Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 146, Decatur, Adams County, 20 June 1930 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

ILLINOIS HAS HALL OF FAME OF ITS WOMEN Outstanding Daughters o’ State Are Honored In Statuary By Kendall Olds UP. Staff Correspondent -.Springfield, 111.. June 20 —(UP) — Search for Illinois heroines of whom miniature statues are to be placed under glass In the rooms oi l the Illinois State Historical Libr-1 ary here reads like Action romance. I Data was prepared on 130 women. Owe hundred twenty-nine figures have been made while the other is in the—7>roc ss of being made. These 130 heroic Illinois women, who represent eras of the state from the days of the Indian down through the Civil War and to the CONSTIPATION RELIEVED • . QUICKLY "ARTtRS This Purely Vegetable Pill ItvVu will move the bowels without any pain and TSES— I depressing after effects. Sick Headaches, Indigestion, Biliousness and Bad Complexion quickly relieved. Children and Adults can easily swallow D-. Carter's tiny, sugar coated pills. They are free from calomel and poisonous drugs. All Druggists 25c and 75c red pkgs. CARTER'S IS! PILLS

' 2.. Purity that's. J W’’ ■ T 4 S& ' ' ‘ ,r*WTf Lt OJL , _„ * I ■!■___ IL ■ ID »■ l-W /*=»<■ .i-wSkV * , eSg-CttS' • - -48,^ •VSjgpfay- ■ ■■ Wb. Ish t' u Malt extract jL ..in „».«- V< 13z«'w£=3flM i — * ,4j The most skillful methods in the blending of Real Meritan Malt Extract are your assurance of rhe unfailing purity and healthfulness of this finer malt. Real Meritan is a food—rich in health building properties—brought to you with all of nature's goodness sealed in! Real Meritan is sold with a money back guarantee. Try it today. Your dealer can supply you. your Dealer Mi.’'.chief's Market. E. VJ £ \ J, Miller Grocery, Su- ?/* Lb W fr/Jfl WK * man's Cigar Store, j I" E r e , j Grocery, Lose Cigar Store. BMLkIXJjjFL..., J», jp Quality Goods at Reasonable Prices - at - Home of Quality Groceries We save you money—Make us prove it! KING TASTE MAYONAISE 1 Q t 25c jar for -L«7v KING TASTE SANDWICH SPREAD i Q „ 25c jar forlJv SWEET PICKLES Hr 4 2 dozen for ICED HONEY BOY COOKIES Hr 2 dozen «lt)v 1 !h. box CAMPFIRE MARSHMALLOWS 29c No. 1 SALTED PEANUTS Hr , Z 2 pounds ttvv - Saturday Specials - 7 bars P. & G. SOAP for 25 C SHREDDED WHEAT 1 flp THE LATEST IN CORN POPPERS 40 C AUSTRALIAN HULLESS POP CORN 1 A in Bulk, pound IvU PERFECT’S MACARONI 1 A 3 ten cent packages forLtJv GOLDEN AGE MACARONI lip 2 ten cent packages forJL JLv GREEN BEANS, Fresh Hr 3 pounds ZivC WE HANDLE PASTEURIZED MILK ONLY Pin ' 5c Quarl 10c FRESH BERRIES. FRUITS AND VEGETABLES AT SENSIBLE PRICES FOR YOUR TABLE. !■ ■■■ 111....— ' ' M. E. Hower Phone 108 Monroe & 7th sts.

! pres nt day. were selected for the honor as being the most heroic of their sex because of some mark lot dlstlngulshtnent uurlng their i life. It may have been because of 1 h roism in holding back a band of attacking Indians in the days of ■ the "Covered Wagon," or it may | have been for accomplishment in l i the world of arts. Miss Georgia 1.. Osborne, state, llbiarian. says that her latest fig-1 urine is representative of what Illinois women have accomplished in sculpture work. The one selected for the honor, to represent Illinois women in this , branch is Miss Kuhne Beveridge, a granddaughter of General John j !,. Beveridge, former governor of I Illinois. Miss Beveridge was born in the governor's mansion while her grandfather. General Beveridge, was governor of Illinois from January 1873 to 1877. Her sister, Ray, who gained fame as an actress, was born in Evanston, a town founded by the former governor and his friend. General Evans.! They are the daughters of Philo J. I and Ella M. Hutzer Beveridge. Their mother married a second ■ time and was known as the Baron ! ess Ella von Wrede. Their childhood was spent in Dresden. Ger-1 I many, while in later lite they lived I mostly in Paris and London. Starting her professional career | when she was 15 years of age I Kuhne first studied under the New York sculptor, William Rudolf O'Donovan, and later with Rodin in , Paris. Among her famous works are: Sarah Bernhardt. Joe Jefferi son. President Cleveland. John i Drew. William J. Bryan, William j Astor Chanter, Buffalo Bill, Rich-

-jard Croker, King Edward, King! L opold of Belgium, the Queen of Holland and a monument for Costa i Rica. With hr mother. Baroness von Wrede, she made a statue called •The Veiled Venus." which won a bronze medal at the Paris Sulon and was immediately bought for the museum at Leeds. England. Mlsij Beveridge has been married I twice. ■ fc —— - O'■■■■..l I ■■ -I ■!■!■ — C* -j n of Superstition According to a writer In the I .on, don Sunday Times the superstition that It Is unlucky to open nn umbrella In the house has Its origin In Catholic times, when the priest carried the viaticum to the dyUg person under a small canopy In the form of an umbrella, as is still '/one In Catholic countries today. There fore the open umbrella in the house becomes associated with the idea of i death. , „ — wQ — Inventor of Phonograph A tablet was unveiled In the National library at Peris on the fiftieth anniversary of the death of Edouard Leon Scott de Martlnvllle who. according to the tablet, construct'd a crude sound reproducing apparatus known as the “phonautoi graph - ’ 20 years before Edison In- , vented Ids phonograph. o— — Dance Saturday and Sunday nights—Sunset.

