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The Tribune from Coshocton, Ohio • 1

The Tribune du lieu suivant : Coshocton, Ohio • 1

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The Tribunei
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Coshocton, Ohio
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Congress, Clean Capitol It's bath night (once a year) for the nation's Capitol and Washington firemen turn their hose on the imposing facade. By the time the 77th Congress convenes the Capitol will be spick and span, clean and crisp. Church Revival Forecast Because of Nazi Attacks Increased Attendance at Catholic Church Services Noted Following Riots religious revival would sweep Nazi riots in which a crucifix, ing of the Madonna were Austria as the result of prayer books, and a paintburned. Already heavily increased attendance had been noticed at all Catholic church services, even tho newspapers had published no reports of the riots and the news was circulated only by word of mouth. It was forecast that the first real indication of a surge of religious sentiment might be apparent in an increased attendance at schoot: where religious education is part of the program.

Only a week ago priests were compelled to read an official decree announcing that religious education at schools was no longer compulsory. But yesterday in all churches of the Vienna archdiocese a circular letter was read from Cardinal Innitzer, archbishop of Vienna and now storm center of the religious controversy, appealing to parents to make their children attend religous-education schools. Many priests urged parents to make sure that their children also received religious education at home. Nazi authorities seemed to be taking every precaution against a new outbreak against the Roman Catholic church among their followers. But there was anxiety lest an unforeseen incident cause new violence.

VIENNA- Roman Catholics predicted today that a GERMANY AND BRITAIN SPEED DEFENSE WORK Hitler Assails French, British Factions Opposing Him By UNITED PRESS Europe's peace rested on bayonets today. In Germany, Fuehrer Adolf Hitler began a campaign to liquidate "Marxists and other state enemies" from the newly occupied Sudetenland, announced that Germany's defenses would be extended and declared that the reich's only "real friend" was (Continued From Page Ones Former Newcomers Man Dies at Dover Following Accident Robert Lyle Gaskill died at 10:30 a. m. yesterday in Union hospital, Dover, of a multiple fractured skull sustained last Wednes day morning in an automobile accident on N. Wooster Dover.

He was 45. Mr. Gaskill was coming from his home in Massillon to hunt it in Tuscarawas county. He had lived in Massillon for 15 years as an automobile salesman. He was a member of the Massillon M.

church and the Newcomerstown American Legion, having served in coastal service during the war. He was born April 8, 1893, near Wolfe, the son of Allen and Hattie Gaskill. He leaves his wife, Margaret MacMillan Gaskill, his father, stepmother, two brothers, Lawrence, of near Wolfe, and Jess, of the home, and a sister, Miss Lottie Gaskill, also of the home. Short funeral services will be held at 1:30 p. m.

Wednesday at the father's home, followed by additional rites, at 2 p. m. in the New com erstown Presbyterian church. The Rev. D.

A. Morris pastor of the M. E. church, and the Rev. Harold Lee of the Presbyterian church will be in charge Burial will be in Bethel cemetery The Weather OHIO-Fair tonight and Tues- day, Slightly rising tempera-, ture.

THE TEMPERATURES 1 a. m. 47 -00 a. a. m.

m. ..45 ,47 a. m. 43 5 a. m.

44 a. m. 43 m. .43 Shenanigan in Horse-Pulling Contest at County Fair Disclosed A story of masked "string pulling" at the open class horsepulling meet which was a feature on Saturday's Coshocton county fair was told today by Burt Miskimen, proprietor of the Farmers Exchange. According to Mr.

Miskimen, a team of horses, entered by Vincent Bros. of New Holland was brot into the exchange at 7 a. m. Saturday to be weighed in prior to the pulling contest. Frank Ingham, employe of the concern, placed the team on the scales.

It weighed 3,040 -40 pounds more than the limit set for entrants in the "I couldn't see the scales so well from my position," lightweight class. Mr. Miskimen said today. "But one of the boys was "I want to enter this team in lightweight competiof the handlers standing in the doorway and saw it all. The men had tion," Ingham quoted one as saying.

