Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 66, Decatur, Adams County, 18 March 1930 — Page 3

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(OWNERS ■claim them sensational values BF Motoring expert* and the motoring public unite in acclaiming Dodge Brother* B/ chievement in the new Dodge Six and Eight-in-Line. From the standpoint of ■ comparative specification* or by actual te»t on the road, these car* have a»- ■ tonished everyone with their remarkable performance, their luxury, their roomiB neM and ,he ' r k* 00 *? 1 Anc * f he*e fine qualities are offered at ■ prices which bring a Dodge cor within reach of many added thousand*. I A NEW ROOMIER SIX I $835 ■■ AND UP, F. O. e FACTCRY p or she f>rst time at so low a price, a Six —or a closed car of any description _by Dodge Brothers. The lowest-priced ccr ever offered with Mono-Piece B Bocy. And the lowest-priced Six ever to be equipped with internal-expand-B » n 9 four-wheel hydraulic brakes! And roominess, beauty, power, speed and |B dependability in a measure never before available in anycar at such a low price! I A NEW EIGHT-IN-LINE I slO©ts ■ AND UF, F. O. B. FACTORY B for the first time, an eight-cylinder motor car of Dodge Brothers traditiono B dependability. The first time such’ c wealth of power has ever been B achieved at such a low first cost and with such economy of operation. H The first time such a combination of luxury, beauty and refinements has ever B been offered outside of the high-priced field. In every way, a triumph of value! IjanSE BROTHERS J SIXE?S ANjO EHGSHTS B UPHOLDING EVERY TRADITION OF DODGE- □ E PEND AB I LITY I SAYLORS MOTOR CO. ■ DECATUR AND BLUFFTON. Associate Dealers—Jay County Motor Sales, Portland, ■ Ind., Schwartz Garage, Uniondale, Ind. Isavmds for I The sale of the season is on! First day crowds are proof k lof the extraordinary values WS S Ift r A riJZ Bp ff &As f r r Ai we are offering. Our stock ! I must be cut in half within UyL ft? 10 days. Prices have been irS* L "* >J * y a 8Z £>4 1| .jf I greatly reduced to do it. IwJ » j I n Wi I B®/ Bo not fail to take advan- A-» - - — | tage of this Golden Oppor- * I tunity. Come today— >ri. JllA ■■ select a “Good Will” used x car at a sensational bar- x'&S’iii V , M E gain price. ~m, iijTi-imaftlr * 1929 m Pontiac Sedan I his car has not been “GOOD WILL” 11 1927 Chevrolet Sedan II noiTn iT7 far - Can ’ Guaranteed XU"‘“mXX tell It from a new Specials m a-i shape. New ne j Everything 111 tires. A dandy good nrim. S i<” e T lIV l l V 1927 Nash Coach puce is extremely Tires and low. H’ S guaranteed. "phoXing like new. Come in and see It. Runs g „ o d and is a t ° a T s we have to offer 5 Ford Coupes gO<Ml car ‘ Good P ain ’~. goo<l tireß> A good selection, 1926 Whippet Coach, and runs like new. your choice at Rood condition. 1926 4 door Ford sedan $75 1926 Essex Coach 11-to condition. Ij _ 1926 Chevrolet Coach. I jr] Bo~M.il - The above at remarkably low prices. \ Adams County Auto Co. Madison Sheet. Phone 80. Fl Mj&A l I I Ufl

; ville tills summer. In complaints to | city officials they complained tlm* | farm hands, given tin extra hour |oi’ day) git: Jump Into automobiles,

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, MARCH 18, 1930.

drive to Evansville for ti night of bright lights and then the next morning are unable to plow a straight furrow.

