Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 97, Decatur, Adams County, 23 April 1931 — Page 7
lawyers JUt over "fiIVORCE WAR" Vi ? iß|Lv3<l;i Will Retain ic T ett ■gd iiness Despite , II- Ix * ,f Correspondent " '"f . April 23 — ll’’’) — 1,1 almost jubilant •he 2^K r x , aula's recent victory "rliil, , among the legthe , , _,. xi .,al western spites lI,L <livi ' r, ''‘ ‘'t'l'it- 1 « a -»W«r "'ir.IJEL ... . ■ entirely discount of Idaho and Arhad the latter still re It- - Ehß lin-Ibb . and a treat. The s 01 Ueno are earnestly - to the Arkansas >ru e »^^B u l ' .-eciation in its a'Ktti o i to the Hti-day divorce voter-of that state. .hsplays letters re , x, much, dlsecii.-- - oi Arkansas who
K ■ • tA. V-<-Mz== vawV** %v*>vss Ji > nf\ X XX»*' <**> *•*** * »'*** ** *>■»* AA SX-WK* <**** **V ***** '**" *.S xCxs'SxV II ,'' "~-- A) * 111 aB ; CLOVER LEAF BRAND PASTEURIZED BUTTER .|j K* | EXTRA . QUALITY | I \\ CLOVERLEAF CREAMERIES INC. $3 ■ NN DECATUR. HUNTINGTON, INDIANA N : % fa ■lilSS GLADYS HELEN PHILLIPS I Nationally Known Cooking ■ School Expert, selected z ( ;, ■ I Cloverleaf Butter i id| ® to be used in the a" uafl Cooking School Demonstration ■I conducted bv The HOME Grocery Friday and Saturday. , Boverfeaf Creameries, Inc f v
I The Home Grocery I Invites You to The |FREE Cooking School fl FRIDAY AND SATURDAY from 2to 4 o’clock in the Ellis Building, opposite the Court House I Miss Gladys Helen Phillips ■ IN CHARGE. Special Prizes Each Day. Admission Free. ■Demonstration and Special I Sale Saturday on All fl PERFECTION COOKIES AND HONEY CAKES fl Fresh From The Ovens I! COME IN AND TRY THEM fl Rainbow Sugar Wafers * 29c fl Fancy Chocolate Cookies P • || Honey Cookies 2 dozen for 25c
want to conte to Nevada. One attorney of Hot Springs, Ark, wants to hang out his shingle in Reno and a lawyer In Little Rock wants to come to western Nevada to engage in ranching. Interest in Nevada's divorce laws I was greatly stimulated with pessa«e of the six weeks divorce hill by the 1931 legislature. The Reno Chamber of Commerce received 101 inquiries from prospective divorce' seekers during March as compared I with 21 in January and 7 in February. This is in addition to the hundreds received by the lawyers and bar association on which no tabulation was made. The chamber's records show that 42 per cent of the Inquiries came from the Atlantic seaboard, including New York, New Jersey. Pennsylvania and adjacent states. 18 j per cent came from the Paclfi.t Coast states, eight per cent from the New England states, four per cent from the intermountain states, four per cent from the southwestern states, and two per cent from Canada. The proximatity of Arkansas to New York whence comes nearly half of the divorcees, would prove extremely dangerous to Reno's business. AU in all. the Reno lawyers are 1 well statisfied with the results.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1931.
As Alfonso Passed Into Exile SWC? & 1 f l||||lll This picture, sent by telegraph to London and radioed to New York, shows Alfonso XIII (left), dethroned King of Spain, escorted by police officials on his arrival at Marseilles en route to join Queen Victoria and their family in Paris. The last of the Bourbon dynasty was warmly received by an enthusiastic throng on debarkation from the cruiser Principe Alfonso, which had borne him on the first step of his exile from the land wherein he reigned as king. « ______________ Interna-ttonal 111 ustrated Nuws —Radioed t» It ( A.
New Capital Plan For India Nears Reality | Washington, April f .—<U.R) — A new headline lias been cropping up in our daily news, the National Geographic Society says, and that Jin New Delhi, India. This city isexpected to have the same relation to tile British Indian Empire that the city of Washington has to the JJnited States. The general plan of the new Indian capital, the report said, has been made by Sir Edwin Luytens and is similar to L’Enfant’s plan , for the American capital Located on tlie Jumna river, the ■site of New Delili is within a 45- ' mile radius of the sites of seven ' powerful cities raised by Indiap potentates, all now in ruins with j the exception of Old Delhi, which, , stands as a tribute to the powerful Mogul emperors.
