Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 127, Decatur, Adams County, 28 May 1930 — Page 5

KgleynewsT J ■ n(l mih. Charles Dettinger ■ugh''' l ' Betlle entertained ■ WP ekend: Mr. and Mrs. J ppttinger of Detroit MichiMr. and Mrs. G. F. Keil K|v of Van Wert. Ohio. ■ |„ Scherry and children ■* |.;inor, and Leßoy of Or- ® Io are visiting relatives in BL,I Magley for a few weeks ■ r „t. Lucile, and Elinor Hll■gppn t Saturday with Mrs.

I I K H U-' vs Kk \ y r ;6Ruenl- - I j V *' A,CHE ■ ’ I MB* 7 Wish her future happiness... I 1 with a DIAMOND.' |: S . i 1 Diploma in hand, she faces life for the first time. Os course you wish her well but let your wishes take a form she’ll truly !• appreciate. A fine diamond! Mounted in a beautifully wrought ring or bracelet, or set in one of our exquisite Gruen wristlets, the diamonds we offer are all. perfect, all correctly cut, all reasonably priced. Graea Iji| |M gS HI <*•" G ’ rUfn Cartouche |fn|N| I O Imfll .111 diamond idiamrmdf L ‘MI J**-— L<i| il l d.e;«« /run, »ts MH |M -~8 >|< i 111 l!llll st><) I Pumphrey Jewelry Store J I DECATUR PORTLAND 11 1 \ f 111 ■n£-eA .1 T J IB I U u J .J QlXlXct pjordH *1 $ Al

1 - _ I 'cr i>cvi» ,»»« iiiv >■' ■fiSffifflfiSKESFHffiES; Issi :ffi Sffi!JSE®SffiE®EKS.SSEMiESfiEHiEHiEJfi*H!fiEKSffi The Complete • I Guide - Book £ I i IF YOU’VE been a tourist in foreign lands, you’ve S probablv come to have a high regard for one or an- yp other of the standard guide-books. Surrounded by strange scenes, strange names, and with your time i j limited, you have turned with relief to any volume which tells you on good authority where to go and g what to do. Hfi Consider your ordinary shopping tours in the s same light. Without an up-to-date guide-book of merchandise appearing daily within the pages of this newspaper, your most casual trip to the stoi e.~> uj would be more or less like a ramble in foieign countries. gS> We’re speaking of the advertisements, of course. ffi If it weren’t for the advertisements you would be a J. stranger in the market, surrounded by strange ft names, strange brands. Buying would be ff S unless you tested every article you wanted befoie you bought it. As it is, you can make up your shopping list in a | few mmutes, and buy with confidence instead of ffi suspicion—knowing what you’re getting-knowing I that consistently advertised goods must maintain | standard quality. , ffi I Decatur Daily Democrat j ■ i ■ sanr-.- —h r-i.r=>« vnr=3»■»nHh.. i'Pjf^rfl3fl2fiKJlc®ru

► Milton Scherry and family. , M|i ‘ Bnd Mrs - J - J. Heimrich and , fam, h wore dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Stiaub and family 1 Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Knatz of Fort ■ Wayne viaited with M r. and Mra I Walter Kruetzman Bunday afternoon. i Mr. and Mrs. Otto Hildebrand and - family and Mrs. Mina Hildebrand i entertained /for dinner and sup. i per Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. William Bracht, Mr and Mrs. Jesse Fax, Mr. Harry Warden and family

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 1930.

