Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 214, Decatur, Adams County, 10 September 1930 — Page 3

ISIOYMENT | ITALY SAID | TO BE IMG ■.fnrol Bank ■ social Insurance W Makes Ki'P'* rt ■ in ■ Bnnk lor s.K’tal |K ’ iwnrli'l-'""" Medo|KL just itlf.TTt'- ■! ' b <> ,ab - ■ . ' lialv on July 31 were K r roial I" 1,1 •"" l k „ unemploy*’* 1 - tr IK-- nt In - rno-nt soIK" • <-. ■ ■ ■" .. th< " "" rk ' |K .j-nna: I,'S. linn lire 1.000 ' " 1| - |K„| ratio” .'eater than K ; a , "''h a inrreas. the winter. |K! . . , .'. in in force The ro’. social insubsidy on!' given r . ' month ' • employ ■ half by tit- " ck-r. Em|Ks su.li as '■!■' arc outside - social K, r .... . n |K> ml This |Kappens ' cases. :al figures, on ■K] theta unetni n agrinid' 28.1)00 odd; Km-ta! 73.77,4 in i "ad repairing ■ U : he'i?’; :u ■a. textile in-j K • ■ ■ li'itidred a.button there work- t.u large sums. ■ Italian s plans for dealing - no money - and . km.in must K the moriei '. obtains from - pu!> 1i c work ||H — ■EMPLOYMENT ■SEEN AS SPUR Ito education ■per Enrollment ExBed from Persons Who ■Need Re-Training ■* York, Sep,, i,, _ (VP) _ Un . will give a tremendous to edm at.-i: - especially and u-education — forecast today by G. E. ■hind, presu.ei • <,f the NationSociety. with the very OpenTV the fall terms in schools of kind, Marchand says, “we ■expect to sc greater numbers |B e ' er applying for instruction Iwclinical and commercial sub- ■ Ni sl't, continuation and comB" 1 schools should lead. B>e reason for this is that the fall into three great ■ fs: The young high school M Colll 'g" giaduates, who find

I Notice to Patrons ■ On account of the Indiana Banker’s ■ Association convention in Fort ■ Wayne, we will not 'be open for ■ business after 12 o’clock, noon, on I I Thursday, Sept. 11 ■ Officers of the following banks ■ will attend the convention: I First National Bank ■ — | Peoples Loan & Trust Co. * . I Farmers State Bank, Preble

I themselves unequipped by an orIdlnary academic education to And | suitable work; those who have been employed biji are not now because they laekofl modern business and technical education; and the older group who have been I employed for years, but whose | Ideas and methods have become obsolete and who are now seeking re-education in modern business ; methods and ideas. They realize education must be continuous throughout life.” Marchand announced that the National University society, which, ’ by means of motion pictures, stage 1 plays and charts, provides an In I tensive review of modern business ideas and methods, and emphasizes personal success, will meet ’ this new demand for education by extending its work to 12 "coaching r capitals” at strategic points throughout the country. They are: ’ New York, Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia, Detroit, Los Angeles. St. ’ | Louis, Cleveland, Minneapolis-St. ‘ | Paul, Seattle, San Francisco and j Washington. 1 Marchand is a lawyer by proses ' slon. Twelve years ago, however, ' he attracted attention by spectacular success he had made in manufacturing. At the age of 36 his fortune exceeded $1,000,000. He 1 then retired from business to found | the National University Society, 1 through which to teach tHe meth | ods he himself found successful in I business. ■ - o A King of Deer ’ Crawfordsville, Ore., — (UP) — Duncan McKercher has earned I 1 the name of “the deer king of Ore-1 ' gon." He makes a business of rais ■ ing and sending the animals to all - parts of the United States. His her. 1 [ •i now contains 75 deer eight of which , ■ are fawns. His favorite is “Baoe.” I A few years ago she did the unus- • ual in giving birth to triplets. i o Repaid in Full Kendallville, Ind., —(UP) —An esi tate ,said to be comfortably large, Jhas been inherited by Charles LieI! berenz, due to the fact that he con j tributed to the support of two aunts , 1 during the World War. Lieberenz’s J uncle remembered his nephew’s kindness and had him share equally with his two sons, when he died recently, it was said. ! o Wasn’t Blood at All • Tiffin, Ohio —(UP) —A car, the • road and two ditches were splattered in red after an automobile aci cident here recently. Two ambulaa- : ces and several doctors hurried to • | the scene. They found the car was -'a truck which was carrying a load ; 1 of ripe tomatoes. I • Four Babes in Year Callaway, Minn., —(UP)—Four child, en were born to Mrs. Joe Turn within a year. On September Triplets arrived at the Turn home August 12. They were Mary Louise lour pounds; Mary Jane, three and three fourths pounds, and Mary May, three and a half pounds. All are reported doing well. Mystry Man Dead I Sabina, Ohio —(UP) —“Charley” Sabina’s “mystery’’ man is dead »Ie lived here 40 years working at a hotel, but no one learned his last ' name. He made no close acquaintances and mail was never sent to him. o . Unwelcome Music Colorado Springs —(UP)—There was music in the air when an accordion player and two vocalists started an impromptu program on the streets at 3 a. m.. Their efforts fell on unappreciative ears and they were hailed into court and fined for disturbance ot.the peace. Same As Charity Newcastle, Ind., —(UP)—Prosecution, like charity, begins at home, decided Frarrklyn George, Henry county prosecuting attorney, so he brought charges against Omer Mor rel, who made and sold beer in the same building that housed George’s office.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1930.

