Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 25, Number 135, Decatur, Adams County, 8 June 1927 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. J. H. Heller Pres, and Gen. Mgr. A. R. Holthouse Sec’y & Bus- Mgr. Dick D. Heller Vice-Preeldent Entered at the Postoffice at Decatur Indiana, as second class matter. Subscription Rates: Single copies —1 -J* One week, by carrier -H' One year, by carrier 5-00 One month, by mall-35 Three months, by mail..————— LOO Six months, by mall 175 One year, by mail 300 ©ne year, at office-- 3.00 (Prices quoted are within first and second zones. Additional postage added outside those zones.) Advertising Rates: Made known by Application. Scheerer, Inc., 35 East Welker Drive, Chicago 200 Fifth Avenue, New York. De.roit received forty thousand cases of whiskey from Canada in one week and the prohibition officers are seriously thinking of doing something about it. Does seem like thats getting a little too strong. Tuney has the nerve to say that Lindbergh will be forgotten in a year, which makes us think less of the champion prize fighter. The slim, smiling aviator will be remembered long after the referee has counted ten over Tuney and all the rest of his crowd of entertainers. We are sure pulling hard for the Schulte Oil company in their efforts to discover a new oil territory just north of this city. The development of a paying field there would mean much to this city and would create more pep than any thing which has ~, . i happened in many years. We hope they bring in a regular Texas gusher. Governor Small, of Illinois, has returned si xhundred thousand dollars of the amount he collected as interest on public funds while he was treasurer of state. The people of that state twice elected him governor knowing he had collected and kept their money. Some times we doubt that folks are fit to govern themselves. The city council has disposed of the park naming problem by granting the two petitions. Hereafter the old cemetery on Winchester street will be known as Legion Memorial park and the water works ground as the Samuel : L. Rugg park. It may be a little ' diicult to get these parks fixed in your ! mind but after a year or two you will have forgotten they were ever called by any other name. , We can't help wondering why the state police parade around with all those cartridges in their belt and the big ugly looking revolvers strapped at their sides. We suppose this is necessary while they are advocating safety I week, adjusting brakes ami showing authority, but we can’t just understand how or when they use them. Gosh, one of them might go off and .just ruin the safety propaganda. Brisbane is now more fearful than ever that sonic foreign country will secretly get together a couple of thousand airplanes, sail over here and destroy the leading cities. Not yet They will have to find two thousand Lindberghs or Chamberlins and have to have machines than can do the round trip without a stop. In the meantime this country will probably meet them man for man long before they get here. Remembering the rains throughout this section of the country a few days ago it is not surprising to learn ftiat the southland is again suffering and that many families trying to return to their water-soaked homes were again driven back. It seems doubtful whether the decision of the administration not to take any action until next winter is wise. If they started now’ they might avert a repetition of the floods for next spring but if they wait until then to do something it will be just a matter of luck if there is not another serious loss. The Decatur Country, Club with a first class golf course will put Decatur on the map. We need same feature | of this kind that will attract the at-

tention of folks from far and near and 1 with the proper support we can have it now. Think how difficult it would have been to have raised >25,000 or $30,900 with which to build an ordinary course. Mr. Schulte has already invested three or four times that amount and is going on until the Decatur links are the best to be found. You are fortunate indeed to secure the benefits and the pleasures of such an institution at the low price it is being offered you. Don’t put it off for the list will close one of these days and you will want in then. Already a number from out of town have applied for membership and the receipts from that source will largely support the club when it is completed. Congratulations to Arthur Sapp, well-known and widely beloved citizen of our sister city Huntington, for his selection to be president of Rotary International and congratulations also to the Huntington chapter and to the Indiana district for so distinguished an honor. Mr. Sapp is an attorney, a Rotarian who believes it and lives it, a fine man in every way and a deserving one. His duties will require all of his time for the ensuing year and will necessitate a tour of the twenty-four countries in which the organization is now grounded. As district governor in Indiana he made a record which attracted attention and his elevation to the highest honor in the gift of Rotary was not a surprising but a reality which will gratify all who have the pleasure of knowing this fine Hoosier. Nine young men and women graduated from the St. Joseph high schools last evening and six from the commercial department, received their diplomas and stepped into the arena with the hopes of service and accomplishment. The Rev. Charles Girordot, of the St. Joseph church at Bluffton gave the address, an appropriate one for the occasion on the subject, “What we all strive for, success.” He pointed out that ambition and hope of success had led men on and that every great accomplishment from the hour when Columbus discovered America until Lindbergh drove his plane to Paris in thirty-three hours had been the result of determination to succeed. That took the boys and girls through school and that will keep you going st> long as you remain true to yourself, to your teachings, io your eomsanßy and your government. ,

