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Journal Gazette from Mattoon, Illinois • Page 8

Journal Gazette from Mattoon, Illinois • Page 8

Publication:
Journal Gazettei
Location:
Mattoon, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ft i DAILY JOTJKNAt-GAiXTTE AND COMMERCIAL STAB, MATTOON, ILLINOIS MONDAY, DECEMBER 1MI Battlefield Between U. S. and Japan Author. LEADS "AIITI-RED" DRIVE IN FRANCE I. STREET WORK NEAR COMPLETION The construction of a new way and a project for widening the street adjacent to the Illinois Central System's freight depot Is rearing completion, a company spokesman said today.

i The new strip win connect the brick pavement along the freight platform with South Eighteenth street and provide a new outlet for trucks direct to U. S.1" Highway 45. The new pavement is of concrete construction seven Inches thick. It extends north and south for 120 feet and Is 23 feet wide. The street is being built on the east side of the freight house along the south six doors.

It will -eliminate the present necessity of driving trucks from the freight house to Lafayette avenue" or Edgar avenue before enter- ing Eighteenth street. The project was started in anticipation of heavy truck traffic from the freight house. Workmen JTifZcr Is Busy i -But He Also Looks Ahead from page one) atraaae In the guttural tones of ftlUer. "We are fighting for the new order, yes, but not a war of restoration. Just get wise to yourself." That was a hard pill to take.

Yet veit today- a good many thousands feonfuse wishful thinking with the hard facts of life and think in Iterma of war of restoration rath-r than one for the new order as planned and set' in motion by Hitler. The, new order is as different from orthodox procedure and prewar customs and policies as the Victorian Age from the twentieth Century of our own time. You can't put 1914 or 1918 on the table and fit even a part of it into the pattern of Hitler's new order. It won't work, even If the fuehrer cared to think In such obsolete terms as he looks at It. 1 ij it Wife mi mm i II i mt III II llllllJ Twenty Years Ago Toddy Dee.

192L A modern new truck has been placed in service at the, post office ln order to take care of the Christmas rush, now At the annual meeting; of the National Building and Loan Association the officers elected were R. A. Gabbert, W. N. McKamy, W.

G. Sawin, S. M. Owings and F. A.

Kinzel. Miss Minnie Litwiller ia the bookkeeper. S. K. Moudy of Shelbyville has moved to this city, to' live and will be1 employed in a local drug store.

The Farmers State Bank of Toledo was entered by robbers list night and non-negotiable bonds amounting to. J2.000 were taken. Mr. and Mrs. O.

O. Mlsenheimer have returned home from Sullivan where they attended the 62d wedding anniversary of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. N.

Mattox. Mrs. Elizabeth Kunkler died today at the. home of her daughter, Mrs. Leo Littleton, 2208 Richmond avenue.

Mrs. Kunkler formerly lived ln Sigel. Atel Theodore Bjrustrom, well known fsrmeriiled today at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Fred Musser, ln Gays. Under a new law every person engaged in the real estate business must take out a state license, effective in 1922.

TEN TEARS AGO Dec 8, 193L The Methodist-church at Dorans was damaged about $200 today by a fire, caused by a hot stove pipe. Mrs. Flora Jeffris, formerly a resident of the Lerna vicinity, died Surviving are his wife, a son, two sisters and three brothers. CAROLINE PALMYRA MARSHALL liKJoaJ SAMOA MARSHALL a. w.a,.i jfc.

APHErS NEA Telephoto (Todty'i Nawa Pieturaa Today) of U. British and Japanese bases In the Pacific. PACIFJB QCUN iiitttmiitM Central Illinoio Deaths Mrs. Ellis Babbs. Effingham, 111.

