Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 214, Decatur, Adams County, 10 September 1931 — Page 7

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Jims split | ‘‘■JPin GAMES SlylH ,H Mm’H - W 1 1; issue today but there t’S W to -he popularity ■ " barbell games )()■ reliefehilW^—’ - yesterday„l mu mpluyed . W- ,- between the New York ~„| ' •‘"' l '” l ' , ' r ‘T^K.313.4- 1 - „,n !■ i !■: u.l vtrtually' [■ . ' e-eortl H ”■'•• x ”" York ' Brooklyn Kobins. ti oimpli »' ' illkees. * 'll Gomez, held iMß'v-- ■ ■ ■" 11 l,iis a "' l four K r . ■ even :( '•: hl' ’" to 0 1 ... !■,; ' I . —’ll only , with 11l four tlines . I-- ii 1- d t ub ..one from the (Kb 449. | - . - li- dub-d b-.i ' | t , ; - vv lie - '• H^Kd. -I' -he Atm-r- , UHun i ■ bl world ■ six ' :■-> 111.- fourth fill day He "inning run H. nth inning. II- nr Meme and the ~ H. - it Meine al , only Ims while Lloyd mi dro\ e B [AT MEN lien' i ■-« fat yon are or nib Lot. to get out and aor miles If you will ' ' of lx I'll -i hen in "f hot water every fur I nw-ks and ent out ami fatty meats - will f-- I .. good so onerand '!m ms- for activity will ■n. ,n -1.-: von Will immensea dmlv walk of several and lose fat. Mriiili- yi.ii !..-ing fat yon will ■ gallium -i-mfs' in emlnram-e amldn-'i- Your skin will grow ! and vour eves w ill sparkle I ■it th" im,.,| ~|th that Kruschen ■lust try one 85<- Ixittle of Krus■m Salts: it will last you 4 After you have taken one y l(l lh " "l-t um chair won’t hold ' ■ any nmre you’ll want to be ■ and doing you'll enjoy work — ■ill sleep like a top and probably ■* years longer. (Set Kruschen ■ vntshall s t ut Rate or any live P 8 * 1 111 America with the und that you must be joy■fr satisfied or money back. ■* R. Daniels of Richmond Hill. J writes: After 2. bottles of 1 g techen - I v <‘ removed 3 inches ■» my belt, feel 25% more ac- ’ ■ ’ mind is clearer, eruptions I “’•Ppeared. Am 46 yrs. old F?" 1 yrs- younger. 1 get up F hn , E W. Kruschen sure is yit!'

17 Ihindon I (R«. U.S. Pm. Os.) , is the one word you should never forget when ordering coal. Try it once and you’ll always insist on it. Dundon Coal Sa I money in the long run. That’s because it holds fire so much longer, yet makes so much more heat. Dundon is clean, blocky, uniform, carefully prepared ‘ “nd closely inspected. Wt oaljß DECATUR LUMBER CO., Dncatar, Ind. WILLIAMS EQUITY EXCHANGE, WBEaat Station. Ind. , CLINE LUMBER CO., Gene?., Ind.

j two runs. Yesterday's hero: Charley Rootlof the Chicago Cubs who defeated the White Sox, 3 to 0, in a charity ■ game. Root allowed only six hits with only one runner reaching third. He also led the attack with 1 one single and a double to drive in all of his teams runs. o • 1 MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS ' Following averages compiled by 1 the United ■ Press include games played Wednesday, September 9th: 1 Player. Club O AB R H Pct. ' Ruth, Yankees 128 481 135 183 .380 Simmons. Ath 114 459 98 174 .379 ’ Morgan. Ind. 122 433 85 155 ,35s ' Gehrig, Yanks 136 545 147 193 .354 ' Cochrane, Ath 113 438 83 152 .347 o HOME RUNS < Gehrig, Yankees 42 Ruth. Yankees 40 Klein. Phillies 31 Averill, Indians 29 Ott, Giants 28 Russia Turns Eyes J Toward Arctic Regions Moscow, Sept. f.— (U.R) —With every day the Soviet Union is be- - coming more Arctic-conscious, it 1 is engaged upon a grandiose "con- I quest of the North," which has 1 touched the imagination of its people. A huge slice of the polar region. 1 north of European and Asiatic Russia, is considered Soviet soil ami l tht- government has assumed full I responsibility for exploring and ex -1 plotting that region. The Soniets possess the “north ernmost human colony” on Franz Joseph Land. They have established a series of radio and meteorological stations from Wrangel’s Island to Franz Josef Land. Now an announcement has been made that the "northernmost electric station" soon will be built in the Murmansk region. Experiments are also under way for growing vegetables in the Arctice reaches of the country, Mexican Mayor Scores Tale-Bearing Americans Juarez. Mev„ Sept. ”, —(U.R> -Americans who cannot hold their liquor, become involved in trouble in Juarez and then return to El Paso to tell a story of “innocents abused" were scored by Baltazar Adame, Juarez mayor. "As acting police judge of the city, I personally know of each I case that comes before the court." Ihe said. "And it is not difficult to determine whether drinks arrested by officers were intoxicated the night before court. "Os the thousands of tourists and El Pasoans who come to Juarez, there is perhaps two who will receive what they call abusive treatment. They return to the United States and tell all manner of tales, none of which will bear investigation. "To hear them tell it, they come to Juarez to visit the mission, the market and observe the ’quaint native life,’ and have been dry personally all their lives." COMMISSION DEFIES LESLIE; BUYS TRUCKS ICON I’lNl El) FROM I'YGE ONE) were obtained from the Studebak-er-Pierce Arrow Corporation, South Bend, for $41,819.50. Eight Chevrolet trucks were purchased from the W. A. Bowen .Company, Indianapolis, for $5,372. Eight one and onehalf ton trucks were purchased from the Federal Truck Corporation. Detroit, for $7,510. and eight Ford trucks from the Thirtieth and Central Sales Company, Indianapolis, for $5,463.36. Other equipment purchased by the commission brought its aggregate expenditure to $211,324.36. Old trucks were traded in on the purchases, based on an option by Attorney General James M. Ogden that such action was legal.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1931.

