Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 18, Decatur, Adams County, 21 January 1930 — Page 3

I hat ■nioki Brought I Came To Stay I L ( l! , <>l stomach and |K j rouble Ended by. and Different ■ Medicine |H Hi *< ■ 'A ||g| •JWF* V MB /”* ifeipi; I 1 BRANNON only worked quick-j ■My «•»•• r.'sui's It ] , , Mr -, North “Months luive > weak kidneys have again. No K|. a'e. however light, pjois followed. Evon I i h -i< kened me. Hack had HS-- I could not find to K after I Ivo 'ijoki to the test had been .sol v-, r .d digh'.* ha' ulatever I liked with-' - discomfort. What 1 those aihes -KA- -leeping fine and i rest< d and K." i- ■' <1 in Decatur at the ; and by all di all towns i section. k? serious. Even mildJ: _• nuts. Remembet i 'H.|) COMPOUND amazing re the':- aids of cold sui’.er- ’. These table are | s.iii.e high quality as ■

Wednesday - LIFE INSURANCE Day lill'National - Thnit vVcck I r . . X i Manage your money - Don’t let it manage you I f < «r i ■»“«*’ II ' 10l IB" I R '/ ' *’*' 1 X 'Ob *- I ' ; 4 '*-rJ rhe insuied nan n:ay «ell ask Jkath “W lte ei; thv stir,><? ’because he leaves the world I WV ■•'•■ >• • y S XX ’■■■'• ’ n< "' : ' : 11:11 h' s conscience is clear and ihat his family will not suffer through want. I >z X i X. ?•• r-fe insurance is :; protection and a secure investment. Shrewd men of today plan to x, jr Jt p?' i\'c Thrift b” laving a c ’de a little of (heir income to meet insurance premiums. I•■ ® B ■ I • 1 CP I . . The Banks Listed Below Will Be Glad To Assist You. Benjamin Franklin it n rr - ■»- The Peoples Loan & Trust Co. First National Bank - Old Adams County Bank Number four of a series of advertisements published by the Decatur Banks in the observance of Thrift Week.

AUTOMOBILE IS VICTOR JFTEF MANY YEARS * Kansas City Harness Factcry Going Out of Business Ktuptn City, Mo., ,ian. 21—(UP) I The aiilomchlle age naa at tan icaugiit up with tlime pioneer KanIsa’ City btiMlriesH men and they I hav ■ dei tiled to tl.siiand a iinslm “s I that his been a landmark her foi 1 he past half century. The "s .io which i< being col - jdvelel by F ire it-llvlinrelcb Warner Hirness <o:vpai:y ts nit belu; I advert sod heuvtly in th- dlspla? K tdumns of n w pa m is. it may las a year, John J. I outer, senior me a 'her c.f th" firm said, mid really if ! peoply want I’l. lies, they will lock 1 lip t :e -hup, be add I. I Foster has been in the harh ;■ ' hus'ne h for the pa t 55 years, I starting work when he was 17 year 1 >'.l. II > was force ! tn quit school i .t that age beeanse his parens ; could nd longer afl’otd to lie p him ' in se'.toi 1. Adolph-II Inireich. -second senior member of the firm, is known "a< I the iv's! harness make.- in Kansas -City." and has been ti the buoineus | for 48 ye-rs. Tin ••junior" member of the conyiany has spent 41 years in the busin ss. He is George N, Wagner, The p .rtnei ship has lasted IJcr the past 23 years. \Vh"n Foste- star r d gr astir , ha.:neks and helping cutters and I stitchers he was paid |5 a month | and li.iat.l. Jtlisy <1:. r, thus'. Otten 1 the would be a dozen teams standing in the yard waiting for fittings. I And the harness maker of tins 1 1 :ys vs as-c eful a a ‘a'lor pi 1 reo that collars an I breastbunds iii'ted Whit the harness maker did-,' not. do Foster was forced to do 11 | that at the end of the first y ar he complei d Ivi three year appren- ' ice course and became a r egular | tradesman. Not long after Foster had started 'Ts own business Helmerich joined him and later was made a member lof th' firm. Kansas Cilyians of other decades i can :e r :iemb<r when “D'splay," the! I gall mt woeden ho.se was wheeled out in front of th? store every day. j | “Display” has serv d the paitne- i 1 ship een inually and one of the! agreements of 'Jhe :umd is that I ‘Display” will not he s-dd to the i iunk rtealet but stored away in'a* left dnd given rfiv annual coat ot ' ' paint Varnish each y ar.

DECATUB DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, JANUARY 21. 1930.

