Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 37, Number 236, Decatur, Adams County, 5 October 1939 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

CHILI) IS BORN <coNTiNvnn cm raon «ix» ifo hruuiptatc lung It would hgv* bevtt virtually tMpOMtble to I hav* arcotnpllahod the delivery In j side the large re* pl rutar mid to r*- j move the mother would b« to doom her to death A fire department officer ad ministered oxygen to the mother' by mean* of a hone clamped to ’ her face, the only part of het ' body projecting from the lung Faced with the Impending birth doctors contacted Fred H Suite | Hr. father of the young man on j whom thousand* of dollar* have been lavlahed for eaperlmental equipment to aid hla recovery from the aame disease which attack the young mother Snlte Immediately volunteered the uae of Snlte'a breastplate lung, a device which cover* the cheat from neck to waist One of Shiite'* technical assistant*. Leonard H*w- | kina, brought the equipment at! mlle-a-minute speed Into the city from Snlte'a suburban mansion In a station wagon. In minutes that seemed boors ‘ to the anxious surgeons the breastplate arrived. Swiftly Mrs. Kpstein was shift-' ed from the big respirator and th< new device was clamped over het paralysed cheat. Then there was another agonising delay The breastplate did no) j fit. She was returned to the ta.ik and adjustments were made. Finally It wan clamped on and she was Wheeled into the delivery room. .Epstein paced the corridor wringing bls hands . At the end of an hour and a halt a nurse came out smiling “It's a girl.’* she announced. "She weighs six and onehalf pounds and your wife is doing as well as could be expected " Doctors revealed that even at the last moment nature interposed

♦ ” lITII TltTil IdflJ! M A*JI all MMTLJI .. I **s £* 11 1W ■ IL I vjw I HiiW > iMM ■Bf mF < agp r as fflF .ZB >w fMk *,' w •- s BflfX ■■ ** ir ajSU -W ' D ■ d S -“* SSr^s' ? - H I M A W-4.'- 9 «•* < ' 9 1 w I W JI wff > WWM* BWtt i II IBi IWI ML JI 5 ! 1 _BI 2I fl ■■ B * I I.JI a fl II I a 'll ■ J | I Hm & If u J b r i i I J T j I H'l rii.'Rflirf.ll IM l FlI I 4 r V :: AND WE’RE USING LOWER prices:: AND GREATER BARGAINS FOR AMMUNITION! o : :| II II <» < . Time-Tested II < » ZINC-O-LITH HOUSE PAINT '» < • j: ♦ A popular nationally advertised Glidden Product— ’• I assures the user of a gleaming white paint job which ' - ; J will beautify and protect for many years to come. 11 NOW 2.59 GAL. ; • In 5 Gai. Cans <« : A Regular $3.00 Gallon Value <> < » I o H GLIDDEN’S SUPERIOR BARN PAINT b ; ; • A First quality bright Red Barn Paint at a price ’' ; [ you can afford to pay — Superior Barn Paint will add • • years of service to your farm buildings. II ' 1 if : A Special October Value < > NOW 1.09 GAL. :: In 5 Gal. Cans. :: NOTE:— "— !; Do not confuse Zinc-O-Lith House ; Paint and Superior Red Barn Paint : with inferior second quality paints. : Both are first quality paints, and * are guaranteed by the Glidden Com- I I pany and by Schafers. : ' ’ II

other dltflruitles. It was a posterior delivery "The child Is normal and look* : like a fine healthy young lady" Dr. J. Weiner, resident obstetrician said. EXKLAN HEAD ’CQNTtMI'KD Fttoa rAOU ON Kt I same courtroom, in which the former "strong man"' of Indiana politics was convicted and seni fenced for the murder of Madge , <>be(Jtolier, a statehouse employe. That trial opened on Oct. k, lt».’S and Stephenson Was sentenced Nov. Id. 11*35. Seated a* a table was the former klan leader, now greying about the temples after 1* years In prison. but still appearing handsome and healthy, lie was wearing the, same black suit which he donned for his ride to the penitentiary In IMS. He followed closely all the words of his attorney. Christian told Judge Cassius ' Gentry that he was not going to make the court weigh the evt-! draco of that former trial or "be a Jury" but believed he could eaI tabllsh "that the conviction is wholly void upon Its face." "The record shows that the verdict was void, the judgment on the ( verdict Was void and the commit!-' j ment (to the prison* also was , i void." Christian asserted that the Indiana supreme court opinion uphold-' ing Stephenson's conviction like- j wise was void. Stephenson was indicted on four ' counts. Christian said, convicted on the first and acquitted on the others. The one count charged that he killed Miss OberboUer while engaged in the commission of a M*' ony — attempted perpetration of rape. Christian explained. The jury then found him guilty of sec- i ond degree murder. Heading from the statute. Chris- \ tian then declared that Stephenson was sp>-< ifit ally charged with

I first degree tnnrder. The Indictment charged that Stephenson assaulted the gnd and a* a result "she suffered great , -hame and humiliation," Christian read. As a result, he continued, i she took poison and "the combination of shock and poison caused her death." Nowhere In the Indictment, 'Christian declared, is Stephenson 1 accused of giving her the poison. Inducing her to take it or getting tbe poison for her to take. "On the contrary, the Indictment specifically say* she took the poison." The Jury found him guilty "contrary to law"' and be has been In prison it years on a conviction which la "wholly null and void." Christian said. Christian's motion for a newtrial asserted that the former klan leader was held for "many months" t m a "dungeon" in the stat* prison and was placed on a diet of stale bread and water after be was admitted to the prison. After bis conviction. Christian said. Stephenson was removed Im-I mediately to prison and not kept in the Hamilton county jail pending the outcome of hla appeal aud "had no opportunity to confer with ' his attorneys." NATIONS WAIT tOONTINVEB FK<»M FAGK ON Kt tai cr reviewed troops at bls nearby headquarters. Para I ig* Industry With the French army In Germany. Oct. 6—(VPl—The French atmy's cautious, methodical, downhill advance into the Saar valley baa paralised *1 (■OO.OO 1 Ofv (B) worth of German industry there. One can stand at the French front line observation post dug !n just across the crest overlooking bu miles of valley, and see no signs of I'fe. There are many German soldiers below, hidden in pill boxes and be hind artillery emplacements, but no civilian life. No smoke pours from anv chimney of the big factories where Germany's best s’eel has been made. There Isn't an Industrial, v heel turning In the whole region from Mertiig past Saarlouis (Saarlantern b IMUingsn. Voelklingen. Saarbruecken and Zweibnecken to T'l. mavens, at the edge of the grea* Palatinate forest, which Is a dark blur on the eastern horizon. Bite by bite, the Frenca are biting off more German territory west of the Saar river, and adding it to the gg.OM acres they claim already to hold. The advance is slow but general. 1 saw a sample of it yesterday. French tanks charged througn and beyond the Bong forest In the Mtselle valley, a few miles inside Germany. German tanks went nut to riert ilhsu. tor hours, these monsters battled at close range among tne trees, firing shells point plank. There were no supporting Infantry, no protecting airplanes, one by one 'anks fell out of the fight, their armor plate blown away, th“lr crews dead. The French tanks flnallv < merged victorions on the eastern siJe of the forest. Evansville Man Dies Os Accident Injuries Evansville. Ind.. Oct. 5— (UP)—, Ray Kissel, 2d. of Evansville, died : esterday from Irjurft.-* suffered »day in an automobile collision.

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DF.CATI’R DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY. OCTOBER 5. 1939.

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