Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 184, Decatur, Adams County, 5 August 1931 — Page 5
■ AI/i/.ht se ■ F, “/ lAGE ° N ~ 1 ■ te lib '. ■ <1 lan.l vof nuemtains. .lotted ■“//.I , o.i 'l with under-, |B |,k '' ' ending would ■t""' ought not for "e< ks. » "■ and ,-. ud>. the Lind-' S' nifli the sell-eon’l-whi' i' air luall l Kt nut Atlantic' Hl u, '""■'' ,l WtW tin t '• ’" nfl at ■ w < rivet Hunter Hay. hah tiu ir goal., ■/ ironi i' ■ key in the; Mr- I' lgh. lew! a’i' daught i 'JWY’-t ' b ''' , ... Lindy, living' hi!n iiti- hatted hind . P-'" ' responsi- ~,„ ! tilted State;,; |M,. <>f Chicago. I . , operator H.- i re..l in < hicago, | ~. .. po-.ver'ui radio ■B Ti.....,i >'H the 2u meter ■ j o i nsoii ears i Liudbe-ruh signal. ■ Up 11-T r ,,. i; !-,:i>bam| piloted I r l That lastminutes. J„hllSli|l's ■ plumes the i jKfOA. WO A. WOA." letters of . ■ in N--w I. , ■itvt came: - JMe ■ , -i. plane. Klic.il its touch, ■. in ini'i l > a. eii's station ■lB D: ■ Baker Lake at ■ n iinerals 12 ’ip.iii’ i > tiv. ich cv-n- - or 6:35 EST. ■.OT MACHINE ■ C ASES HEARD ■oNTINI'E? ”‘UiM PAGE ONE) make I: legal. - te, ;, n: , x will probably be circuit court. The u , ( , U f i,y Sheriff ■ s at' orneys - ttial and the K' ’ltem that it would e 'liter postponment the case. ' !• s;ifi<s| and the ' found tin two men uu.<ty on ih ' i ■ ttnony. The fines ' '■ amounted
fell FO CHINESE HERE ■'ll I" XOU.CKLY ALLAYS ■ IhhU PAIN and ITCHING ■A'.? ’" f! 7, fronl itching, blind. ■k. 7 \ ‘ ,lll,s riles you are ■. K .'to be z. a t the soothing. Bt ‘7 r o f ihe rare. Imported Kir n« <’i erb which fortifies Dr. ■nd At Its the newest , A ! "’’. lnß ' treatment out. Kiruh, A . 'omfort in a few ■nw i.r h " Veil can work and Boethmc f >, "i " 0 !t continues its K \ lilllg action. Don’t deBa and J,'i nie av,,i,i a dnnger- ■ operation. Try Dr »i’ons Clmimoid under our guarBo th Pan'’,' " fv completely and bi “- 11 or I CALLOW i KOHNE
- E sca P e d girl Bares t km Harem V jf Horrors ~-77 ’ ,!>,l^ er ' Turk, All Bey fate awaited this gently y, " >S f.j easts > the eunuchs— nurtured young girl behind the silken OSt hideous days, nights draperies of the harem door? You , an she—-could any woman ">«st read for yourself HAREM ft'tt forget? SLAVES — the tremendous true-life Hirpsima story of a victim of the Armenian •ittetn — ' Or i, ln ’^ mer ' can ’ Rose, was massacres. It is written with a quill hood_ h” * e / lr * t , blush of woman- dipped in the life blood of a beauti!w ooped f' 1 Wlld Kuedish ful woman, who, herself, knew the dered her f"h Up ° n *' er * >Ome — o,ur * unspeakable cruelties of harem cap•o death— 81 rove ber mother tivity and who tells about them now, sway — and'fl' * cream >ng sister frankly, for the first time. You will sit the harem G t a ’* ave —into breathless over this gripping tale in dread T , O, , b a t merciless wolf, the September TRUE STORY MAGAZINE. 15 >eneral, Ali Bey. Get your copy—read it today. r ~u ur ,s ever’/ Monday night over and N B C Red Network. 10 o’clock New York time
a3o.iv. * The slot machines were confiscated by Sheriff Johnson and officer Arthur Clark on July 18. Two were nickel machines and two were dime machines. BANK MERGER AT BLUFFTON (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) banking purposes. The capital stock of the new bank will be SIOO,OOO with a sur--1 plus of $50,000. I Plans for the consolidation of the two present .banks have been' | carried on for the purpose of en- ‘ larging the banking service to j Bluffton and the community, it was I stated by bankers who authorized ' I the announcement of the merger. —o KLAN LEADER'S WIFE WILL AID (CONTINUED FORM PAGE ONE) , jn tlie plot against her husband. | Before Stephenson's arrest on a I charge of second degree murder. Mrs. Brehm said she was inducted' Iby klan officials to help “create I public sentiment'’ against him by, (tiling suit for support of their, I daughter. Katherine, now 15 years , old. At that time, she said, she: i was told the klan “must get rid I , i of Stephenson." Stephenson was convicted on a I charge of abducting Miss Madge I I Oberholtzer of Indianapolis, and I ' I criminally attacking her. The' I woman took poison tile follow ing j , day and died several weeks later., Indiana Aouth Succeeds As One-Man Orchestra • ■— ! South Bend, hid., Aug. 5. (U.R) — . Paul Castle, a high school student , I of 16. is gaining popularity as South I | Bend's one-man band. He plays i I the piano, accordion, a drum andj • all the traps, nearly a half-dozen horns, a fiddle, harmonica an 1 sev- . oral devices of his own invention. I I Paul gives a- large amount o'. ' | credit for the one-man band idea , to his father, who helped him rig t up the outfit. In his performance 1 the right foot comes in for more! , than its share of the work. It beats i i the bass drum, hits th cymbal, I ’ i tambourine and triangle. A snare I drum, connected to a small battery. I I j rattles each time the other drniy j I boom*. A special wire rack holds the I : harmonica and horns so that all' . I can be played w ithout the use of 1 ‘ hands. The Ift hand plays the | accordion and the right itand the j piano. I At present both Paul and his .father are searching for something to keep the left foot busy. (I o , Little Red Hen Runs Nest Time By Clock — I I Kinston, N. C., Aug. S.