Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 17, Number 127, Decatur, Adams County, 28 May 1919 — Page 5
I It Is Not : « BY CHANCE!» that so many business women come here rcgti- SR ffi larly tor their shoes. Women who are on their ic feel a great deal either in the office, store or jS home. I hey know that we make a special study SR of their needs—smart shoes that are comfort- rti Ee able because they arc RIGHT. And values 50 that appeal to the woman who knows money’s SR m worth. | CHARLIE VOGLEWEDE | MAKES YOUR FEET GLAD
♦ + ♦ + + ♦♦ + ■«• + + ♦ + + + + ♦ WEATHER ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ft Indiana —Fair tonight and Thursday ; not much change in temperature. ’• - The Richards Special, to be piloted in the Indianapolis 500-mile Liberty Sweepstakes race by W. W. Brown, has been widely press agented by Pacific coast drivers in the contest I as one of the fastest fliers ever built,; combining a Hudson classic with an engine of Brown’s own design. During its first appearance on the track, the ear lived up to its reputation, batting off a lap on the 2% mile saucer in 1:34 4-5, with Ray Lampkin, whoj aspires to be a relief driver for Brown ■ in the 500-mile grind, at the wheel. Dr. D. D. Clark and family motored to Anderson yesterday where they: visited with their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Amrine. Mr. Amrine is getting along fine in his new work and is highly pleased with it. Bprucy Oldfield is offering to bet $2,000 on his protege, Roscoe Sarles, who will drive the veteran's erstwhile Golden Submarine in the 500-mile race at Indianapolft. A stipulation of the bet is that the winner must finish in the money, Barney figurng that if Sarles’ mount breaks up, his rival’s may do the same if forced to land among the first, ten. Otherwise the opposition could leaf along and con-
The Home of Quality Groceries Have you tried one of our 45c Brooms yet? Fancy Home Grown Potatoes, fresh from the pit, bu $1.50 5 doz. finished 4 in. Clothes Pins, in cartons 15c 4 cans Milk, Pet, Carnation, Wilson or Silver Cow, for 25c 18 lb. stone jar of fancy Kraut for 89c Lippincott’s Jellies, any flavor, pure fruit 15c Asparagus Tips, small, green and tender, can 25c High grade Applebutter, in glass jars 20c, 30c and 35c California Table Peaches or Apricots, can 25c Hand picked Navy Beans, tb 10c Santa Clara Prunes, 1b 20c Fancy Head Rice, 2 tbs 25c Large Evaporated Peaches, tb. ..25c Tomatoes, Indiana pack, large can 20c Evaporated Apricots, tb 28c No. 2 cans Tomatoes, can 15c Preserves, pure fruit, tb 30c Pumpkin, 2 large cans 25c Seeded Raisins, 2 pkgs 25c PINEAPPLES FOR CANNING NEXT WEEK PLENTY OF COUNTRY BUTTER EVERY DAY We pay cash or trade for Country Produce: Eggs, 38c; Rutter, 4(1 to 50c M. E. HOWER North of G. R. & I. Depot. ’Phone 108 A brand that satisfies those who demand a good smoke White Stag Segars .... Ask for them at your dealers
I tent itself with annexing Oldfield’s I $2,000. | Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Perkins and babe are here visiting with the Tom ! Perkins family. Mr. Perkins recentI ly returned from Italy where he was j in military service. The Indianapolis speedway, on which the international 500-mile Liberty Sweepstakes will be run, May 31, lha-> th r ; habit, drivers state, of shifting the minor irregularities in its i brick surface, due to the expension ' and contraction of the weather. Though these changes are not visible to the naked eye, they are nevertheless quite apparent when passing over I them at high speed, and it behooves every contestant to know them so well that he unconsciously takes them into account during a race, leaving his mind free to attend to other mat- ; ters. “I think Lase Bud is drinkin' agin as I saw him goin’ toward home this mornin’,” said Mrs. Tilford Moots, t’day. Knockers are th’ camp followers o’ success. —Abe Martin in Indianapolis News. Mrs. Lewis Murphy and mother, , Mrs. W. R. Woods, who visited in Ft. . Wayne, stopped at the home of Mrs. . Henry Myers at Middletown enroute 1 . to their home here Sunday. Mrs. D. 11. Hunsicker spent the day , in Fort Wayne. Ben Hoagland went to Fort Wayne ' today to call on his sister, Mrs. H. S. • ' Snyder.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. WEDNESDAY, MAT ISIS
