Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 36, Number 283, Decatur, Adams County, 1 December 1938 — Page 5

.11011 DELAYS ; SON'S CASE .— <BK|| e Trip From KKK |Hea<’ Postponed i, , - -, ■ •■mt' circuit ~,,. .1 lldg ■ b y, ii here for the KZ , ill A 1< ”.ik- ... is settled. |L, <b p'ity anor■J Doctor About 1# Ideal Way h LOSE FAT I KBA 11 :xEin I now that \ <i’i it ( iu.> Lit ai.-l reali> . \ <>u doi. ME3L. ! '* l • u " th' lia.kl'ii-aK- . iik< 11 < ' to R , C p .- t'v . ni kih - K g}i • • -i\ e II Lu I'L-.l - - < < i liubt no fatty foods K|< and vtpretat'l’-s. *»urr JKe A h i.'t' tr ispoonful of Krus■Lsdl- iter every niornp straight rlk lit [ Kt IS' lien — it i« >'ot jn«>t ■ha!| n »■.iti< people ioa» iurnorIt* lete. Look on the box! III*. illMtohrd Kit!it«| i« similar to the fnmoiiM wait of Eiiropvnn Sinim Hh? # ,| l'li' l:,( liawe none HK»- 1 i ■ K|| water. Gel a jar \Y \t

--- <■*\ ■ ■ I I I I I &K“ ■ > j | ■J 1 hjn J 19 t .LJ-l3 I I Brmg he K,ds And X/A I Enjoy A Trip To M- -*' II TOYLAND’ E h I I I sets w ' th electric pencil ■4p Country Doctor WoTtJ I'CHCIy With H lul‘g'6 .--- $ X eOO ||sc u sl.OO selection of fine Toys! SI.OO 6T T " 2«C NeW a ?, <i 1 ( ! ft uJ‘!l! t -T Snow W»>« -ft|s* .... that win f ] e ] lg ht the hid- Drum , 13 in... 5®C l« w u White Cftc dies. Come in and make Super Shovel gi Ir en S 8“-- 3 your selection now. Bring s® c ■ |o dyPl3y er Organ the chiMre n With YOU - ~ Trucks i you ’n both thrill at this 7 J via A Greyhound Bus. motor a £ wagon $ £ ,00 fine assortment. driven SI.(JO Anne PAm '— Tinker Cftf* » 5® C lullK' 1)01 iS’ Toys .... 5VCup Embroidery IMILW. MV/IjUO. Doc and Dopey UTi'aA P ■lsc t 0 $ 1.00 \ v a ” s,zes an d “5® up P «S set with Table and prices. Red Metal Wagons. 24 in. St: / T T QT Baby Dolls, long £« Aft . SI.OO V® drink and wet. 9 1 .U V lLittl._Books 10< . with wardrobe Animal Block I fc. ’ 50c up S IOO 25c Jroscope $ J .QQ Quintuplet Dolls, 15 in. size, gg —— I I ZirrA’*"' 20 s '“ pi " s D °" ss.6o sa ®L CA/ » i ” h “ M ’IS ffirljL, JJk|4; ' X b n y TeX Bears $1 to $2.98 J ' Ur7 A l Black and White Baby HST VXViI Pandas. 12 in. 00 It Folding Doll Buggy (metal)-- ■> [Niblick & Co.

I ■■ '■'■■■ —■— Girl, 14, With Champ Steer fjty.e .. . < t.J .’<...* 1 ' - - ' if DIE W llww’g iVsrawMWkW A! ■ B I I fin r’k | r ’’4B,—’s S J. a « ; ; a » «* W * ’ ■» *a& w W ■ Irene Brown and her steer, Mercer -•— With her junior champion Aberdeen-Angus steer, Mercer, shown above, Irene Brown, 14. of Aledo, 111., hoped to win the grand champion award at the Chicago International Livestock show. Mercer was given the junior title, the second most coveted title in the show.

court. The judge was expected to make a decision within the next two weeks. Q HERMAN WELLS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) trend toward democ racy has been ■ arrested. Some peoples not deeply rooted in democratic govern-! ment have ben seduced by the grandiose promises of unscrupulus leaders. They have traded tbeir ' precious guaranties of liberty tor the quick and transitory gains of ! a dictatorship. Totalitarian government . . . runs amuck in the world today. “Our public school system is the great bulwark of liberty ... It is the duty of the university to insure that every student understands the fundamental philosophies underlying democracy . . . I would not suggest every student be indoctrinated with a given set

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, DECEMB ER 1, 1938.

of principles, but rather that he understands the philosophical basis for democracy—an understanding that encompasses not only its benefits but its weaknesses as well . .. I ; It is the only form of government I compatible with the dignity ot men.” Wells warned that "if the rising tide of intolerance and hatred is to be arrested before it engulfs the world . . . There must be mori al re-armament." He said the “regeneration of the individual is the key to the moral regeneration of the city, state and nation." He praised the churches and other organizations in Bloomington for ' their cooperation with 1. U. in character development of students. Possible changes in the I. U. school system were noted by Wells. He listed them as comprehensive . examinations; survej courses for the first two years; divisional as distinct from the departmental

