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Marysville Journal-Tribune from Marysville, Ohio • Page 1

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H. Bnrtipu tvyorri' Ohio State Mufcum and High Sin. UNITED PRESS BEftVICB International mnstrated New THE EVENING TRIBUNE VOL. XLI, NO. 153 MARYSVILLE, OHIO, SATURDAY, MARCH 25, 1939 By Carrier, a Week WEATHERs Sliowerj (anight And Snnduy TEN WARDEN TWENTY-TWO CHARGES LISTED IN COMPLAINT BY SHERWOOD; WOODARD PLANNING TO FIGHT At 77 She'll Wed Ninth Husband WELFARE DIRECTOR ASKS REMOVAL OF OHIO PENITENTIARY WARDEN EFFECTIVE AS OF APRIL 1 COLUMBUS, March of James C.

Woodard as of Ohio Penitentiary, a position he has held lor four years, wad demanded in formal charges sent to the state Civil Service Commission jtoday by State Welfare Director Charles L. Woodard! was nuspended Sherwood on March 2nd and William F. Amrlne, state superintendent of corrections, was appointed acting war- The removal order cited 22 specific charges against Woodard in addition) to general charges of incom- pctency, inefficiency, Insubordination, neglect of duty, failure of good behaviar, andlother acts of misfeasance, malfeasance, and nonfeasance in office. The removal order is effective April 1st when Wcodard's 30-day suspension period ends. Woodard, has Indicated previously -that go to court to oppose ODD MISHAP FATAL ZANESVtLLE, March Charles MqCoy, 70, died yesterday of burns suffered in an odd manner while plowing on his farm near McConnelsville.

McCoy lighted his pipe and accidentally set fire to brush in the field. He was then burned In trying to.stamp out the blaze. SPANISH WAR NEARINGEND; TERMS GIVEN HOSTILITIES MAY END AT ANY i LEADERS MAY ESCAPE FROM SPAIN. HENDAYE, French-Spanlsh Frontier, March Nationalist leaders are awaiting a reply from the Republican defense cotmcll on proposals for an immediate end of the civil war and hostilities may cease at any time, dispatches to the frontier said today. It was indicated strongly in dispatches passed by the Nationalist and Republican censors that the licans a "reasonable time" to permit any Republican leaders who desired, to leave Madrid and seek any removal charges.

Specific charges against the warden Included: 1. Failure to properly direct and co-operate with subordinate officers within the penitentiary. 2. Failure to instruct, train and properly direct the guard force at tho penitentiary, "particularly in the use of firearms nhd current po- fllce methods." 3. Failure to instruct and train guards in actions In Case of riot or disturbance.

4. Failure to Instruct guards as to availability of arms and ammunition in case of riot and disturbance. 5. Failure, to instruct guards as to duties and actions in case of fire. 6.

Failure to keeo an adequate and useable store, of firearms and ammunition for riot of disturbance. 7. Causing firearms'and ammuni- Burgos and reached a peace agree- lien to be stored 'in an unsuitable me nt with the Nationalists. nnd unsafe place. 8.

Failure to "continue practice of begregatlon of known perverts and moral degenerates." 9. Failure to (continue practice of segregation ofc "known' syphilitics" nnd permitting them to intermingle with (other JAPS CONSIDER MILITARY PACT WITH GERMANY CHARGES FILED Two Spelling Bee" Champs Crowned DISCUSSIONS RE-1 PORTED AND CABINET MAT SPLIT OVER THE QUESTION. Not Candidate, Says Vandenberg Mrs. Leonora Dnncanaon William Stycr Nationalists had given the Repub- pictured leaving the Los Angeles, Cal, hall of Justice after filing their notice of intention to wed are Mrs. Duncanson, 77, and William Louis Stycr, 59.

It will be Mrs. Duncanson's ninth marriage. She has been divorced four times and widowed four times. TOKYO, March are engaged In urgent con- riB over a German proposal tor a broad German-Italian-Japancse hilUary alliance against any oppo- lltlon to their policies by the democ- It was asserted today in official quarters. Informants said that discussions so bitter that a cabinet crisis ight possibly be precipitated.

It was said that at present a ma- i of leaders were opposed to involving Japan in European mat- but were not willing to abandon Jhe German idea unless a better proposition were forthcoming else- inhere. "i In favor of the alliance, according I informants, were the Russian, Italian and German sections of the Japanese general staff. War Minister Itagaki was repre- i Minted as favoring an alliance cover the possibility of war against i Soviet 'Russia alone. 'Foreign Minister Arita was li) be supporting War Minister; itagakl and to be urging that Japan a counter-proposal for a miii- tary alliance applicable to Russia was admitted by those who fa- vored this course, informants said, i that Germany and Italy were un- ALLEN CENTER ANDCHUCKERY HAVE WINNERS KATHERINE AMRINE WON COUNTY SCHOOL TITLE- ESTHER HUBMANN OF ST. PAUL THE PAROCHIAL Senator Johnson Senator Vandenbcrj Senator Borah safety abroad before thje 1 troops entered.

