Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 16, Decatur, Adams County, 19 January 1938 — Page 5

IfSICKING fcffilS HELD 1.,. I'olire Air;’ 1 J l "'' I '' ■ Robberies 9’ Solved S ioil.m Hia* ' m<lrina southern as'torn ol.lu baa with the arrest ot W:.". ink It' fit tenileiit ~,,1i" ' ■, ■ -■ A ■■■■"- «.if-’ > ra< king ?■ v : ■ ■M W ' •„ ln<l’.an..rnlis, lie ioimin A 'hio.n out has ■ ; the past ■ he hail jumped bond He was out 011 bond r.ddiery at Mich. m whn h two <»t his \K:: '■ be taken to Marbreaking , sate ■ l " 11 " A " m _—— —— sBdANGEKOVS dangerous to sell a SUBSTI'or 666 just to make three K u- cents more. Customer* are best assets: lose them and your business. 666 is .»-.>■ or four times as much SUBSTITUTE.

| SORG’S MARKET HONES 95 and 96 107 N. SECOND FREE DELIVERY |^V*~ ERESH chuck beef HAMBURG ROAST BOIL I IZIC M f 3 ’° r 25c 191 c |B—“ ——~ Center Cut _ J* o** 0 ** c BRAINS FRESH HAM CHOPS | 10c 24c >Oc S FRESH p| S H — FRESH OYSTER M OYSTERS HALIBUT CRACKERS | »3|c »9e I Public Sale ft 7--ROOM MODERN HOME—7 will sell at Public Auction without reserve the followdescribed real estate on the premises, on X. SATURDAY, January 22nd in at 1:30 P. M. North Third Street, Decatur, Ind., 7 Room House, 4 rooms down. 3 bed rooms up, excellent steam heating plant, ; plumbing. Full size basement. Garage. Splendid location. All street and sewer improvements. This property can be inspected before sale day after 1:00 P. M. and all day on sale day. ' 2 Cash. Balance in 1, 2 and 3 years at 6° a interest. by March 1, 1938. | VELMA LAKE I MABEL SAUTTER ■ IRENE GATTSHALL, Owners S. Johnson, Auctioneer. ■Public Auction ® ov * ns t 0 Southern Indiana. I will sell at Public Auction, 3; Aorth and 6 miles East of Bluffton, 3 miles South and fl miles 01 wcatur, l'/ 2 miles west of Kirkland High School, on ■ Friday, January 21,1938 K COMMENCING AT 10:00 A. M. Htch „ 5 ~ HEAD 0F HORSES — 5 u, n ’»,!« Iloana > Gelding 4 yrs. old & Mare 4 yrs. old, Mare is ■<nnr,' l la ' r PX,ra Rood Sorrel Mares, coining 2 yrs. old, V 3;000 10 3-200 lb. team; Roan Mare, coming 3, in foal. Srham r. , 11 ~ HEAD OF CATTLE — 11 "(i ■ c' Be 3? duP l,y of sale, a 6 gal. cow; .Jersey, fi. due s”dno vs* o. COW; Holstein, 5, due March 15, a 6 gal. cow, Hol■m’ , ' 22, a 5 gal. cow; Jersey & Holstein, 4. due Match 18, s d . .1 | erscy & Brown Swiss. 5, due March 23, a 5 gal cow ; Jeru dim V s ’,** Ka ' cow; Holstein. 5, due Feb. 1. a 5 gal. cow; ‘b <■ f e ”' ’ a ’* Kal pow ; Jersey & Holstein due with first calf ■g S _N, n^ U !'' nßc l Bull > 18 lno « cHslble to register. ■Hoz,",' 5 p ‘ ,lat >d China Sows, bred to farrow in April; 10 Feed■Eb 2onn each: 11 Weaned Pigs; 1 Male Hog. ■on K h( ‘ ’ R"°d Yellow Corn; 50 Hu Oats: 8 ton Timothy Hay; uobles Clover Clippings; 40 large Shocks Fodder. BartTmrt.,. v . IMPLEMENTS Pin* ii I, * “ Bottom ’’lows; Fordson Tractor; 11 2 ■nip R ak ’ * 0111 Plow: 12 Disc Drain Drill; Mower; Tedder; Sbrewlm.'. 11 , Wagon & 14' Rack; Wagon Box; Rudd I'ertaixn. “Wheel Corn Cutter; Vega Cream Separator. 2 yrs. , ■h Walking Pl tor J-Deere Corn Planter; Double Shovel; 12 Kettle- m- . (,d Grind Stone; 10 Cord good dry Stove Wood; *. duy Articles too numerous to mention. ■mil Bank „r n ,? 8e deß h'i"g credit arrange with Farmers & Mer- ■ 01 Bluffton, sale clerk. I»c, n °ah henschen ■ • JOHNi >ON--Auct 10 ne 8 r I Luuth by CraigviUe U. B. Cbuich.