—(U.R) —A . ' little red hen quits her nest regu-l ' larly every day at 6:15 a. m., 12. '' o’clock noon and 5:45 p. m. for food j ’ i and water, according to W.H. Brink- ' i ley, her owner. 1 ! One of her eggs, Brinkley claims ! iis flat-shaped and bears a clock ! I dial, a complete circle with 12 reg , 1 1 ularly spaced notches on it.- ; , o Yankee Girl to Teach French ’ Ashland, Pa. (U.R) Miss Adeline i l Strouse has been selected to teach i French in a school at ('bateau | 'Thierry, France, in place of a t ach»l er of that country who will take i 1 i Miss Strouse's place in a New Jer-| ( sey school. The exchange plan is : ( i expected to give both teachers more' ; ( practical experience in teaching : | the languages of the countries to ' . which they are transferring. , i o ' , | hlormc! Rainfall i. Scientists have worked out that | C.-.oo.ooo.tKKi.iMio tons is the approximate normal rtiinfttll for contlnen- ■ tnl United St.t'os for one rear.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1931.
Scene of ‘Red’ Riot in Chicago Iba... 1 A- J Ji t Jk : -, x A." I „ /'A. F I, BfeJIL I ’’’* •- e, 1 " v M K Sc* M li s »s?f» .mm.. k—ihUfihh fe..*« Si MH wln.JmuFreY'.’.HTan.m l and ‘“J’*™ 1 Chica «° Monday This photograph shows crowds which gathered in Dearborn street in .. t‘. r 3 ; , "° k'lmmumsts who sought to prevent court the Negro residence district, following the rioting. At the right is i (lit.on ol <i woinaii lioin her home. The three slain were Negroes. the house where the eviction took place.
Eighty-two Year Old Bov Was .lust “Her Man” Wise Courthouse, Va.. Aug. 5.— (U.R) — “Uncle" John Gilliam. 82, farmer, lumberman and veteran of the Spanish-American War. has brought home to Wise county his Hide, the former Miss Etta Laney,
I The trip from Bristol was made! under difficulties, for after the wed ! I ding, Gilliam and his bride went to . I Fort Blackmore to board a train 1 j for Norton, their nearest station. I I only to miss it. "Well,” said the old man, “we: I could walk across the mountain but! | it's 15 miles from hire." “Let's do,” said the bride, and so! they followed the old "Chief Benge" , trail across High Knob to Norton, i from where they took a taxicab I home. The couple met while “Unde” I | John was buying timber on Stony' 'Creek. “From the first time I saw him." I said the bride, “I couldn't love any I of the other boys." Q i Uncle Sam Exempt From Pennsy Fuel Tax' Harrisburg. Ba., Aug. 5.— (U.R) — Only the United States government is exempt from paying the PennsylI vania liquid fuels tax. the DepartI ment of Revenue has announced. Even the Commonwealth of ■ Pennsylvania is required to pay the Ithree-cent tax on every gallon of gasoline purchased by its representatives, the d- partinent said. Formerly political sub-divisions of the state were not obliged to pay i the fuels tax on gasoline used for strictly municipal purposes. 1 a Girl Clerk Routs Bandit With Candy Box Missile St. Louis, Aug. S.—(U.R) —A drug | store properitor's brother, in the store during a recent holdup, hurled a box of Candy at the bandit, who | then fled. The candy tossing example was emulat'd the next day in a confec-1 tionery store by a girl clerk. She !aint“d however, at a plate glass' i window when the bandit began i I ransacking the cash register. He' I tied as the glass crashed. | ! '—o ■ Great Salt Lake Reported Shrinking Salt Lake City, Utah. Aug. 3.—| i (U.R) —Great Salt Lake -20 per cent salt content- —is undergoing a pro■ess of shrinkage this year of sev re droughts. The lake, whose water is so heavy : that men have broken- their necks 'diving into it, is at its lowest point i in 20 years. o Z— Fryer and Gosling in Snake Mexico. Mo.— (U.R. — A “fryingsize” chicken r.nd a four weeks old ' gosling were found inside a blacki snake which was killed recently by Mis. Forr st Weaver. Mrs. Weaver ' attacked the rfptile with a garden i hoe when she found it disturbing | her poultry flock. The snake was i five feet nine inches long. ■Rome Kitchens "Go Vegetarian Rom . — (U.R) -The Roman kitchLen is becoming more and more I vegetarian. Rome alone last year i consumed 5,000 tons of | costing 4,500,000 lire, a notable in- . crease over'previous years. Into 1 salads alon went 1.258,052 kilos of salad vegetables coating 1,220,310 lire. Italian Perfects Motor Using Sea Wave Power Rome, —(UP) —Signor Giovanni | Cotugno. musical instrument maker I of Ancona, has invented what he I calls a hydrodynamic motor for I using the energy in the waves of j the sea. He has given the following : particulars to the United Press. “My apparatus consists in a i wooden shaft about 14 feet long andj
