Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 37, Number 224, Decatur, Adams County, 21 September 1939 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
MEMBERS OF NAZI <<X>NT!NUED ON PAUB I1X) automobile and carred to th* 1 nearby University hnapUnl. where he whs pronounced dead A few seconds later the Buchan eat radio station lnlorrupti«d a musical program and an excited voice shouted; "Calinaacu la killed " The station then boca ma silent for IS minutes, after which the announcer said: “We are sorry for the Interreplion on account of an unfortunate WEARWELL SHEETS $1«« / A 42 a M / pillow Cases t each 25c ' Stock up before the price* advance. Buy Now at the old price. Long, wearing tine-textured sheets of selected cotton. Sehages are extra strong. Drapery Damask TWiniowr i I IU JM I Special ‘ll'lll II Price II mil Y,rd “HJH 59c 50 inches wide. Colors of Rose. Blue. Green. Red. Brocaded Designs in plain colors. Also Flowered Crash, Frt r 50 in. wide, at—yard Niblick & Co
B. J. Smith Drug Co I MAKTHtSMXAU *t**DCA pack 110 Puratect Concentrate 35v« LIVER OIL TABLETS £ :2“«— *•«•«». 7g c »| |. Jf with court* * wi»arrt«rt» i >«»« vJ BIG SIZE Ila sol GtMMt Lttthtr r | ; SKIN LOTION T>HL zPs ®k EB 50 e ~* ■ KLENZO de Luxe Large Pint SiMtfLENZoLj3 >/ too™ brush Im k » Sas ~*_ wreeten breath. 9 L ' ' '■■ "■ 1 ■ — p»— Lj?A Kexall soz.sizeGE*7 1 DROPS CARBONATES IS ttWjSl with Ephedrine COM POUN D 1 Gpll BrfflrJ an d Efferveacant. Cw Italian Ila Im —35 c Johnson's Dreskin CeeMee 20c G L O • C O A T Value_~ssc WoriTa Fair Special SPECIAL ( . „ " Both for only Carn " ,9f 35C BOTH FOR gg FREE —Z_ —_ Medium size Mineral Oil e%. rt HAleO SHAMPOO gallon .... when vou buv large size ~' — Aspirin, 5 gr. « afe Both for 10Ta 19C 49c »1.00 Cod Liver Oil - Plain or Mint O Facial Tissues fl — Flavored 500 sheets ... Alt 30( . Virk . M MW Bor-.-d ' Baby Talc -»<!-, A-B-iMi a A „ pound can ... 4fjC| 30 capa
Kennedy Family Returns ro United States ■
■rfttaork tw Ym L/T -4 2MIIW R I'. p! tV ■- <
Amoug many Americans who have returned to the | United States from Europe are members of I’nited States Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy's family. I
incident." After firing the snots, the ouMlm jumped Into sn automobile which was waiting for them It bore license plates of the city of Ploresat. They raced through the streets Ito the radio station, where they I were Joined by several other conIsplrators. All carried revolvers In their hands. The band rushed into the rsdio room and shouted a message into the microphone apparently In an effort to give a signal. tit was assumed .the attack on the station was an attempt to start a reneral uprising of iron guards as a result of the assassination .) Os Vast Import By Joe Alex Morris (United Press foreign news editor i A radio announcement from Bucharest that Premier Armand Calinescu — toe of Rumanian Naaiam—had been aasaasinated and a | sudden interruption of communications between Bucharest and the outside world hinted today at Im portant developments in southeastern Europe The shooting of Calinescu and
I Shown, left to right, in New York are Eunice, Kathleen. Robert and Mrs Kennedy. The Kennedy* since have gone to Boston. —-—■■ .... ——
two or more of his assistants by the pro-Nasl Iron guard, as unofficially reported to the Rumanian legation in Washington, was regarded as a possible effort to touch off a general outbreak In Rumania If such an effort were successful against King Carol or the Rumanian government which had drastically suppressed the Iron guard organisation the consequences might easily involve the Nasi and red army forces that smashed their way through Poland to the Rumanian frontier across which Polish refugees, toldiers and gov--1 emment leaders fled. Calinescu had long been the key figure in iKng Carol's program for crushing the Iron guard with repressive measures last year, which borught official announcements that Zelea Codreanu. Iron guard leader, and many others had been killed by guards while attempting to escape There had been