Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 86, Decatur, Adams County, 9 April 1932 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
SF©>fS
BEST BOXERS ARE ANNOUNCED Chicago, April 9.—(U.R) Cehtral A. A. U. boxing champions In all weight classes were selected last night Ip Ixiyola gymnasium before jTltiu persona. Tile eight winners battle their way through a heavy entry list Irnrn Illinois, Minnesota anil Wis (.otisln before receiving their title belts ami statuettes of boxers. The winners and runners-up: Weight Champion 112 lbs.. Frank Sancllo. Chictgo. ] Runner-up, Lynn Thompson. Ils His.. Nick Seialaba. Chicago. ] Runner-up. Johnny Seanavino. 126 lbs.. Tony Muscarello, Chicago Runner-up Joseph Palazzolo. 135 lbs., Eugene Higgins. Chicago. Runner-up, Ernest Toniello. 14? lbs., Johnny Phagan, negro. I Chicaeeo. Runner-up. William Celebron. Rockford 160 lbs.. Fred Caserrio. Chicago. i Runner-up, Anthony Zale. 175 lbs.. Max Marek. Chicago. Runner-up. Frank Androff. Minne-i
apolis. Heavyweight. Earl Sather. Minneapolis. - Runimr up. Frank Ketter. Chicago The central champions will go to New York next month to compete in the national A. A. U. tourney which will decide the makeup of the American Oiymnic team. The outstanding champion of the 24 semi-final and final bouts was Earle Sather, blond giant of Minneapolis who scored two knockouts in defending his title won last year Sather, rangy and clean limbed, knocked out John Logan. Chicago, in two rounds in the semi-final, ami Frank Ketter, -rawboned heavy-, weight of Chicago, in two rounds in the final bout. Ketter was on i the mat four times before the ref I fciee raised Sather's hand. Nick Seialaba. Chicago bantam > weight, scored the quickest victory in the final round. He knocked out | John Seanavino of Chicago's wes. | side in less than a round. Scial-, aba. a former Golden Gloves champion. presented a savage and relent less attack against the inexperienced Seanavino. Jerry Chapman, a spectacular lightweight from Minneapolis, suffered an attack of appendicitis in the first round of his semi-final bout with Eugene Higgins. Chicago.•
THE CORT SUNDAY AND MONDAY Matinee Sunday 2 p- m - Evening. 6:30 10c ■ 35c “SHE WANTED ? MILLIONAIRE” The truth about beauty contests - and the Unlucky Girls who win them. Joan Bennett - Spencer Tracy Added - - “ONE MORE CHANCE" comedy, with BING CROSBY Radio's Sensational Star. News — Cartoon TONIGHT—LiIy Damita in "THE WOMAN BETWEEN.” Also good Comedy and Cartoon.
£ IF YOU NEED (Money Quickly CALL ON US / If you have an urgent need for money you will appreciate the promptness of our financial service. You can get any amount up to S3OO here —and get it quickly—no red tape —no embarrassing investigation. And the repayment terms are most liberal. Franklin Security Co. Over Schafer Ildw. Co. Phone 237 Decatur. Ind
ADAMS THEATRE SUNDAY-MONDAY-TUESDAY — 10c-35c “SHANGHAI EXPRESS” With MARLENE DIETRICH. CLIVE BROOK. WARNER OLAND. ANNA MAY WONG, EUGENE PALLETTE. An Action-Adventure Picture that Electrifies your Senses with THRILL! after THRILL! Added-A ’BOY FRIENDS’ Comedy. TONIGHT—BOB CUSTER in "QUICK TRIGGER LEE”—An ACTION WESTERN! Added-Comedy and Cartoon. 10c-35c
Australia’s Loss L jk * W ... MO® The sporting world mourns the untimely death of Phar Lap, the Australian wonder horse, at .Menlo Park, Cal., after a brief illness with bronchitis and indigestion. The big red gelding captured the admiration of lovers of horseflesh throughout America when he recently won Agua Caliente Handicap without a preliminary race lin this country. Phar Lap’s winnings amounted to $332,750. placing him second only to Sun Benn as the turf’s greatest moneyj maker.
