Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 244, Decatur, Adams County, 15 October 1930 — Page 3
wBK LUNCH i cut CHEATING BILL ImII - ' K. e <’ hcfk . In , San k / iKfrancisco I otals $0.38! I KL Hurry * Krantz S'liC'-e B 1 ’ W< 5 .,, F K.X » Enter or -.Binary ryellene-. n psvclio-analyzoil by thA3 the I'"!"" 1 s,a " >B I)l, ‘ ~ „f commerce. ■ , ..quail) i- Chinaman. |K,.< his birds-iio t soup. Cm | f " r " is h °' ! Italian who likes "red Bi| ;, 1,. -paJiHti. tlie famed : ilih (luuioiets has now sill-. / I ■tk>- indignity of an official j I air ” :| l i'' . Litio" that til"! M .... h... k in all <las -s of food . . v ■ |hl . establishments is now i H P-3Si F H W Traditions «as wl "‘" sailors ’ .■K- .... S ’ '""I’ ashm ■ / alburv an I fill th-m---■w ■. ~|, to y1 1r .,., < avera:;... 11l the reomnit-■ But now j . "dm: 1 :- -" —-==^^F.. M, have pulled the average th. 1 income of a steerage —qai'e so bad. I dinner at a hotel din • " :,h a lhe( 'k "' whii. Hub patron pays' ar „ras>. $1 023. B it the sand- .. '■ drug-store conn- , n only ftt.isi cents per visit. MB Intriguing Statistics intriguing statistics are I Mr^K t out in a Department of "™ltt^^B Pri l . bnlle’in on "The San ■ Restaurant Jr dustry.” a sin-ivy intended to seem > oti important human * eat ’ n? - Mrs. intrude ’ion not -s the ro- I fact that San Francisco’s ; .■ palivs • operated by Ital- ~ French. Chinese. Japanese, , and persons of other naF Romance ends and fact 4 ding. thousand one hundred and ■ ~’iim establishments annual sales of $46,872,792 122.205.616 patrons. Wage numbered 12.236. and dian annual pavrcil of $13,492.iy a - ■ with MB u Measures 15 Inches - <Ul'i-—An apple, tneaii jrßMi: I.' ini hes in circumference ini weighing one and one-half .is bein'? exhibited by Wile v The specie Is of the Comity King variety. _ A Plank Road Excavated " ra Wis.. —(UP)— An old road was discovered buried I".ii uh 'lie present sufface street here by a sewer con- ' 1 .'. The road, estimated been built more than 75 ago, was in good condition.
I THE CORT I Tonight and Tomorrow I “CHEER UP AND SMILE” ■ A talking and singing Movietone Radio Romanes I featuring Dixie Lee. Arthur Lake and others. ■ Broadcasting Laughter! A youthful, pepful, tun<’- ■ Ini musical romance of campus, Broadway night ■ dubs and radio broadcasting studies. I ADDED —“HAMMER AND TONGS” Talking I Comedy and Movietone News. 15c--35c I Friday & Saturday—“SOLDlEßS AND WOMEN” | I A talking romance with Aileen Pringle. I Sunday, Mondav. Tuesday—John McCormack, the I famous singer, in “SONG O' MY HEART.” THE ADAMS THEATRE I Tonight and Thursday—lsc-35c PeGREATEST ADVENTURE cf Modern Times! THRILLING! EXCITING! I WITH BYRD AT THE SOUTH POLE Authentic Feature of Terrifying Exploits and Unflagging Ihirf. 8 'Chartered Landa. Man's Sublime Courage Pitted Against tho rn ftirdeßt F °rees. The ONLY ACTUAL MOVING PICTURE Ln 4 0rl(la MOST COLLOSISAL UNDERTAKING! ’ An A Lb TALKING Comedy and A ‘FLIP THE FROG’ Cartoon. Matinee THURSDAY at 2P. M.—at 10c-25c l''ritni a T n , d Sat,,r <iay—Wm. POWELL in “FOR THE DEFENSE" ‘BRILL A MINUTE! u"’’ANvb^D les — T HE TWO BLACK CROWS MORAN & MACK I p ace t OO , ODY ’ S WAR”. You’ll Laugh ’Till You’re Black in the I
Motor Company Buys Land I Miami. Flu., (lIPi-A five acre | tract of land has been purchased here by General Motors Corporation for wood rot mid paint experiments Rate Pinochle Hand Held Rochester, N. Y. (UP)—Mrs. , Thomas Salter picked up a pinocle ’anti recently und looked over to I two complete sequences In Dia- . monds. It is one of the rarest tneldu land counts 1500. Shoe Shiner Owns Block Utica, N. Y., tl’l ) Joseph Maz-1 |zoltl came to Utieu 27 veers ago land set up a bootniack chair on | Bliiudlna. street. Today lie still I shines shoes, but he uiso owns a I business block. 