"I'll walk 'em around a little and see if I can't work them heavy cord tied to the outside horses' shoes and they down to the limit." lifted up on them while I balanced the scales." A half hour later the two handlers returned with Altho Mr. Miskimen said he believed that this was the team. Mr. Ingham was out when they walked the the team which broke the world's pulling record at the horses back on the scales, SO Mr. Miskimen manipulated fair Saturday, Leslie Porteus, manager of the contest, the weights inside the scale-house.

They balanced at denied that this was true, altho the prize-winning team the limit. was also from New Holland. The Coshocton Tribune VOL. XXX, NO. 48 COSHOCTON, OHIO, MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 10, 1938.

THREE CENTS RUSSIAN AVIATORS DENOUNCE LINDBERGH Mooney Again Loses in Court Colonel Branded as Liar, REVIEW PLEA IS REFUSED BY HIGH TRIBUNAL Attorney for Famous Prisoner to Try New Move WASHINGTON The supreme court today refused to review the conviction and imprisonment of Thomas J. Mooney in an action which appeared to close virtually the last avenue thru which the famous convict might win his freedom in the courts. His attorney, John F. Finnerty, however, immediately obtained permission to renew a three-year-old application for an original writ of habeas corpus. Institution of this new legal measure made it certain that the famous case will again receive technical consideration by the high court.

The court's refusal to review the Mooney conviction was announced in the court order list which unprecedentedly noted that Justices Hugo L. Black and Stanley Reed dissented from the decision. was The denied motion by for the an supreme original court writ three years ago without prejudice because then the case had not been taken thru state courts. The petition denied by the court today was for a review of the state court's dismissal of the petition for habeas corpus advised by the high tribunal three years ago. Mrs.

Anna Glover Dies This Morning At West Lafayette Mrs. Anna Sangster Glover, 82- year-old former Coshocton woman at 3 a. m. today at the home of a niece, Mrs. Charles Walters, East Main West Lafayette, where she had resided since she became ill two months ago.

Mrs. Glover was well known in this city, having been a member of the Coshocton Historical SOciety, the local Presbyterian church and Woman's Foreign Missionary society. She was born Feb. 7, 1856, at Plainfield daughter of Charles and Sarah Sangster. On March 13, 1894, she was married to Cuthbert Glover, who preceded her in death.

Also deceased are two brothers, three sisters, and two stepsons, Charles J. and Louis C. Glover, both of whom lived in this city. Surviving is a sister, Miss Laura Sangster of West Lafayette. The body will remain at the Rehard-Bonnell funeral home in West Lafayette until Wednesday noon when it Ill be taken to the Coshocton Presbyterian church, where funeral services will be held at 2 o'clock.

Dr. R. H. Kiskaddon, local Presbyterian pastor, will officiate, and burial will be ni Oak Ridge cemetery. Bootlegger at Fair Sentenced to Jail James Williams, Cincinnati Negro, was sentenced to 30 days in county jail and fined $100 and costs by Common Pleas Judge J.

C. Daugherty this morning following his arrest on a charge of illegal liquor sale. Williams was arrested at the fairgrounds Friday afternoon by State Liquor Inspector Bryan: Baker and Dan A. Rufo, Canton The two men purchased whiskey at Williams' small tent near the stock barns, they said. He was returned to county jail.

where he has been held since Friday. Chickens' Capacity for Corn Determined at County Fair How much corn can a couple of full-grown, healthy chickens eat in a specified time? That question was answered in a guessing contest held at the county fair last week by the A. M. Hays Co. A hen and rooster were placed in a cage and plenty of shelled corn was given them.

The idea was to guess how many kernels of corn the pair would eat in the three and one-half days before close of the fair. Merle V. Baker, Fresno Route 2, guessed 2376 and was exactly right, for the chickens ate just that many. Howard Nowels of Adamsville and Jesse Turner, Sixteenth and Elm Coshocton, were second and third with 2375 and 2378, respectively, There were 1560 guesses entered. The number of kernels eaten represents about three good-sized ears of corn.

