Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 24, Number 230, Decatur, Adams County, 29 September 1926 — Page 3
I Ew Magazine Devoted I Er Parenthood Published ■ 1 " h , h,«t < iNhtr. n I s ,« Ycrk. Se > ,t 29 Ca,t * d f ’ : * ! ■K . r sponsorship of sixty em.n---■B n ‘ ‘ , a iists 1B chlldreu's health, IRt’ un and welfare. a new uultonHr; nodical called “Children. The IRXtne for Parents,” made 1U |M<. -> appearance today. I Ris magazine.” it was announced coree J. Hecht, president of The ||B' „,s- publishing Association, unlEer -hose auspices it is issued. “Will no propaganda purpose, being !■ Crated solely to fathers and moth U\’for the sake of a new generation SB normal. intelligent and healthy ■Khildren In this it will have the acfKve .....petation of the leading ediicaIK pal and child welfare agencies. f'Evate aDd K» vprnmpn!al Iff Among the editors of the new maHarine are: Miss Julia C. Lathrop. iKrtner chief of the V. S Children’s ■hurean. Angelo Fatri. educator an I Bluthor Os books on child training, prank p-e-idetit of the UnlverI Eitr of Wisconsin. Judge J>n B. LindII eV of the Juvenile Court of Denver. Mr, in Livingston Farrand. president | l.f Cornell University, Dr Lee K. ilprankel. chairman of the National IKhealih Council, Dr Helen T Woolley. ■■Research Teachers College. CollltnIlbia diversity. James E West. Chief Mscout Executive. Mrs. Sidonie M Mcrnenberg. director of the Child ||Stade Association of America, Mrs. H lan,. Deeter Rippin, national direcII tor. The Girl Scouts, and Dr. Bela Schick, discoverer of the Schick test ■H for diphtheria. I 1 "There are magazines on the hreed- || ing of hogs and dogs, the growing of II flowers* the reKning of metals." exEl plained Hecht. “There are magazines ■ I for laboring m- n. radio fans, barbers. B beekeepers—for every trade and proll session, except the greatest of all— H parenthood. I -Billions of dollars are spent on II schools; hut practically nothing is U spent to teach parents how to rear |l their children. Os 96.000 hours of a 11 child's life between the ages of five ! | and sixteen, only 7.000 hours are I I spent in school; the other/90 percent || of the time is the parents' responsi- | bility. The new magarfne will have I | nothing for children to read; it will II consider with parents all the vital | problems of bringing up children from ■ crib to college.” i K o I State Horticultural Show I To Be Held November 11-13 Lafayette, Ind., Sept. 29.—The India iana Horticultural Exhibition, to be U held at Purdue university- Nov. 11, 12, I and 13, in connection with the dedicagl tion of the ne whorticultural building, I will bring together the greatest display M of horticultural products the state has ever seen, making it an event of great i I interest to horticulturists generally in g the middle west. Fruits, vegetables, |J| canned goods and flowers, for which si the state is famous will be shown at I the exposition under the auspices of y.»s. I ... ii ■ - managed by students, will a. at this time. Figures of state and national horticultural prominent* will appear on the three day program, and all of the state horticultural societies will hold their annual meetings during the exposition. Gov. Ed Jackson, a former fruit grower, will be one of the principal speakers. The Indiana gojuarnor owned. for some time, an orchard near Newcastle, while judge of the circuit court in Henry county, and cooperated with the Purdue extension department. Prof. C. G. Woodbury, who served at Purdue from 1907 to 1920, holding for a time positions as chief in horticulture and director of the agricultural experiment station, will deliver the principal dedicatory address Nov. 11. prof. Woodbury is well known to Indiana and middle west horticulturists. He is now, director of raw products research of the National fanners’ Association. Other speakers ovil! be Dr. J. C. Blair, head of the department of horticulture, University of Illinois; Dr. ' P. Hedrick, vice director of the New York Experiment Station at Geneva, who has acquired national recognition through his monographs of peaches, pears, plums, cherries ami small fruits of New York; Dr. R. L. Watts, director of the Argicultural experiment station and dean of agriculture at Pennsylvania state college and •'rof. H. U. Dorner, chief in horticulHire, University of I'linois. Wabash— Miss Ethel Gilbert has become proficient in the art of prize 1 "inning. Entering a'Purdue unjver-, mty contest, she won a -trip to Wash-' tieton and upon her return wrote such “« excellent account of her trip that ■allroad officials made her a present tr a genuine cow. Gary—Called to the scene of an ac- !, en k Police recognized the car which iad been backed through a window, us the same one that had been reported stolen only a few minutes before uud arrested Herbert Martin, the drier ' on a charge of vehicle taking.