0 Dove Shooting Cost $lO Jerome, —(UP) J. o. Beardson | hot doves from his automobile. Officers caught him at it. It cost | Beardson $lO. M< 'I UP) - Hale Riggs, win I played football several years, boast 'ed he never suffered an injury on 'the field. While dressing tor pra<tice, he fell and di.dmated his col- , lar bone. 0 _ I • Thjs Stop Valued at $3,000 Seattle, —(UP) —Is was worth at I least $3,000 to stop a skyocket vvitn Ill’s face. Watson Smith declared | when he filed suit for that amount i against J. N. Vring, whom he claim- | -d fired the rocket that hi: him in | the face July 4. o Relief For Poor Planned Racine, Wis., (UP)— A city commissary for poor relief has been created by the Health Department. The lowest bidder among several grocers was awarded the contract Ito supply groceries. Most of sl.m.- ! 000 appropriated for poor relief was I expended this summer creating the I need for an additional $50,000 voted i for relief work recently. — o Girl, Nine, in High School V-ernon, N. Y. —(UP) — Rutn I Wetson. nine has enrolled in Vernon Hiah school. The daughter of | a teacher, she is believed to be ; one of the youngest high school 1 students in New York State. o Hugh Pumpkin Grown Summerhill] N. Y.—(UP) —When A. D. Van Marter dropped a pumpkin seed on his farm he did not exI pect !. to grow. But it did and one of the pumpkins that resulted had I a circumference of five feet, seven- ’ and one half inches, and weighed 76 pounds. “Sweets" Weigh 20 Pounds Sullivan, Ind , — (UP) — Virgil King claims the title of "sweet potatp king" after raising seven potatoes with a combined weight of 2b pounds. — — o Winter Food For Birds Rhinelander, Wis., —(UP) —Food distribution stations have been established throughout the county by the Oneida county conservation club to provide for bird feeding during the winter. o Tree Sitters Crew Strikes Spokane, —(UP)— Things went wrong with his refueling contact, to Erland Ressa didn’t set a world’s tree sitting record after all. After 1.436 hours aloft. Erland found the ' "orage crew refused to send up more grub, so he came down, content with a state record.
DECATL R DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1930.
CITRUS FRUIT BAN AGAINST FLORIDA OFF Conference of Entomologists Ends 18 Months Quarantine Atlantic, Oct. 15-(UP)— Eighteen monthe after tlie Mediterranean fruit fly ouarantlne was clamped down on Florida citrus products It 'i s lifted today by agreement of ntomologists of 18 Southern und We tern States. The ban was lift'd I'cllcwlng assurance of the United States Department of Agriculture that danger of further infest tion had disappeared. Th • F< deral Plant Board said '•> t If would assume all responsiidlttv ip event of a"y infestation ■> future, pi-cording to Manning S. Yeomarn, Georgia State rfntomo- ' 'gist ho participated in a Wash’•i"to i f’.'>nf c rence from which the 1 '■rreoment to raise the ban revolted. First Restrictions The first re frictions went into ■ffect Mav 1, 1929, curtailing shipments of Florida citrus fruit in its 'taftir?! state. While a stringest radication ermpaign was waged by federal and state authorities, a modified order on November 20, 1929, permitted .shipment of sterilized citrus fruits. Today’s agreement permits vir-' tua’.ly blanket shipment. ‘Th > iwtnl ami elimination of he Mediterranean fruit fly by first confining it to that section of ! Florida where it was first discovered,’’ Yeomens said, "has been j one of tile gr eatest pieces of work ' ’ver unde’taken and completed by' the United States Department of I Agr culttire with state departments and state boards of entomology cooperating. Gigantic Task "No one believed in the beginning that such a gigantic task was nossib!