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The Sandusky Register from Sandusky, Ohio • Page 2

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-THE REGISTER. SANJ5T.7SKY. OHIO, SATUBPAT. MARCH 16. Breakfast Table Talk MNOlOlHt'f.

SANUtJSKT, was arrested hy poller charge of crashing: a red tight AN BUSCtlON OF OFFICERS meeting of the Erle-co Council of Social Agencies will be held March 27 instead of March 26 as previously announced. A LARGE CLASS OK CAND1- datcs will be initiated into the ai p.ni. Sunday. Largo del from nearby towns Will participate. MRS.

KREELAND SMITH MAS 'hem nr.r.icd chalrnuui the pro- on American bird lli'o to bo In Clrveland Music April 2 with Dr. Arthur Allen of Cornell niveriUy as the jjpeal; TWO SPECIAL SIND.VV SKR- will bo held at tni- Salvation Army Citadel here by MaJor and James Thi- young people's service will be held at and the rrpular service lit 8 p.m. JOSEPH SHOCKER, 33, SAIL- or, Detroit, Mich, was arrested by Patrolman Jack Darby last night after raising: a "rumpus" in the sleeping quarters in the basement the City Shocker was with intoxication. THE REV. J.

O. DICKER-SON', pastor of St. Stephen's A.M.E. Church, the Rev. A.

J. Payne, pastor of Ebcnezer Baptist. Church and "jthe Rev. E. W.

Hester, pastor of Second Baptist Church, will ex- pulpits Sunday morning. "WHAT AUTHORITY HAS -Jesus For Us?" is the title of the Subject which Miss Ruth Frost will at the meeting of the "youth Fellowship at the First iVongregational Church at 6 "Sunday. A covered dish supper will be served. COMPETITIVE EXAMINATIONS six scholarships offered annually by DeSales College, Toledo, will Jje held Saturday, April 6 at tho Fireside Thompson School News xry-outa for the senior class play, Fever." have started. The girls of the home economics class will serve the faculty at a special dinner Monday.

Joyce, Wanda, Bety and Opal re-entered our school. have transferred from WH-- lard. Miss Good presented her first and second grade pupils in an interesting assembly program Friday. "The theme of the program was v'Spring," The Rev. Esehmyer of Uloomvllle augmented tho program a delightful chalk-talk.

Mrs. Bear, the home economics instructor, expects to attend a meeting at Fremont on March 20 of the "North Central Regional Home Economics Association. Mrs. Price of the "state department of education will appear on the program- Patty and Grace Leinlnger and Lucy Decker are visiting for days at the Red Bird mls- In Kentucky. Miss-Mary Lein-Inger, who formerly taught at "Thompson, is a teacher in the mls- sion school.

The timber area of Soviet Russia "covers 3,600.000 square miles- LEISY'S BEER in ERIE, HURON, AND OTTAWA Counties college, Msgr. Francis J. Macelwane. president, has announced. The examinations are open to all Catholic high school seniors in the Toledo diocese.

ARTHUR MORRIS, 27, HAMIL. ton, Arthur Hughes, 23 and Francis 34, both of Toledo, trusties at the Osborn Honor Camp, were being held at the city jfdl yesterday afternoon for safekeeping pending return to the Mansfield Reformatory. The men refused to work, according to Charles 8hel- lenbcrger, superintendent at the farm. THOMAS DALY. W3 FULTON- st.

Sandusky barber, will leave Match 20 on an aerial cruise to Miami. Havana. Panama, Honolulu and San Francisco, guest of Thomas A'. Todd, national vice commander of the Flying Aces and chairman of the national rehabilitation commission. They, will be gone for 13 days.

Daly is a partner in the LIU and Daly barber shop on Jackson-st. Half Pocahontas $7 Powers Coal, Ph. 2200 Plane Contest Will Be Held A large crowd is expected to wit ness the monthly senior and junior indoor model airplane flight contests at the Junfor High school Sunday afternoon, Joseph Olander, Junior High instructor, said last night. Several hundred saw the contests conducted last month and Sunday's crowd is expected to be larger if the weather Is favorable, Olander said. The contests will be held from 2 p.

m. to 3:30 p- m. All contestants will be out to break the present indoor flight records. The senior division record is 79 seconds and the junior record 26-5 seconds. Entrants over 18 years of age must compete in the senior division juntor group includes boys of the Junior High and the Toung Ameri'can Recreation Association.