Mr. and Mra. Milton Scherry and lainily, Mr. and Mra 1 . Lewis Jr. Worthman, and family. Mr. and Mra. Edward Kolter am! son Robert entertained for dinner Sunday Mr. and Mra. Robert Wolf of CiaigvUJe, Mrs. G. F. Parmer and daughter Mabel of Decatur. Mr. and Mra. Edward Jaberg and daughter Donna Ruth. Miss Whelma Jaberg, Glen Girod, and Millon Dettinger. Mr. and Mrs.* Franklin Fruchte and son Dale, Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Scherry and family and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Fruchte visited with Mr. and Mrs. Paul Belberick and son Dwight of Fort Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hower of Decatur Mr. and Mrs. Dick Farr of Fort Wayne were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dettinger and family Sunday afternoon. 0 Flood Danger Slight Helena, Mont. — (UP) — Flood danger in Montana virtually has passed and unions unforseen weather develops, the state will be from serious inundations this yea? according to W. A. Lamb, chief engineer of the United States Geological survey. Authorities do not anticipate any floods comparable with the disastrous inundation that caused heavy damage and loss of life at Wibaux Mont., last June. Chipper As a Kid Spanish Fork, Utah — (UP) — Just to prove that age makes little difference to one who is really talented, John Tuckett, Sr., danced, sang and boxed several rounds with one of his grandsons when 65 children, grand children and great grand children gathered to celebrate hfs 96th birthday. VANISH No matter how severe 01 stubborn, delightful, snow-white, odorless OVELMO CREAM instantly soothes and comforts the worst cases. Has rid over 50,000 persons of eczematous eruptions and cleared up their skin. Keeps skin youthful, beautiful, velvety smooth. Get OVELMO CREAM today at ycur druggist or toilet goods counter. Money-back guarantee. Gsick skin yearns for velmCJ EVERY SKIN NEEDS OVEI.MO"

DEPORTATION IS STILL PUZZLE TO MILWAUKEE MAN E. J. Costello, Once Hustled Out of England for Unexplained Reason By Arthur H Rice (United Press Staff Correspondent) Milwaukee. May 27 —(UP) E. J. Costello, editor of the Milwaukee Leadei, socialist newspaper, Hats deportation an one of the outstanding events of bis colorful career an a journalist. Costello. 50, told (he United Preus that he had not yet received official notice from the British government why he was deported to the United States immediately following the World war. Making a trip to Europe in 1920, Qostello began organization of European bureaus of the Federated Press a labor newspaper press association which he organized in Milwaukee in 1919. He established bureaus in London. Oslo, Stockholm. Berlin. Amsterdam, and Copenhagen, and returned to England. A short time later, Costello said he took passage on a steamer from Newcastle, England, bound for Bergen. Norway. On the ship, were Miss Claire Sheridan, English sculptress and cousin of Winston Chur- ‘ chill, and a Mr. Kamineff, Soviet government employe. “Miss Sheridan, it developed, had 1 asked Chut chill for a passport to Russia that she might make busts of Lenin and Trosky. Churchill refused and Kamineff arranged for the trip.'' Costello said. “I made their acquaintance on the trip, and learned later that Miss Sheridan succeeded in 'reaching Moscow. “A short time afterward while in London again. I returned to my hotel one night and found two Scotland yard men going through my papers They politely but impressively read a deportation order signed by the British foreign office,” he said. “It was rather a joke as I had made arrangements to return to the United States by the time the order . directed me to do so. I "No cause was given for my deportation," he said, “but 1 had rea■lson to believe that secret service , jperalives bad been on the ship to