Remains of Andree Expedition I

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' '. ▼ ■ :4 WWW - » -wt Th" sli p Hratvaag. that carried the expedition headed by Dr. Gunnar Horn, arrived at Tromsoe, Nor- , | way, bringing with it the remains of Salomon Andree, who with’his two comrades perished on Franz Josef j | Land, and what was left of the camp after thirty-three years. The altove photo (upper left) shows the ; body of Andree with Dr. Horn paying tribute at the casket; lower left, some of the relics found at White and (at right) Dr. Horn is shown unpacking the relics at Tromsoe, Norway. *

CLEVELAND WILL TRY RADIO PLAN OF EDUCATION New System Will Enable One Teacher to Lecture To Large Class Cleveland, 0., Sept. 10 —(UP) — A new system of Instruction, uy which one teacher will handle a •lass of as many as 250 pupils, will >e tried out this fall in a local hlgn school. If the experiment proves uccesst'ul the system will be adopted in all Cleveland public high I xcb.ools. UnG r the proposed plan, the •lumber of teachers needed in the .igh schools of the city is reduced. One instructor can teach eight or en times as many pupils as miler the old system of group instruction. This will enable the board of education to hire special teachers o help in reference work and to give special attention to delinquent students. The new system is similar to the lecture plan used in universities.! Hie lectures are to be broadcas’ | o students gathered in one large | ■lass room. Illustrated films and slides also are to be used. The exleriment is to begin with lectures ■i ancient history, medieval history English and science, according to ehool officials. A rigid system of checking remits will be used and classes will >e taught by only instructors who lave had special training for the vork. SALVAGING OF GERMAN FLEET COSTLY PROJECT Six Years and $2,000,000 Spent In Work On Scuttled Craft By Arthur F. Degreve, UP. Staff Correspondent London, Sept. 10—(UP)—Eleven years ago the huge German fleet, j still proud in defeat, rode the * waves of capa Flow. It was a pleasant sight to British admiralty eyes. The fight had been hard. The spoils of victory would be sweet. Then suddenly one of the battle cruisers lurched forward and began settling into the sea. Others [Qllowed and before the astonished eyes of British seamen the fleet disappeared below the waves. The Germans had opened their seacocks. They had scuttled their craft as a last act of definance. After recovering from their amazement the admiralty officers turned their thoughts and energies to having the ships salvaged. Veteran shipping men and others contemplated the task but made no bids. Year after year the ships lay snugly in Davy Jones’ locker. When the admiralty had all but abandoned hope of realizing on their victory, E. F. Cox, in his late thirties, made an offer. It was quickly accepted. Then Cox began a task which has been watched with interest by the shipping world because of the many difficult obstacles that lay in! the path of success. Gathering around him some of: the best engineers and divers in 1 Europe, Cox directed the work to date has resulted in bringing to the surface later to be junked three battle cruisers, one battleship, one

