Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 25, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 17, 1935 Page: 5 of 12
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Wednesday afternoon apr. it, 193a
HENDERSON DAILY NEWS, HENDERSON. TEXAS
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to use.
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RANGE ROUND UP OFFERS
Attractive prices . • . convenient terms
• . . liberal trade In allowance which
make it easy to buy a Modern Gas
Range . . . NOWI
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GOODY! GOODY!
SANDWICHES
AND
ICE COLD BEER;
The Best on the Hlway ‘
OWL SANDWISH SHOP
1} milea on Kilgore Hlwny J
--------------- 4
The president of the Unite!
States does not have constitution
al power to pardon state prfaM
era; his powers extend only to fed
era! prisoners.
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Spacious storage compartment: convenient
table top; handy warming oven; easy-to-clean
porcelain iinish are but a iew oi the many
extra features any Gas Range Dealer or the
Gas Company will show you. Visit them.
^■^71
[CONOCO
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Igty
• Gas has always given you speed, con-
venience, cleanliness and economy in cook-
ing. To these basic advantages the modern
Gas Range adds a wealth of new features
that give even more pleasure and satisfac-
tion to Gas Cooking.
The fully insulated and heat controlled
oven frees you from constant watching;
saves fuel; keeps the kitchen cool and
assures better baking. Now type burners
are faster, more efficient and automatically
7.1 n-;*r
— *«■» . 'At ■ r .
Scorpions are believed to be the
first of the earth's creatures to live
on dry land. They are now resi-
dents of desert areas.
I VfOIjR car today has twice the
. JL horsepower and speed of the
I car you drove ten years ago! The
I average of 22 leading cars in 1934
I was 108 horsepower.
I Bearing pressures and tempera
I ture have increased correspond-
I ingly—so greatly that motor parts
I are now made of new alloy metals
I of extra strength and durability to
I stand the load!
I To protect such a motor you
I need an oil with enough extra oil-
I iness and film strength to with-
/ stand the extreme pressures and
temperature!
Yet motor oils generally have
no more oiliness and film strength
now than they had ten years ago.
New refining methods have re-
cently come into use to make oils
free from carbon and sludge. But
these refining processes have low-
ered instead of increased oiliness
and film strength—the very quali-
ties on which depends an oil’s
lubricating value!
CONTINENTAL OlL COMPANY • Est. 1979
-/CONOCO
(TlWksSkHRM PROCESSED
V—MOTOR OIL
There is one exception—Con-
oco Germ Processed Motor Oil.
It, too, is free from carbon and
sludge troubles. But, more impor-
tant, the new Germ Process—add-
ing concentrated oily essence to
highly refined oil—puts into this
oil 2 to 4 times the film strength of
any straight mineral oil, as tests
on Timken and other machines
have proved! That extra film
strength gives safe lubrication un-
der the most extreme pressures!
Germ Processed Oil protects I
your motor another wsy. Its pene-
trative film, the “Hidden Quart,**.
stays up in your motor and cuts
down starting wear.
Germ Processed Oil gives longer
mileage with greater motor pro-
tection, as the Indianapolis De-
struction Test proved.
Say “O. K.—Drain ”—fill with
Conoco Germ Processed Motor
Oil and drive with the assurance
that your oil meets your motor’s
needs!
Radio Stars In Golf Tournq
FONTHILL, Ont. (UP)—M
amateur entry to be received
the General Brock golf tour
ment, to be staged here for prl
totalling 14,000 July 11-13, 1
that of Paul Whiteman. Play
wit hthe widely known "King
Jazz,” wll be Guy Lombardo, 1
Bernie, Rudy Vallee, and Ed
Duchin, orchestra leaders. St
member of the team listed* tn
entry form will be Walter VI
chell.
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IMotor oLU
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SEE YOUR LOCAL DEALER , . . OR______
United Gas Public Service Company
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8EG?AN 9-ta<^E A-too-TiN(p
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material as the jacket
Pattern M3 comes to you M
detailed directions for maktmffl
jacket shown in sizes 1S-18 stad U
40; illustrations pf it and Ufj
stitches used; material require
ments. Price 10c.
Pattern 971 comes to you wM
detailed directions for making '
plain crocheted skirt in sizes IM
and 38-40; Illustrations of all th
sltches used; material requlreiasql
—price 10c.