Prizes will be awarded to contest winners. Glander said the following Junior High youths would have airplanes entered: Alfred Eckhardt. Tom Buckingham, Bill Waldock, Max Schnlttker, Danny Beck, Glenn Waterfleld, Eugene Anthony, Jack Sehlmeyer, Oon White, Malcolm and Albert Glenn. Glander will be in charge of cou tests- Argentine-Jap Pact Is Signed BUENOS AIRES, March IB Japan and Argentina tonight effected a commercial agreement which struck a severe blow at United States hopes of re-entering the rich Argentine market on a scale large enough to supplant European nations. An exchange of notes opened the way for the entry of Japanese textiles and manufactured products into the Argentine market.

The agreement covered by the notes provides for Japan to purchase 30,000,000 yen (about $6,900,000) in Argentine raw materials in three times the total of 1939. DEADLY AERIAL BOMB INVENTED Devise To Be Shown U. S. Military Authorities, By DALE CLARK BALTIMORE, March 15 iff) Lester P. Barlow is ready to show the nation's highest military authorities a deadly aerial bomb which he says will kill every living thing within a 1,000 foot radius when it explodes, spreading death and destruction with detonating waves that no one In its path can escape- In a small workshop In a wooded thicket a safe mile from the Glenn Martin airplane factory, the short, stocky inventor today described the death machine he wants to sell the government.

The military and naval committees of both the Senate and House and the Secretaries of War and Navy will gather Monday in Washington to hear about it- It's called glmlte the first three letters taken from the name of the Martin plant In whose homb division Barlow is employed). It is a liquid oxygen-carbon explosive. And Barlow Insists it Is safe to handle- The formula is hi's secret. It is that formula, Barlow say, that makes the bomb safe to handle, although other llsuld oxygen explosives are too delicate for practical use. "I can fly 20,000 feet over a battleship and put it out of commission with one of these bombs," he asserted.

"I don't have to hit it. I know I can get within 600 feet of It- And when she goes off 30 feet above the surface I'll get the guncrews and controlling crews and put the ship out of commission. Another bomb set to go off 30 or 40 feet beneath the surface would finish the job. The detonating waves do the work. Unlike fragmentation bombs which spew shrapnel and damage only what they hit, the aerial mines blast the ai'r the same way that depth bombs create a crushing under-wafer force, Barlow said.

Such bombs exploded in the air over a battlefield would result in instantaneous, wholesale slaughter- Barlow wants the government to test his bombs with goats, tethered GO feet apart over a wide area. The Washington Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals opposed that suggestion today. Such a test could be made only in large uninhabited area. Barlow thinks western Texas or Florida could be used- Fighting Red's Militia At 'Battle' Of Grand River KING CAROL STARTS ON PAGE ONE Carol was represented as fearing strongly that' presence In his cabinet of an avowed protector of Nazi interests would be nothing more than the beginning of the end of Rumania as an Independent state. (Germany is deeply interested In keeping Rumania out of war over her world-war won territory in order that Rumania may give Germany the oil, food and other things Germany needs to fight the allies- Pro-Nazi influence within King Carol's cabinet, naturally, would make this economic help all the easier, and would help stiff-arm tho allied blockade efforts In the Bal- kanB.

Both Russia and Hungary once owned present Rumanian territory-) FILINGS END STARTS ON PAGE ON Hi 1, and Gilbert Bettman, Republican, of Cincinnati, for supreme court, Jan. 2 term, Herbert S. Blgelow of Cincinnati, advocate of larger old age pensions, filed for Democratic U. S. Senator In the late hours, giving opposition to John MtoSweeney of Wooster.