Funeral services Paris (Via Berlln)-INS The in spec tor general of French police went to the Port of Bordeaux Satur day- to take charge of what was officially-called an "anti-Commun ist" campaign. This development occurred afief Admiral Francois Bard, prefect of Paris police, appealed to the popu lation for assistance ln tracking down the assassins of German sol diers and officers. This appeal was Issued after st least three German officers were the objects of shooting assaults by Paris terrorists. George Washington Only George Washington was. the only President who received the unani mous electoral vote.

today at the home of her eon, Joha Jeffris, in Chicago. Michael J. Buckley, a retired farmer of Lerna, died today from injuries he suffered ln a fall from a load of hay. Merle Janes of Mattoon and Miss Lorene Clodf elder of Humboldt were married today in this city. Miss Bertha Louise Morse of Cobden has arrived in Mattoon to spend the winter and will reside at 1521 Charleston avenue.

Glenn Smith and Miss Ruth Hopper, both of this city, were married yesterday ln Toledo. A large two-story farm residence' of Charles Taylor, northwest of Cooks Mills, was destroyed' by fire yesterday. All the contents also were destroyed. Kermit Beajs and Miss Blanche Layton, both of the Shlloh neigh borhood, were married today la Trilla. Livestock men from over this sec tion of the country gathered at Salem Center, east of this city, to day to hear an addre by H.

P. Rusk, head Of the aftimal husbandry department of the University of Illinois. Miss Ida Turnbull, principal of the Mattoon High School, has returned home from Bloomington where she attended the fall con ference of Big Twelve principals. Relief At Last For Your Cough Creomulslon relieves promptly be cause it goes right to the seat or tne trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, in named bronchial mucous mem branes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulslon with the un derstanding you must like the way it quictiy auays we cougn or you are to nave your money Dacx.

CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis Pierre J. Huss, former Berlin correspondent of International Newa Service who is the author of the series of articles entitled, "Inside Germany Today." The series begins today in The Journal-Gazette. basic p.clple of tne new order ahnilM aHfiAH Bm1 worklng -glove from the White Sea down to the Black Sea and from the Urals to the Channel ln the "common interest" an4. ivplTnrrt nf Hiimtu anrl th Europeans. It Is something along the line Napoleon hid In mind.

Frontiers on! that blueprint are secondary; in fact they could be secondary; laco tney couia do drawn ln mvl4ble tok their practical "significance under the new order is concerned. The Germans, to hear them talk, would see to it that each nationality could live in self-security and on Its own sovereign name but the push-button on things that matter Is BERLIN in capital letters on that Hitler blueprint. For the International troublemaker, and ln any case of unrest or threat to another land, there would be the mnip. w1th hn himf. from the Darracks of Nazlland.

It would be. by force of circumstances, a most peaceful Europe under the swastika. "I guess I might as well live In a cage," says the subject of King IfanVrm KooL 4n "Wirt Afnt ont No. 4, nw 20-2s-13w. Warns County.

Swan-King Oil D. E. Spencer-Federal Land Bank No. 2, ne 28-ls-6e. Pure Oil C.

M. Berkel No. 1, ne ll-ln-7e. White County. Superior Oil E.

S. house NO. 12, nw 3-5s-14w. Superior Oil E. S.

house No. 11, ne 4-5s-14w. Superior Oil E. S. Great- house No.

13, ne 4-5s-14w. pure Oil W. M. Martin No. ne 18-6s-9e.

Four-County Area. Twenty wells were completed in the four-county area this week, in- Great1 for Mrs. Ellis EAbbs, 48, of Effing-Great- ham, who died Friday ln St. Anthony's Hospital, were held Sunday afternoon at the Assembly of God YThat Is one of the reasons why the peace conference in the accept- sense of the word finds no place He wont Mt at international conferences to settle frontiers and foreign policies because he says they are not practical and, behlnl iu- 11.1 ni the scenes, are nothing but political horse dealing, rurthermore, and what Is more to the point, Hitler has no lnten 7: Uon of Justighting this war to Victory and then carving the map as It should be. His way of doing It Is to do it now and that Is how the new order was born.

Hitler launched his new order long before Munich; ln fact the keystone was the Austrian Anschluss and from then on It has merely gained ln momentum and scope. The Nazis also have a favorite the -ary that during a war you can get things done much more quickly than ln peacetime, when you have py wv- ular state of rhlnd. In other words. It's easier to work ln the blackout. From Hitler's standpoint, the -i lost 52 WEA SIZE 14 AGAIN -aM.

e. vifKixa, rr. worn Ton rm Vm mlnponodi an tiivn 4 leodw. rw(ul flpir drug. No iwci)ni.