I The match was awarded to Hig- ■ kins. The tournament physici :n i ; advised an operation forth - unfori Inmate Chapman. i Frank Sanello. Chicago, fly-1 J weight, reached the final round | through a bye and went tin to win | a decision over I,- nn Thompson. l I slashing red held, who was tired! from a semi-final victory earlier in the program. ■ Golden Gloves former champions, 'and runners up fared well. In adI dition to Seialaba. Tony Muscarello.! Johnny Phagan, a Chicago negro, ] 'Fred Caserrio. and Max Marek all ! won titles. SENATE PROBE STARTS TODAY I (CONTINUED FORM PAGE ONE, j Iter yesterday got the impression Whitney had refused to testify before the committee. Further telei phone conver ations la»t night clar--1 tried Whitney'; attitude. It is un- j i derdood now that in long dis-I tanee conversations with Senator ‘ I Walcott, Re.n.. Conn.. Whitney was , t ai jad to submit to the committee; I details of short transactions of sei- ■ ■ ected traders. Q U«e of “Whipstock" A whipstock is h to,! all.l, Is . I lowered ,»n top of a stria of toy. 1 drilling tools when it is ilis mI .< I drill by them. The beveled face of | the whipstock raises i!i«- wor'-ilis i tools to glxuce off to me side of I the detached string. A whipstock i Is also used as a means of stmigh* I ening a hole which has <l"vi:itef ' from the vertical. The expression I “■Ranging it whipstock” mentis tha' I the drilling tools are tost and ar rangenients are being made to drib past them with th" aid of a whip stock. Sanskrit Long Uaed Cuneiform inscriptions of western Asia indicate that Sanskrit has beetj the main language of Hindu lltera ture, religion and culture for up wards of tl.odu years. It Ims been , changed slightly in thi t time, but remains substantially the same now , as in the first records we have of | It. The language of the Vedl< I hymns differs from current Sanskrit i about as Homeric Gr.ek differs from Attic Greek . o Englishman • idea Tl>~ streamline projectile <as d«- | vet ped and first perfected by an J Englishman. Sir Joseph Wlttworth. In 1888. The French have used th" streamline p-ojectile since 1S!)3. It was used by this coui-*,-y during the •Vorld war. o FOR SALE —Four room house on south 15th street. $400,041 cash. ' Telephone 5594. S6t3x . - i i. ■— — FLORENCE HOLTHOUSE Stenographic Work TypewritingJudge .1. T. Merrvnitm’s Law Office. K. of C. Bitig. If you have any extra typewriting or stenographic work I will be! glad to do it. Phone 42 for j appointment.
BASEBALL NINE ' TO BE FORMED Decatur w ill have an independent baseball leant in th* field this soaI son, il. Hay Snedeker. owner of i the California Players, winfet theatrical organization, who Is | o, molding the summer months In Decatur announc' d t-irtuy Sm l k-r staled that the team wa n>w bring organized, and that Lili local candidate would lie given an opy.irtunlty to try out Wednesi day afleiii.ion al 4 o', lot k at Decaj tur high school athletic field on W< ■ Adams tree;. Pat Coffee, vote an baseball player of Deiutur will a,, as coach and I busiue i mana er of the Decatur beam t 1 s ye»:. Snedeker announced. It is the de .ire o the manage- ' ment to use as many young Ih*catur players as ; i. . ible. Two semi profe—ional players I from Fort Wayne have been Jgned tor the sea in and two or three I fltehers of Northern Indiana have been signed. The first game will lie sehedul- | I >d far Sunday April 17. it wa ■ I announce I. Following that game. a . ‘ted.ile Including the fastest I semi-pra teams in the middlewest l twill be announced. Baseball flayeis desiring to try out a.e asked to be on hand next
Wednesday afternoon at 4 o'clock. ■ o— LOC AL GIRLS SING TONIGHT CONI INI Eb i-'KOM PAGE UN’EI I Fort Wayne; Dr Frank K. Dough erty, Muir ie district superintendI ent. Ono other delegate was to be ' elected today. Lay delegates to the conference I will be: Mrs. F. F. Thornburg. ; Fort Wayne district: Lloyd Me 1 fTure. Kokonio district; Albert Harrison and Albert Bauer. MunI cie district; E. K. Shera. Richj mond district; Dr. Otto King and . Rev. B. W. Ayers. Wabash district. Alternate lay delegates include F. F. Fridley, Warsaw: G. E. Meek. Kokonio; J. W. Kirkpatrick. Muncie; C~ E. Frederick. Auburn. L. E. York, state superintendent of the Anti Saloon League, in an , address last night, urged the con- | ference to "get in the fight’’ to 1 support prohibition. "With the supnort of this conference." he I said. “I could elect any dry mnillI date in the state.” o Trees Old Age Insurance SILVERTON. Ore.