Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 40, Number 241, Decatur, Adams County, 12 October 1942 — Page 5

■Kay, October 12,1942.

J® Kidnaner Breaks Out of Jail

? ’W' ■' Si C jL*j| JmNk 1 ' » -‘Br f \Cv Mnabfi x. k. it mF ■«§ ' 3r w ’ K W y* i

he wan taken to an undisclosed hideout by police for pro(Jake the Baiter) Factor reads an account of the upocmade from State ville prison. Joliet. Id . by Ro -er , oohy B'Sg m <H l , ' r ■' l ’ r 'rs. Touhy. who was convicted for kidnaping Factor P «•■**»* e '* in rourt: "I'm <t°i n ß l< > K‘‘t you, Factor. I'm going to | W get out of there!” This is • phonephoto.

I BiE OF ALLIES IS I § From r»g« 1) I W'-. “Ml-ht i. '~■!> f S»sr*?/. " -r- >■ ■ ‘' h w *•* ,l " v '" ■" "' ' ' ! ’ p ' '■ :■ • I* ol ' l ' '!'• 1 "' 111 '' 1 ‘ dnL o ■M and iniio made i’ HU> •<•■»■ &M *•* ’•'• l " < tiatiotiH we

iBHpTER THIRTEEN ■g£Md Chloe baked a turkey in on Thanksgiving, and k. ■WllMd some of the broth. Nick *?.fT»a4j ate dinner with them, ■mwt candied yams and cornmince pie. Tandy had K& &• stufling. as he railed it. ■* i cook anything. Al! mam CO . I cook, he said, even fetM, "The skill't at d the palette,” W*dy. "*“• married long _Rlad »e. Mariiy for love," said •ib ■*’ ' 'nously chopping gibs» M lie gravy. »Hl and Tandy were taking the nursing. Gay, at •W* request. had said nothing to ||m about the initials and the ■K m.' i. “That's right," Gay “If he dies it wouldn't SWteA But if he gets well—'* ■■ laid he was going to get ■Hkup't. ■•! and chafed quietly, of them, around Chloe's in Manha'tan. Nick from Idaho, feagbm Oklahoma, Tandy from S»Wwi«»ns, and Nick from Maine. knew where Hugh Richt&bhmed from. Noone asked him § M B in his room, looking out atid the patch of sky tMM I ' roof-tops. . .. fj'Ut to get well.’ he had to y0u.... What are to do with me?" TCQm had not answe red that, fcr ■Midi once he had gone to sleep, k•* * ’ Iwßraday. r turning from lunch. Mis* Jepson in h gh MMW Miss Jepson had visited W Ml and rccovi red the carbon of ttfiSChbs' had written on Monmg to lunch with Kann ' dors this mean?” des Jcps >n, “You've got Sr 'jfeir this woman things I never the Piccadilly Puppets, i»4 and Her Poodles." “Mfet hd you -ay?" asked Chloe. i*W* should 1 remember? But ■MM* what I never would have ■Kt » >u!dn*t have told her the BflM wi re the intelligent BRm Broadway. There’s someKjjjbt it that— The real actors u " *f they saw it. It's li■MHm And she says they'd like to isticated poodle Did you like that?” Jgglpw it wot rather trite." is right. But I don't use SS«jkMthcr. And when y>u make wror.g you make the sound ignorant. . . . ns w hen you can carry fW Hsjuor and are broad-minded tiwMr. You see how silly it MiMHlting it on those dogs ” **Ri Sorry," said Chloe. "What Club going to do buying both sets, in ■••• this letter. 'We want to see vasafib' mated poodle,’ the secreand S4j I go and look up WMkr to them And there it is. ■Ejjbr our hand. And I’ve Mt*Wi this carbon of yours to Is snl explain. Ik may I* Mb 4 through the files himself ■Mpt* remember I'm as new here • geu are. Just because Mr ■•Mis and I have mutual friends ■ Mfha rar.tee 1 can keep my job - if 1 don't have—" •*•» * ‘o’ ll * tu tbe matter "•■■atior," said Miss Jepson you're looking dis.-.;a'<d yw?» e ■ >u ‘-‘“o' k tfINK beer.-.rsir.g a « A ft lend." Ml fit e, which sounded "tr.pe,” L*lOy*" remarked M •< Jeymn IMP I a going to give you some * *

created on two continents, the very lihertlee we made law, are endang- • ered by destructive forces from • without. We are In the midst of B mankind's greatest war. a war to determine whether the march of . progress shall proceed or be halt- . ed by the totality of conquest. , “Our cause Is not only libert.y- - for ourselves but liberation for others. An American victory will tie 8 a United Nations victory and a vic-

