Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 61, Decatur, Adams County, 12 March 1930 — Page 3
■locked In Vat; I ■ (r ies (uiin Release lington l“'l M " r,h ■ death stan-l Tom !»»•*«: ■ ' . - pin bo-1 ■ I""" , '°'l ■ iron **"’ lIU, ‘I ■ ill an I* estabthe plant. Hell. 11 ! " pnv ■ ~/prnr I'-.kr.l thioiuh va; ■'' , „ odorizing K pl| IO r.miovc the scent of ■ fluids Hom clothing. He ■ into the ' " lk H '‘7‘ th '.' 9
k VANIMI r — e , bow severe or M -M. snow-white, 9' ■ "J CREAM instant;f c -\..s the worst ■ e!l .. - .er 50,000 persons 9 » eruptions and ■ r'M'ed ' C ' • ■ son. teccs skis 9 . I, velvet/smooth. I r,iC. ■ > CREAM today at ■ T-ur drv = n st 'or loner BOOCTS 9 ■■-■■■ '->« k 000-crtee. -iCK ' ’’J! C R X IVELMvJ it. D S OVE!■ Moj |
Ride In The Beautiful lew Ford I [OME in and arrange for a demonstration ride in the new Ford. You wil! know uen. from your own personal experience, why it is such a good car to own ind drive. Here, at an unusually low nice, is everything you want or need in a notor car. . . $435 up, f. o. b. Detroit lecatur Sales & Service, Inc I I’. B. SHORT | Phone 21 S. Second St. I A Bank For All It is the aim and desire of this bank to render a service that is within reach of all. ., / SERVICF, \ is \ AS PERSONAL \ .AS [fWIPUAL \ MAs EXPANSIVE 1 AS THE f DEPOSITOR |i r PERMITS I Old Adams t County Bank t V-. J'/
locked. | Death from suffocailon was on.t •'lid faced by Hell and he whs alstj 1 In danger of being whirled In the I tank until lite was extinct, n s the motor operating it was rtmn ng. Al-1 though the gear waa no. engaged.' Bell knew that there were times when It would slip into place' I through vibration or moving the! tank. For that reason he kept ar s .11 us po-Hibie, depending on his voice to biing aid. 4 Bel) shouted until he was hoarse, lull four houjs passed before his ties attracted the attention of 1: | E. Stepheiwon, a passerby, who reI leased him.
I CONGRESS TODAY ♦ -<U.R) - 0 Senate: Cont'nues debate on tariff bill. Continue.-: lobby investigation, with Claudius Huston, chairman of the republican national committee, on the stand. Commerce committee considers award of mail contracts to shipping lines. House: Debates motor bus regulation hill. Judiciary committee resumes prohibition hearings. o Jefferson and Madiscn Presldi nt Madison returned aftei bls Induction into the I'l-esld'-ncv to the house at 133.*1-3T» F street, which he hnd occupied as secretary of state. Jefferson spent several days In the White House before he left for Monticello.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY. MARCH 12, 1930.
