Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 67, Decatur, Adams County, 19 March 1930 — Page 5
MADRONS ■L DEFEND In FRANCISCO jj. froin Ml I’arts of gKited States in H Maneuvers ' ll 1S parts of thr Sla , r - converge or. withhi a K., ~.' Sail Francisco fK n ‘ • I'""" U, ... Harbor anH K, ~.,j . tose troops illi ! "" 1 ' b " l Ar'"> A:1
[TRUSS ■comfort I FOR | I YOU message is addressed to jou if you wear a that patches, does not or :a;..es undue pain. can gne you relief with ■ service of Expert Truss tbe; - truss sold here Hftndr.ic . ! adjusted by our trained Fitter, and is 'o hold the rupOur service already has many men, women children in this city, suffer? I B. J. Smith ■ Drug Co. ■ Decatur, Ind. I I ■(iiiiinHO
I Bays 1,000 I Hatchery Chicks I raises all I but 9 of them I Mrs. G. G. Adair proves that I Hatchery Chicks pay best — I Read her letter in the book I we offer to give you FREE VVfORK cut two- Get This cut two-thirdi! That's V » IREE tafiXiEs r Th. <i &»-i.h Hatchery Chicks com- Mair uh,<r biter lou 11 nn , a ”, pared with chicks ittriutad m the truth esting and valuable. Bitched at home. She In fact, the ideas tn it •W "I put in an order may easily be worth or I,ooochicks from a hatchery. hundreds of dollars to you. Just I rnueJ all (, ul „ ine That fatl [ ca n at our hatchery and get one Put 531 of the finest, best devel- of the books. It's free. If you oped puiieas I had ever seen in can’t come soon, phone us to * laying bouse. In one year my keep a book for you ... or mail records showed a net profit of the coupon. Don’t watt, because ♦3.2 3 per pullet." our supply of the books is limited. 400 Hatchery Chicks Make Order Your Chicks in Advance $163.20 Profit in 13 W'eeks Also ask about our prices on And here's the case of John chicks and the splendid breeds «o«yel, another National Prize we can supply. Let us tell you "inner. He hatched 400 chicks about the selected flocks from •t home from 62 5 eggs. Ar the which w e get our eggs. Let us »»ni* time he bought 400 Hatch- explain why our chicks are big*ry Chicks. On the former he lost ger and sturdier; why they have 13L30 because so many of them greater vitality; why they grow d; «d- On the Hatchery Chicks he Lister. Place your order now. ma d* $163.20 clear profit at the Don 't put this matter offs 1 ' weeks. Then there’s Attend to it at Melvin Berg who made only once and make I • ‘93.56 on 200 hens from home- sure of getting , , I fatchea chicks. But his profit on your chicks / f 2() 0 hens from Hatchery Chicks when you want / J *M $762.70. And there are many them. / < other similar / ! T’P'riences Tbit slogan Be Your Guide / in ly describ- . Harche7yChicks DECATUR HATCHERY Phone 197 E. Monroe St. - | ! Send me free the Book of Prize Winning Letters on "Why ft , f; ■ Pays to Buy Chicks from a Hatchery." I ■ ; ' I ! R. F. VStale I ■ 11 ■
Corp* will be to devise a defense of the Han Frunclsco area against a land, sea and air attack. For defense of this area of 20.000 square miles, the War Department has ordered concentration of 150 planes. Forty pursuit ahd four cargo planes of the First Pursuit Group. Selfridge Field, Mich., are schedued to leave for California about Maxell 26 with overnight stops at Omaha, Neb., Cheyenne, Wy.’ and Elko. Nev Maj. Ralph Royce will be in command. Maj. Hugh J. Knerr will lead 20 planes of the Second Bombardment Group, Langley Field. Va., stopping at Montgomery, Ala; Shreveport, la., Midland. Tex.; Tucson, Ariz.: and March Field, Cal. This party will depart about March 24. The Third Attack Group, Fort Crockett. Galveston, Tex., will send 29 planes commanded by Maj. Dav mpoit Johnson byway of El Paso Tex., and March Field. Major Carl Spatz will command 26 planes of the Seventh Bombardment Group which will fly from Rockwell Field, San IMeg'j, Cal., ir less than a day. Eight nlanes of. the Ninety-first Squadron from Crissy Field. San Francisco will be commanded by Capt. Walter H. Kraus. The concent iat ion of planes will be designated a Provisional Wing under command of Brig. Gen. William E. G-illmore. Assistant Secretary of War Davison will fly to he coast to watch the flying war game. q 100. COO Badenites in N. Y. Karlshuhe - (UP) — A special committee compiling information and statistics for Baden’s “Home coming Week” this summer has found that there are more'than 100.000 natives of Baden or children of Baden-born parents living in New York. so to speakt Baden's third largest city. No Prison—Just Home Edgartown. Mass, — (UP) —As the sole inmate of the county jail here. Edward Tracy is deprived of nothing except his liberty. Books, magazines, cigars, cigaiettes. a radio, flowers and an easy chair combine to make life pleasant for the lone prisoner. Once a day, a keeper takes Tracy for a stroll through the village streets.
