Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 26, Number 12, Decatur, Adams County, 14 January 1928 — Page 7

I SIXERS TAMERS ' ■ iSp hi m'eks l % t l?CorreßP<>>‘ ( ’ eut) fl t 1 ’ 1 !“■[•> SI >re show and fl 1 M ‘" ila rB hue gf'en the wild men ,obc ( ,il(l ' cited fOf'ISII MCllHatiC” fl *<* uio dog market. If they fl ‘of atm”"'I’-'" 1 ’-'" " e ““M in fl wl |l have to tide on past Man3B W in fl ila 10Iin ;>'ideas, in short, have for fl A " ierl •.notiler taken root so fl °" f rJoughout the atehipelago that fl !ir ”'' ~1-mtnre had better see fl and seeke.s for color I S well 'ooh i" ! 1 hOmt ' tOW "| fl chiM,f " l ' f th,, \inerlean ideas have fl Soin '' ",.’7d with avidity, fl W " S!' been taken a good deal | S reluctant L' The of ,he ■i •** r , ri . uri . !. speaking many I JS'dia and ' lller,ai,,i,,g |9 ire n»re than anxious to point out. fl ' h e "wild man of the I’iiilHppines so 19 (rrtuetitlv portrayed abroad is not tyfl ItheMands II >w ever, he docs fl L and th- mountain provinces fl' e many a queer tale of the ruses B iployed hy nealv.-rrive.l American fl Jes in davs net so long past when fl wricaus realb were in control of fl *l-lands-a m which inereasfl . llf! self-government has now changed and when there i.-.i’ly was something fl to control. ■I Headhunt-:-. ■ example, wanted fl They didn't want to fl h- Tues.iuv Hiisiness Club members, fl There was keen enmity among the diffl ( eren t tribes, and the week's toll of fl- bads was more important to them ■ than the latest .< -■ hall scores to the 9H average American. fl Taking a leaf from this very book, fl ...s.s.-r, A:m r. constabulary offim rials hit upon a s. lotion of the headfl innmig problem by introducing the MB tacof-wat as ,i mountain sporting ■ 1’ work: i Tribe pulling against JU , and Ilea.l • fayed on shoulders. fl Down in tie Sulu Sea there was MM ' : til', amentado, or M running amuck When a man ran aMB ttuii'k he expei'. <! to die. and he set Um "i‘ “i - 1 a ‘‘ ' a,i<l,ll '' fi,ni iu,en ‘ Mb :: : promoting himself as far as ■9 possible in the Mohammedan heaven MM it!'killing'b 1 ' large: t possible number Mb '" -.lans before they killfl «< tomfl I’looked like a tough nut. Hut the fl Amer.cans eraeked it. They learned that for a Mohammedan to be smearfl ttl wit!l I’ig s bi nd was to consign BB ta’-'the M. ii.immi dan hell, So they fl S ave "t'd'n- to < ;d'h all Moro gentlyfl 3lfn “ho ''an amuck and to smear MM them "it’i blood instead of shootfl ing them. Kminiiig amuck became nilfl Wlaf quite soon. HH — !) ■ Two University Students S To Explore Arctic Circle ■ Chicago, .lan It - H'lh — Spurfl r jtd by the spirit of adventure, two |M University of lowa students and two RW other companions will leave early |M next June for a four mouths venture ■ infix points in the Artic circle that M have never before been explored by ■ white men. . » \ | John I). Fuller of Keokuk, a junior R medical student, is the leader of the ■ “Pedltion. The other student advenR surer is Gordon Armstrong of Britt. M| a sophomore in the college of engineer-' R " li: Kaldton Latimore of Savanah. (la.. ■ and one other <• mpanion whose name H las 1101 l|lcel > imnmmced, will accomM 'W the expt'dition. M Tlle quartet plans to travel in CanM honi Sturgeon Island postoffice M Southern Canada, a little norttiwest B ritim n ( lUP ? P ’ 1111 a waterwa y route to ■ Goal ”> t"e Arctic Circle M eil crosses Repulse Bay. I BEDBUG; I is R vSJ£ a l e sm allpox, | la VIEW ()E “BAT MAN” l X A Tn~’ 1XS ’- VaCCinatloll ,s M onc uL.? ‘ I ’ l ’ x k ' 'ransmltted only ■of hedbii'/ n ? at ‘ S thro "« h the ! 'i'e I Arsons I g nf ?'| haVO previo " sl - v bit ten ■ is infected with the disease. I '’M'larin 1 11;’ 1 ;' 11 . 0 unul ' views of I i U,UH ' of Oa,las - f”' I bedim t' CK lhat ’’■•“’•nation of I ‘Mwestiu,, <U h “ S 11:1(1 a vu ried and I * orl <. He firl!' t!tr l . ncdical research I thr,) "Bh his ? t „| a "7 lnto f >r dtnonence ■ Wto, so n,. '■' 1 1<; nii, lnrial niosI “Wrliere ma,ntttl “ed a bat colony "'^'ntd'lo7 Wa " tlH ’ nrst cit >’ •“ ilillK 'he klim S!i Prohlb57 ”“?• T »* d Texas > "i? bats, ' Passed a law protect- :" ( Si l nXr , i c . , : rowt,rß 0( 111 "■ tl1 " " “isrinci] over ’ ,r Ca ibell to'n V Ut "' th< ‘ y ask( ' <l ' ■ s| f*’tiou. 11,> i, lak '-’ a Ktli, i.v of the 1 would 51 n eutt!<l iU,U i ' Va ß'iingt( n 1 mo ' ll ' Soon ;ifi,;'i,kiiii'i«o 1 MX 1 a luw proh,b - 1 . U 7 4<; : “ :,lv| " ea ' Or. : Mau." tai " c ! known as the "Bat ! . '—o- — ; Tll( . P ‘”ne.r Mi„ ion ‘ ; U r "" M -7'7| OU C ' ,ifw I iu ni7 U “ IJICSO . b -' j