“: however, only three new nfestations have been discovered in Florida since Angu-t 1, 1929, an l there are still 700 Federal inspectors on the job. ‘The discovery of the fruit fly, considered by all entomologists to he the most dangerous and devastating pest extant, literally thr?w growers of frufts and vegetables into a near panic, for the existence of between $800,000,000 and $1,000,000,000 worth of products was jeopardized. “The United States Department ' of Agriculture assumed leadership I immediately and has expended between $5,000,000 and $7,000,000 in th“ fii-ht on the med-fly. “Cost of this work is insignificant when we consider the value of the crops endangered.” ’’WOF NEWS Mr. and Mrs. Dore Erwin and Jr. Charley Teeple of Decatur ata led the Home Coming at the ionroe Methodist church on Sun--1 day, Mr. Erwin and Mr. Teeple each gave a very interesting talk >y were entertained at dinner by Mr. and Mrs. Janies A. Hend-
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Runyon or Deal. ;r called on Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Crist on Sunday afternoon. Mr. Ira Wagoner, Miss Lois Hue:'man and Ruth Bahner motored to Hunting ton on Sunday and spent he day with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Vagoner and family. Mrs. Gail Hendricks of Auburn s spending the week-end with rel- : ices. Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Beals of o. u.m.i spent Sunday with Mr. and M.s. H. E. Forrar. Mr . Jennie Rainier of Decatur i attended the Home Coming at the 1 j ,oiu ce Methodist church on Sun-1 I .ay and visited her daughter Mrs. ! orest Andrews and family. Mr. J. J. Hoffer and sister Miss I i Lou Hoffer entertained Mr. and J ir.c E.. B. Macy of Decatur on I Sunday. Mr. Raleigh Osterman, Harlan Osterman Miss Goldie Martz and | Ina Rayl motored to Florence, ' ndiana on Sunday and spent the jay with Mr. and Mrs. Orval Oster- I .an and family. M.. and Mrs. J. F. Crist called on , . riends in Geneva on Sunday after- > noon. Miss Marjorie Stepp of Montpe- i /•r is vldting Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Brandyberry, Mr . Edith Witmer and daughter! Mrs. Ada Hilty of Fort Wayne call- I ed on M.s. E. W. Busche on Friday I alterroon. Mr. Jacob Longenberger left for Newton Falls, Ohio on Friday where he will visit his father Mr. William . Longenberger who is seriously ill. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Ralmond Crist called on friends in Decatur on Saturday evening. Mr. James Andrews returned to his home in Monroe on Saturday | from the Memorial Hospital at De-1 catur where he has received medl-1 cal treatment for the past week! tor injuries received in an autoihobile accident. Mrs. Sadie Scherer is Improving slowly from her recent illness at the home of her sister Mrs. Mary , Lewellen in Monroe. Rev. and Mrs. V. D. Williams'
land Mrs. Philip Heffner attended' ;lhe Home Coming at the Methodist' i church at Geneva on Sunday after-1 noon. Mr. and Mrs. John Floyd enter-1 talned at Sunday dinner Mr. und Mrs. J. L. Berger of Elkhart, Mr*.] Sara Earl of For: Wayne and Mr. | and Mrs. E. W. Busche of Monroe 1 Mr. and Mrs. Charley Hocker of Decatur called on Mrs. Oliver Hend-' ricks on Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Smith entertained at six o’clock dinner on Sunlilay evening Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Smith and Mr. and Mrs. Bud iNewhart of Preble. Mr. and Mrs. James Kessler entertained at Sunday dlnnter Mi\' and Mrs. Harry Kessler and son Dorwin o! Fort Wayne and Mr. and I Mrs. Jume-i V. Hendricks and son : Lewis of Monroe. Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Crist of Deca-' tur spent Monday In Monroe witn | relatives. 0 I New Castle, Ind., —(UP) — Den tists frightened Floyd Daffer, 34. to death. When he went to one ’o have his teeth worke don he appealed very nervous. Gas was adminislc -<| and a short time la’er he died While still in the dentis , ’s chair Coroner John Niblock attributed death to excitement. i Liquor Cached in Pipes Atlanta — (UP) — I. P. Jones I i youngest member of the Atlanta police force, distinguished himself recently by discovering that bootleggers were using drain pipes in 'the heart of down town Atlanta tn hide pint-sized consignments of corn! liquor.