Send 10 cents in stamps or M
(coin preferred) for each pattsr
(20 cents for both) to Henderso
Daily News, Needlecraft Dept,, I
Eighth Ave., New York, N. Y.
--° ' ""**■ iM
5- O u>E D to u)( W
• SO—AV? the (?a- ioo e
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in each line.
Paul Muni’s star of life arose
Where by Vienna, Danube flows!
The first fiften correct solu-
tions received will win for the
solvers a pass to the Palace. Bring
or mail your poem to the Palace.
polygraph. It simply produces a
pen-and-ink record of the breath-
ing, but you can’t control your
blood-pressure. When the record
shows that the tested person holds
or subdues his breathing at a cer-
tain question, and relaxes
brehrhe normally after it
passed, that is significant.
TELLS INTERESTING STORY
.......uid-deb aaidth oien ......
If at the same point in the re-
cord his blood pressure increases,
and directly afterward becomes
normal, that adds to the signifi-
cance.
When
voluntary
B
an adjunct of the
University law
school, and courses are given to
budding lawyers there in what is
evidence, how to get it, and what
to do with it after you get it.
A four-year police school is one
states will license medico-legal
technicians just as today it li-
censes lawyers and physicians, to
conduct the sort of scientific ex-
amination of accused persons that
is forecast by these first “lie de-
tector” convictions.
Here is another good one for
puzzle lovers of the Henderson
Daily NeNws readers. Just to
make it simple, we give you the
first two lines. Remember that
it must Rhyme and that will help
you to figure out the last word
I
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with our baat routea and all road o—dl
tion- mark-d—-H frM of eharz-l"
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you must have motor oil
done quickly. The collar with the
scarf is as smartly new as it is
prac leal. And who of us doesn't
like the flattering line of the sad-
dle shoulder? You can make the
jacket in cotton or wool—and you
what's just as important, it gels
will find it a part of your summer
wardrobe that you'll insist on al-
ways having on hand! If you wish
a smart ensemble, make a plain
crocheted skirt; pattern 971 con-
taftis one to be made of the same
‘Lie Detector’ May Prove Guilt, Innocence of Hauptma
------ 4
One Freed, Two
Convicted With
' ...............
Prominence already) given use of the lie detector as an inno-
vation in solution of crimes ivill be immeasurably/ increased if
Bruno Hauptmann if subjected to its mute grilling, as pro-
' ......i an effort to establish his innocence of the
Lindbergh baby slaying.
HR.
If it is,
of extra high film strength to get
SAFE LUBRICATION
VIENNA COLLEGE
570 YEARS OLD
Vienna, Apr. 17—Vienna’s uni-
versity, one of Europe's proudest
and most ancient scientific insti-
tutions, celebrated its 670th birth-
day recently.
On March 12, 1365, Duke Rudolf
the founder, who also laid the cor-
nerstone of the famous St.* Steph-
en’s Cathedral, signed the charter
by which the university was found-
ed.
He originally had destined a
whole city quarter for the univer-
sity, but it finally was domicided
with the Dominician monastery,
where it rose to high repute.
Until the reign of Maria Theresa
in the middle of the 18th Century,
the university’s organization re-
mained in accordance with medie-
val customs; "secular” and "divine”
sciences were kept strictly apart
from each other, teaching of the
latter being entirely in the hands
of the ecclesiastical authorities.
The great empress, by combin-
ing all faculties, brought the whole
institution under state control.
At the same time she decided to
erect a new building in which all
branches of the university should
be housed.
Its grand hall has been the
scene of many memorable events.
It was here that Haydn’s "Crea-
tion” and Beethoven’s Seventh
Symphony were first played. Here,
during the Revolution of 1848, the
rebellious students held their meet-
ings. After the suppression of the
riots, as a unitive measure soldiers
were quartered in the university.
The building continued to be used
as a barracks until 1856.
When the new university was
built tn 1889 on the Schottenring,
the famous old building became
the sea of Austlra’s "Academy of
Sciences.”
posed by his wife, in ------- .
Lindbergh baby slaying. Here the instrument is shown as
operated by its inventor. Dr. Leonardo Keeler of Northwestern
University, with the face of Hauplmann superimposed on the
face of the prisoner who actually underwent ^this test.
L ' - _
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I
By WILLIS THORNTON
NEA S-rvic- Staff Corre-pond't
CHICAGO, April 17 (UP) —
little needle scrawling a record on
moving tape may stamp more
firmly in the minds of thousands
the belief that Bruno Hauptmann
is guilty of the Lindbergh baby
murder—or it may add weight to
th eclaim of the German carpen-
ter that he is innocent.