I . FAVORITE SONS FROM OHIO '? ■ /w j dMiE3 JMMjMIMMjMWwMI -a IRil Upper left in Governor Vic bonahey of Ohio, who can have the support of Ohio Democracy along with former Senator Atlee Pomerene. lower right. Theae favorite sons have agreed to help each other in trying to obtain the nomination. Senator Frank B. Willis is the avowed Republican candidate and says that he is in the race in earnest, believing that he has an excellent chance. MM M® MI M® AlM®ft M f vfn«ar Unonilul ! f ,

BERNE NEWS i Miss Hulda Lehman was a business caller at Fort Wayne last Friday. Rev. Wm. Egle attended to business i matters at Fort Wayne .Monday. Rudolph Schug, president of the I Peoples State Bank, was a business) caller in Decatur Monday. Harmon Bagley is working at Lima, Ohio, this week. \ Alfred Isch, of French township, is; bedfast since last week on account of I ( injtiries received from a horse kicking I him. Mr. and Mrs. John llennanlang. ot, Fort Wayne, visited with Mrs. Herman-; lang’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. William I Nussbaum 'oyer Bunday. Mr. and Mrs. XX 7 . H. Teeter and ’’a-) mily, c( Portland, were guests at the Werner B. Lehman home Sunday. Mr. Teeter is a brother of Mrs. Lehman Mr. and Mrs. Robert Krick and children, John, Joan and May, of Decatur, were visitors at the home of Mrs. Krick’s parents. Dr. and Mrs. Amos Reusser. Sunday. E. J. Stacy and son William, of Fort Wayne, and Mrs. Dorothy Stultz, of Alliance, Ohio, were Sunday guests at the Roy Beery home. Mis. G. B. Crowell of Huntertown, attended to business here on Friday and Saturday and also visited with her mother Mrs. Mary Kerr. Miss Cora Habegget. of Fort Wayne and her room-mate. Miss Inez Lehmar both students at the Art Institute, visited at the David Ilabegger home over Sunday. - Donald Spninger returned to school at JndianaptSlilx Sunday, accompanied by hjs father, Ftanklin Sprunger and little brother Derrfl, after spending the Christmas alnl New Year vacation in Berne. His return to school was delayed one week, on account of illness A few of Berne’s musicians met at the home of Mr. and Mis. V. A. Eichenberger Sunday afternoon to play for their own entertainment. Those who were present were O. N. Smith, L. B. Smith, Edward Lichty, David I). Stauffer, Edgar Clauscr, Norman Leichty Lores Michaud, X 7 . A. Eichenberger and Miss Kathryn Anderson of Geneva. Emanuel Lehman and Clarence Leichty, of Fort Wayne, were visitors at the Jeff Leichty home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Jzehnian and family, of Fort Wayne visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clem Smith. Sunday. * > Peter J. Baumgartner is /Suffering from heart trouble. He is confined to his home on North Jefferson street. Enos Neuenschwander, Palmer Lehman and Arvine Welty returned to | Berne, Sunday, after spending a few . days with the latter’s parents at Dal- ) ton,’ Ohio. , Mark" Yager, of West Unity; Ohio, spent Sunday and Monday with his mother Mrs. Lena Yager and brother L. L. Yager and family here. i Berne’s Fighting Five will play • Rockcreek at the Auditcrium Saturday night. Mr. and Mrs. Flavius Billman and family, of Fort Wayne, have moved their household goods to Berne, where they will make their home. They are occupying the Spence property, directly north of the Dr. Christina Kuntz h me. Mts. Bertha Bagley and family, Mis« J-sephine Reusser. of this place, and Mrs. Maltha Beavers, of Fort XX'ayne were dinner guests at the Frank Wagner home at Decatur, Sunday. Mr. and Mis. Roy Deffinbach of Hartford township, ate the parents of a Hl pound daughter since Sunday. w Mts. Ora Stopher has a little son since Friday evening. Mts. Stopher and son are with the mother's parents, | Mr. and Mis. David Crok. near Salem. Mi. Stopher died a few weeks ago I from injuries received in an auto ac- ! cident. Rev. C. W. Saucrwein returned heme early Saturday morning from Cleveland, Ohio, where be had visited •lev. Hoerneman, patient at the Fair-j |

