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Show Uncommon Child Training, Old and jTe,y Faces Trial for Crime That Stunned World Bi Sense e BU Syndicate ffXC Modern Methods Conceded to Have Many Points Advantage; "Lectures" Altogether Beyond the Understanding of Little Ones. 5rvK-- . is power but only If it unnumbered centuries the Niagara river Wisdom tumbled over Its two tail cliffs, and Lingers nothing but stone wall the sana from it th? ground down which it poured. Then the ilismvery of the use of euabled men to put It to Knowledge u svl- - ri ' Ij For oi k. Vv.. r- . (.,4flf4. v 3S chinery. However Intelligent you may be, your intelligence will be of no value to you unless you set It to work. To mal;e It of any benefit you must learn bow to put It to work, and fur what kind of work It Is best fitted Doubtless you have met many people cf whom their friends said: "These feW lows are keen witted and observing. Why don't they do something beside sitting around and making 'wise cracks' "? Probably because they are too lazy too averse to Intelligent and consecutive thinking without which there can be no real education. - 1 . e . .l The Murdered Infant. By WILLIAM C. UTLEY with murdering the Mrs. CHAHGED of Mr. and Bruno A. Lindbergh, Bronx Richard Ilauptmann, alien, will face a New Jersey court some Ome within a month to answer for what hat generally been recarded the most unthinkable crime In recent history. For more than two years since that eight of March 1, 10:12. when the child, who had been not Llndy's only, but America's baby, was snatched from Its nursery Id the Hopewell, N. J., estate, to be found dead some weeks hirer only fl?e miles away, authorities throughout the world and particularly Id New Jer-aehad spread a relentless net to administer Justice and exact retribution. Now the men of the law are certain that their net, drawn shut with a drawstring of powerful If mostly circumstantial, evidence, has closed upon the tight man. In New York, where Haupt-manwas captured and held In the Bronx county Jail District Attorney 6amuel J, Foley has built a steel-stroncase against him and a grand Jury has Indicted bim for extortion. Wisely waiting until bis state, led by Attorney General David T. Wllentz, had developed what It considered a foolproof array of evidence. Gov. A. Harry Moore took his time about asking extradition, with New fork safely retaining the suspect on $100,000 ball When the requisition finally went to Albany for the signature of Gov. Herbert II. Lehman the charge was murder, with, oddly enough, no mention of At the time of writing. kidnaping. New jersey officials had not explained the peculiarity.- Withstands Grilling.. Friday night, October 10, Ilauptmann. stolid, steely eyed, still bearing his Impregnable attitude of complete denial that weeks of grilling had been unable to break down, entered the Hunterdon county Jail at Flemington, N. J.. close by the courthouse where he will stand trial. The New York Supreme court had denied the appeal entered by the defense attorney, James M. Fawcett, who vainly attempted to prove that Ilauptmann had been In New York with his wife the night of the kidnaping. On the night of April 2, 1032, Colonel Lindbergh, convinced after a month of dickering that 15 notes he had received, asking for money In exchange for the return of the tiny victim, were written by the actual kidnaper, drove In company of Dr. John F. ("Jafsle") Condon, to whom the note writers had agreed upon as liaison, to dark St Raymond's cemetery In the Bronx. With hira he brought $70,000 In bills of the denominations specified In the notes. While the flier sat In the parked car, $.r0,000, Doctor bearing Condon, wrapped to specifications, approached the graveyard wall found no one, started back. Lindbergh watched and lisDoctor Condon tened breathlessly. had almost reached the automobile on his return when from behind the wall came an unmistakable cry: "Hey, Doctor!" He stopped and turned. Again Doctor ConIt came. "Hey. Doctor don retraced his steps to the wall handed over the money, and was promised that the baby would be restored at a designated spot within eight hours. In the Bronx county courthouse Thursday. September 27, Ilauptruann. sometimes called Bruno, sometimes Richard, went through his paces for tern minutes before a group of detectives, lie stood up, sat down, walked across the room, talked softly, talked loudly. He was asked to cry "lley, Doctor!" In a loud voice. Unknown