THIS WEEK ONLY-THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY ZJ BUY ONE-GET ONE FREEI sJ To better acquaint you with the Nationally Advertised NYAL Home Remedies,Toilet Articles, etc., we are offering during this sale a full sized NYAL ITEM FREE —with each one you buy at the regular every day price—Two for the price of onel Concealed Bell ALARM CLOCKS I 1 0 , . MVAI unZpFMFiMFc: 11 NYNAPS-SANITARY PADS Sturdily constructed, 24-hour movement Alarm 2 for ’ Clocks with concealed back-bell. Finished in pastel . " ’ ” a special pink insert which is moisture proof. shades-green,red,yellowandblue. 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Licorice Comp.-4 oz. 2 for 25c s£w) p|n< s() c Buehu and Juniper Pills 2 for 50c j f or 35 C Built to stand the strain of long wear 15c Senna Leaves—whole— ,gj QQ 60<’ Pure Vanilla Extract —3 oz. 2 for 60c and service. For this sale only 2 for 1.75 25c Bicarbonate of Soda —1b...2 for 25c _________ 25c Nyal Earache Drops 2 for 25c 50c Nyal Nyal Special Combination 1.00 Nyal Cod Liver Oil— 25c Nyal Yellow Pills 2 for 25c Fare Cream . irr . . T > -o □ pint 2forl.w 75c Nyal 25c Nyal Toothache Plugs 2 for 25c , ' Guaranteed Hot M ater Bot le and 25c Arom. Spirits Ammonia- Aspirin Tablets 25c Nyal Carbolic Salve 2 for 25c (w‘th peroude) Fountum Syringe m one. As 2.0 loz 2 for 25c , . — ; A velvety vanishing value--at 2 for 2.50 F °J- 50c Nyal Dyspepsia Tablets 2 for 50c r . U . 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Crispy peanuts—coated with a thin Z lor /3C ; -——— . ~——— c shell of pure toasted sugar. Nutritious 50c Brilliant Ldae Hair 0.l . 2 tor 50c Stationery and healthful as well as delicious eating. 10c Nvnl 50c Par Shaving Lotion 2 for 50c 50c Ny al Full pound box 2 for 50c p.i m c_„ 25c Par After Shave Powder 2 for 25c Tooth Brush 50c Embassy Lawn Papetrie— 24 sheets Sweet Treet Gum Drops 50c Nylotis Almond Cream 2 for 50c and envelopes 2 for 50c Chewy, fruit jelly gum assorted flavors to the box. Spicy and "■ Ini, weaie inner ine envelopes—tasty, each piece cupped and packed in ex a v ue 2 for 1.00 cellophane box to preserve freshness ?5c W ave Crest Linen Lawn—72 sheets and flavor. of ri PP le bond to the box 2 for 75c Full pound box 2 for 50c ww w w irv 30c Wave Crest Envelopes, Monarch Sweet Treet Chocolate Cherries 11 i Fl — size to match paperJuicy maraschino cherries, hand-dipped Fl| 1 I I|Tll£F I . t>ac age 0 2 foi 30c in rich chocolate coating and cordialed JLI Vr JL UOV I* M Edgewood Linen Tablet, Note in a cream fondant. They fairly melt in vF B * ze ruled 2 for 15c your mouth. 15c Wedgewood Linen Envelopes 5U Full pound box 2 for BOc size package 25 2 for 13c
ALASKA PLANS BRONZE STATUE i OF IRISH GIRL Befriended Hard y Men in Gold Rush Days Seattle. Oct. 15 —(UP) —Lovers I the hardy Alaskan prospectors i and gamblers as one woman, who I remained "pure and white as the ' snow,” during the gold rush days i of '97 and ’9B, Mollie Bell will live I again when her friends erect a I bronze statue of her at Skagway, Alaska. The laughing-eyed Irish lass, honored by all on the trail and In camp, was the belle of the North. She was a comrade and tender-hearted pal to the unkempt men who plunged into the wilderness to seek their fortune. Wooed and Lost One of her closest friends was “Packer Jack” Newman. who wooed and lost her. He has had a bronze image of the famed Alaska belle moulded for a pedestal to be placed in a Skagway park Indicated to her memory. Far different than the dance hall girls, Mollie Bell was the angel of the camps, and her name j is still spoken in hushed reverence Iby the old timers. It was she who