!%e KITOTN ) - . - T? <£'. 1»Z», Weffcrn Union.) 1 It Is scarcely an exaggeration to ■ say that many matters which agi- ■ tats ths public mind are nut worth . a thought in eoniparlson, with dietary, to which a thought la aeJ--1 dom given. i FEEDING THE CHILD * i Children cannot digest food that needs mastication before they have
teeth. This Is a trite remurk but watch the streets and cars as you pass to and fro and see the stuff that Is forced upon helpless dillhood.
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1 Tlie fact tlmt u child crys for, eats (jnd seems to enjoy what is given IL • seems to be the only reason some i mothers use in feeding. 11 Solid food must wait for teeth. The , digestive Juices, like the ( teeth, are not . ready for use in the little child, as . milk. Its natural food for nine months, fulfills every need. ’ As the child grows, food is needed to build up Its teeth and bones as well ■ as the other organs, and this food ' must be supplied or poor teeth and 111- • nourished bodies will result. > Orange Juice, tomato juice strained, - may be given young children after f three months, between feedings. These juices supply vitamlnes which are necI essary for growth and health. I uts, except butter and cream, should not be given until after the coming of the second teeth. 1 Acid foods, pickles and vinegar in 1 any form, fresh hot breads or woody vegetables uncooked should never be • given to a small child. f The child needs variety and when . this Is not possible make the serving . or dishes ns different as possible. ' Predigested foods ar< not good for the child; his digestive tract must have exercise to be healthy and normal. Candy. If allowed at all, should be 1 homemade and given after meals in i small quantities—never before a meal. • Important points for every mother i to bear in mind: > "Service and cooking of food control , palatabllity.” , “Selection and mastication determine nutrition.” "Bad habits cripple life as do weak bones the body." As water makes up a large proporI tton of the body It is necessary that i young und old have plenty of water dally.
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(©. 1926. Western Newepeper Union.) The well-informed housewife will And no great difficulty In selecting a combination o4.toods that is nutritively efficient and at the 1 | same time simple and economlcaL . . —Jordan. ' •“ AIDS FOR THE HOUSEWIFE A little meat with dumplings ami the
ineui suili< I. 1.. !y dlnary appetite. Ground car away seed is nl< q for a spice cake, making a new variety of flavor. A few nuts
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coarsely chopped added to cookies I make them quite fancy cakes. ' A teaspoonful of dry sulphur mixed I In hot milk Is good for a sore throat. If grease Is spilled on the kitchen ( floor, dash on cold '.rater and it will harden and prevent It from soaking Into the floor. Much of It may be scraped off with a knife. Brooms should be hung when not In use and turned often when using and they will keep from spreading. A pinch of salt added to whites of eggs will cause them to whip up lighter. 1 A little soda ruhbed Into spots of grease will aid in cleaning when scrubbing the floor. A supply of soft tissue or paper towels is economical to use for wiping (mt greasy dishes before washing and for wiping the hands. A teaspoonful of turpentine added to the boiler of clothes will whiten them. Oil of lavender is good to put Into bookcases to keep books from moldIng. If the cases are closed for any length of time. A little sand put Into the bottorfl of vases will keep them from tipping when filled with flowers. Boiled flaxseed strained and sweetened with lemon Juice added Is good for a cough. Rub a little lard or soap on the side of the drawer that sticks. Use lemon Juice on mildew stains. I Mildew Is a plant and must be killed to stop Its growth. ! ' When lighting the gas strike the match before turning on the gas. then turn It slowly; If turned on full force It causes an explosion which makes the meter Jump andythis increases the bill. When cooking always turn off the gas before removing a dish; this saves many a cubic foot of gas.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1926.