MOUNT VERNON ROOMS CLOSED TO OCCUPANCY <“ — j Ladies’ Society Members Will Be Housed in New Building By Martha S rayer < United Pie is Cm respondent I Washington. March 12 H'Pl Never again will the bedroom where George Washington slept be occupied by an ordinary individual. The Mt. Vernon Ladles' Assocla t on. a group of women from the 48 states, who control and manage tin Washington mansion 18 miles south if the national capital, have jusi finished an improvement at this h storic place which means that the home of George Washington hence foith will be sacred from modern occupancy. Since i. was taken over by this croup of women.( restored and opened to the public, it has been occupied only thtee days of each year. .That. wa-»- wher. - Mt.■ -Vernon I adfes came in May for their annual inspect on visit. Then the nai.s.'on w,.s closed to the public and at night the ladies slept in the ii storic Washington bedrooms. Now .his will he a thing of the past. Workmen aie putting finishing ouches on a handsome new building within the limi's of Mt. Vernon. . nich will be occupied by membeis of the Mt. Vernon staff who live here, and has sufficient space so that when the Lad es make their annual inspection visit they can sleep in the new building instead cf .n the mansion itself. The new building is a low, rambling structure, copying the original irch lecture as closely as possible. It has stile ly up to date modern features, however, including a three car gas age and all necessary plumbi Ing and ba hroom equipment. It will I Lit mo the landscape so that the | average tourist visiting Mt. Vernon [ will hardly be able to distinguish i. ironi the oiiginal buildings. The number of touris s visiting I Mt. Vernon is increasing in num- ' ie. from year to year, until now I he histor c e ta'e nets an income roni admission fees of more than I 450,000 annually. No other historic ; spot in or near the Capital has an iqiial drawing power. Las. year the total number of visitors was more ■than 600.000. 'iwen'y-five cents is the price of I admission and the mansion is open [only six days a week. A b.ll providing for its taking over by the government is now pending in Congress and though this legislattion will I meet considerable opposition, there : is a possibility of passage. Operated by the government, the ! a lm ssion charge undoubtedly ! v.niid be abolished. Only one govi 'lament building in Wanshington as such a chatge—the Lincoln I r.ise un, which is housed in the weil'ng where Lincoln died. The admis ion tee there is necesar; uecatise the house is not govininent owned. o Reporter Loses Five Letters; Four Returned Evansville. Ind., March 12 —(CP) I \n Evansville Pi ess reporter insists I hat a letter doesn't have to be rop..e 1 in a mail box or pos office c assure delivery. Just toss your leiteis on the sidewalk, the repore suggests and four out of five iuies they will reach the r destinaion. The repor er addressed five let-
! rupture Relief i Right Here In Your i Own City Are you searching vainly for rupture relief, comfort and security? It is right here m ywr own city for you, as hundreds of sufferers can testify Visit our store and let our Expert • Truss Fitter explain ’ how an AKron Sponge Rubber I Pad Truss, correctly fitted to, your needs, will give you the results you want Every truss j we sell is guaranteed to hold ! the rupture. Stop suffering! I B. J. Smith Drug Co. Decatur, Ind. KffiSMiSsU
Iters to himself and scattered them. | about the business section, however. not without difficulty. An elderly man frustrated one uttemp: to lose a letter. His "I beg your pardon, you dropped this" sertt the reporter two blocks farther. Two alert newsboys retrieved another. The next day the postman brought In four of the “lost" letters. The fifth was never delivered. It will never lie. The reporter saw a young man In front of a pool room snatch up one envelope and dart Into the pool hall. But Hu* joke was m him. In all etters were blank pii-c.'s of paper. Seek Lberian Post Purls, —(CP) —Some of Paris’s most ambitious social-climbers have been recently endeavoring to obtain the now vacant post of Minister of Liberia because the Liberian Min ster is entitled to a roll of drums, a lalute of present arms whenever he goes out on state business and has a printed invitation into high node y.