Alleged Baby Slayer Faces Chair ; K" Hmw> wi 1 z—- ■ Hht> 'Z ' ■ Rogers’ ' . ..i~» \ V STATE TROOPER . ■ ■■ t' v <.’ GLAt/rL HAY ‘<k: W kSW W.. X •’7l M wtlßlni. v ifll "-..i.. k— - -twwrthiiiri. .-iVijffiiwWkrtff.X-u " GEiVEViEi/C OE&acN SHowJ TttmTHY ROGERS GRAVE' NEAR' .AEGECON VJ JUDGE DDOYC PROSECUTOR BAM>MJ4

|TN FORTUNATE COINCM I' '. '!•; or co ]d blood <1 mur-1 i dr’ 0 ’v Gladys Mae Parks, the! “Sphinx Woman,” can tell the real! I story behind the death of her two, wards, Dorothy Rogers, aged 4, and two-year-old brother, Timmy. The two liitl s ones were loft in Gladys Purks’ care by their father, Alan Rogers, on the death of his wife. Dorothy’s kittle was found in the woods at National .'Pa:'.:, N J., and the dismembered body of the boy was found in a; thicket in Ahse-on. N. J. Mrs. P;who admits that the “Mrs.” is a self-bestowed title, insists that the children met their death 'through accident, and that f ar 1 was the motive that prompted her disposal of the bodies. . I Thus far the State h. n failed to, prove any thing more than that I

In t’ c li -yday of coach s and riding horses here Foster-Heimreicii-'W;.':n«. furnished the majority of l h?;h p:i:ed outfit ’. Eos er and his 1> . tncis si ld many sets of harness . th it cos'. 11.000 or more. Silver or gold mountings hand s wed ornaments in tloweied or butterfly designs. monograms, gold ferrets. I q. a ter blankets of leather or broad-

♦ Gh'dys Pk-Ics had\disposed of th r 4 I bod es. Witness nfter witness fails | }to alter her stolid demeanor. She' i admits that her life has been a questionable one, that she has. i wandered far from the straight 1 and narrow, she admits that she has had many lovers, but never a husband, she admits having been a frequenter of questionable resorts at Atlantic City and other places, but she will not admit being the direct cause of the death of the two children left in her care. She will not alter oi amplify the sta>ement made by her on Novi moer 9 to Prosecutor Baldwin and other officials of Camden, N. J., after she had surrendered to the authpri- ' ties there. She then statetT that she hod struck Dorothy for some ■childish mude'd and that the child fell to th? floor, and fater she, i realized that the child was dead. I

cloth were some of trie embellishmen s. At ons time 35 harness makers were employed working 10 hours a day, at from $7 to SlO a week. “I have a car,” Foster admitted. “But I have never driven it an i never exprct to. It would seem too much like ingratitude. I guess you would say,” Mrs. Foster and his sou

4 Timmy, she says, fell down a flight | of stairs, and she memtains that the fall was.a fatal one. All efforts of the State to dis- , prove her statements have been unsuccessful and every ruse calculated to shake her stolid remeanor has failed. Her father, the father of the children have confronted her. but to no avail. Although many witnesses remain to be called including her father, George Parks, and Anthony Daka, her common-law husband who urged her to surrender, Judge Frank T. Lloyd hopes to send the case to the jury very shortly. The State asks a first degree conviction, out h-r counsel, Samuel Orlando, is confident that she will not be converted on the evidence so far introduced. In fact, he is confident of acquittal | for his client. ;l l hi» '-sreel)

both drive the machine, he said. None of the partners is sure what he will do when the busin ss is finlly closed up. Foster, who has traveled extensively, may continue his trips about the world. He is certain, as a,re the other men, that what ver business they engage in. t will no- he something connected with the motorized age.

--“there is no <■» • medium of protection that is better than Life Insurance.” “Everyone knows Hint il is not whnl is earned, but wUal is saved, which measures the dilTerence between success and failure, i bis is a diirerence so slight from day to day as to seem unimportant and of no consequence, but in the aggregate of even a few years, it u-m,tints to a sum of great importance. The ability to save is based entirely upon self-control. The possession of that capacity is the main clement of character. It passes over at once into the realm of good citizenship: He who sells an insurance policy sells a certificate of character, and evidence of good citizenship, an unimpeachable title to the right of selfgovernment There is no argument against the taking of Life Insurance. Il is established that the protection ol one's family or those near Io him, is the one thing most to be desired, and THERE IS NO MEDII M OF PROTECTION THAT IS BETTER THAN LIFE INSI RANCE.” CALVIN C(X)LIDGE. May we offer a suggestion? Take a piece of paper and pencil. 'Then gel in (ouch with a repreImagine that you are about to take senlative of The I nion Central Life a long trip from which you will Insurance Company. You will be I i surprised when we show vou how never return. Imagine vou have 1 - .. , . ... • ' easy it will be lor vou to accomplish plenty of money. Sei down on paper most of the things yon desire. Ail exactly what you would like lor your you have to do is tell us what you money to do alter you leave. waul. We will tell you how to get it. Over a billion dollars are invested with us in Life Insurance. THE UNION CENTRAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. The Suttles - Edwards Co. GENERAL AGENTS A. D. SUTTLES Phone 358 i

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