Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 25, Number 142, Decatur, Adams County, 16 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. Holthoiise.........Sec’y & Bus. Mgr. Dick D. HellerVice-President Entered at the Postoffice at Decatur. Indiana, as second class matter. Subscription Rates: Single copies I .02 One week, by carrier-—— .10 One year, by carriers.oo One month, by mall .85 Three months, by maill.oo Six months, by mai11.75 One year, by mail— 3.00 ®ne year, at office-— 3.00 (Prices quoted are within first and second zones. Additional postage added outside those sones.) Advertising Rates: Made known by Application. Scheerer, Inc., 35 East Welker Drive, Chicago 200 Fifth Aveuue, New York. While planning your vacation, arrange for your newspaper advertising, because you'll need a little extra business to pay for the trip. Business follows advertising and when big business, manufacturers or the retail merchant let up on their advertising a gradual decline in sales is noticeable. The summer months can lie brisk if we all help to make them good. No use going to the Black Hills to cool off when we are having this kind of weather in Indiana. The reception committee missed an opportunity by not trying to show President and Mrs.
Coolidge the Sand Dunes in Lake county, when they stopped off at Hammond to dedicate the memorial park. It is regretted tha. the report that ■ Nungesser and Coli, French aviators, who attempted to fly from Paris to New York, were found, was not true and that no trace of the famous flyers •was obtained in Canada. In all prob- I ability they met death in the cold waters of the Atlantic, which is just ’ one reason that daily flying over the o.ean will not become so popular with everyone. Col. Lindbergh has signed a contract for his first two million dollars to write a 50,000 word book of his historic flight across the Atlantic, his ’ receptions in Europe and in Washington and his views on the future of aviation. If in original “Lindy” style the book will be interesting to read and if he is as fast a writer as he is a flier he will have vae book compiled within a short time. A number of local business men joined in the Dairy farmer's tour of Adams County today and visited several of the fine, dairy /arms in this county. In recent years Adams county has forged ahead in the dairy industry pnd the financial results to the farmer have been most gratifying. This county has several of the best dairy herds in the state, another evidence of the fact that Adams county farmers know how to do it. According io a ruling of the U. S. court of appeals Dr. Frederick Cook, of north pole fame, must remain in prison. A judge at Fort Worth, Texas, had ordered the release of Dr. Cook on a five year probation, but the court's decision was reversed by the higher court. Cook was convicted of using the mails to defraud in an oil scheme and has been in prison since 1923; He is finding it harder to get out of prison man his attempt to discover the north pole. Hope is the rightful inspiration of the soul of youth. It stands on a sunny hill and points ever to the good luck and the good fortune that will be ours tomorrow. Without hope life would have little or no meaning. There would be no incentive to work and save. There would be no real progress. But hope is just one of the elements of success. It is, perhaps, the most essential of all. Unmistakably it is the one that brings humanity its greatest measure of joy. It vitalizes every fibre of our being. It keeps us up and going with brave hearts and happy faces. Unfortunate, | however, is he who is swept away by : its charm. It should never be for-] gotten that such prosaic virtues as
I work, honesty, industry, thorougliness, economy and u host of their I sturdy kind are likewise to the attainment of great and good things. Through the qualities that comprise thrift our hope-dreams may «<une true. Without it, they never t will.—Thrift Magazine. The Industrial and Volunteer tireme: of Northern Indiana held their I convention at Bluffton today and De- ) ca.ur was represented by the local ? Volunteer department and the Gen--1 eral Electric firemen. The boys were j' togged out in new blue and white > suits and will we believe, make a showing on neatness in uniform. The Bluffton people extended a hearty welcome to the tire fighters and both papers, the Banner and the News pt inted welcome editions. William Kerfoot, vice-president of the organization is a candidate for president and if “Billy” wants the job his friends in this city would like to see him have it. The town of Bremen is asking for the convention next year. o—- ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦*♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY ♦ ♦ From the Daily Democrat File ♦ ♦ Twenty Years Ago Thl« Day. ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ June 16. 1907, was Sunday. o ♦ BIG FEATURES ♦ ♦ OF RADIO ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ FRIDAY'S FIVE BEST RADIO FEATURES WNYC—New York (535) 6:30 I’m. — Goldnan Band.