Norway and had seen me in the* company of Miss Sheridan and Ku- i mineff Perhaps they thought 1 was] a Soviet operative," and the editor chuckled as he recalled (he incident. “It was not long after this that the Russian government's press obtained control of the Federated I Press and I resigned," Costello said. | The newspaperman entered public relations and magazine work In ' which he was engaged until Fobrun, y 1930, when he became editor of the Milwaukee Leader. O FRANCE DOOMS BILLBOARDS IN NEW REGULATION Artistic Group Must Approve All Changes of Natural Beauty By John White (United Press Staff Correspondent) Paris, May 28—(UP)—In the confusion of falling governments, budgets and naval conferences, the French parliament has managed to pass a law which settles a controversy of many years’ standing. That law dooms the billhoard— dooms In fact, the indieci imtnate building of anything that is not beautiful to look upon -by setting apart the scenic and natural splendors of France as forever immune from man’s industrial progress. For years France has jealously guarded buildings known as “historical sites,” forbidding even the owners the right to alter them, and forbidding the sale except to tne State, and at a price fixed by the State. But stretches of unplanted terrain, fields, river banks, roadsides and rhe like did not come under the old law. Then came the post-war period of industrial expansion and certain devil features of the so-called "American influence." Factories sprang up along the banks of the principal rivers, chiefly the Seine, which outs * squarely through the capital and I its contiguous industrial suburbs. ’ Billboards and electric signs came ■ [ to advertise the products thus pro- ■ duced. A few romanticists protested, but their voices were unheard. Until someone suggested installing a huge hydro-electric plant on ■ the historic promenade which skirts the Sceine at Saint GermainenYaye, hard by the no less historic , Pavilion Henri IV. Then Frenchmen I rose as one man and demanded that 3 such a thing be made forever im ■ possible. | The new law provides for estabJ lishment of commissions in each :| department, with a “superior com- ! mission" in Paris, presided over by L the Minister of Fine Arts. Under its I terms no person can excavate, build, destroy trees or in any other ■, way mar the natural aspect of his 1 plans to a committee of architects 0 and obtaining their approval. J Thus France insures herself = against the sacrifice on the altar o: 2 so-called progress of the heritage of J generations. ———o * J Garage Stolen k Ogden, Utah —(UP)— Tracking ! criminals is one task but tracking t stolen garages is another, and local ■ police were unsuccessful in (heir at’l tempts to locate garage stolen from S some property owned by the Feder--1 al Building and laiau association, r Criminals may somtimes be traced • through tin* "fence" who receives ] their stolen goods, but thus far no f “fence” has been discovered who j i takes in stolen garages. 1 Show Indiana "Medicine j Chicago (UP) - Spiritual aids ! for criminal pursuits are on exhi- ? bition at Field Museum of Natural j History here, in a collection of In--1 dian medicine charms. Among the 3 exhibits representing the Crow J Cheyenne, Arapaho, and Apache InI dians, is “horse-stealing medicine." n The Crows, famous for their slumJ erous raids on neighbors' horses. I usd. this charm extensively, beliovB ing that it gave them power in their | operations. L Children Almost Hate Cross, ’ Nervous Mother I "'My children almost hated me, I I was so cross. Thanks to Vinol, my B nervousness is all gone and we are | Itappy again."—Mrs. T. Johnstone. U For 30 years doctors have preII ! scribed Vinol because it contains 1 important mineral elements of iron, calcium and cod liver peptone. The • very FIRST bottle brings sound I 'sleep and a BIG appetite. Nervous, Slwornout people are surprised how 1 QUICK Vinol gives new life and ; pep! Tastes delicious. B. J. • Smith Drug Co. 1 _ o- — 2 Schafer Guaranteed ■ House Paint @ $1.95 i per gal. All regular j colors. Guaranteed 5 Barn Paint (a) $1.50 ; per gal. — Schafer Hardware Co. 2t

LONDON CHORUS GIRLS UNDER 18 ARE PROTECTED i Producer Responsible for Rturn of Company After Foreign Tour -—. I London, May (U.K) —The triin- | limbed, timid little chorus girl of I England has been "given a haud", us Texas Guinan often has urged her “suckers" in New York night clubs. In reality, it is more than a hand. It is the protective wing of John Bull, if you can imagine a wing on ' a lion. A charter for chorus girls of 16 and 17 years of nge had been drawn up end made effective. The charter, officially known as the Children Employment Abroad Amendment act, was drafted after considerable agitation by moralists who claimed many of the girls were taken to strange lands and left stranded when the show collapsed. This, the moralists argued, left only one course open to the girls, too proud to wire home for funds. The act provides that a special license must be obtained from a magistrate by a producer before he can engage the services of girls under the age of 18. The magistrate must satisfy himself that the girl has the consent of her parents; that she is fit for the engagement; that site will return home as soon as it is ended and that site will be properly treated and her welfar? supervised while she is abroad. If a manager fails to do this he Is subject to a fine of SSOO and sentence of two years at hard labor. o Earliest American Candy Stick candy was the first con fectlon imide In the United Ktntes. LOANS TO FARMERS Up to $300.00 Special Time Plan Franklin Security Co. Phone 237 Over Schafer Store. ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■a

