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The Coshocton Tribune from Coshocton, Ohio • Page 6

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Coshocton, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE COSHOCTON TRIBUNE MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 23, 1933. THE COSHOCTON TRIBUNE A I A AX INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Entered as second class th.p older at Ohio. Published each cvenlhg usifi a morning by The Tribune Company. JOHN W. CUI.LEN COMPANY a i a A i i a i WESTERN OFFICE EASTERN OFFICE South MlchiK.in f01 i New YorK: Chicago General Motors i Member A i Bureau of i a i Selee: List of Ohio Dally Papers.

Associated Ohio Dallies KATE OF SUBSCRIPTION'S In City by Carrier $7.00 Per Wc-t-k 1J By i Week; s.1.00 Weeks. .50 One Year. S4.50 Trie has complied i all provisions a i a Recovery cotio. Full of No 1 ritrvu-f a i letters from readers ein- not be'jjubiisliccl, altlio upim reuucut the writer's name will be omitted. The.

editor the right, to reject, ail i a i (:, of 500 or not. suitable for i a i Manuscripts i not be unless accompanied by pottast. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY Happy the man who can rndurr- with equanimity the highest and the- lowest --Seneca, The Bluck Trial the Lakiu Bluck murder trial today the fate of a man who is a con- URORS in deliberated fessed killer. The. defense has rested its case solely on the contention that the defendant is insane.

The case is typical of American court proceedure --a system that has produced some of the most flagrant, travesties on justice of recent years. The more heinous the crime and convincing the evidence of puilt. the more probable is the set-up of an insanity Two defense alienists and a number of witnesses have been used 10 convince the Jury Bluck is insane. The state countered with three experts who testified his mind is sound. Perplexed jurors must decide on a matter which even the experts cannot settle.

That is. pranting that the experts arc sin- core, and not testifying merely as they arc paid to testify. The whoic system needs changing. The court should appoint an alienist whoso finding would be final. But other changes also arc needed.

Verdicts of not, guilty because of insanity arc becoming too commonplace. a happens in such verdicts? The perpe- rrator of the crime may at worst become a patient in a sanitarium where he is often speedily "cured." as the George Remus case. Or if the institutional authorities decide that an individual of so dangerous tendencies should be restrained for a longer period, he need but arrange 1 when he is advocating reduced wages for all labor the situation on a new complexion and the public wonders if it miglit not be well in this economic emergency to put the brakes on. Wage-earners are not alone interested in top- heavy The bond and stock holders of the corporation arc i a concerned and the consumer of its products must know a i exorbitant salaries ure a tax, on him. Oil" $100.000 salary would not go a divided among thousands of employes but where one is a others grow and among them up those parasites on the body of dividends and bonuses.

Too many corporations were paying million-dollar bonuses to executives during the boom period. President Roosevelt is to be keenly interested in the big salary question, particularly since the disclosures in New York. It is not known what he can do in an a i a way but public opinion would accomplish wonders if properly crystallized. a on Parade Tl-' you're a of everyday cares, "fed up" with business problems and the complexities of NBA, take a few hours late in the afternoon for a trip to the Drive up to Keene, or Lafayette or Warsaw. Or belter still, walk.

The breath-taking splen- dors of a are worth a walk. The loveliest season of all year is now at its height. Every tree, every shrub, is tinted in a phantastic riot of color that beggars description. In one magnificent, i a crescendo, nature rings I down I he a i for the year. Jf you make your trip late in the afternoon, the chances are you'll be favored by one of those brilliant fall sunsets.

The vivid hues of the foliage against the sky's mighty i background of scarlet and gold provide i i i and awe-inspiring spectacle. A week Irom now the coloring will not be so bold. So go iit, once while this brief, beautiful i season is still with us. It's a fine tonic for the soul. Best Radio Programs EVERYBODY HAS HIS TROUBLES THESE DAYS A I NBC a 1 WJZ.

WCKY, WENH. i n-M WI.W Bob i li 4i i I i 7 (0 1 A i WI.W. WJR i i i s-n: I i i AI.M-!-: A A WMAQ. Vl'i 'I'll'" WTAM. WSAI, 8 Of: a i i WJZ, WCKY.

