Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 33, Number 39, Decatur, Adams County, 14 February 1935 — Page 5

♦ '' r t'oi Evidence fIMLe . I F'*9 ’ lU.R) * ■■ 'V lii Th ‘, I d uu ■.jßm. ••• ,u t .'■Wz ..-. &8B : "' b ' 1 I'' I ,d.:i 8Mj1K..!.’.-, :■-'•! ' k ’'" i: ' l ’ l "' p.,: f: - lumber :. '! I | “ u - "'* . : larlglC bought hEz I ,■( ■ I ‘bl l|.H > stand HV The Defense ’EL i,.- .. t‘<". > were not in I

Won’t Pay Over 25c I For Medicine I Friday and Saturday ■iFFEREKS FROM STOMACH TROUBLE. WEAK ■ ■kidneys, lazy liver, nervousness and K GENERAL RUN-DOWN CONDITION:

V. 11.. tins in your W) * uii.i miliknown iiulo-Vin. has s? percent the people first trial bottle at 25 limiiiM \>c believe the, who benefited will using regular tull*1 nielli, me is $1.25. S W HAT IT IS! ” ||9 ♦ advanced i(impound of 29 of the Medicinal Herbs, and not habit It is after ala and mixes with in stomach, thus the poisons that sostroubles and permitkidneys and liver Io funcit arts within 10 to stop uas an( | p a j nß , bloat and belching. It Cripe or nauseate you like liver medicines. It will Ha' bile from lite liver as ink. ,\i the same time drives the poisons from l.'eves backaches. 1 irritation and weakness. I ft cm bed-wetting Bl !i '* iluv '- Strengthens the by natural means. K™ whethoi Indo-Vin will help 'imtisands of others r will end your suffera day or a week—remains Kr, lil!t in tight of what it i tor others, it is surely a bo io try it for 25 CENTS, traction ot actual cost. This I tory ofter is good Friday I ■iNtturday ONLY. so read the I K.' 1 ■ announcement and act ? u thi,s in fa i r »e»8 to i and your family. ■ "HAT it WILL DO! * will cleanse your bow- ' ■y ei i ’'“'’Mlly -not drastic or se- : ■clLnmp, 'J"’- v were NEVER BEFORE. Ollt awlul and I 1 ’frequently from the first ! □ CI may have been inside . H. . 011 g. ii ln e, causing you i |Ss di? s ot mise ry with head-1 ■ ■lazv t y S,,el ’ B ’ ilkin eruptions ■do V,n Uro m Sy ' UreU feelin fiifttw an , ■ *' elieve acid eondiKglti swn nif| Ke the digestive orle le relief' 1 f rlPa “ aIKI Rive ■ WitiL- f lloni iudtKestlon. | ■ckeath aim , s oniacll ’ shortness Ml w„ ; Jlld dyspepsia. ■hife re„ g pv.A?" the greatest, |l>ly ' u LVE R HADIN YOUR | ! ?hih ill kidn l act as a diuretic to Kiltie.. or t yH “ nd ,lush out ■ becoml a“ pui ' lly that may B A c ?- a J. lllued up inside. ■’B and H E . SHARP | r auu RISING at night.

I Hauptmann's handwriting, as attested by defense handwriting experis. The handwriting exhibits shown by the state were forged, the defense hinted Hauptmann's "sudden wealth" came from lucky stock market speculations started with money he i saved or earned in business partnership with the late Isidor Fisch. The ransom money found at his home was given to him in a shoo box by Fisch and he did not know tlie nature of its content. The ransom bills he passed were taken from the box to balance money that Fisch owed him The identification of Dr. Condon. Col. Lindbergh and Perrone were baseless and mistakefi. He was not in New Jersey at the time of the kidnaping, but two other men in an automobile with a ladder were seen there. He made the notation of Dr. Condon’s address on the panel in his home merely because he was interested in the case." He could not have built the ladder. because it was crudely made and he Is an expert carpenter. SOME OF DEFENSE CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE was in any wise responsible for i this enthusiastic outburst, which had no proper basis." The Associated Press report to which Wilentz referred was sent out last night 14 minutes before the Hauptmann jury give Its verdict, and four minutes before the jurors entered the box and took their seats to await the arrival of the judge before announcing the verdict. It was printed in newspapers in many parts of the country and was announced on the radio' Messages from Shanghai. London, Santiago and other cities today told of the appearance of the I mistaken report in newspapers in

F wSt L ■Sk • G. H. Mosby, Originator of Indo-Vin, who chooses Friday and Saturday to offer his medicine purely on a trial basis at a fraction of its actual cost. 0 ♦ It will make your liver more acI five; will clear away old bile de--1 posits, thus relieving spells of biliousness and sick headache. , Relieves rheumatism and neu- ' ritis, giving quick relief from pain. IT WILL put a stop to the skin eruptions that are caused by the impurities i» the organs, will overi come the sallowness or 'muddiness' that is due to sluggish liver and 1 will put the ROSY GLOW OP i HEALTH into your cheeks. The I unfailing remedy tor female complaints. Indo-Vin will make your stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels more aci tive, build you up in general and make you LOOK. ACT and FEEL i like a DIFFERENT MAN or- WOMAN, years younger than your real age. To get your first hot He for 25c ; (Friday and Saturday ONLY) bring coupon to the store below, or send I with 25c (stamps or coin) to IndoIVIn, Inc., Cincinnati, Ohio, and I medicine will bo shipped postpaid. ' COUPON hkl only 25c GOOD FOR ONE INTRODUCTORY DOTTLE INDO-VIN ; (Friday or Saturday Only.) HOLTHOUSE Drug Store

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY. FEBRUARY I I, 1935.