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1928.

I view Park Hospital. Rev. lloernema r is reported to have undergone an operation on Tuesday for the removal of seme glands in the neck. His left eye which is blind, liad not been examined vet at that time. He is Hying in good hope* of regaining his health, although ! his condition appears quite dlscouragi W / A daughter was born to Mr. and I Mis. Peter C. Schwartz, in Monroe t jwnahip, Monday morning Sol Lehman, of Foft Wayne, was a visitor in Berne, Tuesday. C. T. Halvegger and Roy Girod were business callers at Fort XX’ayne, Tues, day. Postmaster Menno Burkhalter attended to business matters at Bluffton. I Tuesday afternoon. ■ Roy P. Beery, manager of Bell’s 5 and 10 cent store, was a business calI»r at Fort XX’ayne, Tuesday. ’ Mrs. Elizabeth Ebnit underwent an .peration for a complication of dis-1 eases at the Adams County Memorial Hospital at Decatur. Tuesday. The Plus Ultra Class of the Evan-1 gellcal Sunday school wil hold a bake sale at Andrew Gottschalk's Drug 1 Store, Saturday morning. John Abnet, who had along seige of' illness, is slowly regaining his forme’’ health and was able to be in town Wednesday. Mrs. Selma Nussbaum is again helping out in the job department at the Witness office, while Herman Dro is still absent on account of sickness. Herman Is recovering and is able to be up town again, but does not dare to work yet. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Leichty and lamily and Mr. and Mrs. Levi Sprunger and family, were at XVest Liberty, O. Tuesday, to get a litle baby girl at. the Ametican Meunonite Orphanage. The baby is seven months old, and its name is Lois Lorena Hoffman. This is the second child that Mr. and Mrs. Leichty have from the same orphanage, the first oeing a little boy. which they had for two years. Marcus Lehman was a business culler at Decatur Monday. Joel Ellenberger has moved his household goods into the Mitli Slicemaker house, southwest of the Mennonite church. Dr. and Mrs. Eugene XVechter, of Speed, Indiana, arrived here Tuesday. Mrs. XX’echter will remain here tow or three weeks, while her husband con tinues a trip to Buffalo N. Y„ and Washington, D. C„ on a business trip. Wilbur Nussbaum and MArtin L. Sprunger were business callers at Angola, last Saturday. NOTICE TO MODERN WOODMEN The Modern XX’oodmen will hold a special meeting January 18. with election of officers. There will also be other business of importance and every member of Decatur Camp is urged to be present. 9-3 t M. N. Sebnitz, Clerk. o USE Limberlost Washing Powder

Moose Notice SPECIAL MEETING Saturday Evening 7:30 o’clock AT MOOSE HOME, to complete arrangements for the initiation Sunday. All members please be present. Dictator.

