Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 80, Decatur, Adams County, 3 April 1930 — Page 3

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— _ _ __ Idi I >Jj enek al Motors Trucks ■ Tpß A Great Value • Newly Added! Iw n J' * n 1 *™ - ‘sbimb IB^K— I ”* R -— -J? \|_tz ffijzy -TON RANGE W INVESTIGATE this truck if you want power —a real truck all through—■to make sure of getting the most for truck axles, springs, clutch, trans* H rnur money! Model T-15a . . . 5,W0 mission, 6" truck frame,4-wheel truck ■■lbs. “Straight Hating” (total gross brakes ... 2 chassis and 3 types availII weight, including load) ... Six cylin- able .. . price chassis only, f. o. b. ■ der and speed—o 3 actual hors;- 1 ontiac, Mich, ikß Adams County Auto Co. ■ Madison Street Phone 80 I DECA 1U R INDIAN A r" | r R. S- Herbst from the Goodyear Factory, will be z- 7 ' ‘•J / with us all day to give these interesting I I ua' // z Y demonstrations. I Sai ” a p l 5 llßhl One! "day |M DEMONSTRATION OF ■ / ' % -Bl Z7~; : ,■ Saturday, April 51 h _ _ • at Decatur’s Only /Ik T gS I I Exclusive Tire S*oie f > 1 J BV + I B ■Proving why more people ride on i ■ "il .„<! TUBE TOCETHEIt GO O B E AIS • I LOW PRICED! 1 Goodyear Pathfinder Tires TIRES and TUBES Tubes, superior to many I 9k*S&L ;i (takers’ high-priced brands. Fresh [/f/ r NS jfrSztllatt v Come in and have your eyc« hock —all firsts — lifetime guar- //Jf ( \ opened—see exactly why Goodyear nteed. Carefully mounted and Kj I Ate / Tires “ re far out ' distancin K an >’ ‘ lacked by our year round service Sf< »XOnf RSmIjEmN other make—why' millions more | i f satisfaction. Tube with each [ vS?J BmCTI people prefer Goodyears! BalloOllS 4/Sgj M&fKl Goodyear builds MANA’ MILLIONS RH' Kj more tires than any other com--19x4.40 Q T 1 B jR pany and can, therefore, give the ire & Tube.. tPO.dO ' ■gßogSsl/ KIB greatest value. Come in Saturday I 0x4.5f, kl 4 ry OF and SEE how much more your ire '& Tube th7.05 monej buys in a Goodyear! 9x5.00 ' rr* n ryr High Pressure ’ire & Tube. . 4M 3Cx3'i t 'x5.00 > - The & Tube. tPM.OV » $10.40< $10.50 i Other sizes also | Tiro A’- T»>be $11.40 : low priced. | 90x5 H. D. QQ 4 ' J Tiro A- Tuf-o McDtififee T ire Service Road Service 110 N. 3rd St. Phone 2G2

iTo your mellow tones In the distance, i Bidding me up and away. To tasks In the dearly loved . < hoolroom, ij In Joy. niy lessons to say: Again, when nty work nil completed. Honiowaid, with xeo.s light and 1 gay. • On Sundays, you tinted all our worship. Though bright be the skies or gray. With each stroke of your might; hammer, Went forth on waves of the air,

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TIII BSDAY, APRIlft, 1930

So inds. ns from string'} of an Ins runtent Trhleii on the listening ear; Soft t everbeerat ions' sweet music ' Kiholng tfueful nod clear. Like the rise i,nd full of a river Or purling of hrook more mar; Ah. beautiful and soul entrancing To spirits attuned to hear; I it — dear Did Clock slightest' wonder. That o our hearts you've grown dear? Like a King In your wonderful low'r. Supreme, you ruled o'er the town,

