Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 26, Number 264, Decatur, Adams County, 7 November 1928 — Page 9

URGE PHYSICAL EXAMINATIONS As |lie holiday season comes upon L on ee more. Interest in the steady Little against tuberculosis throughout Indiana Increases with the springing L throughout 'he sta,, ‘ of volunteer Brian nations intent upon financing ,l,e 1929 struggle against the "plague” (hrmigli the sale of Christmas Seals. The Indiana Tuberculosis Association, |pon sors this sale in cooperation with l> county organisations, and the continuing tight against the disease already lias borne fruit of which Hoost^r, well may be proud. Both preventive and curative is the campaign organized by these associations and financed by the proceeds of the Christmas Seal sales. On the curative side are to he found the already establishfl| sanatoria, clinics and other similar facilities. On the preventative side ) S the work among children, such as fresh air schools, child nutrition classes and summer camps. Bettered clinical facilities, work toward improved housing conditions, better nursing, etc. And, perhaps, the more important preventive phase of the fight just now is the campaign that has been conducted throughout 1929 in every county of the state to impress upon Hoosiers the value of early diagnosis of the disease. Commenting upon this campaign, Murray A. Auerbach, executive secretary of the Indiana Tuberculosis Association and editor of the Hoosier Health Herald, says: "As important a phase of the anti-tubercul-osis movement as has been undertaken nationally in years is the early diagnosis campaign that has been in progress throughout the United States since last March. No man can be cured of tuberculosis without his consent. The individual must consent to an examination by a physician that his disease may be discovered; and then he must consent to a prescribed course of treatment for a sufficient length of time that his disease may be cured. The earlier the discovery of tuberculosis is made, the more certain is the hope of cure. One of the goals of the early diagnosis campaign is to set graphically before all physicians the picture of tuberculosis as it exists today. The other ma iia onsig exists today. The other main goal is to awaken members of the lay public to the dangers of delayed diagnosis. We all too often go to the physician only when we have become so ill that further ordinary activity is impossible. How much better to see the physician now and then, as a mere matter of precaution. It is this preventive theory that is accented largely in the early diagnosis campaign. Indiana is setting out to convince Hoosiers that no man can be cured of tuberculosis without his early consent.” If no other effort against the dreaded "White Plague’’ - were being made throughout the state than this early diagnosis campaign, the money derived from the sale of the Christmas Seals would be well spent. But this campaign is but one of the several important and winning phases of the educational struggle that Is being carried on every day of the 365 in each year by the tuberculosis association. Under such campaigns, Indiana gradually is ridding itself of the "plague.” Citizenship at the holiday season means purchasing Christmas Seals to the limit of financial ability. Let’s keep the death rate going down in Indiana. -— o "**¥¥*****#*l7 ’NEWS FROM MAGLEY* K * ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ >{. * ¥ if. ¥ ¥ 5; Miss Alma Scherry spent Thursday afternoon with .Mrs, Milton Scherry. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Mills called on Mr. and Mrs. Harry Frauhiger, Saturday afternoon. Mr and Mrs. Lewis Manns, of Fort Wayne, were over Sunday guests cf Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bloemker. Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Scherry and son Harold, Walter, Conrad, Klmer Peters and Misses Martha Conrad, Edna Egloy and Magdaline Borne were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Reppert, Sunday. Mrs. Mina Reppert and son Clarence w ore dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. °«° Schlickman of Decatur Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kolter had as ** le * r guests, Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Kolter and family, of Decatur, Mr- and Mrs. Milton Cerod and family and Mrs. Henry Bloemker, Mrs. ( aroline Jaber, Misses Whelma Jaberg •Minnie and Irene Bloemker, for dinner and Mr and Mrs. Edward Jaberg, Sunuay afternoon. Mrs. John Miller, of Van Wert, and 'j' 8 ' 0,,s Yost, of Defatur, visited Mrs. Milton Scherry, Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Frauhiger spent the week-end with his mother, Mrs. bertha Frauhiger. Amanda Worthman, Mr. and rs. Fred Peters and family Mr. and m' S k owls Worthman Jr. and family r and Mrs. John Hilgem.an and faln V w ere dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Borne and family at Preble. Mr. and Mrs. William Worthman, • r and Mrs. August Worthman and ewis Manns and daughter of Fort ayne, were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bloemker, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Christ Borne and fay had as their guests Sunday Mr. .' u Mrs. Martin Worthman Misses bernadine, Marie and Harold Kolter Dt Mrs. Susie Reppert, of Decatur,

