Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 14, Decatur, Adams County, 16 January 1935 — Page 5

EwiST SSfIIN flit SPOTLIGHT fell Heads I'or Coin* propaganda Q- . " >UR) — 1,1 H |vl ..-,1 plotter-.- IKtPIf ■S h»'h* '•«•<! school H !V IHL ami m*in K tin' H ! .in? quit k* HH : .*ll tuctii. H >,.> ■1 ! ![«'—no tmK»| ' • • " c 'T HR ■" t iwiui SgS i: - • SB : ' '- Y l II v prompt, n . • taßMa ■ H •' iHAMvMN HI SKI ! Itm <o. BH D--'tu- Indiana LanS m ■OLLECTION I j CHARGES I ON YOUR Ilectric ■ LIGHT (POWER II BILLS by paying on OR BEFORE lan. 21 c iollowing collec--11 c harges o n all ounts not paid by h of month followthe meter reading e been authorized: ° on sums up to $3 7 ° on sums o ver $3 IITT LIGHT & WER OFFICE -ity hall

Which Man Did Witnesses See ? mjgt TkC-to;., , . y - •'SfilTiigm This layout shows a comparison of two men which defense attorneys are expected to use in their fight to free Bruno Richard Hauptmann from charges of murdering the Lindbergh baby at his trial at Flemington, N. J. Right, views of Hauptmann; left, views of John F. Scanlon, Menlo Park, N. J., realtor, whom the defense claims might have been mistaken for Hauptmann in the vicinity of the Lindbergh •state at Hopewell.

timent." Instead of the three It's and Lincoln's Gettyburg address the primer of America's youth soon may be teaching tlie glories of au overthrown of capitalistic government, he predicted. After ten months of silence the Gary educator returned to his crusading with the same vigor that he ripped at the Washington “brain trust" and charged it with plotting to overthrow the government and set up a dictator in the White House. •The school superintendents probably will deny that they went communism," the stocky, squarejawed pedagog said.. "They want the objectives of communism, but hope to secure them without the dictatorships und repressive measures which so far have been unavoidable. "They want the thrilling experience of jumping out a ten-story window without suffering any serious consequences.” Dr. Wirst based his charges on reports of the National Convention of School Superintendents in Cleveland and pointed an accusing linger at a paragraph in which the 1,000 educational leaders decided: "The educational workers of America must bind themselves together now in a powerful union to create tens of thousands of citizens groups to study critical economic and social problems.” He referred to a statement by Dr. George S. Counts of Columbia University that: "The system of private capitatism, of an economy administered for private gain, has been shown to be bankrupt. The teachers of this country are under obligation to inform the rising generation of this tact." Dr. Wirst. sitting in the cluttered study of his home, shook his head sadly. •lit looks like these school superintendents have pledged themselves to use their schools propaganda agencies to help in creating an ultra-radical sentiment among our people, which will force the country over the precipice and into the abyss of communism, ’ he said. Get the Habit — Trade at How

HOUSING UNDER THE NEW DEAL Do you live in a °UNDkT THk’n^W Washington Bureaus aw bulU o£ ‘ ~y agon cy and activity DKAL. U contains briefly .-.' t as to do with houses and housing, of the federal government that jw(tltutions> through It tells about thi ie ~ owners Loan Corporation, the Federal Home Loan Banks, the Horn . nd t i lc Feda !i'oSL s =.s. vars.-isfsrr can be aided through those four fedeiat • ~a II obtaiu rtTe.r‘vhatlhe «ove, nmeut ,s OoinF to do to provide low-cost homes thiougli t o J: Y* public Works Homesteads Corporation, the Housing Division f el>uM'cW«“ Administration, the Public Works Emergency sing, the Tennessee Valley Authority, the arm Cted Adndnistm the Federal Emergency Relief Administration and lC ,>ieri housing and Farm Authority. It gives the addresses of all!federal houshrf aseuctea to whom interested persona may app y» house plans, thirteen government and private agencies fiotn . niav floor plans, blue prints and suggestions for small house designs may be obtained free or for a small sum. CUP COUPON HERE Dept. 230, Washington Bureau, DAILY DEMOCRAT, 1322 New York Avenue, Washington, D. C. I want a copy of the bulletin HOUSINL UNDER I HL . DEAL, and enclose herewith five cents in coin (ca . l '®‘ l l llly^ P or uucancelleU V. tS. postage stamps, to cover leluiii postage and handling costs: NAME STREET &. No - CITY ..' i STATE 1 am a reader of the Decatur Daily Democrat, Decatur, lud.

r ’ DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1935.

