Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 181, Decatur, Adams County, 2 August 1938 — Page 5

| INMATE DEATH Filed Against Atwl ’ u of tl,B Cen,ra |rMl ' -al for f«* ne ' Wh ° *‘‘£ to d»*lh while trying ” ’ c “ l tb ls ,( Saturday night. ; ‘‘ e * f involuntary mancriminal negligence ’“' hl ' r „il gainst Roy She.I* b* i»nt who was absent ”• ,’7«ve when the accident I ,e#ft ’ ii .hiie state officials, head- . sle ‘" h m Clifford Townsend, intocendigently m bemg con-1 other officials blamed of accidents on a com-, * • inadequate housing, low Leaned that in most■state Nation attendants are forced Jrththc inmates 24 hours a Lad that salaries are extremely « Voder these conditions it ia Lgfble to obtain satisfactory! ■doves, they said. I £housing problem will be solv-1 <,» part by the institutional build- ‘ jroyrani approved by last eel,! special legislative session, ipds were appropriated for the Ntttctioß of new employes quarjjsjt sou rhospitals —Cent) al, Evr jle. Logansport and Richmond. 1 of salaries of employes n been compiled by Edward P. MUM. state budget director, and 111 be presented to the next legis-1 tire session iu January. Present iiar.es range from S3O to SSO a onth with maintenance, but in | glcases the attendants are hous|rSii the insane. Brennan said, aerman is free on SSOO bond. A nk'uinary hearing will be held jps: It) on the manslaughter o r— ♦ Heart Stopped For 15 Minutes, Baby Revived By Doctor j \ u g 2 'U.Pi Thr Kcitold Robert Didier was ■tywbe alive today. His heart ■■stopped for 15 minutes yester- ■ His parents. Mr. and Mrs. CharBl X Didier, were returning to ■tap from their summer cot-1 Bp at Diamond Lake, 111., when B*automobile went over a bump ’ Bi threw the baby to the floor I Ba the rear seat where he had i I irked in blankets. Didier WELL DRILLING Pricss Reasonable Write Floyd Kohn Ohio City, Ohio !ta ». e . n l ot Condition of the A< C lI’KST IySIRANCK COVIP CWT Michigan ,Temple Avenue nviDi l)ay " f December, W 37 ».’" «*• President F-8. BROWN, Secretary »«« of Capital paid r ’ t,ass,loo.oo ta rL ASSETS 0F ' Bstate unlncmnb- | M ’ 1,400,001.00 .. , g ans on real •tale i Free from any fa .^T br J‘ nce ' 560.125.0 U »»u.i stocks own- «» ton Interest and MX (1... 2 - 709 ‘"” tM) etc - ) ii2 ’T oo dJ” ? nd Acc <>unts I XX lnpro, ' eßsof . otherwise'- S eNone “■till . Jet Asset, 5 -*04,570.00 5,,, U.L, “>«ry tT 0 ?" 1 ne - t SMjUB Man n dT ol None [ and None : h’ 4 Ai'ounu'un; ‘ ™ "»t 33 ' OUU ' 0U ks er other '’"pany ili,,e ’" of ‘he N ° ne , 2,616,610.00 jWai 510,100.512 00 , » 2,1112,050.00 Total —- 6«re’; f ' 1 L If{ DIANA. hit sfin mrn * B sioner. JJ’Mnnep of HB Urailce Com- «'»« a?U 4 T hereb V 11' St “ement L , correct copy of 1 the V. bove raentin n h a Condition of I i'* J1 ’t day of Company on by ■>/ December. I#ST „« | I?™, 111 * ’ald° p "^ a ‘etatement and I ■U^ I "‘hisXe’ tatement 18 i Su 41 * m , v n n ’X b ’ r »f«- I hereunto ‘ a? d aWx n >y olM- '*•»» Gbo »2* June, 1030.

Flyer Slides Into Streamliner + Hr* *** * bTIK JSfSs I!Ml ■ Il BM 111 11 ■ w » -k* sßß View of wrecked observation car Damage sustained by the observation coach of the Mercury New York Central streamliner, after being hit by the Commodore Vanderbilt, Chicago-New York flyer, near Rocky Ridge, 0., is pictured Thirty-one injured were taken to hospitals. Brakes of the Commto dore Vanderbilt failed to hold the train on rails wet by rains according to trainmen. The Mercury had stopped after grazing an automobile at a grade crossing. Witnesses said the flyer had been slowed to 10 or 15 miles an hour when the collision occurred

