Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 27, Number 128, Decatur, Adams County, 29 May 1929 — Page 3

[HOPE READY YOPAY HONOR ] TO U.S. DEAO I Victims Graves Will Be ecorated On Memorial Day By Samuel Dasblell |... gUtf Correspondent) May 29 -(UP) Tlie graves American h, ‘ ro l,ea<l fr,)l " jH lIZ , of Scotland to the Alpim Xorthern Italy, will be decor. I ■ mninrrow during Memorial Dav I which- have been the special | private and official organiza £< oil both sides.of the Atlantic. | ceremonies, especially m the seven great cemeteries 7ZL, lro m the World War will take (,>• the first time in view of the K;,.,,.,! white marble croses, thus" tokens which according to faith comprise the Christian or the Cross of David over the place of those who gave sacrifice itself will resound to the of American and French troop ySt,,. in behind the Stars and Strip Tricolor of France, in pictures ceremonies which will begin al HHI American Cathedral on the Avenit;, orge V ami a’ St. Joseph’s RoCatholic Church. Wreath on Unknown’s Tomb splendid cortege will march front ’hutch to the arch of Triumph afhe services, where the American jmatic Representative will place eath on the tomb of the Unkniwn ler in the name of the American le, following by the placing of a th by Dean Beekman representing American Legion, the Protestant Catholic churches, and other assointerested in maintaining the sEiers graves. will proceed to the greai cemeteries scattered thr ighout France where they will I with many French inhabitants in tribute to the graves. American Overseas Memorial Association, which was founded nine years ago for the decoration of jjfcierican soldiers’ graves in France, and England, has undertake:: placing Qi appropriate wreaths on ' eltry grave, and including those of and British momuments which i an adjacent those of Americans. I HB'housands of these wreaths are ah in the cemeteries being made to lay against the white shaft of cross. They consist of a small tath with two palms, a spike of te poppies and the American and ft Winch flags. I YWhe Graves Registration Service, cowith the Overseas Commit- | t« and other patriotic societies have special trips to the remote’ through the railroads and tourists so that friends and relatives MHtlm dead conveniently may attend ceremonies. I American Dead Overseas | ■Uore than 30,000 American dead i amain in the war cemeteries on I side of the Atlantic. These perare in their last, undisturbed ■u.ing places, the removals to Amer: iHH having been practically finished. now on, the American cemeter may take on a permanent landfeatures, the graves all being i *rringed in order, and whatever monuißSents of the burial ground. I ■Following ate the cief cemeteries the number of graves: (Meuse-Argonne).... 14.1 ts [gjwise-Aisne 5,9,77 Mihiel 4,146 Wood 2,268 . |B)ny (Somme) 1,832 I Bfcresnes (Paris) 1,507 I Banders Field, Belgium 368 England 437 ■ The American uniformed forces tabpart in the MeMmoria! Day seri ißt'cs will include the members of the Legion Paris Post Nunber - (he members’of the Departmen: I France. It is also expected that a ■elegation of sailors an dbuglers will sent from one of the American men. } -ST wai ' at one of the nearby ports. The military Attache, most of officials of the Embassy, and many ; of the French government al- ' Jp will attend the ceremonies. The Col■r Guard of the American Legion Paris Bost will officiate at the church ser : jpces at the Arch of Triumph and at B>e Suresne Cemetery ust outside of Varis. Impressive ceremonies will also be Bield at the Lafayette Sscadrilie MomiB“ent at St. Cloud, at the grave of La ■ayette in the Piepus Cemetery, and to the industry of certain French American residents, the graves of French soldiers, who ■ought with Lafayette and RochamBeau, have been located and will be de Borated. The graves of those valiant ■eanien who sunk the English priva"Alabama" from the Union shiup off the English Channel ■"'ring the Civil War, have been found ■tear Cherbourg. ■. 0 ■« **¥«¥¥*¥¥¥¥« I* NEWS FROM MAGLEY * ■ 65 ■ Rev. and Mrs. C. T. Roeck of Toledo ■Ohio, were guests of Mrs. Mina Ren■Pert over Sunday. Mrs. Roeck formerly ■ "'as Miss Clara Schneider, whose fath■®r was pastor of the Magley Reformed ■church. She enjoyed meeting her old I ’’ends at church services, Sunday ev- ■ enhig. R ev an( ] Mrs R Oec j { are on ■ heir way to Indianapolis to attend

Hoover Picks Representative Committee \? yi ** ' - i’\t >'#’*'■ y ' dj&t ” &$/ * HB ‘S7~

'I he National Law Enforcement Commission, which was picked by President Hoover and will serve without pay, is being spoken of as entirely representative, since the member., favor nene of the radical elements of the questions with wliicli they will have to deal. Above are six of tlie eleven who form the commission. Top, left to right, Judge Paul J. McCormick of Los Angeles, Cal., Southern District Judge cf California; Roscoe Pound of Cambridge, Mass., dean of Harvard Law School, and

Mystery Plane Makes Flying Economical z<? / S b'*-—Oz

This Stimson monoplane is no mystery in itself, but the secrets of its motor are carefull.' guarded from prying eyes. Just recently it completed a flight from Detroit. Mich., to Langley Field, Va., using only $4.68 worth of