Rumors reached St. Jean De Luz, on the frontier, that a detachment of Nationalist motorized forces had entered Madrid at 7 a. today but the Madrid radio, broacustlng tu usual at 8:15 a. m. (3:15 a.

m. EST) gave a routine The Nationalist government issued an official denial of Italian reports that the two named officials of the Madrid government, Wenceslao Carrillo, Interior minister, and Gen. Jose Ortega, had arrived at PLACE BLAME FOR TRAGEDY United States Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg of Michigan celebrates his 55th birthday with ihe statement he does not intend to be a canda- datc for the presidency in 1940. Vandenberg is shown being congratulated at a meeting by two Republican colleagues, Sen.

Hiram Johnson of California and Sen. William E. Borah of Idaho. WMINITTARZAN' IS KILLED AFTER STAGING BANK HOLDUP 10. "You have shown favoritism to prisoners of wealth and polltlcaj standing and have granted special privileges to 'such prisoners, more especially in the cases of C.

Sterling Smith, Kenyon V. Painter, and Thomas Licavoli." ICE-CLOGGED CARBURETORS CAUSED BERMUDA-BOUND PLANE TO CRASH ON OCEAN. WASHINGTON, March British air ministry today blamed inmates to require ice-clogged carburetors for the loss and circulate large sums of money at sea January 21 of Imperial Air- within 'the prison, contrary to pris- wa ys New York-Bermuda flying on rules. i boat Cavalier. 12 "You have permitted the i The ministry's conclusions, which breakdown Of dicipllne to such an absolved the crew of all blame extent that there was at the.

time of were made in a report of an inves your suspension and had been or i tigation of the accident which was a considerable tiiae prior, thereto, climaxed by dramatic rescue extensive trafflclng und sale of nar- i ten of the thirteen persons aboard colics, whiskey and marijuan ciga- xets within the penitentiary. 13. Permitting a situation of disci- the plane. Six of the eight passen gers and four of the crew of five were rescued by the Americai pline to exist whereby preferred tanker Esso Baytown after 10 hour inmate positions within the in the Atlantic Ocean, such as dining room Jobs, hospital) The report was made, available I jobs and others were i the press here by Capt. U.

C. I int. lair attache of the British embassy have any plan or jit was prepared by Wing Com Jota "Tf Falure a rule' for linspection and search for gander Vernon Brown, ch.e am contraband on visitors and I dent inspector of the B.itish entering and leaving the prison. minify. Miami Police Estimate 'Con' Game Loss (ILLER SOUGHT BY POSSE OF 300 SHOT DOWN BY HIGH SCHOOL YOUTH IN VILLAGE JAIL CAMERAMAN iikely to accept any such counter- The Japanese navy was said I oppose any broad alliance with the "Axis" powers on the ground that the project would call for the dispatch of a Japanese fleet to Europe in event of hostilities and, it was argued, Japan could obtain no balancing compensation.

CHA1TANOOGA, Marcli he made not to reveal where he took some pictures of a- cockfight had Photographer Robert Brown of The Chattanooga News in a dilemma and also in jail today. CODY. Wyo. March un- ertaker shaved the beard and hingled the unkempt hair-today nd madeTarzan Durandja savage vho ate raw meat and killed five men, into plain Earl Durand, 26, a imple-minded youth who had a iad dream and never woke up. The national guard hauled its lowitzers out of the Beartooth Mountains and 300 men came be lind, unbreeching their rifles.

Th? lunt was over. Tnrzan, bearded woodsman, killer of man and beast was dead, and even parents were 'ad. SALT LAKE CITY, March To the natives'of this ranch coun-j plans for a $250,000 "This is the try who had known Durand all hlajplace'' monument to commemorate UTAH TO HONOR ITS PIONEERS GRANITE AND BRONZE SHAFT TO BE ERECTED WHERE MORMON'S FIRST SAW VALLEY POLITICAL ACTIVITY OF DAVEY IS ORDNANCE UNIT TO PITTSBURGH PRECISION LABORATORY TO BE ESTABLISHED IN PREPARATION FOR POSSIBLE ARMS WORK I PERKINS ESTIMATE FORMER GOVERNOR APPAR-j WASHINGTON, March jrttary of Labor Perkins estimated 'today 45,000 more workers were on industrial pay rolls in February tiian in the previous month and 100,000 more than in February, 1930. ENTLY LAYING GROUNDWORK FOR AN ATTEMPTED COMEBACK COLUMBUS, March from Washington recently re- Ivealed an apparent attempt by former Gov. Martin L.