stopped the machine and picked I him up. The baby didn’t move. "He's suffocated, he's dead," Didier sobbed. With his wife, Margaret, holdi ing the baby, he rushed to a drug store. The druggist worked for ' several minutes to revive the baby, | pronounced him dead from suffoI cation. But Diuier would not give up hope. He put the child in the automobile and sped 14 miles to a hospital in suburban Wheeling. Dr. Edward Lu Larson could detect no heart beats. The baby's body was . starting to turn blue. Larson tried [ i artificial respiration without re-| sponse. As a last resort he injected adrenalin into the baby’s heart muscles. Finally the baby stirred. A few hours later he was home with his parents. 4-H EXHIBITS — (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) club exhibitors were automatically I entered in the contest and any 4- | H dull member, regardless of project she was taking, could enter : the contest. All contestants were required to exhibit one can of fruit and one can of non acid vegetables. Bernice Mathys placed first in this contest with her exhibit of beans : and plums. She my enter the Ball ,

Key Figures in Murder Case fe i W a i jp X-* x WljM jhR Ml '■’ <' yM Mil r Hi <¥— /HI _ , a fei ■-, zw t iwgr: JK . Ji fOsSf 'wiw w ’ M "*'*■* > Jj| > / “ O ’"" Francis Carroll, left; Paul Dwyer, upper right; Barbara, lower right Key figures in one of the most unusual murder cases in the history I of Maine are Paul Dwyer. 18-year-old small-town Romeo, his former sweetheart, Barbara Carroll. 16, and her father, Francis M. Carroll, a former deputy sheriff. Carroll is on trial charged with the double slaying of Dr. and Mrs. James G. Littlefield, a crime to which Dwyer confessed and was sentenced to life imprisonment last October. Dwyer at the time of his admission said he murdered the elderly couple because the doctor knew of the existence of letters which girls had written to him. Carroll was charged with murder following his arrest on a morals charge involving his daughter who is a I . key witness in the case, now being heard at South Baria,

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, AUGUST 2,1938.

I contest in connection with the state fair. Other high placing girls are: Marjorie Dilling, second; Irene Mathys, third; Erline Steury, fourth; Irene Habegger, fifth. o MAKE CHANGES (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) the amount that he has paid in on principal and maintenance while he was in occupancy under his tenure A contract deducting from this, i first, any delinquency and secondly, ■ the cost of putting the house into I first class condition for a new occupant and thirdly, any depreciation caused by his use o t’the property which cannot be repaired. As previously mentioned, this balance is returned to the withdrawing tenure A occupant ae equity. "But what about the invprovemeuts that are made on the place,” was another question asked. "Those improvmeents which were made while the person was in occupancy under his tenure A contract are also taken into account. The withdrawing homesteader will receive the fair value of such improvements. It must be remembered that this does not mean that he will necessarily receive as much as ■ the Improvements cost him but only [such amount as these improvements

HOT WEATHER COOKERY Here, Mrs. Housewife, is a packet of three of our Washington Service Bureau's booklets containing suggestions you are looking for in thsso hot summer days: 1. Cold Dishes, Drinks & Desserts 2. Snlads and Sandwiches 3. rish and Seafood Cookery Send the coupon below for this packet of three booklets: CLIP COUPON HERE Frederick M. Kerby, Dept. SG 19, Daily Democrat's Service Bureau, 1013 Thirteenth Street, Washington, D. C. Send me the packet of three hot weather cookery booklets, for which I enclose 25 cents in coin or stamps, to cover return postage, and other handling costs: NAME STREET and No. CITY STATE I am a reader of the Decatur Daily Democrat, Decatur, Ind.

can be sold for by the association: when it is putting a new client into' the house, for the new client must! pay for these improvements. Thisj evaluation is made under the dir-; ection of the hoard of directors of the Homesteads Association.” All of the houses at the Homesteads are occupied. o SCHOOL TO PAY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) the year were $650 received from the sale of the Central building and $140,000 received from the new issue of bonds. The total of $140,650 has been turned over to the PWA, which is providing 45 per cent of the cost of the construction of the new building.