light cruiser and 25 destroyers. Although he knew comparatively little about salvage operations, Cox realized he needed more than the 1 usual equipment and purchased the j submarine floating dock the Ger-1 J mans had used, which he used in ! I raising the destroyers. One of the most difficult tasks in the entire operation, it is said, was that of closing all deck and hull i apertures left open when the fleet was scuttled. Cox’s determination was displayed while attempting to salvage the battle cruiser Hindenburg, weigh-; ing 28,000 tons. After months of hard work it had been raised to the surface but developed a dangerous list and had to be dropped back . again to* the ocean floor. Later, in order to counteract this list, Cox’s workmen built onto the Hindenburg’s side a block of con Crete weighting 9,000 tons. On be- i ing re-floated, she developed a star-) board list. Once more the cruiser, was dropped and another concrete 1 block built. This done the Hindenburg floated. Six years have passed since Cox began his operations. His firm has spent to date more than $2,000,000. The profitsa re not known. o—, POULTRY ANO RABBITSSELL AT HIGH PRICES World Congress at London Reveals Value of Fine Pet Stock London. Sept. 10 —(UP) —Increasing value of poultry and rabbits was one of the many interesting phases of the World’s Poultry Congress, held recently at Crystal Palace. One English Plymouth Rock cockerel, buff colored, sold for $2,630. A white Wyandotte cockerel was valued at the same figure. C. C. Wilts, of Salisbury. Wiltshire, enteied a Rhode Island Red and a White Wyandotte sire said to be worth $4,860 apiece. Six were valued at $490 apiece. A flock of 12 Barred Wyandottes received a bid of $2,916. Among uncommon birds the red magpie valued at $972, received considerable attention. One Old English game bird on exhibition carried a value of $4,860, while another Old English game bird, silver grey in color, was valued at $7,290. Two English owls, worth $490, each, were insured before their owner entered them in the show. The same owner also entered a long-faced tumbler estimated to be worth $729. Two red chequer racing pigeons were placed on sale for $490 apiece, while a blue and a red frillback pigeon sold for $291. Lady Rachel Byng entered a rabbit valued at $7,290 and two colored angora bucks said to be worth $4,900 each. A silver fox female rabbit brought $2,430 and two female sable rabbits were placed on sale for S9BO. o Checks to Doughnuts i?oluinbus, Ohio, —(UP) —Ohio penitentiary prisoners are dunking ing doughnuts again. Harry Benson, dovjghnut baker extaordlnary, is I back. Benson was a trusty at the i pen till June 11 when he disappearI ed while on an errand. In the priI son bake shop he used to make eight and nine thousand doughnuts . a night. He was arrested in Akron recently for making out 150 bad checks in nearly as short a time, Warden P. E. Thomas said.