WLS. I ens Kelvin i WHK. WADC. WKRC, CKLY. WON.

I I NR'C i i A A WSM. WTAM. i 'm CHS C'rojibv: WABC. CKI.W. WHAS.

WON, WKRC. WOWO, i TOO WKM. I I 0 I 1 a i WADC, WHAS. (K30 CBH I A WHAS, WKRC. WBBM, WHK, ,0:00 Co a WEAF, WTAM, WBM.

WMAQ. 11-00 CBS a Hle.e r.jtin-r: orchestra; WABC. CKLW. WADC. 11-30 NBC i i i WEAF, WTAM.

WSAI, KYW. 'I I A 0-00 NBC Dick a WJZ WLW Hob sports 0 11 MBC Lowll Thomas; W.I/, WLW WJR. 7 00 NBC AIIK.K i i W.J/. WLW NBC l.um WKAF WTAM WLW WMAQ. H'W) NT'f" I WEAF WTAM 4" CBK i WABC CKLW WHAS WHK.

oVin wnr i WFVF WTAM WSM WLW WMAQ. fl.OO NBC Ben AF WTAM. WSM WMAQ. re- A A WHK CKLW WOWO WG.N WADC WKRC. 1-e's S'like a WTAM WLW.

WMAQ-WSM. i NUwe'ti WABC CKLW W. WKRC 10-45 CBS New World Orchestra; 11:00 NBC WE A WSAI 1 1 3 0 NBC 1'aiil i i i PLGA.SE WILL tOU BORROW FIEW FROM THE TMBVME FILES of Nevreomerstown, died of diphtheria after a week's illness. Funeral services were held at Newark for Mrs. Rachel Gainor, 28, 20 Years Ago Today OCTOBER 23, 1013 It was announced here Umi, Co- I of that city, who had died of double rantecl 22 pneumonia.

She was a former rest- I shocton co. would be dent of Coshocton. Philippine Independence Filipino independence issue evidently is go- to be with us again this winter. i 1 or I Mrs. Emma Banford, 6 9 died at new I'conscs were to become the home of her daughter, Mrs.

E. I on the fourth Monday of S. Gat.mer, Hamilton a November, 1913. four motuhs jllness Max Miser, three-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs.

Robert Mizer of Fresno, died after a short illness of pneumonia. Altho G. L. Cooper of Keene and 10 Years Ago Today OCTOBER 23, 1923 George W. Murphy, 82, a veter- I his sister, Mrs.

Liber of LJbcn, had an of the Civil war, died at the I HE ing to be with us again this winter. Both the samc lncy saw hQme of hig Mrs John Mar houses of the Filipino legislature have turned clown I Ulc 'j tim( in 2 dlS- Newcomerstown, from infinni- the act. and the whole problem thus irs ties. hill" were plan: John W. Hudson, 41, died at his Hawes-Cutting tossed back in the lap of Congress.

The Filipinos objected to the act chiefly because it seemed to promise the form of independence without the substance. What they want is a straightout independence measure, with no strings attached. If we are going to let them go, it would seem that a quick and complete severance would be the logical way to do it. It is more than possible that this is just the kind of measure tlir coming Congress will pass. If so, the at last will redeem a solemn pledge which turv.

years. Residents of the nirig to circulate petitions asking homo on East Main St. from an in- the liquor license commission to re- Jury to his head received Aug. 27 Washington Letter tions and a member of His most impressive features are keen, shrewd eyes and small hands, with thin, sensitive fingers--not chubby, like the rest of Mr. Wiggm.

Prof. Einstein of Princeton Poses move saloons from that district. 15 Years Ago Today OCTOBER 23, 1018 Miss Daniel; 1 lii. while working in a mine owned by the Barnes Coal and Mining Co. I at Conesville.

I BERLIN Communists who had seized the German port of Hamburg clriuph- were ejected by police, according to tcr of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Daniels advices reaching this city. was ignored for more than a quarter ccn- The merchant who sold "Machine Gun" Kelly's wife that machine gun probably thot she wanted it for some perfectly normal, legal, household function--like shooting her husband. Remember, candidates, the law says you cannot give the voters a i of value to induce them to vote for you.

