Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 19, Decatur, Adams County, 22 January 1930 — Page 3

"I El ( , n , r Identified H ,|, IM <U.R) A mi'ii | i>oli«u “Mr. \"| R9| j, Kierlchx, Totenville, | or amnesia. % . lTe/ltllX WUH puliro nftor he huil attracted ■, foiitly uti- -*■ lff| intense cold ■- r il;ii kUS who he H H. Block Larjfe Estate 22— <ITI») —An left hv Wllthe * r 1 • hf Block $•;,405.000. n Calls President Hoover ||, .lull. 22. - tUP>-A ill five Kentucky .... I Hoover of Lexington. ofTleer, to occupied by District tuughterty. „ has lived in Washitig- | [ or > i ears. The delega’"Ri il Representatives ( rad dock, Kendall, Funds Near JEKirit of Exhaustion ■H .■R 'ln .' n almost to euked from 1.0 . <^H;c R hi h for m 111 i■.- 1 s too' Ri - - Stt awn hurl coin*- ■ —o- — onal Hockey Scores “* r>. Chicago Black Senators Pittsburgh | - B Canadians 5. New ■^^Hrericans |F§e Believed Dead France, Jan. 22 —(UP)-- < ft p| ngets were believe I to krlietl when a taxi airnoilh of Dieppe yes '

Thursday - SAFE INVESTMENT Day yH National Thrift Week Manage yo,ur money - Don’t let it manage you l . H hi> ,||| ii Hr ill I lh|i|r . 11l ml hi Hi 'll 1 .mil Ihin i.lr. Ihi J11 III' 111 I, IHM Hs, > “*$ assured that he will not be caught in the tide. While speculators wonder about dividends, the Safe II * IL l on jour money. Our experience, integrity and expert judgment in Safe investments is at • : ' :: •• w T || . \ 'I.? x.. * The Banks Listed Below Will Be Glad To Assist You. Ben^. m ,"! . F .! nklm The Peoples Loan & Trust Co. I Old Adams County Bank - First National Bank I Number five of a series of advertisements published by the Decatur Danks in the observance of Thrift Week.

Missing Oil Man V, on Id Come Home —i A sick, broken ohr man sits in llte villa St. August I tie, Cannee, | Prance longing Tor a sight of the j Statue of Liberty and the Kansas J inid Oklahoma oil fields which pro j •lined Iris fortune. He f a James O'Neil, former president of the Ptalrle Oil & Otis Company, and ' missing witness in the famous Teapot Dome Oil scandal. Lauds Prohibition o~i Tenth Anniversai y Senator Moiris Sheppard (Dent.) Texas, delivered a panegyric of the ten years of legal drought brought about by the enactment of the ISt It Amendment. The tenth birthday of the enactment stirred Congress in severaJ bitter sdenes over the wet-dry issue. etday. Two bodies were found near the plane today The other bodies were believed to have been carried out to s»a. It was assumed the pilot lost his direction in the fog and attemtped i o make a landing on the beach.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, JANUARY ‘->2, 193(1

j The plane crashed Into a sen cliff' J mil was wrec) d. Cold To Continue Imlhimipolls, .fan. 22. *TU.R! As I snbxcro weather struck Indiana lor the limith time this winter, l\! b. weather bureau forecasters promised "slightly colder" in the oust, (tortion tomorrow, with continued* cold elsewhere, accompan led by dear skies. Off .dal tendings last night were below zi ro in most sections of tig' l state, varying from in below a 1 I.ogansport and Valparu'so, to :i below at Indianapolis and Vincennes. Farther south readings were abound zero. Warmer weather was expected by Friday, with continued fair eonI ditionx. . .. # Hardware Man Dies Indianapolis, Jan. 22.- (y.ft) —Last | t'itc for Arthur li. Caldwell, To, vice president and treasurer of the \ hi Camp Hardware company, who d'ed Tuesday of heart disease at lie Indiana Christ'an hospital, will be held at the home in Indianap- | oils at 2 p. m., Thursday. TAR 1)1 EU SAYS DIFFERENCES HAVE ARISEN (CONTINUED FKtsM PAGE ONK) j where they were to go Into'con-i ference w.th Premier MacDonald. J I So seriously do the Italian delegates consider the effect of yes- ' terday's private negotiations he- ! tween Turdieu and Foreign Minister Ditto Orandi, that they planned .to spend the entire day in intensive ! study and work on the FrancoItalian situation. The Italians announced they would accept no engagements for the day, remaining at their hotel throughout. Real progr ss. however, residing from the llnee-hour dinner conference hist night of American, Btltish and French delegates, was reported today by a- spokesman for the American group. The American envoy declined to I give exact details of the discussj ion, other than to say that much I"heavy underbrush” had been cleared away. Following last night's dinner, MacDonald an d Stimson gav° Tardieu a full report of the preconference- discussions between : America and England, and today ithe American delegation was hold ! hng a full metcing to review the

i ’ I results of yesterday's negotiations, At the conclusion of tomorrow's j session ut St James palace, li was ; announced, a full stenographic copy outlining the position of each I nut.oij will he Issued for the benefit of the public. Stlmxon vvetii to No. Id Downing street tit noon to confer again with Prime Minister MacDqpuld. The French delegates, Tardieu, 1 ' Aristide Iti in nil and (leorges Le>- ! Kites, hail left the government's .'residence when the American chief delegate arrived. The prime minister also saw the ; delegates of the British dominions for half an hour during the mnrn- , ing. Tardieu, after studying both the British and French positions agatp, announced that various minor difficulties had been smoothed out in regard to procedure and that progress should l,e much faster than Imd bee 11 expected if the delegates continued the pace of the last 24 hours. ’ He said conversations in which | all of the delegates would participate were scheduled for Friday. The delegates, however, will not | give definite naval figures in their statements al the plenary session | tomorrow lint will make general ; stmvevs. SICKNESS ADDS NEW TERROR TO - FLOODED AREA (CONTINUED FROM rAGE ONE) | bring the river to a dangerous I stage. Additional suffering was brought by sub-zero temperatures and snowlast night. Vincennes reported 2 degrees below zero. Two inches of snow fell there during the night, further hampering relief workers. A request for immediate dispatch of relief supplies for 150 persons marooned on Claypool Hill, near Decker, was sent to the Red Cross at Indianapolis by H. B. Williamson. field representative of the Red Cross, in charge of flood relief work. Army aviators from Fort Benjamin Harrison, near Indianapolis, will fie asked to carry the supplies, and an-swer from William Fortune, head of the Indianapolis Red Cron, indicated. Four relief workers from Princeton waded in water .up to their necks to carry food and fuel to 4tt isolated family between the Patoka and White rivers. Ice was not s rong enough to support the party, lint heavy enough to block i progress in a boat, the workers said.

One negro woman, seriously 18, was removed trom her home yesterday where slut had been alone

r>d r> J / ] S M j S —,Wmhw I, Old Gold V...1G. “c P. Lorillard Co.” nation-wide distribution, it has put ful .. . Proof? .. . It’s in the first package BETTER TOBACCOS .... make the difference and your throat can be judge and jury. V .not a cough in a carload”

for more than a week with litll- - and fuel. National g ,unl troops, suit lotted

at the Hazelfon 111 on U, S 11, after pllegod threats had been mud" to dynamite the highway levee to

PAGE THREE

release water behind the fill, were withdrawn yesterday upon orders ' from the udjiiUtit general. <