Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 26, Number 144, Decatur, Adams County, 18 June 1928 — Page 3
OLD HOME WEEK ADDRESS LIST Frank Adelman 409 Spring SI. Hot Springs, Arkansas. Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Wortzberger P. O. Box 1492 Tulsa, Okla. Mr. nnd Mrs. D. D. Wertzberger 230 E. 18th. St. Tulsa, Okla. Miss Harriet Wortzberger 321 E. sth St. Mat ion, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Wertzberger 854 McAllister Ave. Benton Harbor, Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Wertzberger 1535 S. J. St. Elwood. Indiana Mrs. S. A. Walters 321 E. sth St. Marion, Indiana. Mr. nnd Mrs. John Troutner South BelUngham, Washington, Star Route. Mr. arid Mrs. Eugene Troutner South Bellingham, Washington. Star Route. Mr. Levi Troutner South Bellingham. Washington. Star Route. Mrs. Arthur H. Middleton Harlowton. Montana Box 823 Mrs. Harry Partridge North Manchester, Ind. Mr. and Mrs O. B. Daniel R. R. 2. Huntington, Indiana Mrs. Clarence Vadou, R. R. 3 Wilsall. Montana Mrs. Gtts. Middeton Twin Bridges, Montana. Mr. Dale Middleton Harlowton, Montana. Mrs. Glen Barlett Buffalo, Wyoming Mr. and Mrs. Lee Georgen Buffalo, Wyoming. Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Sipe 433 E. Suttenfield St. Fort Wayne, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Gay Alma, Michigan. » Mr. Dick Gay Alma, Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. Omar Parent Claire, Michigan. Mr. G. A. Christen 1536 Cherokee Rd. Louisville, Ky. Mr. H. W. Christen South Clinton St. Fort Wayne, Indiana. Mr. B. C. Christen 2035 Adams St. Toledo, Ohio. Mrs. B. B. Uhl 436 North 18th St. Sebring. Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. True Chilcote Atwood, Indiana. Thomas Johnson, Dunkirk, Indiana. H. S. Keller and Family Hillsburgh. Indiana. Mrs. Ella Haley Portland, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. William Avery Kirkland, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Barnett Geneva, Kansas. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Barnett Carlile, Kansas. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Beatty 2018 Phenie St. Fort Wayne, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Lewton R. F. D. No. 6. Fort Wayne, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Lewton 607 Erie St. Fort Wayne, Indiana. M. Me. Stoops, Petersburg. Indiana. Dr. O. E.‘ Brodbeck Elyria, Ohio. Mr. Frank Carrier 218 Keihl St. Woodlawn, Penn. Mr. and Mrs. Nolin King 110 W. Clayton St. Mahonongtown, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Miller 922 E. Washington St. Fort Wayne, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Buckmaster 2416 Fox Ave.' Fort Wayne, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. Win. E. Davison 422 W. Third St. Fort Wayne. Indiana. Mrs. Archie E. DeWitt 422 W. Third St. Fort Wayne, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. A. Meyers R. R. 5 Box 171 Bluffton, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. McConnell 14041/2 Dewey Ove. Los Angeles, Cal. Mr. and Mrs. Rolland Waltz Amarilla, Texas. % Midwest Oil Co. Paris Beery 520 126th St. Toledo, Ohio. Mr. C. P. Mathewson » 702 Ashman St. Midland, Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. Gus Smith Box 637 Midland Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Judd. 908 Holland Ave. L Tampa, Florida. W Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Reed and Family $ 127 N. Highland Ave. Indianapolis, Ind. | Mr. and Mrs. Ed Weissling and Family & 823 Summit St. Findlay, Ohio. 8 Hr. Herbert Fullenkamp ■ Cor. State and Washington Sts. g Chicago, 111. % Hanan and Son. Emanuel Hart
Great Dane Brings Life Nearer To Helen Keller 7 '''«. \ l> ■- Ma % ■ ' w BV t & * 7 MISS HELEN KELLER, as she appeared on her arrival from Europe with her Great Dane, the gift of a Stuttgart, Germany, publlsher - - ‘ — (International Illustrated News) .’ -t 1 ?”-I iljfo SHIRLEY KIRKE International Illustrated News Staff Writer <J*|, NEW \ORK.—Blind, deaf and dumb from her earliest years, Helen Keller has just opened another avenue of communication with the world. It consists of the Great Dane pictured above, a gift to her from Robert Lutz, publisher, of Stuttgart, Germany. * —
"All my life I have been interested In animals," said Miss Keller on her arrival from abroad. "Since early childhood, life has fascinated me; I have visited nearly all of the Important zoological parks and menageries, making the acquaintance of African buffalos, hippopotami, sea Hons and even prairie wolves and coyotes. “All these contacts have helped to make the world I live In vivid and vastly Interesting."