All In / Intestinal poisons are sapping a SBta your energy, stealing your pep. S makinsr you ill. Take N? k ff'SWST -NATURE'S REMEDY-the J ■ W W safe, dependable, vegetable /TOM6HT laxative Keeps you feelinp f TOMORROW ritfht. Get a 25c box. ALRIGHT | The AU* Vegetable Laxative
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1930.
VISITORS SEE PRICELESS ART IN NEW MUSEUM G. W. Vandebiit Mansion at Asheville, N. C. Is Thrown Open to Public Editor's Note: -This is the second of two articles on opening the George W. Vanderbilt mansion at Asheville, N. C., as a public museum. In yesterday's letter was the description of the house and its history. Herwith is presented the description of the interior, as visitors will see it. United Press, N. Y. Ashe.ille. N. Mar. 19.—(U.R) visitors this wpek are birug admitted to Biltmorg House, the mansion built 35 years ago here by George W. Vanderbilt and stocked with priceless treasures. It was opened to the public this week and a nominal fee, to meet Its expense asfa mils' um Is being charged. Entry is gained through the Cedarcliff and B’ltmore gates to the estate where watchmen constantly are on guard. To the left of the main entrance to the house is the “Grand Staircase,” modelled after the staircase st Bloise, in France. It is a broad sweeping affair extending in spirals to the top of Biltmore House. A mass ve wrought iron chandelier hangs in the center of the staircase spiral. Beyond the entrance hall, visitrs will be escorted to the “Court of Palms,’’ sunken, with* many types of palms growing around a central figure of a boy and a swan in marble, by Hfcrl Bitter. AustroAmerican sculptor. The "court of palms” is covered by high ceilings. The main drawing room of Bilt more House, beyond the “Court of Palms," is oak-panelled and hung with sport engraving by famous artists. Heads of deer, buffalo, boar, moose and other b'g game adorn the walls. An eagle is mounted over a huge fireplace Napoleons chess outfit is in a corner. Lending from the drawing room into tJie banquet hall, the walls of a paitage are decorat'd with a copy of a fiieze of the Parthenon at Athens. The banquet hall is a copy of an old Morman hall, 66 feet long and 75 feet high, with triple fire places, nd a huge oak table in the eenter. Gobelin tapestries depicting the history of Vulcan, made for Francis I and woven on cloth of gold, adorn the walls. Over the hall’s entrance is the motto, “Give Peace, God. in our Time." The main dining hall, off the banqueting ball, is furnished in Spanish leather above marble pan 4s. Gold and velvet chairs are | Hatched by a table of similar de | ign. A Wedgewood fireplace adds j is touch of warmth. From the windows es the print room a visitor may see the French Broad r ver lose itself in the nearby mountains. On the walls of the oom hang scores of prints, and an -mgrvaed history of Maxmillian the Great by Max Durer. The “Tapestry Gallery,” 100 feet long, is lined with Flemish tapes tries and also contains paintings Deluding one of William Cecil Lord Burleigh, uncle of Mrs. Cac l’s husband. 'There is a Boldini of Mis. Peter G. Gerry, of Washington, who was formerly Mrs. Van lerbilt; and Sargents of Mr. and Mrs. Vanderbilt. Op the second floor is “First Hall," a great room in whifh hang Sargents of Olmstead and Hunt •tainted at Biltmore House; also paintings by Ziiloaga and Zorn. Tht floor is covered by the 11th cen tury Turkish rug valued at leas! at |90.»00. “South Bedroom.” used by Mr. Vanderbilt, contains regal furn sh ings and is adorned with Portuguese and Spainsh prints. Off this mom is the bath, in which Vanderbilt install'd the bath tub of a Caesar, removing its original three legs for four, which proved inadequate. The marble atta r cracked ot its own weight, but was repair'd. Actual construction of Biltmore house has been estimat'd to havp co,st 47,000.000. Ne estimate of the value of the art collections and uniques ever has bene made pubtic. It stands unique in the history ol American homes. Vanderbilt selected Asheville for the site of his milPonaire’s playhouse, and brought international recognition to western North Carolina. Biltmore House for years has been the object of qnvlotts tourists' eyes, which until today were confined to its exterior. CRAIGVILLE NEWS Mis. Ollie Abbott of Rockford. Ohio, spent a few days here last week visiting tr ends. Mrs. BwJjqrt Ctoasdale and daughter of Bellevue, Michigan, were callers iu the home of Mrs.
