Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 189, Decatur, Adams County, 11 August 1931 — Page 5

''■[DSS WILL ■Bor founder ■IN SEPTEMBER ion. __—- ■n, n nics Planned at j ■SIArTsW of Clara sav,„™ Harlan "It'S - tumidimWi -»■ «•>»'•“ Biir,on■Lwm "i" »>• '.SBwf'i-t 11 ' ' ■ a mil!-' «'ur b<V s .. Til. lin kof pror i>> l „' n , »"rk h> the R.'d | 1..,, Europo. il |( ' kr<iiU'o-| iv/ imp:••--•‘I Mlss nar- . „( . -ii - United | ...■Milk: Geneva | ■ * T. 1 Int. Red Cross. Health Impa.red I ill.- s'.. anil alt i j I. alto the or- • - - . 'Hr •:.••■ :. Anu-rii -‘•‘■e. ■. ' tltr _ i Hi,., . «. ■ .-.infilled t she Washington. E^Htx.: ' - ni an Hn-a:: tin- He I of «li!'h M:-- liai'tun was I president dimmed. , : H a»a i1i..., L anil • • to I tans vi He. Neighbors Aid ..Hi l " r the hope Iter in S' Paul's Lutheran \ H x *^Hh> ktnmt; data Barton t No. Mith the unit 1 '' Michigan fa mi-! i«t dost!- It. h> forest fires. 1 i !i,: an opt.-1| the invita-! j )rnvp h ,. r | ITT could and | V'l'ff time disas-' e w• •!! .., wartime ser"a>' iii cliiih the Danville jH*; a '' : ''"'i » "tli. i units, which ■Hfe hail he. i. formed in Koch|Mkra!ir| Syrih met the situa | »i.<i iatcelj being jB“®",‘ n,al i:! |,!,,|-i ini: the United ■*! 5N '" d! " faPiy unanimously M))/ 1 '"' 1 '"n It: March Id.

■dt 1 forces London's ■Lord Mayor to Use Auto ■ u»d„„ —< l I*»— KHi|„ rc of all *»®aw,rs l„ iUld a| , (h 6 may _ u n ' l "' lhe *«<«ed coach , 1 *" ri o<‘s recently forced ■Lrt? Mav <”' of Ixmdon. Sir ,0 r< ‘ sor: <0 the pro-i Mayi,r ' ViiR Koing in ! WLT'r ,h ° Guildhall to ■L „ ‘ ’ " im WPre hi. mace-1 X, dn<l !,l > sword-bearer. ■fi, , lh h yards fl °"' the MZv TH ‘ ame t/a grindHL. ~T lu' of the sou manual assig

■Wednesday Special jj ICO Tea Hone or Sirloin Steak, lb. . 25c XI: ,cc Fres, h Pi g Shanks, 3 lbs 25c B , ar^ c cans Sauer Kraut, 3 cans 28c 1 [ resh Boi Hng Beef, 3 tbs 25c I <;°od Hamburger Steak, 2 lbs 25c I reßh Xe <‘k Bones, 4 lbs 25c 1 Jjood Creamery Butte*, 2 lbs 60c 1 ( jj l ice Pork Liver, 3 lbs 25c I null I>canut Butter, 2 lbs 25c I Mas ter Coffee, 2 lbs. 55c | 1 a caroni or Spaghetti, 4 boxes 25c 1 Free Deliveries. Please order early. I Phones 106 or 107 HJlutschlers Meat Market

’Chute Jumper Ills Own Photographer !

The most unusual pictures of a parachute jump « ever secured in this country were made when Cor- Tporal Garland E. Cain, of Chanute IJield, Rantoul, ' 111., equipped with two three-ounce special cameras j held on shroud lines, made pictures during a para- ' | chute descent from a U. S. Army plane flying at I 4,000 feet, tapper left depicts Corporal Cain just

