Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 137, Decatur, Adams County, 10 June 1938 — Page 5

lIIEK DEATH Kbemurder farrier Mui'tlend Auto Driven ■ BJnto Pond

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Yorktown, Ind., was murdered before Irin automobile went over a gravel pit embankment, submerging with Its driver In a pond almost hiacceslble from the main highway a quarter of a mile away. A postmortem examination last night hy coroner Elmer H. Rentley and Dr. W. U. Kennedy disj closed that Glass had died before he touched the water and state police detective F. S. Foster found additional evidence which pointed toward foul play. The autopsy recorded death as I resulting front a broken neck and Dr. Kennedy said there also were

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1938.

three hemorrhagic bruises on the body, a possible skull fracture and an absence of water in the lungs. The body was badly decomposed. The doctor also revealed that there was no blod In the middleaged farmer's heart, a significant fact because the blood had drained to the bruises, which would not have happened after death. FrfStcr, who said he was convinced the death was neither accident nor suicide, found the Ignition switch turned on and the car in low gear. The car was dragged from the pit, near Mooreland, Ind., after a farmer, plowing nearby, saw the car In about 25 feet of water. Glass was In the rear sent. In his clothes was a pocket knife, and a brass knuck. The coroner estimated the body to be nearly three weeks old. Claude Glass, the father, said his boy worked part of the time in the Muncie Foundry company. He had served a jail sentence in Kentuncky for stealing tobacco from warehouses and hauling it to Lexington. Glass said the yunger Glass had been living with his parents since he obtained a divorce four years ago. o SCHRICKER TO (CONTINUED FROM PAGE? ONE) ed States senate, I shall accept the nomination,” Schricker said. “I shall accept humbly, with a true appreciation of the responsibilities entailed, and I promise you now that I shall immediately embark upon an aggressive campaign to the end that our great democracy may triumph this fall.” Schricker, who has expressed himself as opposing the president's judiciary reform bill, briefly assailed the life tenure terms of supreme court justices. "I hope to see the day when the United States supreme court will be directly responsible to the people by a short, limited tenure of

HOOSE UNSEATS ARTHUR JENKS I — New Hampshire Republican Congressman Unesated By House Washington. June 10.- <U.R> Re1 publican congressmen accused the administration today of “playing ' : politics" in a congressional elecI tion contest to hold its strength ’; in the normally Republican state ■' of New Hampshire. 1 ! Late yesterday the house un1| seated Rep. Arthur B. Jenks, a ■ j Republican who has represented ' New ampshire’s first district in I congress for one and one-half II years. The vote was 214 to 122. 1 j In his place—to serve the remain- ‘ ing few days of this session—it ’, accepted Alphonse Roy. French--1 Canadian opponent of Jenks on the ■' Democratic ticket in 1936. ' j After lying dormant since last ■ I summer the contested election case ‘ was reopened recently. Republicans charged that administration leaders had planned this belated action to strengthen the prospects of Sen. Fred H. prown, I)., N. IL, in his coming reelection campaign. “It was absolutely political and 1 about the lowest thing I ve witnessed.” said Rep. James W. Words- ■ office?’ he said, e did not amplify 1 this statement. Schricker, a former Knox, Ind., 1 newspaper editor and banker, is • a conservative Democrat. Party leaders decided, however, that he I was the man to defeat Van Nuys 1 and a Republican candidate yet to ■ be named. ! The speakers at yesterday's rally stood in the open air before a i background bearing large pictures I of Gov. Townsend. President Roose- ■ velt and former Governor Paul V. t i McNutt.

