Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 37, Number 239, Decatur, Adams County, 9 October 1939 — Page 5
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■ f yy |F*g ■rMornmsAf ter Ta king friers Little Liver Pills
■Scik New Endurance Record EH ' ■" ■ Si ffi*ic- 11 ~ BFw »it > yl* H ~ b ' 1 ’. h ■ '■■ ■" ' a new light ptant endurance mark of more than 343 hours, Bmi Schliepper ami Wes Carroll! pilot their plane over Rosamond Bty Uke. California. Here's a refueling scene. The plane scare i close to the ground t« take on fuel. ■Romance for “Oomph” Girl? iSr Hrs I » "'WK k • I \ ji iniCA Im* i Wdli Mb •*»■' > I -Zb r ■ EjS ,<v Ann Sheridan " » ■ 4 i ■ BBshlp* r<-< k KelhCS ; n * ••'sral new romances rumorsd tor aon UheriOan UM m P" girl of the movies is one with Shipwreck Kelly the former University of Kentucky aU-Amoncan football alar..
I ward where Stephenson u bring > held Mitering Hlephru».ui » quarters, he found the furm< >' "strong man ' <4 Indiana poiitUa to Weak irom pain that he could hardly cry out Nrwhy quoted Blepbaoaon »» day Ina; I “I'Ve never been thia ale It br fore, G-l a doctor " Dr. Sturdevant was called and •»*«• Hteplu'Ueon a hypodermic and be fell aalwp Immediately ’He waa at ill glswfftaff soundly when court opened thia mnrnlna l>r. Sturdevant Mid that Steph vuaon's condition appeared to Ihaerloua and he would deter mine after anomer eumluatkia whether to perforin an operation . Meanwhile. Jamea K Mort ham. deputy attorney uem-ral. prepared to argue the stale r answer to a Motion by Slephviiaun a attorney a that he lie tried agalu on the original first degree murder Indictment against him • Stephensons motion, filed Tburaday by Floyd Christian of Noblesville, chief counsel for the former stain ku klux hlan leader set out that the former grand dragon waa convicted of second degree mur<i<. on a first degr<<murder Indictment and asked for a new trial Christian. Mhati Srnth of I.a Forte. K. K. (Toe and Frank Campls ll of Noblesville, all alter- ' ueya for Stephenson, argued the cans before Judge Cassius M. Gen- ■ try In Hamilton circuit court i Thursday auJ Friday. Judge Gen | try adjourned the case until to- | day at tip end of Friday's session «_ SOVIET Rl SSI A ( ILLS tCONTINUKp FROM FAUB UNS) Here to be forthcoming. German | sources searclp*d for favorable
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, OCTOBER 9. 1939.
TWO BOYS DIE OF CIS FUMES — '■ - Fort Wayne Lads Die In Gm-Filled Cellar Os Grocery Store Fort Wayne, Ind. Oct :» <U.P) The boyish cinioalty of iw<> |J. year nld youths was believed today to have been rwaponalble for their deaths 111 a gaa filled t ellur of a locked and sealed grocery store here yesterday. The bodies of the boys. Iloherl Hull and Robert t'uney. were found yesterday aft or noon a few feet inside the window they had forced open In the Redding market here Roth had died from the fumes of (siiaaalum cyanide gas George Hunter, negro, an employe of a Fort Waym- exlertninatllil firm which had fumigated the building over the weekend.| discovered the I todies He culled police slid coroner Walter K. I Kruse who said th.- youths had been dead It to I* hours. Neither boy had Iw-en missed from hmm- because they had planned m take an all might hike) with their boy scout troop The hike had been canceled at the last, minute Authorities aald the fumes from the potassium cyanide were so strong that t'uney, first through the window, had no time to warn hh companion lb .th died where they dropped, just across the sill. REPORT IN.H REP ‘CONTINUED FROM rAUL ONbl foot embankment. It was almost completely demolished. Mr. Shafer's car was also d- stn.yed Neilh-, er Mr. Shafer nor his 71 year old wife waa Injured. A small dog. belonging to the Kocher family, was not hurt In the accident. A daughter. Helen Kocher. Is staying at the Findlay hospital, while Mr. and Mrs. Koeber are there BERV ICES ARE (CONTINUBD UN I AUH BUI tended, he aald that the slogan which grew out of the discuss bins, and which waa upon everybody's lips was: "Let the Church be the Church." Quoting from Oswald Spengler's book. 'The Decline <rf the Occident," Dr. Goshsd spoke of thia as a "dying ctvilixation ' a civilisation which la born, grows to maturity, to-ara fruit, declining and th.-n dying “The messag.-of this prophet of doom Is a me*sage which a man would have to accept, if h.