Love Not A Philosophy; It Is Only A Disease, States Famous Savant By Francis F. Healy (I. N. S. Staff Correspondent) Cfiicago—(lNS)—"Love is not philosophy—lt is a disease." In an Informal discussion of love at a meeting of the American Philosophical Association here, Dr. dustaye Carus, world famous savant, outlined his ideas upon the intangible subpect of love and declareil that the older one becomes the more susceptible they are to, the ’disease." "Immunity to disease decreases rather than increases with advancing years," Dr. Carus maintained. “That fact is established by our mortuary statistics alone." Dr. Carus took sides against Dr. Will Durant who was qulted recently in San Francisco as declaring "A man over thirty cannot love." "As a mater of fact," continued the eminent philologist, "I believe the socalled ’dangerous age’—so called for purposes of definition and discussion, has been well established at forty and beyond, becoming, I am personally of i the opinion, more acutely dangerous l with passing of time. “Almost all the world's greatest lbv-| era were men past the ages of 30 to 35". * — : —

———-■ , a .i- — , , ~ I, ■ , i — It’s Our Twenty-Fifth Cut Yourself Another Piece of Cake * < hy cutting in on the news of the day through the columns of the Decatur Daily Democrat —as welcome as a piece of birthday cake filled with goodies. r Market Reports Local and State News Events International News Service United Press Service Comics Features Renew Your Subscription and Keep The Daily Democrat in your home during 1928 •'- ■ w « I • ’ ■ ■ We Have A Needle Case for Those Who Renew During This Month. K \ \ ' IS.l.'— ■■■■ ~ „ ... , t .. ..

Southern Girls Scorn To Dress On Paltry Sum Fixed For New York

Atlanta, Ga.. Jsu. 14 — (UP)—The girls up in New York may be able to droHB on 4200 a year but Georgia girls want it strictly understood they can’t regale themselves at any such paltry figure. A concensus of feminine opinion from a group] of Georgia cities and towns reveals that Georgia "peaches” feel that S6OO per annum is about what it costs to be well dresked in Dixie during this day and time. Down south anywuy, it is generally believed the peach blown beauties of Georgia composite!}’ outrank in comeliness daughters of all other states. Clothes may have something to do with It. General scorn has greeted the pro- I nouncement of a Columbia university professor that a survey convinced her a Manhattan girl can dress smartly on S2OO. That amount is considered only a starter down here. The normal Dixie business girl spends about S6OO on clothes (if she , learns enough) or at least S4OO say | ' the more cautious. And this is how ' | she buys her things, usually: Shoes, seven pairs at $lO n pair S7O I Stockings, 24 pairs at $2 each.... 48 Lingerie (including negligee) 55

Six dresses at sls 90 Five huts 32 Two evening dresses 50 Four party dresses. 100 Light summer crepe coat 25 Four pair of gloves at $2.50 10 Bathing suit 6 Hair bobs and facials 35 Total $521 o— ——— Japanese Aid Defenses Receive Attention Tokyo —(UP)—Japan is paying increasing attention to her aerial de-

Draft Horses Have for sale forty (40) head, all kinds of draft horses. ( Must be as represented. H. O. WHITE, ‘ Phone 61 Monroeville, Ind. 1

PAGE SEVEN

i fenseces. , , I The 1928-29 budget wti include an--1 appropriation of about $600,000 for air I defenses including a numbpr of mo- ) tor anti-aircraft guns, most of which • wl) he stationed in Tokyo. , i Anti aircraft gunners are to be trained in the Field Artillery School in . China Prefecture and In the Artillery ' Regiment school at Toyohashl. I 0 ( Get the Habit—Trade at Homa, it Pay»

Improve Your Complexion Peoria, IL. —“I found Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery to be a better I medicine even than they say it is. The % four bottles which I took aa a tonic seemed |.] to ma gj c on ■ 1 i myentiresyßtem.lt ] J c ven regulated my J bowels and cleared U P corn Pl ex * on 80 a. J Tp ’“at I look and feel 'NX. Fl hke a different perx'XJ / I ®°“- Ido not expect , t 0 PVCr £ n j a better tonic and alterative than Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery."— Mrs. D. | T. Sivley, 207 Wayne St. J Golden Medical Discovery is a personal blessing to every man and woman. . It increases the appetite, stimulates tho digestion, enriches the blood and clean the skin of eruptions and blemishes. In I liquid or tablets, at your Drug Store.