ALL OFFICIALS CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE gram. Dale W. McMillen, president of the Central Sugar company of this city, spoke to the growers. Mr. McMillen stated that the company was anxious to cooperate with the farmer and beet gr wer in promoting the agricultural program In this territory- “We want to help the farmer und will continue to develops markets for him,” the sugar company president stated. Mr. Bus: he. president of the organization gave an interesting talk j and explained the efforts of the association in attempting to have I tlie acreage quota increased. He pointed out that cn extra one thousand acres of harvested beets meant an expenditure of $112,50'' a year, citing that the grower would receive approximately $60,000 for the beets; an addition'll $15,000 in benefit payments; $15,000 would be spent for labor; $15,000 for coal, coke, limestone and other materials, $7,500 for freight. Over a two year period the extra 1,000 acres would mean the distribution of about $250,000, Mr. Busche stated. Several hundred growers attended the meeting. EDGAR UNTHANK CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE j until today the colored 'people are 190 per cent literate," Mr. Unthauk !said. j He presented the unfortunate side of the negro life from the standpoint of inequality of opportunity. The meeting and dinner was held at the Rice hotel at 6:30 o’clock. The tables were arranged in the form of a capital “L” and were fittingly decorated. The committee 111 charge of the affair was composed of the Mesdames Ralph Roop, Lloyd Cowens, Burt Mangold, Clyde Butler and Amos Gruber. Phone your Grocery and l Meat orders to the A. & I • ; Store- Five deliveries daily. Phone 82. ”

PARTY ENDS IN I SCALDING OATH Niffht Club Hostess Charges Young Millionaire Gave Her Bath Chicago, Jan. lU.~ <U.R) -A night club party tlmt ended with Mins Vera Read of the Club Alabam' taking a bath in scalding water brought George Kastman Dryden, son of a millionaire rubber merchant and grand-nephew of the late George Kastman of camera j fame, into police court today. Miss Read, 21-year-old night clubi hostess, charged that Dryden forci-1 bly held her, fully clothed, in a j bathtub in his apartment while lie! ran hot water over her and ducked her head.. She suffered less j first degree burns, "but enough to ! make the skin blush,'' besides j scalding of her lungs, according to | a physician. Dryden, 24, told a different story | of the bath but Miss Read was supported by her 24-year-old sister, Hazel, ho also is a club hostess and who went to toe par.y last night with another couple. "George held her down in the! till) and struck me when I tried to j stop him," she told police. Botli! she and Vera swore out warrants j charging assault.. Dryden was re-; leased under S2OO bond after sur ' rendering. He told police titqt Vera “sue-! cumbed" to wine served in his ! apartment and that her sister suggested she take a bath to sober up. “I don't know who drew the water, whether it was liot or cold or how Vera got into it." he said. Dryden, sun of George H. Dryden of Evanston, is defendant In a suit for $75,000. filed last September by Miss Marella Oldham, 22. queen of the Michigan cherry fes- j tival in 1032. Rile charged him with breach of promise, seduction and assault.. He was divorced in 1933 by tlie former Miss Dorothy Hessler, 29, who wus given custody i of two children. SEVENTH EXPERT CONTINUED FROM RAGE ONE tried to disguise Ills handwriting, i On previous days, Albert S. Osborn, ruddy-faced, deaf, and assertive, had sworn to his belief Hauptmann was the author, to be followed by another master of script analysis, Elbridge TV. Stein. Jolin Tyrrell of Milwaukee, and | Herbert J. Walter, of Chicago, had i been tile other two to bring the weight of their findings before the court. Osborn the younger still was on the stand when court recessed, at 12:25 p. m.. and the courtroom throng was happy in anticipation that the tedious handwriting testimony—which is so vital to the slate's case — was drawing to a close. RETURN SAAR TO CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE States. Although organized Nazis were held in rigid discipline by their leaders in carrying out Ailelf Hitler's pledge that those who voted !'> Sunday's plebiscite would not be persecuted, there were incidents of