ITALY ACCEDES T 0 1936 TREATY Naval Agreement Has Additional Country To Add Strength I London, Dec. I—(UP) —ltaly will accede to the 1986 naval agreement signed by the United States, GreatBritain and France, it was announced officially today. A protocal attached to the treaty made possible to adherence of other powers at any time. The protocol will be signed tomorrow at the foreign office by Dino Grand!. Italian ambassador, and David Mantague Scott, undersecretary of the foreign office. The chief consequence of Italian adherence will be that Italy will now exchange information regarding naval building programs with France, Great Britain, and the United States. In this connection Britain will notify Rome that the three powers have decided to invoke the treaty's escalator clause to permit, construction of 40,000 ton battleships. Britain will add, however, that she will not built above 40,000 tons provided other European .powers respect that limit. The treaty provided maximum tonnage of 35.000 tons for capital ships with 14 inch guns. Other provisions included maximum tonnage of aircraft carriers 22,000 tons witn and destroyer categories to be class--6.1 inch guns; limitation of cruiser ed as "light surface vessels. At 8 000 tons with 5.1 inch guns maximum submarine tonnage of 2,- . GOO tons with 5.1 inch guns o Two Men Fined For Traffic Violations Attos Yost, of Decatur, paid two ' fines in Justice of the Peace John . | I. Kelly's court Wednesday after noon when he plead guilty to a | charge of failure to signal for a 1 sudden stop and failure to stop for a preferential highway. The fines and costs totaled 14.60. Mr. Yost was arrested Tuesday by State Patrolman John Webster, at Five ' Points in the north part of the city. system or organization; and a general college plan for better , orienting students and offering a ■ two-year course to certain stu- ■ ■ dents. He suggested the organ--1 izatldn of a standing committee 1 as a fact-finding group. f in concluding, Wells asserted he was “convinced that new selective 1 processes” to determine those who enter universities “must be deI veloped.” He said only one out of ten persons attends college and j that many who belong in a university are not able to do so because of finances. To improve the sys- | tem, he suggested an “enlarged system of scholarships on the basis of need and superior ability, provided either by the state or by private donors.”

Faces Problem V" jwl ai* * w| bHT’tsl .\ tSsw Wf W’i Bfew WlKipailF milk JKX: i Mrs. Pauline Kim and child Knotty problems with immigra. tion authorities faces Mrs. Pauline Liebman Kim, 32-year-old forpier Brooklyn, N. Y., girl pictured with her Chinese son when they arrived in New York. Mrs. Kim was married to Herbert Kim, a Chinese, in 1930, and has lived Withitiim in China and Russia until he was arrested in Siberia as an ‘‘economic spy." Question seems to be the citizenship of the boy since Mrs. Kim had renounced 1 t her U. S. citizenship.

I John Kohue ot Decjttqr route two whs arrested Wednesday by PatrolI man Weister and fined by Justice Kelly when he plead guilty to a charge of failure to stop at a pre- | i'erential highway. The tine and ' tests amounted to $9.60. Ti e arrest was made at the Intersection o! I S. Highway 27 and the extension i of Thirteenth street a mile ninth of I Decatur. BUFFALO NURSE I IS CONVICTED Former Indiana Girl Guilty Os Concealing Birth Os Son Buffalo. N. Y. Dec. 1 —(UP)— Mary Kathryn Reed, 23. a nurse at the U. S. veterans hospital at Hata- <! i, N. Y. was found guilty in federal court early today of concealing tlie birth of her baby boy. She said the baby was born dead, that she bore him unaided, put his body in a laundry bag and later buried him in a field. The jury exonerated her of a charge of Involuntary manslaughter. There were seven married woI men and five men on the jury which 1 deliberated 13 hours. Miss Reed is a native of Hillsdale, Ind. She had received nurses training and practiced in hospitals at Lafayette, Terre Haute and Gary, Ind. Tlie verdict carried a possible maximum penalty of a year in prl- , son and a SSOO fine. As jury foreman Fred W. Lgnnox announced the verdict, the attractive, Auburn-haired nurse slumped in her chair, her throat and face convulsed by the effort of trying to hold back the teats. Miss Reed was remanded to an | 'institution for unwed mothers to