Monroeville, Ind. Mrs. W. F. V'erian Montebello, Cal. Mrs. Rose Moran. 1017 Park Ave. Indianapolis, Ind. Mr and Mrs. Robert Meyer 1017 Park Ave. Indianapolis, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. F.red Harrington 527 South St. Kendallville, Ind. Mr. and Mis. F. M. Miller 24.32 Lillie St. Fort Wayne. Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Miller 910 N. Anthony Blvd. ‘ Fort Wayne, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. William Sehenkel 1811 Franklin Ave. Fort. Wayne, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. Wm Leichtle 401 W. sth St. Mansfield, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Steigmeyer 308 Cowen St. Garrett, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Steigmeyer 320 E. William St. Fort Wayne, Indiana. o Plague Long Spared India Although Europe suffered from many visitations of tlie plague before and during tlie Middle ages, it was not until tlie Nineteenth century that the plague appeared in India. Q Greatest Railroad System The German Railways company Deutsche Rechsbahn, organized by the Dawes commission, is the largest railroad system in the world. It comprises 30,(XX) miles of track and employs more than 7(X).(MM) men. o— Famous British Harbor Scapa Flow is a small body of water almost Inclosed by the Orkney Islands. It is about fourteen miles long and varies from three to eight miles in width. The principal chan riels leading out are Hoy sound into the Atlantic ocean and Holm sound into the North sea. — Fear Adds to Ills The extent of poverty in the world is much exaggerated. Our sensitiveness makes Half our poverty; our fears -anxieties for Ills that never happena greater part of the other half.Bovec. —o — Preserving Vegetables Cookellzed vegetables are those dehydrated by the Cooke-Kelley P Bv this method the vitamines are retained and the food will keep indefinitely in powdered form. Splnath. corn and mixed vegetables are among the foods treated In this manner.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, JUNE 18,1928
America’s most famous blind • woman author, teacher—and Inspi- < ration to all unfortunates!—exl plained that the Great Dane beside i her is a breed noted for its loyalty I and intelligence. She will train him to be her eyes, and through his canine observation she will visualize ■ what goes on around her In nature. For life—the simple, human, perI sonal, everyday things which we don’t talk about—ls very wonderful to Helen Keller!
PRESIDENT’S REPUTATION AS FISHERMAN (CONTINUED FROM PACE ONE) in the deepest secrecy. Repeated efforts on the part of the newspapermen to ascertain the number of fish caught, if any, have resulted in complete failure. “Several,” said Edward T. Clark, his personal secretary, evasively; “some" parried Colonel E. W. Stalling, the secret serviceman who fishes with the president. As proof that trout can be caught in the Brule is the experience of Stalling. Tlie very first day, he made his initial cast, using a leader with three wet flies a threeqiound German brown trout immediately struck. For five or six minutes the fish gave Battle, then subsided. Starling was about ready to let it take water when suddenly the line whirred out of his reel and the fight was on again. Finally netting his catch he found that just as lie was about to land the big one, a pound and a half rainbow trout had struck at one of the other flies. Two fish were on ills line Today the president plans to make his deferred visit to the temporary executive offices in Superior. Work has accumulated since last Wednesday and the air mail, abetted by the army flying corps has laid it down regularly here. Mr. Coolidge was- to have come in Saturday, b'ut rainy weather here and fair skies over Cedar Island Lodge prompted him to stay there and fish instead. o Midget Coal Mine The smallest coal mine in Great Britain is probably one situated high up on the Yorkshire moors, at Tan Hill. It Is worked by five men who have made a tunnel into the billside nearly two miles long. The coal, which is of good quality, is sold retail at $5 a ton, but it has to be fetched. Farmers who come with carts form tlie mine's best customers. — o Wary Ladies When a girl doesn’t marry until she’s thirty these days she’s hard to catch. She finds out how well she can get along without marriage and becomes very choosey. — Atchison Globe. o Noisier An open mind Is all right, but the open mouth is often worse than an open cutout—Lafayette Journal and Courier. —o Summing It Up The kitchen Is a country In which there are always discoveries to be made.