This, of course, doesn't apply to escape across a state border. Thence he cannot be promises. extradited. He is not a criminal; lie is only a sick -----man. The country is divided, roughly, into two classes: The Association of Grand Jurors of New York Those who thot prohibition would solve the liquor county recently proposed that the English system question, and those who think repeal be adopted in this country.

There, when insanity is pleaded to save a guilty person from punishment, the jury may bring in a verdict: "Guilty but insane." News) The latest, style in coiffures will expose young women's necks. Styles In dresses already have ex- Such a verdict leaves the prisoner amenable to Osel i about everything else. the law and can be brot society needs country. when back, and he escapes across a border he There can be no doubt that We read that for three years a. London barber deserves such protection in this nas refused to speak to his only son.

Ah--cutting his own heir. WHY YOU It's Nature's 'Way of Ejecting: a Germs and Secretions I a Tissues in a or Lungs "It isn't, the cough that carries you of. It's the coffin they carry you ofT In." OV 1)K. I or broken-down tissues and of se- cretions that have come from the i cells which line the breathing pas- sages. I Whenever these cells are irritated by any cause, principally by germs Editor Journal ot the American Mecl- wh crl gct the tissue and cause leal Association, and of the Health Do you remember this old medi- inflammation, they respond with the pouring out of a secretion whose chief purpose is removal of cal judge? There's truth in it.

to Uj( crm the extent that a cough is not in itself a disease. A cough is a a symptom of changes The cough serves the double purpose of removing the secretion and Exorbitant Salaries RDINARILY the smallest wage earner would resent government interference with the business policy of paying high salaries to officials of large corporations and to movie stars. The masses have long looked upon those fabulous salaries as poals to which they might aspire and some day attain. Bui. wher.

a groat industry totters under an in- i a salary load and when the head of a bank is given a S32.000-a-ycnr increase at time parts followers. "An enemy could cripple us without declaring war." says a Navy man. Probably by offering tis the Filipinos ever decide what they want, we believe Uncle Sam should give It to them. taken place, in the tissues of nose, of some of the germs at throat or lungs. f) 1P amc time.

It is for this rea- Tlie chief purpose of the cough son a the public health rhyme was up each cough and sneeze-If you don't, you'll spread is to get some undesirabli stance out of breathing passages. This undesirable substance may be feather, a fishbone, or chicken bone that you might have swallowed. But in vast majority of cases it is a collection of dust disease." All sorts of soothing syrups have been promoted for relief of coughs. The a i i a bark often is wrecked by the a i barking. i Greatness, of is one pan.

a i i and nine He Writes Plays a a o. O. Mclntyre 1 a i 6 is (ninoim i in i .12 i a cause. i i 11 I IS i i a i I'D a i Answi-i- to Previous Puzzle JClKENiBjAjClKlEiR i NEW YORK. On.

2'. i IJi: modern Pepys: i and Krei! a ire on a to a i i story a to ploi a. 1 go i a barque for London. So to ilnddlc lightness and diuih. The Ifttc Earl at my task but Die pobtmaa IcU.

an Derr niynerj: i bepan a talc copy of Constance witi; i i i "the," A biogniphy. tr-r he had it i hr workerl acic." and I could 1 pin it down. In the a some motion picture called i l't-11 Mhe West. Anc. tliem bemn ovi.r-e;;;;oited in-; Marleiic Deilricii would But they paid i mind.

10 the Bre'. oori to rcune O. Iricnd. RIIC mine, i Ivloorc. To dinner al The Park A i i with Ethc-l Roche and my i anci from there, oven to mminr, characters r.s lie wen! a i i i u.v.u;h:er i misunderstood A 1 a of the let th.i.se like a "Kvery year cukicr and colder." lie Bagatelles: Peter B.

Kyne lives oil the top lloor of the tallest a a mem. house on the tallest hill in Han Ffiinciseo Don Clarke, who iiM-d to be a a i to ride on street i now all the way flyin't; from the to New York Hamish and Amiee are nn lour of I i a for six months James Rurrett. the city crack runner of i i of Colorado The late Mian P. Howard and Roscoe. Peacock.

