Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 203, Decatur, Adams County, 27 August 1931 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

FALL'S PRISON REPORTED GOOD ' Santa Fe, N. M., Aug. 27. —(U.R)— The New Mexico state penitentiary, in which Albert B. Fall, former secretary of the interior, is now serving a sentence, was characterized as being in ’tine shape' in the annual report tiled with Governor Arthur Seligman by the board of penitentiary commission era. The report was filed with the governor since Fall entered the pj'ison to serve his sentence. “■The report recommends that 4pme plan be adopted to obtain employment for discharged and paroled convicts. The report shows an average of 507 prisoners during the ye.tr, with ■ a maximum of 559. The average ;

A Clear Skin is glorious, .be happy, too, with New Strength in the Blood M Surprise yourself and bo the envy of others . . . look better . . . feel better! Blood is Life!! HP* I Build more red cells in the Blood—thence will J come Sturdy Health'.'.'. Countloss thousands know | this to be a fact. Just take S.S.S. and prove SgK. it yourself. You, too, will enjoy your food . . . yH have firmer flesh . . . sleep sounder . . . your nerves will be calmer . . . your skin will clear up n .. . you will possess a greater resistance to infec- F tion and disease! S.S.S. is the world’s best blood i medicine. It is composed of freshly gathered medicinal roots and herbs—a gift from Mother Nature. — Successful for over 100 years. It works . JL safely .. . surely ... swiftly! Make a note . of your condition today—then compare A clear skin Gkji the difference six to eight weeks hence. comes from t S.S.S. makes you feel like yourself again. within I S&S, Purifies and Enriches the Blood

I yQWT»»V,* I <ll —■» mo . xm—L I_ILJ .. tr« ■ »«nwW'W*WV-v«HßW»W«<*w*>«awr I raaBBHBM£a M*■■ I■ _ . . 8S- BOY’S JACQUARD ; ' ~ - GOLF HOSE H • patterns. a !,«? ~~ sizes. Regular 39c y< *** ,; ?’4 ftutS values. Special Start .your boy in right this year. He will need new clothes to keep in step with his classmates and we’re here to furnish the entire outlay. Bring him in Saturday and be all reftdy when the school bell rings. special Boy’s Brown Cordn,v> -a ■ <>. ■ ■ rov Knickers, all sizes | Boys School Suits @ . Q | ALL WITH TWO TROUSERS sOU Either Two I.ongies or Two Knickers SUITS- with two 4 plus Knickers ‘ W” $5.95 up I®W , r EAT T f-• \4 I- < Just received, new SUITS —with 2 long trousers bM -4 patterns, new shades. $8.95 up W ® 98c SPEClAL—Bearskin brand Stockings in both black | and brown, a'l sizes b’C tU* Overalls. 220 denim. Blue ( hambry Shirts Dress Shirts and Dress Caps, new patfull size, triple shtch- sizes Bto 14'/> areal Blouses, sizes Bto terns and shades, all cd. al I sizes, priced 14*/ 2 , fu‘l cut and fast sizes, a real buy at special at value at colors, special at 79c 49c 50c 89c Others at 49c BOY S LONGIES BOY’S KNICKERS with the new wide waistband and 22 inch bottom , new patterns and colors. Special at A ” 1 plus ’ in aH s,zes and co!ors $1.95 $1.39 and $1.69 Boy’s Outing Boy’s Oxfords, in new & I com P os *t*on varsity patterns, leather t sole, a real buy soles gnd heels, all sizes oglQjit $1.69 $2.95 M B.„d G, m jotifvT’Myeu-Co-Irvc 1* ms 98c ' ,c ‘ o^^ u o iy^ l^lA T A r D 59c

jis 30 more daily than during the | 18th fiscal year and the greatest I ; number ever housed in the insti- j tut ion. Convicts’ earnings for the year I were $37,467. Prisoners are en- | gaged in 69 occupations at the penitentiary. Fall, however, on account of his ill health, does no work, but j remains in the hospital. The institution sold 1,750,000 bricks and tile, made in their brickyards by i the prisoners, for $27,087. Average daily cost of feeding i prisoners was 22 cents a day, or $80.38 a year, or a total cost for i prisoners and 24 employes of $42,772. 0 POPULATIONS’ CENTER SHIFTS (CUNTINUKD PAGE ONE ward movement has clung to the 39th parallel of latitude is remarkable." the census director said. In I

