Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 25, Number 192, Decatur, Adams County, 15 August 1927 — Page 3
. Fisht Ounce-,. X* I i c ; | '• <•■ L§3»ZMMa Jk| ||L& HIIIf Baggy Ub WF S ' ci -- t 1 Eight ounces of monkey! Behold the five-year-old marmoset which George C. Swiebel, of Wilkes Barre, Pa., is taking to Hollywood, where he plans | to open a pet shop. The simian came from South America. Off for Hawaii -X Wdb •. :? W | - < ■ * '*■ SEtf npl * ' —’•WWW’"' * Gordon Scott will control lite destinies of “Golden Eagle,” ( Hie San Francisco Examiner’s entrant in the big airplane race h Hawaii, MNROENEWf ■ Mr. Robert Oliver, of Kalamazoo, ®chigan, is spending a few days with ' 118 grandmother and uncle, Mrs. Hat-' Selig and Harve Sells and family. ■ Mrs. Sadie Scherer, of Decatur, was visitor in town Sunday. Mr. Adam Hofer, of Bluffton, viswith his brother, Mr. Jude Hofer nxl wife, Sunday. ■ Mrs. ijda Shaney and son, Lee, of. U#la - Ohio, visited with Mr. and Mrs. 1 ■" E Farrar for a few days. I J^ rs ' e " a f' e °rge, Mr. and Mrs. Egly and Mr. G. W. Keller, of ’ his Place, and Mrs Viola Keller, of art Wayne, spent the week-end at weling Green, Ohio. They attended ' an Tassel reunion Sunday. Mrs. H. E. Forrar left Sunday for, fer days, | f Mrs. Ben F. Shirk and daughter. oledo and Lima, Ohio, to spend a j 5 ’ - s P p nt a few days with Mrs. ™rk's parents, Mr. and Mrs. David Uisu '-e, last week. Mr and Mrs. Solon Duer and daugh-1 Virginia, and Miss Marcella Tom1 ot'West Palm Beach, Florida, the week-end with Albert Duer ‘“'l family. | - Mrs ' A. J. Miller and William Tay- , ’ of Decatur, called on friends in j * n Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Boniface, of Daat spent Sunday with Mr. and «ts. Forrar. Mrs. Elfia Steels spent Sunday at Webster. j r ' and Mrs. Matin Hoffman and
WITH THESE MEN RESTS SACCO’S, VANZETTI’S FATE I 11 i I ~ VT. " f *’ t i & ■ V H d® B - kmMa W«® sv i JBi BB Z . MMMKWS i: ' ;-iS!WSS **«<W* -4 • With these live .Justices of the Massachusetts Supremo Court lies the fate of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti. They will decide the new appeal for which the execution of the condemned men was postponed. Left Io right: .Justices Braley, Pierce Wait. Sanderson and Carroll. (International Newsreel)
AND NO GEARS TO SHIFT! * . > , r . flL' 1 J > l .> WF’ \ \ I II t >.'m W-' iw -J * k Henry Ford has taken his first airplane ride. Picture shows him in the cabin of the Spirit of St. Louis as Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh explained the controls of the ship before a flight over Detroit. BEFORE and AFTER % MSBS ' '*■ msw ?' lib Says a report from Los Angeles: “Rumors that Alberto Gufflielmi was being groomed to succeed his late brother, Rudolph Valentino, were revived when it was reported that the former had submitted to an operation in plastic surgery. Gugliehni’s face, it was said,.lias been remodeled on lines resembling those of the late screen idol.” Guglielmi is shown at left: Valentino at right. (International Newaraall
' son, Doyle, and Harold Andrews, spent a few days at Fox Lake near Angola. Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Smith and Mr. and Mrs. Z. O. Lewellen spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs. M. S. Oliver WarI ren, at Farmland. : Mr. William Pittinger attended the [reunion of the Spanish War Veterans Monday. ! Mr. and MrsS.C. Souder and daughter, Kathryn, and Mr. and Mrs. William Stuckey and sons sent Sunday at Lake Webster. Mr and Mrs. Jacob Scherer entertained the following at Sunday dinner: Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Bahner and family and Mrs. Sadie Scherer, j Mr. Floyd Keller called on friends in town Sunday. Mr. Sylvan Rupert, of Peru, spent the week end with his mother, Mrs. Anna Rupert. Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Parrish and daughter spent Sunday with his mother j Mr. and Mrs. Raymond E. Crist est on a trip to Turkey Run and the Shad-
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, AUGUST 15,1927
es last week. Mr. and Mrs. John W. Hendricks, of Decatur, Mr. and Mrs. George Wallace and children, of St. Petersburg, Florida, visited with Mr. and Mrs. W. L Keiler Sunday. Miss Minnie Mills spent the weekend at Danville, Indiana, with relatives. Mr. Kennth Kessler, of Cincinnati, Ohio, is spending the week at home. Mrs. Chrystal Sells. Miss Mary Elizabeth Jones and Mardelle Hocker of Muncie, spent the week-end with tljeir parens. o Slang at Secret Language Slang at first was the Jargon deliberately adopted as a kind of secret language by certain classes, often criminals. We’ve Met a Few Walter 1 twenty-eight, an electrical engineer, was killed Thursday by coming in contact with a wife car- , rying voltage. —Ohio Paper.