—(U.R>—A. G. ; Stee'hammer. former state legislator. plans to set out 50 filbert I trees next spring to provide him I with an income “in his old age." He is 86. The trees will l>ear in I about seven years. o Cheu.'cal lernui Isomerism refers to substances which are made up ot the same ■■hemicnl elenirt’s It, the sumr pro povthm. but In rrt.fch the atoms are differently •’■yeged so as to pro dure sid-s* Vet-e having differen’ physical arm chendi-al properleA Example* are methyl el her and ethyl aleoho! The formula fie noth of j i these Is C.' Hfio Allotropism Is the occurrence of rhe same ,-tieml . tai substance in different forms t-'or example, carbon ap|a*ars as a dta m<s>,| a« chare,al as graphite, etc Rodins H»--. tpiece *Th» mm ol Hell.' >r as It Is i more usually called. ’The Gates of Hell,' Is a work by rhe emlneot French smlptm Rodin on whkh he origiaally Intended to p'ace nfs famous statue The Thinker We understand that this monument has how neon set up In I’arlt. contrary ito the smitproTs original Id-a — Washington <tar Arlington Cemetery Mansion The mansion in Arlington cemetery has been restored to the condition in which It was when a private residence. A great deal of the original furniture could not be secured, since It had come from Mount Vernon and had been returned, but period furniture has been used. It ‘ is a handsome example ofatdanta lion home before the Civil war j —o — Scientific Fruit frealment The way In which science csw I Seal with fruit is astonishing It j ran change the flavor s' tpe color jnd size; It can improv*. Its keep ,ag qualities; It -an pnalnce earllei 'or later ripening Take apples sot I instance Scieniltlc treatment has I now given us a ripening season for English apples which extends fmn June, when the earliest are ready until *he following March when the latest come ro perfei-tlon Be fore long we may have home grown apples at their best the whole yeat I found. - Exchange —_o Usury in England I It became legal to charge fn'.erest : for money lent In England in the time of H >nry y’ll- Before this In I terest had been charged for gen eratlons by legal fictions of part nershlp. breach ot contract etc. Thr ■ first English permissive stntntes - fixed 10 per cent as rhe legal limo 1 which .-mid be charged
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT S \TURDAY \PHII .9 1932
Tonnage Must Be Sacrificed to Love! *♦♦♦ • * ♦ * Fat Men Must Reduce or Lead an Unromantic Life. Divorce Walks in Shadow of Corpulence. Jazz King Adipose Tissue on Altar of Cupid. ? j- Apoie.ftTPkton r- sfll & ■ SSni — • >-® > 4) ■ M |ia, Wife '* Jr t l 1 fl ill Jfe-' ■ Paul Witemajt [pfr J . kwbahd | Mk Paul Whiteman, famous impresario of jazs, blamed the disagreements with three previous wives that ended in divorce upon his artistic temperament But the present Mrs. Whiteman, the former Margaret Livingston, screen actress, discovered the real secret. Before she consented to marry Whiteman Mar garet stipulated that he shed 50 of his 269 pounds. He did so, and the wise wife has kept him down to a mere 189 ever since, and their romance continues to bloom. Fatty Arbuckle, once the screen s most famous comedian, lost two wives by the divorce route owing to the clash between romance and tonnage He is now engaged to Addie McPhail. They were to have been married last Fall. Maybe Addie is insist ing upon Arbuckle getting rid of his spherical silhouette before she consents to honor and cherish. There is hope for fat men in the news that Henry Rohwer, 787-pound big shot of California, and his 110-pound bride are still in love, despite the vast difference in displacement. However, Mra. Rohwer has induced hubby to do some rope-skipping—just to keep fit. Then, of course, there is the romance of Aimee Semple McPherson and her husband, David Hutton. The famous evangelist fell in love with her baritone spouse despite the fact that his figure is anything but willowy. So maybe we're alt wrong. It is just possible that the heart of a Romeo beats under many a Falstaffian body.