4 Cutten Smiles at Troubles Orville J. Teylor ,-| Arthur W. Cutten ;Threatened with expulsion from the grain board, Arthur W, Cutten, right, millionaire Chicago grain dealer, nevertheless manages to tmile as he leaves the agriculture department building in Washing- j | ton with his attorney, Orville J. Taylor. Cutten was given a heapling before a cabinet committee on charges of attempting to manipu- j the wheat market in 1930 by selling millions of bushels in violation of the grain futures acti

I individual terrorism and all antiNazla in the Saar were nervous. All was quiet today and Saarland- | ms went back to work. No Incidents j marred celebration* which continued throughout last night. Many Jewish merchants who bearded up their shops yesterday reopened them. J’ollce said there was not a single cane of a Jew suffering from persecution. Nevertheless. more Jews left by train toduy, tutir a<ssets turned Into cash. They sought new homes In Southern Fi'ince where they can live i u farm lands as tenants. Three Badly Burned Miners Are Rescued Princeton, Ind., Jan. 17 (UP) — j Three badly burned coal miners j were rescued today after their ! lamp* ignited gas 180 feet below the ' .surface in the Mowry Wage coal minohere. The readied miners, Roy Kirby, I 25, Lloyd Willis, 21, and John Rogers were removed to a hosiptal i where they are expected to recover. Only the quick thinking of Her--1 man Willis and Virgil Willis, standing >it tile top of the shaft, saved the imprisoned men. They smelled liming clothing and lowered a rope. The miners faatenj the the rope to themselves und were ! pulled to the surface. | - o Prices that speak economy. | Complete close out at C. 1). Teeple’s store. Come in and see for yourselfu

QOOR CHILD | /amp the. school By Dr ALLEN G. IRELAND Dtrtitcn. PbjsuM 4*J Health Ldaratioa Hew Jetity Stiff Department of Pa bln lailraetioa Prevention of Colds at School . First of all, to keep colds out of the school it is essential that parents cooperate by keeping children at home when the earliest signs of

a cold appear. There is no measure quite as effective as this. At school, the temperature of the room should be kept around 68 degrees. Hot, dry air increases the chances

lof taking cold. Wet clothing should be removed and every school should provide some means, however crude, j for drying clothes. “Bundling” should be avoided by regulation, I mean by that, that an inflexible Tule should prohibit the wearing of sweaters, windbreakers, rubbers ; ! and the like in the classroom. All pupils with signs of cold should be excluded. It is only in this way that spread can be limited to a few cases. The exchange of pencils, pen holders and small utensils that can be put in the mouth must be prohibited. With a little patience teachers can educate children to cover the nose and mouth while coughing or sneezing, but when that stage is reached such children shouldn’t be in school. Water drinking should be encouraged. Fresh milk and the fruit juices are excellent preventives as well as remedies. Correct diets and home measures should be the subject of class projects and discussions. Finally, the teacher should herself set a good example. How the modem school can aid the health of children will be the subject of Dr. Ireland's next article.

How Hauptmann Was Linked in Ransom Money

This layout shows scenes of the discovery of some of the $50,000 ransom notes paid for the kidnaped Lindbergh baby in the Bronx, N. Y., garage of Bruno Richard Hauptmann, now on trial at Flem-

FT. WAYNE MAN —■■■ CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE tions between Mrs. Schmitt und Howenstein. Mrs. Schmitt pleaded guilty to a second degree murder Indictment la.st December 10 admitting that she | administered potassium cyanide in a glass of orange juice to her bus- - band, resulting in his death. The state charged that Howenstein procured the potassium cya- j nkle and urged Mrs. Schmitt to givej it to ilier husband to get him out of j the way so that they could carry on ' their clandestine relations without! difficulty. Mrs. S lmiitt testified on the wit-, cess stand that Howenstein threat-' cued the life f her und her four-j ytur old daughter if she would not kill her I’msihaad. ‘She was the! state's star witness. Pronouncement of Howenstein’s 1 sentence will he made next Monday by circuit court judge Clarence R. 1 McNabb. Sentencing of Mrs. Sch- j mitt is being withheld until after Howenstein is sentenced. OFFICERS FIGHT CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE joined by citizen vigiluntes and closed in on tile area from all ‘■tides, finally trapping the bandits with Nash at the farm of Jake logger half mile from McNa'b, till. Yusco had been released earlier but Nash, wounded in the hand, was held by the bandits until they were trapped. Two of the four bandits, including the one seriously wounded, entered the loeger house. The other two, one said to he the lead-j ed, ran back of the house and in- j to a cornfield, closely followed by ipolice. Surrounded in the cornfield, (he leader, carrying a sub-machine gun, committed silicide with the weapon before police could reach him. His companion surrendered. Sheriff Lawrence Ellina, Putnam county, and u deputy from

