inventor's death: “Every man has a brain and some thing ejse called a will. In the brain there is a peculiar convolution discovered by Broca, called by the convullion of Broca. “The? will can force this convolution to. store up knowledge and ex periemse, but it is obstinate and it requires great will power to make it record. “The; men who manage the industries the u. S. have by their strong Villa forced this lazy convolution full of information, which they use in th dr business. “The boy that keeps that convolution working overtime is going to be just what he wants to be." F. E. And.ews, high school principal. said he received the above from Edison in response to a request for a letter that could be used on a lantern slide a j conclusion to a lecturo on Edison's life and work. —— — Arraignment of Winnie Judd Set For Today Pho-nix, Ariz Nov. 3 -(VP) -Ar raignment of Mrt. Winnie Ruth Judd, the first step in a scries of moves by which the prosecution hopes to send her to the gallows on charges o: murdering Agnes Anne Lerol and Hodving Samuelson, two former friends, was scheduled for today. Sometime before 5 p. m. Mrs. Judd will be moved from h r com fortabfe quarters in the juvaniio ward of the county jail to appear before'* Justice of the Peace Clarence E. Ice. The date of the preliminary hearings will be 3et after which Lloyd J. Andrews, county attorney, will begin preparations in earnest tor the trial on a charge of murdering Mrs. Lerol.
MARKET REPORTS DAILY REPORT OF LOCAL VND FOREIGN MARKETS BERNE MARKET Corrected Nov. 3 No commission and no yardage. Hogs. 100-140 pounds $4.00 140-170 pounds $4.30 170-200 pounds $4.40 : 200-250 pounds $1.50! 250-300 pounds $4 4i> Roughs $3.5043.75 Stags—s2.oo. Vealers $7.50. Spring Lambs—ss.2s. 1 CHICAGO GRAIN CLOSE Dec. Mar May July! Wheat .62 .65% .66% .67% j CoriX 41% .44% .46% .48% j Oats . .25% .27% .28% .28% Fort Wayne Livestock Fort Wayne, Nov. 3—(UP) —Hogs steady. 100 to 120 tbs. $4.10; 120 to 140 lbs $125; 140 to 160 lbs. $4 40; 160 to 180 lbs. $4.50; 180 to 200 lbs. $4.60; 200 to 225 rhe. $4.65; 225 to 250 lbs. $4.75; 250 to 300 lbs.. $4.85: 300 to 250 lbs. $4.70. Roughs. $4.00; Stags, $2.50; Calves $7.50; Lanbs $5. < 5. EAST BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo, N. Y„ Nov. 3.—(U.R) Livestock: HOgs: on sale, 1,300; active to all I' interests: weights above 150 lbs.. 1 10c higher; lighter averages steady; l bulk desirable, 150-260 lbs., $5.35; < pigs and underweights. $5.25. i Cattle: Receipts. 150; holdovers 1 150; slow; scattered sales about’ steady; bulk unsold; common to * medium steers, $5.50; cutter cows. I $1.50-$2.50. 1 Calves: Receipts. 100; vealers f steadj- to strong; good to choice 1 mostly $9; common and medium. $5.50-$7. I 1
Sheep: Receipts, 300; lambs un- '! changed: good to choice, $7; medium kinds and fat bucks. $6; ? strongweight throwouts. $5. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected Nov. 3 No. 2 New Wheat 52c New Oats I‘ie Barley . 30c Rye 30e New No. 4 Yellow Corn 40c New No. 4 White Corn . 30c LOCAL GROCERS EGG MARKET Eggs, dozen _ 26c ' Just - back from market with a full line of ladies and children's coats and dresses. —E. F. Gass & Son. I mriif (if *<f iiiiniMrator \(». 2MH Notice is hereby That the ' undersigned has been app <inted Administrator of the estate of Daniel’ 1 Beeler late of Adams County deceas- L ed. The estate is probably solvent. *' Simuel E Beeler Ervin T. Pontius, Administrators Lenhart. Heller and St hurg-er Attvs - 1 Nov. 2 1931. Nov ’3-10-17 ; Appolutmeut of IdminKirtHor Noti— hereby, given. That th-, undersigned h%s been appointed A immistrator <»f (he estate of Minnie ; Dun|eU lite nf Adams County, de. , ceased. The estate is probably solHarold ii. V Daniels. Administrator I I-rfl-hte and Litterer. A((or tle y h ■ ■ ' I AUTOS Re-financed on smaller payments. Quick service. Franklin Security Co. Phone 237 Decatur. India.... f'-tlll Illi -MIMII Z icm . ipjk. S. E. Black FUNE.IAL DlßtevfOß .'•irs. Diack, Lady Attendant Calls answered promptly di./ or night. 'lka phnne 500 Home phone (27 ' A mini lance Service N. A. BIXLER OPTOMETRIST eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted j Hours : C;z»«i to 11:30—12:30 to 5:0 • Saturdays, 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135 For BET lER HEAL 111 Set DR. H. FROHNAI’FEL Licensed Chiroprut tor mid Nitturapath 1 Radionic diagnosis and treatment j Phone 314 104 So. 3rd St. I Office Honrs: 10-12, 1-5. 6 8 10 years In Decatur. LOBENSTEIN & DOAN FUNERAL DIRECTORS Calls answered promptly day or night. Ambulance Service. Office Phone 90. Residence Phone, Decatur 1041 Residence Phone, Monroe 81 LADY ATTENDANT