Now Distributed by MAPLE CITY ICE COMPANY NQRWALK, 0, Haw YW enjoy local ServltfJ on good ojd, Beer- You your fcmjly to.tlw bear that 's actual. Iff Heed no more. thja Haoje City Ice CGJB- tfoi-yalk. Ohio for Lelsy's is Two declaration of candidacy" were refused; Bernard L. Beutell of East Cleveland, for Republican U.

s. Senator, because he filed after the 6:30 p. deadline, and Reo Alley of Berlin Heights, Erle- co, for Democratic Senator, because he lacked the roquired 1,000 signatures. Reports of rebellion against Sawyer's selection of Democratic convention delegate candidates In certain districts filtered Into Columbus. In the 19th district, Fred Shut- rump, Mahoning-co chairman, and Municipal Judge Peter B.

Mulnol- land of Youngstown filed as delegate candidates against Sawyer's nominees, but said they would support Roosevelt. They were pledged nominally to Edgar T. Morley. a filling station operator, and Attorney Dominic F. Rendinell as "favorite son'' candidates.

1 In the first district. Thaddeus Nolan, treasurer of the Hamllton- co Democratic committee, filed as a delegate candidate. He said he would support Roosevelt but was Pledged nominally to Orvllle Rouda- baugh and Andrew Donnellon of Cincinnati as "favorite sons." Bomo Democratic leaders questioned the legality of Nolan's candidacy. Iff) ENDORSE ROOSEVELT SACRAMENTO, March 16 A five-man committee created in support of the Presidential candidacy of Franklin D. Roosevelt today filed with the secretary of state its official endorsement of 48 Koosevelt-pledged delegates to the next Democratic national convention.

First name on the list was that of Kovernor Culbert L. Olson. Lleu- enant Governor Ellis Patterson's lame was second and that of Former U. S. Senator Willlum Glbbs McAdoo third.

Filing of the endorsement followed get-together conferences yesterday at San Francisco under the sponsorship of Interior Secretary Harold Ickes to uvert threatened conflict between competing delegations, one headed by Olson and the other by McAdoo. Forster China Co. ClAveUnd Ril, Open ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS Natural UW, All that wUJ iwt bloom until Murine RATIFY TREATY The Associated PrenJ Finland's weary and saddened parliament officially wrote the final chapter in tho war with Russia last (Friday) night, ratifying by a vote of 145 to 3 the peace treaty whicn gave the Soviet Union huge chunks of Finland's best agricultural and industrial areas- Elsewhere. Premier Daladler weathered a critical storm In tho French senate, winning a 240 to 0 vote of confidence, and IT- S- Undersecretary of State Sumner Welles arrived in Rome for a final seri'eo "of conferences before sailing Tuesday for the United tatos- Finns To Rebuild Finland's task is one of reconstruction, of resettling 600 000 men. women and children tossod out of their homes by the 105-day war and the sudden peaca- Her stricken army sloshed wearily through th snow in a four-mile retreat along a Jagged 226-mlle front, as it must do each day until the entire Karelian lsthmuj and the ceded areas north of Ladoga are cleared of Finnish troops- For the allies, British leaders maped a bid for a bold diplomatic stroke in the Balkans and The near east.

There is fear In some quarters of a Russian or Gorman drive mto Rumania. In Paris, the French senate ended two days of secret debate by expressing confidence DaludUr would wage war with Germany with "Increasing Th 0 session begun among calls for "action" and with criticism of Daladler for holding too many and minister of war, national defense and foreign affulrs- Tho belief was expressed ill parliamentary circles that Generalissimo Maurice Gustave Gamelln would leave his post as commander of the allied land forces and become French war minister In an Eastei) cabinet shukeup- In his final days In Rome. Welles will see Pope Pius in an unexpected audience Monday and will talk with Premier Mussolini and Foreign Minister Galeazzo Ciano- There was speculation that the Pope and Welles might discuss possible peace moves. In Scandinavia. Sweden and Norway swiftly advanced their consld- tiution of a defense alliance with Finland and real aid in rebuilding the devastated republic- Huron REGISTER BUREAU Miss Ethel ferry Mrs.

Arthur J. Buffing ton and daughters Denny and Nancy will spend the Easter spring vacation with Mr. and Mrs. S. A.