I . Faithful Old 109’ J
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I Pilot Charles A. Lindbergh inspects the wreckage of his nwiil plane, from which he leaped with his parachute when fog prevented a landing. The plane crashed eight miles from Ottawa, ■ Illinois, after a ,’>,(HMI foot fall.
Betty Crocker To Resume Iler Radio Talks, Oct. 4 Half a million housewives in the United States and Canada will tune in their radio sets on one of thirteen broadcasting stations from the Atlantic to the Fac tic Coast on the morning of-October 4fh, when Betty Crocker, nationally known Home ser vice specialist, resumes her radio talks. Three times a week, Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays. Miss Crocker will attempt, as she describes it, to give new ideas to old cooks and old ideas to new cooks. Mondays arc Wednesdays her talks will deal with general household problems including the preparation qt' food, proper minus and other suggestions which shv> hopes will be devoted to her radio cooking school which last year was declared to he ;he largest school in history in tho n'Jtr.f her of registrants. The stations trom which Nyss Crocker will broadcast this year are as follows: WEET, New York; WGR, Buffalo; WIT. Philadelphia; KDKA, Pittsburgh; WTAM. Cleveland; WWJ, Detroit; WHT, »’hicago; KSD, St. Louis; Gold Medal Station WCCO, Minnea-polis-St. Paul: WDAF, Kansas City; KFJ. Los Angeles; KPO, San Francisco. Her talks will go on the air al approximately 10:45 A. M. This is the third year iu .which Miss Betty Crocker has discussed culinary problems with American housewives over the air. Three years ago she broadcast her home service talks from I Gold Medal Station Mintreajxrlis St Paul. So great was tne interest shown that last year arrangements were made to send out these talks three times a week from a drain of stations extend ing from Boston to Iz>s Angeles. This year Miss Crocker will use practically the same chain of broadcasters for her series with the addition of KPO, I San Francisco, on the Pacific Coast, i One change has been made since • ■“ ’ r. ; , Tlrree senarate uid distinct scboou ‘ were conducted last year and to quali--1 fy for graduation in any one of the I schools, it was necesary that a housewife report on all of the lessons. This i yeaj-'but one school will be included i iu the 25 weeks of the series, the lessons to go on the afr each Friday I morning. To graduate and receive a diploma, it is necessary only that the 1 listener report on any ten of the Fri- , day lessons broadcast during the seai son. o —- Lutheran Churches To Hold Convention In South 1 Richmond, Va. Sept. 29 —In Rich- , mond, the old capital of the Confederate States of America, delegates from the reunited Lutheran churches ■ in the North and in the South will meet from October 19 to 26 at the Fifth Biennial Convention of the United Lutheran Church in America. Three times in the past eight years CUtheran delegates from the South have gone forth into northern cities to confer on ecclesiastical methods and plan the work of the church. Once, in 1920, the convention met at Washington. This year for the first tifce delegates from the northern cities will meet their southern brethren on southern soil. At the time of the Civil War schisms appeared in the ranks of the great churches, and the Baptist, Methodist, Presbyterian, and Lutheran denominations divided into northern and souther groups, the separation of three of these denominations continuing to the present day. In three of these groups almost herculean efforts "have been exerted to reunite the divided churches but without success up to the present time. In the Lutheran church alone, the reunion has been effected and for the past eight years through the United Lutheran Church in America the|
