Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 39, Number 171, Decatur, Adams County, 21 July 1941 — Page 5
iXDAY. .H’LY 21, M*
Imssine youth ■DATED TORY l.dlll ( louse Fouikl At fW IIU . Os Mother In I J fort Wayne ■ Ati i -l " f 1,11 ■ 1 ' * I**' * l *Y f ' MMFi ' . , t -Hhe July MR "•‘'■■l *" * f ° rl . !i!T " |"”l’ d . . c.m. near b<-i<-i '■ t "'••’•*• r to ■ F-o W-i>n. 1,. urliM'ii tcllins ’ : '‘" "" ’ l ' l ' r > (.(.tilled |g|«, •> ;..|<-1- .<il<l . 11. i-mallud , \i . K B I »IT \IX TERMS Hicm PAGB ONO f.i.n in i ,l| ii'l , 'i | KZH. '* ' ' " ! " 11 " in.-an LA .. . p.'li < hapter of ■kR \ . \i,.| Xnaliias. h< <i A down ’ ■ ■ has K3A ..-<■ ■•’ .H. iipic.i "P ” r lapp ' -. I"|2 Io <■- -day '11..’ 3" , ,'i.id !><■< n kilh-d and So i.. < < t R workmen Authoi rushed! • • < •-poiKl.ility for -• disp.ili Il Said .< German ratiS3mii: » i- blown up near Pre-1 ■H, E >ih i by saboteurs forty four
H Sonja Henie Soon a Citizen I '■ • fbmja Henle and court clerk I Ar,r *M Sonja Henie, the ice-skating star. will become an I n in the fail, Bhe la shown in Bridgeport. Conn. I a^E UM u° n court ft ' •*>* swore to facta in her fins! c.tizcnship I M »‘ric<f to Dan Topping, Jr., the sportsman, Mias Henie ■ ,r>r citizenship under provision of the naturalization law I P'ei a foreign-bom woman the right to share her husband s ’ citizenship. El Adopted by the Division ■ i nH I v ’■ I 1 .' r \ ■hPKF > i|B I ’»? J? p ««k»ng her the permanent Daughter ot m>k2^u n * Navius of Detroit, president of the or- ■ Ku>». J,,, »” presentation to the recording artist and national- ■■ fchgw of the Star g p , n gted Banner at the 42nd Division’s j wnrsatica AUmuc City, N. J, gM wHm
Germans we-e kllb-d. If was asserted. A L’uited Press Vichy dispatch , said the Grrmana had found It necessary to warn that persons who trind tn swim or row acr >ss lhe Alilrr river between the <m-«ii pled and unoccupied sones of . France Would ire shot without warning Moscow waa putting out frequent report, calculated to fit In with the "V" war of nerves Cotnmbla broadcasting company picked up In New York during the night one Moscow radio report which said an Italian monarchist officer had shot at Henlto Musao Uni at Ferrara several days ago The officer waa descrilrrd aa being a member of the "anllGerman opposition group headed by lit a race and Muti.” Achille Htarace and Ettore Mutl i are former aecretarlea general of the Fascist party. Incidentally Berlin. In a broadcast picked up by Nations' broadcaaling. suggested that Icelanders "rise and throw down the burden of American occupation.” The broadcast ended with the three abort and one long notes of the opening of Beethoven's fifth symphony. equivalent to the Morse V AWARD SCROLL FOR ALUMINUM President. Governor To Sign Scroll For Winning County In State Indianapolis. Ind . July 21 -An In-ter-county contact in Indiana for collection of old aluminum for national defense, with the winning county to receive a framed scroll signed by President Franklin I), i Roosevelt, Governor Henry F. Schrkker and national defense officials, was announced 'oday by the state defense council, which is co-ordinating city and county alum inum drives taking placa in the state from July 21 to 29. Signers in addition to the presid i ent and governor will Ih- William H. Knudsen, director of the office of production management, and Mayor F 11. l<aGuardla. director of the office of civilian defense. •The scroll will be one the citl- ' sens of any county would be proud to hang in their com thou e or other public buildlug aa a permenent reminder of extraordinary service 1 to their country in the cause of na- ' tional defense." Governor Schrick- , er said. Determination of the winning
IT’S TIME TO CONSIDER CLOTHES FOR COLLEGE Kt 2L&?r* JXb"j 11 ■' 7 !■ ft th’" ; :,.l. -nil ni;ht "ft "■'l ' i'- d ' »“ 1 ■ ' "•"■ ll -4* <.u t-.u ir»<k. About thia time of year the family has to start thinking of suitable clothe, for the young daughter of the house to take to college. She ll probably be wondering w hat she should get to be correctly gat bed for campus and classroom. Slacks, if allowed on the campus, are simple, and the three-pieee suit, shown left above, ha, bell-bottomed, tautly laced gob slacks, a brief bolero of spun rayon gabardine J and a white sharkskin shirt laced to match the slacks. The wool jumper, top right, is made with full skirt, snug midriff, with the jumper in green and the shirt in fireman red jersey with long sleeves. Below is a chic dress for classroom or dates. It is a nautical two-piece, with snug longer middy top with dctactabb vestee. It is made of scarlet spun rayon serge, with white braid and cagl, insignia.
