Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 40, Number 245, Decatur, Adams County, 16 October 1942 — Page 5

gfIAY, OCTOBER 16, 1942.

W Executed Saboteurs Lie in Potter’s Field

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, ~w ... W *«»<« ’• • V x »’ » ~t.*;g J , ' . • S WMHtbe gravel of five of the six Nazi saboteurs executed at the Washington district jail last Uy are in a potter's field at Blue Plains, Va. Neither friends nor relatives claimed this bodies. The graves nrc marked by numbers.

|ttk Caribbean [owbtedßyU.S. MW fortress In Lea Thon A Year r: — Ssiai kfcfi's Antigua. Oct. !<• li-pi- 'Hwwys a Huie bit of AtnerMiddle Os the ('alible in It's H MW* more than a year since lb* Sn ted States start..! baUdtßg a tea. a» Saint John's. on fte British b Bat ths Am ■ •*n <>')' >* "’in (iota raw. Dp'.iiplete w ith all the ssevraMdKbf home. Ths"ttK B "’ ~llly '“ 4 * trul| K

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to* CHAP l-K SIXTEEN "“Of ecEhe. since no one is to continue Ito Chloe said. L “Gsf faaftrs t,” he reminded her. j “Shell foi r<' it," Chloe king “|Mfcia.iy when the karns you write,Fan*l that one of the udo n y I He IsaiKd "1 like your saying she the name. No aicMaiaSror. Torclie being down ng the family trinket* and hie * ■N—M—Meo grimly humorous not tabs see I'm just gifting didn't •ewe te’ljScai it'll back, whether 1 was alive er She iMBd at him speculatively. the family pride, all hMmB-F: le. my child. And it th i* I*— have knew They Mid to grief, that I'd run she starve As a matleft h< |MMh| she had faith in me. that. She had 'aken •■w M after my parents died. had college as , May, had » with war taken and died f He aasfti»d not to want to speak W thate'lfchine sa.d softly, "the pawned wen- hers?’’ ring. She thought Mkwmß wealthy when she died. cverything ‘Everything’ and what thousand dollars. I New my my b00k.... The ring e r s •Übijfc n> why you didn't want to—to •hospital,” she said. TjtKMt have them trace me by **■— you meant to make a living I BWRMng he was. she thought. jBBMfcM with all that she had 'fcpMßjPut he had not expected to by writing, not at first 'Ha—a—ant to find some kindred kin l " pwtry’” she —dhan editorship or something M—B My grandmother had vi•i—)«*v founding a magaime T'amafcaem. a long time ago. If nse then that I'd be able to gtvei ®p. to want to die rather H-aaSittb.s : i'ljl of people you srd i Gar Wjf he,rd ot ftnl out th *t I “Taaw ill." is i Chloe. “You another friend.” he said l^n*—iy. "He forwards my Im4 Hh knows m> adores* and the •»Mto Ip rite under. Nothing else like the grave for secrecy ‘teids lay note to you wa* another MKite him.** ftjglte* T-ur note lme *a.! _ <li*appoir.’ment, he had much in " Just 1 had pawned were L[ aver you could redeem

i fortress and a training cerfter. But . it's a monument to the American ‘ way of living. Yankee soldiers arc provided with a modern lighting plant, an electric laundry, a big hospital, paved street**. There even are moving pictures, a chapel and — something new to Saint John's- running water. There’s no reason for the American soldier not to feel right at home. He can play tennis, baseball or handball Dances are held several times a week. English girls from island families are brought to th* ' parties in army cars. Even the food la American, brought from back home and prepared the way the boys are used to lit.