| terms of latitude and longitude, he’ ' pointed out. the 1930 center is locat|ed in latitude 39 degrees, 3 min--1 utes. 45 seconds north, longitude 87 degrees, 3 minutes and ti seconds I west. In 1790 the center of population was about 23 miles east of Baltimore. By 1890 it was 20 miles east ot' Columbus, Indiana. Since that time it has moved slowly westward in that state. SUSPECT SENT TO WISCONSIN (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) which he had jested. A woman. I who had read newspaper accounts! of the fugitive, told police a man! answering his description had beg-1 ged her for food. Kenosha police, who had trailed him to Greensburg. I Ind., were notified while local of- : iicials took him into custody. As soon as Miller indicated he i would waive extradition, he was l started on the journey back to the scene of the crime. o Bandits Obtain $26,000 Burlington. Mass., Aug. 27—(U.R) —Two highwaymen, firing several .shots, waylaid, an automobile carrying a bank treasurer on the I outskirts today and escaped with nearly $26,0(0. o — \ olunteers Fight Fires Sac’-amento, Calif. Aug. 27. (U.R) Five * '.ou and volunteers battled ‘ive forest fires in no. the. n Cali-! fornia today, barricading the flames j to prevent further destruction of j property. The most serious fire was in Lake I county, where valuable summer! homes, mining property and ranch-1

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, AUGUST *27, 1931.

es were ruined as the flames spread toward the Nevada state line. A SIO,OOO home in Carmel Valley owned by Samuel G. Blythe, maga-. zine writer, was destroyed by a brush fire that swept up the slopes of Mount Toro. o Net Player Is Killed Thorntown, Aug. 27.— (U.R) —Archie Hill, 21. captain of the Thorntown high school football and basi ketball teams last season, was kill!ed instantly in an auto crash near i here today. The auto- in which he was riding with End Robbins, 20, I and Wilbur Huber, 18, also of ' Thorntown, < .’.l.ded head-on with ! another. Robbins was injured seriously. __— - -o Measuring Temperatures The bureau of standards snya that high temperatures are measured by means ot thermocouples. ; , optical pyrometers, pyrometric coties. etc., and that temperatures ' below tlie freezing point of liquids are measured by the gas thermometer. n - - Famous French Sailer Herve Riel was u Breton sailor who saved the French squadron, when beaten at < ape hl Hogue and flying before the E'.glish. by looting it into the harbor of St. Malo (May ICi'2). He -was so unconscious f the service he had rendered that, when asked to mime his reward !ie begged for a whole day's holiday to see his wife. Browning in ISO? wrote the poem “Herve Riel ’’ Dead.y F.sh It is generally believed that the slunk is the most d ingerous fish. Inn tlie barracuda, n large, savage, pike-li! e fish of the tropica) sens, is more apt to attack the shark. It is almost ns large as a twelve-year-old I oy and its mouth is such that tiny bite Is likely to result In iwirnnem Inii.’v

