Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 276, Decatur, Adams County, 21 November 1930 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Fvbllshed Every Evenlug Except Sunday by TH« DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. I. H. Heller Pres, and Gen. Mgr. A. R. Holthouße..Sec'y & Bub. Mgr. Dick D. HellerVice-Preßident Entered at the Poetoffice at Deca.ur, Indiana, as second class matter Subscription Rates single copies * .02 One week, by carrier .10 One year, by carrier 6.00 One month, by mail .36 Three months, by malll.oo Six months, by ma 111.76 One year, by mall 3.00 One year, at office 3.00 Prices quoted are within first and second zones. Elsewhere 33.50 one year. Advertising Rates made Knowu on Application. National Advertising Representatives SCHEERRE, INC. 35 East Wacker Drive, Chicago <l6 Lexington Avenue, New York Charter Member The Indiana League of Home Dalllee Feels like a November breeze this morning and the predicted cold wave may arrive bifore the week- ■ tnd. If the solicitors for thp Red! Cross failed to see you and you I Vjsh to enroll this year, send your ‘ dollar to the secretary. '“Employ someon?, plan to increase your business, push it with ; a little advertising and it wont be long until y< u have forgotten about tile dull days. 111 I • ~ Bobby Jones is said to have reeUved a quarter of million dollars tor the ten talking pictures he’s 4U»ing to make, so he is one amateur who made golf pay. “■Leaders of the mob who hanged "two negroes in Marion last spring aded not guilty” to the charges •yesterday. Maybe there wasn't any Uynching there and the pictures we saw were only effigies of the unfort titrates. The holiday season is here and the live merchant is telling yon through the newspaper columns what and where to buy. Read the advertisements in tonight’s Daily Democrat and then do your shopping. President Hoover and state governors were encouraging public

exp nditures and Mr. Coolidge I comes along with his old fashion-1: ed economy advice against it. ( Ccolidge’s middle name should ; have been “Economy". A (: rnado wiped out the little I town of Bethany, Oklahoma, Wed- I n sday, killing 20 persons and injuring several score. The first organization to come to the aid of the suffering was the Red Cross. Your dollar membership makes it possible to care for stricken communities like this. — If you have a st ady job or a fixed income, keep on spending in the usual way. Better yet, do a little improving or remodelling and trade with your local merchants. Money in circulation is not idle nn ney and good times are judged by th • amount of business don - , by tile other fellow. Instead of fixing a certain amount as a goal in a campaign for funds, the order of things has been switched around to a "mile of pennies," it being figured out that tile mile < f coppers will net $814.80. The campaign is being made by a Sunday School class in Columbia City and is a unique way of conducting a drive for funds. Ashbaucher’s MAJESTIC FURNACES ASBESTOS SHINGLE ROOFING SPOUTING LIGHTNING RODS Phone 765 or 739 Illi ■ I 111 Pill—i

State Auditor Archie Bobbitt announces that he will continue to I pay the salaries of judges in those places where the technicality of tenure of office arose. This ruling will probably solve the question of legality in those counties affected t by the legaJ question concerning the time when Judge’s a.re to take r office. Happiness of friends over the j i appointment of Martin Jaberg to • the state board of accounts is miti- , gated on account of the latter's 1 serious illness. Word from his bedside today was not encouraging.l although Mart is making a fight and wants to get well. The ap- ‘ polntment is the recognizing of one I of th most capable accountants in I the state and when Mr. Jaberg is ' able to assume his new duties we know that he will fill the position in fine style. Friends here are hoping for his speedy recovery. Down in Texas they can't get a 1 • jury to try the case against the! ring leaders who burned the court! i hous in Sherman the night they ■ i tried to take a negro from a vault I lin the building. More than one! I hundred prospective jurors have I (been called and each cne declared ' i that he would not convict the persons charged with the crime. The i judge in the case became indignant j and scored the men with the state-1 I men. "If you won’t enforce one law you can't criticise another man for not enforcing another law.” The court is correct. Os the vast army that wore the blue, there are only about 48.000 i names remaining on the pension pay rolls, which is 10,000 fewer' than in the preceding year. The total numb r of Union soldiers of record was 2,713.365. Os their widows and dependents there are 167.000 surviving. The pension depaitment at Washington reports that, exclusive of World war veterans, the government has paid out to war pensioners more than SB.- i OOO.Ortd.Ofjd on 7,000,000 pension certificates. The am ual disbursements : are now about $220,000,000 to 465,000 pensioners. The pension commissioner makes a pathetic statement that there is only one Civil war parent still living, and that the last veteran of the Mexican war died within the year. Eight widows and one daughter of veterans of