Decree of Authority Subject to Discount The late Leonard W. Wood was' commiserated with by a reporter, one day in Washington, on the apparent; neglect meted out to him during the i World war and on the harsh Judgment that had been passed upon his admin ' Istration of the Philippines. General Wood changed the subject, hut afterward, as the reporter was i about to go, lie told a story. "When we are Judged,” be said, “we must consider our Judges. We must Judge our judges, so to speak. "Joe Childs, perhaps, was the greatest jockey in the world. He won almost every big race; some of them he had won three or four times over; the king’s Jockey, you know. “Well, during the war Joe enlisted in a cavalry regiment, and they sent him to a riding school at the Curragli in Ireland to be trained. “When he mounted his horse at the Curragh school the riding master said to him: ‘“Have you ever ridden before7’ ‘“Yes, once or twice,' said Joe. “‘Yes.’ said the riding master, with a disgusted laugh, ‘on a donkey nt the zoo, I guess. Why, you've got the worst seat on a horse I ever saw In my life.' ”
Electric Furnace One of Scientific Freaks When men can thrust their bare hands into an electric furnace that melts metal with ease, It would seem that there is such a thing as cold heat. White mice, too, will run about in tills furnace without suffering any Illeffects, while an interior of a wireless valve can be heated to incandescence without heating the glass bulb Itself. The secret Is that the furnace heats only electrical conductors, being a high-frequency inductance furnace. It Is In the manufacture of wireless valves that one of the most interestlug uses of this furnace Is found. Just before the valve Is sealed from the vacuum pump ft Is placed for a moment within a high-frequency coll. The metal parts immediately become red hot and the bubbles of gas and vapor are boiled out. The valve Is then sealed from the pump with the knowledge that the later heating of the valve by the filament will not cause further release of bubbles. Like Dynamite There Is nothing that a man will not do for the woman he truly loves! There is a type of woman who knows this nnd who, after having won the devoted love of a man, proceeds to use that love as a mean of gaining her purely selfish ends. Many a woman of this type Is hopelessly extravagant. She knows that her husband will make any sacrifice to gratify even her slightest whim. But s-he often does not know that the very love which makes him spoil her will make him violently condemn her If she Indulges In dangerous Indiscretions. Love Is somewhat like dynamite. It properly handled. It can serve the most useful of purposes. If treated , carelessly, It can cause havoc and even death. —True Story Magazine. — University Defined American Universities and Colleges ; says that In the United States a university is an Institution of higher ' learning, comprising a college or col- : leges of arts, literature and science—historically the first part of the American university to come into exist- j ence—and professional colleges or i schools of law, medicine, theology, etc., and especially a graduate school of arts, literature and science. In addition to schools and colleges devoted to instruction and research, the university Includes divisions of laboratories. libraries and museums, and sometimes a university press am! j research Institutes. Not every Instltu- | tlon which calls Itself a university measures up to this definition. Food Requisites According to Prof. V. H. Mottram. , an adult woman needs but 2,500 calories a day. An adult man engaged in sedentary occupation requires 3,000 calories dally. A man doing hard | work should have 5,000 calories. The j physiological reason given Is that the feminine organization utilizes food j more economically than man. A child's food should not be proportioned according to bls age, as he requires more than half the food of nn adult. Boys and girls of fourteen are to be considered as adults in food ultillzatlon. Care of Ferns Give your fern water only when you see the surface of the soil Is dry. Then submerge pot in water for ten minutes. This will mean that every particle of soil In the pot is saturated. Whenever you water the roots spray the tops. Keep plant In a room where there is plenty of fresh air. Florists ventilate their fern houses twice each day. Set the fern outdoors whenever there is a warm rain. As soon as possible set the plant on the shady side of your porch. Easily Pleased Rastus had gotten Into the clutches of the law and was talking things over with bls lawyer. “I think," said the attorney, "1 can get the Jury to exonerate." “Boss," said Rastua, “Ah don't crave to be exonerated. Ah just wants to, be let loose.”
At Cedar Island Ix)dge u® , ~ - i President and Mrs. Coolidge are now safely installed at Cedar Island Lodge, near Brule, Wis.. which will serve as their Summer home. The executive and his wife are shown witli one of their dogs immediately on their arrival at the lodge and seem pleased with the place.
