Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 27, Number 58, Decatur, Adams County, 8 March 1929 — Page 7

IsUNTIJNS STILL I WEffifflDEN BY | UMIT LEASERS 9 province 9 By I) Bess, ■I | P Stiff 9 Peping. Ma.h ‘ 9 ,» in -THte of US hundreds of I of sea-roast, ds three modern H m ..nd its extensive motor ■ IJX today presents a picture of 9 p alisnt similar to that existing in ■ in -it- Agps ’ ac,ordl ~g 9 „ a survey just completed by a forH £n traveller in th- Province. 9 tup homeland of Confucius, abou ■I ~h a controversy raged at ■ Sirs and later at the Washing--9 I(in conference. h..s suffered as much 9 sanv of the most remote provinces 9 . Chinn as a r. suit of the wide--9 ..read desolation attendant upon civil 9 wars and militarist misrule. The peo--9 me who had lamed so much from the 9 anting of the Nationalists last spring. 9 liV e been phmged into deeper despair 9 conditions have remained practic--9 ''l!' unaltered, th • survey shows. H “bv the trend of circumstances. 9 Shantung province lias become a kind 9 of no-man's land between the two 9 most powerful warlords at Nanking- ■ -Chiant Kai-shek and Feng Yti--9 hsiann- Ttl, ' s, ‘ |, ' i " |prs - " bn allotr * llot 9 yet willing fully to trust each other. 9 have staked out parts of the province 9 for their own. and other parts, juris--9 Won of which is in dispute, have been left in the hands of bandit leaders. who swear nominal allegiance to Nanking, and Dr. Sun's Three Principles. but actually are the same highway robbers they have always been, whose sole function is to raise revenue. and who feel no obligations to give anything in return for the money ; they extract from the people. Protected by Japanese Two of th. se bandit overlords have become very powerful under the Nationalist regime, one holding the southern quarter of Hie province along the coast from a point .’>o miles below Tsingtao. the other setting up in Cbefeo. being protested by Japanese occupation of the Tsingtao-Tsinan railway zone, which prevents Nationalist armies from advancing from the south. It is true that conditions have improved in the region actually occupied by Feng fii-lisiang, apd in some parts iu which Chiang Kajshek’s soldiers reside, the survey shows. But fully 60 per cent of the province is little changed from previous periods of misrule The foreigner who made this study does not find any particular fault with the Nationalists, He realizes that Nanking has its hands full with a multitude of problems, and that the sltue'.on in Shantung is so compliKonjola Rescues Young Lady From Nervous Collapse Says New Medicine Strengthened And Invigorated Her Entire Inner-System And Organs L i 4' ; - . Y- \ i MISS PEGGY WHALEY . Por mwe than slx months I suf- ' '7, bom p xLreme nervousness,” , ul Miss Peggy Whaley, North ' on street, Kokomo, Indiana. insomnia also was my lot and as hpm. l ' ° f ~leae ailments my general <-m>.i-c Was in an extrp niely rundown 5»«.L lod ’_ J was on the verge of a trjbi.ua COl!apse - Loss of sleep conliau thi steadily to m y weakness. I a *"” by ago 1 rPad a statement to i- 1 'bine and as I knew her "‘'-nln P ,iT t Sincere peraon - 1 ~e- n ne w nwii? 6 " and there to try lh,s the ven- -^ n6 .' l i onjola ' myself. From better anii'V' ° f the treatment I felt a comnleto f ° Ur botlles have affected appetite 1 have a out wakirJ T thru the n,ght wltl ‘- again. tc “7 . ne ' VeS aro 00101 derful anu 1 6 Konjola i 8 simply wonmen dation it™" thlnk ot no repora ’ as, °und!ng r ° ng , eno ' IBh to B>ve this tomeT y ' R has meant 0 Sw »h. j0 Yager & I Fm BeCatUI '’ Ind > ftt bv 311 Um ivef. F . a k a rirug Rtore and tllis e “tire s b^tion n,eelsta throughout

I rated that it will probably tike nuiny years to strnighten It out. The survey indicates that Japanese occtipntlon of the railway zone has increased the difficultieu of improving conditions In Shantung. While Japanese soldiers maintain ihrder In the zone, and prevent militarists front I using the railway ns a plaything, according to their custom elsewhere In Chinn, nevertheless this slice out of • Shantung Inierfeis with Nationalist plans to set up a new and better administration. The Chinese are determined to force Japan out of the railway zone. They declare with entire justice that Japan has no legal or treaty right to keep 1 troops in Shantung, which is part of : China's sovereign territory. The Japi anese readily admit this fact, but de- • clare they must keep soldiers in ShanI tung as a matter of military expei diency until the Tsinan incident has been settled to their satisfaction. The Chinese have set up pickets around the railway zone, and have practically killed trade in Tsinan, which was once the heart of the province. There nre at least five separate and distinct •‘governments" in Shantung today, if one includes the Japanese regulation of Tsinan, the survey shows. Over each of these, Nanking exercises a merely nominal control. o South Bend Has Fire South Bend. Ind., March 8 (UP) — Twelve persons were forced into the biting cold Thursday when fire destroyed a two story frame building containing four stores and three appaitinents. Iraniage was estimated at ' 150,000. o FOR SALE- Ford Coupe. New Duco. 192 G model. Price $165.00. Saylors Motor Co. 57t3

t Tire Mileage at Lowest Cost 30x3 in. tire $3.50 30x3'4 in. tires $3.50 to $6.50 32x1 Cord Tires - SB.OO to $8.75 33x4 Cord Tires SB.OO to $9 QQ 29x4.40 Balloons S4.QO t 0 $6.50 29x4.75 6 Ply Super $8.75 30x5.25 6 Ply $9.00 33x6.00 6 Ply Double Service... $15.00 I 30x3'4 TUBES SI.OO to $1.25 29x4.40 Tubes . sl, $1.50, $1.75 31x4 and 32x4 Tubes $1.50 NO HIGH RENT TO PAY. AT RESIDENCE 341 WINCHESTER ST. Giles V. Porter

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY. MARCH 8, 1929.