frequent police\ announcements tn the last year of frustrated iron guard plots to blow up Bucharest public buildings and assassinate government leaders , Apparently the iron guard, ap-' plauded by Nail newspapers in Germany, had carried on its work in spite of the drastic measures taken by Calinescu. Germany has been reported demanding that the Rumanian government interne President Ignace Moscicki and Gen. Edward Smigly- ( Ry<li of Poland for the duration of the war. instead of permitting them to go as the Rumanians desired to France and set up a Polish government headquarters I WARSAW STILL (CONTINUED FROM PAGB ONE) gave proof, like the flag at Fort McHenry which inspired Francis Scott Key's American anthem In IRld. that the Poles “still endured. Refugees Terrifled Bucharest. Rumania. Sept, 21.— 'U.» — Thousands of Jewish refugees from Poland were terrifled today by a Rumanian government's I order that “all undesirable aliens" must leave the country within IB days. Many of the tens of thousands of Polish refugees streaming southward from the border were Jews Many of them had been on the move srtlce Germany began expanding eastward and southward, through Austria and Ctechoeovakla. They had been permitted to cross freely Into Rumania the past
w For Sale at all Dealers
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, SF.PTEMB F.R 21,1929
Guest Speaker ak W||j I 1 MB * J Dr. Harry G Hamilton, pastor of Buffalo's largest Baptist church, will apeak at the Pleasant View Baptist church at Wren. O, next week, Monday through Frflhy He will also speak Wednesday. Thursday and Friday afternoons.
few days during the great crush of refugee Polish soldiers, civilians and diplomats at the frontier. , Now they were to be shunted off again and few had the means to proreed to a friendly country. The Rumanian order did not specify Jews, and authorities said It Included "undesirable" Christiana I as well, but there was no doubt that Jews would be most affected. A government spokesman said if the measure had specified Jews it would have invited proteats from countries. Including the United States, where the Jewish population I* not restricted. e Maj. Gen. Windsor Takes Over Duties 'atndon. Sept. 21 —(UP)— The Drily Telegraph said that Major General Edward Windsor would astume full duties in France today. The Duke arrived In France yesterday. the paper said, was billeted at a chateau, the name of which could not be disclosed, and spent in preliminary discussions.
SAY BRITISH HOLD BREMEN Reports Persist Huge German Liner Captured By British Ixindon. Sept. >l, (U.F> Reports were prevalent today that the Bit.000 ton 120.000.000 German liner Bremen, third largest passenger ship in the world, had arrived al a British port under a warship escort, a British prise. There had been reports for several days that the Bremen had been captured. It was recalled today that the German ambassador at Moscow. Count Frledrhh Von Iler Sthulen berg, when asked last Saturday where the Bremen was. following reports that she had arrived at a Ruaaian Arctic port, said bitterly that It would be more appropriate to ask Winston Churchill, flrat lord nf the admiralty, where she was. t The Bremen sailed from New York Aug. SO. It was reported safe at ports all over the North and South Atlantic, and in Italy If the Bremen had been captured by the British It would be no surprise If the British had withheld the news for days or weeks, because that is part of their policy ) There was hope In quarters close to the navy that British destroyers might have had a successful light with a German submarine flotilla tn the Kattegat Strait between Denmark and Sweden, at the entrance to the Balk. yesterday. People of Lassoe Island, in the strait, asserted that they heard i flring of the heaviest sort yesterday. It was said that the flring was so heavy and so continued that It could hardly have been anything but a big naval tight. There was one alternative explanation' The Swedish admiralty had announced that It would hold target practise in the Kattegat off Gothenburg yesterday and Gothenburg is across from Lassoe Island. Those here who thought there ! really might have been a tight suggested that it was more likely that destroyers had engaged submarines than that all the firing was target practise. They said. too. that destroyers could make sufficient noise to cause laymen to believe that there was a big scale naval battle. JURORS DECIDE (CONTINUED FROM PAGE OMNI their pleas to the jury. The other verdict, given them by the court, which they might hare tendered in case they decided ths other way. was simply, "we. the Jury, find for the defendant.