Hollywood. April — Facetious•' minded mortals have often wisecraekad to the ('ffect that nobody loves a fat man. As nobody has ever aroused enough interest to prove or disprove the statement, j the relation between tonnage and! romance must be left to some statistician ot the future. But glancing back over the careers of some of our most famous fat men. there is some evidence to warrant the supposition that wives are no: particularly enamoured of blubber-laden hubbies. Take, for instance, the case ot Paul Wbiteman, famous jazz impresario. Paul had been married three times before he wooed and won the present Mrs. Whiteman, who, you will recall, was Margaret Livingston, screen actress. All of these previous ventures in matrimony ended in divorce, and the jovial Jazz King blamed the wreck of his rnarit i! barques upon the rock of his artistic temperament. However, when Margaret came along, she had a different opinion. Before she consented to marry Whiteman she stipulated that he must removed at least 50 pounds of the 269 that lie was carrying about. At first Paul couldn't see things her way. He loved his creature comforts and didn't see any sense
CHICAGO HAS LEGAL TANGLE Two Courts Order Separate Probes Into Activities of .Judge I — Chicago, April 9.— (U.R) — What I may gi down in local annals as the | “war of the judges” today took on i'll the aspects of a musical coni 1 1 dy extravaganza lacking only, .grease paint and some pretty ' c horus girls. The city’s courtrooms presen'ed the spectacle of two judges defy I ing each other as appointing rival special state's attorneys, rival special grand juries and instituting ri- ' val investigations of primary election terrorism As an added touch county ofli-t , cials said they had no money to! pay for one. let alone two. investi-l gallons while mher county officers! were threatened with arrest he I cause they were unable to obey I conflicting orders of the rival . judges. I Figures in the unusual controversy were Circuit Judge Michael Feinberg. Republican state's attorney and candidate in Tuesday's primary. and Chief Justice Harry Fisher of the criminal court. Feinberg appointed his prosecutor and grand jury early this week and ordered them to investigate ‘election violence and also his own i record in handling bank receiverjship cases. i Judicial colleagues said Felni berg's procedure was unusual and; Fisher ordered Feinberg to turn! the jury and investigation over to him. When Feinberg refused, Fish-, er said the Feinberg inquiry was illegal and promptly appointed his own investigators. The position of court officials "as delicate. Feinberg ordered them to cooperate with him but as! promptly as orders were issued; Fisher warned officers they were; accountable because of the alleged i
tin deliberately throwing away th" spherical figure that is the cartoonist's delight and which is his trademark all over the world. But Margaret was adamant. No ■reduce, no marry, was her dictum. ! and at length Whiteman went on ia diet which took a foot or so off ' his girth and dissolved five of his ! seven chirr. Thus did the Jazz King win his i fourth wife. who. with the wisdom 11 of tea Sol.mi.'ii -, i- keeping him right at the slenderizing diet and , on a rigorous program of exercises. Paul is now down to 169 pounds and is comparatively willowy to I; what he was. You see. Margaret had a hunch ,|that it took more than artistic ternperament to make Paul lose three wives. The trouble was that they never got down to the J. zz King's lieart —they couldn't penetrate the ; armor of fat. Though the Juliet of grand opera lis usually built more for comfort ■! than speed, one cannot imagine a . 30(1 pound Romeo. Still many a heart of a gay cavalier is hidden ■ under successive layers of suet. Another celebrated fat man whose .itonnage clashed with his romantic i i notions is Fatty Arbuckle, once the • screen's most famous comedian. ■ Fatty's first wife stuck to him
iillegality of the Feinberg jury. | If both juries are held legal,! authorities said there was nothing to prevent each of the IS judges on j the county bench from appointing' !un investigating body. Further complications were fore- : peen if any indictments are return ed since Fisher has ordered the] 'court docket closed to the Feinberg jury. The question of double jeop-1 ardy might also be raised if both! groups indicted the same person, i o Woman Provides Bond Hartford City. Apr. 9 -<U.P.) Bond of 310,(Mil) was provided her 1 for Mrs. Hazel Green. Muncie, who' had been under arrest since last Deceniiier. when she and a dozen other persons were linked with i several 1931 bank robberies. Mrs.'