G.W.VANDERBILT MANSION OPENS TO PUBLIC EYE Costly Asheville Landmark Is Now Museum for Use of Tourists Editors Note: This is the first of two articles on the opening of the George W. Vanderbilt mansion at Asheville, N. C-, as a public museum. The second article which follows tomorrow will be a desorption of the interior. You may release the accompanying story March 18th or hold until March 19th and run both articles together if your rpace permits. United Press, N. Y. Asheville. N C Mar is.- fU-P) i —A private home into which many millions of one of America's greatest fortunes were poured to make it a thing of rare beauty, is now a public museum after 35 years of privacy. It was at the urgent request of the Asheville Chamber of Commerce that BILTMORE HOUSE, magn ficent estate of the lute George W. Vanderbilt, railroad magnate, was thrown open by Mr. and Mrs. John Franc's Amherst Cecil, son-in-law and daughter of the builder. Fabulous wealth and five years of architectural and artistic effort seldom if ever equalled in America brought completion of Biltmore House in 1895. Vanderbilt literally scoured the world for rarest objects of art to adorn the place. Workmen were imported from ‘ 1 ■■oreign lands —masons from Scotland and Ireland, stone carvers from Italy, finishers and artists from Switzerland and France. Richard Hunt, New York architect, drew ' the plans which reflected the cheteaux of the French Rennaissance; Frederick Law Olmstead, designer of Central Park. New York, designed the gardens and grounds; R. S. Smith. New York, supervised the construction. But it waA Vanderbilt, with the power of his millions, who addeo the priceless furnishings which made Biltmore House into a private museum to tax the imagination. Every room of the really vast estate —it foundations cover four acres of ground — literally I hang heavy with works of art con- ! noisseitrs might hesitate to evaluI ate. Listed among them are: The chess set Napoleon used at St. Helena. Cardinal Rlchelieu'B ceremonial robe.-. The bath-tub of a Caesar. Scores of original Whistlers. Sargents. Baldinis, Gobelin tapestries. A library ceiling canvas from an Italian castle, whose owner Vanderbilt forever kept s cret by agreement. A refractory table from an Eng lish monastery. Ming dynasty china. A 14th century Turkish rug, 54x 90, valued at $90,000. A library of 25.000 volumes, con ta'ning many on gardening am ; i~. i hitecture. Biltmore House contain- 10 mas ter bed rooms besides servants quarters, baths, drawing rooms, dining rooms, a huge banquet hall 56 feet long and 75 feet high, library, kitchens, courts, billiard rooms and galleries. It forms the center of an estate of 12.000 acres which once included 120.000 acres, but much of which was turned over by Vanderbilt to the Pisgah National Forest. There are 17 miles of macadam roads, 120 miles of riding trails, and dirt roads. More than 750 persons are employed on the estate, many in the Biltmore Dairies, which in elude 700 head of cattle. (Part II Tomorrow) o Soviets Alter Cause Watertown N. Y. — (UP) — Antireligious activities in Russsia re called here that while Soviet repre senta'nives were cotracting forth - manufacture of a paper machine a few months ago they eliminated a reference to God in the documents The phrase ‘act ot God" was stricken out in a clause relating to tin- ; controllable elements that might' cause a breach of contract. The paper machine is being manufactured by a local firn, for the Volga mill in Russia. o After 50 Years Ortonvilld, Mich.. —(UP)—Fifty years ago Mrs. Mortimer Gregory promised to “love, honor and obey her husband but at a recent celebration of their wedding, when they pledged their troth anew, she had a different ceremony. The word i cherish was substituted for obey. 0 ! Monrose, Colo. —(UP) —On the I ranch of Alvin Magraw in Bostwick park, seven miles from Mon- , trose, at an altitude of 6.500 feet, Mugraw has been able to pick pan i ' sies from his pansy bed every I mon h during the passing winter. I although he had to dig down into 1 the snow to accomplish that feat.

Winners in Miami Contest laV 3 *ilfeJill ■ /iM Wfl ■b i i ji 4 ' 1> X — J (Left tu right) Miss Alberta McKellop, who as “Miss California." wun second prize in the Miami Beauty Contest Miss Janet Eastman. as “Miss Texas,' was adjudged “America’s Sweetheart,” : carrying the highest honors to the Lone Star State, end Miss Margaret Ekdahl as “Miss Florida,” was awarded third place. They will journey to Rio De Jamro. where they will comp-te for the title ot “Miss Universe.” „ ... ' (Intei naiiuua.l Newsreel'

» —— * Attendance Records Are Announced For Adams Co. Schools Following is the report of attendance in Adams county schools for the last six weeks: Union Township Trustee Arthur Blakey Paul Spuller 17 16.50 1)7.06 May Jewell Falk 20 19.3 96.5 | Nellie Brodbeck 24 22.27 92.81 Dorothy Spuller 17 16.05 91.70 Parochial: •Benhart Schultz 53 51. 96. Rev. J. M. Frosch 18 16. 89. Root Township Trustee —Arthur Blakey Electa Oliver 29 26.4 96.48 Mary Clem 15 13.9 91.14 Monmouth H. S.: R. A. Eudaly. Edith Lehman. Thelma Cogan 35 31.3 95.031 Grades: Harve Haggard 30 28. 93.33, Mary Suttles 30 28.30 89.11/ 7 Ixivina Christner 15 14.41 96.08 j Dorothy Rabbitt 13 12.3 95. / Parochial: A. M. Greunke 50 41.16 52.33 Preble Township Trustee —Ernest Worthman Milton Werling 29 23.9 93.03 Elizabeth Leyse 25 24.82 99.7 Edward Jabe.g 21 19.8 92.1 Pai ochial: H. F. Nielson 54 51.3 95. Frieda Buuck 19 16.6 87. Rudolph Stolp 56 51.75 97.6 | A. W. Rossman 35 31.15 91.5 Lla Gunsett 37 35.4 95.351 Kirkland Township Trustee —Charles Arnold Nellie Coppess 24 21.97 91.56 , Edna Borne 25 21.18 96.75/ Margaret Geisel 34 32.23 94 Leo Strahni BertelineZimmerman 36 33.3 92.5 Vaughn Schlagenhauf 28 21.05 94 64 Kirkland H. S R. J. Mann. William Bryan. Edna Kirkpatrick, Albert Coppess 66 62.9 95.5 Washington Townsh p Trustee —T. R. Noll Mary Wheat 33 31.74 96.21 Cha'mer Edwards 29 25.3 87.24 Clyde Troutner 19 15.3 96.32 Mildred Coppess 27 25.1 92.6 Beatrice Dettinger 19 17.4 95.31 St. Marys Township Trustee —Orlen Fortney Pleasant Mills 11. S Peter W. Vitz, Velma Fortney, Mary Gulick Agnes Yager 50 43.*1 87.15 Grades - Elmer Elrsim 31 22.92 73.871 Ho Johnson. . . 25 2 ).22 80.08 My; tie Clements 25 19.1 76.5 Bobo:— William Noll 28 25.6 91.4 Margaret Schneck 29 26.1 90. Blue Creek Township Trustee—lL L, Sipe Nova Ltliman 26 22 61 86.97 D. O. Roop 16 14.9 93.12 IL M. Cro .nover 37 35.5 95.91 A. C. Cook 26 25.47 97.98 Mary Brennan 22 21.17 96.02 iSstella Campbell 15 14.55 97. Monroe Township Trustee —Vance Mattax Harry Johsison 21 20.12 *95.83 Ruth Martz 25 23.8 94.7 Francille Oliver 23 20.90 95. Marguerite Lewellen 23 24.8 94.7 Ezra Snyder 17 16.2 95.29 Chrystal Sells 14 11.95 85.33 Mary Ann Habegger 30 29.39 97.83 Cr'ttrndon Mason 50 47.54 95.13 Eldon Sprunger 43 40.50 94.19 Monroe H. S.— Virgil Wagner, S. ® A. Lahr, Viola Cart-