\ Arountiji dial, < 111 |i _ lift 3 PALTRY I ■ I FLOUR I | | I Waldorf Tissue 4 for 19c | I Ivory Soap £ 3 for 19c I I Corn Flakes 2 for 19c | I Peanut Butter 19c I Country Club Rainbow I Pork and Beans Salad Dressing I 3 for Quart I 19c 35c I Light & Dark Cake, Vanilla Butter Cream Iced (21b) ea. 35c MACAROON SNAPS pound 19c ■ DEL MONTE SPINACH, No. 2U canper can 19c i RICE, BULK 3 pounds 19c COUNTRY CLUB FRENCH DRESSINGI9c I MUSTARD Quart 19c D V 2 Pint MIXED OLIVES 19c I Potatoes “ ■ 15 lb. pk. 59c I TT ■ Fancy Red Ripe O » 5g lomstoes Hot House Z IDS. Zt}C g I Hd. Letlucs 4d<" c L 2 heads 19c I II Savings on Meats | j Picnic Hams 6-8 lb average lb. 21c I i ■■ --- -- | Bacon G^"<i c Q u u n X lb. 24c I I Beef Roasts - tender lb. 25c I

lif.CATIIB DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, JI’NE 20, 1930

OSAGES POORER BUT STILL ABLE TO GIVE PONIES A n n u a 1 Entertainment For Less Fortunate Indians Is Gala Affair Hominy. Okla., June 20 —(UP) — Although the Osage Indians are feeling mighty hard up since their Income from oil has fallen from 113,500 to around $4,000 a year, it is doubtful if they will abandon their annual "pony smoke" festival s held each summer. They still have enough money left to give away a few hundred ponies and not feel the loss. A "pony smoke" in the Osage means that Indians from other tribes come to visit their good Osage friends, and after passing th. pipe around the circle of medicine men. confabs, and feasting the Osages present each visitor with a fat and valuable riding horse or pony. The meeting is one of good will

| and the Osages are liberal hosts. | 1 I They have been doing this for; years, and thousands of ponies have been given away. It makes no difference to the 1 | Osages It a lot of the same horses j j are brought back each fall by those I who have received tire gifts in tjie ! season when grass was tall and lush and (he cost of keeping aj I horse was nothing. The Osage 1 takes the pony he has given away, feeds it through the winter for his friend who comes and gets it again In the spring. Since old production has fallen off the income of the Osage has j di opped materially, even to pitiful proportions In some instances. I They are still worth considerable for every Osage head rig lit is considered wortli $15,000. Formerly it was worth $50,000. The flush times of the Osages. began about 1920 when the famous Burbank oil field was opened. However, oil was first found in the Osage nation in 1897, and since that time nearly 400.000.000 barrels I ot' oil have been recovered from | beneath their reservation. The Indians have been credited with about $350,000,000, of which they have received and spent some I $235,000,000. They still have some i $30,000,000 to their credit in the United States government treas-

ury- t , From oil alone each Osage head right lias received about SIIO,OOO. The whole Osage nation of 1.500,000 acres nly cost about a million dollars, and it has paid in oil dividends alone three hundred and fifty times as much. The Cherokees, who once owned the reservation land sold It to the Osag- s for 70 cents nn acre, have never profited from ofl on their own lands. Contains Your Canary’s Complete Menu !■ It’s no longer necessary j < to buy three or four I items separately for . i J your bird. One package of Sing Sing Bird Seed contains Us E S them all-select seeds, tbinaSing ? dirt-free and correctly ES''. , &*nd 5 combined-cuttle bone, > OCEAN sand and 2 Enni»-H»m>- si n( r Sing Biscuits. Block burn / ' Coffee lo / j' st ,ur dealer cane." Kan-UMJ City. ? • Kun to o-dcr fiam Missouri 6 ■ EVERETT & HITE Decatur, Ind. |

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mores 1 I w’ ,ur ')K I CM ster SEHills F T FT I rr< ,ln! \ r J —F<) l< SA I F 0 I kJ/z 11 Ma. ioh tn c tills Hsher \ Harris, 1),.... IL 11 wi i Miller Deitsch. (v, 1 IwllW' 3l Appletnan s Grocery FQI 'aner f. t <>,, Monrn. ■ nußEsr -1 'A"-';rKEi;' Williams Equity \ <n . fl 'Y ii!ianis - I t pit,er * s,,n - \DHshir.< fol ßl. I Everett Grocery. |'| e J.W ef M>'iy fl Bern,> Milliiur Co., ’ & L * nhart V. I M I F rTilhWTftllWM iTT’ -- ■ ; I- — - w"® \\