Lutheran people of these two sections of the country have worked together for the common good. o Scientist Finds Common Source For Japanese, Hebrew and Basque Races San Sebastian. Spajq (United Press).— According to Dr. Yoshitomi a distinguished Japanese anthropologist who is studying the origin of the Basque race, the Basques, the Japan--1 ese and the Hebrews all belong to the sgfiie ethnical group. The former two, he declared in an interview are two of the ten lost tribes of Israel. Paolino, the Spanish prize fighter, 1 said Dr. Yoshitomi. Is a typical speci--1 nine of the Basque race, yet he might 1 easily be mistaken for a Japanese | wrestler representative of the same • age and condition as himself. Even more remarkable than the physical resemblance between the Basques and the Japanese, said Dr. Yoshfltomi rs the similarity between the Japanese tongue and the language of the Basques, the origin of which has hitherto baffled all the European experts, because it does not bear the slightest resemblance to any known European language either living or dead. In support of his theory Dr. Yoshitonii pointed out that there are nAmerous Hebrew communities in India, 1 China and Japan, who plainly do not descend from the Jews of Europe, but whose origin, Ifke that of the Japanese and Basques is much more re--1 mote. 0 Marie Krvl Doesn’t Want Musical Career; * Threatens To Elope Chicago, Sept. 29. —(United Press) —Marie Kryl, daughter of the Band Leader and composer, doesn’t want a i.-’.-ir'-.-.l; ..reer---«F<4 -if !'.■•'• .T'-iO?--• <'W. kos, wealthy young greek nobleman, , an elopement is threatened. “We plan to be married in January but if very much more fpss is made we’ll be piarried now,’’ she said today in reply to reports that she had decided on a career and a SIOO,OOO gift from the band leader for breaking the engagement. o
Get the Habit—Trade at Home, it Pays i Through J rains Ir ROYAL PALM Lv. Indianapolis 2:55 AM Lv. Cincinnati 8:50 AM Ar. Jacksonville 11:15 AM Ready for Occupancy 9»00 P.M. PONCEDE LEON Lv. Indianapolis. 3:20 PM Lv. Cincinnati .... 6:45 PM Ar. Jacksonville 7:25 PM Ar. Miami 8:50 AM Suwanee River Special Lv. Indianapolis 6:15 PM ' Lv- Cincinnati 9:50 PM Ar. Tarnpa 6:15 AM Ar. St. Petersburg 9:00 AM Ar. Bradenton 8: OS AM Ar. Sarasota B:3SAM Ar. Venice 9:55 AM Sleeping Cara and Coaches Dining Cara Serving All Meala No Change of Care For further information, tireping car reeeruationt, etc., addrett: H. D. LYONS, District Passenger Agent 307 Merchants Bank Building Indianapolis, Ind. SwmmßAJiwSrcroi I — —
Saxaphone Played Duong Reign Os Nero According To Records Just Revealed Rome. — (United Press.) —Nero re | dined with his wine and women to I the languid and eroticully charged strains of au orchestra of primitive saxapnones, according to records just revealed by Prof Federico Celentano, famous latin scholar. Exciting "Jazz,” or a forerunner of it, enlivened the eccentric Emperor’s Bacchanalian feasts. Even as far back as 753 B C. during “the rape of the Sabine women when the Romans carried off their neighbors’ spouses, so that they might pop ulate their newly-built city, the Romans played gaily on the "tlblcius thuscl" as they called them. These instruments were Imperfect saxophones, forerunners of the modern instrument. Though the Romans were "cave-men" hr wooing, they recognized fully the value of a “tlbiclus thuscl” to excite the impulse. Another Roman Instrument was the “psaterium” and the "sambuca.’’ These, the ancestors of the guitar and the mandolin, were first introduced in Rome in 186 B. C. They were played exclusively by women. Their sound was sharp and at the same time languid anil fascinating.! They produced a strange excitation of the senses and their use was later prohibited by the Christian church. Instead of the modern polyphonicorchestra of mixed instruments, the Romans hafl groups of musicians all
