Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 41, Decatur, Adams County, 17 February 1930 — Page 3

J LESSONS [I TO POOR fOUNDAHON Organization Ses Three Years * Service . F ,.h. 12-<UP)-Thnt **■„( n «iuiring culture [\, a ll»bl- “» ,s tho ' whi eh th ■ Community L foundation has eon- ** years of successful Ko do for the music Hh. (oniniuni'y what the ''J, th- pnhHc libraries ’i , , do for other phases to -ive iniillL <oclal problems by giv* men, women and 7,, opportunity to study “ <hl) would otherwise enjoy suc h instruction. >tive of crime music said Dr. Percival .Lnther of the board of ’•Music can tame Wild ! we certainly need its J,,, tame the wild civilianL jas developed in our lL The hoy or girl who a musical instrument F f 0( recreation which * ior to any passive refh j,! : can be offered. It L.« opportunity to enterand at the same tinu |is personal! y. * believe that music is [Latest needs in AmeriL,nt time to combat the to deadly monotony and | industrial life, and the Lgnity life. Other cities luars recognized the noCimunity music and th e s musical opportunities rto wish them.” tie oldest music lovers iby the foundation Is a hfflisram grandmother uplav the piano. Well past

IK iv/O SCOUNT II MR lectric jght Bllis nuns o« BEFORE b. 20 111 Bill! ’ Io due and must All) hy twentieth •f month at [i mt i

50, with hands stiff from years of drugery, unable to speak Engllan | well, and In extremely limited dr-1 cumstnnees, she has found Joy In I satisfying a lifelong ainibtlon. Once a w<. k she takes a piano l<» son from u foundation teacher, anil In hoi own Imine on a s<yr<>nd or third hand piano which she has managed to purchase she practices diligently. Tim twenty-five cents a week which she plays for her lesson Is a sacrifice, A young girl who works in a department store is being given i harp lessons through the foundation. II r mother is a harpist, and her father Is a harp maker, but through family onstrungement, the girl was thrown on her own responsibility, and although she knew how to play the harp, aha could not afford one Th • foundation i * furnish ing her a rented instrument ami a lea her. She is often heard over the radio. The foundation Is not merely tryln f io assist the musically gifted students to obtain the necessary training io develop their talents, its for far-reaching object is to tnak music a part of the lives of those who long for I’. MANY DENIALS IN ISTY'S VOW TO DIVINITIES Chantressof Amon Leaves “Book of the Bead” For Burial Niche Chicago, Feb. 12—(UP) -It took 41 separate and individual denials to 41 divine judges to make sur° that you hadn't sinned, in the good old days of Is y. In case you never heard of Isty. she was the "housemistress, the chantress of Amon" who lived about 1000 B. C. in Egypt. These sins which she denied so vehemently in her "Book of the Dead" sound rather familiar and cover about as much ground as any modern maiden's In fact, they cover i funeral papyrus eight feet long -ihd half a foot wile. The document is half in color, d vignettes, t.nd half in hieroglyphics. Then, too, there are pictures representing in■idents connected with the lady's life, and some predicting h r posthumous adventures. Surrounded by the sacred Phoe- ; nix. the gods Nut, Osiris, and minoi dieties, are the pleas to the gods. I Besides claiming that "I have no* harmed an evil-doer" Isty says that she has not been guilty of murder, stealing, uttering falsehoods, sacrilege, wrathfulness, cruelty, violence, rebellion, extravagance, plundering. lust, blasphemy, uncleanlt I ness. nagging, quarrelsomeness, ! causing sorrow, or hasty judgmen*. : And she closes her plea with a spie! ( supposed to enable her to join Ro. I he sun-god. as he travels across the | sky. 11 For those tiiat doubt the existence of so remarkable a woman, the j v-nyrus is being exhibited at th. Field Museum of Natural History with a line-by-line translation and explanation of the hieroglyphics, i tie document was found in a cache at Dier el-Bahri, part of the c me very of Thebes, in 1891 and present ei) to the museum by Martin A. flyer-on. o f'e-nor'a’ to Dog’» Loyalty Grey Friar's Bobby was a Scotch collie'dog wh'eti s’"’r on its tints I ter's grave i*i Edinburgh for 12 years, nn til it timilly died. A memorial b-s bee - ere< '“d in the Scotch ff ,->t*-i »o th s faithful nn'inal.— ’ Pathfinder. ______ I

SMITH BROTHERS Triple Action COUGH SYRUP * My ends I tcMcoughs *■o ' 1R OfAST <SX 31, 7only\

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT MONDAY, FEBRUARY’ 17. 1930.