Simplr follow th AjiM Cwti Piatt and iro Ujin. Ajdl Candr eonUlnt MemuT 1tmiin tri mitriraml. lnll P-prtitr for fltitn foot. Mcua bi 11U00 purill (uumntce. Money Beck If Not Satisfied Let tell To? Kt or Btwd run lcuif veiaau bow unit torn to 8 pounds MilNET BACS.

Rnembrr Urn name. Just phona67, Dept. 45tore. aft iSS 11 eluding 17 producers-and three dry or John Krick, 64. who died Fri-holes county led wlth 10 day at his home ln Montrose, were producers and two dry holes.

Rich- held today at St. Paul's Lutheran land county had three producersr church -trr Krick IMMAUit lurm.Ia a VV. A VI VI 4 ntwav go fishing for. anyleepJkJCtf.tbftJty.to.Fba to To hell with the Balkans, rm not interested In olives from Greece if it means marching the goosestep economically and politically before going fishing In Nor way. But Hitler's Europe wouldn't Mrs.

J. W. Reynolds. Assumption, 111. Mrs.

J. Reynolds, 73, died Saturday at her home near Assumption. Death resulted from complications which followed a broken hip, according to Coroner Charles O. Miner of Shelbyville, who conducted an Inquiry. The funeral was held today at the Stumpf funeral home ln Pana.

Sur viving is her husband. Mis Paris, 111. Miss Jennie Nelson, 82, retired Paris school teacher, died Sunday at her home. Funeral services will be conducted Tuesday afternoon at the Presbyterian church. J.

W. Kern. Clinton, 111. J. W.

Kern, a former superintendent of the Springfield division of the Illinois Central- System, with headquarters ln Clinton, died Saturday at the I. C. Hospital at Paducah, Ky. Mr. Kern had been on leave of absence about a year from his duties as superintendent of the Kentucky division.

expect to finish the Job within the next few days ropean observer) after that the pilgrimages to Hitler's grave would probably draw as many sightseers as Mohammed in Mecca." Of course once you have the new order functioning in continental unity and isolation from England and the western hemisphere, there Is much to facilitate life for the a.veiac umi, uu the word of Nazi draftsmen of Hit- average man, if you care to take ler's Europe. Europe. A man going from his home In Berlin to Istanbul by train could cross tne numerous sovereign countries In comfort and with little documentary difficulty. At least, that's how the Nazis visualize the future setup. A passport of identification no doubt would be necessary but a perfunctory stamp at each borderpolnt enroute also would suffice.

They wax enthusiastic and swear that fire-eating omctals and pass port examiner no longer would rout the new order traveller out of bed. After all. they hold, the swastika on the passport would be sufficient frfpntifiration. Iik th roval' crest the. days of World War II the whole issue of border crossing was disposed of once and for all by this man Hitler.

He marched his mighty armies clear across strife-torn Europe to accomplish that easy bor- der crossing for generations- eomlng war. He keeps reminding his German audiences that only a few years ago. before he came to power, 48 political parties fought like wolves for control of the Reich. He dissolved themall and today there Is only the Nzl party. It requires stretch of the imagination, therefore, to read his mind on how to deal with the pesky Job of settling the dog-fights of Europe.

If the dogs must fight and tear each other to plecees, then whip them down to the tame kind which yaps at your heels and obeys the call of the master. That takes time and energy, but In the end you have something to go on. For example, as ber-table experts tell you after four rounds, borders without suicidal tariffs, so that goods could flow back and forth for the benefit of all paid for ln kind or with international European currency. That is a blueprint worth working on, looking at it from the Nazi standpoint. By the same token, the new order magically and Inevitably worry about the stubborn- Nor- after him and that Is why the Nazis weglan or the volatile Serb.