| m <»*h. three Block certfftcates |and two diamond ring*. The ring* 'were found In his possession, Stiv-l 1 er said. I McFarland Is charged with liarI boring Benmore and Ruhlhorn. DECATUR STORE CIVES PROGRAM 'I Farmers Os County Are Guests Os Local Store Today —— More than 1,000 persons attended the annual opening, held today by the McCormick-Deeriug store for farm families of this community The program began this morning ' at 10 o’clock at the McCormickDeering store, where the new equipment was shown and enter- ■ tainment given by the Kirkland 1 township Hot Shots. At 11 o’clock a luncheon was served at the store and then the ’ crowd was taken to the Catholic auditorium, where three hours of I entertainment was furnished. ' | Don Mollenkoff, district manager, ' acter as master of ceremonies. Mayor A. K. Holthouse delivered the welcome address, in which he I stated that Decatur is proud to i serve as the county seat of a rural I community of such high quality. He I stressed the importance of the ' close relationship between industry 1 and agriculture as exhibited in this city and community. Woodrow Wil son. manager of the store also greeted the crowd A humorous picture showing how . 1 the model farm should not be. was then shown. Music during the after i noon was given by the Kirkland township Hot Shots. Other pictures shown during the afternoon were "When You Think of Mowers,” ' “Magic." "Trucks." and “Combines." Carl Shroyer gave a talk on , Harvester threshers and John Gentis talked on "Trucks." A play was also given during the program. * - —♦ TODAY S COMMON ERROR — 1 Wan is pronounced to rime with on. * , ■ —7

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, .JANUARY 19, 1938.

White Slavery Charge Filed Against Three latfayette, Ind, Jan. IB—(UP)— Held under white slave charges a man, his wife and his sister, waived ; preliminary hearing before U. S. i commissioner Morris R. Parks and (were taken to South Rend today ;to await trial. Bond was set at $2,500 each. James Roark, 25. his wife Mary Elisabeth, 24, and his sister, Bethel 22, have been held here since Dec. 1 30, accused ot transporting glria from Ohio to Andetson, Ind., for immoral 'purposes. 1111 ■ ■ o Gracious Customs Men Sought — Montbeliard, France. — (U.R) — Courteous and well-trained cus- . toms inspectors will be the aim ot a new school at Montbeliard. France, where the French ministry of finance will opent he first school for customs inspectors in Europe next year. o ROSS KIDNAPER fate task was to find the bodies of Ross and Gray. Otherwise, legal authorities said, the kidnaped could not be convicted despite his admissions. The long "disappearance” of Hoover and Anders yesterday might have given the FBI chief an opportunity to fly to Tacoma, Wash., to have Anders viewed by witnesses in the kidnap-kllling of lb-year-old Charles Mattson. St. Paul is on the direct airline between Tacoma and Chicago, scene i of the Ross crime. On the basis of known facts, there was not rational explanation for Hoover's activities, and it was presumed that he made publiconly a part of his case when he told newspapermen in Los Angeles Monday night of Anders’ arrest and ' confession. Immediately after he conferred with newspapermen. Hoover disap--1 peared. He was next seen at the local airport last night when a huge transport plane belonging to one of the transeonstinental lines landed and taxied immediately into j a hangar that had been prepared for it. In the plane was Hoover, his squad of G-Men. and a prison- | er. The plane had been so long . out of Los Angeles that it could have easily flown hundreds of miles off the direct course —as far off the course in fact, as Tacoma, Wash. In Tacoma, investigators and all concerned with the investigation of ' the Mattson kidnaping were amazed by the resemblance of pictures of Anders and an artist's drawing of the Mattson "kidnaper" from the description of the only persons who saw him—the three children who were with Charles when he was abducted. Dr. William W. Mattson denied that either Hoover or his prisoner had been in Tacoma. The fedral bureau of investigation office there refused to make any comment. There was no positive evidence that the prisoner brought here by Hoover and his men was Anders. E. T. Guinane, chief of Hoover's local office, first denied that there . had been a prisoner at all. later I admitted only to "a prisoner." A , reporter for the St. Paul Daily , News asked Hoover if the prisoner I was Anders and he said that Hoo- ' ver had replied “yes.” Hoover's explanation of his coming here instead of going directly to Chicago from Los Angeles and ♦ NIGHT prowlets are noisy—others steal in and out of your house so quietly you'd never hear them. /ETNA-IZE A Residence Burglary, Theft, and Robbery Policy written by the /Etna Casualty 8i Surety Company of Hartford, Conn., will give you financi a I protection against marauders night and day. The Suttles-Edwards Co.. Agent Jack Leigh, I. Bernstein and A. O. Suttles, solicitors. Aetna Casualty and Surety Co. Aetna Automobile Ins. Co. Aetna Life Insurance Co. SUTTLES-EDWARDS CO. Agents Decatur, Ind. Phone 35« lllini Aiimd

I thus saving 350 mile*, was: "I wanted to get some rest before getting Into Chicago" Ho said he. his agents, and their prisoner would continue on to Chicago' thia morning. The three children in Tacoma are the only perßous who can identify the bearded man who stole Charles Mattson and would have

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| collected SIOO,OOO ratiHom had not' inveatlgaton found the child's naked and violated body before the j father could arrange payment. In the Muttion cage, the kidnap!er killed hli victim deliberately. Anders, who once was a logger in Washington state, confessed to GMen that he not only killed Ross deliberately but alio killed hli

partner in crime beenune he didn't I want to share $50,000 ransom In the vicinity of Roekford, 111.. I j there was no indication that G-> Men were looking for the bodies i of Anders* victims, though Anders confessed to them that he had buried them there and Hoover said Monday night that the bodies had not been recovered. Without at

I least one body, legal authorities! ; said, it would be impossible to! I prosecute Anders for murder, de-1 npite his confession. Also, the G-Men had nothing to say of the "third” kidnaper deHcribed by Mlkr Florence Freihage, 44, secrotary of Roes, who waa with j him the night of Sept. 25 when he was kidnapped near Sycamore. 111.

PAGE FIVE

Miss Freihage was positive there * had been three men —two who dragged Romi out of his car, a third I who waited at the wheel. Anders is a prisoner; he said he killed his partner. Atwood Gray; not one word has been made public cou cerning the third man. Miss Freihage will be the only identifying witness against Anders