Davey to lay! the groundwork for a political i comeback in Ohio and for gaining at SHOCK METHOD PROVES HELP PITTSBURGH, March U. S. army will set up early in April a recision laboratory ut Carnegie- In- U'ontinui'd im page -) iff, the inunderstanctable thing was had changed him In an instant from an opcn-mlndc-d youth who loved the outdoors and this wild explorers and pioneers has moved a step forward with a grant of $5,000 by the Utah legislature. The 75-foot granite and bronze In preparation for an emergency rOSS onserv lve Democrati of schizophrenics at -Ar-'m fine job of spelling.and deserve In preparation for an emerfecncj candldate or president. hraitil for ner-'credit for their efforts.

Five of where Pittsburgh's smoking steel mills would be called on to begin urning out guns and cannon, (the rmy will bring tho pre-calibrated nstruments Industries Hall of Carnegie Tech from Washington. mountain country; who had ft It ithaft will be raised at the spot confined even when he was in a where the Mormon pioneers first house, into savaga killer. Until tight days ago he had no reputation as an untractable person or as i "bad num." days Qk'o he wus in jail serving 30 days for shooting an elk out of season, an offense which is not considered; to be very serious in this country where game- abounds and ihe natives are known to kill it out of season for food gather to glimpsed the Salt Lake valley and heard their leader, Brighum Young, say, "This is the right place. Drive on." Leading figures in pioneer ploration, beginning with the arrival of Father Escalante on the of Utah Lake in 1770, will be portrayed. I A model of the shaft, as pre pared by Mahorui Young, dt- The laboratory, to contain, instruments worth $20,000, will be op- irated under the general supcrvi- ion of Dr.

Webster N. Jones, direc- or of the college of engineering. and Major C. H. Morgan, executive officer of the Pittsbugh Ordnance District.

The equipment makes possible measurements within two-mil Huge kili -their beef cattle. He was a of Latter Day Saints jjc-aceable prisoner, on friendly'church President Brigham Young with- his jailors, and he was land noted sculptor, has for its cen- iinleresled only 'in serving out figures, Young and the two time. counsellors with him when, he first Ten days the district attor- saw the valley. MIAMI, March A horde of "confidence" men ranging from petty swindlers to "big money" operators obtain more than $3.000,000 here during the wuiU-r tourist tt-iison from pursuiis who allow a dwire fur cusy money 10 coimuer of the Ueteelive which buu-au us ts.e from retired busini-bS men who ure lureU by fabulous tules of profiti from wagering on "lixed" races. The most gullible those persons who have little -purchase iruichii.ej, loie their saving in "heuhii belli," or ben-ine involved in ciiin-iiiiili hiiiji nty charged turn with killing beef On one face of UWmain shaft wil iteer to a cattleman--a figures of O-'aon Pratt and Sony this Battle raising section jfiastus entered the val- iilwuys puni.shed.

Durand three days ahead of the rnair was told about it and someone re-'Mormon Tiie Donner pai'ty marked to him that he might "get! )uch the trail over the 10 years. I Waiutch Mountains for the Mor Twenty-four hours later, Ike man ri emigrants and later met disas v.iio loved the outdoors so much loiter the Sieira Nevada Mountains felt confined even in a house-, jn be depicted on the opposite his jailor, escaped, and be- bicie. his nightmare of murder that i famous men of tarly westtfi ended ifn tlie lloor el tho bank i)s tory will be shown on the tw 1 cv.ell yesterday uiU-nx-oii. He wings of the rnur.unu.-nt, 1('ojjlJliliej Oil i to hold it up. oUJided ft frmn tsie mala thai position of influence with the state's delegation to the 1940 Democratic national convention.

With 15 months yet remaining before the party's quadrennial nomi- nating convention the former gov-l ernor paid an extended call on Vice President John Nance Garner ARKANSAS HOSPITAL FINDS TREATMENT EFFECTIVE FOR MENTAL CASES- IMPROVEMENT IS NOTED LITTLE ROCK, March tltute of TechnoloEv that is nrc- rl 1 LC insulin shocks which plunge tltute of Technology that is pro whose name has been repe ared to measure ordnance within wo-rrdllionths of an inch. mentioned in political gossip as a conservative the mental patient into deep coma iare giving new promise of life to Two of the three winners in Tho Tribune Spelling Bee were crowned Friday afternoon when Katherino Amerine, 14. of Allen Rural won the championship iinals of the Union County school system and Esther Hubman, 13, of St. Paul's parochial school at Chuckery won the championship for parochial schools. Marysville grade schools also held their championship contest Friday, DUt there were a number of ties and those who tied for the local school championship will meet Monday to decide the championship.