They'd now tell themselves before the mlr-get beaten to form in due course ror it's worth fighting for. of time. This Is, you see. the Nazi dream. "The first hundred years of the The Hitler blueprint of Europe new order would be the hardest; under him envisages all that, along (quoting herewith a cynical Eu- with tough problems and sore that always have caused dissension and Map depicts sites em fleWS 01 llllllOlS 1 ri 1 flf I IClflR DRILLING PERMITS ISSUED BY STATE Special to The Journal -Gaxetta.

Spring-field, III. Oil ana gas well drilling permits Jssuea today by the State Department of Mines 'and Minerals are listed below. The name of the applicant Is given first, fol lowed by the designation for the well and then its location: Bond, County. C. J.

Moritz, White No. 3 ne 17-5n-4w. 7 Pure Oil L. A. Pearce No.

A-l, Tie-l2n'7e; Pure Oil Roy Stanford No. 1, sw Hamilton County. Ohio Oil Mattle Whitmore No. 2, se 13-6s-5e. Ohio Oil O.

C. nw 24-6s-5e. Smith No. 2, Jasper County. Felix Jablonski.

Felix Jablonskl White Eagle Oil Fisher No, 1, sw 18-5n-I4w. Pure Oil Alonzo Stanley No. 1, se 18-5n-10e. Macoupin County. R.

O. Whipple, H. C. Rhoads No. 1, sw 35-Sn-8w.

Jefferson County. Carter Oil Raymond Dobbs No. 3, nw 10-ls-2e. Richland County. Walter Duncan, W.

C. Bierhaus No. 1, nw 16-2n-14w. Pure Oil John O. Coen No.

21, nw 9-3n-9e. Pure Oil L. R. Boley No. A-1, se Wabash County.

Continental Oil S. M. Dague 1st Russia and golden" wheat from the "semi-Independent" Ukraine; champagne and Rhine wines could vie for favor on" the tables of new Europe, and the fat hogs of Poland, Dutch cheese and Danish butter would come in ample quantities to all who toiled and marched In step with the powers that be. No more huge taxes for standing armies and armaments all surplus production and money and effort could give added support to the Hitler as planned and forged by him back in the days of World War IL That would be, as he sees "it. the fruits of his labor and a just reward and pleasure for the sacrifices made.

Again I say, this is Hitler's dream for all that it may be a night mare for others. a church In this city. Burial was ln Mason. Mrs. Babbs leaves her husband, four daughters, a son, one sister and a brother.

John Krirk. Montrose. 111. Funeral services leaves his wife, a daughter, two sisters and three grandchildren. Mrs.

Catherine Hish. Shelbyville. 111. Mrs. Catherine Hish, 80, died Saturday at her home northwest of Shelbyville.

The body was taken to the Stumpf funeral home ip Tower HilL Mrs. Hish had been an Invalid several years. Surviving is a brother. Stephen Perry Miller. Brocton, 111.

Stephen Perry ler. 63, a native of Brocton, died Saturday at his home in Frankfort, where he had resided 25 years. Surviving are his wife, a son, a brother, two sisters and a grandson. Orval W. Hlghl.

Assumption, 111 Orval W. Hight, 72. for 45 years an Assumption banker, died Sunday in a St. Louis hospital. He had been ln 111 health since he suffered a stroke four years ago.

The funeral will be held at 2 o'clock Tuesday afternoon at the Glenn funeral home in Macon. which was productive ln the field for 20 years. The operator's No. 1 Watts in the area was initialed at 50 barrels a day. The Petro sand ts found near 750 feet and often is 40 feet thick.

Oil Chiefs to Meet. Springfield, 111. A meeting of the personnel 6f the new division of oil and gas conservation has been called for Tuesday, Dec, 9, by Robert Medill, director of the State Department of Mines and More than 75,000 DODGE JOB-RATIO or in th Amy Jasper had two and Clay county had two producers and a dry hole. Twenty-two locations were made in the area during the week, 12 in Wayne county, three ln Richland, three ln Jasper and four in Clay. The most Interesting test in the area was B.

