Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 192, Decatur, Adams County, 14 August 1930 — Page 3

cabinet 1 MERS ENJOY i JIMER RECESS L- W 9>« S .® f ’ ■lohlMie l avonte ■hies and Pastimes v Slew-"'' Brown, M CurrospoiKlont ' ' i'i IIP Sniftered Aug !■> u r 1 ■ leaver of autumn are the K r .,nh govrrmnent. anti all K. n ,bring’ transacted under se< rotaries. (.•..•■i, h parliament reM in t ;„. cabinet leaves for . n '. PV t „ dabble with his lanfl subordinates. T. 0.1: I Premier, is x lX eeption and he is only 1,;., greatest passion outM. Tardieu is now \ >'■ arranging his W . "" irll n '"" l,erS )/-] . col I / years. >7 a "' as ' ’T '/■him in He -‘- k - ,llaile nec ’l ■ apart-1 aii-'B expangrowing library. K finishing tins task. Tarfew short |Ki;,. . \ a probably injn,>. not. as has , the past, take gM a . V;--. Tai-lieu recently haVt ‘ \Kfihai’' trips if he • ‘^^■parli-nu-t-' again '' .V Briand is :lt llis tln, ‘ “ After he has tired of Briand plans to don his cap and go to OuestreX a- ■ a " li’.ing boat. He w e: J «?vp’a’ wopks sailing! . mplating fi r- ' 1 United - —Ha going tol

Jin't wait until it is too late/ —- iMKjgiy b I ' **, 3| Bp 1 I \ ■ I u; r "~~ ■ \ k —to correct a rundown,./ ■ B I condition M 1 fact you should not overlook in the blood! Good of experience has proved its useand resistance to infection fulness in building red-cells in depend on that! Loss the blood. Take it before meals. underweight, slug- Millions of people have found it I es -% a weakened condition, . the easiest and surest way to re- | pimples and boils are store their red-blood-cells. The often seen, of a de- appetite picks up, the whole body of red-cells in the blood, is invigorated. Get S.S.S.—take red-cell count is al- it and possess a wonderful power to continue, ANEMIA of new life and vitality. Ask for results. S.S.S. should be the large size. At all drug stores, A hundred years 0 s.s.s. co. I mint* tsunm I IJ Speak to an Officer I ■ I M hatever business plans you are I ■ I developing, there is an officer of I J j l‘ le First National who will be I |j to consider with you any ser- I U vice a conservative bank may run- I ■ der. Make your wants known and I B vnii «»;n —. !— J i »•_ ■ » ***** irwivc utaerveu mien- 7 IB I ( * on ' I I | First Bqnk I | I Capital ana Surplus *120.000.00 I } I Decqtur, Indiqnq I SL 111 | I 11 | | I Illi

Geneva on September 10. M. Jacques Louis Dumesnil, minister of marine, lias forgotten the London naval conference and the resumed Frnnco-Itallnn conversations and is peacefully enjoying his rich fanning property in the department of the Heine and Marne. Ills farm is one of the richest in the department anti Dumesnll is considered an excellent farmer. His colleague in the war department, Andre Maginot, is more inclined toward the fashion rrsorts and is therefore spending his summer between the great Deauville and th“ tiny but exclusive LaBaule. M. Maginot, a giant statur■d athlete, loves swimming and can be seen on the beach practically every day. Repercussions throughout Europe following passage of the new Am'ii< an tariff bill have not prevented M. Pierre Etienne Flandin, minister of commerce, from enjoying a quiet holiday on his large family propeity along the Cure river. His estate is in ons of the most picturesque sections of France, — o Hard Luck Story Wins Albuquerque N. M., —(UP) — A sick wife, six children and the fact that he was 67 years oid earned Juan Estevan Trujilo, “another chance" when brought before Judge Helmrick in district court for violating the national prohibition law. He was given a 90-day suspended ~entente. —r O Coin of 400 B C. Vincennes. Ind., —(UP) —Among 4.000 coins in a collection owned by Roy E. Ferguson, is one of Greek mintage which is 2,300 years old. It was coined in 400 B. C. during the Ephasus regime. On one side is cast a fly and on the other a llama beneath a tree. . —o- ■ — Spring Uncovered St. Louis, —(UP) —Record low water on the Mississippi river, due to dry weather in the middle west uncovered part of the old levee hero and a spring of bubbling water, , which came through the stone pav-1 Ing. Levee hands have used it for drinking purpose | ■ -o Jails Men Who Robbed Him Vancouver, Wash., — (UP) — Two men robbed George Holt, taxi driver, and tied him by his thumbs to a fence. Holt escaped phoned a.lean, and the two were arrested in the driver’s taxi.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 1930.