The Story of OD and AD • > * a I OD and AD owned neighboring farms. Z7J7Z7 1~ P I ■ 1 l\/■ / \ I f Both decided to grow tomatoes. But when CwfbLv 1 VXIV 1/ V 1 JL y their tomatoes were ripe, OD and AD had X. ' different ideas as to how they should sell ““ them. This is the story of what happened. vK - j A nil • z *” L—- ‘ people passed. He put up a sign that said: ’ How 5 AO's] “AD’s big, red, ripe, juicy tomatoes” Be- • cause so many people saw the sign, rnnugfc Z"AW 1’ A T~W . i xzM ZS \riTol' FM "" people stopped to buy so that he sold all his ()!/ *111(1 .\1) JcC ~~ripe tomatoes every day. Many who bought, „ r _,- . « M vv. .X —remembering his namz on/Ac rt'gn, came back Solei 1 heir - - _S again and again. When the season was over, he had money in the bank. I omatoes OD filled baskets with his tomatoes and AD thought there must be a Amer way to put them in a wagon and drove to town. He sell his tomatoes. He Anea 1 he must tell peo- One day AD heard that tomato juice was went up and down the streets looking for pie about them, but he decided he could healthful and good to drink. He thought it ■ people who wanted to buy tomatoes. Some never sell very many tomatoes if he talked would also be convenient to handle, to sell, days "he sold all. Some days he sold only a to people one at a time. So he used one of the and to serve in the home. He told OD about j few. When the season was over, he found he simplest forms of Advertising. He built a it. The next year both decided to make and had made just enough to live on. stand by the side of the road where many sell tomato juice. t ... - - \ I —Aivt — WCnt t 0 grocery stores ' n tow n, [T ,C AD a — I where many people came every day, and I iOW t If asked the grocers to put a few of his bottles \ f TR* •'YJwwtaJuitt mH" [ cf S V/Sl 11 n on t ' le ‘ r counters - Then he put an adverOl) and Al) \ fZ tisement in newspapers read by thousands q/The advertisement said: -J- v “Enjoy thr refreshing taste of AD’S Pi’Rß OvJlLl A IlV'll *• 7 *3/>;'i>*"** I T TOMATO Juke, pressed from big, red, vtne- ■ ripened Tomatoes, (rood to drink and gcxxl for Tomato Juice OD’s wife squeezed tomatoes all day and AD felt sure there was a better way to 3»»- At '™ r ftvonte grocery store put the juice in bottles. OD took it to town make and sell hts tomato juice. He took Because so many people read about it, enough and went from door to door, looking for some money from the bank and bought a people asked for it to exhaust the supply people who wanted to buy tomato juice. In a shiny new press that squeezed out juice eas- quickly. And remembering ADs name on whole day he could call at only about 50 ily and quickly. He put the juice in bottles the label they came back and asked for it homes. As most people had never heard of that could be tightly sealed. He had labels again. So AD bought tomatoes from his tomato juice and did not know how good it printed for the bottles, reading: neighbors and made more tomato juice to was, he sold only a few bottles each day. AD’s Pure Tomato Juice. supply the demand. I 11 II 11 II 1 _■■■■■■ II — • JfX bottles and labels, and employed more peo—a* * * \ ,hT*' : • ■.F-f / 1 ■) pie. AD knew that, because hij name was on ’ z Zv/v, '/ A iff \‘ 7?4*• ’ every bottle, he must always maintain the OO and AD *1 high quality of his product. And, because QflCl I vW M \ he did this, women soon insisted on ADs 1A- J 'T'l '’lA - 't Vi U 7 / ee C ; 1 X'l Pure Tomato Juice. I /id 1 SIC —m. AD already had found that the more he advertised and the more bottles he sold, the Next A ear OD and his wife decided that if they were AD now saw how true it was that the less it cost him to put up each bottle. Theregoing to make any money, they would have more people he told about his tomato juice, fore, as his advertising was extended all to work harder. So she got up earlier m the the more he sold. So he advertised m other over the country and his sales increased, he , morning and picked tomatoes and squeezed cities, telling women how good tomato juice reduced the price. I hus more and more peoand bottled juice all day. OD spent a longer was for their families to drink. He also sent pie could afford to enjoy tomato juice, and, day in town trying to see more people in or- salesmen to call on grocers. He got so many although his profit per bottle was now very - der to sell more bottles. But, even though orders that he arranged to buy tomatoes small indeed, he sold so many bottles that OD and his wife worked long and hard, they from hundreds of other farmers, built a big- he had a very fine business. So both AD and could not make any money. ger building, bought more equipment, more his customers were benefited. AD tells OD how an Idea Became an Industry'—through ADVERTISING 1# fnr / ~~A I. One DAY, years later, OD called on his old neighbor people and employ hundreds more on part-time. We pay // J ~\l w sa 'd> "D’s remarkable how your business has more than half a million dollars a year to manufacturers f sll . grown since you got that idea about selling tomato juice? of cans, bottles, labels, supplies, and equipment. 0T ( *FFtdMATO~nr~I t't “Yes,” said AD, “but even more important have been “The entire industry now sells more than twenty mill ‘ 'fm jl the benefits to other people. We are now only one out lion dollars worth of tomato juice a year and the public : 9s f' ?81 :■ of many producers of tomato juice. Wit we take all the enjoys its healthful benefits—at the lowest price at which i KSB Bs~| uj Qt j tomatoes grown by more than a thousand farmers who it ever has been sold. Aes, tpmato juice was a great idea, ALI h ave h ere an assured market for their crops. We give but that idea would have benefited very few—without • .senjfT?* 1 1- steady employment the year round to several hundred Advertising to tell the story. ’ Copyrnht, by G. I.ynn Sumner Decatur Daily Democrat | YOUR LOCAL PAPER