to "detectives-wa- s Hauptmann, one of the Colonel Lindbergh, disguised by d glasses. a cap and dark, Lindbergh said It was without a doubt the same voice that had come over the cemetery wall Ilauptmann was arrested September 20, 1034, when filling station attendants had Identified him as the man who had passed bills known b.v their serial numbers to have been gold certificates from the packet .'rreii'lered The German by Doctor Condon, that he knew nothing about their origin. Find Ransom Money. Going to the home where Ilauptmann a.nd hi wife, Anna, lived with their y n g r horn-rimme- -- 1 . J kg ft v Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh. deals, often, because of their close friendship, with no paper record being Whca made of money transactions. Fisch had decided to go back to Ix?ip-zito visit friends and relatives, he had left In Hauptmann's care two satchels and a box, contents unknown. They were stored In a part of the Hauptmann Gazes Fondly at His Own house where rain was discovered, at Son. a later date, to be leaking through the roof. It was not until he removed them son, Manfred, blond, to make necessary repairs that Hauptchubby, gay, oblivious to his father's mann learned of the money secreted In more of found $13,7"KJ trouble, police the box, he said. the Lindbergh ransom money, hidden Once the money was found, Hauptbetween the walls of the garage. mann, according to his testimony, bechecked with His handwriting was came afraid that he would be caught that of the Lindbergh ransom notes, with It and punished under the rewidely publicized throughout the counlaw, which cently passed try. Comparing the rough, scratchy, carried a fine of double the hoarded barely literate scrawl of the notes amount and a possible long-terprison with the handwriting upon the sussentence. Later he began spending It pect's application for an automobile a little at a time, to avoid being caught license, Albert S. Osborn, handwriting with the whole amount hoarded away. expert who has testified In many ImHe claimed that he bad a right to a portant cases, declared that there was large share of the money because but one chance In 1,000,000,000,000 that before leaving for Europe and both had not been written by the same Flsch, his death, had borrowed heavily of hand. Police found paper Identical with no written account of the with that of the ransom notes in the him, transactions ever made. Friends and Hauptmann home. relatives of Flsch Insisted that he was Millard Whited, lean, lank worker virtually destitute and had not been on the Hopewell, N. J., estate, "posisending money home. Other things tively" Identified Hauptmann as the made the Fisch story sound more like stranger he had seen coming out of the a fish story. bushes there twice between February The chief alibi developed by Defense 8 and February 20. 10r!2. Another Fawcett In his desperate fight Attorney witness said that a man who looked Hauptmann extradited having like Hauptmann had driven a Dodge against New Jersey was that Bruno had to automobile with a ladder In it near called for his wife on the night of the the Lindbergh home on the day of the crime at a bakery where she was Is a Dodge. crime. Hauptmann's car at the time. From the bakery, working Other witnesses said his face "looked which they left at about 9 p. m. or familiar." 9:30 they went directly home and to Hauptmann's footprint tallied with bed. Fewcett said, bringing out conone found under the window where the from his client testimony curring kidnaper's ladder had rested. One of The testimony Attorney Fawcett was the rungs 'of the ladder had broken able to hold up only In part The pro through. Indicating that the criminal of the restaurant and his wife, might have hurt himself, spraining or aprietor Mr. and Mrs. Frederichsen, testified twisting his ankle. Miss Anita Lutzen-- ' that Hauptmann had called for his wife berg, blond working girl and friend on the night of March 1, 1932, but after with whom Hauptmann frolicked In the admitted that they were not the days shortly after the crime, when grilling, sure. Their conviction that he had his wife was traveling In Europe, testivisited the bakery was discovered to fied that at that time Bruno favored be founded principally upon the fact with a limp a leg whose lameness he that Ilauptmann had called for his ascribed to vericose veins. wife Tuesday night." Whether The suspect, it was claimed by the he had"every done so on the particular Tues