♦ BIG FEATURES ♦ ♦ OF RADIO • *♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦ ♦♦ ♦ THURSDAY’S FIVE BEST RADIO FEATURES (Bopytight 1927 by United Press) Central standard time throughout. WEAF, hookup 8 p. m — Sil vertown Orchestra. CNRM, Montreal (441) and CNRO, 7:15 p.m.—Operatic hour. WOC, Davenport (484) 9:30 p.m. — Knights Templar Band. KYW, Chicago (535) 10 p. m.—Congress Carnival. WJZ, hookup 7:30 p. m. —The Harvesters. —■ o ♦ TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY ♦ ♦ — * • From the Dally Democrat File ♦ ♦ Twenty Year* Ago Th(e Day. ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦+♦♦♦♦♦♦♦•• June B—President8 —President Roosevelt says' it is wrong to kill Elk for their teeth 1 and urges B. I’. O. E. to change emblem. i Frisinger and Company offer $45 in premiums for best Belgium colt shown at fair. Miss Minnie Orvis entertains for Miss Anna Costello. Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Piter, of Dellefountaine, Ohio, visit here. The new’ building for the Decatur Produce company is being roofed. Iva Lightfoot, of Swayzee, is a Decatur visitor. Ofls iDbble and Fred Schur ger leave for Monticello, Indiana. They are working for the Homestead Art Company. Tom Petersen and Company is the name of a new firm in the cement contracting business. 0 - THE GREAT WAR 10 YEARS AGO I*- General Pershing and his staff arrive in London.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, JUNE S, 1927.

* TRY THE * * NEXT ONE * ¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ CURRENT EVENTS 1. What was the total prospective tax cut forecast by Senator Reed recently after a confer- » enie with President Coolidge? i 2. What American decoration has been awarded Captain Lindbergh by President Coolidge? 3. What important international conference assembles June 2(1? 4. The water supply of wdiat great city has been threatened by dynamiters? 5. What, prime minister • recently told his country it must have an army of 5,000,1100? 6. What country holds a general election tomorrow? 7. What two great nations recently severed diplomatic relations? 8. Where does President Coolidge plan to go ou his vacation? 9. Will he again be guarded „by marines? 10. Wha famous flyer Is near the end of a flight over four continents? ANSWERS 1. $300,000,000. 2. Distinguished Flying Cross. 3. Arms conference attended by the I’nited States. Great Britain, and Japan. 4. Los Angeles. 5. Mussolini. 6. Irish Free State. 7. Great Britain and Rossia. 9. No, by regolar arniv cavalrymen. 8. Black Hills. 10. Francesco de Pinedo. <■ • -o ■ . “Your Health” This Column is conducted by the Adams County Medical Society and the Indiana State Medical Association in the Interest of the public’s health.

