Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 209, Decatur, Adams County, 4 September 1930 — Page 3

Aww WSPURRED lIN ENGLAND ■lssstsM of Industry MB Virgil I’inlllv' ■L. Si."' • n.H-1H.n.1-Tt I ■ Englan'l ■Z" vahi - ■L 'lns ".'1"“" ' ■ in ■■■ " a ”’' l ‘K,<n>t and b.■ nnn the ■ R Wunder the mcr.-as.’ ■' l ,li '" I W.uuutry J r,al _

iMWWfWt J Dragging Feet I // your VITALITY is slipping ■ aicay from you try S.S.S.

w rnn-pV’' ;c <- r;I Kfeet * yet they tell a biff Back at th<- tain-head are not up to When your red-blood-only SOS you are NOT /Me]f-Cr is daruo rous. You K. the vitality to fight inand disease. —th- I'-..,! Tonic — Blates the bl-'d-building or■Bto supply the necessary redM Your appetite picks up. Hbody is strength, ned. invigfeel like vourself dK And DRAGGING FEET STEPPING FEET. Vie S.S.S. before each meal.

jj ßeware E. X i * OF life IMB blow!FfF .OUTS ■ Jbh'a & 7 'fAw K -Miwoyl I Ride in safety on heat-resisting Cavaliers, I sold at prices that defy competition BjOT day . . smooth road . . . high IB speed... BANG! A blow-out! Rotids Cl *«? d* 4 OP • death on tires... UNLESS you’re riding ' 2 ’ $4.85 B tires made to overcome them. 29x4 40 (UK XK ißGoodrich made Cavaliers for that pur- »pt)it)t) M*. Gave ’em huskiness in every detail... 30x4 50 (P / • *> A the strength to stand up under high qO«OU bad roads, quick stops and all the ?Sx4 75 fT £ B er punishments modem tires meet. tP/•£)£) B^ nd yet... believe it or not, these tires 30x5 00 d? Q1 F B* less than tires of just ordinary quality. I e| 0.1 B®y defy competition... even the catalogue ■“uses. Come in ... we have size.* for all I ■■eoger cars and four sizes for trucks. v K :-W H W .-■& I I p o o d r i ch Cavu/ier Italey’s Service Station and Marshall Streets phone 897 Standard Oil Products

Iln 1920 there was but one trial. This year there have been 28. Another phase of the work done by the Ministry to promote better Flocks 1* a drive to destroy rat< iaiid various rodents that infest England, Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland. Specimens of rat trap, poisons and othet means of destruction together with particulars of a poison bait recommended by the Ministry for use on poultry farms, because it is comparatively harm less to other domestic animals, are now exhibited throughout Great Britain. Models of poultry farms — one at-infested, the oth?r rat-proof also are displayed at agricultural centers. In England and Wales five lns‘l- - are at work studying various phases of poultry cure. In Scotland 'he Dowett Institute near Aberdeen and royal veterinary colleges in he east, north anti south of Scotland all are giving instruction on poultry farming. The Ministry of Agriculture maintains a research station at Hillsborough and Its laboratories at Star mon: to assist the industry In iNorthern Ireland. It is from Nortnlern Ireland that a great number of

Millions of people have found it the easiest and surest way to keep themselves “fit” Its successful record of over 100 years in building red-cells in the blood is a guarantee of satisfaction. Get the large size bottle. At ail drug stores. © s.s.s. co.

Builds Sturdy

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1930.