Hahn Appeal Dismissed By U. S. Supreme Court New Date to Be Set for Execution of Woman Convicted of Murdering Men WASHINGTON- The today dismissed the appeal cinnati, from the Ohio supreme the death sentenced imposed first degree murder conviction. District's Attempt To Acquire Farm Blocked in Court Knox County Judge Dismisses Conservancy District Case The Muskingum watershed servancy district's suit to acquire full title to the 256-acre farm of Walter in and the Grace Mohawk Busenburg, dam 1o- basin, has been dismissed by Knox County Common Pleas Judge Charles D. Hayden.

In the decision, which may have far-reaching effect thruout the district, Judge Hayden held that the district had not shown that it was necessary for it to acquire title. Two courses are now open to district attorneys. They may file (Continued on Page Eight) Henry Crawford Dies at Age of 82; Funeral Tuesday Henry Crawford died at 11:30 p. m. Saturday at the home of his son, Lester Crawford, 242 N.

Sixth after being bedfast for more than six months with complications. He was 82. Mr. Crawford, who had been an invalid for the past eight years, had lived in Coshocton county for 44 years, His wife, the former Elmira Caley, died about 11 years ago. He was born in Springfield, Ill Jan, 20, 1856.

He was a former member of the Red Man lodge. He leaves his son, at whose home he died, and one sister, Mrs. Mary Wright, Canton. Funeral rites will be held at 2 p. m.

Tuesday in the Dawson funeral home in charge of the Rev K. Barss, pastor of the M. P. church, Burial will be in South C. Lawn.

BIRTH NOTES A daughter was born Sunday at city hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Horn of Walhonding. A daughter was born at city hospital Sunday to Mr. and Mrs.

B. Hulcher of Fresno. GRIMES IS RELEASED NEW Brooklyn Dodgers announced today that Burleigh Grimes would not manage the team in 1939 and said his successor had not yet been selectled, Well, She Won't Starve to Death Irked by conflicting reports that she had received a inheritance or would receive it soon, pretty Jessie Barker, above, secluded herself in the home 02 her mother and stepfather in Louisville. Ky. "She's just an ordinary girl," said stepfather Wright Barr in denying Miss Barker had already a check for a million received, by her father, Jesse Barker.

of Peoria, Ill. Her family said she would get the million next spring. Meanwhile Miss Barker is existing on $1000 a month. Bulgarian Army Chief Murdered Maj. Gen.

Peeff and Aide Are Assassinated by Former Convict SOFIA, Bulgaria Maj. Gen. Ivan Peeff, chief of staff of the Bulgarian army, was assassinated in the street this afternoon. Peeff's aide de camp, Maj. Stoyanoff, also was assassinated by the same assialant.

The assassin then committed suicide with a second revolver. He was identified by the name of Vlasseff, who is from Stanimaka, the same town as Peeff. Vlasseff was released from prison three weeks ago after having served a sentence for murder. The assassinations occurred the ministry of justice. Vlasseff, who had been following the two men, emptied a revolver into them while they were en route to the war office.

Canal Lewisville Man Hurt as Truck Upsets Charles Robinson, 37, Canal Lewisville vicinity, was seriously injured when a truck in which he was riding went over an embankment near Williamstown, Sunday, according to word received here today. Loren Durbin, Marion, driver of the truck, died of injuries received in the crash. Mr. Robinson suffered a broken nose and fractured right leg and is confined to St. Elizabeth hospital, Covington, Ky.

Is Arrested in Indiana On Non-Support Charge Howard Seidner, secretly indicted by the Coshocton county grand jury in September, Sunday was arrested in Ft. Wayne, by Deputy Sheriff Zara Abbott. Seidner is charged with failing to support his wife and a twoyear-old daughter, Jeannette. The complaint was filed by his wife, Mrs. Garnet Seidner.