"MARIANNE" IS GIVEN SHINGLE IN NEW POSES Symbolic French Republic Statue Puritanized, Modernized and Has Hair Trimmed By Ralph Heinzen, UP Staff Correspondent Paris, Aug. 14—(UP)—Marianne the symbolic figure of tlio French Republic, has been puritanized, moderniz d and furnished with an up-to-date-haircut. The first Marianne, after the enthusiastic revolutionists seized the Bastille and beheaded a Bourbon king, had atwtsted knot of hair, with tiny side-curls, all In the mode of 1750. Under the restoration, after the era of Napoleonic delirium, Marianne had her hair pushed up on her head. Now under the third French Republic. in the re gn of Gaston Doutnergue and Andie Tardieu, Marianne has gone thoroughly modern. The official plaster busts of this symbolic maiden, such as stand on dusty shelves in all French townhalls and public schoolhouses, will show from now on a modest figure with a perfect shingle. Not only will Marianne’s hair be bobbed in the approved manner of the expensive barbershops of the boulevards, but puritans have covered her right breast which hitheru has been exposed. The bachelor president and the h.-chelor premier both disclaim athorship of the instructions to cover Marianne's breasts and model nize her hair, but the official mill where the busts are molded insists that all undressed Mariannes are unofficial. The 1930 official sculptors have changed something, about Mariannes’ lips, also, and she has a sort of self-satisfied smile, strangely comparing with the majestic disdain of the previous current statuettes. Once modeled along Greek lines, Marianne is now purely Latin and particularly Parisian.

WOMEN TO SEEK LARG ESUM FOR BIG CATHEDRAL Maintenance Fund Necessary For Success of National Undertaking Wa hington, Aug. 14 — (UP) — Somewhere in America are 15,000 women who are going to provide $150,000 annually for maintenance of Washington’s new National Cathedral. That is, if a campaign to be launched next fall and to continue through 1931. is successful. The cathedral, which stands on the highest point of ground in the national capital, is slowly going up under the impetus of nationwide contributions. General John J. Pershing heads an executive committee made up of nationally prominent men and women, who have raised something like half a dozen millions for the construction over a period of several years. Contributions to the building fund come in rather easily, at the rate of about $1,000,000 a year, and the great building is now about one-th'rd completed. But maintenance is another serious problem, and a special women's committee is to be organized to raise funds for that part of the work. Mrs 1 . William Adams Brown of New York, who managed a successLittle Green Capsules Stop Rheumatic Agony Results In 5 Davs or Money Back The fame of the little green capsule, because of its canny power to speedily stop ’the terrible rheumatic pains that make life almost unbearable, it rapidly spreading all over America. You go about conquering your merciless enemy in a different way —a knock-out way. You take one tiny capsule each hour for the first ten hours —then relief comes. The second day, take one every two hours for 14 hours—Then take 4 little green capsules every day until every little twinge and every bit of tenderness is gone and your troubles have ceased. The little green capsule now so much in demand from coast to coast must have a name so it is known in every worthwhile drugstore in America as ALLENRU NUMBER 2. Holthouse Drug Co., say these little wonder-working capsules mus* banish all pain and torture in 5 days or money cheerfully refunded.

ful campaign to raise funds for the restoration of Sulgrave Manor, original home of the Washington family In England, will head the committee. Mrs. Alvin T. Hert of Kentucky, former vice chairman of the Republican National Committee, will be one of the members, all of whom will be equally prominent women from various sections of the country. The committee will be small and each member will have charge of the work in her particular territory, witli Mrs. Brown in general command. The object of the campaign will he to enlist 15,000 women who will contribute annualy to the maintenance of the cathedral. Annual $2 up, and It is hoped the average will be $lO. If so, the total will be 1150.000 annually. The committee will organize in October, the campaign will get under way and continue through 1931, and in 1932, when a great service is to b«* held in the Cathedral as part of the George Washington bicenntennial celebration, the gifts will be formally presented by the women's committee.