THIMBLE THEATRE 7 n » * SHOWING-“THE NECESSARY INGREDIENTS’’ gj E» C SFfJ AHOY, KING- NA OOT AA. PODEYE.YOU'RE The A MY GOOD MWL OIL UP THE ) VJHY 00 YA SET THERE AH' \ /IF I SOME PAPERA FBtJT, MINT HAVEN'T YA? WELL, MAN I'VE EVER MET _ COME— ) MINT AnO GET SUSY_ VIE \ IGNORE THE KING'S OENAtA ?) ( I'D BE GLAO TO PRINT 7 TO SET ON Tur ’wiia ALL .YA GOT TO DO IS PRINT UP) VJE WILL GO TO THE mint 1 MUST END THIS DEPRESSION/ AIN'T YA GOT NO RESPECK / \ YOU SOME PEIOZEES ) , Att -25_ELOOR L JI A FEW BILLING PEZOaE.ES >■ —'r ~~ V "" FOR. ROYALTY? COME ON I <IF I HAO SOME iNKy V E A"Vr» AN ENO this A IOEARONCt) -< / NOW. PRINT SOME , y— <SIT t 0 TH y<TF J ‘ AaiT ?BJ| ilk 7 wfe uyW iJMfcF”' IBe ■
MUCH INTEREST IN ELECTIONS New York Clash Between Smith, Roosevelt Is Watched New York. Nov. 3. - (U.R) —New York state's election today demanded national interest because it rinvolved a clash between Governor Franklin I). Roosevelt and former Governor Alfred E. Smith and because it may mean the end of the investigation of this city's tammany, regime. The clash between Roosevelt, considered the foremost candidate for the 1932 democratic nomination for president, and Smith, 1928 standard bearer, was over the former's reforestation policy. Roosevelt made a final campaign radio speech last night. He characterized attacks on his reforestation as based in ignorance. He said he was willing to rest his case on "the sound judgment of publicspirited citizens. The chief effort of the democratic party in the past campaign has been to secure additional seats in the assembly so as to gain control of that body, and vote out of existence the Hofstadter legislative investigating committee which, under the guidance of Samuel Sea-' bury, has been presenting testimony highly embarrassing to a number of tammany office holders. Several republicans also have .had uncomfortable minutes in the witness chair under Seabhry's' questioning. Seabury was notified yesterday by Sheriff Thtnnas M. Farley of the attachment for the committee of a safe-deposit box held jointly by Mayor James J. Walker and Russell T. Sherwood. Farley also levied on brokerage accounts of Sherwood, a Hofstadter witness who so far has failed to honor a subpoena. The accounts are said to total $15,000. Som»> political significance also was attached to the presences here of Mayor Anton Cennak of Chicago. Hailed as a "peacemaker" in the Roosevelt-Smith clash. Cermak [said: "I am not here to muster up anything or anybody or to muss up i anything or anyltody." Cennak conferred most of yesterday with Mayor Frank Hague of Jersey City, di mocratic boss of New Jersey. > O 1 r~ * , | TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE j - ) Can you answe, seven of these I teat questions? Turn to page tour for the answers » — —e 1 What famous American inveni tor died recently? 2 Who w.ote the novel "David ' Balfour” I 3. To what rac do Arabs ne’.ong? I 4 What is the length oi the Panama Canal from deep water on the Atlantic to deep water on the Pa elite? 5. Os what material were ship:-, us d by Christophe - Columbus constructed? 6. What is the diameter of the pianet Mars? I 7. In what year did General Washil on command of the continental I armies? 8. Who is Oliver La Fargo? j 9. in wh.,i division did “BartiinL’ ' Nelson hold a championship? i 16. What gne al term i< used t » embrace the Eolithic, Paleolithic I and Neolithic ages of man? lAshbaucher’s MAJE S T I C FURNACES \SBESTOS SHINGLE ROOFING SPOUTING LIGHTNING RODS Phone 7f»5 nr 739
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1931.
