Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 25, Number 121, Decatur, Adams County, 21 May 1927 — Page 3

f JIIIRSV STOCKED I ffl BABY FISH I ■Shte Sends 1OO,(MIO WallI ■ Eyed I’iks For Stone I Quary Here ■ I ( , (i , r |, Kn;i|.p, of the Isaac Walton 188, . t.it.-.l today that the stone |Hq n ui > " f 1,10 roa,) ’ '"’ r,h if ■ ct pecatar. was stocked with 100,000 I Wall-eyed pike yesterday. Mr. Knapp received the baby fish from the state hatchery and placed them In wha' is known as the Interurban stone quarry Ea , w iH be a few years until the fish Blwtll be large enough to catch. E;. I The quarry was stocked last year ■fl with b'S and small mouthed bass and BBthe pl.i e is one of the good fishing BB spots in 'lii- county. It attracts many ■H fisle-r'iieti ami some fish are caught Bl I there. It is against the law Io keep a Bl I bass iitnler 11 inches ami a pike unBl der 1-' o'' Id inches. Mr. Knapp stated Bl Ilia' Ipiariy would he slot lied every Bl year or so with new fish and that the Bl Isaac Walton League hoped to make M >t as S'"’' l ;l >' is,lin P Pk'ee as any lake Bi in northern Indiana. ■K — . — o ! I SCHOLARSHIP AWARDS MADE I (COXTIM I'.n FROM PAGE OVE) B| Jane Kauffman, Minnie Moyer, Paul ■I Marshall. Edwina Shroll. Richard B| Sutton. Mary C. Toney. Eileen Burk, ■ I Ervin Fox. Kathryn Hower. ■ Honorable Mention—Franklin KellEl i er, Theodore Sovine. I 5A Pupils I Mar; Cowan. Marjory DeVoss, RoseI B lyn Foreman, Mildred Heshet*. Ellen I | Uhrick. Panline Hakey, Ida Mae | B Steele. Marie Teeter. I Honora Ide Mention—Helen Suttles, M Chas. Baumgartner. Marcella Gilbert, Bl Milton Hoffman. I Following are the awards of Leader and Digger pins for the las tsix weeks of school: 8A Pupils | Leaders—Bernice Gloss, Inez Cook, I | Georgia Foughty, Helen Koos. Mary | I Murphy, i ala Ogg, Gretchen Winans. I I Dorothy Young, Maynard Butcher, 11 James Burk, Harold Melchi, Ralph I I Meyers, Jesse Sutton. Diggers—Frederick Brown, Edward 1 I Gauze, Richard Steele, Wayne Zeiflp'l. I Mary Hower. Dorothy’ Stewhsy S.I man Koos. i 8B Pupils Leaders — Ruth Winnes, Bernice I Knittie. Robert Hite, Edward Martz, | Harold Mumma, Bernard Schieman. Diggers—George Helm. Harold Hoff- | man. Paul Uhrick. 7A Pupils Leaders—Wilma Case, Olive TeetI er, Fred Musser. Ina Anderson, Elva I Anspaugh, Marcella Brandyberry’ I Mary M. Coverdale, Helen DeVor, ■ Louise Hanbold Rosamond Hoagland, ' Mimic Niblick, Sylvia Ruhl, Richard Parrish, Richard Schug. 7B Pupils Leaders—Laura Christen. Elizabeth Frisinger, Vivian Lynch. Rolland , Reppert. Diggers — Lucile Johnson, Virginia Smith, Waveland Fisher. 6A Pupils Leaders — Ruth Rrodbeck, Ruth Elzey, Miriam Haley, Sara Jane Kauffman, Franklin Keller, Dick Macklin. Pauline Marshall, Minnie Moyer, Dale Myers, Edwina Shroll, Dick Sutton, Mary C. Toney, Ervin Fox, Kathryn Hower, Theodore Sovine, Eileen Burk. Di^fcrs—Wilma Foughty, Margaret Hebble, Frances Huffman, Kenneth McNeal, Wilbur Reynolds, Rrtscoe Smith, Eleanor Stele, George Wornnek. Margaret Yocum, Mary Kohls, Maxine Manley, Byrl Hunt. Marion

last fleet of sailing ships at SEA CARRYING AUSTRALIAN GRAIN

London (United Press). — Somewhere in t.he South Atlantic Ocean, or possibly lying in a calm of the Indian Ocean, is a fleet of 13 homeward hound sailing vessels. These thirteen comprise virtually all that is ■est of the one-time great fleet of sailing vessels that plied the seven seas. loaded with Australian grains, the 13 vessels "began their voyage to England in such close succession that their trips will revive the once famous port-to-port races when the sailing ship was in its hey day and cap'•‘ttis laid wagers before leaving port 'hat their vessels would be the first ,0 reach their destinations. Out of the whole 13 only one ship p s the British flag, although 11 of the vessels were built in Great Britn>n. Os the 12 under flags, one is ‘talian owned, while most of the others are of Baltic state register, for most of the great English sailing Vf ‘ssels were exiled to the Baltis "hen the vast fleets began to break!