letters, and if yon want to keep your job, you’ll take them al it." Chloe took the letters, breathing as the mariner breathes when the typhoon is past. One of them was to Rann Sturgis: Dkak Mr. Sturgis: I am sorry that you did not talk with Mr. Samuels or 1 when you called. It is plain to see that you were not made acquainted with our fine galieryxy of artists. Rosinda and Ramiro are a supine creation, fresh from the Trocadero in Paris... And so on and on. A hundred times Chloe had turned “galieryxy” into galaxy, and "supine” into anything. They were Miss Jepson’s over-worked words. Today Chloe wrote the letters as was, and Miss Jepson read them before she signed them. Before the next week was out Chloe cared little what the letters sounded like. Her mind seemed a blank on which Miss Jepson printed her dictation, and Chloe transcribed the words in a sort of tranee. The vigils were telling on her. Gay and Nick and Tandy helped her still, but the brunt of the night nursing fell inevitably on Chloe. They stood by her, however, .'ar more than she could have asked, and it waa wonderful having Tandy during the day. On Chloe’s desk one morning Tandy had found TAe Journal of a Jack Kabbit and decided to illustrate it. “It’s a darned clever autobiography," ho had remarked, excited with the idea. He bad hunted jacks in New Mexico and knew all their tricks and their manners. He brought bis drawing-board up to Chloe's spartment and spent most of bis day working and tending the patient. Chloe’s book would have vibrant and eloquent jacks to plead its cause «o that no future publisher eould resist it, and when it was published and selling like hot cakes, Chloe and Tandy would divide the • glOiile “You’re a dreamer, too." Chloe had aaid to him. She liked Tandy. Everybody liked Tandy, with his lovable mouth and his humorous eyes. Nick, the plodder, wigged him for iaainesa, for working only when the mood was on him, but Nick, too, loved Tandy. "Dreamer, nothing. Tandy had answered. “You'll sell this book. A kid would eat it up. I’d say a jaek rabbit wrote It, if I didn't know.’ Nick had a job now, painting murals in a Village night-spot So Tandy stayed with the patient during the day until 3 p.m. when he was relieved by Gay. Chloe took over on her return from the office. Always the thought of Richards was around her. “what are you going to do with me?** be had asked. He would not live, of that she was sure. His prediction of life was upheld neither by the nurse’s ehart, nor in the physician’s opinion. She knew only that she was going to let him sUv in that bed. as he had asked to do. “I promised him be might,” she had said, when she first consulted Dr. Kiasey. "The responsibility is yours, then. the physician had said. The day before Chine had faced Dr Kinsey, she had telephoned i Sturgis* office and learned that he , had been called back to Albany. Whatever happens, Rann Sturgis . will tell me what to do. He's bound • to be back soon. One December morning Chloe i paid Mi.. Thorpe for her services. | It was a Saturday and she would have her check from the office that ■ afternoon Thi. would pay for an- - other week’a rent of the patient's room. Hugh Richards could not go •nt wn the eteoet new any auro than ; he could have gone that first Satur-

Push Bond Purchases In Indiana Schools Teachers, Students Will Be Enrolled Indianapolis. Oct. 12 Indiana's 10 percent! war bond snowball — rapidly gathering enough size and momentum to n present this state's share in smothering the Axis with fighting dollars — began spinning today in a new direction, toward hundreds of primary and secondary educational unite. The program embraces a twofold objective: 1. Education of children of all ag-.-s on the value of the 10 percent war bond investment plan to help finance the war. to keep living costs down and to aid in effecting a sensible post war economy based on the American principle of voluntary savings. S'amps and bonds are being sold in most schools not only as a thrift lesson, but to make 10 percent of family income investment easier for those who are untouched by the payroll saving* plan in offices, stores or factories in which they are employed. 2. A campaign to enroll every Indiana school official and teacher in 10 percent Investment In war bonds so that this group can take tory for oppressed and enslaved people everywhere. I like to remember on this significant anniversary the words of a contemporary poet: “Columbus found a world and had no chart. “'Save one that faith deciphered 111 the skies.' “We have the faith; deeds will implement it."