i eggs are shipped to England. By I, modem transportation the eggs laid i ( In Northern Ireland are on the breakfast tables of London 24 hours i lifter the poultry farmer collect! 1 them. — ——o— Boy Good Knitter 1 Pittsburgh, Pa , —(UP)—Three I months that Joe Wehner, 11, baa j 1 pent in a hospital may slow him I t up on a baseball diamond but he ( . has added a useful art to his ac- 1 i ompllshinente while recovering 1 from a crushed leg. Joe has learned to sew ami knit ami has become so proficient he now surpasses his ’ .uui s,sier» in wielding a needle 0 I 1 Realistic Dance ’ ntrohe, (UP) Four of the ( boys who took part in the recent , ' umian nances at Camp Wesco folI lowed the old Indian cusioni of t )]ve snakes between thilr 1 , teeth. One of the boys who danced ( I with a snake was William Abra- , ' u, , airooe. - ■ i. i I Qmn ii i ■■■ ,«■ Two On One Hook ( Thousand Island Park. N. Y. — ' I (UP) — James M. Coleman, of Hoc h ‘ I ' I ester, supposes it will be called a ■ ‘ fish story, but he says it's a fact he caught two sunfish on one hook , One was hooked through the lip , and the other in the back. A brother, Edga., and a son, are ready to , ba< k up Coleman's statement. o Saved by 45 Cents Albany, N. Y.. — (UP)'- William Foley, of Glouchester, Mass., was al', realty to be placed in jail on a chaise of vagrancy, but after he was committed he was returned to city com t because it was discovered he had 45 cents in his pocket at the time he was arrested. Under the la v, a person cannot be convicted of vagrancy in that event. He »as released. Chisel Off Front Pittsburgh — (UP) — To avoid paying $25,000 for one inch of land of the apartment had working the King Edward apartment building allegedly encroached, owners owners of the apartment had workmen chisel from four to five inches from the outside wall of the sevenstory structure. Raby's Colds Ml Best treated without y-A dosing—Just rub on OVER W MILLION JARS USED YEARLY

SEE SUNSPOTS AS INDICATOR FOR WEATHER Scientists Seek Ratio of Influence on Heat, Cold And Rainfall Vallejo, Calif , Sept. 4—(UP)—A visionary photograph of the good year 1940, A. 1).: A small, bespectacled man peers through a smoked telescope, carefully jotting down his findings When they are complete, he makes a detailed report. Acting upon his report, thousands of workers are dispatched along the thousand* of miles of the Missisippi valley, to work feverishly at building new levees against the coming of a great flod. Or — Workers are sent into the mountains in December to construct new dams and reservoirs to trap the moiling snow the following spring so that the lowlands, which are to suffer a terrible summer drought may live in comfort on the hoarded water. Such a picture will become reality if the tentative findings of Captain T. J. J. See. U. S. Navy mathematics professor (retired) are continued. After 10 years of continuous research. Captain See has definitely connected the behavior of sun spots, he has announced, with the Mississippi floods of 1927 and the present drouth that is buring up the Mississippi valley and midwest. Captain See thus summarized his results: 1. It is proved that when sunspots are most rapidly increasing the earth is Unduly chilled and the upper currents of our atmosphere descended so near the earth’s surace that we have floods, storms and hurricanes, as in 1927. 2. The maximum of sunspots in 1928-29 was thus followed by the dreadfully cold winter of 1928-29, )n which all countries suffered and Europe was hardest hit. 3. Now the Talance observatory in France reports that there was a sharp diminition of -sunspots in June. The earth was giving toe much heat early in July and hence all countries are suffering now from drought. “I am afraid," Captain See said, that adequate relief from the drought cannot be expected before Septemeber, when the rapid motion of the sun southward will finally upset present atmospheric conditions and bring rain.” Captain See’s sunspot theories al most coincide with those of Father Jerome Ricard S. J., "padre of the rains" at Santa Clara University Calif. Crops have been planted for .oany years on Fr. Ricard’s “sunspot” forecasts. Both scientists are now hard at work in research calculated to establish sunspot ratios which "will ,ive ampler notice of impending changes than are afforded at present. o - CHANG SEEKING TO REGAIN HIS LOST KINGDOM Picturesque ‘Ladies Man’ Giant Reported Planning to Recoup By D. C. Bess United Press Staff Correspondent Peiping, Sept. 4 —(UP) —An attempt o recover his lost "kingdom" in Shantung province is being made by that picturesque militarist Chang Tsung-chang, possessor ot a hundred wives and concubines, according to reports in the Chinese press which are confirmed from for eign sources. General Chang bosom friend of the late Shang Tos-lin, has twice neen driven from Shantung, where he once ruled supreme. Now the complicated situation created by the latest civil wifr in Shantung has given him new hope. Japanese newspapers report that eneral Chang has left his retreat In the resort of Beppu and has come ] to Tientsin. This report is not verified, however, and is not believed to be true. It is hardy likely tha* Chang could get to Tientsin without detection. He stands more than six feet six, and his face is familiar to all the Chinese in the north. He is incapable of moving without some sort of display. It Is confirmed, however, that Chang has sent agents into eastern Shantung, where he established himself for a second time after the Nationalists had occupied Peiping in 1928. At that time. Chang enlisted thousands ot robber-ruffians, and seized a number of Shantung cities. W Ith his notorious comrade-in-arms. Cm Yu-pu, he looted and burned i owns and cities, leaving thousands ot dead and dying in his wake. Although Nationalist gunboats surrounded him and his guard on an island off the coast at that time, he managed to evade them, and got away to Japan with enough money to keep himself and a few of his harem. He remained in Japan unti' this summer, living more quietly

