Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 32, Number 31, Decatur, Adams County, 5 February 1934 — Page 5

•F ( ,n bocal Eastor \bout Hitlerism r i<uH " 7 . M I’rugh. l ,H * l “ r O1 l ' lt ‘ ..nW! > hurcli. dMiver.nl ‘ „ <m Hitlerism and ■> 1,11 m Girmnny.” before ~ rial Association "/ union meeting of the onWXcol*' Church recently, e < elements were W m the ». .. . verpts from the ,_K ■rniien..' “ ssl « n a r *' l,g i- 11 divine or providen'l*WLti,,<!l.e to greet poHta-ai ■* u modern phenom ■ ei... med m th. days w ,. , . witnessing the re■7..! ’ h " resurgence of nat H and pride of a people, for mm ’i” 111 * decade h « !i ~|t i i.i’.'l »>«■ spoiled and J aprlJ „ ; and the man who u tin .rest of that wave of I, Adolph Hitler. In J millions of Gerkind of Messiah. | V. sent front God to ■ ; ami. In 1932 when H [or tun<> ; Germany were at . and ilie people were 1 -‘rose and cried to ■ \«ake and throw oft dag- ' lluWf< ■ 111 I,S K. ; ., p, ...i' up unto himself >he hopesand ideals ln^Bt !te German people. He has t retnendous human I w;! , - • German nation the World War. He has d G, i" what neither Hind- ■ .i.ing nor Papen has and what Strese:u r done had he livMHand - to inspire hope in I.- and to lead them ■ a glorioua future | Fath Hand. or Nazi; -m the person philos

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y~~ ■ui os BEFIN 4 M lb ■ OS .MALI El PAIMENTS ■I EXIRA MONET IF OESIRID ■ fKINKI.IN SECURITY CO. ■ Over Si haler Hdw. Co. Iws THEATRE Knight and Tuesday I “DESIGN FOR LIVING” I with ■redric March, Gan' Cooper, ■Miriam Hopkins, Edward I Everett Horton. ■dded - ' Rhapsody in Brew” I A Musical Comedv. 10-25 c ■>Ml\(i--The 1 Marx ■irotlu Is in -DECK Soi l’” ■ ! fHE CORT ■onight - Tomorrow “THE WORLD CHANGES” An unusual story, with *ne great character actor, Daul Muni and great supporting cast, tided—Fox News, ( om«b . Mickey Mouse. 10c -25 c ASHBAUCHERS majestic furnaces ASBESTOS shingle hoofing SPOUTING lightning ROUS I Phone 765 or 730

■—j— —— Reunited by Tragedy i f wv w. gy > x-.ibhs XL wwML < s ' W Siirw -wk ’W* Wjßi. ' A poignant scene at Queens County Court, L. 1., as Helen Cuevas comforts her husband, Ignacio, Cuban engraver, who is awaiting trial on n charge of slaying Patrolman Joseph Misiachia, with whom his wife ft said to have been friendly. Although it was pointed out it would aid defense, Cuevas refuses to have hit wife’s name dragged into the case,

ophy of Adolph Hitler thrown up in a form useful for propaganda purposes. “One of the outstanding characteristics of the German leader is his personal hatred of the Jews. Those who knew Adolph Hitler twenty years ago tel us that this was an outstanding piece of his make-up even in those early days. It is something woven into the very fabric of his being. Hence his determination to consider the Jew as a foreigner, as a stranger in Germajiy and to look upon him as a second-rate citizen. “In one of his radio addresses Hitler said, 'A church that is unable to support the state is worthless.’ The Swastika, sign of the Nazi party, has been placed on the ! altars of churches beside the cross, and one begins to wonder which is the object of the most reverence and adoration. I “The. Roman Catholic church has also felt the hand of Hitler meddling in its afiairs. For one thing he has destroyed the political power which’ Catholics have wielded in national affairs. Here and there individual priests have been arrested and jailed for making statements from the pulpit which were interpreted as being offensive to the government. The leadership of the Roman church is beginning to realize that they too have a fight on their hands to preserve their j religious liberty. “The organization known as ’Ger- ( j man Christians" is a party of peoi pie within the Protestant church . who regard Hitler as the instrument of God for the cultural, moral and spiritual rebirth of Germany. This party became strong enough to control church elections held last summer. They are strong ly anti Semitic. Accordingly they put through the Aryon law which excludes all persons having Jewish blood from the membership of the church. They have also reorganized the church joining the 28 state churches into one national church which they call the Reichskirche. They have placed at the head of the church an officer called the Refchsbishop and they have given him dictatorial powers. This is a totally new ligure in German Prot ' estantism, and the office is invest ed with powers that have never be fore been given to any official of t lie church. “That Hitler is determined to bring the church under the direct I control of the s-tate is shown by the , recent move ot the Reichsbishop in I handing over the League of Prot-, I csleiit youth to the leader of the j | Hitler Youth Movement which is a , purely political organization. “It would Jje very difficult to pre diet just what the future holds by way of new developments in the I German religious crisis. The recent ' turn of events is evidence that there are still great numbers of people in Germany who hold what I St. Paul called ‘the lils-rty where with Christ hath made us free' as | the dearest possession of life, ami : that they will tight to preserve | that treasure against tlic pillagings | of the princes ot this world. “Not by might, nor by power, but I by My Spirit, saitb the Lord of i Hosts.'' bond holders ONLY BIDDERS ON PROPERTIES! CONTINUED FKOM PAGE ONE) | Marshall, attorney tor the Lake i Shore Sugar Co; Freeman Day. ' Chicago, Fred 1). Zollaas, tort I W ayne. attorneys for mortgage i trustees or bondholders; Mr Me-1 Milieu of Chicago; Mr. Larrowe of Detroit; Mr. Synder of this! city; Harold McMillen. J. Ward I Cailand ami H. C. Okseti of Deca-j ‘tur. The Misses Regina Mur laugh and Miriam Parrish, acted as stenographers. 1 The latke tShoic Sugar compan v ; | was the only bidder that qualified l in submitting bids. Bonds of i 1 $25,000 and a certified check for 11