Ho wr.s an in 0 -If) Tfi as an -11 To i elbow. i 26 I i of work. -14 i note 27 Accessory. -H Also. 30 Second "1 Kvcry.

r2 Tall for 34 Dorter i ne.pullod, 36 Flower .17 You nnrt me. i i i r. a i To piece -1(. To a -17 Hollows. -I! 1 Beer.

I. arse. r.l a i a is one of worlrl- a ir.otl- cm i i To press. I Dormice. I I "StranRc nge Is Ins a plays.

1.1 a i 5 At one i he as a 17 Irish tribal society. I Frozen water. 19 Form of "no." 21 Opposite ot barl. 23 24 flower. 27 To adduce.

25 person. 31 I i ,13 a i i i i to i i bonr. (lower. -11 Posts as 4rt a valley. I a notice, r.l a i note.

".1 a i nf surprise. Til To accomplish WASHINGTON, Oct. of people lost their jobs during the depression. Among them was Albert H. Wiggin, former chairman of the $2.500,000,000 Chase National Bank and prize prince of international finance.

The Rockefellers obtained stock control of Chase National in 1931, after which their Winthrop W. Al- cirich became the dominant boss and Wiggin's days obviously were numbered. Wiggiii didn't like it much. He went out as chairman last January and Aldrich succeeded him. The difference between Mr.

Wiggin's case and that of most other folks -who lost their jobs was that Mr. Wiggin was paid $1,000.000 by the banlt during the depression and retired on a pension of $100,000 a year. He still was one of the world's smartest bankers. The Rockefellers wanted to retain, his good will and felt they might need his services" in the future. Jolly Old Soul i Wiggin, answering Ferdinand Pecora's questions before the Senate i banking committee, was remark- i ably frank and honest about every! thing except the question of who i actually had run.

the bank since 1930. He never did admit that it was Aldrich. He didn't want to admit it. i Tills behemoth of banking dur- i ing boom days is a jolly old soul. i He is fat and at the age of 62 his shoulders are rounded as if from many years of conferences.

Alternately he giggled, chortled, or beetled his brows. He has gray hair and a moustache, large jowls, hair parted in the middle. Kts profile makes you doubt the popular theory that young men I with receding chins never get very far in this world. (Wiggin was a minister's son who became a bank. clerk and eventually a director of dozens of our very largest corpora- A Big- lAugh Then Poor Mr.

Wiggin's last appearance before a Senate committee had found him amused, by La Follette's theories of economic planning, now so popular. La Follette finally asked him if he thot the capacity for human suffering was unlimited. Mr. Wiggin laughed very heartily then--as if it were a trick question or perhaps just in a spirit of good, clean fun. But he agreed that he did think that which was before Mr.

Wiggin went on the bread line. In passing, it might be mentioned that Mr. Wiggin, while boosting his own salary, was urging lower wages for labor. Utah Looks Dry Secretary of Agriculture Wallace; whose press conferences usually are as well attended as Roosevelt's and General Johnson's, talks to correspondents with his feet perched on his desk. His shoes always glisten with polish.

Utah may be the first state to vote against repeal. Her Mormon Church, always powerful, has announced vehement opposition. The election is Nov. 7, when five other states vote. Utah's vote, however, can't delay repeal.

Ten men now are in the death house at the District of Columbia jail, awaiting electrocution for murder. Nine are colored. Executions here in the last 14 years total only 21. Orders have been issued forbidding subordinate officials' contact with representatives of Soviet Russia. Recognition seems closer than ever and Roosevelt doesn't want any preliminaries gummed up.

Farm Credit Administrator Morgenthati is the official dealer with Russia. On Sunday boat trips down the Potomac, the entire Roosevelt party stands at salute as it passes George Washington's tomb at Mt. Vcrnon, The ceremony is omitted on the way back. Take a good look at Princeton's new faculty member, for it may not be soon that you will see his likeness again. After dodging cameramen on his arrival in Ne-w York and then again at Princeton.