1 ' " ' ——~ When Cotton Prices Crashed Scenes of wild trading sm i excitement.prevailed in the cotton pit of the Chicago Board of Trade I Saturday when the price of cotton broke $7.80 a bale and practically all the traders on the floor rushed i in to execute orders. i

tance, failed to budge it. The Lord Mayor's coachman, who never gets excited, got down, surveyed the front wheels with critical glance and reported: “My Lord, the new axle which was fitted yesterday apears to have seized one of the wheels. I am sorry to say ‘he coach will not move! The 1/orri Mayor maintained his usual calm demeanor, called for his automobile and completed the journey by motor. j o v NOTICE —My eider mill will run j every Tuesday and Thursday lie- | ginning Tuesday, August 11, until ; further notice. 0. Chronlster, Bobo. IS7-6tx j BARGAINS — Bargains In living room, dining room suite, mat- , ! tresses and rugs. Stuckey and Co. Monroe, our Phone number is 44 ' -M

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1931.

after he left the wing of the plane. Note his facial • expression as he clutches for the rip-cord on hi* ’chute. Lower left photo shows Cain just as ne tumbled of, the plane on hi? 4,000-foot plunge. Right photo shows what Cain secured as a picture of himself floating toward the ground. » Lspyrlght Chicago Herald ami Examiner.

SPAIN REMOVES REGAL RELICS Madrid, — (UP) —Many regal relics of the monarchy have been removed from the palace of the “Congreso do In* Oiputados" where the Cortes Con.tltuyentes is in session, yet others remain. The big statute of Isabel 11, which ; was in the conference room, has been removed, even though it was Isabel herself who ordered the building of the palace now used to, draw up a Republican constitution in. She was the grandmother of j Hon Alfonso XIII. But the statues of Their Most [Catholic Majesties Ferdinand and Isabelle, who laid the foundation ! for united Spain, look down upon I the deputies as they distused the I j constitution for the nation. And the’ 'mace-beaters, on both sides of the, presidential rostrum, still wear the; red velvet Jackets and with the insignias of the Kingdoms iof Castille and Leon —exactly as I macebearers dressed in the 15th 1 Century, when Isabella ruled. MONROE NEWS Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Hahnert, Mr. John McKean and Margaret ; Dulin attended the Spanish Amor[lean reunion at Ossiati, Indiana on , Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. H. E. FOrrar visit'd with friends in Geneva and j Bryant on STTnday. Mr. and Mrs. Menno Roth and: son spent Sunday afternoon in Bluffton the guests of Mr. and Mrs. j iliarry Klopfenstein. Miss Frances McPherson a nurse: of Grant Hospital at Columbus. 1 Ohio, was visiting at the home of j her unde Mr. John Floyd for a few idays. Mis. Ora Beakler and children jof Osborne, Ohio are visiting at ! the home of the Scherer sisters. | Miss Carrie Scherer, Elizabeth Scherer and Miss Jesse Dickerson for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. John Crist spent! Ahe week-end at Winchester, the)

guests of Mr. anil Mrs. A. D. Crist. Mr. and Fred Watkins of Upland spent the week-end with Mr. and | Mrs. Forest Ray. Mrs. Forest Lake of Decatur spent Monday with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. James E. Kessler entertained at Sunday dinner their sons and their families, Mr. and Mrs. O. I). Kessler and daughteh; Evelyn and Phyllis of Angola, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Kessler of Hunt ' mond Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kessler and son Dorwin of Fort Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. John Amstutz and family of Fort Wayne visited Mr. Ira Wagoner on Sunday afteruuen. Mr. Grover Sells of Bradford, Ohio called on relatives and friends in Monroe on Saturday. Miss Creo Crist of Port Waynei spent the we r k-eml at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Crist. I Mr. William Pitttnger of Bradford, Ohio, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. I James A. Hendricks, i Mr. Harlan Osterman of Berne, And., spent the week-end with relatives and friends. I Lewis Hendricks returned home lon Sunday from a two weeks vacation spent at Fort Wayne witli Mr. | and Mrs. Harry Kessler and son j IJprwin. j Mrs. Jennie Rainer of Decatur spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Forest Andrews. Mr. E. J. Fricke spent the week end with his family. Mr. S. C. Sanders of Camden. Ohio spent the week-end with Mrs. S. C. Sanders and family. Announcement 20 Years Old Augusta, Me., —QJ.R)—Mrs. John I,a Flam me recently received a lel--1 ter from her sister, Mrs. Fred Pooljer, of Fairfield, 22 miles from here. :The letter announced the birth of 'a daughter. Investigation revealled that the letter was mailed 20 'years ago. The ‘baby girl" is' now a nun in the Jackman convent. Stowawak Sentenced Havre —<U.R) — Stephen Dubos, *23. a New York student, who sailed on the He de France as a stowjawav, has been sentenced to two months in prison for embarking l [clandestinely.