Whwe H«bal H.... Kn t*• •

it was in this pretty cottage in West Branch, la., that (lie Republican candidate fur president, Herbert Hoover, first saw ihe light of day. inset, Jesse Clark Hoover,

Mrs. S jphie Yager and children George I and Augusta and Miss Bertha Ander son, of Fort Wayne. Daniel Scherry and daughters Marie and Marcella visited witii Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Kruetzman and family, Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Hildebrand and family were dinner guests of Mr. and Mis. W. H. Dettinger, Sunday. Miss Irene Gerod was the guest of Miss Marie Scherry Sunday at dinner. Miss Alma Scherry and Hosier Eekrote were dinner guests cf Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Eckrote, of Linn Grove, Sunday. Mr. and Mis. Henry Scherry, Misses Mildred Worthman, Ida and Edna Borne and Marie and Bernadine Kolter of Decatur, Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Kolter and family, of Decatur, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kolter. Daniel Jaberg and Miss Whelma Jaberg called on Mr. and Mrs. Milton Scherry Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Hildebrand had a masquerade party, Tuesday evening in honor of their children Helen and Carl Hie guests invited were Robert Kolter, Glen, Irene, Dwight and Arthur Gerod; Marie Scherry; Gerald and 1 Maydeen Barger, Metha and Amanda Bteberick, Catherine Henry and Car! BeibeHck Whelma Andrews, and Garth Anderson. WALL STREET IS CELEBRATING ■ New York, Nov. 7 — (U.R) — Wall 1 Street gave an enthusiastic demonstra ' ticn today to Hie Republican Landslide Stocks opened strong, appearing in huge blocks witii gains ranging to mere than five points. Trading was ac--1 tive as orders swept in from the nation over the miles of wire to the local i brokerage houses. Tickets lagged bo- . hind the market in the first few miu--1 utes. Airplane shares were carried up sensationally on a wave cf buying which ; usually accompanies a bullish demonstration. Oils soaied and Public Utilities were taken in huge amounts at 1 new high prices in many instances. r A long list of issues was swept to the best prices for the year and longer, 1 even the rails joining the upward . movement. There were no laggards. All groups joined the uprush which 1 took on proportions cf the wildest bill! f market of the annals of the stock exchange. 1 0 — ALL OVER INDIANA (By United Press) r BLOOMINGTON—“The Fundamen- ’ tals of Military Strategy” is the title of a new book bv Lieut. Colonel Oliv--3 er P. Robinson, commandant of the ’ Indiana University Reserve Officers ' Training Corp unit. The book is the 5 result of fifteen years of study of / military tactics and science by Col- ’ onel Robinson. He is the author of ’ ’Musketry,” “Preparedness,” “The Best Guarantee of Peace” and “Lee p as a Leader.” GARY— Patsy, ft pup, belonging to C C Brink, has something to bark -, about for the rest of her life. She has had an operation under either, including the preliminary X-Ray picture. t The pup is fond of swallowing bits , of bread from floors and failed to notice that one bit carried a long 1 needle. 1 GARY— I The capacity of the Anter- ,• lean girl for consuming bad liquor amazes Baron Von Hirscrfield-Hagel- ■ berg, he declared while here viewing v- operations of Gary’s steel mills. He is a son of a German industrial mag1, liate. “The bunk” was the baron’s ,1 verdict on prohibition in America. t -o Knights of Columbus members, attend the installation of t officers and the big ..dinner to ■ be served at the hall Monday s night. Nov. 12. I’lease make r dinner reservations by r. day. . W ' r

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1928.