McGonigal of Leslie, Mich. Mayor and Mrs- Frank McQuillan and son Edward returned Fri- from a vacation in Florkla. Receut guests at the A. J. Buf- ingiou iX'HidmiciJ at Boulder inn were, Dr.

and Mrs. G. A- Gibbous, (NBA Telephoto) Marching men tramp the streets of Disney, as Governor Leon C. "Fighting Red" Phillips orders His national guard to the PWA damslte on Grand River. Phillips demands indemnity in advance for state roads and lands that wUl be inundated by the dam.

Guardsmen are to halt construction of the dam until the state is paid. Largest Line'r Ever Tagged 'Made In U. S. STARTING TIMES AT LOCAL PLAYHOUSES mm it hf artltlac at tkc fu tawtftc ttmmt, PLAZA THEATER 3:35, 6:30 and 9:26 p. m.

'The Phantom 5:30 and 8:26 p. m. STATE THEATER "Charlie Chan In 1:10. 3 :26, 6:40. 8 and 10:15 p.

m. "Barney Rapp And His Now Englanders" 2:35, 4:50, 7:10 and 9:25 p. tn. SANDUSKY THEATER "Smoky 3:05, 8, 7 and 8:65 p. m.

"Hidden Power" 2:05, 4, 7:55 and 9:50 p. m. OHIO THEATER "Balalaika" 1. 4, 6:50 and 9:45 p. m.

"Knights Of The 2:60, 5:45 and 8:45 p. m. Lowered WASHINGTON. March 15 The price of long-distance telephone calls is coming down- The federal communications commission announced today that tho American Telephone and Telegraph Co- had agreed to reduce Its rates, commencing May 1. on calls of 420 miles or more- The commission estimated a saving of fS.600,000 annually to the public- Decision to reduce rates, the commission said, followed "conferences and negotiations" which it negotiated.

WHITE DATA STARTS ON PAGE ONE Above, is the first photograph showing the complete outline of the neio U. S. liner America, largest passenger ship ever buiit in the United States, neartng completion at Newport News, Va. Close- up of superstructure, at right, shenos her streamlined funnels and modern mechanical lifeboat davits. The America is 723 feet long, 92 feet wide and will accommodate 1219 Catawba Island REGISTER BUREAU Mrs.

L. C. Von Thron. The Jundlor counesl met In Leaders training the home of Ed- 1 ward Ludwlg Wednesday evening. This group has been established as a patrol for training purposes.

Tho Farm Bureau Study club, which was to meet March 20, has been postponed until March 27. The Union Sunday School MotV ers club will meet all day Wednesday, March 29, to sew, at the home of Mrs. Esther Armbruster who with Mrs- Wilma McRitchie ing, will furnish the dinner. Carl Zwlcker of Oak Harbor, county committeeman for soil conservation, met with the members of the Catawba Community conservation committee in the home of Edward Ludwig recently. Tho work for 1946 program was outlined.

All farmers will be visited to determine their plans for participation. Mr. and Mrs- Carl Neil of Hastings, Mich-, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Vern Ellithorpe last week.

DcWitt Elwood. father of Mrs. CA. Lawrence, left for his home. Flint, Mich-, Sunday afternoon after spending several days with the Lawrence family.

Elton Weyho left for tha Veterans Hospital in Cleveland to receive treatment for an Infection in his hand- Cornelius Ireland and three children have moved from tho John Darr farm house on Muggy-rd to Rocky Ridge- Jake Waldecker and family have moved from the Vern Ellithorpe house to Middle Bass island. Dr. and Mrs. S. H.

Schutts, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Oetzel of Norwalk, Mr and Mrs- Harvey G. Spellman, of Sandusky. Mr.

and Mrs. John Klein and son Kenneth returned Wednesday evening from a vacation in Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Wile have left for Ann Arbor, where Wile is associated with tho John Rogers Theatrical Co.

Mr. and Mrs. Norman Saylor are visiting relatives In Michigan. Miss Thelma Post of Cleveland was a rocent guest at the Fred Post residence. Mrs.