Just received a fine assortment of splendid Nursery stock: Apple, Cherry and all kinds of fruit trees. Evergreens & Shrubbery plants of all kinds. Priced right Schafer Hdw. Co.
WORLD EXPERTS PLAN STUDY OF DINOSAUR EGGS Savants’ Congress to Meet In Montana Next Year By William E. Gammon, UP Staff Correspondent Red Ixdge, Mont., April 22. (U.R) —A great confess of savants will gather here in the summer of 1932 to inspect the scene where ages ago a prehistoric dinosaur laid its j eggs. Tlie eggs, or fragments of them, discovered last year by the Princeton University paleontologic expedition, have been heralded as one of tlie most important finds on the North American continent. The first and only dinosaur eggs found previously were uncovered 'by the Rcy Chapman Andrews expedition into tlie Gobi desert of I northwestern China. I World scientists will be invited 'to attend tlie International Congress of Geologists, Paleontologists and mineralogists. Preparing Guide Book Already plans are being made anil an extensive guide to the : richly laden Beartooth region near I here is being prepared. Dr. FranI ces A. Thompson, president of the i Montana School of Mines, has plac- ' ed tlie facilities of his institution in cooperation with Princeton unii versity in gathering’ data tor the i guide book. r j Additional data on the region will jbe gathered this summer during | the Princeton university summer 'school under the direction of Dr. :W. T. Thom. Aside from geologi'cal studies the expedition expects to contribute to the knowledge of I the dim beginnings of primitive ' man. Hobby Brought Discovery To Dr. J. C. G. Siegfriedt, whose hobby is the study, of fossilized bones of prehistoric animals, goes ! the credit for attracting attention Ito the Beartooth district. Dr. Slegfriedt’s discoveries startl led the scientific world some years | ago, and subsequent development lot the region has led scientists to ■the conclusion that it is a veritable I paleontologic playground. Aside from its strata richly laden I with fossil bones, its geologic peeularities are thought t> be unique I in their similarity to classic Trans- . vaal. 0 _ Scuffle Ends in Broken Leg Neenah, Wis., April 22.— iU.Ri — Tom Kuethcr, manager of the E. F. Wiecket Lumber company, made John F. Morriss, Chicago auditor wlMi is looking over the comjiany’s i books, feel at home by engaging in a friendly scuffle with him. As A result of tlie wrestling match, I Kuether is in a local hospital with I a broken leg. JUST TEN DAYS -ECZEMA GONE I 1 I When the skin itches and Eczema drives you mad, just bathe the parts night and morning with antiseptic Moone’s Emerald Oil. Get a bottle for <BS cents at Cut- • shall's Cut Rate Drug Co., or any i progressive druggist and apply after reading the directions. | if the itching hasn't .entirely ceased in ten days you can have I your money back. It's easy and pleasant to use and it's speedy action is little less than marvelous.
CENSUS SHOWS AMERICANS IN FAR OFF PLACES Third of a Million Found Scattered Over Globe Hy Joseph it. Baird, . UP Staff CorreapondeQt. Washington, April 23. — KU.R> — Nearly a third of a million Ameri cans now make their homos in various parts of tlie globe, a state department census reveals. Consuls coordinated their efforts to enumerate former United States citizens, who have taken up a per-' manent residence in other lands.; Their count —in some cases only lan estimate—showed 386,272. This is about 6,000 less than tlie total of another census taken several years ag<. Canada contains more American citizens than any other country—l 218,717. One province alone — Al-' berta —has 98,030. Ontario ranks second w’itli 47,889 and Manitoba third with 37,783., France Attractive Life in France, it appears, is | more attractive to Americans than ■ in any other country outside the •i * ■Western Hemisphere. Nearly 26,000 former residents of the United j i States have chosen France, as com-, pared with 8,000 who chose Great, Britain; 4.302 Germany; 5,459 Italy;' 11,800 Russia and 17,06!) Portugal, j | State department officials were frankly surprised to find so many! ) i Americans living in small, queer | corners of the globe. For instance,' I there are 600 in Angola, Africa; 90 tI in Madagascar, an island off the! east coast of Africa; 202 in Siam; ,484 in the Straits Settlements; 450 lin Syria; and, more amazing than all, 16,949 in the Azores. Europe Leads if North America is excepted, I there are more Americans in EurII cpe—Bß,3o9—than any other conti'- , j nent. South America has 13,724; ’ I Asia lias 20,286; Africa lias 3,470,1 M and Australia has 1,956. ’ i Considering smaller geographic -