- were not a Christian" Referring to an article recently published entitled "Ran Francisco. A Dying City,” Dr. Goebel showed statistics which indicate that only 3 per cent of the population of the city In-longs to any religious Issly, Catholic. Protestant or Jewish. Other statistics show 5 per cent, which may Im- a bit more accurate, but still very significant "If our mission in this world Is to be fulfilled. It means that you and I are to have souls filled with the consciousness of th«- mysteries of the everlasting God. It means more than the reading of many books ... It means a return to* the reading of the Book in which we find the word of the Eternal God "The longer I preach, the older I grow, the more I am convinced of the fact that the power of the Gospel of Jesus Christ will not transform this world of ours until the members of our churches Irani the meaning of what Jesus said ‘lf any tnan will come after me. let him take up his cross and follow me.' That means sacrificial living, our whole life dedicated to Him In service.” Closing his address. Hr Hisds-I told of a conversation with a cultured Indian, from the Wlnnrhagus in Wisconsin who had studied at the university, and who spoke of the significance of the tom tom as follows: "You white people think that this crude musical Instru mem which we call the tom mm Is not anything to be taken seriously But. when an Indian beats the tom-tom. La beats it In übsolute tune and rhythm with the boat of his own pulse, and he reuctlon to the Hitler speech and cllt-d tbnt Norwegian newspaper Tldi-ns Tngn. which said that. “If Roosevelt and Mussolini have misgivings it would be up tv the Oslo slates tn act as intei uiedlaries." Meantime, Hitler began to put some of the plans disclosed in his speech Into effect. German ships arrived In the Baltic states to begin returning around lOO.teb racial Germans to ths relch as part of the fuehrer’s design for re-settlement of eastern European minorities ir cooperation with the Soviets —which have now virtually completed their domination of the Baltic sone * Lithuanian negotiations with Moscow, involving return of part pf the Vilna area to Lithuania snd establishment of big red army bases near the east Prussia bordet on LiTfeuanian soil, were reported almost completed Finland is nest lu the Soviet design
Mystery Broadcaster? Norman Stewart Is this the Oxford-accented announcer broadcasting pro-German I propaganda over a Nasi short : wave station heard consistently I in America and Great Britain? He is Norman Baillie Stewart, born in Scotland and once an of* fleer with the Seaforth Highlanders. Several years ago he was found*guilty of giving military secrets to the Nasis, sentenced to five years in jail and released in W 37 because of good behavior. It was assumed he went to Germany following his release. hopes 'hat he will thereby bring i hl» pulse-beat iuto harmony with J the pulse-beat of the Eternal 8plr- ( it.” Said Dr. Goebel In commentj Ing upon this fact, "the Indian s , desire io put his life and soul into I harmony with the Eternal Spirit die louud in the hearts of men the I 4 world over, lu Christ, our Lord. | , we ran bring our hearts into har- J ( niony with the pulse-beat of the , Eternal God tu that hope lies the . | uilsatoii of the church, becomltig J faithful stewards of the mysteries lof God. and being fouud faithful , In our individual Ilves, and lu the . Christian church." - DEBATE DELAYS i - (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE! r no legislation is lending, time will 1 be allotted to opponents aud proponents of proposed changes *n the neutrality act. Meanwhile, senate leaders conHdeully spurned lotuproniim- proposals on the peiidhlg bill and be--1 san pressing for a uhosdowu by ‘ this week-end. Chairman Key Pittman, D.. Nev., ' of the foreign relations committee claimed votes for the admluis(ration's program and predicted that the force of that strength would crush the opposition and . permit passage of the bill this ' Week. He refused to consider a formal I notice by the isolationist bloc that It was ryady to accept all other features of the bill if the section r<-|M<alhig the arms embargo were ! elltulnati-d. "The anna emltargo has to go.” he said, "the thing la nnin-utral." BOARD .MEMBER i (CONTINUED FROM PAUE ONIOi , adjustment board. iFinul decision of the state board is < xpected in a few days. i Into Mother’s Arms ... 1 ‘ I tjL F Here is the reunion at New-York’s , Grand Central Terminal between Bobby Laurel, on arrival from the Weat Coast, and his mother, Mrs. Stan Laurel. She told reportera she I planned to reopen divorce action , agauut her hha-ttar husband. .