authorities, had quit working immediday night in question they could not ately after the time the ransom was say. paid and had not looked for work Denies Writing Notes. since, yet maintained a stock market with the ransom notes on Confronted whose account activity had totaled the witness stand, the suspect exHe he'd two mortsome $201,000. gages totaling $7,000. He had made amined them closely for nine minutes. loans of $7,fi00. And in the market, Handing them hack, he said: "I never wrote them or had anything to do with although he claimed gains, he had actthem. I never saw them before In my ually lost ?7,0)0. life." Convinced that there was more eviExpert Osborn called attention to the dence than had been uncovered there, that there were seven distinct fact the police returned to his home, where In the boys of the neighborhood had been characteristics of the writing with tallied identical char notes that tearing tar paper from the roof of the In all of Hauptmann's writgarage In wholesale lots, and retailing acterlstics It to curiosity-seekerfor twenty five ing. Most unusual of these was a cents a small piece. The garage they peculiar formation of the letter "x," more of In which It was written like a double completely razed, finding the ransom money and a keg of nails "e." "Have you ever seen an x' written Identical to nails of a peculiar type that had been used In the kidnaper's that way before?" the state asked Osladder. Hauptmann, a carpenter by born, who listened eagerly with an ear trumpet to aid his defective trade, said he had built a door, a win dow frame, a counter, a house, but "Never," he replied, "never In my never In his life a ladder. Inside the house the Investigators life, and I have examined thousands found a loose board above a closet upon thousands of specimens." There were other reasons for the On It what appeared at first door. glance to be nothing more than a state to believe that Hauptmann had written the ransom notes. There were smudge was revealed upon closer scruthe same misspellings throughout that an Imtiny something vastly more were common in the suspect's writing. portant. It was the address and telephone Dumber of Doctor Condon, writ-fen- . There were the same little twists of language that were common in the GerIt was frankly admitted hy Hauptman's speech. Ami. as had been mann, In the carpenter's own hand. 'Bit by bit the evidence was making a brought out before, the paper of the more and more powerful case, the net notes was exactly the same as note paper found in the second exploration was folding about him. Throughout all this time Ilauptmann of the Hanpttnnnn home. Meanwhile, should the case against steadfastly maintained his Innocence, supported consistently b.v his wife. The Hauptmann In New Jersey fall through, money, he insisted, had been not his the alien will have to return to the property, but that of a close friend Bronx to answer to th extortion Inand l usiness partner, Isldor Flsch. Not dictment placed against him there. long before Hatiptmaiiti's arrest, Fisch New York officials are confident that with this charge, which they are sure died of tuberculosis In Leipzig, Gerthat they can prove, and In nd'tltlon, many. charges of gold hoarding and minor As Hauptmann Tells It. counts, they can put him safely in Flsch, Hauptmann claimed, had been for the rest of his life. affiliated with hlra In many business prison . Western Nawep&per Untoa ! g g s ?S-1- 0 Not long ago I visited a town where I lived as a young man. There had been many young fellows with great promise among my friends. Some of them were still there, going to seed. They managed to make Just about enough money to live on. But there their ambition ended. There had been opportunities In their very town of which they might have taken advantage. But that meant work and thought It was easier to follow the line of the least resistance. "Knowledge comes, but wisdom lingers." said Mr. Tennyson. Wisdom Is the fruit of knowledge. Without it nobody can get the best out of himself, or make the most of his opportunities. e the talks were lectures. But I you realize that everyti.in. 1 was Intended for your benefit "I realize that Auaty. talk Is going to be a reve:atlJ7 both of ns, I believe." "Now to continue our lesson me see If I can state your Met J? ly." continued her aunt "The friejj. . iy talk. In the majority of the best way to correct children im to give them advice, and, la that M you should have some humor, though