county will be made on a basis of the number of pound* of old pots, pans and ohter aluminum articles collected per capita in each county during the period ot the campaign. Census figures of IHb will lie used in computing county popu Unions. Am a hit for local collection committees a* to the goal they should work toward in their campaigns, the def-nse council tiled two esamples: First, that Mayor laslluardia has declared the national campaign should result in the collection of some 2<>.otHt mm pound*. or about one-seventh pound per capita: second. that a test campaign carried on with the aid ot the national office of civilian defense in Dane county i Madison t. Wisconsin, resulted in the collection ot about one-third pound per capita. o Wheeler Disclosure Classed As “Treason” Indianapolis July ill 11'1*1 Ht. Rev. Henry W. Hobson. Bishop of the Protestant Kpiacopa! diocese of Southern Ohio and chairman of Fight for Freedom. Inc., today detiouiu cd Senator Burton K. Wheeler's disclosure <>f the movement ot I'. S. forces to Iceland as "treason" and asked a congressional investigatio nto diss-over the source of Wheeler's information "His revelations of this counrty’s military activitios could serve only one purpose, that of Informing Nazi Germany in advance of America's defense preparations,” Bishop Hobson said. NAZI ADVANCE CONTINUED HtoM FAUE ONU, British ph hummed hack fm f.esii loads of bombs ami ammunition. There was no sign o.' (terman fighter opposition and it appeared that the British planes were flying deep Into France Io carry home their attack mi sec ondary defenses and. presumably, air bases. conimunicaii ins lines and other military objectives. Home of the planes appeared la lie sweeping in over France at chimney level. Nor was the French front Hie only one where the HAF w is < n gaged Home admitted that 'he British had again attacked Naples, embarkation |M»inl for supplies end men for North Africa. The ini. lans said 15 persons were kiil-'d and 21 wounded in the new Naples attack. A HAF attack on Benghazi, important Libyan base, also was admitted The seamy new - from the Russ t German fighting from indicated that the stiffness of Soviet opposition. the length ol German communications line and. po.isibly. bad weather bad slowed down Nazi operations. There was no weekend spitlige of Nazi victory aiiiiouuceimm'.s • « some Nazi spokesmen had predicted. Instead. German source* explained that the "vast llussi.ni spaces aud the masses of troops involved inevitably extend the time of operations The high command then adJed that SBCUcltug auuihdauoa opera-
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA.
tions were in progress and that Rumanian and Finnish troops were advancing on the Bessarabian anu far northern flouts. The Russians said that the fifth week of war started with the <;,-i mans still hammering toward Leningrad, Kiev, Moscow and Odessa but indicated that the panzers had stored only slight advances, if any. Guerilla warfare behind the front, said Moscow. Is increasingly hampering the Germans. NAZI PUTSCH (CONTINUED rilOsf page one> tnmiths ago Jose Ciiadros Qnnago. a journalist accused as a leader of th., anti-1 Bolivian movement, still was' sought, police said. They had suspended the totalitarian newspapers La Calle and Inti and the wckly publications Trabajo anti Busch. Cochabamba, an agricultural center. appeared to be the focal Point of the subversive movement. YOUTHS PLEAD CONTINLU FROM FA'Jh ONR • In questioning by the court. Ramsey first admitted making only two' trips to perpetrate the thefts, but latei changed his story, adding another trip Both lad* were remanded to jail in the custody of the sheriff, while their punishment was takui under advisement. — — — o— Trade In a Good Town — Decatur
I'HIMULE THEATER Now Showing -“EVEN A TREE HAS LIMBS!” . .»> v H » I rv>-Bn, 2 iKH MCj*w*r Suite** I-C J I'VE THE ■’ApOO.ES /• WAVE GOOD \ DP BufifiE <SOON \ 1 .WIMPV THE HEAT, i ENW w,m/ >DSCOVEQV t SiNTM Ef > I v DOUBTLESS. IT S > 1 —■* ->. -ti - . Thev _> l ANCwOvv ( ' X OE&PEES COO-BO DOu-N f mQa,' APg vQI ( DO?) J k > J <-Z~J J DC BuGtoE ? M ' I -- —~ r <7 f-x z jgzx w. SSIIM | Jr I • ■■■■ <■ ■ ■■•■' • ~ •*" ~ t7i< BLONDIE CAUGHT IN THE DRAFT! By Chic Young om~rnii i ■ w — .iw^ec^ — I AJWLT»7? I : ■ ' k v4 W a/— < ■Bxowl TUBCLOTUBS S KttHVHfi V J I‘J, * * f~*— aSxBT ') .“ P uujNPflcss )n fcWfrV’Ti ■ Ht A\ 1/ </ vY/kfy ; ' a y i ouMoua*AV /pxft) I ■ U-aAV- . *T ■;> Ay*' I Towwn«yyW I i i h WJ’ ■ j ®ffz - flu 1 < hA)>fl mopnimo j-fcr v< U' ra N- ■I&L> vy I \ s- l Ti ffi 'O i _L o w%* u f>v - Sm iiwy!^ ll 'I \\ iIH JraiWjgjtlf/ffioCJEai .^iT riar^TtiH M V <h' . • 1/1/ IQb i Ff|t r '*‘ L JJII / f J 1 ' * '***** ♦<4» '/■'.Af 1 -.. .. ..' .. ** -1 litAJt«J»3w<>Sw3tSp™iiSl3ttSKßLwwi— ■ ■ . - *!
