Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 125, Decatur, Adams County, 26 May 1930 — Page 3
taBREAD p IN ANGORA ■th big crop Bluing Assure Bum-; H Wheat I‘roduc- ■ () n This Year Herbert Allen |K |1( mimbml I 1 \l ■l-n-All e#t iH,, . of 41.1.1100,000 ■ pminds moic_
■■■■BBMMMBnMBBB ■ y, I INSURANCE TICKET ■ *TI &I II Provide- high trade mal- ■ I Ijfe T &gaJßllrl-> 't**’” i'lsornii. p prutecii.m in convenient form on a KdK’ short t.-rm bams. Th.. ’^SuKF Ia the ad. « t 1 ■•ft* 1 *')! Covers Not Only Foreign ■ F n 3nd domestic Travel Acci’■S dents but non-travel acci- ■ fe dents as well, won't wait » 25 RATES iHtoo lond i r 100 fol 4 Center of the Universe! ]•» £ ep tiie home circle safely 2.00 for 10 days jrtled against the depriva- 2.50 for 12 dte/s n that might follow if you 2.75 for 15 dais i ii'd or killed. for day# Accident Tickets J ■' ■ convenient form of Accident 6.00 I r ■*T Insurance ' 5 for 1,0 ~ays ■ J" v t i 1000 for 9 " da vs ■ |wi ,s Buy Them When You Travel Ins ,„. es husinpss wolm . n ■ ■For 25 cents it pays same as nu n. Insures Par Accidental Death persons without occupnFor ixis# of Both Hands nr tiolls , for <»>'! me in berm ent only. HK . ~ TI „„ , Age Limits—lß to 70 For Loss of One Hand or a ___ per Week for Total Disabil- SllttlCSf ity up to 52 weeks Edwards Co. ■ Per Week for Partial Disa- Nib|ick StQre ■ bility up to 2b weeks. 358 Kr IT AT THIS OFFICE Subdued I® // Magnificence I ~_ L— I- ——- ; I nN those hours of sorrow there is a genuine comm fort in every funeral direction by Black. By assuming all L I responsibility we relieve the family of Iw all details during the hour of grief. DEPENDABLE SERVICE! I ECONOMICAL SERVICE! I S. E. Black FUNERAL DIRECTOR >6 S. 2nd St. Ph ° neS: House 72? ■|rs. Black, Lady Assistant. . House : I J nirom dicatlr ? I Whichever Way The I Wind Blows I The sailor uses every breeze. I Likewise the up and coming bust- I I ness executive uses every facility I I his bank offers: Deposit, credit I I investigations,—local and abroad, I timely loans, collections, exchange —domestic and foreign, discounis. I friendly counsel, investments and f trusts. The First National lends ■ impetus to forward progress. ■ 1 ■ II First National Bank I I Decqtur. Indiana J i 1 |
1 him lust year. I# cheered by hundreds of thoiiHumlH of houuewive# | who wee in thin situation the pro#, pect of cheaper bread. A demand already han i eon ntude I that bread price# be reduced to io |PiaHtreHH per ocque or about two! cents 11 pound. Meantime, the oldest speculator# <m the Stamhoul grain exchange I say prevailing grain price# are the lowest on record since the worl! j war. Many broker# have been ruined and the bunlne## of others 1# in j a precarlou# condition. Government agent# report the early spring rains in the famous j Anatolia wheat regions assure the bumper crop and the danger of insects bus passed. Tiie Angora and Mercine crop will come onto the market during May 1 _ ' i
DECATVR daily DEMOCRAT MONDAY, MAY 26, 1930.
Wreck of Mexican Ace’s Plane r . . ,_ 4 . „ .-r-< l *J® ' • - .. y/• A * JBOI ww 1 ihis jilcture shows the wreckage of p’ane in which Col. Pablo Sidar, Mexican army air ace. attempted a nonstop Hight on May 11 front Mexico to Buenos Aires. Sidar, accompanied by Lieut. Carlos Bovisora, encountered a storm and craslted into the sea oft Porto Limon, Costa Rica. Both men were killed. Both bodies and this wreckage were dragged from the sea and taken to Porto Limon, where picture was tak -n.