[State Patrolman’s Wife Is Slightly Injured Mrs. Truman Bierle, wife of the state patrolman of Bluffton, escapled with shock and minor injuries Monday when the car she was driv-' ing overturned on state road 124, returning home from thia city. Her husband was driving immediately ahead in the state police car and sa-w the accident in the rear view mirror. A locked steering wheel was given as the cause of the crash. The car turned completely over. t Mrs. Bierle wae able to crawl from the wrecked auto unassisted. They had come to this city in their own car to get the state police car.

JUDGE ENJOYS USE OF TROOPS Federal Judge Issues Order Against Troop Use In Election Memphis. Tenn., Aug. 2 (U.R) — Federal Judge John 1). Martin today ordered the United States marshal to “use force, if necessary" to prevent national guardsmen entering Shelby county before or during next Thursday’s primary election. * Gov. Gordon Browning, charging that the Ed Crump machine here planned to steal the election, said he "might or might not" decide to have troops come in and take over the polls, "but a federal injunction will not stop me if I decide to do eo.” Judge Martin enjoined the use of militia on petition of Crump's j followers. A nomination to the U. S. senate is at stake and hence, Martin ruled, the federal government had jurisdiction over the primary. Browning came here late yesterday in a sound truck that once belonged to Huey Long in Louisiana. arid in a speech at the failgrounds he said: “the idea that a federal judge can interfere with my right to give orders to the national guard is silly and absurd. Whatever I do about the troops, whether I send them or whether

I don’t., will have no relation on ilia injunction. I know my rights and I am determined that the c»w of Memphis shall not steal this election.” A crowd of 10,00® heard the speech. The 117th Tennessee infantry. 1,200 men, was mobilised under arms at Jackson, 100 miles away. Their annual maneuvers, scheduled for this week in Mississippi, had been postponed. Col. R. H. Bond and his stuff were here yesterday. They visited the fair grounds. It had been reported that if troops came, they would be quartered there. Judge Martin told Marshal Charles Miles to swear in all the deputies he needed to "resist an Invasion by the militia." Crump’s machine is the dominating political force of Shelby county. When Crump supported Browning for governor four years ago, 60.000 of the 61,000 Shelby votes went to Browning. Now Crump is supporting Prentice Cooper for the Democratic nomination for governor and Browning is up for renoniinatioti. The feud extends into the senatorial race. Browning is allied with George L. Berry, millionaire labor leader seeking the Demo-, cratic renomitiation. and Crump is; backing Tom Stewart. A third | candidate for the senate nomination is Rep. J. Ridley Mitchell. Judge Martin ruled that the presence of troops at the polls would intimidate voters and infringe on I their constitutional rights. Browning had had his state crime commission at work in Shel-I by county and he had said that he

PAGE FIVE

might use troops because the commiMtan had found flagrant padding of registration rolls and other devices by which th* Crump faction planned to steal the aloct.ion. ■■. — o PRIMARIES IN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) aided Dodd's campaign. The West Virginia campaign developed no issues of national importance. In all states, aJI parties were nominating their candidates for congressional and state offices. Two other primaries will be held this week. On Saturday. Kentucky Democrats will decide between Sen. Alben W. Barkley and Gov. A. B. Chandler for the senatorial nomination. President Roosevelt campaigned for Barkley and new deal prestige is at stake. On Thursday, in Tennessee, the Crump machine of Memphis and the Gov. Browning state machine will battle for dominance of Tennessee democracy.

500 Sheets B'/ 2 xll, 16-lb. White Paragon Bond typewriting paper 55c. The Decatur Democrat Co. : I AVi ar° > '< 4SK YOIIRGSOCIR