F. Williams No. 1 Nolan-Cooper, a wildcat six miles southeast of Flora in Stanford town ship. The well recovered good Mc- closky saturation which flowed on a brief drill stem test. The operator started drilling plug Saturday.

White County. The most closely watched area ln White county at present is east of Centerville, where Sun Oil Company drilled a discovery well on the Strowe farm in sec. 7-1 3-10T Several other operations are. now under way in the area. They include McBride's No.

1 Daly; Suns No. 1 Baird and No. 2 Strowe and Skelly's Ka 1 Bryant. The area has Tar Springs and McClosky production. Clinton C0UntJ'" Activity was revived in the West Centralla pool during the weekend.

J. J. Broadus Is drilling below caMng gfc Nq Heirs Shell OH Company farm-out and an attempted eastern extension of the field. A location north of Broadus venture is Strawser and Isaacson's No. 4 Phoenix which is near sand completion in the Benolst Macoupin County.

A state drilling permit has been issued to R. G. Whipple for a rank wildcat in Macoupin county. The well Is No. 1 Rhoads ln sw sec.

35- 9n-8 "-v -S -r TtlKKS mmm QHSLH3DGD This space is dedicated to the memory and respect of i those fine American boys who yesterday were the victims of the most savage i and underhanded attack ever perpetrated in the annals of history. would provide to the wishful mind vast new developments of all Eu-of the Nazi and his rationed rope, ln due time completing the. stomach a well-filled larder so Titan monuments of the ages to Marion County. Minerals. The meeting will be held South of Centralia In Che old toldlscuss law enforcement actlvi-Wamac pool, Peterson's No.

1 Tim- ties of the division. G. C. Curtis, berlake has been put on pump for of the division, will test of the shallow Petro sand preside. that stomachs could again become pot-bellies from the Joy of living and and non-continental powers no longer' would be ln a position to switch off and on any hunger blockade against Europe.

The latter would be self-suffi- cient in the Nazi view, pouring out ie manufactured goods from national-. JELL Mt TtT A BARGA'N ALL ABOUT JLft FIRST 1 HOUSTON A Ji in i 1 1 KHU II II VI i gi Just give two minutes pf your time NOW in silent reverence to their memory. Thank you. Don Let the Weather Fool You-Take These Precautions Now! I fit yffl job rjllP LOAN PROBLEMS DIFFER 1. Install Year-Around Doors Keep the cold out ln winter and flies out ln Rummer.

When summer comes merely slip out the glass and put In the screen. Complete with fittings. I a i I I mm- 6 Grat Truck Engine I 18 Whealbas Ungthri 112 Standard Chassis imn iinnp nrkiiirn and Body Models! u. A A HORSEPOWER IN I00SE U4-TIII TRUCKS 2. Install Storm Windows i Rarefy are two mortgage situations "Identical.

There are so many variable factors to consider. For example, income of borrower, relative size of proposed loan to total appraised valye, number of years owner elects to pay of and others. When you apply for a loan to First Federal we. take all these factors Into account. From them' we evolve a sound, economical pattern or program.

As a result you get the cash you need under a plan of repayment based on your capacity to see it through to completion, GIBSON FURNITURE COMPANY MATTOON Keep cold winds out and the warm air int Will make a real av, Ing on your fuel bill! L' ntiU ECONOMICAL POWER, TOO, because it's Job-Ratedl Tour Dodge track will be engineered, and "sized" to fit YOUR job. It will be powerful, yet economical, with exactly the right one of six great truck engines to pull your loads most satisfactorily. Every other unit will be "sized for the work at hand. Still priced with the lowest easy budget terms! Come in today! And your Podge Deafer "KEEPS 'EM ROLLING' WITH A-l SERVICE! EMUS Hill EASY TERMS CAN BE ARRANGED I Construction Materials Co. 303 South 21st St.

Phones 43 and 44 1 STOP IN Mcaa ma SaacMlcaffaiM Sbacl la Wlffcavt NaMca BoPAtiAti iVHlXER SONS MOTOR CO. 1101 Broadway Phone 581 C. R. FIXMMER, Secretary i 1608 Broadway 1 z1 1,.

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