CORNS Lift Off-No Pain! Ihiesn t hurt one bit! Drop a little "Freezone" on an aching corn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you life it right off with fingers. Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of ’Freezoup" for a Jew cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn,! or corn between the toes, and the foot | calluses, without soreness or irrita-
tlon. 1 . * • America Automobile engineers — keen analysts of motor car performance —were the first to begin telling one another about the wonderful performance of the Hupmobile Eight. America, they said, had not produced its equal. One car, they declared, might compare. That was a Sedan handbuilt Italian classic which casks several times the Hupmobile price. S J Now, all America is learning the facts about the unI precedented smoothness, ease of handling, acceleration, Sedan, $2M5. and road steadiness of the Hupmobile Eight. Sedan .seven passenger,s24Qs. , , . , . Sedan-Limousme. »even-p«s- Owners of the most costly cars drive it — and theresenger, $2595. Coupe, two- a f ter wj j| not willingly drive any other car but the passenger, with rumble seat, . . $2545 Roadster, with rumble Hupmobile Eight. seat, $2045. Touring, five pas- , . , eengerv6l94s-Touring,seven- It is rhe product of a modem a better engineering, passenger, $2045. All prices at once you an j [ e( J t h e difference when you Lo.b.Deuoit.ulusrevcnuetax. , . take the wheel. . A comparison of performance—of upkeep cost—of driving facility—will make other types which cling to the engineering of a passing day seem out of date, cumbersome and clumsy. By all means investigate and know the difference between Hupmobile Eight performance and ordinary fine car performance, befofe you purchase. II T. J 'Durkin So. Second St. ‘ Phone 181
I playing the same instrument. These bands v.'ebi called '‘colleges'’ and were [ used mostly tor military purposes. | King Servlo Tullio had a baud of twuj | hundred musicians of diffurent "col-1 leges and playing together during the battles. The Romans borrowed many of their [ instrument from the Greeks and the' Egyptians, among which the lyre. | Nero was a champion of the lyres. I It was this instrument that'h () played during the burning of Rome instead of the fiddle as la commonly supposed. I Democrats Agree On Wet Plank In Massachusetts Boston, Sept. 29. —(United PresPs) — Masschhsetts Democrats have decided ’ not to soft pedal the liquor issue in connection with the fall campaign, Early today, the resolutions committee of the Democratic state convention, in session here, agreed upon a "wet" plank which opposed the return of the saloon, but advocates repeal of the Volstead Act and the 18th amendment, if necessary, to permit the'
- i As Time Passes 11 fit You will need more of the ser- M B vices of a bank like this one— It t a bank where you will feel at t B home, where the officers will ill take a friendly interest in your < 8® £ progress, and where your cred- j© ■ it needs will receive the fairest iff consideration. - t>ecqtxir’ln‘diqnq
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enactment of regulat"d sale similar to the Quebec system. I Secretary Mellhn Believes Prohibition Is Succeeding Washington, D C. Sept. 29. —(Unit1 «d Press) —Secretary of the treasury , Mellon believes prohibition Is slowly, • I but surely, decreasing liqifbr consumpjion in the United States. Mellon said today Lett leg sources of -apply are decreasing and that people “ are drinking less than ever before, adding that very little liquor is not coming across the Canadian border. Industrial alcohol, he admitted, continues to be the chief source of supply cf the illicit market. ’ On and after this date, Sept, 27 I will not be responsible for any debts contracted for by my wife. Daniel Durbin ' 228-3tx o ,— THE jHLTY NURSERY is ready to receive fall orders for fruit or sahde trees, berry plants, and all la nds of shrubbery. Call or write for price list. The Hilty Nursery, Berne, Ind.. 4 miles south of Monroe. 1 ~ z 815