Bertha Rhinemiiler of Cleveland spent this week with Mrs. Gladys Davis and daughters. Mrs. C. T.

Lamb was hostess to the Rye Beach club on Tuesday. Mr, and Mrs. Allen Comstock and daughter Judith wero weekend guests of friends in Cleveland. Mr. and Mrs.

John Cleveland were recent visitors at the Archie Harris residence of BloomlngvIUe. Plymouth The Twentieth Century Circle will hold Its annual Guest Night, Monday evening, March 18, A dinner will be served in the Lutheran Church annex by members of the Ladles' Aid and the remainder of the evening will be spent at the home of Mrs. H. B. Postle.

The Tourist club was entertained at tho home of Mrs. Edward Ramsey, Monday evening. A dinner was served at a table centered with a bouquet of sweet peas and daffodils, and tho appointments were In keeping with St. Patrick's Day. After roll call, Mrs.

Ramsey invited tho club to be her guests at the Plymouth theater. Tho next meeting will be at the home of Mrs. S. B. Bacbrach with Mrs.

P. H. Root as leader. Tho Alpha Guild of the Lutheran Church will meet Tuesday evening, March 19, with Mrs. Sam Fenner, Mrs.

W. Kimball and Mrs. F. Stewart, as hostesses. Tho Plymouth Garden club held a meet Friday evening, March 16, at the home or E.

K. Tranger on Plymouth street. The topic for the oevning was "Cacti" with Mrs, R. K. Clarke, leader.

Roll call was a seed exchange. Airs. W. M. Johns, has been named as a candidate for alternate endorsement by the Richland-co Republican committee to attend the state G.O.P.

convention In Columbus in June. Robert Bachrach who was employed by the S. B. Bachrach and Son, is starting in the seed, wool and livestock business for himself. He is expecting to build a warehouse in tho rear of the Taylor filling station on Sandusky-st, in the near future.

The United States and Great Britain exercise joint control and administration of Canton and Enderbury Islands of the Phoenix group In the central Pacific. The landing of the great Siberian meteor in 1908 was heard 400 miles away. The motto of the State of Washington is Al-Kl (By and By). SANDER Today Sunday DOUBLE FEATURE Bob Steele A ShiHjtm' Scrapm Daredevil 1 Main l'locr llaltony The highways of the world on January 3. 193S, totaled 9,684,559 miles.

PLAZA 1 (iRETA MELVVN GARBO DOUGLAS NINOTOTKA cUid The Phantom Strikes STARTS SUNDAY LOVE'S IN BlOMI Iw MICKEY RQONCY! "ANDY HARDY GETS SPRING FEVER" LEWIS MONEY CECILWPARKU-FIYHOIPCH ky W-1. Vtn Prki A MUST RUN HIT! fmtftMR-t CANDIDATES STARTS ON PAGE ONli 840; Elmer Norberg, 610; E. R. William S- Souter, 756. Democrat, Alex S.

Stoll. 292; Joseph J. LaLond, 900; August Zeiher, 746; John Nichols. 845- Independent, Harley L. Hough, 440.

PROSECUTOR: Republican, Peter Catri, 369. Democrat, Robert W. McCrystal, 272. STATE REPRESENTATIVE: Republican. Clarence M.

Kreuger 413; Democrat, Frank McQuillen, 153; James Young, 510. CLERK OF COURTS: Republican, Vincent Lorenzen, Richard Grob, 155; Richard Wilke, 229. Democrat, Miss Bernadlne Lester, 765. "RECORDER: Republican, Leroy MdFadden. 243.

Democrat, A. Speir, 1,019. TREASURER: Republican, Ed- closed, the load is the equivalent of a mortage amounting to 24 percent of the total value of real estate in the county. The county has an assessed valuation of $53,680,050 while its share of the national debt, on the basis of population, Is $13,112,232.26. "This Is the debt levied upon the people of the county by the Indirect taxes Invented by the New Deal" White said, "It would stick out like a huge sore thumb If levied directly upon real estate.

