'A oi, In: m SPENCER Wlnmcxorwnns mama-m ', up!!! -" -iaaaa aanal M.-m.-'rrrdMmq6_ Indian poucsm the site of the boyhood home of Abraham Lincoln -tthetaatrestingNaeeUthematr- IN president's beloved mother. And Indium intends to mark the historic "not with 1 Lincoln memorial which will stand for :11 time to come as u mark of the "ection in which the patriotic Hoosiers hold the great war president. . ,.,.._-___V The Lincoln shrine will be located in Spencer county _in the southern part of the stare and an interesting description of the proposed work is contained in a finely illustrated arti- cle in the current issue of the NIL ioual Republic. The author is Col. Richard Lichen chairman of the In- diana Conservation commission which "Born in Kentucky. called hr the nation out of Illinois, fighting far the honor of his country in Washington and dying there in victory, yet the plastic, determinative period of his life was spent in Indian. If our coanhthas fargotten that part, whose fault car it be but ours? Kentucky and Illinois “Kentucky has enshrined his birth- has ch.rge, among other things. of 1ndiaita's fin? system of state parks. In speaking of the proposed near arid, Col. Lieber says: place. Illinois guards the man! mmyr's ashes. In Wishington the federal government has, ended an im- posing temple' to his undying mem- ory. The state of Indian: had ail hut forgotten her obligition " well As her opportunity. For Abraham is the greatest Indianinn of all time. low-'u-uun-udnnm. w ..-_“_. my, __ "Childhood's plastic mould, youth's glowing ambition, and the bold te~ solves of adoleseenetr, hi which three 10m: done chnnctet and destiny are determined. tind the sixteenth med» den. of the United States I resident of Indian. -By every foree that nuts I man, Abraham Lincoln m A recent survey shows that last year 18.500,000 carbon tilameot elec- trict lamps were purchued in the United States, in spite of the fact .that the modern human: filament Imp is much more than twice as economical u I light source, says the Seientiffe American. - "of. the 18,500,000 lamps. half a million were for legitimate special mcuus, u: Alluuu nay-0......“ w ---' an", to ideals, to truths and to con- victions. character,ideals, convictions come in youth. Men learn to love a Hoosier. AIMNOU bobbin-din.†- 3E3; Iwho have supremely ulna- ea,testedintermsortlteiraehie- menus. He found mWPdeu’ ehar- in the days of early life. The nun who does not love truth, honor, vir- tue, patience and seat from and, manhood is not guided by them in the trying hours of smell-e need in after years Those actions. which make such lustrous pages in the n3- tion’s history that .1) the world ms home to them, had their roots in from the soil of Indiana. Cham- ter nude Lincoln great. Lincoln's emitter received Qs definite bent and form from the int%enees that surrounded him between the yen: of 1816 and 1830. OLD FILAMENT LAMPS WASTE ELECTRICITY yum. mph " indie-tor lamps, and tor heating, mistakes, and so. on; two million also were purchased became carbon filaments Ire more' rugged than ordinary tungsten tila- "at; This leaves sixteen million lumps. which were purchased on ac- count of initial low can: or for other muons. Every one of this sixteen million lamps is 1 mm of 'MMteeeq- my watt. an economic loss beam: ik nut operate " low eeeiesserr In - use: good coal had to be burned Jmmmukenp trtrthe1onredBeieste, d t“ urban iuameget hmpo " light _ in antipath- with tungsten hip-I wicked m of "nouns" HUGE RADIO TUBE USES MUCH CURRENT thm-l-up mavuuummmvmmun-n- mummy-v hummus“ teet;Detaibuthe CumuA-ymha NavulCadet Will-Evit- Theideatutsroungottkerhaa an euy time in the British navy ha: been dispelled by the career of Prince George, youngest son of the King of This young mu: has just joined the stat of the mighty battleship, Nel- son and has taken up duty as In in- terpreter on the ndmiral's allâ€. Bert to get so far, he has had to engage in eleven years‘rf hard , work, suy: 1 Portsmouth ispntch to the latent!- ional News, ., He joined the mvy in 1916, enten' ing the Rosat Navul college at 'Cl borne in September of that year. The! great In: was then at its height, and _ the boy m thirteen and a half years; of Ice. I Btu-e lithium: A little over five years later, he passed oat as a full-ttedged midship- man, and Wu appointed to the Iron Duke, â€ship of the Mediterranean Beet. in whose crowded summon were SI other young Midshipmen. After two yen: in this ship, the royal midshipman was transferred to the Queen Elizabeth. and in May. 1923, he became confirmed as a “one- striper" in the Februu'y following. Then one a few mouths in the de- stroyer ttotilu-ieader "Mackay," which led to his hiking the courses at Portsmouth which resulted in his qualifying as lieutenant in Jumnry. I360. Posted to the cruiser Hawkins, tuse ship on the Chimrstation, his term of duty coincided with the serious trouble in the Ympte Valley, includ- ing the tragic nlfair at Walnien. Appointed We He received his nctutl Kppoirrtmmst as lieutenant in February, 1926, but it is noteworthy of the rigid impur- tidity of the naval examiner that he only gained I swam)â€: eertitieate in setunanshitt, and no more than a thirxreUss in mvigition. gunnery and Ott returning home he In: detail- ed for a speck] course in French. He studied in Kris. and incidentally qtmiiiied as I good dancer, “Inci- may so to win the approval of his brother, the Prince of Wdcs. Now that he is a fully qualified interpret- er, he will probably any in that cup- city for some years before any further promotion awaits him. mmvovmu nun! prime. Altogether the British mvy in not such a swell job even for th British The state of Alabama will reed“ no tax revenue from the federal gownment's great electric power de, Velopment " Muscle Shoals, ae2ord, in; to a decision of Col. Hartford MeNider made in reply to a letter from the chairman of the Alabama state tax commission, asking that the sacrament pay taxes on its power business MUSCLE SHOALS NOT TAXABLE IS DECISION Col McNider, wing secretary of war, stated that the supreme court has ruled that ttoverrtmenbowned businesses at not subject to mn- tion as Are privately-owned enter- "I! um I“ N-N-rr-dd- G-hr-BAND A. a. [will] mien gene! In.“ " N In.“ an†SEWING MACHINES â€UANDKIPAIIID I-lrd hm- 'stlriaetut,rt. mmwmo grid-m)“ m'g'u'ism Wei-Ti]: mmnxmmilnuuiu F Alilhett. you see it you will say, . o o . o.o"0n1y General Motors could produce such a car at Chevrolet’s Low Prices" WM. RUEHL & CO. E7