Ruth Judd's Eyes Give Clue to Heinous Crime Woman Head of New York Criminal Bureau Says Trunk Slayer's Eyes Indicate Motives Back of Murders. 1-* ■■■- ewlßß ztraftMo —• -f-wj. -Si*■’W 'W » '' ' ' ' ' k. «a I vase FiLg, if 3 aevore w--nr - ■ It, MM, |_v. G~2_c-o~ A •- ( PUTM I oUDD IcwcfT j - r In full corroboration with the person who described one’s eyes as the "w.ndowi of the soul,” Clara Parsons, well-known New York State criminologist, principally bases her diagnosis of Winnie Ruth Judd, Phoenix-Los Angeles trunk s’ayer, on the “distant, almost vacant" look in her eyes. In fact. Miss Parsons believes that Mrs. Judd’s eyes largely •xplnin the gruesome murder and mutilation of her two erstwhile friends. While the eyes are considered the most important clue to Mrs. Judd s heinous crime, Miss Parsons has pointed out various other highlights of the trunk slayer s features which probably have a more or less direct bearing on the case.
New York Nov'. 3 Although experts in the intriguing field of criminology have not been able, as ‘yet. to pick out. with unerring accuracy. or with appreciable practical results, persons who will commit crimes in the future, they are proficient at providing backgrounds and tile motives which actuated the c riminal—after the deed has been ‘clone. Such is the case with Winnie Ruth Judd, trunk slayer. While such post-mortem reasoning does noi serve as a preventive of crime, it does provide helpful xplanations of lawless violence and many, in time, with the all- ! important cooperation of far-see-ling legislators, segregate the crimI inally inclined and guard not only i others hut themselves from their ! dangerously uncontrollable natures.' The most recent and particularly I gruesome case to bring criminologists to the fore with interesting 1 theories brought out this statement .iiont Clara Parsons, head of the. criminal identification bureau New >York State Department of Corrections : < "Winnie Ruth Judds first words, I am not guilty,' might have been (anticipated from the distant, almost vacant, look in her eyes. "While otherwise the woman !seems to be an average looking; I person, with no particularly out-i ’ standing Earmarks of crimes her jeyes have the familiar faraway,' even slightly vacant look so often (seen in persons mentally disturb-’ |cd," declares Miss Parsons. The person who described one's 1 eyes as the "windows of the soul" I has a sincere corroborator in the . ble womjn criminologist who; bz.®?s her diagnosis of the killer of .h e r two erstwhile friends In 1 (Phoenix, Ariz., on the tell-tale eyes] ; of the trunk slayer. "The look in Mrs. Judd's eyes is seen in melancholy persons, per-! sous 'who are abnormally sensitive! to the point of brooding over imag-i mod slights. Her eyes, and the! eyes cf persons like that, do not' ■seem to be alive. They do not smile .when the lips do. They are. as it were, the eyes of an individual shut i oif irom the world, in a world of llieir own," Miss Parsons deciares. "Mrs. Judd's eyes, to me, tell a story of an unhappy childhood, an uneven girlhood, a ditfeontented life, and hours of brooding over things real or imagined done by others to hurt her. Whatever the violence of her temper, her jeal-
I ous rages were inborn in her nature. in my opinion." As the well-known New York; State expert on criminals was endeavoring to explain Mrs. Judd's; murder and mutilation of HedwigSamuelson and Agnes Ixtol, the i woman who stuffed her victims’ | bodies in trunks and shipped them i to Ims Angeles was writing her j "life story” and unconsciously sup-1 porting the '.’ery theories advanced by Miss Parsons. "tier brow is low but broad, aud ■ the furrows may denote brooding' or much quizzical raising of them to people to whom she lias been, wont to appeal for help against I punishment or for indulgence of ’ her whims," Miss Parsons explains in continuing her study of the self'confessed double murderess. "Her nose is average, the daring nostrils perhaps indicative of high strung sensitiveness. They are not high cut and broad, the nostrils of the keenly intelligent person. "Her mouth, with its rolling and! slightly thickened underlip, shows! a love of the beautiful, a sensuous-' mss without perhaps sensuality. The almost downward droop at the corners would tell a story of life- < long discontent, unhappiness, melancholy. "Mrs. Judd's chin does not bear i out the strength of her jaws, which are square and determined. The chin slopes away to a weak line, which on the other hand is counterbalanced by her high yheekbones." i In conclusion, Miss Parsons be--1 lirves that Mrs. Judd is emotionally cold, for, after satisfying her grudge, she still bore, it. as is evidenced by the cold manner in which she disposed of the bodies, j Aside from the mental condition 'showing in her eyes, the woman : criminologist, however, sees only la fairly average woman in Mrs. I Judd's other features. o i Ret the Hants—Tr»oe at Heme FLORENCE HOLTHOL'bE Stenographic Work Typewriting lihlgi .1. T. Mtrrynuin's Law Oiritv, K. of C. Bldg. ,|if you have any extra typewriting >r «i«nogray’iic work I will be i --lad to do It. Phnne 42 for ippolntment.