FINAL PLANS £ ARE MADE FOR | TEACHERS’ MEET | (CONTINUED FORM PAGE ONE) P Ernst Worthman, Preble township; M Daniel Scherry, Kirkland township; B T. R. Noll. Washington topnship; B Orlen S. Fortney. St. Marys town- B ship; I). D. Habegger. Blue Creek B township; Noah Rich, Mon.oe town B ship Edwin Beer, French township; B A. F. Baker, Hartford township; Ed E Sta’ily, Wabash township; Charley’® Abnet. Jefferson township; Dr. Burt gj Mangold, Decatur and Vilas Si hind- B lev, Berne. B Besides all teachers, all persons M interested in the Institute subjects B are cordially invited to attend the B sessions, it was pointed out by Sup B erintendent Striker. >B All Adams county teachers are B asked to record their censes with ■ the County Superintendent r n Sep B tember 3. Unless* this is done, ’he B teaching cont act is not valid. A w fee of $1.75 will be charged all B teachers who teach in Adams conn B ty. Teachers of other counties also K are eligible to attend the Adams I county Inst tute. provided they pay I tlie registration sea. I COURT HOUSE | Real Estate Transfers ( B Paul R. Castle et ux. in lot 827. B Decatur to Belle Liehtensti Ig r io. 1$ SI.OO. E Anti-Typhoid Serum Ferdinand Widal, a native cf Al E giers and professor of the Paris sac- B ulty, collaborated with ('haute- fl messe in his early work on preven H live vaccinations against typhoid it fever -iml made Ids mark by Ids K discovery of bacterial agglutination B in 18:15, and its apidication in tlie K diagnosis of typhoid. Sir Almretli B Edward Wright, professor of path ■ olog.i. made typhoid vaccination Igi praeticali <■ in IXPii mid 1-97. inovti- ■ lilting ov.r t’.iixi soldiers in India B in isl • o ■ Dietary Impotsibil.ty An applicant for tlie dole had Ids , claim questioned by our local po lice sergeant on the ground that I lie was an owner of Imuses ala though lie has received no rent from them for months past “(it course I own two Imuses.” retorted the indignant one "hut I can’t eat them—l ain’t a white nut.”—Bui ! let in Sydnev NSW j I • o I Lengthy Tapel.n- w Stretching Hom Newfoandlnnd to I the Azores, :i tnpel'.ne 1.2(44 miles ? long was reeled out recently from g a cable stemnei to obtain an as- I curate measure of the distance I traveled between the lira hinds. I The lapeline was a fine stil-l piano I wire. | o ■ River Made Lai.e Reel l-'ooi Ink - in Tennessee is I eatisod liy a change in tlie course I of the Mississippi river, n part of g the formei bed separated from the I present channel of the river in the I fousi of a lake. It is located in the ex*eme northwest corner of Ten I nessee nd part of its urea also i« I in the state of Kentm 'tv ■ O B Georgia's First Cotton Cotton was first planted in Geor- I gia in 1757 from seed brought from I the Bahama islands. The crop was 1 planted by John Earle on the Is- I land of Skidnwny. which is located I off the const of Georgia mid lie- I tongs to the state I Cannot Break This Mirror A noiihreakalile mirror Invented I by a Gernmn .a-ientlst Is made of * wood, staked in a caustic alkali I and tlien put through a process of I Immersion in metals nnd chemlculs. E witli final rubbing wit'll a piece of I lead tin or zinc until it takes on - I brilliant tmiisi> E o — I Antonyms Etymologically the words •■friend’’ I and "fiend" are antonyms. They I come from Anglo Saxon verbs I meaning "to love" and “to hate." , ■ respectively, and me related to J words of the same meaning in I other Teutonic languages l Plants' “Signatures" A pseudo-science stningely mixed I with theology. Is the doctrine of I I lie sigmitum of plants, that Is. :| (he belief that for every Illness I there Is some herb with the power I to cure It and that tlie herb hours | the sign or mark by which It may I l>e known against what particular 'I Hines It mm lv. madled ? o I opus ilims ioq iq qsa.w 11 null |>4iq qi|.w tuaql |tu Spuuq aqi li UO4J supiJtS I|S|IIJIIA .lAolllej OJ, I (j iu.iva saaotusA, pJw'! O I Makes You Lose Unhealthy Fat I Mrs. Ethel Smith, of Norwich,!l Conn., writes: "1 lost 16.1b5. with I my first bottle ot Kruschen. Being!l on night duty It was hard to sleep I days but now since I am taking|| Kruschen I sleep plenty, eat as I usual and lose fat too.” I To take off fat —take one half tea- I spoonful of Kruschen in a glass of I hot water every morning before!] breakfast—an 85 cent bottle lasts 4 1 weeks—Get it at Cutshall Cut Rate 19 Drug Co., or any drug store in Am- i erica. If this first bottle fails to j convince you this is the easiest.!] surest and safest way to lose fat I your money gladly returned. ’