WEAF —Network 20 stations 6 pm.— Cities service hour; Bourdon's orchestra. WGHP —Detroit (244) —7 pm.—Detroit Symphony orchestra. WJZ —Hookup 6:30 pm. Royal hour. WBAL-Baltimore (286) 8 pm.— Municipal band concert. o , THE GREAT WAR | 10 YEARS AGO | t U. S. Senate, without roll call, passes Priority Bill, giving President Wilson control of railroads and power to order preference for such shipments as ■‘deemed necessary for prosecution of the war. o ******** *¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ * TRY THE * * NEXT ONE * ¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥¥ Science 1. Who was Auer von Welsbach? 2. What is the popular name of the element hydiatgyrum? 3. When is a diamond said to be of the first water? ■l. Distinguish between structural and dynamic geology. 5. 14 Leo a planet, constellation or comet? 6. With what does the science of hermeneutics deal? 7. With what form of mathematics is Euclid generally associated? 8. What is nitrometer? 9. Practitioners of what science take the Hippocratic oath? 10. What gas is used in inflating t':e Naval dirigible Los Angeles. Answers 1. Inventor of an incandescent gas gas burner. 2. Mercury. 3. When it is colorless and limpid as water. 4. Structural geology deals with farm arrangement and internal structure of rocks; dynamic geology with causes and processes of geological change. 5. Constellation. 6. The science of interpretation and explanation. 7. Geometry. ‘B. Appaiatus for determining the amount of nitrogen in any substance analyzed. 9. Medicine. 10. Helium. Car Os Thanks We wish in this manner to express our thanks and deep appreciation cf the many kindnesses shown us by our friends and neighbors during our great sorrow and bereavement, the loss of our dear mother, Mrs. Sophia Beineke; our thanks for the beautiful floral offerings; for songs by the quartet; for the words of sympathy by Rev. Scher: y, and all other’s who share our giief. THE CHILDREN o Pendleton —There now are 1,970 in- . mates in the Indiana Reformatory, the I greatest number in the institution's I history according to J. E. Hennings, j trustee. ] Bloomington— A $50,000 apartment house is being erected at Fess Ave. and Second street here.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, JUNE 16, 1927.
FROM NORTH AND SOUTH . irrTn ' ll There’s beauty wherever'you LhRHImM go in America. Here arc Mabel Kiley (left), of New Orleans, iimlMnry Kathryn Hamer, of * ** Omaha, entrants in the beauty ♦ vHKuHmK \eston, '1 < xas. I Internationa! N.w-rcrl) W WgMF “j 3 ' Uh. -
Congress Os Episcopal Church Is Shocked By j' Young Rector’s Proposal San Francisco, June 16 — (UP I —■ Some of the more conservative dele- ( gates attending the 53rd national|, Episcopal Church congress in session ' here, recovered their composure today and prepared to refute a suggestion that the church sanction unmarried unions "if such a step would improve social conditions.” The Rev. Henry Lewis, youthful rector of St. Andrew's church of Anu Arbor. Mich., somewhat upset the routine of the annual gathering last night by advocating his liberal step. "If to sanctify unmarried unions would do away, as some urge it would, with promiscuity and double standard, I and better protect the children of j legal marriages, then to keep on fussing with rules about divorce and the idea that all marriages are made in Heaven, is utter folly," he said. “Science,” the Reverend Lewis said, “has created an entirely newmoral. situation by protecting youths who often decide qn Mi. ex.pediency or worthwhileness, whether sex relations should be indulged in.” "When you introduced contra.eptions you changed your moral situ-
The Battle Os Bunker Hill - - June 17th, 1775 - - ■ A GLORIOUS day in American history . . . that first of the Colonies’ sacrifices for Independence. Yes, it prompts this question: Have you fought your “Battle of Bunker Hill?” Arc you making any sacrifices for your future Financial Independence? Surely that’s worth fighting for! Start now. Let your “first shot” be a Savings Account with the Old Adams County Bank
ation,” he continued. “You have done away with that .old but ver y effective weapon which deterred many a person from going beyond the accepted code —far of consequences.” “To many people what used to be considered lapses fiom the moral code, are now considered to be acts CORNS Instant Relief Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads stop all pain quicker than any other known method. Takes but a minute to quiet the worst com. Healing starts at once. When the com is gone it never comes back. If new shoes make the spot “touchy” again, a Zino-pad stops it instantly. That's because Zino-pads remove the cause — pressing and rubbing of shoes. Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads arc medicated, antiseptic, protective. At al! druggist's and shoe dealer s—3sc. Dr Scholl’s 'Lino-pads Put one on—the pain is gone!
which are us natural as eating or 1 drinking." The convention will continue until Friday. ——o— Stock wile. Saturday. June 18 1 p.m. Butler & Ahr sale barn. Decatur. Horses, cows, hogs an d sheep. ar Undrained land is a IS drain on your purse. Ig & Let Drain Tile convert K ■LI your loss into profit. 0| j-t Larger crop yields, M greater assurance of f”* bl crops and larger profits Its ‘jl are some of the direct B M results of land drainage. IS 0 The I ” Krick-Tyndall Co. r
It’s? a time to remember style — not forget it 1/ \ ul iPO o \u 14 \\ 4 \\ I\ \ V * ’ ’ II \ X • • \ t I l I LJ r I \ £T Slvles'uil ; Cto'hEb 1 STYLEPLUS Summer Suits sls to S3O Summer Clothes demand a keener regard for fashion than do the clothes of other seasons. It takes a pertectly tailored lightweight suit to retain style. It takes a quality lightweight suit to withstand the punishmen . of a hot summer day. • Styleplus admirably meets the occasion with an oflcling of Summer Clothes that will do much toward making this season as fashionable as the one we’ve just san goodbye to. Palm Beaches Mohairs Tropical Worsteds Flannels — tailored by Styleplus Teeple & Peterson
THE ART SAVING Saving is not a science; it j s an art v ~ , , ■ a science l something that can be taught from a book an \ ... - ’ ' rt| sson lt . thing you can learn through practice. Then. : . "'-re is only onway to master this Art. Begin to Save, and i. . u hCf P it up. Open a SAVINGS ACCOUNT At Thia Bank. THE PEOPLES LOAN 4 TRUST M, BANK OF SERVICE