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1931.

12,500 was filed with 'Special Master in Chancery Remmell. 24 hours previous to the holding of the sale and announcement of the fact was made by the federal court representative. No objections were voiced to the proceedings or decisions of the court. The -session was held in the general office of the company, located directly west of the main factory building. Tlie sale was the result of the decree rendered by tho Federal Court to sell the property in the! ! suit of the Resource Holding Co., a New York Corporation and Charles J. Welch, plaintiffs, vs the Holland St. Louis Sugar company, a Michigan corporation. J Receivership proceedings were! instituted in February 1930. Th<» local plant of the Holland St. Louis Sugar Co., now known t as the Central Sugar Co., was built and opened for business in 1912. It operated continuously every year until 1930, and did not resume operations until 1933 when ; the property was leased by the Central Sugar Company. The plant was successfully operated last year by tiie Central Sugar Co,, and plans are being made now Io go ahead with the running of the factory next fall. Contracts for growing beets are being obtained and unless legal technicalities obstruct carrying out plans for t.ext fall Mr. McMilI len and his essociates will continue in charge. More than $65,000 was spent | last summer in rebuilding the yards and rehabilitating the machinery and equipment in the local plant. o —— You save . . WORK Let us do this. 15 pounds..l9c Decatur Laundry. -—■ — —o Get the Habit — Trade at Home

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ICY PAVEMENTS CAUSE DEATHS Highway Accidents Cause Four Deaths Over Week-End Indianapolis, Ind., Feb. 5. —O.PJ— Highway accident* caused four deaths in Indiana over the weekend. Icy pavements were blamed for a majority of the accidents, Aaron Paul, 6, Huntington, was fatally injured when hit hy an automobile while hitch hiking home. The boy hailed a milk truck and as he crossed the road >'ie slipped on the icy road nnd fell against the fender of another car. He died of a fractured ahull. Don Spivey, 22, Delphi, was killed when a jack supporting a heavy truck trailer, slipped. Spivey was beneath the cart and was crushed. He died before aid could reach him. Samuel Wagner, 74, Petersburg, was the victim of a hit and run driver in that city. Three youths, all of Arthur, later surrendered to Sheriff William Wetathcrs of Pike county. The three being held are James Comer. 15, driver of the cur; Hal Boyd, 16, aiKj Harold Small. 20. Frank Rendell, 25, Harvey. 111., was killed when the car he was driving, skidded on the pavement and overturned in a ditch near St. Johns. FIVE CONFESS PART IN DEATH OF EX-PASTOR <’ONTINUED FKOM PAGE NEI against tike three. Mrs. Balk'-, who had been nursing the pastor’s wife while she was ill witli tuberculosis, and t’urtz, were held on vagrancy charges pending further investigation. The gun used in the slaying. Saunders ring and watch, were hidden in the basement of Mrs. Balke’s Wabash home until destroyed by Cutrz, police s - aid they were told. Mrs. Saunders gave Mathers $lO to hire her husband killed but he I became afraid to cal! in more help and did it himself, according to police investigation. Roe purchased a pistol with SS.SO Mathers gaxe him and drove the minister's car on a drinking party the night of the slaying, the confessions relate. Mrs. Saunders was quoted as saying tn Iter confession: “I believed Mr. iSautiders was losing his mind and I lia<> filed ' papres to put him in an insane hospital, and I was afraid to tell him 1 had filed the papers.” A denial that Saunders was losing his mind was made today by his brother, the Rev. Eldridge Saunders, pastor of the Methodist church at Uniondale. Funeral Sunday Wabash, Ind.. Feb. &--- (U.R) Avoiding all reference to the, manner in which the Rev. Gaylord V. Saunders met his death.