BAILIFF SURE ‘GRAF ZEPPELIN' PURSUED HIM Urbana, 0., Court Attache Startled hy Low-Fly-ing Goodyear Blimp Urbana, Aug. 14 —(UP) —So far as Tom Heck s concerned, it was the Graft Zeppelin that pursued him over several miles of Champaign country roads before he finally outdistanced the craft in the Heck fa inily car and saved himself and car from a bombing attack. Such was the tale that Heck breathlessly related when he recently dashed into common pleas court which he serves as bailiff, and gasped that he had been the target for an impending air attack. And that is the story that Tom still swears by, despite much eye-brow raising from skeptics. Driving serenely along the pike from his home in St. Paris to Urbana, Heck’s early morning rev eries were interrupted by the sudden drone of a giant aircraft. The roar Os the motors increased an I when Tom checked the Heck car to peer upward, he was amazed to see the mighty Graft swooping down upon him. In his line of vision, Tom perceived several passengers on the companionways, poised as though ready to hurl bombs upon an unsuspecting country-side which at that moment included himself. Throwing the Heck car into gear Tom sped down the highway but despite a frenzied rate of speed, the Graf hung tenaciously to his trail. It was not until several miles nad been traversed did Heck succeed in outtripping his pursuer, and soon reached Urbana, where the harrowing tale was told. Necks craned from courtroom windows but no ship—allied or foreign—hove into view to convince an incredulous audience. But while Tom was repeating his story to Urbana townsfolks, citizen < in adjacent towns were gaping up wards to watch the Goodyear blimp “Vigilant" cruise placidly through the skies. o Hits Young Drivers Denver Colo., —(UP)—A series of automobile accidents in which drivers under 15 years of age were involved caused Charles M. Armstrong secretary of state, to call attention of Colorado sheriffs to a aw governing the age of drivers, setters were sent out by Armstrong o the sheriff of each county in the state pointing out that it is unlawful for any person under 15 years of age to operate or drive a motor vehicle. o Crew Saves House Howell. Ind., — (UP) — A train crew saved the farm house ot George White from being destroyed by fire there recently when they turned in an alarm to the local fire station. The blaze was noticed by the crew of a Wabash passenger. The train as stopped and the alarm turned in. The only damage done was a hole burned through the roof. o Honey Selling Topic Madison, Wis., —(UP) —More efficient selling of honey will be em phasized at ths annual summer meeting of Wisconsin beekeepers at the University of Wisconsin here August 13 and 14. A visit to the celebrated British collection of bee boks ftded to the Miller memorial library will also be a feature ot the meeting. o Honey Competition Springfield. 111., — (UP) — Beekeepers of Illinois are urged to induce their wives to enter honey sweetened culinary products in competition for premiums offered at the Illinois State Fair. o Civil War Vet Weda Petersburg. Ind., —(UP)—'Henry C. Grubb, 82, and Mrs. Elizabeth Shoulders, 75 were married at Petersburg. Grubb is the youngest Civil War veteran living in Pike County.

PHILADELPHIA TO WALK COPS WHO ARE TOO FAT New Medical Requirements Will Guard Health of Police and Firemen By James C. Fetzer United Press Staff Correspondent Pittsburgh, Aug. 14—(UP)—The fat, jolly cornerman —of which almost every police force can boast will soon be only a tradition tn Pittsburgh. Passage of the heavy, roundfaced patrolman is presaged by announcement of the establishment of one of the most modern clinics in the country to care for the health ot police and firemen—and incidentally to see that members of either department do not become obese. Careful check of all employes will he made and "cornermen’’ who show too plainly “that future shadow" will be given a turn at walking a beat. The same police will be followed in cases of mounted patrolmen and anyone showing a tendency toward overweight will be assigned a “walking job.” To minister to the various ailments to which Pittsburgh’s 1,000 policemen or 1,000 firemen may he subject, complete equipment has been installed in the new physiotherapy department. It includes ultra-violet ray lanips, whirlpool baths and other similar apparatus. Two types of ultra-ray lamps are provided — one for checking progress of germicidal activity, the other to be used in “pepping up" police or firemen whose resistance is low. Another instrument is the articulator providing massage treatment, which will be used to correct faulty posture or to overcome stiffness of joints. Chief Surgeon Daniel E. Sable established the clinic after conferences with the Safety Director and the Superintendent of Police Sable will be in charge of the members of both forces to periodic examination “The men shouldn’t fear this examination'" Sable said. ‘"lt isn’t something to hurt them. It’s for their own good. They are getting an examination that would cost them a large fee somewhere else." “If a physical examination reveals that a policeman is overweight, I will prescribe exercises to help him reduce. If a cornerman fo r instance is too heavy and fails to reduce, I will recommend that he be put on a beat where he can walk off his weight," Sable said. “Or if a mounted officer is too heavy and fails to reduce, I will recommend that he be transfered to a beat. The object of these examinations is to put each man in the job for which he is best fitted.” 0