them. If not. I asked you to destroy ■ the pawn tickets. The ring I hadn't pawned I left to you, too—to pay aa far as it would for all you had done. When the ring comes back,! it’s still yours. All of it is yours, Chloe—when it comes bsck.” "And this is mine, too," said Chloe, pointing to bis script. "When it comes back.” he added "Every time it comes back. Pretty | soon you'll get tired." “You don’t know me," Mid Chloe.! But she didn’t mention her own | work to him. Not in the presence of Dctfrt-Born. “No, I don't know you entirely, Chloe. But there's plenty I do know. For instance, you haven't always lived in 12-a, and guna job-hunting. Your life has been pleasant and sheltered. I can tell that just by looking at you.” “Yes. there arc patches where the skin’s still thin.” "And you’re determined and proud. You can't bear ths thought of defeat.” "You're a wix,” she smiled. “And going back to where it's pleasant and sheltered would incus defeat, wouldn’t it?" She nodded. Going back and marrying Nate would be defeat, of course. Now probably the author of Drtrrt Bom would ask her what she was trying to do here, since his gift* of penetration didn't go that far. Instead, he Mid, “You’ll never go back now. And there'll be no defeat for you. Because .. Because, he was thinking, her suecess would hang on his. And there would be no defeat for him. He felt that strongly tonight. Perhaps it was because of the light in this giri's eyes. That strange shining when he had read his poems. She knew poetry. She could feel. Here, with nothing ahead, so far as the eye could see, their fundr melting fast, both of them jobless. I and he too weak even to look for work without putting himself to bed —be felt a portent of success, such as he had not felt since he first came to New York. He Mid after a moment, “You know Rann Stutgia. How does that happen?” She wondered how he knew, then remembered ho had been present the night Sturgis called up about his I know him." she said. "Do you?" “After a fashion. The Sturgises were friends of my grandmother. ?he Used tn eome to New York for the opera age* ago and visit in their borne. Rann's father is dead now. but I remember when he visited t Charleston and how glad she was to. see him. She Mid I must took Rann ! up if ever t came on. I remember Rann, too He came with his father ( It must have been sixteen years ago. I wa* about eight. “And you haven’t looked him up •I doubt if he remember* me And I'm not one to took people up If he had been a writer, or an editor I —or if 1 had been a success. . . . Don't mention me to him. please, aor anything I've told you." “No, if youd rather I didst “I’m wot in need of an attorney . said Hugh. J , * *** ■ ■ * ■ *— mi* mis ■ ■■ •»

But it took hard labor, and plenty of it, to build ihfr American base. Hundreds of Islanders found work at the base, either aw skilled mechanics or as laborers. And their old English customs are gradually being . hanged to new American customs. They are chewing gum. eating! candy bars, and ice cream, swigg-l Ing soft drinks, and salting their talk with American «l>iig. As one colonel remaiked. before the 9-year lease with Britain Is up. the Antiguans will be as American in manner as anybody iu the United States. — ..<> .....— Second In Fishing Licenses Columbus. (>. — tl'Pl Ohio ranked second In the number of fishing Bcenaes sold in 1941, the Sts'* Con-

• Next day Chloe got from Hugh a ' list of publishers to whom betert- \ Bum had gone. Odd that he had omitted to send it to her favorite ' house, the one with whom the Jour- ■ not was now reposing, the Journal I and her highest hope. But she took I his script there, first. “I am Chloe Cameron, agent for ' Hugh Richards." It sounded well, though the reccpI tionist had certainly never heard of ! cither of them. I A Mr. lien wood talked with her. , He would be glad, he said, to read I Mr. Richards’ book, though they were publishing very little poetry. And while Miss Cameron was there she might take her own book, the very amusing Journal of a Jaek Babbit. They had been interested in reading it and in seeing its clever illustrations, but their list of children's books was already too long. So Chloe came out as laden a* she went in, and walked over U» the Public Library where she sat under the right-hand stone lion at its wide entrance. Her thoughts turned to | Rann Sturgis and their historic > iluncheon. . . . She had been lonely then. That is, she had fell lonely after mueling and parting with him. Now she was | lonely no longer. She had Hugh. j She was going to marry Hugh, j They had discussed it fully be- ' fore she left that morning. He had looked tired and ill the night before, I after reading hi* poem* to her, I after their tong talk. She had made ' him go to bed. keeping his book beside her. In the morning they had had breakfast together, and he had said that he knew — somehow he knew -that the mad wa* going to i turn, and that wh« n it did. when ho | could take care of her, they were going to be married. I “When the mad turn*"—and his ; dark eye* seemed to see that turning of the road—"we are going to take it together, up to the heights, . aren't we. Chloe?" A poet’s love word*. A poet's plaa. “Yes!" she had Mid. a warmth in her heart, as if a lamp had been lit there. “I couldn’t go on without you," he Mid. And he had taken her in hi* arms and kissed her- -gently—for all the fire she had felt in him, for all the savage irony of hi* poems. He was more tender, gentler than even Nate had been when he kissed her —quiet, sensible Nate.... Yes, one day they would go hand-in-hand—-but now they mint earn a liveli- ' hood. . . e I I might ask Rann Sturgis for a 'job. she thought Wonder if he's ready to talk about the children's ‘ program yet. I might get that. -.-If II could talk myself up enough. I'd tell him I'm the Jack Rabbit Girl mjself, and pretty good, if you ask . me. At long last an idea had come to ! her—a strange, a daring ideal Suddenly she got up snd climbed . ' the library steps to a telephone. (To be continued 1 ewto s* ss»■*••« toi a»»»«w: I PionSawS to UM* twtuif StoWto* to*