NOW IT'S SPANISH Maggie Accuses Adele of I Getting Caught in Filmy Lace Mantillas. SILK FRINGED SHAWLS Wrap Her in Gorgeous Colors—Revival of Spanish Fans and Folderols. (By Margaret Rohe, Written for the Upited Press) Adele's become so Spanish She says “si, si” for “yes;” Mantillas, shawls and huge shell combs Compose her daily dress. But when large Spanish onions She dines on right along, I really think she’s going it A little bit too strong. New York, May 27 —That insidious Spanish influence is agaiug swaying us satorially. We are enmeshed in 1 the cobweb stitches of the filmy lace mantilla, all wrapped up iu the gorgeously embroidered silk fringed shawl and have bowed our heads i beneath the carven glories of the huge shell comb. Though the recent Spanish opera company at the Park Theater has clos ■ ed its season, owing to the musicians strike for a weekly wage, it is yet the open season for Spanish dressing that promises even French dressing a bitter race for popular favor. Those gaudily gorgeous and hectically hueful embroidered Spanish shawls, whose long fringed e<\ges wrap the feminine elite of Spain on gala bullfight days, make perfectly bully summer evening wraps, to be worn at the end of a torrid day instead of at the end of a toreador. Don’t by any chance make the fatal , mistake of wearing a Chinese embroidered shawl and fancying yourself espagrola, however. To be sure there is little difference in the brands 1 at a discreet distance, but a close-up will reveal a subtle difference of tex- ’ ture and design. It only needs a sliced Spanish onion for atmosphere and a guitar and casteanet duet on the Victrola, to make the Andelusian de-* • lusion quite complete. Then there's the characteristic Spanish mantilla, black or white, of ‘ exquisitely fine, and silky handmade j Spanish lace —some of filmy| design! ' and others more strikingly ornate and of a larger mesh. These we are flaunt i ing, not as the Castilian beauties over* their high combed coiffures and ivory throats and bosoms, but over our shimmying, shimmering shoulders, in the form of scarves, so imperative | now as an accessory to the fluffy sum- * mer frock of sheerest weave. It s real-' ly quite a pleasant surprise to find that these lovely lengths of Spanish lace actually come from the Iberian I peninsula, for anent that other Span- ! ish accessory which is rushing so per- , sistently to our heads, the high shell comb, 1 have my doubts as to its Spanish habitat. | ‘ In handcarved tortoise, blonde or ■ dark, in amber or in jet, these combs ! are as expensive as they are large, . beautiful and fragile. Fortunately imitation shell ones carved or plain. 1 are almost as immune from detection j ! as a well made pearl.. They are also ’ one fourth as expensive and four ’ times as durable as the real tortoise shell codibs. Worn in the floosely waved high coiffures of the evening mode, thrust in at most piquant angles, they make an artistic adjunct . to the smartest toilette aud are often ' it’s crowning glory The long, graceful cape mantles of' black satin, fringe-edged, smack of* the Spanish influence and a revival of those charming handpainted ivory mounted Spanish fans is also at hand. . To be truly smart you must wear ) i something characteristic of sunny Spain. So do slip on something Spun-, ish after your morning tub, even !f it’s only a piece of soap provided, you’re surt it's pure Castile. PUNY, WEAK BOY Made Strong and Well by Vinol | Why It Is Best for Children. Williamson, W. Va.— “My little boy was weak, puny and tired all the time, did not want to do anything. Vinol was recommended and it has built up his strength and made him healthy.”—Harley Clay, Williamson, W. Va. ( The reason Vinol was so success- ( ful in this case, is because it con- j tains beet and cod liver peptones,* iron and manganese peptonates and ' glycerophosphates, the very elements ’ needed to build up the weakened, run-I down system make rich, red blood an create strength. Sold by Smith. Yager & Falk, and i druggiss -verywhere.—-ad v . P. S.—For itching, burning skm try Saxol Salve. Money back if it fails. <
| Wounded, He Awoke to :♦ - >■ Find Sister as Nurse 8 Newport News, Va.—Wounded X at St. Mlhiel after seeing his 9i •J brother killed by hit side, Seigt, >J X John Early of Chicago was >1 nursed by his two sisters. Early >« formerly was a member of the X Chicago police force, and the ’J A fact that he still draws his pav > X from the city of Chicago Is a > •*< source of envy and comfort to >J X some of his “buddles,” for no > £< man ever Is in need but what »J Early stands ready to help him. > X Sergeant Early and his broth- > er Michael went through the >♦ X first day's fighting at St. Mlhiel > •J without a scratch. On the sec- •* 1 X ond day Michael was shot. He X £ left a widow and two children. •« A who live in Chicago. Sergeant X X Early was allowed to go back "♦ >♦< a day or so later and see that >• X his brother was given a fitting X funeral. >$ A German sniper’s bullet hit X V Sergeant Early a day or so later, the bullet missing bls X heart by less than an inch. Be- ►*< fore he went under he