No wonder the New Deal rejoices in teh system of hidden taxes. "Despite this tricky device, no one needs to be told of the tax burden as It stands today. But few people realize how they themselves are affected by the huge proportions of delayed taxation that is approaching as a re suit of deficit financing and the growth of the national Delusion Encouraged "Some folka may not be concorned because they think 'the other fellow' will pay the bill. New Deal propaganda encourages the delusion- But no citizen of Ohio can cling to that ghost of decpetlon very long when he thinks of the national debt In terms of a hidden mortages on his property. "There is nothing remote about government debt, except the control of its growth.

Payments hits home. There will be no halt in growth until the people on the home end put a strong bridle of aroused opinion on the Washington bureaucrats, who spend to live to spend." White has been a consistent opponent of New Deal spending. He is a member of a group In appropriations committee of the House which cut $100,000,000 from the Roosevelt fig ures contained In the first three appropriations bills of the current session. Defeat of new USHA legisla tlon on a larger scale was largely attributed to his exposure of the cost of slum clearance under the existing USHA program at $21,417 per family unit. He charged that the proposed bill meant an ultimate expenditure of $27,000,000,000.

ward J. Martin, 208; Henry K. Gossan, Walter H. Otto, 265- Democrat, Harold A. Kline.

625. COUNTY ENGINEER: Republican, Clarence E. Stockdale, Edison W. Bailey, 288. Democrat, Milton J.

Bechberger, 831. PROBATE COURT: Republican, John W. Demo crat, none. VITAL STATISTICS DEATHS Andrew Grlndle, 74, at Providence Hospital. George C.

SmootS, 26. In Columbus. Mrs. Amelia Koegle Slehl, 65, BIRTHS A son to Mr. and Mrs.

Wayne Bunting, Castalla, at providence Hospital. A daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Cietus Rltzonthaler, 420 E- Jeffer- son-st, at Providence Hospital- HOSPITAL NOTES Mrs. Charles Fleming, 409 son-st; Conrad Nuhn, Vermilion; and Mrs.

Floyd Rockwell, Route 1, Milan, have been discharged from Good Samaritan Hospital. Mrs. Edward Savage, 1502 Cen- tral-av; Mrs. Anthony Grohs, 428 Lawrence-st; and Mrs. Joseph Berber and baby, 225 Lawrence-st, have been discharged from dence Hospital.

MARRIAGE LICENSES Gerald R. Jones, machine operator, and Frances J. Lang, at home, both Soldiers' Home. The Rev. E.

W. Brueseke to officiate. Civil War Veteran Will Visit Iowa Alvln Smith, 96, one of Erle- co's three living Civil War veterans, was discharged from the Soldiers' Home Hospital to make an extended tour to Iowa with a friend. A native of Kentucky, Smith was born a slave and at the age of 21 ran away to Cincinnati, where he Joined the Union Army in Company 27th V. P- C.

T. He is the only colored Civil War veteran In this part of the country, and leaves but one Civil War veteran in the Home, Leonard Gribben, 94. William Woodward, 91, another, lives in Homevllle with his wife. The Military Order of the Purple Heart was founded by George Washington, August 7, 1782. COLDST FIGHT MISERY right whereH you feel it-with rwlft-aetlng VICKS VAPORUB ON OUR STAGE BARNEY RAPP IN PERSON AND HIS NEW ENGLANDERS One of America's Truly Great Orchestras RUBY WRIGHT Tl1 Sweetuw ot Alr Rapp Trio and New Englanders Glee Club OTHER GREAT Instrumental Novelties ACTS ON OUR CHARLIE CHAN IN PANAMA With KIDNEY TOLER ROGERS HON Eli ATYVJXL KANE RICHMOND 1 (o 10c TODAY and SUNDAY a 40c Children 14e TONITE is the BIG NITE NELSON EDDY ILONA MASSEY in "Balalaika" Also Zane Grey's "Knights of the Range" Tomorrow! 1,000,000 -0 4 MEN AND WOMEN tO MfS was ftls fill le miming Hr mt THE STORY OF DrEHRllCHS MAGIC BULLET MB MMH Mil 1 HGHW I SffwwirnEBi.

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About The Sandusky Register Archive

Pages Available:
227,541
Years Available:
1849-1968