Killer, Scene Os Trial and Slain Baby ..Jf 5S tt iSJT | Jjß’W I J /' JHHMh ML ' »Pzx • t - 'J \ 1 *” —-x - -t / ■ S • Lindbergh baby I »*.»•-»> ,/ ...«??• ; ■& '5-*»nr‘f Wi£.a ® / C B y igr i / ■■ mTW ..fl v J® d[| i |l!tui>.i ILcherd - , MK wWrfrs* 7 —A^^<«B Hun ‘* rdon coun,y courthou **“’® , ** ,, ’®-" i ®®* sci “MP'

those and other foreign cities. I The Associated Press laTer "klll- , ed" Its announcement ‘and issued i the following explanation: , "When word that a verdict had ; been reached in the Bruno Richard Hauptmann trial for murder of the Lindbergh baby flashed through the courtroom, confusion reigned . briefly. "In transmitting tlie verdict ! from one part of tiie courthouse to another the Associated Press report of the decision was garbled and first word to reach wafting newspapers was that the jury had found Hauptmann guilty, hut witli a recommendation of life imprisonment instead of the death penalty. ’ (No such word reached United Press newspapers as the erroneous announcement was carried exclusively by the Associated Press.) United Press newspapers throughout the world received the ' verdict correctly when it was announced by the foreman of the jury at 10:44 p. m. At that hour the United Press Hashed that Haupt mann had been found guilty and that a death sentence was man- | datory. BRUNO BREAKS I (CONTINUED ON PAGE FIVE) and 20 minutes and took five bal-lot-3. On the first vote the juri ors agreed unanimously that lie | was guilty. Four additional polls I were necessary before they could ‘ agree that he should be sentenced i to death. As when they guillotine a man in France, the entire operation of condemning Hauptmann last night was over so quickly that few ( could realize that the six weeks i of tension and suspense was at an end. I Justice Thomas W. Trenehard, | in his wrinkled black robe, mounti ed the bench at 10:43 p.m. There was gravity and dignity in his face. The jury box, where Alton . ney Wilentz and his colleagues I of the prosecution his been sitting. awaiting the verdict, was , emptied. Constables swept papeni from the defense and prosecution tables. There was one familiar figure

Opposing Attorneys gEv..' ( <■' LjC- / 1 1 1 mW; fjfer wß'-V It X Iff fHit - i 'l'-*’ '' If x - ■ *" <W-<S fe 11/ wSP • ■ • I ■/'wMwSKI : > i fcz; * ■ Mfr* '/ ' - i David T Wllentz Edward J. Reilly Above are pictured the two leading! attorneys in the Hauptmann minder trial. Reilly, acting as chief ■ idefense cout.sel, announced iuuuodUtely after the verdict Wednesday night, that he would anpeal the :are Wilentz attorney-general of the state of New Jersey, was openly jubilant over the death verdict: U returned by the jury of tour women and eight men.

I missing when the major characters had taken their seats. That was Col. Lindbergh, who throughout the trial had been a faithful ’ observer of its progress and an I interested listener to testimony. Only one minute after the jus--1 tice had looked through his glasses at the attorney general and inquired if the court was ready for the verdict, Hauptmann ' had been condemned. Mother Mourns (Copyright 1935 by United Press) Kamenz, Germany, Feb. 14. — 1 (U.R) -A small, white haired wo--1 man of 66, Frau Pauline Haupt- j mann, «tood pricing vegetables before a market stall today, a I 1 market net in her hand, and 1 heard a passerby say that her. wayward son Bruno Richard Hauptmann had been sentenced to • death. She turned quietly away and walked, through crowds of neighbors, to the town newspaper office ■ a block away. There on the bulle- ‘ tin board she read the news for j herself. For a moment she stood staring straight ahead, her faded, red rimmed blue eyes fixed unseeingly on the bulletin board as if she I could not realize the truth. Then her head bowed slowly as I ' if she were praying, and tears began welling down her wrinkled . cheeks. Townspeople edged away ; from the board and stood round I in silent embarrassment. Frau Hauptmann turned away and started slowly down the hill , toward her home, her black clad • body seeming almost broken. Wave Os Kidnaping* Followed Crime Os Killling Lindbergh Baby Washington. Feb. (U.R) — The Lindbergh kidnaping was a blow — ; and a boon— to the department of 1 , justice. i The blow was a wave of kidnap- ‘ ings. The boon was that congress passed the "Lindbergh Law, - which gave the government broad ‘ jurisdiction in the fight against kidnapings and has resulted to date I in solution of 31 cases. • The child of the Lindbergh's