BLUFFTON GIRL IS FINED HERE swanwawswawanMm> « Evelyn Thurston Is Fink'd On Rerkless Driving Charge Hvelyu Thurston .of Bluffton, wns fin<-d • I<» aud roeta by Judge J. Fred Fruchte in Adame circuit court late Bantrday afternoon on a charge- of recKless driving. Minn Thuretou entered a plea of guilty to the ebsrgs when arraigned before the court. She was arrested on September 21 by Officer Rueecll Prior, of the Indiana elate police, on the charge which arose out of an auto accident. Officer Prior charged tout she W3s driving on the wrong side of the road at a curve one-half mite* eo-ilb of Decatur on federal road 2?. wte-n her car and another collided teeadon. She was the only one hurt In the accident and after overnight treatment at Um local hospital was dismissed. War In Brief By L'nlted Press MOSCOW laveatla, government newspaper, says continuance of war to restore Poland wmild be seaaelww slaughter, a fight to crush Hitlerism wouM he criminal ■ folly and that Hltlet's peace bld could serve as practl<-al basis for peace negotiations; Russia prepares to gear domestic pr<e grain to satisfy German need for war material aud to iucreaae vastly Russo-German trade. LONDON — Well informed quarters predict that Britain and France will refuse conference until Germany has withdrawn from forcibly occupl* d territories; Chamberlain indicates desire to withhold official statement on Hitler's peace offensive until Wednesday. meanwhile British plan conferences with Polish foreign minister Zaleski. PARIS — German patrols stage 'intensive raids on western front, seeking prisoners and testing French lines, war office tells of advatic- guard activity in lower Nied valley and south of Haarhrnecken: many Fieuch <<>inniuuiata arcjailed while (xilice seek others still at liberty. ■ERi..IN — German army high command says western front activity limited to local reconnalaance and patrol action with "weak” artillery fire on both sides; German army in Poland continues to advance to latuudary with Russia tin; former German official is executed for treason. HELSINGFORS — <1 ships in Esthonlan and lattvian harlaira to repatriate 120,000 Germans in accordance with Hitler's reichstag speech pioposals lu resettle minorities to avoid future conflicts; Finland, claiming it a Scandinavian instead of Baltic state, seeks to resist Soviet demands for naval aud air bases. KAUNAS. LITHUANIA: Reliable quarters report that Russia agrees to return Vilna area Invluduix ancient Lithuanian capital of Vilna. if minorities are granted selt-de-teimlnatlou rights BRUSSELS—OsIo group of neutral states to mw-t within week to consider torpedoing of neutral ships WASHINGTON — Ptesidetll Roosevelt returns to While House, mill Ignoring semiofficial German suggest lima that he mediate In European war; senate prepares for test vote on neutrality legislation on motion to rceomnilt bill t > | coinmlttoe for revision.