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. DECATUR. INDIANA

Axis Criminals 01 War To Be Tried Six Exiled Nations To Try Thousands London. Oct. 16 — (UP! — Six Allied governments In exile are ready to put thousands of Axis war criminals on trial for their lives before an international court as soon as the war ends. Long lists of Axis and Axis-dominated men have been compiled by the governments of Norway, Jugoslavia. Holland. Belgium. Czechoslovakia and Poland. Norway, which already has revised its criminal laws to invoke the death penalty for the first time in history, names the traitor Vldkun Quisling as Its number one enemy. The Norwegian list of war criminals contains more than 1.000 names. And >h« evidence against the accused persons is so detailed that it fills a special safe. The top enemy on Jugoslavia's list of thousands is German General Fritz Zimmerman. Zimmerman is charged with ordering the massacre of every man and boy in a Jugoslavian town last year. Home 3.600 persons were executed! In batches of 50. , Also on the war criminal list is Hungarian general ’Feran Nojor charged with ordering the killing of every Serb in the village of Nov I*sad. o HOUSE, SENATE (Continue/, From rags 1) committee sharply denounces the administration's farm labor policies. And It says that maybe a few million hungry stomachs will ■awaken the people to a better appreciation of the farmers and their jobs. RED CROSS CHAPTER (Contlnusd Psum rags l) chapter were: R E Glendenning. Mrs. J H. Heller. .Mrs Will Bow ers, Mrs. Faye Smith-Knapp. Mrs. It. D. Myers. Mrs. Harve Shroll. Miss Annie Winnes. Present also were: Tilman Gehrig adjutant of the Citisens Defense Corps: Robert Zwlck. lay deputy chief of emergency medical serration Division has revealed. Michigan came first with 773.22 H licenses Issued and Ohio's total was 714.342. ■' vfp/3ftp ■ ’■ « (Wwv* I ■ I ’’ wl? \ Mots milk n waded «• bale wi» the' war. Cavernmeat goals demand Isstrs «ulk from •»•»» <,w ■" »«w bard. Sea ua for detail, of Bia Purina Davy C»<to PUn...rtU blip y«Uj do your rot 1 1 BIG CALVES I ’.I Sat'otdk -on, U( iAif -A ■ of tah Startvaa SF®ORg I H reylaeoa 40 gal, H ■el m.lk feed ’dgaaffifr I I PURIHA (AU STABTEMA | Stiefel Grain Co. Lot ws Grind and Mix your Gram. N- First IL — Phons 234

services; Dr. James Burk, city' health officer. The matter was presented by Bob Shraluka, deputy county defense director, acting for director Vincent J Bormann. The executive committee will name a committee to draw up the agreement and authorize an inventory of the available shelters, equipment, etc., needed. TO HONOR NURSES (Continued From rags I) was forced to resign from the' ciaae. because of illness in her I family. The women take SO hours of training and then will donate 150 hours a year as nurses aides at the hospital, or more in time of emergency. o GERMANS MAKE (Continued From Fags 1) to withdraw at .Murmansk On the central and northern fronts .Berlin says Nazi planes raided Soviet rear communiiaHons. And it claims the annihilation of a Russian force which had