LONGER SKIRTS, : CROONING ALTER DANCING STYLE t Additional Grace Seen for Ballroom Due to Chang- 1 . ed Public Taste 1 i Cleveland, 0., Sept. 10—(UP) — ’ The popular Terpsichore is under * going a reform, according to a con- ( sensus of opinion among Cleveland dancing Instructors. ( The American dance hall, which , tor years has been the scene of the , Charleston, the Black Botton, the , Bobby Jones, the Bunny Hug and ( others of similar character but more , j. ecent origin, will soon have wit- ( , neised a complete transformation j i that will bring back dances of lithe ( I swaying, graceful movements forgotten during the hey day of King , Jazz, teachers say. Already the ( transformation has begun with dance hall habitues doing a shuff- . ling aimless routine much unlike that of its recent predecessors. This uncertainity of movement is interpreted as a wavering on the part of young America to adhere to the old steps or to develop new ones along similar lines. The shuffling routine, in turn, is predicted to succumb to a new one which will be bred in grace, symmetry, and a certain air of stateliness, instructors i aver. New modes of dress and the growing popularity of the ballad are ascribed as responsible for the change According to Walter U. Soby, sec retary-treasurer of the Dancing Masters of America, long sikirts assume the credit. “When the flappers first put on long skirts last tall,’ Soby opines, "they tried to cavort just as thev had with short skirts. They galloped around the dance floors and that wasn’t becoming in long dresses 1 he girls didn’t look cute Cuttingup in short skirts and boyish form silhouettes was a different propo sion. Pretty soon the brighter ,-irls began to catch on. They realized that to make the exciting new styles effective, they would have ,o change their manners.” The growing popularity of crooning through the medium of the radio wrought an efiect upon dancing, as •veil as new stateliness in dress, in the belief of Miss Margaret Gibbons principal of the Ohio Dancing Teachers Association. "Crooning has very slow rhythm.” is the way she explains it. “It’s soft and sentimental. Strangle-holds and galloping just do not match up witn it. With the long dresses to mal-'3 the girls look dignified and sweet and music to make them feel that way, the rough-handed gyrating n.e.vs i.ave been forced out of fashon. ’ o Finds Old Paper Blytheville, Ark. —(UP)—A copy >f the seventh issue of the Blythe--ille Plain Dealer, issued Decent <r 70, 1898 wag found drifting in i the muddy waters of Big Lake 14 miles west of here. It was found by Woodrow Hughes. 15, who was fishing on the lake. The print was not harmed by the exposure and the paper was brought here for display. Pulling Record Marshall, 111., —(UP)—The state horse pulling record was broken here during the Calhoun County fair when a team owned by Peter Horn Charlotte pulled 2,950 pounds the requi.od distance of 27*4 feet. The Horn team broke its own record. Late Blossoms Medford, Wis. —(UP)—Several apple trees on the farm of Walter i Weihrouch, Cleveland township, are in blossom and have all the fragrance o fthe orchard in spring time The buds on the trees were nipped by the frost early last spring.

MONTANA’SONLY CHINESE COWBOY IN RETIREMENT George Taylor, Adopted by Rancher, Once Fought Indian Rustlers Out Bank, Mont. Sept 10—(UP) —I Only a fa'r lironeo rider but a wiz 1 ard at driving a four horse team was George Taylor, the only Chinese cowboy in the annals of Montana. who now hae put a.way the black snake whip for a garden hoe on h s little ranch here. Taylor’s Chinese name was for- J gotten when he was adopted in 1855 by Jesse F. Taylor, owner of a big cattle outfit known as the S. T. brand, located near Helena. The boy had been brought to Helena from China by his mother who died that year, leaving the five year old stranded. The wealthy rancher sent the boy through school and then put him to work on the ranch as a cow hand. While still in h’s twenties, Taylor was entrusted with a drive of 1,000 cattle from Helena to Choteau, at that time the agency for the Blackfeet Indians. The outfit was encamped for the night at the present site of Wolf Creek. A band of a dozen Blackfeet who had jumped the reservation to steal horses took every horse on the drive during the night. Taylor and two of his cowboys, Louis Morgan and Jim Fisher, set out on the marauder's trail afoot. They overtook the Indians, shot and scalped two of them and recovered the horses. Young Taylor then followed the roundup for ten years. He was known as a most dependable teamster in the days when the prairie was without charted routes and a driver picked his way by landmarks, frequently crossng deep coulees ad washouts. All of the countless adventures of the early west were Taylor’s until he settled down to etock ranching in 1878. He had been clawed by a grizzly on a hunting expedition, saved from the swollen waters of the Marias river and another time had the brim of his hat perforated in the shooting up of a saloon. While spending the night in a small cabin in the Sun River country with a small hunting party, Taylor and his friends were awak-