not enough to subordinate planation and fact It must also k concise. fraEk. sincere, strain ward, honest and clear. It most m be about the child, but to hla- -. very important point to remembe when talking to your children hi . uuuersmuuJ jou correciiy. "That la exactly what I Aunty, but may we change taifc, to your children to 'talking with job children'? It should be, I think. conversation a friendly chat T confidential talk with a child It got to lecture him la harmful" "The more I think about It San, the more I realize that your M are correct It Is too late to w tlce them on my niece, but 1 hol you will stick to them and giT A vice to any children who areevsif your care." j I will," was Sara's hurried re for the doorbell had Just rnnf tH she was expecting her fiance. Sara and Mrs. Daugherty were talking. Sara was engaged to be married, and Mrs. Daugherty. her aunt, was performing a "last duty" from time to time by Installments giving her carefully thought out advice. Today It had to do with one phase of The Right Way to Raise Children," namely. "The Right Way to Talk to Your Children." "It seems strange to me," said Sara, "that so many parents of today try to teach their children by methods." "Perhaps, because they realize that the old people bad the best Ideas on child training," said her aunt with finality. "Ever since your dear mother died, and your father gave you to me to take care of, I have tried to teach you In accordance with the way my mother taught me. But It was too late. You were spoiled. I could not make (and the one word emphasized was make') you see right and wrong In their light I feel that I have failed in the task your father gave me, but nevertheless, I have not altered my Ideas In the least" "Yes, perhaps I was wrong many times, Aunty," agreed Sara. But you see, my mother was strictly modern In her ways, and It was only natural that I became modern also. However, I see no fault In being modern. If I ever have children I shall bring them op according to modern Ideas. We have progressed along other lines, why can't we progress In the manner of educating children at home? I believe In giving a child a general conception of right and wrong, and then encouraging him to work out each Individ ual problem. I most certainly do not believe In purposely letting him make a mistake and then lecturing him or giving him a whipping." "Just what do you mean by 'lecturing, Sara?" Inquired her aunt. This demanded a reply, so Sara answered frankly. "You know, perhaps, that to very young people a lecture seems to consist of lengthy expositions, discussions and eloquent phrases at least, those are terras for what the the grown-uchild thinks of it It seems to him to have no real conciseness, humor, frankness, honesty, polntedness or clarity. Lectures really are for the older, the more advanced people, are they not? They are usually so far beyond the child's understanding that he cannot grasp their meaning, however clear It may seem to the adult. So, of course, he shows little Interest and receives little benefit If we really want to help children, I think we should talk with them, not at them." "I begin to understand your point of view," said Mrs. Daugherty. "You think I often lectured you Instead of talking with you. I know, now, why you didn't want to be bothered with your old 'Aunty' and her silly talks miles Today it turns wheels whk-ndistant, run all manner of useful ma- e Learn all you can, but don't be a pedant with knowing things. who is contented Put that knowledge you have acquired Into running some business or practicing some profession. Make it work. Make it do something for other people as well as for yourself. Get all yon can of It You will need it today more than ever, for there Is more competition. Don't rvorry if you can't go to college. But If you don't, get your own education, for you will need It Only rich men's sons can get along without hard work, and many of these have discovered that there Is more fun to be had In doing something useful than Just loafing. xj n. e hem. At the present time nobody dreams that the supply of oil and coal on vhich modern Industry depends will out. Who then was responsible for the iean years out of which we are now tappily passing? iecoi ;'val Asbestos a Necessity in Auto Manufacturing The United States is the wotlii. largest source of manufactured a! bestos products, but It Is one of Hi! smallest producers of raw asbestsil "Asbestos, as the consumer seen