Sorg’s Meat Market FRESH Ik SMOKED MEATS — P(>( I.TKY — HSU FKEE UEl.h EHI FKI ITS A VEGETABLES FROZEN FOOD LOC KERS OPEN SUNDAY MORNING BEEF « CHOICE l>oKk Cr» BOIL, lh *3® (HI CK ROAST, lb CHOPS, lb 3><* FRESH CASING HOI ND BONE PORK SAUSAGE, tb._ SWISS STEAK, lb 3*® LIVER, lb Dates, fresh Calif., th. .... 39c FRESH ’*• ( ’ racl ‘ erM ’ ,h - ,M ’ X -- ,7c Figs, fresh Calif., pkg 20c FORK STEAK, lb. Apples. Special « ths. 25c Prunes, tresh Calif., lb. IHc torn Meal -3 lb». 13c Cranberries, fresh, lb. 23c Fnegu Graham tracker- 2 th-. 2.»c Seaside Lima Beans, lb. __ I#c zxv’’6J , rvi>u l>:»4 Bars. ( ocoanut Bars Bed Beans in bulk 2 lbs. !*♦<■ DlSIhKh I IFII nr Ginger Snaps, lb. 20c Pillsbury Pancake and Buck- —— Deerwond Wax nr Green wheat Flour, new pack. pktf. 25c TENDER - LEAN 9 Beans 2 small cans 25c Mince Meat 2 pkfts. 25c ( I |’|{ STEAK, lb. J>VV (.unpowder Imperial Tea. Pumpkin Pie Spice 15c pkx- — Milnut or Richwhip Milk SMOKED 9 a Brazilian Tea. pkR. 25c < ‘ Turnips, large bunch 10c 1 li,x >•*»•> ’ Rent a Frozen F<s»d Locker now. Acorn Scunj-h. U.I .nd Head COTTAGE CHEESE ... 2 lbs. 25c S'”’ 4 .’l"'*™ ideduce, ( elery. Carrots, etc. I>ZII a IM> 4 vrLl here. (ut and wrapped to your Sweet Potato??*, lb. 5c l>OL()(i.\.\ - FRANKS* II). 18c order. For you -z ■my!' tt IIRM 1 * 1 ejypc . Z The WORLD is for you to examine, as the United Press, is the fascination of life you will, in this newspaper. Turn the globe itself. All around the world men and wowith your finger tips as you turn these men of the United Press are stationed, pages. Pause when you like for leisurely trained to make sense of the hurly-burly, reading. In these columns, served by the alert to speed the news to you with accurigorously trained observers and writers of rate, impartial detail in DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT The minute it happen*, the U.TELETYPE brings the news to you.

' been encircled below Novorowiak | on (he Black Bea coaxt. However, RuiMian dixpatcim nay j th»-lr force* recaptured aome im- [ portant hili* in the NovoroaxHk ' area. —.a — Nimitz Praises UP News From Solomons Guadalcanal Uland. Oct. 16 (UPI When it cornea to reporting the newa from the Solomona. th,United Preaa atanda are high witn | admiral Nimett When the Pacific ; < fleet coinmand-r vialt.nl Guadalcanal. he pralaed the accuracy of United Pres, Jiepaichea from the Solomon*. And ho added: “I heard a gtxMl many people In Pearl Harbor comment favorably on them ' Admiral Nimetz «pe< ifiraliy Praia,*,! the job done by United j Preex correwpo'ident Robert U Mil-1 ler. who covered the first six week <»f the Solomon., battle. H<- -aid one marine officer uaed to look for United I’rea* dlapa’.-hea daily In Honolulu even through he had ac-<-oaa to official dlapatche*. Nimitz •aid the officer liked the detail of 1 .Mlllc.r'a diapatche-

Rhineland Is Again Blasted By British Some 300 Bombers In Industrial Area Raid - 1 London. Oct It— (UP* —Germany'* Rhineland -including Cologne baa received another vlafr j from some 300 Brltiah bombers. Th,- air miniatry *aya is bomb I 1 era were lo»t in the lateat raid on . the industrial area. Beilin tried to minimize the, attack, claiming the raider* dropp- .-,! bomba it random and m ore<l | little damage. However, th,-,-nemy gave indirect confirmation! that It wax a heavy attack by I claiming 21 plunes were »hot | down. Two low flying German plane* i , raided Kngiand by daylight thlmorning They machine-gunned a I i -oiiHiea-t coast town But liter, I are no reports yet on damage or I ' < asiialties 1 Cologne, wlih-ii was among last ‘ night's target* of the RAF. is no

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•Hanger to British bomb*. Tn fact, the big industrial city was the target of hietory * mo*t d»va«tating air attack latrt May 30th — Decoration day. Some 12 hundred and 5d British bomber* at that time blasted the elty with 1.000 tons of Itomb*. They did such a thorough job that even the Germans admitted that Cologne never i would be the same again. DHS Seniors Inspect New Democrat Teletype Forty member* of the senior | class of the Ibcatttr junior senior I high school formed the first delega- | tion of visitor* at the Daily DemoI crat today to Inspect the modern, new teletype, Inwtalled this week. ' Principal W. Guy Brown was in I charge of the group.

COLDS A A TAI'.I.KTH CO! <III tutors tr, --Hnb-M,. I Ism", a HeaSerfal l.iaimrat.