POLICE CHIEF RAPS LENIENCY Fort Wayne, Ind., June 16—(U.R) — Persons who violate the same law more than once should be made to serve their sentence instead of being given a fine and suspended sentence, is the ( pinion of Police Chief Walter Kavanaugh, of Fort Wayne. The Chief also spoke’ against the change of venue motion whereby a case can be dragged out for several months. “I am opposed to the suspension cf sentences, especially for those who violate the same law a second time, the police chief said. "The offenders do not mind a fine and suspended sentence. If more of tlie sentences imposed weie carried out. these violators would become more respective cf the law. It is the jail sentences which hurt them. "A person may violate the law. be tiled, fined and given a suspended sentence. Then he goes right out and breaks the same law again. This time
I< A Jump Into This! I OUR little friend above just heard about our “Special | June Buys” in Used Cars. He’d been wanting a bus for || a long time, but his pocketbook always said “guess ® again” when he saw the steep prices others quoted. No ® wonder he’s so excited. We’re offering the greatest bargains in “Used Cars” to be found anywhere. i 1926 Hudson Brougham J Studebaker Special 6 Touring B 1926 Hudson Coach 1 |{ u ick “6» Coupe. g 1926 Nash Advanced Coach ( For the party who wishes uncom- | 1927 Star 6 Roadster f parable low cost miles in fine car W 1926 Model Essex Coach 1 transportation we are offering one Sfe 1927 Late Dodge Four-Door I brand new 1927 Hudson Coach at ft DeLuxe Sedan (like new) / $1115.00 delivered, this week. OrigBuick “6” Seven Passenger Sedan ) inal price $1395.00. P. Kirsch & Son I Phone 335 Corner Second & Jackson sts. H
he wil plead for a change of venue anti a trial by a special judge on the grounds that he could not be tiled fairly foi some leasen or the other. It' the change of venue is grunted, the disobedient person usually gets off with another fine and suspended sentence." Chief Kavanaugh concluded. Asked about his opinion on delays of trials, he said he did n t favor con tinuances being granted us they were in many cases which result in the case being dragged along for several months l>efore coming to trial. o Happiness in Work The Baltimore Sun says: "The happiest people nre those who tire too busy to notice It." I ef’« cot busy. o Makes. Girls More Attractive Wouldn't you, too. like a face powder that will keep sltine away—-stay on longer—'.spread smoothly — not clog the pores—and always be so pure and fine? It is made by a new French Process and is called MELLO-GLO. it is surely a wonderful Face Powder. Just try MELLO-GLO. Holthouse Drug Co.
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BLACKMAILER BEING SOUGHT South Whitley, Ind., June IS —(tl.R)*— Clews were lacking today In an effort to tiace the man who demanded $7,770 from Harvey Krlder, 45, wealthy president of the South Whitley farmers State Bank, although Whitley county authorities set a trap for the blackmailer. A note pinned on the door cf Krlder’s home Thursday night demanded the money in $5 and $lO bills, threatening death for the banker and members of his family unless the demand was met. Authorities were notified ami watch ed the place where It was directed the money should be left hut no one appeared. A masked man accosted Ralph Dunkleburg near the town cemetery Saturday night and gave him a note, asking him to deliver it to Krlder. The note directed Krlder to a field neat Dunklelmrg’s home. Officers visited the field and found a lighted lantern amt a sack with a note ordering the banker to place the money in the sack and "beat it". No one was found near. o USE Llmherlost Wrehtno Powder
Had Headache and - Awful Indigestion Man and Wife Suffered Ten Years, Then Found Quick Relief. Does your head ache until it feels like it is going to burst? Do you have indigestion and dizzy spells that almost make you fall? If you do, you’ll be glad to read how Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Winrote, 1107 E. Cedar St., South Bend, Ind., obtained prompt relief. Mrs. Winrote says: “I had stomach trouble and constipation for ten years, and suffered agonies with sick spells and splitting headaches. At times, it seemed as if my head would burst. I had no appetite, and even a few mouthfuls would fill me up. Food didn't digest right, and seemed to lodge in my stomach like a rock. It gave me such awful pains in my sides and back, that I was almost frantic. I was bothered with constipation, too, and was a very sick woman 9 Nothing I took seemed to do me any good until I found Viuna. Before I had finished the first bottle, I was greatly benefited. The dreadful headaches and dizziness disappeared, my, appetite picked up, my digestion improved, and I can eat hearty meals without any distress. The constipation is relieved and the pains in my back have stopped. I cannot begin to tell you how grateful I am to Viuna for my remarkable recovery. It did so much for me, my husband tried it. He had stomach trouble for 15 years, with gas, ,our stomach, severe cramps and constipation. Viuna promptly gave him his first real relief. He’s feeling fine and has gained 15 pounds in weight. We both swear by Viuna.” Viuna acts promptly on sluggish bowels, Iniv liver and Wenk kidneya. It purifies the' blood, clears the skin, restores appetite and digest lon.and brings new strength and energy to the whole body. Take a bottle on trial. Then if you're not giail vou tried Viuna, your money will be refunded. $1 at druggists or mailed postpaid by Icelaud Medicine Co., Indianapolis, Ind. VIUNA The JFonder Medicine Sold By CALLOW A KOHNE