Emma Pyle last Friday. Mr. and Mra. William HU-ks, Marjorie Hicks and Mrs. Lulu Carmoney of Dimondale, Michigan, and Mrs. Frank Whitney ot Lans Ing. Michigan, were gijcstg In the home of Mrs Erntna Pyle Friday and Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Merritt Albbott, daughter Alice, of Churubusco, called on friends at this place Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wolf and ■laughters spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Wolf and family of Tocsin. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Reed motored to Huntington Sunday afternoon and called on friends at the hospital at that place. Mrs. J. W. Drum. Elizabeth and Ruth Abbott of Fort Wayne, spent Sunday in the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Hetrick. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Myers and children spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Wrn. Garton.
Compare Values BEFORE YOU BUY AN AUTOMOBILE Low charyes for distribution of the new Ford save you at least SSO to $75 in addition to * the many suvinys in makiny the cur THESE are days when every dollar counts. The cars he soils. His discount of cutrtnlissiort is the lowperiod of reckless spending is over. People arc est of any automobile dealer. The difference in your going back to the good old-fashioned principles of favor, ranging from 25% to nearly 50%, comes right thrift and economy. Value is again being carefully off the price you pay for the car. considered. (2) No expensive extra equipment is needed when Npwhere is this more important than in the selec- you buy a Ford. The car leaves the factory ready for tion of an automobile. For the purchase of a car use. The f.o.b. price includes a Triplex shatter-proof represents a considerable investment. It should not glass windshield and an extra steel-spoke wheel, in be decided on hurriedly, but only after analyzing addition to four Houdaille double-acting shock abcvery important factor that concern* cost, value and sorbers and fully enclosed four-wheel brakes. Any performance. The time to do this is before buying — accessories you may wish for your individual taste not afterward when it is too late. are sold considerably below the usual prices. O. . - _ i . i None of these charges for selling, financing or accesN THE basis of cost, performance and the actual J 6 J ® J ° „ . i • sories is marked up or increased to cover a high comparative worth of every part, the new front is a , „ , . . , . , ri .. trade-in allowance on a used car. • alue far above the price you pay. It is made ol better materials and with greater care and accuracy because Get all the facts, therefore, before you buy and of the recognized efficiency and economy of Ford figure out just what you arc getting for your autoinanufacturing methods. mobile dollars. Go beyond the f.o.b. price and find The value of these methods is known and under- how much motc > ou thc dealCT than stood by millions of people. It is not generally real- ,he dealer P a >' 8 at the fac,or - v ' A " al .'' c used-ear . . . .1 ..1 • i . r allowance. Compare all charges—item for itemized, however, that these same principles ot efficiency 1 ° and economy are applied also to every step in thc dis- lor value. tribulion of the Ford ear. The low cost of selling, WIIEN you d(> thig you wiU hay<j new apprecialion financing time payments, etc., means a direct sav- of whal lhc ForJ Motof Company and Fopd dealers ing to you of at least SSO to $75 in addition to the arc doing t(J kccp rfown th(j cogt of F(jpd carg Y(ju money saved by 1 ord economies in making thc < ar. a | s(J | 4IIOW w hy it is possible to put so much real 1 here arc definite reasons vv hv this is so. value into thc new Ford and still retain thc low price. (1) The Ford dealer does business on a smaller The mopey you pay goes for value in the car. It is not margin of profit because of thc greater number of wasted in excessive costs in manufacturing or selling. FOItD MOTOR COMPANY