NATIONS BUILD AIRPLANES FOR STRATOSPHERE France An d Germany Construct Ships With Great Secrecy WASHINGTON—(U.R)—Germany has matched France with construction of an airplane for traveling in the stratosphere, far above the I earth, at an exceedingly high ! speed. Manufacturers of this type of! plane visualize it making a trip across the Atlantic to New York. ' flying 10 miles high, in five or six ' hours, thus revolutionizing all present modes of airplane travel.' Both the French and the German machines, the latter built by the Germans Junkers firm in Dessau, were constructed secretly. General Description A genera! description of the! German plane has been forwarded to the Commerce Department J here. The ends of the wings arej pointed and the fusilage is long.) The width of the ship from wing tip to wing tip is 36 feet. The plane flies slowly at low altitudes, but is capable cf making 300 miles an hour at high aitj- j tudes. or better. The construe- ] tion is of the all-metal low deck type, with one built-in Junkers' 800 horsepower motor of the L-8S i type. Equipped with Oxygen ‘io supply oxygen to the motor in the rarefied atmosphere in which the plane will fly, the motor is equipped with a bellows ar-! rangement. The pilot and his as-’ slstant will occupy a low-pressure sealed chamber into which oxygen will be pumped, instead of the us-! ual cabin. The air pressure in this chamber will be artificially, increased to correspond with the! increase in the pressure tit the’airi at high altitudes Preliminary trial flights are expected to be made soon. No at- 1 tempt will be made to reach the’ ultimate altitude of 10 miles at I v. his li (he plane will travel until' it has been thoroughly tested at low altitudes. Just what effect, rarefied atmosphere will have on parts of the plane, such as braces! and struts, is not fully known. j Dance Wednesday Sunset. NOTH I? or Mil It 11 I •. .. |~; Cnuoe Xeniba r ISWTII t lr<-MH < nur>, Slate i Ihe Prudential Insurance (’em- I pany f America, va. Jau<»b C. Ke»sler. Kits It. Kes„lpi John 4. Hemiris ka, Lissle A. Hviidrk-ks Ing-I an V Miri-msn. istwrenve 1.. Watson. A11..-ft E. I.use, May la-sale Line, E. E. O'Neil, I.ewle A Graham, and i'L- lfnl (< wallers, u <j'-.ihani and Wallers. Janies H Ann--trong. Hxe-tpor of last Will and Testament of Charles Armatrong. By virtue ot an order of sale to me ire' le I and delivereil i.v th. Clerk I o( the Ails is Circuit Court. In ttiel above entitle,l cause, I have levied I ipon asiu I will exp ae tor aale t>v I publl, am tion. at the Court tlouaei i'oor east entrance first flour in •aid Count', Ifetween the houra of 10 o < lock A. M and 4 o'clock p J[ ! n I■ rldny the 20th day of Nove.nr A. D l»U. the rents and profits j tor a ternt not exceeding seven ve|i-s of the following oescrlhFd Heat Estate To-Wit; The north west I quarter of section eight (8) township la'entv.ftve (25) north, of I’ange fourteen (14) east of the I aecontl principal Meridian, except therefrom the following tract Town: Rsginnlng at a point 771, rods south of the northeast corner of anld' quarter section: thence west 93 rodai thence south 1% rods; thence east ''3 r d« to the east lln» of asi I quarter sec'lon- thence north 3'4 rods | to place of beglnnig. containing 3 < s more or leas, and leaving after said exception 158 acres more or less! »)so the west half of the west half of th< north etst quarter of s«"l|on «“ven 17) township and range afore-; - 'CI, containing <0 acres mure or leaa ! crWcainlng in all the above deserlb'"i real estate, after exception, 133 1 acres more or less. J n4 o nfallure to realise therefrom I he full a n junt of the Judgment. l nterct the-eon and costa t win R ,| the say- tine and In the manner > ■ fore-aid. offer for sale the fee! si epic O s me thwr described Ileal eslit-: taken as the property of la, oh r. Kestler, Etta It. Kessler,! John A. Hendrl>ks, Lissle A. Hend-I rl* ks. Albert H. im*e Ingram a ' Merrlrnm, l.awren,e K. Watson, May! Iz-o'" Lus«, K. F. tt'Neil, (a-wls A ' Graham, Clement L Walters, as Grah, n nnd Walters J»ri»« II Arm ! strong, Bxecu'or ,of last will andi testament ,f Charles Armstrong atl the suit of The Prudential Insurance Company of America; the said Hile! will be made without any relief whatever from valuation or Appraise ment Laws. BU’-l Johnson tflieriff . , „z*<lan:s County Indiana Lenhart. Heller and Schurver At”'*. Oct. 37 Nov, 3.10'