POISON IVY "Poison Ivy, the bugaboo of many outdoor Hoosier enthusiasts needlessly claims hundreds of victims this time of year”, according to the Bulletin issued today by the Publicity Bureau of the Indiana State Medical Association. “This plant from which so many suffer is easily distinguishable by its three divided leaves", continues the Bulletin. “Although poison ivy, poison oak, poison sumack abound iu this state, poison ivy is the plant most frequently encountered by the unsuspecting city visitor to the country in spite of the fact that it may be so easily reconized. "Since the advent of the automobile, posin ivy has become a dty as well as a country problem due to the fact that more city “folks” get to the country than before and come in contact with the plant when changing tires or ..making roadside 'repairs. “Poison from the plant is thought] to be transmitted to the individual t (trough t lie viriiii”.. -giv-'I! off l»y the plant. When this substance conies in contact with the skin it sets up an intense irritation in susceptible individuals. The disease starts with the exposed parts first. The hands, wrists, ami forearms are usually first attacked, the irritation often spreading to the face. “The symptoms of ivy poisoning are

comparatively easy to recognize. A more or less mild attack may be ushered in by burning or itching of the skin. Within twenty-four to forty-, eight hours a red rash appears. This is followed by more or less swelling and itching, then small blisters filled with serum make their appearance. "Recently a series of experiments' into the causes and effects of poison ivy was carried on in one of the large eastern universities, medical students submitting themselves to tests. As a resulting from contact with the plant was vai table in different people. A few blisters resulted in some individuals. while others have tremendous swelling In the parts of the body inFA HARD Sum Sure > £ MAKES A Fellow g k Feel Chesty • BOSTONIAN SHOES FOR MEN Toha-TMyeu &. Sort / CfOTMINO AND OtS J fOU OAO ANO LAO ~

7 RULES OF MARRIAGE New York. Jone B—(U.8 —(U. I’.) — Seven rules for a happy marriage are prdscrihed by Judge Joseph Submit of Chicago, who holds the national record, anil what Is said to be tlie world's record, In having presided over 22,000 divorce trials. “There must he rules for every game,'' says Judge Sabath in Colliers Weekly, “and the matrimonial game wiM bo smoother If you remember that in a sense you are being reincarnated: that you are beginning a new life, assimlliating a new viewpoint, entering a new sphere.” These seven rules he said contain the essence of u successful marriage: 1. Don't be a matrimonial Babbit Keep in step with your partner’s mind, body and soul. 2. Remember that vulgarity and successful marriage are mortal enemies. 3. Compromise is the anti toxin that destroys the germ of divorce. 4. To have mothers-in-law is fortunate, hut to live with them is dangerous, and Jo criticize them is fatal. 5. Find out your beloved’s ideas of matrimonial ethics before the wedding; then make them the basis of your love life. 6. Park your past at the altar—and never go back, to claim it. 7. Courtship is the prep school for the eollege of matrimony. The real study of the art of love begins on the honeymoon and lasts a iifo time.

volved. “The attack may last from four days to several weeks, depending upon the amount of irritant and the sensitiveness of the skin. Persons who have once been affected are believed to be most susceptible. “A person may be poisoned either by coming into direct contact with tfie plant of coming into contact with some agent that has come in contact with the ivy. A dog may'roll .in the poison ivy and although he isn't affectedmay cany the poison to an individual, “If yon come in contact with poison ivy immediately wash the parts of the body exposed with soap and water followed by benzol, gasoline or ether to dissolve the oil of the plant. "Medical science has found a preventive for poison ivy which may be helpful to sufferers from this affection. The preventive treatment consists of a coarse of medication, usually completed in three weeks. The medicine is a tincture of the offending poison

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(Rims toxlcondendron). It should be given only under a physician's super-, vision. This treatment sometimes has been found n help to those who have to work near poison ivy, and is an absolute preventive in most cases." 0 I Miss Olga Relnklng. of the Old A<l-i ams County Bank, is enjoying a two-i weeks vacation.

The Motorist is always Guilty! When a pedestrian is injured by a car, the driver is guilty—i n the eyes of the court and the public until the accident is proven unavoidable All accidents are due to faulty brakes which are neglected on the part of the car owner. Have Your Brakes Inspected Often! Don’t take any chances! Let us inspect your brakes every 5M w 1000 miles. The service costs you nothing. When they need it let us reline your brakes with Thermoid—the dependable lining—as we are the authorized THERMOID Service Station in this territory. Drive Safe! Thermoid Brake Lining Will Do It BUTLER & KERN PHONE 108 PHONE 505

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