You’re Welcome To stop in at our salesroom and inspect the beautiful, new 1935 PLYMOUTH Or better still, ask us to demonstrate it by actual test. We know, once you get behind the wheel you’ll not be satisfied with any other make of car. It’s beauty, sturdy construction, economy in operation, comfort and luxurious appearance make it the talk of the town. Inspect YOUR New Plymouth at Phil L. Macklin &Co MADISON STREET i

ington, N. J., for the murder of the child. Top, left, workmen digging for the notes under the garage floor; top, right, where some of the note* were found; below, the mcney and its wrappings.

LaSalle county were the captors. The two men hi the farm house forced Miss Florence loeger at the point of a gun to close all of the doors. The occupants were ordered not to answer the telephone. The capture of the two men in the house was effected without j exchange of shots. Nash had been taken inside by the men. He was , suffering from a scalp wound and ; a wounded left hand, j From stories told by the bandits i after their capture at the farm j house it was learned they had | entered the baiik through a base- . inent window. j The bandits all were armed, acI cording to Miss loeger. daughter j of the elderly couple whose house | was used as a hideway. I "1 saw the car drive Into the ! yard and five men got out." she ! told the United Prana. "One of j them appeared to be seriously wounded and blood was streaming 1 from the head of another. Two 1 of the men rail (he car to the hack 1 of the house and then ran through the fields. The others, one of them wounded in the chest, came into the house and pointed a pistol at my mother. They ordered us to close all the doors and not answer the telephone, which was ringing.” The man whose head was injured was Nash. o First Virginia Winery Richmond, Va. —(U.R) —Establishment of Virginia's first winery

PUBLIC AUCTION FRIDAY, JANUARY 18, 1935 1 O’clock. Horses and Colts; 2 Good Brood Mares; Milch t ows; Heifers; Butcher Cattle; Bulls and Hogs. 50 Breeding Ewes. Some Good Quarters of Beef. That Good Sorghum. Miscellaneous Articles. Make your consignment early. DECATUR RIVERSIDE SALES E. J. AHR—Managers—L. W. MURPHY Johnson and Doehrman, Auctioneers.

Page Five

here soon is planned by Antoine L. Alaj, of France. Alaj expects his plant to employ 125 to 15u persons and produce 100,000 gallons per month. Grapes will be imported from France. Market’s "Hard Spot** Strength In a portion of the stock market as a result of considerable kuylng Is called a "bard spot"

IF YOUR BREATH HAS A SMELL YOU CAN’T FEEL WELL When we eat too much, our food decays in our bowels. Our friends smell thi« decay coming out of our mouth and call it bad breath. We feel the poison of tbit? > decay all over our body. It makes us , gloomy, grouchy and no good for anything. What makes the food decay in the bowels? Well, when we eat too much, our bile ! juice can't digest it. What is the bile juice? It is the most vital digestive juice in our body. Unless 2 pints of it are flowing from , our liver into our bowels every day, our movements get hard and constipated and i % of our food decays in our 28 feet of bowels. This decay sends poison all over our body every six minutes. I When our friends smell our bad breath (but we don’t) and we feel like a whipped tomcat, don't use a mouthwash or take a laxative. Get at the cause. Take Carter's Little Liver Pills which gently start the flow of your bile juice. But if “something hettei’* is offered you, don’t buy it, for it may be a calomel (mer Airy pill, which loosens teeth, gripes and scalds the rectum in many people. Ask for Carter’s • Littl.* Liver Pills by name and get what yob ask for— ©1934, C.M.Co.