Mr. Seidner has been employed as an auto mechanic in Ft. Wayne, according to officials. Agent of Fascists, Who Belittled Soviet Air Force Strength of Russia's Air Corps Declared At Least Equal to That of Combined Forces of Germany and Japan -Eleven of Russia's foremost aviators terly denounced Col. Charles ground that he had belittled added, in defending Soviet "According to information London, Paris and Prague, titatively at least equal to nese air forces and is qualitatively of Anna Marie Hahn, Cincourt decision affirming upon her as a result of her Mrs.

Hahn was convicted in Hamilton county common pleas court on Nov. 6, 1937, under an indictment charging her with murdering Jacob Wagner of Cincinnati by giving him poison. Another indictment accused her of poisoning George Gsellman but she was tried only under the Wagner indictment. She was originally scheduled to die in the electric chair at Ohio penitentiary last March 10 but her appeal to the Ohio supreme court gave her an automatic stay of execution. The court refused to hear her appeal and set May 4 as the date for her execution.

She was granted an indefinite stay of execution on May 3 in order to permit her attorneys to carry the appeal to the U. S. court. Beyond the supreme cuort she has no avenue of appeal except the governor. It is within his power to grant executive lemency to any condemned person but a governor does not ordinarily override the courts unless new evidence is presented.

Mrs. Hahn's attorneys carried their appeal to the high court on the grounds that the trial was conducted improperly. They challenged validity of the indictment and the state's bill of particulars, claiming that the bill of particulars outlining the state's charges--did not give Mrs. Hahn ample time to prepare her defense. The Ohio supreme court will set a new date for Mrs.

Hahn's execution as soon as the formal mandate of the U.S. supreme court is received in Columbus. John Dusenberry, Bedford Township, Succumbs Sunday John Dusenberry died at 4 p. m. yesterday on the Bedford township farm where he had spent his entire life.

He was 87. He was born Dec. 1, 1850, the son of Henry and Rebecca Dusenberry, the last of seven children. In 1884 he was married to Nancy Jane Snyder, who died 13 years ago, Mr. Dusenberry had been in failing health for the past three years, Death was attributed to arteriosclerosis.

He leaves two sons, Edgar of the home and Clifford of Route 5, and eight grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m. Tuesday at the home, in charge of the Rev. M.

R. Fitch. Burial will be in Valley View cemetery, Warsaw. FEDERAL CASE READY AGAINST MEDICO GROUP AMA Charged With Anti-Trust Law Violation -The government's case against the American Medical Association--to be presented to a grand jury next week was nearly completed today, The case, one of the most unusual applications of the antitrust laws in the 50 years of their existence, will be heard by a special grand jury in secret sessions beginning Oct. 17.

The government seeks criminal indictments against the AMA on charges of using "threatening and coercive" tactics to combat a cooperative health organization. The main charges the government will try to prove are: 1. Because of the opposition of (Continued on Page Eight) Young Woman Dies At Local Residence; Rites to Be Tuesday Miss Naomi Eloise Perry, 21, died at 11:45 Saturday night of complications at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Uher, 1028 Kenilworth where she had made her home.

She had been seriously ill for the past two weeks. Se was born Dec. 10, 1916, a daughter of William Catherine Workman Perry. Both parents are deceased, Mr. Perry having died on Oct.

3, 1917, and Mrs. Perry on April 19, 1926. Miss Perry had lived with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. William Perry, until their death.

Miss Perry was graduated from Coshocton high school in 1936. Surviving is a brother, Kenneth Perry, 908 Kenilworth av. Funeral services will be at 2:30 p. m. Tuesday at the Uher home, with Rev.

C. Wayne Balyeat the United Brethren church officiating. Burial will be in South Lawn cemetery. Typographers Oppose Judicial Amendment MARION, resolution opposing a proposed constitutional amendment providing for appointment of Ohio supreme and appeals court judges had been adopted today by the Ohio Typographical Conference in session here. Ben M.