says he >* X killed the sniper that “got” him. X “When I awakened I was beA Ing kissed by Helen, one of my ’♦ V sisters,” he said. ajuOedding Arthur J. Buechner of Near Convoy, 0., Will Claim Miss Louise Bleeke. WEDDING JUNE BTH At the Emanuel Lutheran Church, Union Township —Well Known Couple. One of the happy June weddings I will be that of Arthur J. Buechner of | near Convoy. O. and Miss Louise . Bleeke, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, J. 11. Bleeke of Union township. The wedding will be solemnized! Sunday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock June 8, at the Emanuel Lutheran church 1 ( in Union township. Following the , i ceremony at the church' seventy-five | of the nearest relatives and friends of , the couple will attend a reception at the home of the bride’s parents, j Mr. and Mrs. Buechner will be at , home about August 1 on the groom's .farm, two and a half miles west of Convoy, 0., or as soon as their new 1 I and modern home, which is now quite far along in construction, is finished I The groom is a son of Mrs. J. Buechner, of near Copvoy. | Poth he and his bride-elect are pop- , ular and highly esteemed among a large acquaintanceship. PRINT AT NOON FRIDAY On account of Decoration Day the Daily Democrat will be published Friday at noon. Advertising patrons are urged to have their copy in on Thursj day or it cannot be used in Friday's paper. ■ —oABOUT THE TOWN Misses Frieda and Beatrice Wililiarns spent the day in Fort Wayne shopping. ‘♦THE LONG ARM OF THE SECRET SERVICE’’ A big three reel protluc ■ lion of the Mutual Film Company, featuring an allstar cash and a picture in a class by itself. A story illustrating the secret serv(ice, containing a number of ithrills and adventures, that have never been seen in pictures before. Don’t miss this wonderful production. Come and see what the secret service means. Also “JERRY’S MASTER STROKE” A one-reel Mutual comedy, featuring the celebrated comedian, George Ovey. Be sure to see George tonight, and we are certain you will be pleased. REX I SffeS i.Ai •K
N Ir’irn (Fl CH ir*l r-n r-l! Ir-1 r-n -n IHI rii ?r~*« r»i: T-1 vn |r-» r:JI rial. 31; f- 7 / When the Flag goes by Memorial Day ■ May 30th T TATS OFF as the flag passes; that has alwayg been the rule; but Americans had to go to war l earn what the flag j'; means and how to pay d honor to it. ! Decoration Day is no longer a —TTL memorial of the Civil War; it is a // i d ay tribute to all heroic souls I I h ave shown devotion to the / 7 Ift highest patriotism; to those who /1 W gave ves ’ to those who / were w hhng to do so. | I The clothing business can 1 BS UtH wa ’t w^e P asses B Holthouse, Schulte & Co. w The Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes
1 HAVE YOU THE $24? A man bought Manhattan Island | for $24. I The point to this story is that he . had the $24. | There are scores who complain vo- , ciferously and frequently that the road to wealth is always blocked. | Yet when a small opportunity opens j up the capital necessary to take ad ! . vantage of it is lacking. Where is the man so poorly paid in the United States today that he can not save a fraction of his earnings? Accumulation of the smallest sums will in time provide for the purchase of a War Savings Stamp, which immediately begins working for you. o - Celery plants, ten cents per j dozen, and yam plants seventyfive cents per hundred at Fullenkainp’s. Get yours. 12613
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COURT HOUSE NEWS The case of Henry Saunders vs. Clyde L. Fugate, suit on note, was submitted. Miss Marie Hays was appointed to serve as official court reporter and was sworn in. Henry Knapp & Son sold and de- ' livered two Case 10-18 tractors to Am- ■ brose Durbin and Fred Wagner, south of the city. NOTICE. If you want to sell a farm I would, like to have a. talk with you. If you want to buy a farm I want to show j i you some real bargains. I have a list' of good farms. j W. W. HAWKINS, Decauir, Ind., R. R. 10, Clover Leaf Stock Farm, Monroe ’phone. 125t6, $ $ $ S—WANT ADS EARN—S $ $ $
Page Five
MOOSE LODGE NOTICE. There will be a meeting of the | Moose lodge at their hall Wednesday I evening, at which the installation of j officers will take place, and at which meeting all members are requested j to be present. A. C. FOOS, Director. , FENCE POSTS. Just received car Kentucky Chestnut and a car Michigan white cedar fence posts. A. M. MAULLER ELEVATOR, 125t6 Pleasant Mills, Ind. o VULCANIZING i Have your tires cared for by A. W. Tanvas. Vulcanizing casings 50c up; : tubes 20c up. Phone 471. Celery plants, ten cents per i dozen, and yam plants seventv'tive cents per hundred, at Fullenkamp’s. Get yours. 126t3