Fistic Lesson From An Expert ! IMNI f A W : H' “Bw > <2 I i n. —" 1 1 An eager school of fistic aspirants hangs on the words of Tommy Loughran. contender for the heavyweight championship of the world, as he . 1 explains some of the finer points of the noble art. Tommy is training at i West Palm Beach, Fla., for his bout with Champion Primo Camera at Miami on February 22.

> I three pastors eulogized the life of the resigned minister from the! i pulpit of his former church here I yesterday. The body of Saunders remained in the parsonage of the Wabash i Avenue Methodist Episcopal: church during the services at the request of the widow, held at Indianapolis on a murder charge. The services were supervised by the Rev. M. (). Lester, district superintendent of the Methodist Episcopal church. | Assisting were the Rev. Earl ' Pittenger. pastor of the First M. : IE. church here, and the Rev.' Claude Garrison who succeeded ! Saunders in the Wabash Avenue j i post. ( I.ALMS EFFORT TO WARN PRISON GUARDS FUTILE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) . basis of the trustee’s report. "If Stephenson’s story is true, it would more than support the , board's report,’’ Coy said. , Quoting from the statement as , he remembered it. Coy said Stephenson clannod he was approached ■ by Harry Pierpont, one of the con- , victs who -escaped, and informed , of the impending break. ; “Pierpont allegedly told Steph • enson that members of the gang had been promised they would not i be molested it they got as far as the front gate,” Coy said. '! "Stephenson was asked by Pier-: pout whether the officials would ' stick by their promise," according ito the statement given Greenlee. I I Coy said he did not remember I I Stephenson's having claimed that lie attempted to warn prison offic-

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ials of the break. o ONLY ONE VOTE CAST AGAINST RELIEF BILL GONTTNUED FROM PAGE ONE) designed to encourage state insur- ! ance systems and to reduce periodic mass unemployment. Ls enactment this session was con- : sidered doubtful. ; The bill w“uid impose a federal i tax on employers, based on their I payrolls. Agriculture and employers of less than five persons would be exempted. A rate of two per cent was I suggested for the tax. This, on 1929 payroll figures, would yield j about one billion annually. The ; federal tax would not apply where ! industries are operating under state insurance. Benefits of at least $7 per week ' would be paid to insured workers who were thrown out of employment. SEEK RELEASE OF DILLINGER (CONTINUED FROM PAGF ONE) Reports that John Hamilton, alleged killer and bank robber, was hiding within striking distance of i he Lake’’county jail led to new precautions today as Joint Dillinger, i Hamilton's friend, faced arraignI ment on murder charges. Hamilton was blamed for the : shooting to death of Police Sergeant William Shanley in Chicago: | recently. Dillinger will Im tried on I charges of shooting Policeman William P. O'Malley in East Chicago. Tlie reports that Hamilton was in tlie neighborhood of Crown Point

came from Theodore Milakovlch and Matthew Tetak. Gary policemen who were driving from Gary to Crown Point to aid in the guarding of Dillitiger. Near Merrillville, Ind., they saw an automobile containing Hamilton, another man and a woman, they said. Tlie automobile bore Ohio license plates. After a short chase, the police were outdistanced. Dillinger lias claimed that Hamilton was killed in the East Chicago raid. It was known that Dillinger, Hamilton mid other members of their gang has sworn an oath to , aid each other Is capturisl. All werb escaped convicts. o Charges Brown With Violations Os Ixiw Washington, Fob. 5 — (UP) — Ccairnian Black of the senate airmail investigating committee opened the "trial" of former assistant

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Page Five

secretary of commerce W. P. Macfhuckon, Jr., In the aenate today with a charge t-Uat former poztiM?ter Central Walter F. Brown had violat-id the law iu a mail contract ”npoll> conference, during the Hoover AdminiKtratlon. MavUracken. under arrest on « Senate warrant, waa a spectator in the public galleriea while Black outlined the committee’s case and mur geeted “a4>proprMte actlou" against four other airline offfciuhi and attorney*. ' SUPREME COURT ISSUES RULUING (C<)NTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) not inflict it. The ruling did not affect persons sentenced prior, to repeat and now in prison. — -O' —— ' Get the Habit — Trade a» Home