TEXAS COUNTY STARTS WORK Houston, Tex., Sept. L (U.R>—An | oil well Hi e that has raged for two I years near Morerna, in Rumania, I will be treated to baptism by water, after all the tricks of expert fire fighters have tailed. H. L. Patton, Houston teaming i contractor, recently turned fire tighter, will play a leading part in ) the attempt to subdue the wild ! Rumanian well, killer of 25 men. ' Patton will go to Rumania with j .Myron M Kinley, eldest of the famous Kinley brothers first fighting team of Tulsa, Okla. It was Patton who recently gave a successful demonstration of the theory that water will not burn at Overton, in the East Texas field. After watching crews of expert fire fighters labor for 18 days in a vain attempt to quench the blazing Vitek Oil Company’s No. 5 Eaton, Patton stepped in and turned the trick in 59 minutes. Patton and an assistant rigged a dragline and crane apparatus and inserted a tool intojhe well tubing. Then a “mud hog” pump of 10,000 gallons capacity was connected by means of the tool and the well slowly began to fill with water. Fifty-nine minutes later a puff of steam arose from the well where smoke and flame had billowed a moment before. The well began to flow water and the oil fire had been extinguished. Because of his work at Patton was selected by Kinley to help in fighting the Morenia tire. —_o_ Insurance Company Fights Auto Death ALBANY’. Tex. (U.R)- -Attorneys tor the Pilot Life Insurance Company of North Carolina are contesting a claim of $25,000 on the death of Frank E. Whitney, fatally injured when his machine left the highway near here, on the ground that his death was "a willful act of suicide." Whitney’s coupe left a curve and crashed through a guard rail on the highway Feb 5. He was taken unconscious from the burning wreckage and died in a Stamford hospital March 27. Two hours after the car.left the road. Whitney’s father, E. E. Whitney. 65. was found shot to death in the garage of his home. A coroner ruled that he shot himself. / The son left a $25,000 life insurance policy to his wife. A clause made it void in ease of suicide within a year after the i issuance of the policy. ROAD BONDS ARE REJECTED CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) should be disapproved. "It is therefore considered, ordered. and decreed that the bond issues be and the same are disapproved and said bond issues are disallowed by this board". The orders were signed by James Showalter, chairman of the state board. A hearing on the remonstrances against the two bond issues was held here August 25 by Ray Shank special representative of the state board. No Word On Bernstein No word has been received on the request to issue bonds for the resurfacing of Second street, Marshal street. Gloss and Park streets, petitioned for under the name of the Bernstein road. Mr. Showalter was here last week and took charge of the case and made a trip over the streets. He found some objections with the petition, but did not make a decision in the matter. o Great California Library The Hisner War Memorial library is at Lelnnd Stanford university. A building on the campus houses the library, which Is the most complete of this kind in the United States and perhaps In the world. The building wtis opened | Soon after the World war. Addi j tlons to the collection of bonks are j eonstanlJy being ntnde. o SERUM RUSHED TO ILL WOMAN (CONTINUED FORM PAGE ONE) night. -Death had been averted. “I had given up hope yesterday." said Mrs. Nelson/ from her hospital cot today. "But now I am determined to get well. I know the serum will do it. J feel better already." Comment of Andrew Nelson the husband, caine as he and four of his children stood waiting at the airport here when the big silverwinged trl-motored plane glided down. "Thank God that mother is living in the 20th century," he exclaimed, tears in/ his eyes. Nelson, a carpenter who has been without regular work for two years, and the four children rode in the police squad car to the I hospital and could announced the ■ arrival of the cortln with a cheery "Here it is, mother, you’ll get well ' now." “Thank everybody," Mrs. Nelson