I A SeasoivEf ,1 I Clcsui a Ss ?l | ONE SOLID WEEK OF BARGAINS I J A Drastic Clean-up of Me?ciiandisc Throughout I Our Store at Record-Bi caking Savings E I Men’s Oxfords for I Men's and Boa's Slip- I | Children’s All Wool H street and sport wear, H over Sweaters, New Bl Slip-over Sweaters in good wearing quality I fall patterns, all sizes | I red navJ ■ $1.95 J 97c y oi a v„™r'.97c I - aaMMGftetawPwnraßnw waaaayirr haiwnmm—- ■ I Boys School Shirts and Blouses, I I Mcns t l .; 25 J?*;oadcloth Shirts, ■ j 5 fast rotors oil «izes j I |p am white, solid colors and many ■ jml 47c | 5 , ' a ' tcrn “.'’ chc ” se fro ‘ n . 67 c I 1 70x80 !‘ art Wool B W omens and Misses B B noys All W oo| Peter Bankets in rose, blue I Rayon Panties and I | sizes ■ green, orchid, gold— B ... B B ,o Lit t colors ■ Fancy designs I B oomcrs I I full cut ■ 97c j 23c ,| j $1.47 I 136 inch Light and Dark B iH| p C Flannels, good quality, ■ X.y UsMMSVw a/£ UuVVljB fart / checks and stripes, M ~ H yard I / lit Bne rat *' " omens Dre ses, silk I IQp I /«JrJKII chillors, organdies, eyelet embroid-B m U cry end crepes—mostly all sizes inH S \ B *°’— va ’ ues U P to $7.00 H I wl 9 cr.i'drcns Fast Color ■ - 4© '*V. /j ■ 3 Dresses, sizes 7 to 14. in B X - »’• H J a large variety of mater- u —n- It- jTJ S tJ g la'ls and styles, regular 0 V B! H I $1 00 value M UL. 39c I Jill Womens Brtty IM TPBF ZffMRMm Bro-.m m-.l oth»r u we 1 known maxe Mer* B:ue Chambray ■ wash dresses, in [y wS Work Shirts, full cut, ■ I broadcloth, rayon H H — U triple stitched, all sizes fl / I linens, prints, all R all sixes fl U H s : zes “ 39c | V v • ■ lamcxram jkesswau fl - „ , «u 1 ! Cnodren-. 01 ’VeTY I I 36 inch Fast Co,or Prin * S 1“ | Hose, good wearing l| re 9 u ' ar 2Sc values — c 6 40-42 inch Pepperell B H stocking, all colors and BB colors ' y- rd Pillow Tubing, yard I I sizes, pair 19c H 17c || 16c M ■■■■hi i—■uimr — J Boys Sport Hose. 7-8 length, Ro - Vs Gym Shoes - heavv ‘ , ° rru ß ate<i I sizes 6! to 9'/z. fancy patterns ZUC rubber soles in sun tan “D,, and brown I til H Womens Dress Slin- | B Ladies Empress Eugenie pers. Pumps. Ox- H s X7' A W fords. Straps, in 0 B " 3tS Velvets and Fe!ts kg —. Qi patent, kid, fancy 3 an head sizes *AI r I t-immed. Cuban and B B r" v U . ITT gTITIMWt.L I «.(I« l—lMfi IMJCJ. AK7!W I™ 1 "TTSMMKiJ'c’rTOHMKffIWMOV ■EHnBMStaaHMB jjr *VISQUSHnK r ! One table of Remnants R B Childrens School Oxfords B B at low prices. Prints, | ■ Jnd St in bro wr. I I Mens and Boys AdjuSt ' Ginghams, Crepes and £2 “ u w ™ irn , SUks || Black, Smdked Elk and B| eb!e Fa " Caps ’ * ’ 3 | | Patent, sizes 7to 2 | | election to choose •om [ savings || 97c || 47 c *jfl i- w rRt wwnu - 9| MBBscanaMßaßeanaEaam BMHfIEWMRK •w’ M Women’s Silk Hose in J | Mens Work Shoes I Retan Uppers and Com- ■ all wanted colors, all B B B .u . ■ Biles || made by famous | portion Sole, shoe tha. S II manufacturer, Endi- | wi " Btand the wear I 23 c y cott-Johnson | s j | ■■ fl Buy and |jk | / M Unusual Save I 1 " Bargains