than usual. Chinese here declare that Chang recently took amfiher wife, the young (laughter of a former high olfilial in the old Peking government. He uld not buy this girl, as he has so many of bls harem, but she went to I Im of hei free will, being drawn by the reputation of Chang as the principal “ladles’ man" of China. If Chang establishes himself again anywhere, it in believed that most of his harem will hurry back to bint. While he playfully executed two or three of his concubines who unduly attracted by young actors in Peiping, he has the reputation of Crating hiH harem very well. In 1927, while thousands in Shantung were starving to death because of bis misrule, be imjiorted SIOO,OOO v.oith of knick knacks for his har em from abroad. It Is rumored here that the giant Chang has inonarchistlc ambitions He wants to carve out a kingdom for himself somewhere in China, and set himself on a real throne Luring his previous days of power, he was satisfied to rule as an absolute militarist. He was Intolerent of courts of justice, and if he de aired to execute anyone who displeased him, did so openly and with out the form even of a military court-martial. The people of Shantung naturally are not eager to welcome Chang. They are still suffering from his misrule, and from his attempt to recapture Shantung in 1928. o Unusual Sentences Gloversville, N. Y. —(UP)—After William Cole made his 23rd appear ‘ ance and William De Mura his 34th in court on intoxication charges, ’ they were ordered to serve their 59 day sentences on the "install ment” plan. They must pass from 2 p. m. each Saturday until 7 a. m. the following Monday in jail until the equivalent of the sentences has ’ been served. o Mystery Solved , Beaver Dam, Wis„ —(UP)—The mystery of the famous ‘breakfast , roll thief” has been solved here, but . officials were without power to prot sccute the “thieves” Louis Kopplin, I who was an early riser accomplished what authorities had been un- ■ able to do for days when he dist covered a squirrel escaping with a roll taken from a sack left at a . residence here. , o i Blind Pig Healthy Jerseyville, 111., —(UP)—A pU . that can neither hear nor see, is ! owned by Stephen Woolsey, a far > mer residing near here. Despite the i handicaps the animal is growing ’ at. The pig has eye sockets but no • eyes, and the ears, which are normal in appearance, have no openings leading to organs of hearing. • Woolsey believes the animal lo- > cates food by its sense of smell a r 'one. When corn ‘is thrown to the ■ 'itter, the blind pig hustles around ■ and secures its share. KONJOLA SOON BRINGS HEALTH TO MUNCIE MAN Liver And Kidney Ailments Quicklv Yield To Power Os New Medicine—Winning Eager Praise

• aKa - Hi * W T| A jR>

MR. OLIVER CHAPMAN "About two years ago I had yellow jaundice and this left me in poor health,” said Mr. Oliver Chapman, 1207 First street, Muncie. "My liver and kidneys were weak, bladder actions were froonent and I had dull pains across the small of my back. My appetite was very poor and I felt tired and sleepy after the days work? I ' became extremely nervous and | very Irritable and could not sleep well at night. I became worse as 1 the weeks went by. “It was not long after I began I taking Konjola that I began to note a real improvement in my health. At the end of two weeks I began to feel like another per- | son. My complexion cleared up, my appetite increased and I began to take on strength and energy. I now sleep well at night, my liver and kidneys are no longer sluggish and bladder actions are normal. I shall continue to take Konjola for it Is the very medicine my system needed.” Although Konjola often works i quickly, s<ix to eight bottles' are , recommended as a fair trial In | most cases. No medicine should i be expected to banish ailments of [ years standing within a week or so. Konjola is sold in Decatur, Ind., ’ at the B. J. Smith drug store, and i by all the best druggists in all i towns throughout this entire secr tlon.