Old Friends Meet on Birthday of One ‘X. . ... w Ls g M .. IgTlgilßfli .. ■ ' .... .

Left to right, seated, Harvey Firestone, rubbertire magnate: Mrs. Thomas Alva Edison, Mr. Edison, and Henry Ford, automobile magnate, pictured at Fort Myers, Fla., during the unveiling

Mob Attack Police in Cleveland

- - JIK

Some of the mob of 1,200 men and women ♦ fighting with the police at the Cleveland City I Hall over a petition for jobs which the city council was considering. Several were injured '

■ ' , Newest Portia Also an Athlete | — " — - — Miss Mary O'Loughlin, I graduate of | the Duquesne WgjFk Universify. Pittsburgh, has just passed the Pennsyl- 1 r ' < “*<®' vania State I Board exatnnations as an /y ♦ , ■■ ' ittorney. She is a sister of 3HM& | W* S )ave and John ” - - Ez- ■ O Loughlin. w nationally ~ ”” y' known tennis ■ stars. Miss O'Loughlin ASi’P 1 has also .. 3, hteved Icaal S note on the A -3*l athletic field. 11 nternattonal i- •*-*- Newiroeli

MAN SELECTS WRONG FOODS, CHEMIST SAYS Animal’s Instinct Tells What to Eat, But Humans Err Columbus, <). Feb. 13 —(UP)- ; \i::ina)s may rely upon instinct to ■elect proper nourishment but no: iiimans, avers Dr. John F. Lyman, nol'essor of agricultural chemistry! at Ohio State University. The animal has the advantage beau e ordinarily it has the selec-] ion of only two foods, one good | mtl the o her injurious, while man nay chose any of several, he says. I U’.d repeatedly man picks the I wrong kind. • a fallacy," Prof. Lyman continles. "is the belief that our federal 1 and state food laws insure good! Munition without any cooperation from the consumer. These laws protect from the fraud of mislabeling and from the use of adulterants, but beyond that they do not guarantee too 1 values." People continue to err, Dr. Lyman points out, in believing that costs, and food values are corelated. A dime spent for milk is a wiser purchase than a dollar spent for mushooms. even though they be not toadstools, he observes. The road to good health, according to Dr. Lyman's specifications, s paved with the following materials to be used dally: A pint of milk; fresh fruit equal to an apple or orange; abundance of vegetables, especially ot the cabbage. lettuce and spinach variety: moderate amounts only of white

♦ of the bronze tablet honoring Mr. Edison. The i occasion was the eighty-third birthday of the great inventor. < International New»i««t

as 200 policemen finally dispersed the mob. Notice how rioters are i...mpting to assault one of the policemen in tne center of the photograph.

bread, sugar lard, and other "purified" foods; and sufficient other foods such as meat, cereals, fats and bread to dull the appetite and adorn the meal. Balanced rations are the needs of an empty s ornach rath r than the specialities urged by faddists, the chemist concludes. o - — Men’s Styles Remain Berlin, —(UP)-—Women’s styles undergo d.astic changes with amazing rapidity, as their husbands’ pocketbooks can testily, but men's fashions have remained much the same throughout the centuries’, des pite at empts to make them more comfortable dr more beautiful. According to Fraulien Helene DihkThe Perfect jO' Sun-Tan Skin T HUF rl\Z) s «t f L Wg I .X* r $ s■a o?■= > w jf 4/ i GOURAUD’S I Send 10c. for Trial Site 45 nl Ferd. T. Hopkin* & Son. New fork

here who is an authority on the sub ject, physicians nave been tryimi to make men reform their styles for centuries, but the males s übbornl., cling to their tight collars, and belt' and heavy suits.