I TOCSIN NEWS Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Porter entertained for supper, Thursday evening, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Mcßride and family and Mr. and Mrs. Tony Holthouse and daughter Mary Adeline, of Adams comity, Mr. and Mrs. Willard Mcßride, of Decatur, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Yager and family, of near Bluffton, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Yager, Mr. and Mrs. Dick Porter and Miss Mary and Harold Porter, of near Little Vine. Mrs. Chris Beery and Mrs. Claude Kreigh and daughter Bonnie Lou visited with relatives in Decatur, Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Sounterman, of Fort Wayne, spent Sunday witii the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Johnson, north of Tocsin. Miss Nina Carton, of Fort Wayne, was a week-end guest of her mother, Mrs. Margaret Carton. Jus. Galllvan, of Toledo, Ohio, spent ihe week-end witii his brother, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gallivan near Craig- | ville. Other dinner guests in the home, Sunday, were Mrs. Mary Ferguson and son Victor, of Elhanan and Mrs. Ella Dailey, son James and daughter Mary, of Tocsin. Mr. and Mrs. B. P. Trenary, of Fort Wayne, were supper guests, SunI day evening, of Mr. and Mrs. Dora | Myers. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Lyman, of Mar- ! ion. were guests Tuesday night and i Wednesday, of Mr. and Mrs. Elinor Plummer. Mr. and Mrs. George Myers and son Gene were supper guests, Sunday evening of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Miller, of Monmouth. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Hough and daughter Mary Ellen, of Fort Wayne, were supper guests, Sunday evening, of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Byrd. Mr. and Mrs. William Kleinknight entertained for dinner, Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Kermill Kleinknight, George Hall, Wm. Sowards, Sr., and Herman Sowards. Mr. and Mrs. Haldy Garton and family, of Fort Wayne, were guests in the evening. Mr .and Mrs. Ralph Porter and daughter Alice were supper guests, Sunday evening, of Mr. and Mrs. Ira Mcßride, of Adams county. Mr. and Mrs. Perry Schafer entertained for dinner, Sunday, Mrs. Ezra Beech, and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Fish and son Kenneth, of Fort Wayne, Mr. and Mrs. Will Gregg of Bluffton, and Mrs. Jas. Sowards and daughter Arminda, of near Tocsin. Mrs. Jas. Sowards left Sunday afternoon for Bradford, Ohio, to lie at the bedside of a sister, Mrs. Minnie Grove who is seriously ill suffering with paralysis. Mrs. Sadie Hoover and son Ralph were dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Dailey. In the afternoon they called on Mr. and Mrs. Wllfard Nash. Lloyd Woir of Kirkland was a weekend guest of his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Hall. Mrs. Robert Watkins, of Griffith, Indiana, left for home Sunday, after spending a couple of weeks in the Joseph Ca'l home helping care for her father, Turner Vaughn, of Bluffton, who has been very low with dropsy of the lungs. Mrs. Ella Gilliland had as guests Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Sowards, of Valpariso, Mr. and Mrs. Wentz Kreigh, of near Echo, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Wasson, Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Sowards, Mrs. Earl Sowards and Messrs Ralph Wasson and Robert Sowards, of Tocsin. Mr and Mrs. Will Scott and daughters Mary Virginia and Arvilla were dinner guests, Sunday, of Mr. and Mrs. Steve Cline, of Bluffton. The new feed mill at Tocsin will soon be ready for operation. The machinery arrived last week and is being installed at this time. They expect to be ready as soon as the

the nominee’s father, and Huida Minthorn Hoover, his , mother. (International Newsreel)

electric current is turned on. The poles are all set within one-half mile of Tocsin and most of the residents have their houses wired at this time. Mr. and Mrs. Paris Ashcroft, and Margaret Jean Nash, of Fort Wayne, were dinner guests, Sunday, of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Rupright. Afternoon guests were Mr. and Mrs. 11. P. Trenary of Fort Wayne, Mr. and Mrs. Dora Myers and son Billy and Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Rupright and daughters Myrtle and Martha of near Echo. The Ladies Aid of the Presbyterian church will hold a Rummage Sale in the building formerly occupied by the Star Grocery, Nov. 8, 9 and 10. 26213 Cafeteria supper. Reformed church. Nov. 10, sto 7 p. m. Church basement. W T ! 03SS£S9RGHRRH!liHSHHEER^9BI Assessments DUE Assessments on City Improvements I STREETS SEWERS i Sidewalks t I and Curbs i are now due and payi 1 able and will become i delinquent after NOV. 15 unless they are paid. Call at i City Treasurer’s Office ; City Hall l jui u« Ji i

HERE'S A MAN 1 WITH AVERSION TO UMBRELLAS By Richard McMillan (United Press Staff Cnrespondent) Paris, Nov. 6— fU.R) —ls you want to mpet trouble In a hurry, ask M. Honplln, with an address In Rue Jean-Bnrt Palis, if he wants to buy an umbrella. The other day Houplln went to an auction sale at Hie Hotel Drouot with the intention of preparing for a rainy day. The very thing he was seeking was put up for sale —a substantial looking umbrella whleh Houplln secured for sixteen francs, which is little* tnort than half a dollar. ’’Parcel it up," the buyer told the ! eleik. "What d' yon mean —’it' ”? responded the clerk “i'll parcel them up. Houplin, is seems had bought not one umbrella, hut 92 and the auctioneer insisted he take delivery, or elst I | have storage room charged. With melancholy eyes, the sad peg- ! -lessor of 92 umbrellas watehed the : taxi clock tick upward as lie speed homewaid. His wife scrutinized him suspiciously when he stumbled across tile threshold with his arms full of umbrellas and her worst fears were about confirmed when the taxi man came long with many more. After making presents to all his own and his wife's relatives, M. Houplin found still on his hands six dezen umbrellas. What to do with them? The unhappy warrior of the sales, urged as much by the desire to rid himself of the brutes as to retrieve the taxi-fare, took up a pitch in the Rue de Medicis, spiead cut his goods, fixed a card to them beating toe inscription, umbrellas, one, two and three francs” and waited. Too good to lie true, thought the pedWhen You Catch Cold Rub On Musterole Musterole is easy to apply and works right away. It may prevent a cold from turning into “flu” or pneumonia. It does all the good work of grandmother’s mustard piaster. Musterole is recommended by many doctors and nurses. Try Musterole for sore throat, cold on the chest, rheumatism, lumbago, pleurisy, stiff neck, bronchitis, asthma, neuralgia, congestion, pains and aches of the back and joints, sprains, 9ore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet—colds of all sorts. To Mothers: Musterole it also made in milder form for babies and small children. Ask for Children’s Musterole. Better than a muetard plaster