weighing eight kilograms. The autopropellor weighs only 200 grammes, ■Ail consists of two steel blades about one-fifth of a millimeter in thickness. When thrown into the sea. after a moment, it begins to move. The tiny waves break against the head of the machine, and in-
THE ANSWER TO SUBSTITUTION IS ALWAYS.... 'NO"
Decatur Daily Democrat
• stead of driving it to right and left, .(impiess it with continued energy s i in a certain direction. Left in thei [ open sea the wooden apparatus ? I would continue to move ahead for ) j a long time even against the wind tlor current.” The apparatus has been tried in
IS YOUR HOME A TESTING GROUND/UNTRIED PRODUCTS ? /
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the sea of Ancona, and the reports as to its effectiveness have been sat isfactory. Signor Giovanni Cotugno told the United Press it was his intention to donate his invention to the Italian Red Cross to exploit it as they think best.
FORT VICTIMS TO BE HONORED
Chicago, Aug. 5. (U.R)—-The Fort Dearborn massacre, Chicago's first major catastrophe, occurred 119 years ago August 15. Hostile Indians attacked the little garrison and in the battle that followed 60 whites, including women and children, were killed. Chicago will honor the memory of the victims in a ceremony at the replica of old Fort Dearborn, built at 16th Street and the lake front as the first exhibit building of Chicago's 1933 World's Fair and Century of Progress. A ceremony of contrasts is planned, including a parade to the fort by soldiers, both in the uniforms of today and of 1812. High overhead an airplane will - circle as an oxdrawn covered wagon toils its slow way to tlie fort. A flag of flowers—24 by 16 feet —will be raised on the fort’s staff as Miss Fort Dearborn, dressed in the crinolines of 1812, welcomes Chicagoans at the entrance. U. S. Ambassador Starts Rome Anti-Noise Crusade Rome, Aug. S.—(U.R)-John Work Garrett, of Baltimore, American ambassador to Italy, has devised his own formula for combating the sleep-wrecking noises of Rome. The ambassador, like all arriving Americans, found his sleep disturbed by the roaring motors and
WHAT CAN anyone by buying unknown products? And why should anyone buy them, when you can always be safe by asking for brands of recognized quality? The lure of unknown products is often a “bargain price.” The clerk may say they are “just as good” as the popular advertised brands. But isn’t the approval of millions of people worth more than the word of one? Advertising can not create character for a product. But it does place established character on trial. The advertised product has a reputation at stake. It must make good to hold your confidence. One false claim would be fatal. The substitute product is an unknown brand, with nothing to lose. In appearance, it may imitate she product you know. Over the counter, any claim may be made for it. Only by sad experience can you prove that claim untrue! Think of this the next time anyone tries to sell you something “just as good.” Such “just as good” products are urged upon you for only one reason. There is mord profit in selling them. The merchant who permits and encourages substitution is looking at today’s sales slips. Not at tomorrow’s loyal customers. These facts are published by this newspaper to protect its readers. Whenever you shop, ask for standard advertised products. Insist on getting them. Be warned by the words “just as good” that there is something better. When you are guided by names you know you can be sure of constant quality. Os definite purity. Os honest weight. Os full value in return for the money you spent.
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continual horn tooting of taxis. His own car, oft American make, had silent motors and an effective but pleasant sounding horn. Garrett, realizing the value of starting at the problem at the fountain head, instructed bis chauffeur to quietly demonstrate to Italian chauffeurs how a horn earn be tooted without waking up the dead, and the advantages of a silent motor. The ambassador has great hopes for his little scht me. o Ancient Footprints in Park South Hadley. Mass.—(U.R) Land surrounding a ledge in Smith's Ferry on which are imprinted footprints believed to have been made by a prehistoric dinosaur is to be made a public park. o net the Habit—-trade Homs a? l i.-j
Used Tires and Tubes all sizes Model T Ford Parts 1931 Buick Sedan 1929 Chrysler Sedan 1928 Graham Paige 1927 Hupmobile Sed. 1927 Dodge Sedan 1925 Buick Coupe 1921 Hudson Coach STALEY Auto Exchange 930 N. Second st. Phone 65