day night. The doctor would wait for his money. Doctors always waited. And the check from the tenants at home was due on the first. She found a letter from Nate Barlow in her box and read it in the subway on the way to work. It was the third letter she had received from him since she had written, but it did not begin with reproaches as the last had done. It was a short letter, hurried but kindly. The Coopers, he wrote, had been transferred to Tuha, and were giving up the house this month. They would write her shortly. In the meantime, he would try to find her other tenants. He described how beautiful the winter was in the red hills and asked what he should do with Reuben while the house was empty. Chloe got out at Times Square automatically. ... Nate waa writing more confidently than he felt about other tenants. Tenants didn't come fast in Wahilla. For a month at least the house would be vacant, and there would be no rent. . . . Nothing more inconvenient could have happened right now. Chloe was to revise this opinion before the day was out. Something more inconvenient could happen, and did. Mr. Samuels came out of the private door with a letter in his hand. She had never seen him look like that. Hie face waa the bursting red of an over-ripe plum, and his beard bristled like quills. She thought at first he was ill. Something in the letter ... ? Something in the letter. Indeed. He ehook it furiously, and looked from Chloe to Miso Jepeon. Mias Jepson's face had taken on the complementary color of Mr. Samuels’. She had turned green, a wan, chalky green. She knew Mr. Samuels better than Chloe did. “Look," shouted Mr. Samuels, “what Gordon, of the Red Fiddle, sends me taek. What is a ’galleryxy,’ he wants to know. And what does 'supine* mean. Miee Cameron? I am asking you. And you. Miss Jepson, it might be a swell idea for you to read letters before you sign them. 1 call this a disgrace. My friend Is laughing at me. and what my other patrons are doing— Well, Miss Cameron, did you do it for a joke?" "No, Mr. Samuels." lifting her voice. "Miss Jepson Insisted that I take It as she dictated." “Let me see that letter," Miss Jepeon yelled hastily. Mr. Samuels handed her the letter and Misa Jepson, glancing over it, registered an involuntary bewilderment, then her native poise returned. “I know," said Miss Jepson, “I ought to have looked the letter over, but It was a full day, and I thought I eould trust her after having thoroughly instructed her." “All right," said Mr. Samuels. "You have been spoken to. Mise Cameron. You are here on trial and you are not eat is factory. We don’t need you after today.” “But Mr. Samuels, I tell you t took it as she gave it.” Chloe was striding behind him. “The letters have always been like that. I’ve always ..." The private door closed behind Mr. Samuels; then Chloe addressed Ui«a JfDKMI! “You've walked away with It; you may do it again. You may even get hold of a girl that's as ignorant as you arc"— , “1 am sorry." said Miss Jepson haughtily, “that you are so post-| humous." (To be continued) fwmakt H Cm

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA »•

Mrs. Litvinoff Gets Solashed b - ■■■■■ 5 fl I* IkbHEBKBH wa jfg BU '-t | n |U Jr . ~ .WW Champagne splatters over Mrs. Ivy Litvinoff. English-born wife of Russia’s ambassador to the U. S„ as she breaks a bottle on the bow of the William l.loyd Garritnn, a new Liberty ship. T. M. Lee, who aided in the christening of the vessel, also was splashed. The launching took place at the California Shipbuilding Corporation yards at Wilmington, Cal. This is a phonephoto.

its place along with other professional men and women, business people and labor In reaching the minimum savings goal asked by the treasury department. Thrift lessons for school children and education on the value of 1*) percent families to America at war will continue through the uchool year. A program of essaywriting. of poster work, blackboard slogans and public speaklug will lie developed to stimulate sales in school war savings booths. The drive to enlist teachers In 10 ' percent savings for the duration will begin at five toucher association conventions In as many Indiana cities on Thursday and Friday, October 2? and 23. Eugene C. Pulliam, state executive chairman <d the war savings staff, will speak at the aw'M’iation meeting in Cadle Tabernacle, Indianapolis: Wray K. Fleming, state administrator, will address the Fort Wayne and South llend meetings, and other speakers will appear at Evansville and Gary. Dr. Clement 1. Malan. state superintendent of public instruction, the seven-man state committee on wartime education and the treasury departmon* war savings staff will coltoboratu in the twofold program. WAY IS PAVED FOR tVontlaued From rage I) not conflict with organUtioii of workers hy the American Federation of l.abor and the CIO nor would It "try to rob" other labor organizations of membetw. "The Vnitcd .Mine Workers are interested principally In organizing the unorganised," Lewis said. FEW DECATUR (Coattnu*<l From rsao 1) government urges that householders fill their bins to capacity. They are expected to tonserve on heat, but can buy all the coal they want, the size of the pile being limited

—— TO YO u—■ Ms tMe< ...NORTHERN INDIANA HOUSEWIVES, FOR YOUR BSO '’ DISTINGUISHED WARTIME SERVICE AT HOME Btcante you are doina important war work and are taking your job 'wSpAs seriously-carrying huge bundles home from market to save tires and gas . . . preparing tin cans for the scrap drive, taking fats to the J wr butcher. .. pakming darning, making over to conserve clothing • helping relief funds and the Red Cross . . and putting a good 3 shan d your allowance into War Bonds and Stamps T faotMit you are preparing more healthful nutritious meals It is your ll* responsibility to keep your family well and strong with good nour ishing food In the travail of war your kitchen range can be as K important as a machine gun *** fleewef you are helping to fight a great war - without the medals or spectacular glonr-but your skill in the science of home making is bunging a new heritage of health, safety and happiness to your etiil- Wi V dren You and your home express the traditions and the memories |Mu> ‘W , ) ifkhAEHaC'*iim that men work, live and bght for. Cj. / Yes. our hats are off to you, and we are glad that our dependable economical service helps you in your many daily tasks Without the reliable assistance of automatic appliances it would he impossible -I. JH /' for you to accomplish so much Keep up the good work 1 *aw i *" X • • • BUY U- •. wa« BONOS ANO STAMPS see C. A. tfrAPLKTVN, UoM Manager