PRESIDENT URGES CONTINUED FHOM PAGE ONB Gibraltar through Spain Welles, at the same time, assur- 1 ed Bolivia ot this nation's full support if that government's ousting of the German minister should re- ■ suit in an international incident I -—— o ™ , Heuer Residence Sold At Auction The Mrs. Fred Heuer home on West Monroe street was purchased by the Central Sugar company at public auction Saturday afternoon It is to be tennanted by an employe ( I of the company. The sale was conducted by Roy S. Johnson, local auctioneer. The household goods and furnishing* were sold separately. Punish Selectees Writing To Solons Fort Meade. Md. July 21 -tll’l An undisclosed number of selec- | tees were punished with confine- ' went to camp and quaiters today, for writing letters to tw > 1 H. senators in protest against legislation | to extend the service of citizen-, soldiers for the duratioa of thu emergency Regulations fopbid soldiers from trying to influence action on leg-: (station bearing on ‘he army — —o — — - - Hawaii's alphabet lontaina ouly 12 characters.
POLICE SEEKING BRUTAL KILLERS Two Gruesome Rape-Kill-ers Are Sought In MaNhachuNetta Boston. July 21 <UJ& Officers Investigating two of the most grue some rape-murders in Massachusetts history held a 18-year-old boy for one of them today and were seeking • "fiend—a maniac" in connection with the other. Authorities lielleved Raym md Woodward, a junior high school student with a record of two attempted rapes, killed IS-yeai old Constance Nhipp last week and mutilated her body with a butcher knife The girl's almost nude body waa found Haturday night In the kitchen of the Baptist parsonage at Reading, a Boston suburb, where the hoy worked as caretaker dur-
IsTTipi I ■ ■ ■ • ; L— ■ ON EVERY HIGH* AY. ihr familiar “Slop” sign mean, juM exarlh what il eajn . . . through, fastmoving traffic ha» the right-of-way. Thia sign tell* you to STOP before entering or crossing the intersection . . . otherwise vou risk your own life and the live, of others. 1 hat has that to do with Newspaper Boyg? NothFX S ! ing! Bui ii remind, u» that America's youthful army ikrl °f °' rr Newspaper Boyn is proceeding along / W itrSi life’* highway cautiously and with intelligence. - Y Many a hoy with only an academic education (hook learning) and no practical experience ha* grown up and become successful . . . but a»k your few-*' rif business or professional friends and associates if they started as Newspaper Boyg. and the MAJORITY will ■ jW proudly admit that they did. I I ■/ Ol K IIIGH£ST and mpi'ct to ur the hoy who it adding to hit tehool edu■J IL cation the PLLS-experience of a practi■b j cal hutinett, afforded by neutpaper RP* route*. I Decatur Daily Democrat j Today’s Newspaper Boys Will Be Tomorrow’s Leaders
Ing the presctM-t-'* ,b»si>< f. Woodward, however, lied noth-1 Ing to do with the other, end even* more brutal, ulaylng — that of | beautiful France, M. f'oetaran — officer* raid Mira Cochran. It. disappeared Thursday evening while returning horn.* from her iMSikkeepei '* t oh In Dynn Yesterday, following an anonymous tip telephoned to a radio studio where her mother hsd appealed tor the girl to "come home." Miss Cochran's body waa found In a tangled thhkei 10 mile* from the s<ene of the Hhlpp girl s death. Her killer had smashed Miss Cochran's face end head, driven a sapling the thickness of a broom stick down her throat, ripped off her clothes and attempted to burn the body. The slayer had done hi* work so completely that Identification was possible only through rings the girl wore. - --O 1 — —- In the fed- ral fiscal year, endhig in June, the output of new coins la expected to reach 1.500.imhi.000 pieces
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ALLEN COUNTY j ’CONTI NV Kb FilOM PAUB ON»> «taad boa’ Th, others apparently never came to th, surface Lores Sturty 28. of Berne and his wife. Helen, came along in anothei boat juat aa Clem waa struggling to his own capsiaed craft, and ’hey pulled him from the water and into their own boat. Pate Braman, operator of a paaaengei *|H-edlK>at at the park, came along just then and took Clem tn shore. Mo <>n< actually wttneaaed the accident or raw anything of the other youths FAIR RIDES AND (CONTINUED FKOM FAOff ONE) midway, will be the Monter show and weat <>t the midway will lie the "Mammy The Ape’ show. The Ferri* Wheel will be located north of Monroe street on the weat. side of Second at reel Immediately north of the Ferris Wheel will lie the Penny Arcade and the alligator show The motor drome will flank the north end of the midway