- "■ ' — 1 - ■ 1 - s — Paris says: JF YOU would be smart, wear this color. If you would be in fashion, bob your hair this way. If you would be well-dressed, wear clothes simply designed as I make them. PARIS today sets the correct fashion in women’s clothes, for a waiting world, because with French • women dressing is a studied art. Their chic is supreme. THROUGH advertising, the genius of Paris is brought to the attention of thousands of American women. Tn Seattle, a charming lady wears the new- j est Paris hat. Tn Texas —a pretty girl chooses sash- | j ion’s newest necklace of sparkling crystal. An lowa 1 newspaper advertises a copy of a Paris frock at a moderate price within ten weeks of its appearance in the French capital. ! IF you would, be well-dressed —choose your clothes thriftily and successfully — wear them with style I and dharm, watch what the charming ladies in advertisements wear, and read what is written in the magic name of Paris. i * _ Read the advertisements and you will not only read what Paris says, but what the women of America do. Decatur Daily Democrat’

estrlmis. only one person spoke to the amateur street trader and he took lii.n i.ff, wheeling ids umbrellas before him to Hie magistrate who, after reminding Houplin that there weie such things as licenses to trade In the streets of I’arls, let him off with a caution. Houplin decided the batlie was too .much for him, ho lie took his wares along the Rue Si. Sulpleeand left them quietly under u tree. He waa followed and once more arrested. "You and your umbrellas again!" said the magistrate. “This time Houplin was weeping, "What could I do?" He HObbingly asked, as he told his dismal stoty. "There was only one certain way out and that was to bring them to the police station and suy I had found them. Hut I have never told

Do your brakes4i?l?.. to the/MV of traffic ? , r Drive a new Century Hupmobile and note the difference Silence is so much a built-in feature of stecldraulic brakes, first adopted by Hupmobile a year ago, that the contrast is startling with other cars. Thousands who are driving their first Hupmobiles tell us that now, for the first time, they enjoy positive brake action without trace of squeak or chatter. Hupmobile brakes have 6 times tha clearance of average brakes. Dragging or brake friction is thus eliminated and effective power increased from 10 to 15 per cent. In addition, the special moulded asbestos lining of Century brakes has three times the life of ordinary brake lining. Cars have been driven for 18 months without a single brake adjustment. These are facts you should know in selecting your next car. They will lead you straight to Hupmobile for the finest of mechanical qualities as well as undisputed leadership in style and beauty. Forty-two body and equipment combinations, standard and custom, on each line. the Century list prices: $1345 Tu' jp ' «C3w - NEW 19X9 HUPMOBILE CEfUTiU KT SIX&EIGHT ” j T. J. DURKIN Corner First & Monroe Sts. Rhone 181 — —

PAGE THREE

it lie In my life.” "You have another solution more simple," said the magistrate. ”Leav*» them in a furniture store room and forget to pay the dues. In a yeur and a day they will return to the salestoont”, Houplin has sworn off auction room# for life. Get the Habit—Trade at Home. It Pays ———————— G HIC HE S TER § -PILLS Ladles! Asu your l» o**iat /\ for 0.1-ol.t .(-ten* lMaai-1 1 A\ Brmui nils in Bed *«“• etallic tx>«*s, sealed with Blue T»Lr no u&iter llov V 7 / ” /r t OB, ‘ Aik for / ®cni .«HI H.TFKM lMAMO!VI» 1 M n 1*11.1.*. f..r 40 years kuowa _ ffr at he*t. Dales!, Reliable Ituy Now I | I A SOU) BY DHUCOISTS KYSKYWa£*»