** Prosecutor Voglewede called the attention of the Jury to the fact that this was not a criminal case and that it was not necessary for the urors to be certain beyond a re*sonaMe doubt of the gu'lt. as tn a criminal case but that it was only necessary for the state to prove his guilt by a preponderance of the evidence. — ii i» i in Racing Mechanic Is Killed At Speedway Indlanapols, Ind.. Sept. 21—(UP) Bape Stapp, automobile racing pilot, was reported in “fairly good" condition today after an Indianapoia , speedway accident in which Lawson Harris, his mechanic, was Idled. > They were testing tires yesterday . when the automobile crashed Into . a concrete wall at tje southwest i Harris died within two hours. La*. WK LWbw' J I ' t I ROY S. JOHNSON Auctioneer Sept. IJ.— Earl Whitehurst, til Walnut Street. Decatur. Household goods sale. Sept. 2B—Mrs. Ora K. Wagner. • mile* west of Muncie. Sept 28 - James Foreman. < mils least and H mile north of Berne. Sept. 27- Howard E. Gallagher. Olney, 111, Guornaey Cattle Sale Sept. 28 — Daugherty Bros. 1 mile east of Flatt. Durov hogs Sept. 30—Fay Deberard. Kremmling. Colo, Hereford Cattle Sale Oct. J—lllinois Guernsey Breeders Ass n Sale. Peoria. 111. Oct. 4—lndiana Guernsey Breed ers Asa*n. Sale, Fair Grounds. Indianapolis. Indiana. Trust Co. Bldg. I Decatar, Indiana. Phone 104
! Navy Mobilization Under Way for Grid F"" ,IW " ' " • """ ' "" V > 1 I ywM I - — — -er ywr W ± I
While armies tn Europe wage a different kind of i war. football armies tn the United States prepare for the grid wars. Here is a view of scrimmage at |
Stapp uffered face lacerations and I •hock. Stapp won fifth place in the BMmile race here last Memoral Dav. - - o ■' Son Os German World War Ace Reported Dead Paris. Sept. H—( UP)-Captain Faron von Rlchtofen. eon o' Baron Manfred von Rlchtofen, moat fata, us world war ace. has been shot down and killed In an air battle, the newspaper Paris Solr reported in a dlspatvh from Zurich. Switserland. today. 1 n Former W’PA Director Taken Into Custody Indlanapols. Ind, Sept. 21—(UP) --Carl F. Kortepetar. former Marion county WPA director, and hi*, father-in-law, Gurney De’tyshire. w< arrested today by denuty mar•hate on an indictment charging them with defrauding the federal government through divoralon of
■ YOU CAN OUTWIT THE WEATHER WITH I Duplicoat M Zip in rim lininp ind it‘, »n OVERCOA T *.. * out and you Aove o TOPCOA T \3L I $23.50 /A H Other Toppers $1.3.50 up I ■ It's the new idea in topM ooata Easily regulated, it * KtL 11 Bl take* but eight aeconda to BH Zip it in or out aa the wea- K \ ' 1 1> ther demanda. Tailored by fS-Xjf;, Clothcraft in the aeaaon'a i I .r ||if “oat authentic patterna f| « and atylea. nrgm 111 Lined with Earl-Glo J I Holthouse Schulte &Co
I the Naval academy at Annapolis, Md Ro, I <b !
WPA labor to private us*aU. S. district attorney Vo! Nolan said that the indictment was based cn the alleged use of shout I'H) WIA workers last winter on th-» ! construction of private roads on a •abtHvialon at Southport near her* cwned Sy Derbyshire. Nolan eat:-
Riverview Gardens Present ing FIRST FLOOR SHOW OF THE SEASON Saturday niffht. September 23 - and • Change of Orchestra. Sen ing your choice of Wines—Beers—Bast ItrmkVariety of Tasty SandnicheHot ( hilli— Barb-l|-Ribs—Soup-Herman “Hi” Meyers
| na.ed th* expegffiUM Z fund* on this Bork ,7* lio.mw New Fall ( oau an g direct from the market r» for your choosing —< -tomorrow. F. (, a<t