PLANES FACE RIGID TESTS BY NAVY MEN Anacostia Section Kept Busy Trying Out New Models Washington, —(UP)—If you want to know what can be done with an airplane, the Navy Department recommends its flight rest section at Anacostia, 1). C., just across the Potomac from heie. Here a group of flying experts, two aeronautical engineers and a crew of mechanics conduct the strenuous ‘ests on all new aviation developments submitted to the Navy By the nature of their work they p. obably come to know as much a ; bout the behavior of planes as any group in the' country. During the past year, according to Rear Admiral William A. Moffett, Aeronautics bureau chief, tests have been conducted on 42 different types of planes, including nine t'ighte.s 10 observation planes, six transports six patrol, or “flying boats" types, two bombers, four training types, one scouting plane and three miscellaneous craft. Old-Time Road Tests The tests, described by Moffett, resemble the old-time toad tests that were common in the early days of the automobile, but are infinitely more complex. Conducted sometimes at great altitudes, they escape public attention. All experimental machines, and the first plane of each production contract, are put thiough the Anacosta testing laboratory before being accepted, Moffett said. A new plane brought to tlie field is first flown by one of the contractor's pilots, just to prove it will leave the ground. Then it is turned over to the test section. The machine is then weighed to determine the center of gravity, and photographed. This done, the machine is ready for flight*'testing. The Navy pilot climbs in. A board equiped with paper on which to make notations and a specially deI signed chi onometric stop watch reI cording down to'tenths of a second I is strapped to his leg. Measured Course 1 lie plane takes off, it flies back

| What Shall I Give 1 | Them To Eat? t S ' I i £ 5c jyc THREE meals a day—36s days in a year—what a lot *fj of meals to plan—to cook—to serve! pR I jfi And that isn’t all of it. You have to buy food for ffi g those meals. Meat. Groceries. Vegetables. Fruits. * 1 A big job! Not only does it take careful buying jfi to keep within your food budget, but ingenuity to I vary your menus so that they are nourishing, yet ® free from motonv. ’ However, you can simplify this feeding job bv p reading the advertisements that feature food pro- W ducts. In these times, food advertisements are most uni complete in information regarding the price of the p product, its quality, its health value and its uses. jjjj Often the reading of the one advertisement can furnish you with ideas—not only for dinner tonight, but £ for your breakfast tomorrow, and luncheon the day Uti after. j| How .often you say, “What shall I give them to §? eat?” Read the advertisements and you’ll find the answer. $ Decatur Daily Democrat 1 |SS -

and forth over a measured course to determine the maximum, the minimum and landing speeds, and to calibrate the air speed meter. These tests concluded, the plane is ready for its climb test. 111 these tests the plane is brough close to the ground and the stop watch started. The machine is shot up at stead yspead, the pilot recording his -readings until the service , ceiling is reached. Similarly during tlie descent, he records the maximum speeds St varying altitudes. Still more complicated are the | higher altitude tests for the small j high-powered flighting planes. At (a temperature of approximately 40 I degrees below zero he not only must j record with unerring accuracy the * adings of seven instuements every two minutes but must constantly regulate the mixture control of the engine and he amount of oxygen he breathes. By the time these tests have been concluded, both machine and pilot have probably gone through every test that might arise in actual service. o — John Paul Jones Portrait Given to College . Williamburg, Va. — (UP) — The' fiist memorial to John Paul Jones j founder of (he United States Navy and a Virginian by adoption, is his ; Portrait donated to William and ! Mary College by Charles 11. Taylor I l of Boston Globe. The neglected old Jones home still stands in Fredericksburg Va., j near the railway depot. Today the home is used as a grocery. John Paul Jones came to Fredericksburg in 1760. His brother, \ William Paul, is buried there. o — Harris Ends Shaw Biography Nice— (U.R> — Frank Hlirris, veteran American author t has finished liis biography of Shaw despite his 1 physical weakness or 75 years, and | the Imok is to be published in New York next autumn. Shaw \yrote a veijy witty introduction of 8,0001 words advising Harris how Shaw! would write a biography of Shaw, j o- ( Eastman Donation Accepted Paris (U.R; The George Eastman $1,000,000 donation to estab-; I lisli a free, dental clinic here has 1 been formally accepted by the De-| ■ partment of the Seine. The con-l ■ tract was signed by Edouard RenI aid, Prefect of the Seine, and otla- i er officials. According to plans,) work of building the clinic will I : start at once. 1