* PREBLE NEWS Mr. and Mrs. George Bultemler and daughters returned home Wednesday after spending the week at Snow Lake. Mr. an Mrs. Ralph Hresick and daughter Susan Ellen and son Rob ■rt returned home Thursday from Lake Manitou. Mr. and Mrs. A. Koldwey and fa Hilly visited the latters mother Mrs William Linneniier a few days. Mrs. Earl Straub and daughters Harriet and .Margaret visited Mr. and Mrs. Milton Hoffman and family Wednesday afternoon. Mrs Jess Singleton and son Everett spent Thursday visiting Dr and Mrs. J. C. Grandstaff. Miss Mary Macy of Decatur call ed on Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Smith Thursday evening. Mrs. John Smith, daughters Marie and Lucille and son Lawrence of Fort Wayne visited Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fuhrman and family Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. August Conrad and laughter Anna of Decatur called on Mr. and Mrs. George Bultemler and daughters Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Doris Werling and son visited Mr. and Mrs. Albert 'Verling and daughters Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. George Bultemler and daughters had as their guests over Labor Day. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Bultemler and daughters, and Miss Booher of Fort Wayne.

| Young men going back to school * Jfj bfi aS ah] I I K/1 \ » I i > J ' I sh V r* s « \\ .-if / s s \ I / ffi I I wry* w I HR ! Who do you believe in? | A football coach you never heard of or a coach Jfi with a record back of him? A quarterback S who hasn’t proven himself or one that has achievement back of him? ■ j m Hart Schaffner & Marx have a great record ® = 3 for clothes making — extending hack over S years. HFi Today they are producing greater values than ever—particularly in fie I “PREP” SUITS I g $23.50 $28.50 I | with 2 pair trousers i an) Hfi 9i When you get that name in your clothes, you 3N k have the best style, the best coloring, the best ffi fit and the best value your money can buy. 9i Sr » Holthouse Schulte & Co. * Quality and Service Always

• Mr. and Mrs. John Kirchner, and daughter, Mrs. June Shackley and > son Darrell Eugene spent Labor • Day visiting Mr. mid Mrs. Otto Nig- . gli, Fred and Carl Wordelman of Sturgis and Centerville. Michigan Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Ehlerding mid i son of Fort Wayne visited Mr. mid Mrs. George Bnletemler and daugh ! ters Friday evening. Rev. and Mrs. A. R. Flederjohann and daughters of Decatur called on Mrs. John Kirehnei and daugh ers Friday evening. Miss Dorothy Hoffman is spend--1 ing the week visiting Mr. and Mrs Robert Sherlock of Corunna.

SPECIAL FRIDAY AND SATURDAY CHILDREN’S JERSEY DRESSES sizes 3to fi I Colors- rose, green, blue, tan; $1.50, $1.25 value, SI.OO CHILDREN’S JERSEY DRESSES— si es 3 to G i Colors, rose, green, blue, tan; sl, $1.25 value 89c Fall Stamped floods are here—New designs — large i size Vanity and Bullet sets. Stamped goods range in i prices from U P t° $1«75 Decatur Welcomes You to the Decatur Street Fair. 1 DRESSMAKING-HEMSTITCHING Prompt Service. THE VITZ GIFT SHOP > 221 N. Second St. Phone 925 Niblick Building

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Mr. and Mih. Walter Shady and. laughter spenta few dnya vlaiting the formers parents Mi. mid Mra. Albert Shady and family. Marlon Elzey of Decatur spent Labor Day visiting Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Elzey. Mrs. Wm Fuhrman and daughters Luella and Irene and son Elmer ot. ’ort Wayne visited Mr. and Mrs. lohn Knchner and daughter* Labor Day. John Newbard left for Lafayette iVednesday where he will enter I’urdue University. - ——— ■" Get the Habit—Trada at Home.