Man Who Tied Knot I iW' ® 1 z'" J ■ You might say that the Rev. Dr. William Brown, professor at the Union Theological Seminary, and an old friend of the Morrow family, was directly responsible for the marriage of Col. Charles A. Lindbergh to Miss Anne Morrow, daughter of the Mexican Ambassador, at the Englewood, N. J., home of the Morrows, since lie was tire man who performed the marriage rites. general synod. Mr. and Mrs. J. J- Helmrick and family were dinner guests of Mrs. - usrc Hovarter, of Fort Wayne. Sunday. Harry Ross and Misses Nina, Mildred Margaret, Dorothy and Goldy Mi - ler were dinner guests of George Mi - ler and Misses Olive and Emma Miller, Sunday. , ~ Mr and Mrs. Fred Bloemker, Mr. and Mrs. William Worthman Mr. and Mrs. William King and (laughter Gertrude were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Manns, of Geneva, SunMr and Mrs. Albert Scherry and children Cordelia Leroy, and Elnor, of Or ville, Ohio, arrived Sunday, evening to visit relatives in and around Magley a week or ten days. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Scherry and children attended the Sunday schom convention in Fort Wayne, Sunday afternoon. , . Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bloemker enter-

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 1929.

Leaps to Safety - '""'"’’□■r .: - ■- • • :<• Tv® I iW ... ’ ■ w < ; BL,. y |>H< ■ Lieut. A. F, Solter, as he appeared after leaping to safety in his parachute following a head-on collision with the plane of Lieut Lee Meadow, during air niat.oeuvers near Columbus, Ohio. Meadow was killed when his parachute fouled with the undercarriage of his plane. (international Hewsree!* tained for dinner, Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. William Bracht Mr, ami Mrs. Harry Warden and daughters Deloras Virginia, and Mary Jane. Miss Alma Scherry entertained for dinner, Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Arnold. Mr. and Mis. Edward Kolter and son Robert were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Girod and family, Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Kolter and Mr. and Mrs. Girod attended the Sunday school corvention of the reformed church, in Fort Wayne Sunday afternoon. Miss Orene Kruetzjnan has been helping her sister, Mis. Harry Frauhiger, whose boys Vernon and Richard have bee nhaving measles, but is better and able to be out again. Miss Irene Hildebrand attended the Sunday school convention at Fort Wayne, Sunday. Mrs. Charles Dettinger and daughters Miss Bettie and Mrs. Florence Keil and daughter Phyllis visited the cemetery at Huntington, Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Reppert and

Newton D. Baker of Cleveland, ttyio, former Secretary of War: and below, left to right, are Judge William S. Kenyon of Fort Dodge, lowa, former U. S. Senator and a U. S. Circuit Conrt of Appeals Judge; Henry W. Anderson, Richmond, Va., former special assistant to the Attorney-General of the United States, and George W. Wickersham of New York City, Attorney-General in the Taft Administration, who will head the commission. (International Newsreel)

ordinary furnace oil. Captain L. M. Woolson, inset, is the inventor of the new Diesel type of motor adapted to airplanes. (International Newsreel)

Mother on Trial — — aft 4a ! * • rZ * : ; •• it ***^^—— * i Mrs. Ada May Johnson, who is on trial in Chicago for the murder of Dominick Finn, former constable of Lekxlen -township. Mrs. Johnson is tlie mother of nine children. son Bobby were dinner guests of Mr. and Mis. Franklin Fruchte and son Dale, and Edward Scherry. Mr and Mrs. W. H. Dettinger Mr. and Mrs Simon Belneke and son Albert, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Reppert and son Milton, Misses Ruth, Irene, and Mary Scherry, were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Hildebrand and family and Mrs. Mina Hildebrand, Sunday. Rev. and Mrs. Otto Scherry and Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Duckman, of Vera Cruz visited in the Otto Hildebrand home Sunday afternoon.

ADVANCE SEEN IN BATTLE ON TUBERCULOSIS National Association Ends 25 Years Os Its Fight Against Disease Atlantic City, N. J., May 29 —(UP)— : Twenty-five years after its inception the National Tuberculosis Association pnet here today to review the results of its winning fight against disease and to outline plans for further vic- ! tories. Good news awaited the delegates They were told -f two scientific ad. rances that should have far-reaching . consequences in tl»e diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis. Tubercii'lti. the sbstance used in I the test for detecting tuberculosis in human beings as well as cattle, 'its | been reduced to absolute purity, somej tiling heretofore never achieve;!, so I that it can be supplied wholly fre” from o’ he - substances which have asIfected th 1 accuracy of these tests in the past. Tiie details of this process were described by Dr. Esmond R Long tnd Dr. Florence B. Seibert, of the University of Chicago. New Testing Mechanism The second research achievement consists of tlie production of a wholly new mechanism for testing the individual for toe presence of tubercnlsois which is expected to render possible within three or four days of infection , instead of an average of two months afterward, as is at present tlie case. . This was disclosed in reports submitted by Drs. Florence 11. Sabin, C. A. Doan and C. E. Forkner of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research. Both these scientific groups conducted their studies in co-operation with the Medical Research Committee of the National Tuberculosis Association of which Dr. William Charles White of Washington, D. C. is Chairman. Diagnosis of tuberculosis will become much inoie exact by reason of the perfection of tuberculin to crystallne purity, according to scientific authorities in attendance at the meeting. Particularly in the examination of children suspected of infection will the new tuberculin be of great value, for heretofor it has not been certain, in lite individual case, that a positive reaction was not caused by one of the various ini] urities which were known