easel, Tommy Burk. 8B Pupils Leaders—Marlon Baker, Forest BukI er, Gertrude Brandyberry, Mary Max- | ine Brown, Charlotte Hittier, Eugene Knodle, Virginia Miller. Glenlce Tindall. . 5a Pupils Leaders Ronelyn Foreman, Marjory DeVoss, Mildred Hesher. Ellon Uhrick. Marcella Gilbert. Mary Cowan, Milton Hoffman, Charles Baumgartner 1 Joyee Riker, Faye Elcker, Barbara > Ktlck, Ellen Gophart, Helena Rayl, t Helen Suttles. Mlles Parrish, Paul , Strickler, Mary Meyer. Marie Teeter, Margaret Campbell, Pauline Hakey, Ida Mat? Steele. ’ Diggers-Leia Palmer, Mabel Hurst, t Mary L. Foreman, Kathryn Engeler, ’ Idora Lough, Ruth Foughty, Ned Mosi er, Dale Johnson, Harley Straub, Robert Odle, Robert Magley, Carl Sheets, ■ Marcella Williams, Harold Blythe. I 5B Pupils ; Leaders — Mary Kathryn Tyndall. • Maxine Heimbarger. t Diggers — Catherine Brown, Mabie i Parmer, Doyle Smith, Charles McGill, . Fern Irwin, Paul Hendricks, Glen I Dickerson, Mabie Keek. r o DIPLOMAS GIVEN TO 40 AT I). H. S. COMMENCEMENT (Covrixt Ell t’Hint PAGE DXKI gram was furnished by high school ] pupils under the direction of Miss Dessolee Chester, head of the music . department of the city schools. The I boys’ glee club, the girls’ glee club I and a mixed chorus sang several , selections and Miss Helen Haubold presided at the piano. The Rev. Harry Fernthiel, pastor of the Presbyterian church, gave the invocation, while the Rev. O. E. Mil- • ler, pastor of the Baptist church, i gave the benediction. ■ Walter J. Krick, principal of Decatur high school, made a short talk, in , which he cojnplimentb I the graduates on their accomplishments and then presented the class to Mr. ■ Worthman. The latter made an in- , teresting talk, in which he commended the graduates for their accomplishments and urged them to carry on their good work. Following the commencement exercises, the annual senior reception was held in the high school gymnasium. Music was furnished by Don Farr's orchestra, of thia city. The reception lasted until midnight. Following is the class roll: Edward ■ M. Andersom Anna Geraldine An- • drcws.'Anies'KirbX- ITIH<eE TL’.Tmthitfl Baumgartner. Jos. E. Bebout. Marlorio Jeanette Beery, Violet I. Brickley. Anna M. A. Dierkes, Frank DeVor, Benjamin Graydon Dixson, Helen, E. Dorwin. Stella Jean Draper. Wanda L. Elzey, Bernice M- Engle, . Ruth R. Engle, Elizabeth (). Erwin. Arthur F. Everett. Kennelli Doyl Foreman. Robert C. Fowler. Margaret Bernice Frisinger. Robert D. Frisinger, Thurman J. Fuhrman, V. Etola Gattshall. Margaret. Haley. Evan Ralph Kek, Lyle Mallonee, afford S. Mann. Violet A. Neireiter. Marcella Minona Nelson, Kenneth H. Runyon, Mnrv Kathryn Schug, Gerald If. Somers, Dorothy Mae SpUller. Clyde Steele, Arthur D. Suttles. Jr.. J. Gordon Teeter, Vere Welker, Mildred Worthman, Doris Adele Yocum ami Harold Frederick Zwick. Dancinn Sun-Set park, tonight and Sunday. Willie Jones 10 piece colored band. Park Dian dancing 5 cents straight. 8 o'clock. —o Try our Special Sunday Dinner tomorrow. Peoples Restaurant. ! o BIRTH Wanda Maxine is the name of the seven-pound girl born to Mr. and Mrs. | Floyd Baxter of Eleventh street, Fri- ( day afternoon. The mother before her marriage was Miss Florence Snell. __o— — —

