Newspapers / Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, … / Nov. 10, 1937, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO ■ FOUR killed in truck-train crash Four persons were killed and several others injured. None critically, wh en the Southland, luxury passenger train, leaped the rails near Lovejoy, Ga., after crashing into a truck loaded with furniture. Photo shows crowds viewing the overturned locomotive. - Papa Dionne Goes a-Shopping .<•l^ Oliva Dionne, father of the famous quintuplets, is setting ax example for New York’s shoppers by making Christmas purchases early. Here he is shown in his New York hotel room with gifts for the Dionne quintuplets, and for his six other children. (Central Press) A Missionary Returns wl ->• :-. j ••j , • • ' Miss Catherine Talmage, 83, for sixty years a missionary worker ir Amoy, China, fell and broke her hip fourteen months ago. Evacuatec from the war zone, she made the long trip to New York in bed. Othei missionaries in the party (left to right) are Miss K. R. Green, Mis? T.. N Duryee and Miss E. K. Beekman. (Centr*' ' ’?j Loretta Young, Warner Baxter and Virginia Bruce—in “Wife, Doctor and Nurse”—Stevenson Thursday and Friday. HENDERSON, (N. C.) DAILY DISPATCH WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1937 lAMES CONFERS WITH MAYOR KELLY ■: :•' w: : ;&? • > '. Jk|i^P BfSSst j? • ffijßwraggßg J»K. Ilf jjjW Mayor Edward J. Kelly and James Roosevelt James Roosevelt, eldest son and secretary of President Roosevelt, visits with Mayor Edward J. Kelly, who heads the Democratic ma chine in Chicago, and politicians wonder what they discussed. Janies came to Chicago to address Catholic youth. Dogged by Hard Luck f~ T - .' : f / '■ ' 7 A striking picture of Capt. George E. T. Eyston in the cockpit of his racing car Thunderbolt. He travelled the fastest mile ever made by man on the Bonneville Salt Flats, Utah, at the rate of 310.685 miles an hour, but because of mechanical difficulties failed to break the official world’s record set bv Sir Malcolm Campbell in 1935—391.1292 miles an hour. (Central Press) /foMt Nmmsu. DEAR NOAH = SINGE THE SUN never, shows UP UNTIL- MORNING, THE MOON A W©fJ_T» STAY OUT /AUU N »<SH • - . DEAR. * JOHNNY SA W *22 4 SL piew SCHOOL. HOUSER! RRE, DID HE HOWIT £H!S ?'g^- ' AND AAAll— NOAH ** T Vm-est NOTIONS %sm. PAPP.J /Joar NmsmxA’ DEAR. NOAH * ARE BANDITS GOOD AT RAISING PALMS ? > O.ft.MC DOWC.LL BOWUING, GBCEN , O. DEAR. NOAH* WHY doesn't a 'Jail. have feathers ? • UOHNNIC CAUUENS MOBILE, ALA. DEAR NOAH=IS MILK " THE ONL.T THING THAT WIL-U MAKE BUTTER.- FAT I* AR-TIS ISAAC I__ OKLA. CITY, OKI—A. PoSTCASD VOUEa IQEAsS NOW! Near Death ' * ► ::.;n i w =i Atlee Pomerene Former U. S. Senator Atlee Pom erene of Ohio is gravely ill at his Cleveland apartment. Pomerene, who retired from the senate in 1923, was a prosecutorof the cases growing out of the Teapot Dome oil scandal in 1924 and later was chairman of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation under Presi dent Hoover, although a Demo crat. Condemned to Die J* §|||g Ijjjp ij •* N ‘>. | K~L • •; Mrs. Marie Porter Found guilty at Belleville, 111., of engineering the insurance murder of her brother, William Katpen, St. Louis electrician, Mrs. Marie Porter, 37, of St. Louis, mother of four children, was condemned to die in the electric chair. Angelo Giancola, 22, who confessed shoot ing Katpen, also was found guilty and given the death penalty. Mayor at 22! lisj • :••:••• .IVllSl! | ■> ,r<; v v!i||B William ColUns Only 22 and mayor of a town! William Collins, student under taker of Whitesburg, Ky., is the new mayor, and youngest man to ever hold public office in Ken tucky. Collins defeated Mayor H. H. Harris, grade school principal, for the office. —Central Press Hitler Move ii 1 Wgm > •••• ' •.••• • illlll LpY.' Joachim von Ribbentrop As Fuehrer Adolf Hitler dramat ically offered Germany’s services as mediator of the Sino-Japanese war, he sent his ambassador to, Britain, Joachim von Ribbentrop, above, to Rome for conclusion of an Italo-German-Japanese “anti communist” pact. - •' STILL DAZED OVER “MARRIAGE” ~ > ~ . Mary Lee and Ben Ipock at home Still dazed by the disclosure that the farm boy she married was her own brother, Mary Lee Williams, and the brother, Ben Ipock, or phans, now try to ,readjust their lives at the home of Mary Lee’s foster parents near Chilhowee, Mo. Although their marriage was annulled, Mary Lee and Ben will make their home at the Williams’ farm. They were adopted in their youth by different families. ANNA HAHN FOUND GUILTY <. { -*■• • Mrs. Anna Marie Hahn, 31-year-old mother, termed by the prosecution the greatest “mass murderess” in history, was convicted by a jury in Cincinnati, Ohio, and the death penalty decreed. She is pictured here with her attorney (rear) being escorted from the court after hearing the verdict. Kaiser’s Story Pays Doctors __________ m—Km—mmamm T. H. Alexander and his son, Buddy, look at Robert L. Ripley’s “Believe It or Not” book, presented the lad by the author, but Buddy’s story is stranger than most of the things in the book. Bud’s dad persuaded Col. Luke Lea and seven other Tennesseans to permit publication of the story of their attempt to capture the Kaiser in Holland and take him to Paris for trial. The story pays for an operation on Buddy’s spine, curved seven years ago by an attack of infantile paralysis. They are shown in a New .York hospital. (Central Press)
Henderson Daily Dispatch (Henderson, N.C.)
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Nov. 10, 1937, edition 1
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