cared for the sick and friendless, who grub-staked prospectors, who lent a helping hand wherever she could. Mollie went North while she was In her early twenties and opened n grub shack near Luke Bennett. ‘Packer Jack" met her first wheb he stumbled Into her tent one night suffering from a frozen hand. She administered old to him ns she had to others, mid a romance began. Married Another “Packer Jack” became a bit too sure of himself, however, and when Mike Bartlett began showering attention on Mollie. Jack ordered her to forbid Bartlett entrance to her grub tent. Mollie married Bartlett. Mollie gradually drifted away ”rom her direct contact with the ’rail, and in 1902 she was living 'n Seattle with her husband. Her brief life ended in October of that vear when she was shot and killed. Bartlett was acquitted of her murder when adjudged temporarily insane. Now Mollie’s going back Io Maska, to take her rightful place in the Skagway trail, a perpetual reminder that there was at least one girl of the trails who was not •i "Dancehall Lou." Beer Blamed in Suit St. Joseph —(UP) —Charging that ter husband heat her because site bjected when he gave their twoear old daughter beer. Mrs. Wilna Price of Benton Harbor, lias fil'd a divorce suit against Virgil Price.
MANI FAMILIES REPORTED BACK IN DOMINION Canadians Leaving U. S. Through Colonization Scheme Montreal, Oct. 15. — ((J.R) — Re ; i ports from New England common- ’ I Itles that large numbers of French-1 I Canadian residents, mid residents of French - Canadian extraction.' are returning to Canada, have] been confirmed by J K. LaForce. I colonization agent of the Canadian i National Railways. Approximately 1,000 families have returned to the Province of Quebec and settled on farms since I he assisted reparation scheme j vert into effect in 1928 he say;. Many of the repatriates had kei? ' their farms although they moved to he United States some years ago; ithers were settled on purchased a: ms. in the first eight years according o La Force’s figures 623 families vere repatriated and placed on arms in the Province of Quebec. La Force considers these fami-' ies tlie best class of (migrants as | inly those who have some resour-1 ■cs of their own are granted assis-; ance given jointly by the Federal and Provincial governments. Each 1
PAGE THREE
I family averages $2,000 capital of 1 their own. lie finds | Three thousand New England i«liniliesI inilies are on tlie waiting list to be repatriated, and 3,000 more do-’ i sire to return to Canada, but are urn. • able to dispose cf their property in | lie United States, i Many other Frencli-Canadians, lie j sides agricultural families, are rc-’ [turning but as they do not pass {through a colonization office, their I number is not accounted for by the officials, according t> , l.a Force. o Fire Didn’t Bother Him Berkley (UP) —Earl Nelson al | ways thought he was a “sound ! deeper” and now. he will admit It. Nelson was pulled out of bed after j neighbors discovered flames shoutj ng out of his bedroom window, i vVhen rescuers arrived Nelson wa i still sleeping, his hair had been I burned to a crispy red and his bed clothes were afire.
PItES THOUSANDS An old Chinese Proverb says, “Nina in 10 eufter from piles,” but the pain and itching of blind, protruding or bleeding piles usually are alleviated within a few minutes by soothing, healing Dr. Nixon’s Chinaroid, fortified with a rare, imported Chinese Herb, having amazing power to reduce swollen tissues, it’s the new- ; est and fastest acting treatment out. You can work and enjoy life right from the start while It continues ita healing action. Don’t delay. Act in I time to avoid a dangerous and costly operation. Try Dr. Nixon's Chinaroid under our guarantee to satisfy completely and be worth 100 times the small cost or your money back.