worth. R. N. Y„ a member of the elections committee which visited Newton, N. H„ test summer to investigate the contested ballots. "The committee didn't pay any attention to its own findings." Several weeks ago, for the second time, tile elections committee recommended that Roy bo declared the winner of the seat which he has claimed since the election. Yesterday shortly after Jenks was unseated, Roy was formally seated by a vote of 226 to 109. He took the oath of office Immediately. The house now has 89 Republicans, the smallest number since before the Civil War, and 326 Democrats. Each party has a senator from Now Hampshire. Now each has one representative. The Roy-Jenks contest began immediately after the 1936 election, when Jenks was announced the winner by 550 votes. A recount gave Roy the victory by 17. The state ballot law commission later found evidence that 34 fewer votes had been counted in Newton than there had been ballots passed out. Jenks then was certified the winner by the secretary of state. The house elections committee, however, ruled that it could not count ballots which could not be seen ami recommended that he be unseated. o COURT HOUSE Trust Continued The current report was fi’ed by John C. Augrfburger, guardian of Mary Aschleman. It was examined and approved. The trust was continued. Real Estate Transfers Frances Decker et al to Bessie Sullivan, 35 acres in Wabash township for sl. Frances Decker et al to Lucie Eeeter, 20' acres in Wabash township for sl. COL. LINDBERGH (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) I most figures in the world, as far as public interest is concerned, Lindbergh. when he wishes to, can be almost as inaccessible as the Grand ' I Llama of Tibit. Few men in Europe—not efen the dictators — I can cloak their movements in such secrecy as Lindbergh. Voluntary censorship l>y the public, press and friends, operate in I the colonel's favor. Often for I months ala time the press publishes not a line about his movements and it is extremely difficult for any but closest friends to ascertain his whereabouts. For instance, today it required exhaustive inquiries to establish that since attending the recent i private ball at Buckingham Palace, he went to Illiec, off the coast of I Brittany, to superintend installa-

MR, BALL PUTS HIGH VALUE ON | NEW MEDICINE j“I Wouldn’t Take SIOO For Help Retonga Gave Me,” He Says When Mr. Victor Ball, 30C South Harris Ave., Indianapolis, declared: “I wouldn’t take SIOO for the help Retonga gave me,” he repeated what a great many others have a ® ; f I • i JL VICTOR BALL said about this celebrated medicine, because Retonga overcame their troubles and they are happy again. *T had about reached The conclusion there wasn’t anything that would stop acid indigestion,” said Mr. Ball. “After meals sour stomach, gas, bloating, and heartburn made me miserable. 1 was always constipated and full of toxic ,poisons. I was nervous and irritable, had pains in my hack, shoulders, and legs, and had to be up several times during the night. 1 just couldn't enjoy a peaceful minute. “Right from the start Retonga soothed that burning feeling from acid indigestion, and now I can eat anything 1 want, including onions. Retonga also overcame my constipation and that toxic condiI tion that must have been the cause !oT my muscular pains and that tired, draggy feeling. I don't have I to get up at night now, and In the mornings I feel li"e and full of energy. To anyone who is suffering like I was I am happy to recommend this wonderful Retonga.” Rotonga may be obtained at Holthouse Drug Store. advt.

tions in his new summer home on (lie isolated French islet. He then ' returned and moved his family on | Wednesday to Illiec from their j ■ homo in Kent, it was understood, i Watch Departure St. Brieuc, France, June 10 <U.R) ] Local fisher folk reported today that because of threatening letters! from the United States Col. I Charles A. Lindbergh had naked

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' pollco to watch discreetly any de- | parturea from the mainland for | Illiec, the little island he has ac- • qulred off the Brittany coast. | Col. Lindbergh and bls family I arrived in Illiec today. They had i left their English home, Long Barn, j near London, Wednesday. A quantity of building material i has been delivered to the island 1 mid It was reported Unit Lindbergh

PAGE FIVE

| intended to build a laboratory, to , aid hlpt in thu scientific esperlments which he has conducted in l cooperation with Dr. Alexis Carrel. who lives on the nearby Island ' of St. Gildas. Fisher people reported tliat Lind i bergh Intended to use some of the material to build an eight-foot wall nround part of his island, but the i j report was regarded as gossip.