Professor Einstein consented to pose this once as he sat at his desk on bis first day in his new Princeton offices. It's his first posed photo since arriving in country. POMONA GRANGE MEETS ON EVENING OF DEC. 7 "Peace" Will Be Subject for Discussion at Meeting- SEASONABLE OFFERS at reasonable prices are listed every day lu the Classified Section. A night meeting of the Pomona grange will be held at Franklin grange hall Thursday, Dec.

7. "Peace" will be the topic for discussion during the lecture hour, according to Mrs. C. H. Gamertsfelder, county lecturer.

A class of 66 members, the largest ever initiated at a Pomona grange meeting in this county, was accepted at the meeting at Oak Grove grange hall last week. The ceremony of initiation was conducted by the Oak Grove degree team. I SELL IT NOW! You can phone I CUusslIled Ad to 205, the book were once page boys together in the my a I'. S. Senate Jas.

A Flaherty. i rare, prunnnem 1C. of always carries volume of Shakespeare In his The Steward Edward in the pocket Christie. Whites' goes into the bacj: to the apartment at the where A had vounci- ed up fin amazing prcf.udigitat.eur to entertain at a party his son Clyde. Home late and reading Abeirrt" until 4 a.

ni Th elder Lindbergh preriirt'nns. for dining room and squats on the i he jeered, have all come when hungry Mrs. Margaret Vanderbilt. Amory will not 'huve i Percy Crosby one of the i gifted cartoonists who has no idea Persona! nomination for most. i i of i librriti.sts Mn.s;, liiiK.s a once being measured by dressmakers.

No fitee. no wearec! Ted Cook, who salvages as much fun out of Hollywood's" human comedy as Wilson did, tells each morning. familiar i Boyville lu- merely puts i 'ollowing a public speech. The late py" 1:1 the iir.st panel as a vtile and Simeon Ford MIX! Job lledges ti.sed Kini-'-heri and debor.ii ire aficr- what his. creation.

"Stuppy. will io dinner speakers are not without of the very British film director, until he sith at the board tlieir pnysicai reactions. such who a six months in Hollywood, i an old-stager as irvin Cobb is lim! stopped proceedings on the set with: i "This bedroom scene, old dears, is' lousy, definitely lousy." the lad just naturally capers. That to go, to bed with headaches a in ticking off list of editorial! is the why of the rich spontariiety waxd. Rupert Hugr.es hands turn Jobs for a magazine piece today I i of Crosby's work.

as cold as ice. Recently Florence find a newspapers and two! i Wagner hands with i magazines on which I worked a Many short story writers employ him a an especially brilliant ef- now extinct. Just, the blight of the formula in i out fort and shivered at, his icy grip. black Mc.lntyres. leaving riestruc- their Plotting ahead with She inquired he always got coki i tkm in their a Tliese soothing syrups, including those formed in the mouth by sucking on cough drops, have the advantage of soothing.

You must understand, however, that none of them really will cure your cough. The only thing that will cure a cough is reaction by your body to the germs, lessening the inflamma- lion and stopping the pouring out of irritating substances. Sometimes the irritation of the germs, particularly in the back of the rios'e or in the a brings about a sudden swelling; and inflammation of the adenoids and the tonsils. The enlarged and inflammcd adenoids cause the throat to become dry and cause the dropping of sc- cretion from the back of the nose into the throat. This results in most instances in an almost constant cough, which can be con- trolled only by removal of the in- fected and swollen tissues.

The operation for the removal of adenoids is very simple, requir- ing but brief time, and it is prac- tically without danger when done by a competent doctor. i Another way you can control a 1 cough temporarily is to take seda- itvcs of various types which lessen the threshold of irritability of the nervous system, so that coughing is not so frequent. Under these circumstances, however, you should remember again that the real cause the cough is not being reached. I Sedatives should not be used perm a but. only long enough to permit, sufficient rest for the swell, inK to subside and for proper at- i to causative condition, THIS CURIOUS WORLD FH HOOKS ARE USED AS By THE NATIVES OF ISLANDS OFF THE ALASKAN Africa.

DOES NOT FLAP ITS BUT 12. FEET IN ON TALL-CUT IN THE SELKIRK MOUMTAINS, OF CANADA THE SNOW CAPS LAST ALL lEWSFAPESr lEWSFAPESr.

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About The Coshocton Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
94,135
Years Available:
1862-1945