COURT HOUSE Estate Cate The report ot the Iniierlntance tax appraiser was filed in the eatate ot Nancy Jeanette Harden and the notice ordered, returnable October 30. Guardianship Caae Thu final report ot the guardian ot Raymond Edwaida was f led, examined mid approved, the guardian dtschargad and the trust cioaed. Divorce Caae In the divorce caae of Mae Marshall against Clifford Mar*hall, a petition was filed to modify a former order of the court and the notice ordered returnable October 14. The matter of contempt agalnat the defendant waa submitted and taken voder advisement. Marriage' Llcenaea Eldou R Balsinger. Berne to Frances E Huffman, Decatur. COLT SHOW IS (■CONTINUED FROM PAGB ONO of Bertie third John Gaafslay ot Berne; fourth. Arthur DeArmond of Berne, fifth. Dan Striker ot
Borne. Grads mare class, foaled bwiwueu January 1 and May IS: First. William Burke of Decatur; second. Paul Xrueckeberg of Do-, catur; third. Harry Lehrman. fourth. John Oreaaley; fifth, Tilman ateiner Grade mare claM. foaled after May IS: First. WlMlatn Rod—beck; Second. Noah Borne of Decatur; third. Forrest Railing; fourth. Adolph liultrmelor; fifth. Gel of sire class: Fits!. Marlin Marcus Luglnblll of Berne. Graber; second. Archie Bmitley; third. Adolph Bultemeivr; fourth Archie Bmltley; fifth, Claude Harvey of Monroe. “Slowdown" Strike Reported In Plant Detroit. Oct P-il’P> -Chrysler corporation closed Ils Dodge division today, sending lO.tsm employes home reportedly after members of th" United Automobile workers uuPm (CK» had staged a slowdown strike on the final assegn My line.
Nazi Battleship Reported in South Atlantic I * * * ITkbL — TWOWr « • <T - ;
Although not definitely established, it is believed I the Nazi pocket battleship Admiral Scheer, above, | attacked and sank the British steamer Clement otf
As Nazi Iroops Entered Fallen Polish Capital • » 'Em r- ' im'f Til IB > liniili Bib w — Ywi ffF~-dawjTßxyifWßß*glfctTK^Urt Jw» 1 > : rjtbi — LSSE s. —lnternational lllus.treted News Radiophoto
This radiophoto from Berlin shows the Nazi high command saluting a contingent of German troops as they march into Warsaw, the fallen Ihilish capi-
Mrs. Roosevelt Visits Grandson in Seattle ! ' ■*% ~ • - I wl 1L ay i -'tv '*; »-* I*
Visiting at the home of her daughter Mrs John foe’ tiger, in Seattle. Wash Mrs Franklin D Roosevelt, wife of the president, called in camera-
MINOR WRECKS ARE REPORTED Two Minor Accident* Arc Reported Here Over Weekend Two minor acrtdvnta and one arte st were reported by co'ttity and city police authorities over the week end In and near here. A transient, known as George Hall, was arrested Bunday by Police Cnmf James Borders and is being held on a vagracncy change until a check can be made. An Ohio and a Minueettew car figured in a minor m'abap on Becoud street about 3:3a o'crack last evenlug wfacu the former stalo pulled away from the curb. Officer Sephuw Melobl and Chief borders luveetlsated. Rex. Rlcscn. of Berne, eecapud <njury late Bwturday night wh* n the car he waa driving struck a lone, owned by Johnny Trout, on
IRio De Janeiro. Brazil. Survivors of the Clement reported the attack and said the ship was the Admiral Scheer.
tel. past the statue of Marshal Ponlatowski. hero of the IHI3 I’olish campaign. The building in background w the Saxon palace.
men to take a picture of John Boettlgwr. Jr. now »»ven months old. This is the first picture of the latest Roosevejt grandchild.
PAGE FIVE
fed- ral road 27 near the Trout farm, sou'b of the city. The horse died a'moot instantly I tnd the car was ladly damaged. I Hh-sen came into the cMy and repo. ted the accldsni to Dvp'l'y Bbnfiff Leo Gillig, who InvoMigAied. • Mrs. Helen Hughes of Anderson ipeet the week cud with K mother. Mrs Maude Dor win.
Beware Coughs from common cold* That Hang On Crromuhlon relieves promptly becau.w it goes right to the seat of the trouble to kraeen germ laden phlegm, I increase secretion and aid nature to soothe and heal raw. tender. Inflamed bronchial mucous membranes No matter how many medicines you have tried, tell your druggut to sell you a bottle of CrvmnulMMt with the liniwmfunillng that you are to like the way It quickly allays the cough I or you are to have your money back. ; CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chost CoMt, Bronchitis