• up under the strain of competition wiin the modern steam freighters and liners. One after another, their voyages completed, sailing vessels flying the Bri'ish flag have either been sent to the scrappers, or condemned to be ( i sold to the highest bidder for trade routes where competition steamships is not so strong. Now there are but few sailing vesseis on the longer trips and the present voyage of those from Australia is understood to include the largest number which have plied this route, at one time for a number of years | Their long passage this time, they owe to a chance dispute between the grain growers in Australia and the shipping companies. But business’ for vessels cannot be carried on for long depending upon a chance dispute between shippers and carriers, so the present trip may be the swan song for more than one of these vessels which played its small part in making the most glorious era I in history —the era of the sail.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1927.

WHO SAID MODERNISM? i I ILj vtoß W II /II I' 1 IL I

I left 's a num who's never used a telephone, nor turned on tin electric light. He's William Kister. seventy, a farmer who's lived a mile from Elizabeth, N. .1., and within twenty miles of :New York. Stile of his farm revealed this. - He's just never had any use for the contraptions, he says.

Tellegen’s Child ’i 'j ’We-x-' I i ;xt, a To see her,father for the first time in fifteen- years and to make her stage debut, Mlle. Diana Von Domtnelen arrived • in the United States' from France. She’s twenty-three, i • (International Newsreel) Wives Os Talented Men Usually Burden, According To Survey By Victor W. Knanth ■ (IT. P. Press Correspondent I Moscow. — (U.P.) Thjeo children . for each family, living to the age of 15 years, are necessary to assure con- , tinuance of parental names and charj acteristics, the Russian Eugenics Society has announced after a thorough survey. The chances are overwhelming that parents with less than three adolescent children will not succeed ’ | in transmitting their hereditary traits | to the next generation, the Society found. I Scientists, inventors and others of superior intelligence as a rule have . less than three children, the report disclosed, with the result that excep- , tional talents are often lost to the i world in the second generation be- . cause the gifted parents do not as a • rule have enough children to assure the succession of their characteristics. Prof. Koltzoff, who conducted the survey for throe years, found that persons of more than average intelligence and education do not reproduce their kind in the usual propor- | tion. The higher the degree of education and brain development, he said, the greater is the tendency to marry I late in life or not at all and to have few children. The inheritable features of highly gifted parents in this waybecome wasted. The survey disclosed that the wives of intellectuals are more exacting In their requirements on their husbands i than are the wives of less educated men. In the matter of money, comforts and spiritual companionship, tlie wives of talented men are found by the survey to be a considerable Sour food causes » Bad Breath This digestive treatment stops bad breath, «as pains, belobing. Firn: dLj iiig digestive system to improve. la’e bettor digestion and bowl larity by taking Chamberlain Tablets for one we*. amuse healthy digestion, gpt reBuits Quickly. 50c or 25c pocket sizes at yi.ur tor Chamberlain Med. Co . 606 Park St., OesMoinw., 1 CHAMBERLAINS , TABLETS (

burden on their husbands, it is suggested that this fact may explain in part why intellectual men marry late and have few children and why some of the most talented men do not marry at all. o Card of Thanks We wish in this manner to thank all friends and neighbors who so kindly assisted during the sickness and death of our father, William Spuller. We also thank Rev. Smith and Rev. Miller for the sermon and consoling words. Mrs. Bertha Eaton Miss Flossie Spuller Mrs. (). Jhonson. o WIZT -aajAj.ts a’rq inuotit.iiv at[) jo,l apntn o<l riav stuamuSunajH pmij sn ‘jnasajd or o) poa.m a.tß sjaqtuaiu liV upop.o og:£ )b -auiu iA > Xepuoiv •uoi3aq ÜBSMamv aqi jo •;:k on ‘|so,i siunpv Jo Supaaut e aq ||i.w e.taqj, aoitCN uoifian ueaijauiy You’ll Want THIS uw/ Majestic Coal Window TheZMarkof a Modem Home WHEN you buyer build you’ll want the leading coal window value—the break-proof, rustproofed Majestic-with its Certified Malleable Iron frame and hinges, electrogalvanized pressed steel door and Keystone Copper Steel body and hopper. The Majestic protects your home from the impact of coal as it is delivered, and remains sightly and undamaged through years of service. We sell the Majestic in several styles for new and old homes. Call or see us for full information. Now is the time to install that Majestic Furnace Ashbaucher’s Tin Shop Roofing and Spouting First Street Phone 739