Just Perfect! ** ’ • w T ," fW&k « »Sfc» *w» ft* 1 I * ' .- ji Rr* 5 ® i > -f M 'WW”' $ ,'■ ■ X \> 4M!gl8 '■<■ <»- ,' ' tiiwi Wayne Wenig, 1G months old. who was awarded first prize for beauty and health in a contest held in connection with the Health amt iGducational exposition at Chicago. He is the son of H. Wayne Wenig of Oak Park, Illinois.
and that from Anatolia and Thrace ;n August. As there are on hand .n Anatolia now 1,200 cars of grain eady lor shipment and a stock of 25.'n0 tons of flour in Stamboul.l Turkey visualizes exportation or wheat this year Io Greece and .■'rance particularly because of the tow world prices which will retard! oreign exportation. o — Cow Has 22nd Calf Raceland, Ky., —(UP)— “Ros?,", i 21-year cld cow, owned by Mr-. Cnima Meads was recently the ,roud mother of a calf. There is lothing exciting about that fact alone, but i happens the newly-born : “Rosie’s" twentysecond offspring, “he old cow received considerable otoriety several months ago when he strayed away from her home oasture and drank some mash she t and at a still in a nearby woods. o ; The Mayor’s Wish E tes Park, Colo., —(UP)— Hanging a sign reading “May our house al ways he too small for our friends" 51' the front of the house, O. D. Shields, mayor of Glen Comfort, has opened tris office for the season. To Stabilize Table If the legs of your card table show tin inclination to fold at an Inopportune time, an Invisible hairpin wrapped tightly around the center where the two b.-aces clamp, will meet the emergency. J- o Borgltm’s Proposal Rapid City, S. D„ -(UP)—With the faces and figures of George Washington and Thomas Jefferson expected to l:e completed by that time, Gutzon Borgium, sculptor of the national memorial at Mount Ru-hmore in South Dakota has ad. vane a proposal that the memorial be made’the focal center of a national celebration of the two hundiredth anniversary of the birth of j George Washington in 1932. lae
head of Washington will be three : times as high and three times as ! wide as the Sphinx and will be the i Is gest head ever carved of a man.
Thayer’s Cream of Creams, Nation-Wide Advertising Offer i i 2 days only—Today and Tuesday I The greateat aale of line toilet requl.lten, — 1 !■—!?. , w«..ch thia city haa ever had. Do not - . . I mlaa thin unuaual opportunity to aecure JOT CV® ft A the »I.st> Jar of 'l'hayer’a Cream of ▼ 1 * B I Creama, »2.00 bottle Narclaaua I’erfnme VALUE Only Jg ' and »1.00 boa Blxarea Face Powder—all -— !j for only SI.OO. " ” ''' VaUg 1 ] <]so j : THAYER’S CREAM OF CREAMS ha. been Intro-aced to thouaand. I Os American women at a Jar. N°w It • ava ta * ® to ! three-day aalr. nt 1.00. <“d a- an additional make you acQuainled now with the AV or Idl • J 1 * 1 f .. . e b^>K of beauty, we will give you FIIEF.* during thin ■“**• * «i Enulne BIZAHES FAt E POU DI K. re.u'ar y priced at »!.*• Alan von will receive a full ounce hottie of IIIAAItr.M iv I ;* I PEIU’I ME. On aale regularly at All **"* rl t "s r J I JJn ( | dnetory aale for bH"* r > k“ w "/ l L ,>l o\ , gat ,t S , ; e, “ f “* Callow & Kohne _ feg_. jarzzr~~ r ~ ? ~ r -- ;==:: ''
GREAT SWISS RAIL TUNNELS HAVE BIRTHDAY Engineering Feats Have Meant Much to Progress of Europe Geneva, May 26 —(UP) —Switzerland this year is celebrating two anniversaries that are of as much importance for the world as a whole as for Switzerland itself. The first of these is the 50th anniversary of he piercing of the St. Gothard tun-' tel and the second is the 25th anniversary of the completing of the simplon tunnel. The first of thesfe, which lies between Zurich towards the north and Milan towards the sou’h was the first great connecting link between the north and south of Europe. Its importance in the development of European commerce is indicated by the fact that in the first L 5 years of its existence its traffic in goods tripled. Now with the electrification of the railways its tonnage is 23,000 tons. The Simplon, which ranks with its 20 kilometers of length as ‘he longest tunnel in the world, is the gateway for the inhabitants of western Europe with the near east. The through express trains from i London and Paris to Constantinople ' and son with Bagdad and Caro make it the favorite route for the . near east. The tunnel underlies the route used hy Napoleon for crossing the Alps into Italy. I It recently has been doubled with ! a second tunnel running parallel | for its full length. 0 . Plea for Cleanliness Meiino. Mont.. (UP) Greater ! onsumption of dairy products will 1 he obtained if the cows, milk and ■ butter are clean, members of 'he I no Progress Club were told by Walter R. Freeman, state dairy ! commissioner, at a recent meeting. ■ Freeman advised farmers to keep their cows clean and provide them with clean quarters. Cooling of milk as soon as it is drawn was urged, and he suggested that cream be delivered within four days.