er, Nell e Parrish 58 56.8 97.58] Parochial: J. D. R Schwartz 30 29.8 99.2 Agnes Schwartz 26 25.5 97.8 French Township Trustee —Martin Moeschberger Louise Neu-baum 28 25.32 96.29 P.essie Carter 32 30.9 96.1 Ruth Johnson 33 31.11 94 28 ' Marcella Robin 31 30 30 97.74 ■Vera Owens 23 21 73 91.46 Veda Crist 26 23.4 90. Hartford Township Trustee —D. A. Studler Linn Grove School: Lester Reynolds . 22 21.7 98.75 Edna Glendening 38 37.6 98.94 , Mary Schlage nhauf 29 26.45 91.20 I Hartford Center H. S. Russell Steiner, Helen Wood, Charts Kizer, Dorothy Sprunger 60 51.8 99. ‘Grades: — 1 Eldon Carnes 18 16.4 91.1 Gladys Long 31 92.25 | Ruth Munro Wabash Township Trustee—Olis Burk Mildred Wood 32 30.9 96.56 Agnes Blery, 27 23.42 8G.75 William Griff ths 21 19.22 91.55 Rose Mann 19 17.85 93.94 R. O. Hunt, Nell Knipe, Ruth Mahoney, Ora Culp, Kenneth Hunt 1 95 89.53 94.2 Grades: — Catherine Fravrl 33 39 2 9t.lt i Ruth Pusey 41 41.58 94.52 | i Magdalena Hitschy 41 37.31 92.18 | | Mildred McCray 35 31.47 83.92 Myron Lehman. 46 44.3 96.5 1 Harold Long 37 35.7 96.66 Jefferson Township Trustee J. M. B llenbachei | Jefferson H. S.— I Olen Marsh, II L. Greider, Gladys Tetter, Rolland Sprunger. 71 66.25 91.40 Ray Duff 27 26. 96.3 Helen Kenny 36 34.1 94.72 Osie Hiestand 35 32.85 94.21 Madeline Robin 37 33.45 91.75 o WREN NEWS Mr. Orlando Feigoley and family of near Van Werl, called on relatives in Wren, Sunday. Sanford and Nettie Carter, east of Wien, called on Mr. and Mr-. A. C. Carter, one day last week. Mrs. J. L. Moser was called to Loraine, Ohio on account of the illness of her daughter, Mrs, Rayi inond Bowers. The following; called in the F. M. Standitord home last week: Mrs E. W. Jackson and grand child and Mrs. Albeit Mu schler and son Bobby and Miss Helen Koos all of Decatur, and Mr. and Mrs. V. R. Magill of Mt. Vernon, O do. j Mr. and Mrs. Win. Bowers of I Van Wert, Oho visited with Mr I Sarah Frysinger, Sunday. II Bud Cliffton of Kendalville, Ind. spent Sunday with his parents, Mr i and Mrs. Roy (Tifton. ; Mr. O. S. Tunibleson and family and Miss Maporie Cully were callers in Fort Wayne, Indiana Sunday. Miss Lois Standitord spent sevet- ;, al days of last week in Deca ur, Mr. Charlie Jones and family of | Berne and Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Longenberger wer% Sunday visitors in , the home of Mrs. Eva Moser and , daughter. Mr. Riffle Spahr and family ot ’ Markle ant! Dode Smith of Ohio ' (' ty. Ohio were callers In the horn? of Joe Spahr and family Sunday. — o — , »at the Habit —T raoe at Homa,

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