TENSE ATLANTA SITUATION ENDS WITHOUT RIOTING Judge and Acting Mayor Handle Situation In Diplomatic Manner By Foster Eaton United Press Staff Correspondent Atlanta, Aug. 14 —(UP) —A situa-’ lion which municipal officials indicated publicly they believed threatmed to develop into interracial violence was encountered and sue■essfully handled here during the week of July 20. In some respects the incident possibly was unequalled in the, history jf the South. For days in certain circles of A lanta there was a distinctly perceptible atmosphere of mpending trouble then it vanished. It occurred coincident with the trial of one of seven white men charged with slaying a negro divinity student who was accused by the defense of insulting a white women. The prosecution contended the Negro was innocent. Conceivably aggravating the situation was the mysteriou sdestruction of the victim’s home by fire two days after the defendants were denied bond in the case. A committee of whites appealed publicly lor funds to rebuild the structure. Public recognition of the case by Atlanta Constitution on the 20th with a first page news article developing a crime that had been committed more than a month previous. An editorial in the Constitution of the same day, denouncing the incident as ‘shaming the city” and asserting that the case was “ a test of the right of all persons .white and black, to life liberty and the pursuit of happiness in the sovereign state of Georgia.” Unprecedented crowds drawn to the vuiton superior court when T. L. Martin, first of the defendants, was placed on trial Tuesday. Judge R. Earl Camp of Dublin Invoked strictest discipline. When a verdict was reached on Saturday night, he ordered it held until Monday. Facing a mixed and tense courtroom Monday, Judge Camp declared. “It is only the lowest type of

our citizenship that causes racial difficulties, and we are determined j that this class of citizens shall not | disturb the orderly processes of our courts." Martin was convicted of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced to 12 to 15 years a slight subsequent disturbance at the court house wu.i promptly suppressed by summary arrest of the Instigtors. Some felt that Judge Camp's declaration — fearlessly uttered and widely published—coupled with his order to hold the verdict until Monday, successfully discharged the tenseness of the situation. As a final gesture of authority Monday night, Acting Mayor G. Everett Millican of Atlanta issued a proclamation asserting the city was living in peace, and saying: "There is no danger threatening either race in Atlanta other than these irresponsible small factions who are seemingly unconscious of the fire-brands they are bearing." The acting mayor did not identity the "irresponsible, small factions” othqr than to say “it appears that incendiary and provocative actions are going on in the community.” o Hardest Luck Man Oshkosh, Wis., —(U.R)—Arthur C. Powell has won a name here for attracting hard luck. In May a storm blew one of his barns off of its foundation. In June two barns were removed from their foundations by a windstorm. Recently he lost three ot his farm buildings by fire. And to top it off. his car wai damaged in an automobile collision which occurred when he was driving to Oshkosh to repor* his fire losses. o- — ■■ Abode House Curio Wickenburg, Ariz., —(UP) —The abode house in which Henry Wickenburg lived and died 50 years ago. will become a curio of a guest ranch. The house is to be part of he Bar FX ranch. Henry Wickenburg was the discoverer of the famous Vulture Gold Mine. o Big Land Holder Denver, Colo., —(UP) —The United States government is by far the argest land holde" in the state of Colorado, according t« the state immigration bureau. While precise figures are impossible to compile because of conflicts of reserves, withdrawals and classifications, the bureau estimates that the govern ment owns or controls 37 per cent of the entire surface area ot th" state. o Relics on Exhibition Winchester, Ind., —(UP) —A spic ed apple, 47 years old, and well preserved is among the exibits loan ed to the Union County Historical Society for display at Winchester. The apple is owned by Emmett Line. It is filled completely with whole cloves. Another piece is a large stoneware shaving mug with compartments for soap, water and brush. A hand operating sewing machine is included.

