Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 269, Decatur, Adams County, 13 November 1930 — Page 3

fiOFGOLD ll MOTHERS Bigge st Jo b ■L- Quartermaster’s Mrt ( ails It Year’s Klstanding Work N ,,v - .n,.ls of Ani'-fican and widows to HjE. t.ii.-s in Fiance, par- , of the army hmm--3K,,U jiul ilie restoration of ■K L ... old home were K outstanding accom- i -■ I ■R. .1, Its annual report i ■I r was nr.de by Maj.,! R, | L |i «nt. quartermaster ~~~~~~~~~

Indiana Marches Forward... as an Industrial State AMERICAN industry today Is finding its natural center in the middle west. Indiana and bordering territory is in the heart of this industrial development. Indiana is today an industrial state. Growth of industry in many parts of the state and particularly in the northern region has been rapid and extensive. The great industrial district at the southern end of Lake Michigan has been called ’'The Workshop of America.” Here are located one of the largest steel producing centers in the United States and the greatest oil refinery center in the middle west. Here also are built railroad passenger and freight cars, automobiles and hundreds of other products used in the factory, the office, the home and on the farm. This territory is the iqeeling place of coal and ore. It is the cross-roads of the continent. It is the natural economic location for the nation’s production center. Lake Michigan on the north furnishes water transportation on the Great Lakes and to the Atlantic ocean. The Ohio river on the south furnishes water transportation to the Gulf. The state is criss-crossed with a network of railroads. Raw materials are easily accessible and the territory is surrounded by markets for the finished products. To the south of the great industrial district of northern Indiana, the march of industry is making its way. \\ hat formerly were rural communities have become industrial centers. Many industries have located factories in the smaller communities of central Indiana where working and living conditions have been bettered for their employes. In southern Indiana are the Indiana limestone quarries and mills and the coal mines. Serving this great territory with electric power and light, gas and transportation service are the subsidiaries of the Midland United Company. A few years ago, a large part of the state was served by small isolated public utility companies. These companies were acquired and placed under one centralized management. Communities were interconnected with electric transmission lines and in many instances with high pressure gas pipe lines. New, modern gas manufacturing and electric generating stations were built. Small companies were merged into groups of larger and stronger subsidiaries which today render adequate, reliable and efficient utility service in a large part of the state, making possible further industrial expansion. This is the first of a series of advertisements in which will be described how these companies have been brought together under one co-ordinated management and control with the result that service has been bettered, rates have been reduced and adequate and efficient public utility service has made possible the growth of communities on a scale never before possible. Midland United Company PRINCIPAL OPERATING SUBSIDIARIES: Northern Indiana Public Service Company... Gary Railways Company Interstate Public Service Company .. • Indiana ervic ® or P°? *°j Chicago South Shore and South Bend Railroad . . . Indiana Radroad Central Indiana Power Company’s operating subsidiaries.

general, who succeeded Maj. Gen I R. F. Cheatham in that post last January. The Qnartermaßter'll Corps was charged by the secretary of war with making all the arrangements I for thff gold star mothers' European pilgrimage and, Dewitt said, the moat careful consideration was given to this duty." Al! work under th* 1927 army | (housing program, providing 6601 n ' w hospital beds, housing accommodations for 7,983 enlisted men. 92 non-er.mmissioned officers and 18 officers families, has been car ' tried out, Dewitt reported. In ad-1 dition the 1928 program has been finished except for commissioned officers’ quarters at Selfridge Field, Michigan. Thus far congress has appropriated $40,00(1,000 for the army housing pregram. When the 1930 work is done quarters for 4,801 enlisted men, 437 non-commissioned officers! families, 373 officers' famili- s and 29 nurses will have been finished There still will need to be pro-

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1930.

videil, l)cwiti said, quarters for (14,800 enllst<d men, 3,286 officers | and 2.463 non-commissioned offii cers, envisioned in the permnanet 1 housing program. Restoration of the Robert K. Lee mansion nt Arlington, Va., was completed during the last year, the quartermaster general said. Also, mere than a third of the furniture needed to give the interior its i original appearance has been obtained. More than 85,000 persons have visited ths place since last March, when it was opened. The present strength of the quarI termaster's corps is 767 officers and 7,457 enlisted men, Dewitt reported. o——- —_— October Fishing Good Ocracoke Islland, tUl’)—October proved the most successful month of the entire year for chanI nel bass anglers along the coast ihere. During the first two weeks, [fishing pa.ties, mainly composed of northern sportsmen, landed over '•,sb bass.