often resembles a textile because 11 So. can be twisted Into cord and wore Into fabric, but It Is a mineral, wf , T! 7 ' ertheless, which can be mined l; r18" much the same manner as coal 11$ peIe' Iron." says a bulletin from fiJTef f Washington headquarters of the tlonal Geographic society. f- - fserve ' Ifee "Asbestos was used by the woif dents. They discovered that It not burn, so they used It for Iie wicks. When It was discovered tt E.W the mineral could be made Itir 'varn' and woven. It aennirpd niim i"Mak ons uses. , "Today motorists use more ast ' toa than any other group of """ sumers. Asbestos-faceautomol'i tec cars clutches help to put motor I motion, and asbestos brake Un: ' stop them. If all the brak? Una produced In the United States fc price, year were made Into a conttnif ribbon It would span the countrji "' b.' tween New York and San Franrif about ten times. ( Jnini 0 jfj . p Today there Is as much acreage In the world as there ever has been. There Is Just as Titles What much intelligence, o Milra 'TTm tierhnns mnrp. The I Hkli .UUUt, Ulll rivers still flow full ianked, the rains descend to supply o d t I you I Observes Bunker Hill Da? t Boston Is the only place lnf country that celebrates Bunker day. although It is an Imports!1 date in history. !r ' 1'. t .... c wl i Inun 1 Emm. . f ,Mve ft0 Men. Some of them were too thoughtless, some of them were too greedy. Some if them were a little worse than greedy, nd gathered in increment which did lot belong to them, 4 C1 JLake S m pare ffiare imt e who know the high quality and better value to be double-actio- n had in the double-teste- d The point is that we are living in the uinie world that we always had lived n, and that, as far as we can find out, rhls world Is going to endure for a :reat many more centuries. Well, what to do about Itt Make it teach its something. Men learn by their mistakes, and nough mistakes were made In the last six or seven years to supply a college with curricula for the next generation. Do a little thinking about people m lah If), btario's K C Baking Powder. )w ch ' Jrcelain It produces delicious bakings of fine texture and tratford large volume. lina dat Manufactured by Baking Powder Specialists who make nothing bat Baking Powder under supervision o! Expert Chemists ot National Reputation. Always nni form dependable. That Insures Successful Bakings. 333 iTennes! Women who want the best, demand the who got bumped. Take Jones, Brown and Robinson, for example. Jones got a promotion In the firm for which he was working, and flgurin? that he would be sure to get another before long, moved out of a house and into a twelve-roohouse. Now he Is trying to borrow money to keep It heated till the mortgage Is foreclosed. Brown was persuaded to take a partnership In a business about which he knew nothing. It was a promising business. But it never fulfilled Its promise?. Robinson became convinced that the me in the market was going to continue forever; like the rivers in tlieir valleys. It didn't. Robinson wishes he could get the old job back. Let's hope he will. Times are lmnrnvim nn,i be, with his new stock of knowledge he win be able to hang on to a good part of what he makes. An old Forty-niue- r for whom I one worked In the neighborhood of a California town which was left fiat after the breaking up of the gold rush, said to me one day : "Young feller, you can drink whisky. If ye're keerful. yon can chaw tobacco without hurt in' you none, you can even smoke thorn cignreets. but" if you want to git anywhere, yoti gotta leave gam-blialone." There is a pmco of advice, which had it been ginrr;!! followed would havl saved people a heap of money. ' ffvice S s 1 tnon nn fount wi 1729 K Economical and Efficient govern is Na; EJAKIiJG POWDER six-roo- J Musical little Same Price Today as 44 Years Ago : 25 ounces for 25c A fllll I ' Xw 1 j.$3.0i You can also buy 10 ounce can for 100 I f I ! 15 ounce can for 15c PULL PACK NO SLACK flLllSO Hundreds of Thousands of Women Bare Received THE COOK'S BOOK Yon can copr of tim buutifully iltmtMttd b " full ol practical, luted Mcipca that will Mail tb certificate from a can of K C Baking PavaO , with rour nam and address and copy w ill b ttt plM'"' postage paid. four Address JAQUES MFC. COOept.C.W CHICAGO, ILLINOIS NAME, ADDEESi norous nsation fntermooni po above. to I mn, p. o .f craa J""' Hon f ehed And Believed a cn.ll ttblic of 'las found J Oldei (The oldc lorld i Y'W year: I Most of Wy be re ns of I |