Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 47, Number 111, Decatur, Adams County, 11 May 1949 — Page 7
m ay it. 1949
BOveb Jfale "Bs Arc Told ,B P nt Os New jt I Bank Speoks BBolis. May 11 “ tl P) ~ X B. over but -« ■ of 'be National City hBBw York told the Indi?Wßr< association today. influences tn lo'i ' heir f(, "' e BB > ago." Howard C. H : ,i ill speech prepared a t opening lunchlllße IHA's annual convenat "lay Ilßskiitinir every Tuesand Sunday ■ j |Bl invert Sunday aftergß, to four.— SunSet.
Ili 1 11 1 1 ' T ■heating for your home |B|| or Come in for an Estimate B* WARM AIR RADIANT PANEL B* HOT WATER RADIANT PANEL | Installed In Floor Or Ceiling ■i HOT WATER HEATING H Convectors or Baseboards Bi WARM AIR HEATING g Gravity or Forced Air ■Haugk Heating & Appliances I Engineers & Installers Rhone - Decatur 49 - Ossian 186
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seem to be for the worse,” said Sheperd, “but in other ways it is surely for the better. During the boom many things were wrong. Prices were out cf sight and everyone whose income lagged suffered from inflation . .. ‘‘Business men also .had their troubles during the boom,” Sheperd pointed out. "When we feel like complaining we might stop to think that conditions are turning better ... the opportunity is here to get the production machine tightened up, to do business in a more orderly way, and to get a better day's work for today’s high pay.” The bank president said that inflation “always brings illusions, but it is no real benefit to live under illusions ... the general welfare is not going to be hurt by a return of competition which will make people work harder. For the result will be that goods will be turned out better and cheaper, and that is the way this country has grown.”
Fourth Member Os Family Is Suicide Scion Os Brewery Family Found Dead St. Louis, May 11—(UP)— Charles E. Lemp, 77, was the fourth member of the famous Lemp brewing family to die by suicide, authorities said today. Lemp was found dead yesterday in a bedroom of the ancient family mansion on St. Louis' south side. The neighborhood once was a fashionable residential area but has become an Industrial district in recent years. A .38 caliber revolver lay on Lemp’s chest. He had shot himself in the head. A note read: "In case I am found dead, blame no one but ire.” Lemp’s father, William J. Lemp, Sr., shot himself to death at the home in 1904. Another soi, William J. Lemp, Jr., shot lumieif fattlly ;:.i the same house in 1922. A daughter later committed suicide at her home in west St. Louis. The family established tin brewery in ’,’4o and the business grew to : at tonal stature by the turn of the cc-tury. The firm n'-ver recovered from the impact of prohibition, however. Lemp is survived by a brother and a sister, Edwin A. Lemp of St. Louis and Mrs. Hilda Lemp Pabst of Milwaukee. Happy Hustlers The Happy Hustlers 4-H meet-1 ing was held at the Washington} township community building re-} cently. Myona Hicks presided. The pledges were led by Norma Johnson and Ardola Parrish. A safety lesson was then given by Phyllis Singleton and Connie Strickler, after which group singing was led | by Jacqueline Stauffer. Roll call} was answered with a favorite flow-. er. 4 A demonstration was later giv-} en by Mary Ellen Schnepp on bak-} ing, and Mrs. Elton Corson instruct-, ed the girls on baking. Project’ classes were conducted. Delicious refreshments were later served by Karen Reed, Kay Ann Witte and Linda McKean. Twenty six members were present. Every 1,114,009 gallons of water from Moses Lake, Ayaeh., contains one tone of magnesium. *< *
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
RUTLEDGE MURDER (Com. rrom Page One) changed whispered remarks. The state charges that Rutledge followed HattWuU here from St. Louis and killed him because Hattman had seduced Rutledge's wife. The courtroom was packed again, mostly with women, nearly an hour before the session began. Latecomers waited outside the courtroom for'a chance to get seats. The prosecution began its de-
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scription af'er district judge J. E. Heiserman overruled a state request to let the jury see the room. The room, number 729 in the Cedar Rapids hotel, has been reconditioned since the killing and Heiserman held that no evidence would be presented in having the jury visit it. However, Heiserman permitted the state to introduce 15 photographs showing Hattman’s body sprawled on the bed, his arms locked in rigor mortis behind his
back and the walls spattered with his blood. The victim’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. John C. Hattman of Coraopolis, Pa., averted their eyes and wept as their son’s bloodstained clothit g was laid before the jury. Hattman patted his wife’s hand. The defense had objected to introduction of the photos and the clothing as prejudicial and serving no useful purpose. Coronor Robert Brosh used the pictures to show where Hattman
was wounded once at the hairline, twice above.the eye and once deep in the chest. The latter wound caused nis death. LADY CHECK (Cont. From Page Ou. I wrote four checks in Lebanon for about $209 in cash and merchandise. Last week, two checks were cashed in Anderson for SIOO, she said. Miss Traylor, who also said she used the name Marjorie Gosline,
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said she was a Northwestern unh versity graduate. She said her father was a history professor in a midwestern university. Police said she had no criminal . recoi d. But the FBI, which has no women agents bitded when she was brought to Indianapolis for questioning, that charges of impersonating a federal officer might be filed against her. Trade in a Good T <wn — Decatur