Getting Near the ’ Fi n i s h— ' So Here Goes! — — Lowest Summer Prices F«• ei- in -gb a m We ML ST Win! ' V X The Zeppelin Race be- ) X. Double Eagles S“'*We New Heavy can * let sns ' thin>: stand in wa .i. w- . our way now. Sales are Duty All-W eatlicr- what count. Standard R. A. McDuffee All Weathers You U too! Get McDuffee Tire Service Phone 262 Road Service F° r Satisfaction at Lowest Cost EAR! World's greatest tires in their price class. Values only Goodyear can offer because of building millions more tires than any other company. Lifetime gua'anteed—fresh firsts—carefully mounted free. Ford-Chevrolet Regular 4-Ply Full Oversize G-Ply Heavy Duty StwminUf BALLOONS * i HIGH PRESSURE specials; 30x4.50 $8.75 a 29x4.40 » 5 - 55 I 30x31/. . $4.59 New Improved Speedway ~ 30x5.00 SIO.BO Cords-Factory Firsts 30x4.50 . . , ( 31x4 $8.65 Ifiv9l/ eo Q- 28x4.75 $7.55 32x 4 $9.35 S — *• - - jr.r.x 30x4.50 $5.45 . , , Tubes loir priced > Free Mounting I „— ,— , , —,

BRITAIN URGES POPULATION TO RAISE POULTRY Farmersand Unemployed Workers Shown Great Total of Annual Imports London, Aug. 14 - (UP) Officials in the British ministry of agriculture are hopeful that the recent Fourth World Poultry Congress has tatight a lesson grasped and understood by British farmers, and unmployed workers. For more than a year, while the ministry of agriculture planned on the congri ss, an export movement oi British poultry and by-products hat been the target aimed at. At the present time Gt eat Britain imports upwards of £20,000,000 of poultry and by-products. The figure, representing $97,200,000, is paid to Ireland, Denmark, Poland. Greece, Bulgaria, Switzerland, Finland and Sweden. The ministry of agriculture says that practically every nation of Europe, witli the notable exception of Germany, has a growing export of birds and eggs. During the past decade the home production of poultry in Great Britain has inc-eased at the rate of ttbout £7.000.000. or $34,020,000 annually. Although poultry production in Great Britain has increased, last year about 3.000,000,000 eggs were imported tor British consumption and upwards of 30,000 tons of birds were landed in Britsh ports. British agricultural exp rts place the amount paid for foteign eggs and birds at £70.000, or $340,200 tor every working day. These same officials state that with almost 2.000,000 unemployed, a strong market lor poultry and by-products always present suitable soil and good stock, it is hard to understand why poultry farming is not advancing at a faster rate. The ministry of agriculture is now proposing to establish institutes and laboratories to improve

COMMUNITY SALE —at — WHITE’S HAY BARN, MONROEVILLE. INDIANA commencing at 12:00 o’clock noon Saturday, August 16, 1930 Live Stock. Farm Machinery, Household Goods, etc. If you have anything you wish to turn into cash, bring it to this sale where you are assured of the highest dollar. Roy Johnson, auctioneer and manager

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breeds and lower losses caused by disease and poor poultry culture. A movement to encourage Thin 11 land holders t■> supply the perennial demand for eggs and birds lanow ready to be launched. - o Girl to be Farmer Syracuse, N. Y., —(UP) —Desir oils of aiding her father in malting successful a farm which their anj cestors founded Mrs. Leola Grit--1 fin, 17, plans to take a two-year I agricultural c ourse at Homer acahiemy this full, after which she will i attend (he New York state agriculI lurid school at Bornell. The farm i Is a: Sempronius. — — o -—— No Sen e e, No Feeling Fremont, 0., (UP) — James i Bath, 61. of Bangor, Me., felt no pain when a fust moving passenger train severed his leg as he lay on (he tracks near here. Bath's leg was wooden. 0 Kills Nine Lions Prescott. Ariz., —(UP) — Glle« Goswick, government hunter of | iredatory animals in this district, I lias killed nine mountain lions durI ing the past season, he declared lon a visit here recently.

—.— f— I Qin And if you don’t say it*Z positively the finest var- ‘ msh you’ve ever used; it DRY will cost you nothing. IN 2 O’Brien’s 2-Mour stands HOURS a longer and more severe wear, w ater and weather test than any other varnish on the market. 1 *4't B. J. Smith Drug Co. THE REXALL STORE