Hawks Sets New Record 1 Wf V • Rm V WW' •’Fro* . % k dr i w 77a w (Brel ■ : F.m - , TEMagrereMfl

Wnen Capuun 1-rank M. Hawks, famous American speed flier, •et his Texaco No. 13 plane down »t the Genera) Machado Airport, in Havana, he was greeted by an enthusiastic crowd as shown above on his recordbreaking flight. On his return

MARTIAL LAW IS NECESSARY (CONTINUED FBOM PAGE ONE' morming working agreements with the native miners. The government was obliged to send troops into the region on several ocean-' ions when violence threatened. After yesterday's outbreak United States Minister Fied M. Dearing visited the foreign minister here and is understood to have; made a formal request for prelection of Americans. Trains bearing foreign refugees from La Orova to Lima made their way slowly over the winding, dangerous mountain tracks and through the Orova tunnel which penetrates the Andes at approximately 10,000 feet. They included women and children fiom the foreign colony in ■he Cerro de Pasco region who were ordered to evacuate when the rioting began. The fate of the refugees will be in doubt if the railroad workers jcin the general strike called sor 1 today and leave the trains strandd. Government officials, however, assured Minister Dearing and other, foreign diplomatic representatives that the refugee trains would be guarded and given safe conduct. The government announced that all workers participating in the | threatened general strike would be' charged with sedition. The strike was called "a subversive action ccndemn;d by federal law." The government recognized the right of workers to organize, the decree dissolving the labor organizations said, but said that foreign elements were influencing laborers in a manner dangerous to the public order.

Six American wcnien arrived in Lima last night from the mining area. Their husbands had telegraphed them from Cerro de Pasco to leave the district at once and' they took the first available train from La Croya. They had not! heard of the rioting when they ar-1 rived here. Trouble has been expected in j Cerro de Pasco since the overthrow of former President Augusto Le-1 guia. Two British subjects were kidnaped early this week, but were I rc-elased. The government arrest- 1 ed 33 workers said to be leade. s of the unrest and brought them to j Lima for questioning, but they | were not held on any charge. One of the men questioned was Esteban Pavletich, former lieutenant of the Nicaraguan rebel Augusto Sandino. The majority of the Peruvian Indian miners are the conquered d - scendants of the Incaic nations. They come from the mountain regions of the Andean Sterras and are called “Serranos'' < r lullmen. Most of them are illiterate and speak the ancient Queobua and Aymara tongues. They speak Spanish poorly, but usually understand it well. They cling to their picturesque clothing, spun from the wool of the Llama and the Alpaca, when they first arrive at the mining camps, but contact with white men seems to spoil them. The Indians are easily influenced and net inclined to steady woik. o Sentence To Be Served Brazil, Ind., Nov. 13. — (U.R) — A suspended sentence on a charge of child desertion against Michael

journey to New York, he set a new record of 8 hours and 45 minutes, and brought pictures of his take-off for International News Photos and Hearst MetroTone. through arrangement with I Harry Bruno of Us Texaco I Company. (ililCH.at.vuaJ .Sawitretl)

Brown, was revoked and he was sentenced to six months on the state penal farm and fined SSOO by Judge T. W. Hutchinson in Clay circuit court for participation in a shooting scrape at Ashboro Satur- | day night. Brown was shot twice and slight- , : ly wounded by Earl Hamblen, 18, I Saline City, who pleaded guilty cn I a charge of carrying a pistol without a permit. Hamblen's case was taken under advisement. Sleeping Baby Smothers Syracuse, N. Y. —(L’P>—A moth-j er's fear of disturbing her infant’s slumber led to the death of five! months' old Robert Steisser. son of ■ Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Steisser. Mrs. i Steisser placed the baby in a car-; riage on the porch. She glanced at him .from the window several times, and he appeared to be sleeping, so she refrained from disturbing him. 1 Later she tried to rouse him, but he was dead. He bad turned over .and had suffocated. ! o Austin, Tex., —(UP) — Indians on ' the state reservation in Polk County refused to occupy modern cottages built for them by the stato One brave has accepted a cottage but he uses it only as a support for a lean-to built against it and oc- [ cupied by his family. o Search for Deer Fatal Monticello. N. Y., —(UP)—Search ! for deer which he had seen drop in la field provided fatal to Fred Woods 45, of Cold Springs. The deer came Dr o contact with a high power circuit and was killed instantly. I Woods touched the same circuit | and was killed.