Twenty-to-One Shot in Derby II __ . . “Lucky Tom,” by “Master Charlie Phyllis Louise,” owned by J J Robinson, is regarded by many experts as having a good chance ta come home ‘‘in the money” in the 1932 Kentucky Derby The horse shown with Jockey Fascuma up, is quoted in the Winter books .t twenty to ono.
through many trials. But fit fin ally routed her and slw sought ! refuge in divorce. Doris Deane, of i flicker fame, then tried it w ith Arbuckle, but again romance was] shattered by the grim spectre of Itonnage and again Fatty was di-1 j vorced. He is now engaged to Ad-! die McPhail. They were to have I been married last fall, but for some! reason the ceremony was postpon,r. Addie should take a loaf from ; Margaret Livingston’s book. However, fat men should not lie ■discouraged. Maybe we re all wrong and fat is an asset instead of a ; handicap. Last September Harry A. Rohwer. known as Californi t’s biggest shot, weighing 737 pounds, married a 110-pound bride and so I far romance is still blooming vigorously, although Mrs. Rohwer has ! induced her gargantuan hubby to do a little rope-skipping to keep him fit. Then, of course, one must not forge; the idyll of Aims Semple McPherson and her baritone husband. Divid Hutton. The famous evangelist fell in love with Hutton, deI spite the fact that his figure is anything but svelte. What is more. Aimee and her large husband are as romantic and loving a couple as !if such a thing as weight didn’t exist.
I Green is awaiting trial in the t April term of court. 1 u Physician Is Missing Chicago. Apr. 9 --(U.R) Disap- ■ pearanee ot Dr. Alfred A. Budde. I physician, was reported to poli -e by his wife today after she had waited several hours for his re- , turn frohi a summons to "an auto- ! mobile accident." She said she | feared he had been kidnaped. Track Meets Train Cops FORT WORTH. Tex. —-(U.RJ-- ! Policemen here keep in trim for chasing law violators by holding track meets. Besides the crimin- ■ al angle to entourage the racers, prizes are usually elven to the winners. Twenty turkeys went to ‘ w liners -in the last meet.
MELLON VISITS ! BRITISH KING ( rcdentials Presented At Ceremony This Morning At Windsor, Eng. Windkor. EnglaiKl. April 9 (UR) i - Andrew \V. Mnllun presented his 1 1-reilentials in King George V loj day us United Slates ambassador, Io the court of St. James. The (eremony look place al i historic Windsor Castle. Mellon urrlv(sl by motor from i London with Foreign Secretary! Sir John Simon. He was met by! Major Harding, the king's private! secretary, and conducted Into the’ ; king's presence Immediately. A dull grey dv »nd lowering ; skies mat( bed the grim grayness! . of the castle, contrasting with the . limousine l-aring the yellow, Iduc; ' and red royal standard in which |-the ambassador and the foreign j secretary drove up to the castle | Mellon and Sir John were in! j formal morning dross.. Mellon re-1 I laxed in the atiiomobile. Sir John iMt easily forward holding his silk hut in his hand. The ch inffeur mistook the entrance to the castle ami drove 1 toward the .Norman gate. He was 1 redirected bv a pnlheman. This I caused a short detour past the j servant#' quarters of the castle and past Qneeti Mary’s own ro-k I garden. A sentry was taken unawares , as the automobile approached! from an unexnei’ted direction. II- 1 hesitated, came to attention and I prepared to salute, but the limoa i sine had passed him. HONOR SLAYING TRIAL SLOWED CONTINUED FROM FAOW ONF' 4 (lie. New York society woman, her' . | navy officer son-in-law, Lieut. (JG.) [ i'Thomas H. Massie, and two enlist-! ' ed men, Edward J Lord and Al -J . Itert C. Jones. . “Their presence here speaks for .litself. doesn't it?" he asked. But while the possibility of an insanity plea has been discussed, i for several weeks, speculation con itinned as to whether this wonld be . advanced for all the defendants. ; ! Thev are charged jointly with ;|the murder of Joe Kahahawai. Jr.. , young Hawaiian who a month be- ( fore his de th was tried on i harg.-s 'of attacking bine-eyed Thalia For- > fescue Massie, the lieutenant's ..wife. The jury disagreed. ;i Prosecutors conceded the likeliilhocd of ar. Insanity plea by Mrs. ,'Fortescue, mother of the attack victim, and Lieut. Massie on the [j theory -that sudden fury robbed . them of self control. They ques- , I tinned, however, that the jury of . seven whites tnd five plynesians .. and orientals could be convinced of ] . this in th" case of the enlisted men. I Dr. Williams recently appeared! , as a defense expert for Winnie! ; Kiith .fmid. convicted at Phoenix. Ariz.. on murder charges and sen-! '(■need to hang. Both he and Dr. Ot liisoii were prosecution alienis s i > in the trial of Willi m Edward Fox" Hickman, the Los Angeles I slayer of Marion Parker. SMITH KEEPS IN RACE FOR TICKET HEAD 1 CONTINUED FORM PAGE ONE) - nated. But he has become in fact > practically a life-raft tor a number, of Denfocratic politicians who for one reason or another did not get Mt the Roosevelt bandwagon. They are clinging to him, urging him on. Some of these politicians guess- » ed wrong months ago when Roosevelt managers made their first • overtures. Some were squeezed ‘ out by hostile factions in their re■a—bmi in a m .