Recording the hour and the minute. When eueh wee infant was born; Who, to manhood and womanhood grown, / Anon, came n wedding morn! When your toll-worn hands set u pealing. The merty bells at the dawn. ; And. bridegroom and bride ul the ultar, I’ligh Ing their wove, were made one. 'Alt! Kindly, your face beamed upon us, Never on us did you frown. Dark death cast his gloom and his shadow, O'er many homes in your day, I And whether at noon or the nighttime. Os Joy, quenchod e'en the leas' i ay; I’hoiig.t long, dragged those slow, wea.y hours When griet and sorrow held sway As surely old (’lock, in your Steeple— Be it December or Muy — I four -ad face timed church bells a ; tolling, O'e: beaus of gold or of gray, ' Slow-wending their way to the ch urcliyard, To await grim judgincut-day. Wild day , In the depths of winter. When King Blizzard roamed the ea.th; Like a beast, gone mad in a forest Stampeded- you gave wide betlh; Your heart-beat frozen yortr fate cold-blanched; From your throa , no sound of mirth; Thus you gazed in a sto: me-bouatl stupor. Recording ne'er death nor birth. Until the warm rays of the sun shine Restorefl all your former worth And. happ ly of days and of minutes, No longer you suff'red dearth. There’s a tale of woe from mem’ry’h hall. That tells how they kept you wound. Der ou. lives you held a kingly sway And, with “time” you must be crowned. iT.ough the town to a city now grown, We still loved the old-time sound Os your tones, in the glare on noon day Or the shades of night profound: ;o hey sought for a public servant, Till a trusty man they found And, the Council to this watchman gave The key to your daily round. ' B it, they reckoned not, the funds were scarce, And would vanish quick front ' sight. Cleaving naught to pay this ' fiddler’ guy. Would keep you dancing light, it mattered no . whether tain ot shine. In the day or in the night. ‘ : But, how sad to say, theie came a day. Rigid you stared from yotti height; Never a tick nor a stioke. Town Clock.. And. this genius proved it righ To bridle your tongue and strike you dumb, Till on gold ms list closed tight. At last, they found you a valet?tnan To .-.erve as ihc fust would not; |He took the ask as his daily choi'iAnd was “Joliiinie-on-the spot.' I He wound you up, lull many a dav then, alas, one day forgot! And of all sad tales of tongue or pen Quite the saddest was our lot. When some days you'd clang you: n.e.ry tune, Again, duty seemed forgot, And we Knew not when to take our test, Nor. to rise up from our cot. Now, Old Town Clock, in these latter days. Like a candidate you run; Sometimes yo ,’ie ahead, sometimes behind, Some.imes 'Day light —sometime - "Sun Deem it wise .to wear a smiling face, ' would no do it you were glum; Still, we Aish you luck in futur ..ays, l-.oni mo:n to the set of sun; C.ay for timely blessings at your hands, But the meed of sorrow shun. Then tick away to the time of time, t ill our tasks -if l‘fe are none. EMILIA. A. TO.N'NELIEit o— — lowa Tornado Toil Des Moines.— (UP)— Twen y nine 'o ;i i loes killed three lowans. l’i red 27, l; : d waste 114 mile-: of lowa farm land, and cause-' nrn--e.ty damage estimated at $313,850 dnYing 1929. Charles D. Reed, fed oral weather forecaster announced in hfs annual summary. o THOUSANDS OF CORNS REMOVED Your Druggist now has a remedy that really will remove ANY corn or callus quickjy and without any pain. It is properly named END-O-CORN. If you are one of the unfortunate ones who have tried many so-called “corn cures" and still have your stubborn old corns or calluses go to any Drug Store in Decatur NOW and let them demonstrate “END-O-CORN." It only costs fifty cents but it’s worth SSO because it is sure. (Adv.)

OZARK STREAMS WILL PRODUCE LIGHT, WEALTH Big Power Projects Started on Water Courses of Beautiful Area By W. It. Draper (United Press Correspondent I Joplin. Mo., April 3 — (UP| - •'.om fiddh-s to phonographs, font's o farming, ipule buck to flivver — the Ozulk.s have stepped along abreast of the times. Natives now know what's in the newspnpt rs ami on the screen. Good roatls and making the hil! country in o a summer playgroun-l have changed it all. The thousands of miles of spring fed streams that twist through narrow gorges at the base of cliffs are soon to be harnessml and made to produce light and magic wealth While these Ozark people have always worked hard for their small -oinforts and pleasures, the era of ■V<i tri.-i'y I'..