HERE are some REAL VALUES • in USED CARS 'I Manv thousands of miles I in these cars. Come in and see them. Buick 1928 Sta. Coach Buick 1928 Sta. Coupe Buick 1927 Sedan Ford 1930 Sedan 'I I Oakland 1929 Sedan Your old car taken in trade. I Balance financed through •j G. M. A. C. lowest rate of ' interest. | W. D. Porb r Buick Sales & Service Ist & Jackson Phone 123 ‘I -

SOLD INNKEEPER ! SAILS BACK TO HONEST REVOLTS Rumanian Woman’s Dreams Shattered and Fortune Gone Dy George D. (Tie i y Unl>d Press Staff Correspondent j San Francisco Nov. 13 tUPIA little Japanese steamer cleared I through Golden Gate today bearing Mrs. Annie Whittier, 50. toward her goal—a land ot "honest revolutions." For 2<> years Mrs. V.'hittler kept a | hotel in Tientsin. China. As the sea-I sons rolled hy me sudden changel from summer to winter ami yinter ( to summer, irked her. The termoil j of North China grew wearisome. The steady trump of revolutionary armies by her door got on her ne. ves. She dreamed of a land where there isn't at least one revolution per year. Visions came of the spring time poets sing about, and of soft and fragrant summers. One day Mrs. Whl tier packed Up bound for America with 312.000, her • life savings, in a purse. A native of Rumania, she was not pe.mltted to remain in the! United States but that never wor- 1 i “Handy Lotion” i Cleanses and Relieves a n sensitive skin 25c and 50c I The B. J. Smith | Drug Co.

Our new directors BUSINESS Experience, sound judgement and vision is expected of a bank director. In increasing our board of 1 directors, men wilh all three of these requisites have been chosen. j.’ CLARENt E L. AYRES President of the American Life Insurance Company, Detroit, Mich. THE American Life Insurance company has more than $100,000,000.00 worth of insurance in force and total resources of more than $17,000,000.00. Mr. Ayres is not a stranger in this community. He was born and reared in St. Mary’s township, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Ayres. He has a warm spot in his heart for Adams County and the financial help and advice rendered by him in the reopening of this pioneer and faithful financial institution was of great help to all. Old Adams County Bank “GROW WITH US’’

p led her. "Any America will do," I she thought. Nicaragua sounded nice. So she i I went to Managua but from the first there was trouble. "Soldiers didn' t tramp past my I door; they marched through the I houses," she said. Ftn.-riige disappeared. Passport..« were missing and in less than a year, her fortune. $12,000 In gold, was gone. Making her wav to Cun Francisco Mrs. Whittier arranged tor econo inleul tran portatlon to the land I vhere spring comes suddenly. So today n smill Japanese ves-' sei ( lea ed from San Francisco, cur I rylng the black-eyed Rumania wotitan beak to Nor'h Cblnn and there! ■ he will start over again.

MMHave'you the noonday of Life ? Tlu'n make the down road happy hy keeping your strength and health. An unfailing warning of a rundown condition is the diminishing of ths red-ldood-cells.

A DEFICIENCY of red-cells in the blood is usually followed , by physical exhaustion, loss of appetite, under/B 0 weight, nervousness and pimples IfOfli) and boils. When y° u r red-blood-XO C ;, z cells are only 80% Eokroed bio.d you are NOT rX r fr.d!’brMd! yourself—6o% is ceii>. very dangerous. Common sense suggests that every possible step be taken to coirect such a condition. Take S.S.S. before each meal. It will

PAGE THREE

Cun Smoke in Boston Cambridge. Muss. •—(VP)-—Girl students at I lie Boston University Sargent School of Physical Education may smoke In the adjoining city of Boston, not In Cambridge. Recently the student governing body was asked to decide whether looking should be permitted generally or not at all. Lack of n quoriyn prevented consideration of the issue so th- present rule peimitting th* use of cigarettes in Boston but not In this city will hold 'or at least another year. — ————— Chineo Relic A stone tablet ctiru-d dreji with (biHs-es of Confucius more tlmn 1.7(81 teiii.’ Hg<’. Illis t>eel> placed in fl • nett >, »i llhrnrt u- I’elplny

build up and enrich your blood, give you new life and vitality! Your appetite will pick up—you will feel like yourself again! Keep the down road bright by keeping your red-blood-cells fighting for you. Get the large size. At all drug stores. © s.s.B. co. Builds Sturdy Health