Community Auction Sale 8 i Decatur, Indiana f SATURDAY, April 25, at 10:00 a.m. ■ 1 load of North I'akota Horses. 15 head of Native Horses; . 25 head of Cattle; 100 head of Hogs; Shee-u; Poultry; Horse Collars; s Pads: Now Hat-new; New Poultry Equipment; Farm Machinery; Soy Beans; HonsehoW Goods: and manv articles too numerous to mention. New Idea Manure Spreader; Black Hawk corn planter. If you have any thing that you wish to turn into cash bring it to ■ Illis sale where you have the advantage of a large crowd of buyers. > Free prizes. DECATUR COMMUNITY SALE Roy Johnson, audioners. i i . ■ - —-
1 c ornTTiitHl : JUSTEP AHEAD t’s a great day for the I | N C/zi/j boys-Here are great { clothes for the day J diploma DAYS -Oh O, Boy-we wish »e were V, Lack there again — and t I Wr'llmrM not a P arcnt w "° sees / /Vw ’ i i AIS this graduation clothing / P\ |Y Hl ■ Mlgffl ««*« »*y- I i \\ ;■ /TV'S ■' fc AjO 5 better 7 \ r r f I 1 I THERE’S real satisfaction in Free- nnwnssnH ’ fU ’ n “ s 11 shoes fine leathers, perfect nor a graduation clothing dollar have a finer run , fit, true foot comfort. But your great- for its own «- | est satisfaction awaits you in their in- GRADL’ATION si ii s from • built smartness and outstanding style. f iv? Let Uo show you how to double the Shirts—Underwear—Hosiery power of your shoe dollars. | Hats Neckwear ? Tohtt-T-Myetd-Colnc J CLOTHING AND SHOES J FOR DAD AND LAD 1 1
divisions, there are 20,798 Americans in die West Indies and Bermuda <including 8,725 natives of Porto Rico and the Virgin Islands, who enjoy American cltlsensiiip, living in the Dominican Republic) and 19,012 in Mexico and Central 1 j America. , I Consuls imule no effort to tabulate the causes that have drawn so ■ many Americans from their homes. I It is assumed many went abroad as business agents of American firms. A few are missionaries. Others were originally nationals of other countries, were naturalized Ln the United States, and later returned to their birth-places. Yachtman’s Body Found Chicago, April 23. —<U.R/—A story of how an amateur yaehtman sailied Into Lake Michigan alone at midnight in a 22-foot sloop, met a I storm and slung perhaps for a day Ito the gunwhale of the sinking craft was pieced together today after his body was recovered by coast guards who had searched for him for hours. The body of William E. K'egg. 31, i was found Heating beside his half ! submerged craft three miles from | shore. He hail almost completed bis daring trip from South Haven, I Mich., when the boat foundered. His body was kept afloat by a life preserver. Physicians said he probably had remained alive 24 ; hours in the water, '| Kegg was an engineering safety
"■EHBBBaR&MdaBBHBBHHBBBBBB GOLF BALLS Wilson Dormie — The greatest 75c ball you ever hit. New legal size. 3 for $1.35 LOSE BROS.
• I inspector for an insurance coni- ! pany. His father, W. H. G. Kegg I 'of Mansfield, Ohio, came to- Chicago , I today to take the body home. , The young engineer, a member i of the Wilmette Yacht club, recentI ly purchased the boat, the Fiddler of South Haven, although three’ . times during the winter it had been t ' declared unseaworthy. . I He had planned to leave South II Haven Sunday and had hired Fred i Bishop, a fisherman, to aid him. Deciding to sail at midnight SaturJday, Kegg left alone because he i and Bishop could not agree over . terms. Knowledge of his orginal plan led at first to a belief two men ! had drowned. Bishop said Kegg had intended to “hug" the shoreline and took no gasoline for tlie engine and only one oar.
THE BIGGEST NEWS FOR TIRE BUYERS it Amid all the confusion of the day’s tire news, here is one fact you can bank on: U. S. TIRE VALUES are up! Quality, appearance and mileage of U. S. Royal and Peerless tires are at their highest peak— and our prices are I the lowest ever offered for such exceptional tire value! Come in today — get the inside facts about this important news—here’s where you get the most for your money. UI2O the big swing is to U.S. T I » E S U. S. Peerless JHHi U. S. OS U.l' Peerless 29x1.10... 3>4.y© i-we : ,„ x „. a 00.4.50 ... $5.60 W 500 7,1 U P. Kirsch & Son nCTwwnoa—
PAGE SEVEN
Kegg was a graduate of Purduo 5 University. ).■ o — Hear the Riley Harmonica ’ I Band at the high school auditorium, Fridav evening. ■ 97-2 t *- o — ' Get the H«Dit—Traae at Home. 1 W ' 1 I Tnl i T II ® II 1 feel like jj I ■wawmi yourself again