Kroger, Cincinnati Times-Star, was elected president of the conference. George W. Sorrels, Marion Star, was elected vice-president and Roy L. Hiller, Dayton News, secretary Mansfield was chosen for the I meeting next April. A.

Lindbergh today on the Russia's air force, and they aviation: in the highest quarters in the Soviet air fleet is quanthe combined German-Japamuch superior." The denunciation of Lindbergh was based on allegations, spread partly by rumor, that during the Czechoslovak crisis or earlier he asserted that Russia's air force had been weakened dangerously by the political purge and that Germany's air force was equal to the combined air strength of Great Britain, France, Russia and Czechoslovakia, But the statement which the Russian aviators in their anger made regarding the strength of Russia's aviation, was one calculated to be an international sensation. Estimates of Russia's air strength vary widely. There is little official information on which to base estimates. A fleet of Russian fighting planes caused a definite turn for a time in the aerial phase of the Spanish civil war; Russians planes have flown to and landed at the North Pole and have flown from Moscow to the American Pacific coast. In their letter, published in Pravda, the official newspaper orgap of the Communist party, the aviators denounced Lindbergh as having Fascist tendencies, assert- Cortinued from Page One Senator Fair Talks At Celebration of Local V.F.W.

Post BERLIN Adolf Hitler was understood today to have sent a special emissary to Vienna to investigate the attack Saturday night on the palace of Cardinal Innitzer. Christ Aebischer, Switzerland Native, Dies at Winesburg Christ Aebischer, native of Switzerland, died Sunday evening at the home of Mrs. Mary Kochenderger in Winesburg, following a week's illness of complications. He was 71. Mr.

Aebischer was born in Swartzenburg, Switzerland. He came to the U. S. 50 years ago and settled in Winesburg. In earlier years he was a carpenter and saw mill operator, later operating a cheese factory in that village.

He retired in 1927. Mr. Aebischer was never married. Surviving are three brothers, Fred, John and Rudy Aebischer, and a sister, Mrs. Mary Zbinder, all of Swartzenburg, Switzerland.

The body will be removed to the home of Mrs. Mary Kochenderfer in Winesburg Tuesday afternoon, where it may be viewed by friends until Wednesday afternoon, when funeral services will be held at 2 o'clock the Zion Evangelical church in Winesburg. Rev. Waldo Berlenkamp will deliver the sermon and burial will be in West Lawn cemetery, Winesburg. TAX DEADLINE NEAR County Treasurer Warner Perkins announced today the deadline for paying personal taxes is Oct.

20. Notices were mailed out in the county Sept. 20. Approximately 125 members of the Veterans of Foreign Wars and Auxiliary, including several outof-town guests. attended the celebration of the fourth anniversary of the Coshocton post No.

1330 Sunday afternoon in the local rooms. A. Lee Fair of Millersburg, state senator, was the principal speaker of the program, using as his theme, "Spirit of Truth." Talks were also given by Orin Smith of East Liverpool, district commander; Alice Richardson of Dover, past council president of the Auxiliary; Mrs. Raymond T. Edie of Coshocton, Auxiliary president of the Buckeye Tri-County Council, and J.

W. Robe of Newcomerstown, who also served as master of ceremonies. Musical selections were given by Mrs. Carl Clark and son Thomas, and Bobby Hostettler of West Lafayette. A covered dish dinner was served following the program.

Annabel Elson Files Petition for Divorce Divorce proceedings were filed Monday in common pleas court by Annabel Elson, a minor, thru her father, Harry Sperrow, against Tunis Elson, 437 Mulberry st. The plaintiff charges gross neglect and extreme cruelty. The petition states the couple was married Feb. 13, 1938, in Coshocton and has no children. The plaintiff, who is now living with her parents in Mill Creek township, claims she left her husband Sept.

17 after he had mistreated her. Mrs. Elson asks for temporary and permanent alimony, and that she be restored to her maiden name, Sperrow. She is represented by, Russel E. Lyons.

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