I Think of Your . ■ Automobile in Terms of Tomorrow I ■ Itimate cost is as important | as first cost in the purchase of an automobile » I — I i / I WHEN you purchase an automobile you are mak- The difference in selling cost, combined with the ing an investment of a cons’ ’•’ ible amount of low charges for financing and accessories, amounts j money. It is essential, therefore, that you give careful to at least SSO to $75 on each car. This is as importhougk' to the best selection and know what you are tant as economies in production in keeping down the getting or your automobile dollars. price you pay for the new Ford. The first cost is important because it may mean |HE low ultimate cost of the new Ford is the result of an immediate, satisfactory saving. Os equal impor- sound design, quality of material and unusual care in tance is the ultimate cost after thousands of miles of manufacturing. Friction and wear are reduced by the service. 1 his ultimate cost is the true measure of accuracy with which each part is made and assembled, automobile value. These factors combine to decrease the cost of T' _ , . , operation and add months and years to the usefid life HE first cost of the new Ford is unusually low not * , , , . . r . i of the car. Ihe good performance and low yearly only because of economies m manufacturing, hut , , 1 , . . . . i i • • i . depreciation of the new Ford are indicative of the because the same principles that inspire these savings . , , , enduring quality built into it at the factory. are extended to every other step that means greater service to the public. It is easy to see that economies SERVICE charges are on the same fair, economical in production would be of little value if they were basis as the making and selling of the car and replace* sacrificed later through high charges for distribution, inent parts are always available at low prices through selling, financing and accessories. all Ford dealers. In two, three or five years, depend- L The Ford dealer, therefore, does business on the in g on how n,, « h y°« <*«ve, the saving in operating same low-profit margin as the Ford Motor Company. an( ® maintaining a new l ord will amount to even His discount or commission is twenty-five to fifty more thu*i the saving on the first cost. per cent lower than that of any other automobile Think in terms of tomorrow, therefore, when you dealer. You gain because he makes a small profit on purchase an automobile. For tomorrow will reveal many sales instead of a large profit on fewer sales. its true worth. oadster, $135 Phaeton, sllO Tudor Sedan, SSOO Coupe, SSOO Sport Coupe, $530 ’lwo-window Fordor Sedan, S6OO Three-window Fordor Sedan, $625 Cabriolet, $615 Town Sedan, $670 All prices j. o. b. Detroit FORD MOTOR COMPANY
CRANIAL “FOOD” ADDED AT OHIO PENITENTIARY Prison Warden Gathers Brochure Designed to Be “Diverting” , Colatnbim, 0.. March 12 (UP) \ new food hns been added to th< menu of the largi'-it, Hlngle tenunteil penitentiary in the United Stutee. It is designed to f 1! cranial and not anatomical apace of the pri.soiier» of Ohio State Penitentiary. The niorael was concocted in th" mind of the priaon's warden. Pres ton E. Thomas and has been served to each of thi' prison's tenants with directions of when and how to par take.
It Is a book of hroinldes, asphorisms, innxlniH or whatever-yoii have to-olevule- ho-splrlts. Not an ordii' nry brocuure, a copy has been ord ered retained in each prisoner's posse sion with instiictlons to digest its contents wit II hopes reciMle, milt illy threatens or lis.lessness overpowers. In short, It contains much of the pithiness of a Polyanna and I the wisdom of u Diogenes. ■‘Cheer up." its bright pages exult "It might lie worse. Be thankful that t isn't . Tty to better yourself piul hereby make the world better." And: “Do not see): to place the hlame on others for your condition hut try j to find what is wrong with your , self: then correct that wrong." Several pages over Its babble■ : I "Distruc iveness belongs to the 1 brute creation. Practice saving al!; things of worth about you and re 1 inembe. to ponder well the saving I of yourself—the most precious o’’ all things to you. Abolish any ‘gel •ven' spirit you may have in yourj sys cm It is a small animal that
seeks to destroy you." Ironical humor is not entirely lacking as ths: “If you want to fight, Join Hie army. Fighting will not be tolerated here." . — —o — Del’auw University Made Chief Estate Benficiary Grcnecastle, Ind., Mar. 12. (U.R) Depauw university was mad" chief benlflc’ary in the f2,ooi),oim estate of John Higgins Harrison, wealthy newspaper publ'sher, who died al Miami Beach, Fla., lust week. Harrison was a student at Depauw in the class of DtDtl and was 'a member of the board of trustees I at the time of his death. i The and probated at I Danville. 111., yesterday, indicated 'that the univeisity would rec: ive I the bulk of the largo estate. Tlie will provides that 1250,000 i shall lie given to the university at* once for the erection of u'college, < building to be named John Harris I on' hall. Next it was stipulated '
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that 1300,000 should be placed In trust, the Income to go to Mrs. Harrison during her lifetime, and afterward the : in shall become jt part of the permanent endowrtient of the university. Further gifts nmount’ng to $2lO. 000 were made for hospitals and childrens homes. The remainder of Hie estate shall be turned into cash or securities nnd given to Depauw for its permanent endowment. The exact amount of the balance lias not been determined, but will be more than $1,000,000, It was said.
NOTICE ? Before placing your orders g for shrubs, trees, plants. I evergreens, roses, etc., be ■ sure and get our prices. I They are always lower. 3 HILTY NURSERY, | Berne, Ind. 3