Yoh Are Cordially Invited to Call and Inspect The New V-8 on display at the showroom of the • Decatur Sales & Service Inc. Sunday, April 10 I Hl —nil 1 il I
1 *l>eetlv<I *< llolHh 1,, ! Hie R.e«k,,l, S|„ llis( . I>n II"' l>< n.>,. rati, 5® ' 'ir J j IL W 1 J:?" 1 ": 'd i - N ">' smithy r,... W and " K ,ll ' Imx Z;il| lM ® Hl" I'l'lZ/l. .| Ul |„ r "<■ ' fl ’"r when l w.-,s ii"ii,ii laiw |lM " H1.,.,;, . , ||( "" r " and date." lh" party Hi" , J | The .-hang,. U I rini.it v i i.rimsfy :,f " r has sh „J it dm s net uant t„ '‘■"■■m s W 1,1, Hl.rUf,) i( J fbms.'V, I, f. ,- ~11 ~, , bs attltnd.- w!., ~ adopt t„wai,| 1,,,,,. ia prlnuin v.,' * hi ,. h Demo, rat" i nti.m of . r. ■ ponvl.,l- m.i.. I thrown ... milling P | w i shadow. The Mine . E.||, a I Mary Pn- >y ~f lUnfor,, visited in this city ind,y. ] The Mirs, , Mary ItrenuJ ! Piney, and t ■.itlt-rint- Fnt<|| I neva attend, 1 th,, tra.-her'i] title here today. Y. J. Bormann was a visitor in l\u-tlan,l. Eridij.
Ashbaucher s ■ M A .1 I; STIC® FI’RN \( ES B \"i:i "i<>- h'im.h®’ pooling ■ SPORTING I IGHTNING RODS® Phone 765 or 739 ——.—. gosd| USED! CARS! 1931 PM Mill IH "EDA®' 1931 Do I'M UH "EDA® 19.31 PI A MUI TH (OAt® 1930 l»<>!><.i: DA "EDA.’® 19.30 LORD "ID. I oil'J. 1930 CHEA RoLET (OA.® 1930 I (HID I ! DOR K 19-30 PI A M<H IH "EDA® 1930 | Mil it. E Hl' "EDA® 1929 DOl'i.E IH "EDAN® 1f.,31 I ORD He II NE ■ ROADSTER ■ 1929 DODGE DA "EDA® 1929 I 'ORD SPORT io® 1929 I ORD ."PORT ( on® 1929 LORD "TH. ((Hl® 192" PON IIA( * " uH B 192." ( HRY"I ER 6-’ >E® 192 S LORD 11 DOR B 192" ( HI A Rol ET I*l 192." DO DUE I a>t I Sed® 192 S DODGE East I < ou® 192 S N ASH STD. "EDA® 192." N \SII I AND Al Sfi ß 1928 STI DEILAKER *® 1927 CHEVROLET G>ul® 1927 CHRYSLER (0l p ® 1927 DODGE SEDAN ft 1927 ESSEN SEDAN E 1927 PONTIAC COI'PE ■ 1927 ESSEN SEDAN I 1927 STI DEBAKER We also have several cMW® cars not listed that w JB thousands of mdes ot v n transportation. ■ Motor Co I j” 3 N °' Fi oUtub 1 phone 30