AERIAL SURVEY OF ALASKA TO : RE COMPLETED I ■ f Government To Finish Search For Timber l.ands And Water Power . II Washington, March 8-(UP)—The ) hope of locating accurately rich UmI her land and sources of water power, as well as gathering data for maps has prompted the Navy tn eomplet an . aerial survey of Alaska begun in 1926. i. Three latenlng amphibian planes ' from the Battle Fleet, usuallly station--1 ed in the Pacific, will be sent to Alaska late in May. the Navy Department has announced They will be accomI panied by the USS Gannet, a tender, . and a barge. Lt. Commander A. H. Radford. I'SN. , has been recommended as officer-in-charge of the expedition. B. II Sargent of the Interior Department will probably accompany him, it was announced. Nearly 15,0110 acres are included in tlie tract to be surveyed. Aerial photographs will be taken from an altl- . tmie of 10,000 feet witli a T-2-4 lens camera. The area to bo mapped is the Chicagof and Baranof islands and the lAlankan-Canadian frontier in southeastern Alaska. “In addition to the valuable data for maps," the Navy Department said “oblique photographs showing timber areas and water falls t > be obtained are of considerable importance to the

■ Bureau of Fisheries and Forestry." Cozt At $15,000 Interior and Agriculture Department* are to pay sls,non toward the expense of the expedition. The survey of Alaska wits begun In 1926 when a naval parly made aerial photographs of the areas around Kit chlknn, Wrang< 11, Petersburg and Juneati, Following this earlier work, the Interior Department told the Navy It I would have required ten seasons work iby ground methods to accomplish 1 what the aviators bad done in three months. hi adition to the officer in charge ot the expedition, a graduate photographic ofifcer amt four trained enlisted photographer" wll Iprobably be de

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WILLYS-KNIGHT ~ SUPERIOR WHIPPET W Fine Motor Cars L —J . f|g|P=' ■■■ib I . • u • =y—l -Mg® 3 Announcing the appointment of HKW/iV.v \ P*s: Kyi W. D. PORTER fejfegg I SIR' j Decatur, Indiana t I as authorized Willys-Overland dealer ij in this community ■ 'y I jf||fjaEHE IBY th e appointment of W. D. Porter as auth- tLl> or ’ ze d Willys-Overland merchant, the citizens 1 of Decatur and vicinity are assured of a de- E|fH : / fl w j pendable, responsible representation in Super- tT? 1t ,A1 gtel.i° r Whippet and Willys-Knight Fine Motor P j BpSo Cars -. • ILWzM p Mr. Porter, the owner of the business, is an jlliL -* old and favorably known resident of Decatur. * His ten years of experience in the automobile business particularly equips him for this | venture. IS Mr. f >o, 't er ’ s sBl0 P * s well equipped with all facilities and £/ V ' ; - latest appliances for giving the owners of Overlands. Whip- / ■< 7 5 ? Uipets and Willvs-Knipbts first-class service. ■.-•.’><.■ • 1 yIVTOI B . . P B Mr. Porter joins us in extending to the motoring puhhc a . > ‘ - x > - WL fi > Wgl P uiosf cordial invitation to call at his place of business and in- ’ sped the full line of New Superior Whippets and Willys- $ Knight Fine Motor Cars. i , WILLYS-OVERLAND, INC. To'edo. Ohio BS - : ' r;? v ~ 'MI ■■> r 7 ■- •■- ■ . . s . I

tailed to the survey. The Navy’s active Interest In conservation, it was pointed out, dates from 1592 when Admiral Evans evicted the teal poachers then prevalent In Alaskan waters. o— . — — LINN GROVE NEWS Rev. F J. Stedcke is holding revival services at the Ohl Salem church. Mr. mid Mrs. Chanucy Reynolds mid son, were gnesls of Mr mid Mrs. Frank Tuggle, at Markle. Mr. and Mrs. M. K Smith, of Borne Flossie, of Fort Way in- and Mabie, of Bluffton, visited their parents. Mr. and Mi s. F. W. St miler Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. I) Alspiw, of Berne, visited Mr. and Mr-. Arnold Asehle-

man Thursday eveningChauncey Reynolds botighl the Earl Dustman property and moved Into It last Wednesday. Harry Meshberger went t > Indiana polls this week, on :i biisliu-ss trip Dunlel Studler is conflm-d to his home with illness.

-I w — ■ — - -And That’s That! > ~ A >« ‘1 r—txi esl Bank. _ f d\.' jf* 11,1 - WRITING A CHECK beats paying by cash a dozen different ways. You know exactly how much you’ve- spent and to whom it i wont. The canceled check is both a record of the transaction and a bona fide receipt! We invite your Checking Account. SI.OO starts one for you. Old Adams County Bank THE FRIENDLY BANK

PAGE SEVEN

Mrs. Fred Dubach was surprised last Sntunlay evening wlieu her children and grandchildren gathered at her home to help celebrate her fifty-ninth birthdayMri- J. se Wittwer, of Berne, visited A. M Lanning, Sutunluy afternoon.