’"''l a ' ■ e I Look at it go this way s t IF YOU MADE up your mind to produce the best cigarette ever smoked . . . wouldn’t you begin by selecting the choicest tobaccos in all the world? ... Wouldn’t you spend time and money without stint to discover and develop the one most perfect blend? . . . Os course you would. And that’s o exactly what Camel did. That’s why Camel so quickly became the most popujur cigarette in America. That’s why, no matter what you pay, you can’t match it for mild, mellow fragrance and that smooth richness that makes the perfect smoke. ... Experienced smokers will tell you. . . . It’s a great cigarette! i: | Don’t deny yourself the luxury of \ Camels I . IT 1950, R. J Reynold, Tobarco I Company. Wiottoo-Salam. N. C.

the weekly pay check and its assurance of plenty of gas for the family motor car, rear silk hose for the girls, and plenty of store ( lollies for the cross roads dandies The s reams are said to be cap I able of producing 600,000 horse power by eonsti action of numerous ' dams. Licenses have been granted covering erection of 500.000 horsepower plants and work of developing more than 300,000 horsepower is now well under way. A happy, lazy land will soon be teeming with Industry. “Industrially these developments Just abend of the Ozaiks can b compared to the Carolinas,” said • Dr. 11. A. Buehler, chief of the Mis- - 'souri slate bureau of mines and geo- • logy, whose efforts lo bring befon the uliliiy companies the wealth of • ndevf-loped water power in the ()• zurk country is now hearing fruit. 1 1 "I he development of the south I I was dm- o hydro-electrlc propeet. > aking form, and the -ame thing i.- | ; now true of the Ozarks. These de I -1 - elopment- now under way protend: ;'a great advanceme.it for the hil! ) country.'' I Actual building of dams acro-.s; - Ozark rivers is now in p ogress at 1 Bat riel) on the Isage, Table Rock o: 1 the White and Lebanon on lie Nlan j ■ gua.

The Bagnell-Osage project wllli! cost s3iiu,not),(urn when completed! ami will create :< lake <ox (-ring 8(1 J square miles. The dam will be 95 feet high mid 1,000 feel long. About ( 125,000 1101 sepower will be developed, This power already Ims been | sold to the b-ii.l mines of south-east I i Missouri. I At Table Hock oil the White 1 River, a dam 195 feet high and 2,000 I feet long costing $1(1,000,000, is to be 1 started, ami work now Is in pro- > gross on tile dam Hite. This lake I will be 125 miles long ami will cover: .5,000 acres of land. The dam it-l stlf will gem-iate 225,000 horse-! < power Mos of this electricity will be sold to textile pltlllls, silk mill' smelter and numerous small factories, all of which are under coltract to move into the While River listiiel simultaneously with comple ion of the Tabb- Rock Lake. , l>oi!i tip (Isage mid Table Rm', 1 I Like will play Impoiiant parts a.’ (■sorts. Near Lebam- 1 on the Niangua I River a largo force of men are borI tig a tunnel 1.000 feet long under a I j nmitaln and building a, dam Otto I I leet 1 ig and 20 feet high to create a | : ako coverin’.' I.One acres to a depth | :of 20 fee . This propeet will co-' I 1.1 1,1(1(11,11(1.1 and will generate about I 175 000 horsepower. The electricity jl •al ady has been sold to about 19

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Missoinl towns. On Curent River, 11 public utility has obtained a permit to construct two dams generating 6110,000 horse jeower. On thi Gasconade River in c enttal Missouri, Central Missouri Power Company Ims preliminary permits to construct three dams. Preliminary surveys have been finished lor a $10,000,000 waterpower project near Arlington on the Piney River, mid another propeet on Black River near Leeper is contemplated, goveiumenl periuils having been obLui nd. There will be a meeting of lltr Masonic lodge Friday night lit 7:30 o'clock for the purpose of conferring the Fellowc raft degree. All memDeis please take mile. W. XL 79-2!

Li. :ir—~' -.1.... ii nun I LOANS TO FARMERS | Special Time Plan B Franklin Security Co. g Over Schafer Store. g sKaHmMEMBBHnHanMnMaBv'