INDUSTRIALISTS WILL DISCUSS THEIR PROBLEMS I Annual Institute Opens at Silver Ray, N. Y. Today Silver Bay, N. Y—< UP)—lndus trial leaders of eastern and mid- i western states met here for the annual 10-May Silver Bay Industrial j Institute today. More than a score of authorities will take part in the discussions, ini luding Prof. W. C. Lytle, of New York University; Bird Schultz of the New York Stock Exchange; J.D. Brown, of Princeton University, and Dr. Mary Crawford of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Plant operation and management will be the theme of discussion. The program is divided into four major sections —supervisors, plant training, personnel and smaller plants j The last named division will be! the subject of five day joint conference. Officials of the Institute said it will tie the first time in the nation’s industrial history that the j smaller plants, which employ more! | than 60 per cent of all labor, hold j a conference to discuss problems of particular significance to them. The importance of plant operation | and management efficiency is j stressed by Charles R. Towson, In- i stitute secretary. He said that the

Wake Up Your Liver Bile —Without Calomel

And You’ll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin* to Go If you feel sour and sunk and the world looks punk, don’t swallow a lot of salts, mineral water, oil, laxative candy or chewing gum and expect them to make you suddenly sweet and buoyant and full of sunshine. For they can’t do it. They only move the bowels and a mere movement doesn't get at the cause. The reason for your down-and-out feeling is your liver. It should pour out two pounds of liquid bile into your bowels daily.

PAGE FIVE

fact American industry is beginning to realize more definitely than >ver before the necessity for "getting dowm to brass tacks” in every phase of these two branches is indiiated by the broad scope of the Institute’s program this year. Employment, wages and stabilization of employment will he among the major personnel division problems discussed by Prof. Lytle, Brown, Dr. Crawford, Shultz, C. S. Coler, Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company; W. E. Yeomans, Merchants Association of New Yoi-k; G. E. Sanford, General Electric Company; Grover C. Brown Bethlehem Steel Corporation, and others. Plant trainng problems will be discussed by Frank Cushman and C. F. Klinefelter, chief and assistant chief respectively of the federal training and industrial service Washington I). C. Industrial concerns of New York Chicago, Philadelphia, Rochester, N. Y., Buffalo, N. Y„ Springfield, Vt. Hartford, Conti.; New Brunswick. N. J.; Pittsburgh, I’a.; Dayton, O.; Kokomo, Indiana, and Boston, among others, are represented. Mrs. J. N. Fristoe and son True i Fristoe who have been at Winona Lake, visited in this city Monday. 666 LIQUID OR TABLETS Relievts a Headache or Neuralgia in 30 minutes, checks a Cold the first day, and checks Malaria in three days. 666 Salve for Baby’s Cold.

If this bile is not flowing freely, your food doesn't digest. It just decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up your stomach. You have a thick, bad taste and your breath is foul, skin often breaks out in blemishes. Your head aches and you feel down and out. Your whole system is poisoned. It takes those good old CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS to get these two pounds of bile flowing freely and make you feci “up and up/’ They contain wonderful, harmless, gentle vegetable extracts, amazing when it comes to making the bile flow freely. , But don’t ask for liver pills. Ask for Carter** Little Liver Pills. Look for the name Carter’* Little Liver Pills on the red label. Resent * substitute.