the war of 1812, so far as the pen-1 sion department knows, are still 1 living. Records do net show like generosity on the part of any nation toward its soldiers and their dependents.—lndianapolis News. I' • ... — —. — — - 4 Household Scrapbook | By ROBERTA LEE Cake Cake can be kept fresh by taking two slices of bread and sticking hem against the freshly cut surface of the cake by means of tooth picks. Cut by Broken Glass It is claimed that when cut by broken glass, if a little kerosene ' is poured into the wound before any other application, it will prevent -oreness resulting. Vaseline Stains About the only remedy for removing vaseline stains is to sponge ti'.em with ether. 4 (j ♦ 4 Lessons In English w < Words often misused: Do not say "She seldom or ever sings,” Say, "seldom if ever. Often mispronounced: Replevin. | Pronounce re-plev-in, first e as in • "he,” Second e as in “let,” i as in I “in” accent second syllable. Often misspelled: Meager (scanty) observe the ea. Synonyms; Indicate, signify, denote, disclose, evince, present, reveal. Word Study: “Use a word three times ard it is yours.” Let us increase our vocabulary by mastering one word each day. Today's word: Detached; separate; unconnected. “1 wish to be totally detached from all factions.” _o Burley Drew of Geneva was a business visitor here today. 0 I 666 | Relieves a Headache or Neuralgia in 30 minutes, checks a Cold the first day, and checks Malaria in three days. 666 also in Tablets. I 1

—and the Worst is Yet to Come ) | • / • > I • —Tfe n 0 ' I>. J ? Mil ?///>> —3* £ i / By a single O )■ , ) I ,</ / / / j 111 -t« > y * Attend Finance Session M.r — b , J- -St J - ■ ' ■ ■ '-y' ’ ••■CcSi •* 'MfeM ■ JKfc E. J. Becker (left) of South Bend. Ind., Victor L. Brown ot' Milwaukee, Rome C. Stephenson of South Bend and C. C. Hanck of Chicago are among the prominent financiers attending the annual convention of the National Association of Finance Companies at Chicago.

♦ < BIG FEATURES ’)F RADIO I • • Friday's 5 Best Radio Features Copyright 1930 by UP. WEAF (NBC network l 6:15 p.m. CST —College Memories. WABC (CBS network) 7 p. in. CST—Grand Opera Miniature. WJZ (NBC network) 8 p. m. | CST —Interwoven Pair. WEAF (NBC network) 9:30 p.m. | CST —R. K. O. Program. WABC (CBS network) 9:45 pan. CST —Phoenix Hospiery Program. — Modern Etiquette By | ROBERTA LEE » (UPj « Q. If ore hasn't much money, is there any way to remember anniversaries without buying expensive gifts? A. A note, an appropriate card, or a few flowers will suffice. Q. Where are glasses placed at the formal dinner? A. To the right of the plate, api proximately over the kni' es. Q. If one desires entrance to a I club, is it all right to ask for membership? A. No; one must await an invitation. 0 4 *’twenty years I AGO TODAY I From the Daily Democrat FKe November 21. 1930—True Worth, ra dtig stallion formerly owned here by David Flanders makes world record for 14-year old, trotting mile In j 2:10 at Detroit. White Slag Co., ships order of ci- | gars to Gideon, Mo. Price of pork drops 3 cents a i pound at Decatur meat shops. Great Northern Fair association ’ re-elects Thomas Baltzell, president . and Charles Magley, secretary at annual meeting. George Raver, 88, pioneer and vet- ! eran of civil war died this morning. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Linn entertain

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 21, 1930.