READY FOR RACE ACROSS PACIFIC 1 ® ■ 1 ‘I I w f - • • I ' : I j. / ■' * ■y’Sfs-'f ''■♦•'• C : •: ,<*x: ‘ ? Miss Mildred Doran, “the flying school teacher." is all ready to hop oft from California in the 2,700-niile flight t<’ Hawaii, She’ll be accompanied by J. Auggy Pedlar. * li.i-yi ..■(’ ■! ■ ■ 1 ’ ■ - ’ _ a RIG CHIEF CALVIN q ! * % ' ■? a f < / ... ... ....z: .ft f ML iMSii jIHN ' Meet Wamble-To-Ka-Ila, or Chief Leading Eagle, as Mr. Coolidge is uow known to the Sioux. lie was adopted at Rapid City, S. D.
Orchids of Africa There are gorgeous orchids, often two to three feet in height, and many “bulbous” plants in Africa, says Nature Magazine. The glorious Kafflrboom has the bluest of skies as a background for its crown of red blossoms. The Cape chestnvt is clad in a mantle of pale mauve pink. o— Red Hair Not So Good In the hope of exterminating or lessening what they considered a curse, the Egyptians, in the time of the Ptolemies, used to burn a red-hair maiden once a year, so violently opposed were they to hair of 11 red hue, says the New York Herald-Tribune. oRalph Tyndall returned to school at Muncie this morning to conclude the summer term.
Rays Have Similarity There is no difference in principle between Hertzian rays and gamma rays of radium. Hertzian waves are usually polarized and, of course, have | a very much greater wave length— I furthermore, they arise from mass movements of electricity, while gamma rays arise from vibrations of single electrons. o Lives Long With One Lung When eighteen, a girl of Coningsby. England, was told by her doctor that she had lost the use of one lung. She celebrated her one hundredth birth- ! day. recently. She has been blind for nineteen years, but is cheerful andapparently in good health. Christian Macy, of Galion, Ohio, spent the week-end here with his parent, Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Hacy.
No-Tobacco League Is Preparing For Campaign Indianapolis, Ind., Aug. 18.—The No- , Tobacco League is preparing tills ' year for the greatest campaign In Uh I history, according to the annua] rei port today to members of the organization by Charles M. FlUmor* - , gonoral manager. "The fight is on," Fillmore's report declares The lines of battle are being formed. The cause of conflict is universal. It Involves the weal or woe of unborn generations.” Fillmore reviewed the work done bv the No-Tobucco League In the seven years since lie was elected secretary amide hired that progress has beer, .highly satisfactory. He admitted.'
EXCURSION The annual excursion of the First Methodist church Sunday School, of Decatur, to WALBRIDGE PARK, TOLEDO I will be run over the Clover Leaf division of the Nickel Plate railroad. WEDNESDAY, AUG. 17, 1927 Round-trip fare from Decatur. $1.50 for adults. 75c for children. Train will start at Bluffton and make stops at ( raigville. Peterson. Decatur. Pleasant Mills and Willshire, Ohio. Fare from Bluffton. $1.75. Train will leave Decatur at 6 o'clock A. M., and return the same day. I BEIHi3?WSSKEBa&<EWv ! S»X3E?SRffIBaE"(BTHMBHBWBBBOiWBBWWBMBMBMOOBBMI I - § to*-* 'Tiir M The Matter of WHERE M vM is <»nc that need not cause one to hesi- IJ \lj tate. for our service reaches to where Hi 1/ the need is. For miles around we sene 14 d[\ as well as we do here in Decatur and M Vi if the case be in a distant city our HI M connections with other leading funeral directors enable us to handle every F/| \Vi etail with lhe utmost satisfaction ’ iu WlPi Call on us for any kind of service M Wl4 * within our profession; you will tind it Ul will meet your every demand. I S.E. BLACK I M funeral Director Fm H 206 South Second St. Mv Il^p/iQzies; Osficcsoo,^}\Csidencf72.7 lv f 2M,vs.T3lack,£a.dyJlssistant bi L . E - llil 'fill IHli '( JG\ Fl I ■" ;. x ’-7 •<] ■ J'Jx \Nii I / \ E if? == ■ ffiSlH « WRSSESHH WZ r Wj ~L AVs ‘ ifr <l22* II ! I ! H t: E Your Travelers II , Cheque ! f ' ’ llil '! is an unsigned check which can y j- be made good only with your |n signature. ,11 lost it can be E 9 k cancelled and your money will K he returned. Before starling M on a trip, come in for a supply B K of those safe, convenient trav- E filers’ cheques. |P G Capital and
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however, that growth of the tobaccco habit has been phenomenal rlnce the beginning of the present century, and pointed out that the American people are smoking more than a billion cigarettes annually. "The tobacco problem Is no fictitious figment, of a perfervid fancy,”' the report declares. It is no chimera of a cracked cranium. It la a serious reality. Whether we like jt or not. we are forced many times a day to feel its poisonous sting upon oui eyeballs: we are compelled to choke and (iiiigh over its unpleasant irritation of our throats and lungs. Willy nllly we must take it second-hand with our tneuls, even though it gags us and turn our stomachs." ... O'- ■■ "■■■■■■■ Get the Habit —fr«de at Home, It P»/«