CHICHESTERS-PILLS w THE hiamond rkanik a Ladle*! Ask yoar Drucfist /\ / LEK A or L'kl-rhea-ters Diatnind /A\ AZuFjWv Brsmd PHU in Red and <4old< Q> rtalllc boxes, sealed with Blue tM ftvi. IJj/ilGibbon. Take no other. Bay V j / —* your llrugcM. Ask f<>r y •< HEH.TPRB IHAMONR i IB* O BKANI> I*l LLe*. f r4O years known -A /T as Best, Safest, Reliable. Buy Now I —“sold by pbugcists evekywbekb

5 '535 F r iT n‘> Wirt whirls txtra w rJI 11111111 « Ime Mohair L’pbolsttf? Optional Wttbou.'Extra Cui Notice who own CH RYS LE RS eft’ Lr - that alone, means a lot J/ak iRiLi - i—

HEN you ■ -XctiPt r see t h e num , I ber of Chryslers in the hands of bankers, lawyers, doctors, manufacturers, engineers, ( chemists, judges and other ( leaders of American life everywhere, you realize more than ever that you travel in the best of company when you ( own and drive a Chrysler. . It means something deft- 1 nite when thousands of ' people who formerly owned and drove far more expeu- t

CHRYSLER, CHRYSLER MOTORS PRODUCT Dettinger Motor Sales Co. w. n. DETTINGER WEST MONROE STREET.

to exist In the tuberculin used. 'Die skin test lias always probably been complicated by elements In the test fluid other than those which indicate the disease. It will also affect directly the testing of cattle, and reduce tlie number of animals which are slaughtered because they react positively to tuberculin and yet show no signs qf (übercuiosis. Work to B« Continued Research work is to be continued by Drs. Long and Seibert of the University of Chicago to discover to what extent the avaln type of the disease in chickens and the bovine type in cal tie may be the cause of the human disease. Authorities state that tlie work already done ill eliminating foreign elements from tuberculin will affect tlie diagnosis of other liact’rlal diseases in a similar manner, rendering methods much more accurate and dependable. The new test deviled for the earlier diagnosis of tuberculosis by members of the Rockefeller Institute utilizes a small quantity of the blood of the patient. The red corpuscels are removed and tlie remaining serum diluted and placed In a test tube containing one of the fatty fractions of the tuberculosis germ, known a? phisophatide. If the

iff , | |l H GIVE YOUR SAVINGS TIME TO “AGE” | The United States Treasury ' I i finds that currency lasts longer ■ ’ and stands harder wear when on paper that has been properly > “aged." Your savings in this gn I bank likewise will be a strongflli, er aid in time of need, through Ig It the marvelous power of com- w < pound interest over a period of at ■ffi years. ■ e .Capitaland Stylus £l%opo.oft~ as ,

sive cans are now driving Chryslers by preference. Today there is a genera; recognition of the fact that Chrysler has obsoleted iongestablished standards. Bv scientific distribution of car weight, by new utilization of fuel, by advanced carburetion and correctly applied thermo-dynamics, Chrysler engineering has created a new performance. A perfectly-balanced chassis, with buoyant vanadium

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patient has tuberculosis there wilt be u precipitate, but it the disease is not present, nothing at all will occur. This new test will alao be of use in distinguishing between cases of meningitis which are tuberculous and those which are not, something which science has heretofore been unable to do early in the disease and accuracy. Calumny Travels Fast Nothing is so swift as calumny; nothing is more easily uttered; nothing more readily received; nothing more widely dispersed.—Cicero. Sickly Boy, 7, Gains 15 Lbs-Father Happy "My boy, 7, would not eat. I gave him Vlnol and the way he eats and plays now makes me happy. He gained 15 pounds.”—J. F. Andres. Vlnol is a delicious compound of cod liver peptone, Iron. etc. The very FIRST bottle often adds several pounds weight to thin children or adults. Nervous, easily tired, anemic people are surprised how Vinol gives new pep, sound sleep and a BIG appetite. Tastes delicious. Smith, Yager & Falk, druggists.

springs anchored in moulded blocks of live rubber instead of ordinary metal shackles, supplemented by hydraulic shock absorbers, means an entirely new and delightful comfort in riding. Take a demonstration. Learn for yourself the difference between Chrysler performance and the others. , CHRYSLER ”75”—11535 to >1795 Et»*ht Body Styles CHRYSLER >s"—>lo4o to >1145 Six Body Styles All prices f. o. b.factory. Chrysler dealers extend convenient time payments. 2 9 6