F SLOWING UP I Federal Judicial Machinery Running Out Os Funds By Joseph S. Wasney (IT. P. Staff Correspondent) Washington, May 21 -(UP) America’s federal judicial machinery is slowing up notlcably due tn shortage of funds caused by failue of the last Congress to pass tile Second Deficiency Bill. Federal Judges who have been working on akelnton appropriations during April, are reporting to Hie Justice !><*- partm'ent there would lie no serious delays in important legal cases but all minor cases will have to be postponed ‘ until after July 1, when the new appropriation becomes effective. The Justice Department is short nearly half a million dollars for prosecution work until July 1. Attorney General Sargent has instructed all judges, IT. S. District Attorneys, Marshalls and other federal legal ofifeerto curtail all expense so there will be no breakdowns in dealing out justice. "Some reports Indicate that Import- ' ant but expensive cases may have to he deferred," officials said tonight “Field officers have been instructed , not to incur deficits. '"While there is a material shortage ! in some districts, there will be an economy in districts where expensive litigation will not be held and a savings will be made sufficiently to meet substantially all requirements niton the most economical basis possible". Attorney General Sargent has issued a new order prohibiting federal judges ; from calling in other United States ■ jurists to aid them in cases. He also I warned against trying cases where witnesses must lie brought from long distances at heavy traveling expenses. , The Department is striving to carry CORNS FT! Quickrelieffrom painful V7. < 1 / W corns, tender toes and pressure of tight shoes. 1 JDI ScllOllS Aedrug t ; l

■ ■ • A Nation-Wide pF** Six “Demonstration Week” Millions may now experience what thousands already know Motordom’s Highest Achievement—the speed, power and safety of Super-Six Performance in a Nationwide “Demonstration Week” Hudson dealers were never so busy—our sales were never so large —customers were never so pleased—the value never bo great. Thousands of cars have been sold without opportunity to demonstrate them. Demand has kept the market stripped so that few but imminent buyers have had an opportunity to ride. Now with Hudson dealers giving principle attention for one week to demonstrating the new Hudson Super-Six, all motordom may have first hand experience of what is possible with the Super-Six principle released in full capacity. Until you ride in the 1 ludson Super-Six there is a motoring thrill you can never know. You see Hudsons everywhere. You admire their striking beauty. You note their Hashing performance. And you see in them the greatest values motordom has ever offered. In appearance, beauty of detail and finish, and in performance, you compare Hudson with cars costing twice as much. Make it stand out in your mind that Hudson’s price is hundreds of dollars below any car with which it is compared. Take advantage of this special demonstration opportunity. Ride in the New Hudson Super-Six even if you have no immediate intention of getting a new car. HUDSON Super-Six P. KIRSCH & SON OPPOSITE INTER URBAN STATION North Second Street Phone 335

'Health Lessons And Physical Training To Add Ten Years To This Generation

tty li.leinational News Servlcu Cleveland, <>, Health Instruction ami physical exercise which have been I made a part of present-day public school courses will enable the child ! ren of today to live approximately 10l years longer than their parents. This Is the opinion of Dr. C. E. Tttr ner, of Boston, following a survey In the schools here. )*roi>er dieting and' TRUE FISTOE HOME FOR REST Decatur Musician Visiting Parents Here After 25.000 Mile Tour With Keith-Orpheum Shows True Fristoe has arrived homo from New York City, after completing a 25,000 mile tour as ditector and getter- | al manager of one cf the Kefth-Orph-eum shows, "The London, Paris and j New York Company". This company consists of thirty stars. True left here last July and since then has traveled I over thirty-five states, the District of 1 Columbia and four Brittisli provinces ( He will remain witli his parents, Mr.|

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I selentiflc physical development tend to iron out defects, particularly when applied to children, whose bodies are si ill ; in tile plastic stage, lie pointed out. "Ten years can he added to the lives 1 of boys and girls of today through j scientific health education in the schools and cooperation in the homes." 1 Dr. Turner declared. ' ami Mrs. J. N. Fristoe, during the summer vacation period and return to New York City the middle of the sum- ' mor to again tour the country for tlie same company, next season. True has been in this business since ; 1910 and lias been in every state in the Union excepting Maine, and in every I Canadian province excepting New Foundland. He Is considered one of the leaers in his work. It is conceded that only two man in the United States have directed more different orchestras than he has. o .... Treat the family to our special Sunday Dinner. Peoples i Restaurant. 1

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