ACCUSATIONS TO BE PROBED (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) of the coal investigating eommit- . tee under the Harding adminis- ■ tration and president of the ' ' national league of Republicans ! clubs. Eliot Wadsworth, an overseer of Harvard University, former assistant secretary of treasury. I Earnest Lee Jahncke, assistant secretary of navy and close friend ' and admirer of Mr. Hoover. William R. Castle, Jr., assistant I secretary of state, also a confidant ! < ' of the president. Hammond, Wadsworth and I Jahncke were named as repre-! sentatives of the navy league, t ‘ according to Theodore Joslin,! i presidential publicity secretary. Their duty will be to ascertain ■ from the records the truth con-! ! cerning the assertions of William j Howard Gardiner, president of the, navy league. Gardiner issued a pamphlet statement last We<ln*'B- , day in which he charged that the president's old proposal to immunize food supplied in times of war showed "abysmal ignorance." I “Acceptance of his suggestion i I would have worked not only dia-' metrically counter to the interests and weight of the United States in I : world affairs." said Gardiner, j “but. in effect would have made | for bigger and bloodier wars." j In his announcement, the presi- i dent said the business of the com mittee would be "to examine thej accuracy of such statements of President Gardiner of the navy' ' league as may He readily determ I : ined from departmental records." "This inquiry.” President Hoover said, "is solely into the assertions of fact made by President Gardiner x x x. not into his opinions or conclusions, nnr into bud getary or general policies of the j navy." Secretary Adams vigorously ! sided with the president in a ■
Wake Up Your Liver l!i —Without Calom
And You’ll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rann’ to Go If you feel sour and sunk and the world looks punk, don’t swallow a lot of salts, mineral water, oil, laxative candy or chewing gum and expect them to make you suddenly sweet and buoyant and full of aunshir.c. For they can’t do it. They only move the bowels and a mere movement doesn’t get at the cause. The reason for your down-and-out feeling is your liver. It should pour out two pounds of liquid bile into your bowels 'i'dy.
Wednesday Specials 2 ids. 01 iviaxwell House Coffee, 2 lbs.#* bresiuy (bound Hamberger, lb« Nice rresn boiling Beet, lb ll( Sugar Cured bmoked Hams, lb Center cuts oi smoked Ham, lb. * riciu'c Hams, lb ® Medium Heavy Bacon, lb l Fresh Frankiorts, lb lender Beef Steak, lbJ Creamery Butter, 2 lbs * Fresh Cottage Cheese, pint j. Lamb Steak or Chops, lb Nice Fresh Eggs Call 1 (16 or 107 Free' I delivery Mutschler’s Meat Market
issued hs( J White h,„ h ,. at . tM MB Noth .* iMi.l, Kivei«H rniuist, ( "‘»i® saret I’um-, vent. Oct. l — _ .
ifJ —you don't hij money to hunj Buy Ancho COAI $6.51 CASH. BURK ELEVATO CO. Telephone No. 5
If this bfle is not flowing doesn’t digest. It just decays is ttata Gas bloats up your stomach, thick, bad taste and your breath bW often breaks out in blemish* Id I aches and you feel down and out I** system is poisoned. J It takes those good old C ARTEB*SUfI LIVER PILLS tn got these twop flowing freely and make you fed'«?■ They contain wonderful, hanaHl vegetable extracts uinaung wh«>l® making ihe bilo 11 ■' / freely. • But don’t uk tor liver pill*Littlo Liver Pill*. Lok for th* m“ Ci Little Liver Pills on the rei I*** ■ubeUtuu. -*>c *t sit etwee. C-®*