I for E. C. Swartz, of Chicago. Albert S:heumann clerked at in- | terurban office today. Price of hogs on Butf.tlo market I is $7.10 today. I Suit Hied here against G. R. and I. railroad Co., for failure to mark up time of arrival of trains at Geneva, 30 minutes before time as required by law. GENEVA NEWS Mr. S. N. Burkett of Eldorado. | Kansas is here visiting his daugh- ' tors, Mrs. J. O. R. Campbell. Me dames Wm. lleeti r and Hazel Ba ta spent several hours in Port- ’ land Tuesday shopifing. Miss Dona Vee Campbell student nurse of Lutheran Hospital of Fort Wayne spent Sunday at the home of her parents. Df. and Mrs. J. O. R. Campbell and family. Mesdames Cleotus Miller and Frames MacWhinney of Decatur spert Wednesday in Geneva attending the funeral of Miss Gertrude King. Mrs. Merle Teeple entertained I two tables of Bridge at her home I Thursday afternoon. Those present were Mcsdames, Roy Butcher. Edi ward Kraner, Josephus Martin, For- | rest Rutch, Ray McCollum, Thomas ' I Rhoades and Gorman McKean. Mr. and Mrs. Olland Coolman and amily of Noblesville are guests of John Shoemaker. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Denner, Mrs. Elmira Luecke and Mrs. George * 'Uahlev Fo’t Wavn» a™ guests of Dr. and Mrs. Gorman McKean. Mrs. Forrest McCune and Chester Haynes of East of Geneva was calli| ed to Berne Wednesday by the , death of their father Ben Haynes. ; Edythe Whiteman went to Detroit - Michigan Friday to spend the week i end with Mr. and Mrs. Meade Aspy and family of Detroit, Michigan. Mr. Fred King of Niles Michigan Mme to attend the funeral of his i sister, Miss Gertrude King. Finley Kelley supent Thursday in i, Fort Wayne. t Walter Cross was a business calt ler in Fort Wayne Thursday. -(j W. H. M. S. Rummage Sale, M. E. basement, i November 22-29, Dec. 6.

FAMED SURGEON I SEEKS GLANDS OF CRIMINALS Dr. Voronoif Would Use Them lor Rejuvenation Operations — By Henry T. Russell United Press Staff Correspondent (Copyright 1930 in all countries by United Press. All rights reserved) Grimaldi. Italy, Nov. 21 (UP) If criminals could dispose of their gljjnds after execution. Dr. Serge Vororoff. famed rejuvlnation expert would under certain conditions, prefer their use to monkey glands. “As a matter of fact" he said in discussing using the glands of exeuted criminals, "there has been a prefeedent. Some years ago a distinguished French surgeon at a Lille (France) hospital, grafted into the body of a little girl parts of the thyroid gland of a famous bandit. The case was widely reported in the newspapers everywhere. Law Stands in Way "I see no reason why the practice could not be extended except for the fact that at present, to my side for cases in which a criminal might be willing to dispose of !Ms glands. "Os course, before the glands of criminals were used, it would be necessary to make blood,tests to ascertain if the donor were free from disease. "As a matter of fact I have already sought permission—it was refused —to use the glands of a criminal on one of my patients. 1 asked the authorites in Paris for authority j to use the glands of one of the members of Bonnot’s famous gang. I The Explanation “The explanation which was that i should the bandit die during the op- ; eration we would be accused of tor-; titring him instead of putting him j to death swiftly by the guillotine. ' If. on the other hand, he survived, I