* A tip .... from * * Andrew Carnegie I fi ASKED to explain his phenomenal success, Andrew Carnegie -fi blandly attributed it to his ability to get men to work for him who fiS fi knew more than he did. And that’s a formula for success. Nobody who is really sue- (fi fi cessful does all the work himself. He employs others people’s minds and efforts. S fi Do you do the same in the intricate business of running your J home and taking care of your family? You can, quite easily. 9n fi You can employ specialists in diet: you can serve the master Si dishes of famous chefs; you can have the advice of style authorities ffi fi in sleeting your clothes, of whole electrical laboratories in buying fi household appliances, by reading the advertisements. • 99 fi All the newest knowledge—knowledge millions of dollars and S fi years of effort have won —is contained in the advertisements. fi If you will use the advertisements in this newspaper as Andrew fi Carnegie used men who knew more than he did, every dollar you spend will be spent wisely, economically, and will return full yrfi measure of satisfaction. That’s the way to be a success in the 5 greatest business in the world—making a home. §R fi t ffi It pays to read the ad certisements in the J Decatur Daily Democrat

GOV. ROOSEVELT PICTORES LOT OF PORTO RICA Message to Legislature Prescribes Economy For Government By Lyle ('. Wilnon United l'r< as Staff Correspondent Washington. Fell 12 —(Ul’j—Governor Theodore Roosevelt of Porto Rico unveiled a picture of hunger, disease and unemployment, desperation and possibly disaster in his first message to the insular Legislature delivered In Port Au Prince today and simultaneously made public by thi' War Department here. He prescribed for Porto Rico economy in governmental administra - tion ami a program of rehabilitation.! ; The economic situation was bad | before the hurricane which devusl-1 |od th' republic in 1928. Roosevelt! | said the financial condition of the In nlur Government was grave and that of the municipalities desperate. Poverty and distress tire widespri ad. Many taxes are unscientific and. inequitably assesse 1. Tax collection-' are falling far behind the budgetary expectation, bonds have* been' bloated beyond what now constlt-l utes the legal limit. Roosevelt urged the floating indebtedness be funded The Porto Rican Government, he I STOMACH UPSET Get at the real cause. That’s what thousands of stomach sulierers are doing now. Instead of taking tonics, | or trying to patch up a poor digestion, they are attacking the real cause of the ailment —clogged liver and disordered bowels. Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets help arouse the liver in a soothing, healing v.'ay. When the liver and bowels are performing their natural. functions, people rarely suffer from indigestion and stomach troubles. I Have you a bad taste, coated tongue, poor appetite, a lazy, don’t-care feeling, no ambition or energy, trouble with undigested foods? Try Olive Tablets, the substitute for calomel. >- Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound. Know them by their olive color. They do ’ the work -ithout griping, cramps or pain. All druggists. 15c, 30c and 60c. Take one or two at bedtime for quick relief. Eat what you like.

I c cmtlniic’il, muni develop clomcHiic ■ and foreign marketing I’iiclllilom unci'. Li muliitucle of middlemen nniHt be , i reilucccl k" number, ('hililreii must aid In ctihlvutiuii of market garden 1 which RooHcvelt belic’vc-B would do much to offset malnutrition aud starvation. By eHtabliiihlng farm btir>auß Rooaevelt would dlxaeminaie practical education, eHpei'lully in rural districts. Confronted with a populuion of more than 4<JO to the aquur ’ mile, the Governor urg' d Induatrial development Io prevent continued starvation and unemployment. “We are geographically located,” h- said "to form a dietriliuting and manufacturing point for the Caribbean and northern South Americr.. We have undeveloped water power; to the amount of 25,000 horse power' which can ho developed Immediate-! )y that indiiatriee demand it. be-j sides a iiotentlal 25,000 horse power yet unsurveyed.'' To meet vital industrial needs, 'J-LJ J 8 1- -I—IS !-""gS

l ITlWtr* VLfATVt K 1 DON’T HURRY I Have you noticed that most people who “drop” their savings I in schemes or speculation are the I I ones who are in too great a hurry I I to get rich? After all, what is 1 sounder, safer, surer—and speed- I I ier in the long run—than the good J od saving way? Think that over. I First National Bank I Capital and Surplus *120,000.00 s 1 Decqtur. Indiana I i 111 1111 11

PAGE THREE

Roosevelt recommended creation of a Bureau of Commerce and installation of u ful| time publicity man "whose mission would be to present our case to the United States by every available means." Roo?evelt wil make more detuiled recommenda! ious in u subsc <iuent message. — - —o - ■ — — Killed uy F»m»» •• Wiwe Entering a cellar wutalnlug a large quantity of fvriuenilug wlue. a wine grower of Groaawluternhelm. Germany, wu» over cine by the gaars and died before help could reach him. — o ——-- -—— Storing Linon It la an old hint that advtaea the atoruge of linen In blue paper so I that the whiteness of tba material i niay be preserved. If blue pa|>er Is lacking, dip some old cotton material In very strong blue water so that It acquires the necessary proI tectlve tint. This will du equally well.