Miss Amerine. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Amerine survived thirty rounds of the battle of words. Fifteen girls, champions of their grade schools, took part in the county schools contest.

More than 100 words were used in tho contest. "Esther Hubrhann'spcliecl correctly' 100 words in her contest with Robert Graves, sixth grade pupil and champion of Trinity Lutheran parochial school here. Robert went down on the following words: discipline, exceed and appreciate. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.

Albert Graves of the Pcoria Road. Herman W. Teske. teacher in St. Paul's school arid Rev.

Paul Freyberg, Jeacher in Trinity school, took, turns pronouncing the words and judged the contest. After spelling correctly all the words pronounced by Miss Juanita Hesserv teacher in the Marysville high school, and also spelling correctly the word "exhilerating" which was the word that stumped Helen Weaver of New Dover, second place winner in the county battle of words, Katherine spelled "stimulating" and "scientifically" and was declared the winner. She was first in both the written and oral tests. All of the girls participating did new state hospital for ner-j credit for their efforts. Davey, while declining to disclosa vous diseases.

JDr. N. T. Hollis, staff what parsed between him and the psycniatrist at institution, saidj vice president, admitted that their east 50 cef the schizoids conversation concerned the 1940 treated win insulin were contest and Washington observers improv( lnen understood that he emphasized to i Althouh LONG VOYAGE Although the insulin treatments the vice president a belief that the are fast becoming in most I Democratic party must sever itself v.ospitala for mental patients, the' MARION, March from New Deal connections. I Arkansas hospital's new program 'year-old Katherine is on The Davey strategy was by experimentation has forged, her way to Greece alone.

means revealed in detail, but it was ahead of other similar youngest Marion Ccuntian ever to understood that the extent of his according ta statements released by get a passport will be taken caiv of activity in the Garner movement if staff. by nurses on the boat and will it reaches sufficient proportions name means met in Greece by her Athens rela- would bo governed to a consider- up more lives with whom she will live. means of the able degree by Davny's decision to than 75 per cent of the population! The purpose of tha, trip? Kathcr- w'ave eouipmtnt run for odice himself. of the nation's nervous institutions, want to see her .,1 was reported in Washington' Dr. Hollis said.

The disease, and her parents feel the trip and nr or. diameters of ball bearing and mt-r governor talked received similar imeasurements where greut mations that he might run again for i th ln Keln precision, is essential. TAKE LONG TRIP TO HAVE DATES i (Continued on page 2) of educational value. governor or seek the senatorial post now held by Sun. Vic Donahey.

Davey's highly laudatory comment Gamer after their italk rivaled tlie belief, in aomt- 'quarters that he misht attempt to jti.trr a of deU-tS'ites in tlie GAMBIKR. March Ohio prnnary pledged to the vice With Memphis River Island Primitive Colony four Kenyon College men are back president. MEMPHIS. March where they can hear the Jioists of the rising of the sun each a big city and the whistles of morning, Memphis' skyscrapers cast stcumboals plying the stix-ams. from a 900-mile trek which took them to the campus of Rockfortl College, girls' school at Rockford, 111.

The Kenyon caiavan was on a social visit similar to that of ihe Keckford to Kenyon last year. Strvel'dl a cxiK'el pii.nL^ and skating vveu- unions; the jjiujjuied for the vis- regard Mi'. Garner us one shadows over an island wilderness On this thickly-wooded island the greatest men in the country," said the former governor. "I have held him in tlie tsteem bincc the days when I served under his leadership in the house." A day or so later, however, Washington dispatches reported that the vice president hud not tlie slightest intention of entermt; the Ohio pri- where 200 persons live like back-1 little more than a stone's woods folk found in remote sections from Memphis' busiest of the Southland. Separated from the busy Mem- waterfront by the narrow I den in the swaying willows.

smoke cuiis from the chimneys tiny, cabals half phis Wolf river and from Arkansas lish bark loudly uud at docks by the mUlity Mississippi, Mud 20 years ago did not the homeland of proaching btrangers'. and hens cackle. giur.t ll.i backyards while i (CuliilliUi-J nil UJ.UIl Ut families llVl.

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About Marysville Journal-Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
330,391
Years Available:
1898-2017