Bargains in Tres for football trips! —d I TB s - $4.85 I gSr -5| ■ L1 " $5.55 I K W 30x4 - 50 $6.30 | FfkWwjL 2Bx4.7s gy gK 30x5,00 I It B *- bEWmI Genuine Goodrich Cavaliers g at prices that defy competition I JUST the tire for you, Football Fans! «j;-j. 7- 4 Big. Husky. Tough through and ; jgßSWx* W\ through. Made by Goodrich... which \\\ *\ means it’s real championship calibre \\\ ** from bead to bead .. . but priced like , s *’ p ’ just an crdinary tire, or lower. See ' Cavaliers . . . get the prices. |P*W .&*•>** I i j •*■ < We have them in all sizes for IwW?-■ 111 ’St passenger cars and four sizes for trucks. G © o dr i ch Cavalier Staley’s Service Station Cor. Second and Marshall Streets Phone 897 Standard Oil Products _ -_ - - -: - - . .—-

ened by a grinding of the logs in the cabin. The party found u herd of buffalo rubbing and jostling for an opportunity to scratch themselves on the rough logs. The cabin swayed alarmingly until the buffalo were stampeded by shots I In the air and the barking of the I dogs. i Taylor took up stock ranching I on a small scale not far from the ' present Custer highway. He once • owned several hundred cattle and sheep. Ho niarrled a young woman of Swedish ancestry and th’dr ranch home became one of the . show places of the locality. He I has three sons living, two engaged in sheep ranching and a third a sailor in the United States Navy. Since his wife’s death, Taylor has been living at Cut Bank. He is 80 years old. 0 High Melon Price Princeton, Ind., (UP)- A high price was paid by Leonard Harp, r Elberfeld, Carlyle Greenlee and Claude Mcresry both of Mackey, Indiana when they received a $lO fine and a 60-day sentence to the penal I farm each. The three had stolen 1 23 melons and planned to take them to a picnic at Elberfeld. All 23 of the melons they picked were green o Rhinelander. Wis., —oUP)—lntense heat of tiie last few weeks has killed many game fish in lakes and streams of Inelda and upper Wisconsin counties, it is claimed I here. Most of the lakes are at unusually low levels. o Mystery of Teeth Loveland. Col., —(UP) — T.ove- , land’s mystery of the false teeth is | is becoming more complicated. I, R. | Hull and Andrew Robertson lost theirs and advertised for their recovery. The finder of a set turned them over to Robinson. The set did

" , " 1 ' - — ' ——— New Fall Baby Wear | We have just received all the new things for L* BABY—Sweaters. Beret sets — Berets for the older I girls as well as the smaller ones—Dark Sweaters for p the youngsters 2 to 5 years. Knit goods priced to fit all purses. DRESSMAKING-HEMSTITCHING < Prompt Service. u THE VITZ GIFT SHOP 221 N. Second St. Phone 925 Niblick Building

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11 not fit mid Hull established Ids 11 claim. That left Robinson still with•lout means of mastication. ,| O — G*" Amphibious Auto . | Colorado Springs (UP) —George i Bottje’s automobile has amphibian . quulitie . l|e was caught In a I cloud burst on a highway near here’ ■ and his car was swept Into u stream I flowing by the road. The ear float. Jed 30) yaids and grounded permitt I i ing him to land safely. o —— Uninvited Guests Princeton, Ind., • (UP) — Noble Sinks, Chicago and Marie Curie, 1 | Evansville, had quite an audience 1 at their marriage although no invi- ■ tat ions w re sent out and they were 1 both far from home when wed. 1 The two strolled Into the courtroom of City Judge McCary just as he was disposing of a civil case and before a crowd of coiirt spectators, took their vows. • „ ——> o — Get the Habit—Trade at Home. him w ■stMi’.'ragm'tfa.iiTßnnwMai

PEACHES and PLUMS Thursday, Sept 11 $1.50 and up S. E. HAGGARD Monroe, Ind.