was stolen March 1. 1932. On June 22 of the same year an aroused, congress made kidnaping a federal offense when it involved use of the mails, or transportation of the victim across state lines. Since then tlie division of investigation. department of justice, hits participated in the solutions of 31 kidnapings. To quote J. Edgar Hoover, chief of the division. “All of the 31 cases have been solved. "Seventy-four persons have been convicted and 22 are now fn custody awaiting trial. Seventy four , persons have received sentences I totaling 1,186 years, 11 months, land two days; 16 life sentences, 1 two death sentences, and 30 years ■ suspended sentences and 20 years 1 probation; two individuals were lynched while awaiting trial, three committed suicide and two were murdered by their companions. I ‘ And kidnapings seem to be decreas | ing in lumber.’’ Only two suspected kidnapings ! still are at large. One is Thomas | N. Robinson, Jr., a young man who masquerades as a woman and who lis accused of kidnaping Mrs. Ber- ' ry V. Stoll in Louisville, Ky. The jother is Alvin Kappis, Oklahoma I fugitive sought as a participant in the kidnaping of Edward G. Bre- ‘ mer, Minneapolis brewer and erAll of Robinson's associates have been arrested. Most of Karpis’ accomplices are dead, shot by Federal agents. The rest, led by Arthur (Doc) Baker, are behind bars, awaiting trial. The Lindbergh law provides i death penalty in aggravated cases , of kidnaping and in others “imprisonment for such term of years as the court in its discretion, shall determine. Kidnapers who use the mails for transmission of ransom notes and the like may be prosecuted automatically under the . federal i law. Those who transport their I victims across state lines also ■ come under jurisdiction of the law.! The act provides that in the I absence of the return of the per-: son kidnaped during a three day I I period, the presumption arises that I the victim has been transported! "in interstate or foreign com-

merce." | Because of the prominence of the Lindberghs, tlie manner in which their baby was kidnaped, and the tragic outcome, the case presented a challenge of national

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importance to the forces of law and order. When it became apparent that no immediate solution was forthcoming, crime seemed to boo. Kidnaping* and other acts of violence almost became legion. The department of justice began to cooperate actively with the New Jersey state police ami the New York city police department According to Attorney General Homer S. t’ummings: “The result obtained In the Lindbergh case is due to no master detective of fiction working on intuition or sporadic inspiration, but to a practical arrangement for coin which grained : parts, methodical, patient and attentive to the smallest details hung on to the trail until the end came in sight." In Hoover's office Is gruesome evidence of many another kidnaping, solved either by his operatives or by cooperating state agencies. o ♦ — ♦ Milestone Dates In Lindbergh Case • —_♦ (By United Press) Milestone dates in the shocking Lindbergh crime, from its inception to today’s dramatic climax in court at Flemington: March 1, 1932—Lindbergh baby snatched from cradle at Hopewell, N. J. Note demanding $50,000 ransom left behind. March 2 —Nation rocked by indignation and grief. Agents of law from coast to coast on alert to aid i search. Marbh 4—Henry (Red) Johnson, friend of baby's nursemaid. Betty I Gow, arrested. Later exonerated.

Page Five

Miss Gow and other servants absolved by Lindbergh family. March s—Police chiefs and other forces of law from aa far west as St. Louis meet at Trenton to obtain consensus of "best minds" on problem. March 22—John H. Curtis of Norfolk, Vu.. perpetrates cruel hoax. sending the agonized Col. Lindbergh on u wild goose chase by pretending to have clue of baby’s whereabouts, ((hirtjs later fined . and sentenced to jail, although . jail sentence was remitted). April 2 —John F. Condon (Jafsle) pays $50,000 ransom in Bronx cem- . etery. Trip to Massachusetts wati ers, as directed by ransom recipi- ! ent, proves fruitless. May s—Gaston5 —Gaston B. Means obtains $104,000 from Mrs. E B. McLean in Lindbergh baby hoax. (Convicted and Imprisoned). May 12—Baby's body found near home. June 10—Violet Sharpe, maid in Dwight W. Morrow home, commits j suicide, hysterical over police ' questioning. Feb. 10,1933—Federal authorities take charge of investigation, start- , Ing patient laying of net for ransom notes that eventually led to . ■ Hauptmann’s capture. Sept. 18, 1934—Hauptmann arrested in tlie Bronx. Ransom bills and other evidence found as garage I is torn to pieces. Sept. 27 —Hauptmann pleads not ’ guilty in Bronx county court and ; is held in SIOO,OOO bail. Oct. B—lndicted8 —Indicted on charge of murder by Hunterdon county grand jury at Flemington. 1 - Oct. 19 —Hauptmann extradicted ito Flemington. Oct. 24—Hauptmann arraigned in Flemington. Pleads not guilty. Jan. 2—Trial opens-