Viewed at first with pronounc-
ed skepticism, the “lie detector,”
or polygraph, as its inventor pre-
fers to call it, steadily is gaining
support as a reliable aid in crime
solution.
Prominence far greater than it
has attained in the past will be
given the "mechanical sleuth” if
the proposal of his wife
Hauptmann be subjected to
test is carried out.
For the first time, the jagged
lines which the polygraph traces
have been admitted as court evi-
dence, by agreement of prosecu-
tion and defense, and they played
a definite part in sending two sus-
pects to Wisconsin state prison
for murder.
ACCUSED BY MACHINE
There was no flicker of emo-
tion of the face of Cecelo Longia-
no, accused with a pal of the mur-
der of a Portage, Wis., sheriff,
when he gave brief answer to the
question “Who drove the car?”
But in the series of oscillations
which the little needle was re-
cording at Longiano’s side, errat-
ic variations occurcd.
Equally pronounced was the re-
action of Tony Grignano to the
test.
The jurors who convicted the
pair, polled after the trial, report-
ed that they gave weight to the
evidence of the lie detector, but
did not place complete reliance in
it.
FREES 17-YEAR CONVICT
Another man is today free af-
ter serving 17 years in Marquette
penitentiary in Michigan for fel-
ony. Joseph Blazenzits owes his
freedom partly to tests made with
the polygraph at the penitentiary.
This record was part of the evi-
dence submitted to Governor
Comstock on seeking his pardon
as an innocent man.
The “lie detector” is apparent-
ly coming into its own as a defi-
nite, recognized part of crime so-
lution.
Prof. Leonardo Keeler, of the
scientific crime detection labora-
tory of Northwestern University,
gazed about the disorder of the
laboratory, which is being install-
ed in new quarters, as he told of
the cases.
Professor Keeler is the invent-
or of the polygraph, or “lie detec-
Fiftaen of them have been
built, and their use has been urg-
ed for several years.
But the cases mentioned here
are the first in which the ma-
chine’s evidence has been directly
admitted in criminal cases.
IT’S ONLY CORROBORATIVE
“I have have always disliked
the term “lie detector,” observes
Professor Keeler, leaning back in
his chair behind a cloud of smoke.
“It’s too broad a term. It is a
diagnostci method.
“It’s evidence is corroborative
only, and I’d be the last to gay
that a man ought to be convicted
only because the polygraph says
he’s lying. However, in conjunc-
tion with other evidence, it may
furnish most interesting corrobor-
ation.”
There is no mystery about the
of the hopes of the future at this
laboratory, which has studied evi-
dence submitted from 23 states,
and last year made 1200 such
analyses.
AIDS IN EVIDENCE STUDY
No investigative work is done
here. Evidence is studied and in-
terpreted, that is all.
Professor Keeler, who is in
charge of the work of the labora-
tory, hopes that in the future
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LOVE-500 n/t 2 H-<O"
and then TAL-ev?p /I
a long record of these
reactions to sustained
questioning is unrolled, it tells a
story.
But it is a story that requires
expert interpretation. The sounds
of heartbeats and breathing heard
trough a stethoscope mean noth-
ing to the untrained ear. They
need a trained physician to un-
derstand and interpret them.
So the polygraph, or “ile de-
tector,” needs an expert psycholo-
ord that a jury may know what
gist and physician to read its rec-
it is worth. That is why only 15
of the Keeler machines have been
built. In untrained hands they
might be dangerous.
WAY OPENED FOR USE
Now that the “lie detector’s”
evidence has actually figured in
criminal evidence and helped sup-
port convictions, Professor Keel-
er believes the way is opened to
extension of its use.
“It is still a new idea,” he ad-
mitted, “and will have to make its
own way, just as fingerprints had
to do.”
In the new quarters of the
crime detection laboratory, addi-
tional equipment will be available
to the seven men and women who
constantly are making tests and
developing new methods of crime
detection.
Their work is
Northwestern
HE A<?A<o>N
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CROCHETED JACKET
Fashion dictators In Pariz, rec-
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equally needed with the informal
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almost a woven material — but
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Bowman, George. Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 25, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 17, 1935, newspaper, April 17, 1935; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1315010/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Rusk County Library.