Forgel ‘alhti Swhen you drm I ARVIh HOT WATER HEAT IN YOUR CAI REISSUE PATENT NO. 17131 • L| ♦ WaTCf The Arvin Installs on the daih.up and ~ ' ”"U It’s never tOO Coid to drive, if yOU have an Arvn I 0 out of the way. All or any part of the jKSKfe-C . J c nHlW' heat ..directed toanvde.ired point heating system in your car. It keeps you warm an able in any weather-makes winter driving a real pie*'’* .iu-blade fan. Black Morocco body J|, e rv j n f| ie h ea f f rom she Water S/Stem of yOU rCflf and Chromium plated front. ■S. ■ VR . . £ VOUrt 0 ’ Hot water Heater, are available Lj At the touch cf a switch, a motor-driven tan 800 7 with clean, odorless, circulating warmth. Any dealer installation. Arvin al.o make, many . be | QW w j|| fix wish Aryin Comfort. Have yOU' other type, of ear heater., includins a new Hot Air Special for Fords. installed now, and forget the weather! A Product of NOBLITT-SPARKS INDUSTRIES, Inc., Indianapo ll Distributed by . The Schafer Company 101 No. Ist St. ARVIN REGISTERED DEALERS DECATUR OSSIAN Butler Garage Arthur Bowman

I he would be acclaimed as a henefae- [ I tor." Asked how many patients he han I grafted with monkey glands since | ! he first made his discovery. Voronoff replied briefly:: "Roughly ovet two thousand. A- ' bout one thousand additional opearI lions were performed by those usI ing my method in other parts of the j world." o Receives Conscience Fund Lawrence, Muss , —(Ul’> - Eight ' weeks after somebody stole the ! spare tire and wheel from his auto- ’ mobile, Alfred Tempest found in his ' mail box an envelope containing a $lO bill and a message which ex (pressed the hope that His money would reimburse him for his loss. PREBLE NEWS ♦ Mr. and Mrs. Otto Dolling and fa-1 mily had as their guests Sunday., Mr. and Mrs. Frank Spade and | daughter Velma and Mr and Mrs. Willard Mcßride and son of Deca-: tur. Mr. and Mrs. Will Johns and sons of Fort Wayne spent Sunday after-. noon visiting Mr. and Mrs. Martin Kiorchner and daughter Mildred. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bouer spent Sunday afternoon visiting Mrs. Elizabeth Bouer of Magley. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Shady and . daughter Mr. and Mrs. Dorothy . Shady and sons ot Fort Wayne (spent Sunday visiting Mr. and Mrs. Albert Shady and family. Mrs. John Kirchner and daugii-j ters spent Wednesay at Fort Daughter Substitute Is Not Desired No daughter equals your own and no remedy is as good as your awn tried and genuine Carter’s Little Liver Pills. Toning up liver, starting bile flowing and relieving constipation, there is none better than Carter’s. Resent substitutes. Take Carter’s. Red bottles. All druggists. Take Carter’s,

' Wayne. Mrs. Albert shady and daughter Mrs. Hlcliai’d Bogner of Decatur i spent Thursday nt Fort Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. John Teeters and Mrs. Henry Deck, r of Geneva visited Mr, and Mrs. Charles Sullivan Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Frauhlger of Magley visited the latter’s parents Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bauer and son Sunday, Mr. Milo Hilyard of Fort Wayne | spent the week-end visiting Mr. and |

Mortgage Loans at ■- ■ j h’' it Jit? 11l 111 111 II 'l 11 We are prepared to make loans at 6 on first mortgages — farm or city pro . perty—subject to inspection, with’slight charge to cover expenses. If interested inquire of Albert Scheumann, in charge of loans and bonds. who will be glad to explain the proposition. j Old Adams County Bai ■

"" ,hl lb >' in P ort a *3| Mr. and y rH w s "U.|: i 5 v's-ti n) , M S.duly. R Mr ’ HAU'.aINs:I'l’esses ail(1 ‘""W nB w,, " rw '