to the thickness of the pocketbook So far no regulations have been placed here on the amount of gas. supplied by the Northern Indiana Service Company, furnished for heat to local residents. Those who have gas burning furnaces have not received any notice tiiat their source of heat will be rationed. There Is no restriction on wood burning or any other kind of fuel, except fuel oil. which Includes kerosene. The latter product Is rationed for any purpose, even down to a bucket of coal oil used in kindling a Are. Mr Hill stated. Explaining fuel oil rationing. Victory. the official government bulletin. seta up the following example: When fueloil users apply for their basic ration they will be asked to state the number <:f gallons of fuel they had in their tanks on October 1. Coupons equivalent to that gallonage will bi' torn from the ration sheet by the local Wai Price and Rationing Board before i the ration Is issued The minimum Inventory deduction will he 250 gal4oi» In all cases where the users' capacity is In excess of that amount, unless the user shows he was unable to fill his tank up to 275 gallons Temperature Variation Considered For any fuel-oil purchases made after October 1, the customer must agree to turn over to his dealer coupons for the amount of the pur chase as soon as the ration is issued. The baste ration takes account i of the average temperature in each coininunlty and is distributed ar-: cording to th« normal variation of "degree days" over the heating season. Delayed Use A*so The plan takes into consideration. however, that this delayed I adjustment might result tu depletion of consumers' supplies during all unusually cold period To meet this situation, an advanced used of coupons numbered for the subsequent period will lie permitted dur-

Ing the last part of a given period Provisions ar* made also for delayed use of the coupons for a certain umber of days. CHURCHILL PAINTS (ConttDwd Fiotn Fax. 1) state of emergency In troubled .Norway hut squads of storm troopers continued to patrol the streets as a precaution against .Norwegian , demonstart lons. Elsewhere in Norway the state of emergency was said still to be in force. In the western desert the royal air force. American air units and the royal Australian air force were active, blowing up a Idg Nazi supply and ammunitoin train headed for the Alamein Hue. attacking Benghazi and an airdrome on Crete. Axis planes attacked Malta heavily after a considerable lull and the Malta defend.-* - * repotted they shot down IS and damaged another 15.

How To Relieve Bronchitis Crcomulsion relieves promptly because it goes tight to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw. tender, inflamed bronchial mucous membranes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the understanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds. Bronchitis HecT YAGER FOK CORONER few. I K E I* I I! I. I (' A N CANDIDATE , FOR CORONER 2 Year Term “You AU Know Thia Candidate” I’ol idvt I

Nazis Guard Russ Prisoners ..MLlHto-. .0 ’W W■ SL ! Another German propaganda picture, this one shows Russian prixI oners of war herded together in a valley, guard. I by a Nazi soldier w ith a machine gun pointed at them. PUBLIC SALE Because I hurt sold my home. 1. the undersigned, will sell at public auc ion tin following personal property at 722 Winchester street, on FRIDAY, October 16, 1942 Sale starts at 6 o'clock p. m. 3 kitchen < hairs, kitchen table another table. 2 heds with springs and matin --. .mother bed. 1 dresner*; .-omforta; 3 library tables; pi.mo, 2 rix kei-, 2 other .hairs; 6'xlO' rug and pad. 2 • sxl2' ruga : with pads hull Iree, stand, studio couch wicker suite; sewing machine, bitd cage, medk-ltte cabinet. Kirch rod*, drapes; blinds; :ep . tr. I floor and tabh lamps fruit jars, sid.-walk cleaner; many other I article* too numerous tn mention TEH.MN CASH MRS. FRANK BUTLER. Owner Ftati. i Eady, ('let k Suntan Bros. Auction, its. NOTICE As I. Bill Coffee, leave for the Army service October 15, and as we plan to continue the operation of our business while I am in the armv, the business will be continued as a CASH and CARRY Effective October 15th. Since we are eliminatini* lhe Delhen Venice we will Im* able to give >ou Lower Prices for usual Quality khmls. We would greath appreciate all accounts to lie paid in full by October L», 1912. COFFEE FOOD SHOP HILI COFFEE JOHN BIIIGHT

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