ment certainly had averted Mrs. Nelson’s death for the time being. The shipment, he said, would last about a week. Before the supply Is exhausted, he hopes to have more. The Buffalo laboratory was the only place in the country where cortin, made from the adrenal glands of cattle, was available. Dr. Hartman spent most of yesterday distilling the extract. The 200 centimeters ho obtained required glands of 900 cattle. Addison’s disease usually proved fatal until the gland extract was evolved as treatment. Like insulin ini the treatment of diabetes, use of cortin cannot be discontinued. Patients treated with it improve only as long as the treatment is maintained. Bottle containing the precious extract were handed to a United Press reporter in Buffalo, who placed them on an American Airways plane at 2 p.m. EST. yesterday. The Nat plane to which they were transferred started for Chicago at 3:48 p.m. and arrived here at 7 p.m. Addison's disease affects the suprarenal capsules (glands believed to furnish an internal secretion which increases blood pressure.) ! The progress of the disease is one of gradual weakening and lowering i of the blood pressure. The skin'; darkens, flesh wastes away and tin- patient sinks into death unless’

v. rI / ■ U /Bl ’ 1 / nF I® L V J Abooklct 0f24 leaves I 1 of imported cigarette paper atyy vvl | K ' * Il Jr tached to each sack /y 1 NOW... miu+. Tk rettc paper —l5O ISr li r ■ leaves to the book — i i t is®. I GENUINE ’ I “BulCDurham TOBACCO ssva »« jK formerly O I ROLL Your OWN! I Genuine ’’BULL” DURHAM Tobacco at 5$ marked the entrance of my father, Percival S. Hill, into the Tobacco business. For 14 years he was President of The American Tobacco Company. The fine quality and popularity of ’’BULL” DURHAM were always subjects of great pride to him. Therefore, it is particularly gratifying to us to offer this important saving and service to the American public at this time. / I J I * * GEORGE W. HILL ■ tn. ATO mi ‘ PRESIDENT. THE AMERICAN TOBACCO CO.

Wreck of Kaye Don’s Speedboat ..... ’ - This photogra] h was taken a few seconds before Kaye Don’s Miss English 11. fastesl speedboat In the world, went to (he bottom at Detroit during the Harn s-.'orth Trophy race. The craft, disqualified by healing the starling pur by seven seconds, overturned on the first lap and saifk. Don and his crew, pitched into the water, escaped iihhurt.

murmured, her eyes lighting up. "I can hardly believe everyone would go to so much trouble for i me." Nelson, tYio, had praise for the I kinjdness of those who had collab- [ orated in bringing the remedy. He I said: 1 “If it had not been for Dr. Mar-

| tin. Hie air lines, Un- police, the, hospitals, and the United Press, mother surely would have died. I had no money. There was nothing I could do.” . Dr. Torpin said the aerial shipthe cortin treatment is administered. net the Hanlt —Crane a -nme '

TUCSON CLAIMS OLD AGE RECORD Santa Fe, N. M., Sept. S.—(U.R) Disdainful of all things modern, Santa Feans at last have had their civic pride aroused because Tucson, Ariz., is trying to claim it is more of an antique than is Santa Fe. All citizens are reviewing history to disprove Tucson’s claim that it is Hie eldest city in the United States. A recent edition of the Tucson Citizen quotes findings of Dr. Alexander Craig, published in 1907. The Craig article says that "General Coronado raised the flag of Spain over tile little Indian village of Tueson in 1552 and laid the cornerstone of that first mission with his own hands.” As his authority, he recites a time worn document of vellum j signed by Ferdinand and Isabella. I This paper is said to lie in the li-1 brary at Washington. St. Augustine, Fla., claims to have, been founded in 1565. The date of the establishment of Santa Fe is placed all the way from 1542 to | 1615. Dr. Andrew Douglass, of the] I University of Arizona, has been seeking to prove that Santa Fe was .founded about 1614. 1 Santa Feans who know their his-

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tory contemptuously tell Tucson to be its age. C. F. Coan, New Mexico . historian, says Coronado came through southern Arizona in 1542 without ever visiting New Mexico or Arizona again in an official capacity. So how could he have been in Tucson in 1552? Amused Santa Feans claim Tucson will have to think up a better one than that. A Cave of Wonder* An ancient eave In the Fairy grottoes, near the old Thiirlnginn city of SantfeJd on the River Saale in Germany, lias been opened to tourists. The cave contains many stalactites and stalagmites, some of (lie former being more than six feet long ami almost ns thin as a knitting needle. The grottoes were mines for centuries, a source of alum-bearing slate. The mines were abandoned about 150 years ngo.

<z> There is Economy in price only where there is protection in quality and service. W. H. Zwick & Son FUN I'TRA L DIR ECTORS Mrs. Zwick, Igidy Attendant Funeral Home Ambulance Service 514 N. Second Tel. 303 and 61