Granfima Hetrick spent Sunday afternoon in the home ot Mr. and Mra. William Breiner. Mr. and Mra. Joel Kerhn spent Sunday evening iu the home of Mr. and Mra. Denton Ratcliff. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bryan and son Lloyd of near Peterson and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Zimmerman of Decatur were Sunday afternoon guests In the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Barger. Mr. and Mrs. lambert Rauner and (family of Bluffton. Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Bolinger. Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Oliver of Fort Wayne, Mrs. Warren Russel of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ske, Misses Myrtle and Helen Mechling were Sunday guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Bolinger. Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Bell, son Gene, spent Sunday in Fort Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. James Manley of near Peterson were supper guests last Saturday evening in the home of Mr. :<pd Mrs. John Barger.
Rev. Jay E. Smith and family were Sunday guests tn the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Pease. Mr. and Mrs. Oatus Strickler and daughters Bertha and Geraldine spent the week-end with friends at Willshire, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Barger and family, Mr. and Mrs. (Ren Barger and family of near Magloy were Sunday guests In the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Barger. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wolf and children called on Mrs. Mary Hetrick at the Decatur hospital Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Denton Ratcliff, Mr. and Mrs. Ora Ratcliff were guests last Sunday in tlw home of Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Gerber near Preble. • ■ - o Oil Concession Granted Sofia. —(UP)—Rights to exploit the oil lands around Popovdol, Bulgaria. for four years have been giveiuto a Dutch syndicate headed by Cornelius Dr* nc k.
Living In Hopes Ogdensburg, N. Y. —(UP)— A woman, whose name was not disclosed, is awaiting the return of SIOO which she lost in a street and which was picked up by another woman who mailed her the empty pocketbook and said she was keeping the money until she found work Auto Biggest Kick Le Roy N. Y., — (UP)— An airplane ride at 91 isn’t half as thrilling as an automobile Tide at 65, In the opinion of Jasper Starr, local farmer. Starr had a 30-minule flight recently, and when he alighted he remarked that automobile riding in 1906 was more dangerous. Show in Two States Somerville, Mass. —(UP) — Pat rons of LocatelM’s Ball Square theatre buy their tickets in tsflmer ville and are then ushered to seat* in the adjoining city of Medford to see the movies. The city line passes directly through the playhouse.
PAGE FIVE
| Thus, when this city's mayor recently banded a certain picture, the Ball Square theater was able to shew it just the same because its screen is located In Medford. SsametreM at 89 Battle Creek —(UP) — Wearing a birthday gown made by her own hands. Mrs. Rose Weller, celebrated her 89th birthday by entertaining her friends, here recently. The occasion also marked her 70th wedding anniversary. Trace Church Thief Budapest, —(UP) - An Investigation of the disappearance of fnndn from the poor boxes of several fyuda- • pest churches revealed that the thief was a former priest named Csontak who had been unfrocked without the knowledge of the church sextons who had supervision over the funds. To the sextons Csontak pretended that he was colI lecting the money on orders of the I Archbishop.