1 ■■ ■-—- ■ — i 1 wira 111,,n ■■■ :;i! ** n ’» Straw |Sennit| ' hat facts J 5? ' ’ More Americans wear straw hats than any , J other people \ A • Z 1 / 1 But the raw material ; that goes into a Sen- / / nit comes from for- I f eign countries \ * ' The hat has its straw $1 stiffened with shellac Couldn’t buy better straw hat style And the shellac comes There’s style in the medium from India and is a brim product of insects There’s style in the medium belled crown * < There’s style in the band inset with club colors Soft body straw Hats in the latest styles An . d ifs co< ’* a "fJ ,IKhl no ♦ cr nn },nd very B ° <>d wlth your SI.UV IO J])d.vU business suits and your lighter flannels for evening HhK 'WJE'JM.~TOPir-T Holthouse Schulte & Co. 1 — 1 "r

CRAIGVILLE NEWS Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Thomas, Mrs. Spegber, Mrs. Maynard Hetrick Bluffton called on Mr. and Mra. A. H. Hetrick Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs Floyd ■trickier and Mr. and Mra. Grant Strickler and I Mrs Roop of Wlllabire were gueats lust Wednesday In the home of Mr. and Mrs. Oatus Strickler at this place. Mrs. William Breinar was a guest In the borne of Mrs. Emmr Pyle last Friday afternoon Mra. Ollie Abbott and Jim Street 1 of Rockford Ohio were callers at this place Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs Charles Bell and Mrs. Emma Pyle visited at Decatur last Sunday afternoon. Miss Irene Strickler of Willshire Ohio is visiting thia week at th * i home of her grandparents Mr. and ' Mrs. Oatus Strickler at this plac<. ' Childrens Day services will be held at the U. B. Church at this | place on Sunday evening June 8. Mrs. Jacob Scherry and Mrs. Su--1 sle Reppert spent Thursday in the i home of Mi. and Mrs. A. H- Hetrick Mr. and Mrs. Denton Katclitf ' spent last Sunday in the home of Mr and Mra. Harry Waggles a' Bluffton. ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Janies Manley of near Peterson were supper guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Barger last Saturday evening. Miss Opal Drum of Bluffton spen l Sunday with her parents Mr. ami Mrs. Henry Drum. Miss Bertha Strickler visited with friends at Willshire Ohio a few days last week. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Wolf and daugb

HELP WANTED All parties interested in the upkeep of the Zion Cemetery are asked to please come to the cemetery Decoration Day at 8 o'clock a.m. Bring mowing scythes and tools needed to help clean up. In event of rain, cleaning will be done next day or as soon as I possible. Business meeting of all interested afterwards. H. H. High, president Loren Yager, secy. & treas.

PAGE FIVE

ters, Mr. C. A. Wolfe daughter Minnie spent Friday evening in "be home of Mr. and Robert Wolf. Mr. and Mra. Ervin Skoin of Au- ' burn were week-end gueats in the • John Barker and Frank Delbls home at this i I •• -- ■ <)■ ■■■■"■■ '■ lu I Cattle Electrocuted i . i Broadus, Mont. —(UP)— Eight i i head of cattle owned by 'he Gilmore Brothers wore electrocuted during ‘ a thunder and lightening storm re--1 cently. The carcasses were found along side a barb wire fence. t

□ ' / kjfll ■ . f K ’ ■’OSk * , / LAS s 1 ■ ' f IBt ■ y • ■ f ~<■ J Leaves Skin Velvety Soft || What a joy for your akin —this gentle 1 H cocoanut oil soap that lathers instantly ■ even in the hardest or coldest water! E Antiseptic, too.-it removes dangerous ■ germs. Oversize white cake 10c. a