GOOD NEWS for DECATUR MOTORISTS! Manley Motor Sales OPENS NEW DODGE-PLYMOUTH SERVICE HEADQUARTERS! f I f 1 •>. frU" cKr •J COME IN ANO INSPECT H. THESE NEW SERVICE StU ."p C ro« L ! " C ewp’: HEADQUARTERS TODAY! MENT! EXPERT MECHANICS TRAINED IN \\ ZE-RE mighty happy to be selling Dodge FACTORY SERVICE METHODS! ALL TYPES OF and we cordially invite you to come in and look MECHANICAL AND ELECTRICAL REPAIRS! X n uX new department for servicine Rnnv AND EEUnED- lA/ODUI DAINTINri We have just one basic rule in our service DUUI «!W rtnytn VVUnn; rHINIIllu: department, and that is —the customer must be LUBRICATION BY LUBRICATION SPECIALTo insore your complete satisfaction we have ISTS! LARGE STOCK OF APPROVED DODGE AND PLYMOUTH PARTS' stock of a PP rove d Dodge and Plymouth parts. * Our mechanics and lubrication men are specialists —trained in factory service methods. They know every mechanical detail of your Dodge or Plymouth. We have taken pains to equip our service department in a manner to not only insure fast, :S"?oZ v ,o“r. m'„± u “ Drive in today —whether your car or truck needs service now or not. We’re proud of our new service department and we’d like to show you what we can do for you I Tune in on the Major Bowe. Original Amateur Hour, Columbia Network, every Thursday, 9 to 10 P. M-, Eastern Standard Time. MOTOR SALES N. FIRST STREET DODGE • PLYMOUTH • DODGE TRUCKS Budget Terms To Suit Your Needs

YOUNG FARMER MURDERS GIRL — Commits Suicide After Slaying To Avenge Date With Rival Winchester, Ind.. Dec. 1. (U.R> - 1 Austin Roberts, 22-year-old farm- ' er, shot and killed his young school-girl sweetheart, then sent a I bullet through his own heart, be- ■ cause the girl had a date with au-d other man, authorities believed today. , Roberts tired four shots from a 1 .22 caliber revolver into the body ■of 16-year-old Harriett Jordan while her mother, Mrs. Stanley Tabosky, was buying some bottles of soda pop for the couple at a nearby grocery. Sheriff Lester Mann, summoned by Mrs. Tabosky's brother after the tragedy was discovered, said , lie had learned that Roberts was irked because his sweetheart had gone out once with another man and told his step-mother that "Harriett won't do that again,” Mrs. Tabosky saw her daughter's body on the floor when she returned from the store, but Robert wouldn't let her in. She began lives nearby, came over. They screamiifg and her brother, who both heard a shot inside the house. “When we broke in the door to get in,” Mann said, “the boy was dying." Roberts lived six miles northeast of Winchester on his father's farm. Funeral services for Miss Jordan will be held Saturday. await sentencing by Fedet.il Judge John Wnight. A date for senlenej ing will lie set later. ■ o Trade in a Good Town — Decatur

Geneva Man Sustains Fractured Left Arm Fred B. Rines, of Geneva, sustain I od a fractured left arm when a car I which was driving struck the rear I of an automobile driven by Robert ' H. Anderson, of Decatur route 3, on state road 224 at Magley. Wednesday afternoon. Mr. Rines reported to State Patrolman John Webster, who investigated the accident, that he fell a- ' sleep. The car which Mr. Ander- ; son was driving was damaged to i the extent of about SIOO. Mr. Ander- ; son was not injured. The Rines automobile was damaged about S2OO Q Medora Scene Os Disastrous Fire Medora, Ind., Dec. I—(UP1 —(UP) —Fire destroyed three Medora business houses today and for a time threat-, ened to sweep through the entire town before it was brought under I control by Brownstown firemen and fifty CCC workers. . Damage was estimated at SIO,OOO. The flames were believed to have broken out in the Old Beem hotel, a landmark for 70 years. Tills building was razed together with the Wash Smith wood working and ser-' vice shop and an adjoining twostory frame structure. o Effort To Sell Plane Secrets Is Discolsed Los Angeles ,Dec. I—(UP) —An aircraft plant employe wa, indicted today on charges of trying to sell to Japanese secrets of newest fighting planes for American's reJrmament. The planes were the powerful ■PB-1" type bombers and a revolutionary new combat ship called "an experimental job,’’ yet on the drawing boards. ' Federal officers said that Karl

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Drummond. 21, Inglewood, Cal., admitted taking 150 photographs snd 15 blueprints and smuggling them out under his clothing. o— ————> Plan Evangelistic Meetings At Church Evangelistic meetings will begin December 4 at the Bethel Christian Union church in Craigviilo. The Rev. Delmar J. Young, pastor of the church, will be the evangelist. He Is a young man filled with the Spirit of God", It was said by members of the congregation today. The public is Invited to attend to hear "Old Time Gospel". The special services ' will continue indefinitely. o L TODAY'S COMMON ERROR Do not say, "The hunter killed a goose and ate the same;’’ | say, “ate it." ♦ ♦ Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On No matter how many medicines you have tried for your common cough, chest cold, or bronchial irritation, you may get relief now with Creomulsion. Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with any remedy less potent than Creomulsion, which goes right to the seat of the trouble and aids nature to soothe and heal the Inflamed mucous membranes and to loosen and expel germoUrcr remedies have failed, don't be discouraged, try Creomulsion. Your druggist is authorized to refund your money if you are not . thoroughly satisfied with the benefits obtained. Creomulsion is ona word, ask for it plainly, see that tha name on the bottle is Creomulsion, and you'll get the genuine product and the relief you want. (Adv.)