SPAIN CENSORS ONLY MATTER IN LOCAL PAPERS Outside World Gets News That Often is Deleted for Home Folks i Madrid, May 26 (UP) Although many person# living abroad still think foreign dlsputidio# from Spain are suhject to censorsltlp. such is not the tuse. Censor, hip for Spanish newspapers is maintained, but the govern-i, ment has guaranteed aU foreign correspondents and news agencies that, their dispatches will not lie intererred with, and that they will re-! cieve ull cables sent to them from their home offices, or anybody else.| This of course does not mean that he government will not watch what in being sent or received, in case it should feel that it would be to its interests to do so. The government found out that in a country situated as Spain is. it is physically impossible to rnainain any effective censorship, and hat an attempt at censorship would only serve to encourage the work of the rnmorfaetories in nearby •ountries. The newspaper cell orshlp continues, sometimes very strict, aither timesvery lenient. Variations also occur in the strictness or leniency from one province to another. Thus something might, tor example, lie printed in Barcelona and blue pencil in Bilbao, or viceversa. One of the interesting contrasts in that la Nacion. the paper of the late Primo de Rivera, never showed signs of censorship during he Dictatorship, but now has much of its matter killed. La Nacion frequently fills its censored space with he wotds “WAIT UNTIL ALL TIIE "HUTH MAY BE TOLD" in big leti ters. The conservative papers La Epoca and A. B. (’. rarely, if ever, nave anything cut out these days. v they are thoroughly monarchical and strong supporters of the present government. Thus it is. that the reader in Lonlon, New York, Buenos Aires, Berlin, etc., gets better news of Spain than he Spanish newspaper reader. ——o Burro Causes Enmity Fairplay, Colo., — (UP) — The | death of "Old Prunes" a burro, hat 'isrcp’ed the friendship between Fail play and Alma. Both t owns ! claim the right to erect a memorial, , to the 62-year-old animal and each | has raised a fund for that purpose. , o —— Ostrich Raising I Twin Falls. Idaho. —(UP)—Sm- ■ cessful in raising beans, potatoes, i poultry and other products, this sec- j LOANS TO FARMERS | 1 Up to $300.00 ; S Special Time Plan « I Franklin Security Co. 1 I Phone 237 g I Over Schafer Store. g
Their EducationSECURE - ' 1 ext " e< * nes( lay : 11 is Graduation Day for you r U' ~ who have successfully com- ' x pleted four years of hard earned work. We congratulate you ud- ' — on your success and wish you continued advancement There are hundreds of . plans. Each has been designed to meet a Have you provided a plan particular and indi- f or y our future education? ler U whal’ r, vom O plans If not We WOUld Suggest for the future they vou CO nfer with one of cessiuiiy by one of the officers of our instituourjrust or saving < j on at once< Peoples Loan & Trust Co 4
lion is going Into the ostrich InisilU'ss. The Hayes hatcliery Imported hulf a dozen ostrich egg# from LohAngeles, mid hopes to have some of the lotig legged birds mingling with the barnyard fowls before long II G. Haves tried ostrich raising before, and believe# he has discovered the trick necessary to raise the birds in this climatic <>-- — Gnats Make "Smoke" Columbus, Ind., (UP) Seeing
Nothing pleases the hoy graduate more than a Gift from a Mans store. Gifts of wearing apparel that linger long in his mind and that are always useful. John T's great Sale offers the best of merchandise at drastic reductions ! Large and complete selections of Graduation Gifts at money saving prices. You’ll save plenty of money hy choosing HIS Gift from this store. May We Suggest SHIRTS HOSE HATS NECKWEAR HANDKERCHIEFS FANCY UNDERWEAR LUGGAGE PAJAMAS John T. Myers & Son
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"#moke"ciir)lllg uhout thi> tower of . the Bartholomew county courthoitHc ie#ident# of Columlm# culled’the—fire department An Inspection l>v firemen fulled to reveal even n • upurk. Mode Pennybaker, diyOo- ~ dlun of the bullditig, solved the ni)#-"s' tery of the lost "Mnoke", ex|dnl7illi;’ •• that u awarm of gnat# hovering J I around the tower appeared to he i-tmoke ut the flr#t glunee. ..r 0 ' ■ tee HHRft -1»M» »♦ >-nm«
