Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 17, Number 246, Decatur, Adams County, 16 October 1919 — Page 5
I f You Pay for Anything f I I You Need Wnetner ,u ‘| !■ - You Buy It or Not | If you need rubbers and you do not buy . jg lliein you P a y w ’ l * l a COLD instead of CASH. 'W Il is just a question of, what kind of rubbers , 1 $ sin I g°’ n ß to bll - v ' I )on t experiment this year, S I B rubbers are too high to lake any chances, buy yr ■ TOP NOTCH and be certain. We stand back I ¥ of every pair. 1| Charlie Voglewede i j| Sells Good Rubbers.
fl about town fl Mr and Mrs. Ezra Gilpen of Hofl hart mi- «h° have been visitlllg fl W ith Mrs. C. T. Rainer, went to Ft. fl Wayne this afternoon to visit with fl the W- E R° senwink ' e Mrs. fl Rainer accompanied them to Ft. fl Wayne for a visit at the Rosenwinkle H homefl Miss Wilma Smith went to Ft. fl Wayne yesterday to spend the afterH goon and evening. ■ Mrs. D. E Smith is spending the I da v in Ft. Wayne today. ■ net, and Mrs. Stone went, to Ft. ■ fl- ayne this morning to attend the I state convention of the Baptist I church which is being held at the ■ first Baptist church of that place. B M rs . ottomar and two children oft B Sheboygan. Wisconsin, who has been B visiting with her mother. Mrs. William B Drcege for some time, went to Fort B Wayne for a week's visit with re!B stives. B Mrs. Robert Harding returned to her B heme in Ft. Wayne after a short B visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. B W. J. Myers. B Miss Mayme Johnson left last evenB ing for a visit with relatives in Ply- | mouth and South Bend. She expects I to visit mostly with her sister, Mrs. ■ Charles Chaney. ■ Mr. and Mrs. J W. Welch have reI tuned frcht a several months' trip through the western states. Mr. i Welch expects to start farming. Th' trouble with education' our foriega workmen is that they’d all advertise for petitions instead o’ lockin’! fer jobs. Our dee ot a dude is al feller that tries t' git fitted in a pair' o' furnace gloves.—Abe Martin in In-| dianapolis News. Miss Flo Weimer changed cars' I from Willshire to Fort Wayne. I Mrs. George E. Steele went to Fort | Mayne for the day. | Get in line at the K. of P. home Saturday evening and eat with the rest of the folks. Mrs. George Keller and Mrs. Andy Foos went to call on Miss Lillian Keller who was operated on a week ago ata Fort Wayne hospital. She is getting along fine. A. J. Beatty, of Richmond, Va.J spent yesterday at the home of Jacob Buhler and family. Jess C. Sutton returned last evening from a business trip to Geneva. Mrs. Floyd Baker of Ft. Wayne is ■visiting with relatives at Monmouth. Miss Adeline Annen is here from Decatur to visit with Mr. and Mrs.
Test Your Taste WITH A White Stag EXTRA MILD YOU’LL FIND IT A CIGAR CONFECTION THAT MAKES YOU KNOW DOW GOOD IT IS TO HAVE THAT ENJOYABLE SENSE CALLED “TASTE.” 7c or 3 for 20c j
Levi Linn, and probably will spend the winter here. —Bluffton News. E. L. Carroll went to Fort Wayne ; to call on his wife who was operated . on yesterday. i Mrs. Mary Spade of Fort Wayne was a business visitor in the city . tlhds morning J. S. Bowers went to Romo City to spend a week in fishing. Mrs. Dora Deßolt and Mrs. Sherman Pierce and daughter, Vera, of Monmouth, were business visitors here this morning. Supt. M. F. Worthman left today to attend a superintendent's club meeting which is being held at Elkhart today and tomorrow. Be sure and get your box ready for ' tomorrow night and go with the crowd ' to the Mt. Pleasant school. Tho Christian Pastoral Helpers will 1 welcome you at the K. of P. home Saturday evening. They will have plenty for you to eat. Tell all of your neighbors about the masquerade social at the Ben Hur hall which is to le Friday evening. Don't , forget to come. If plans now proposed materialze, ■ Bluffton will have a $40,009 apart- 1 ment building, adequate to house at least twenty families. According to announcement today, the plans of til's apartment are being draw an 4. a suitable location for the big building ha: ■been selected and an option taJwn.I The proposed apartments are to be of the California plan, all surrounding an open court, and are to be moder® ' in every detail, with steam hpatj lights and janitor service furnished I the tenants. The building, as pro-' I posed, is to be of white stucco and ■ will probably be of Spanish architecture. The apartments are to be built |if the tentative plans, go through, by the Bluffton Building company, and it lis thought, at present, that' probably > $15,000 to $20,000 worth of addi'fonal' stock in the company will have to be” sold in order to finance the big undertaking.—Bluffton Banner. Augusta Webb. 63. was “terribly” disappointed when she married AI hart i Webb, 73, she told the court /‘He's | too dead for 73.” she said. “Fm young j feelin' and Albert san old feller.” I Fish net or slinky skirts shouldn't• i be worn by girls under 18. Y. M. C. A. I secretaries of Illinois. Indiana and | Wisconsin and Michigan, meeting in Chicago, ruled today. Harry Bergman. St. Paul, used poor judgment last night in an attempted hold-up. The would-be victim proved to be Detective J. H. Mitchell. . Cook Harley Ward arrival home
VI DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, THURSDAY, OCTOBER Ifi, 1919.
? THE WORLD WITH L : OBE AMERICAN BED CROSS. $\ Public Health Nursing. / '-'WIW ‘ ■ ■■ . ■ i t VS' J■ - k.v. r ® - J i 1 ’’ J n I In ll.e midst of Its multifarious war duties the American R< d Cress did • not m-gfedt its obligations to the. civilian population at home. Throughout I the conflict it maintained Its F.ureau of Public Health Nursing, instruction in £ first aid, home nursing ami sanitation, and disaster relief. Particularly in ■ their work for tlie babies was effort by public health nurses important. The accompanying photograpli shows a Red Cross public health nurse instructing ; a mother In tlte proper preparation of the baby's diet.
| last night 1 , honorably discharged from | the ttrlhy aftdr'serviiig fifteen months I in Franc?, Jle is at the home of i Ills parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Ward'.- > : ——— . i Hale Demands Night Sessions 1 (Continued From Page One) their complete reiord and undergo a thorough .investigation by American' counsel before they are allowed to 1 leave their native countries for the United States. The foreigners must prove, beyond all doubt, that they are coming to the United States for legitimet purposes. Washington, Oct. 16—(Special to Daily Democrat) —To prevent a' sugar famine in the United States an emj kargo on the exportation of all raw I and refined sugar and sugar cane is provided in a resolution Introduced trT tffe house today by Representative | Dallinger, Mass. Other resolutions of Dallinger call on the secretary of war and the secretary ts the na’vy to inform congress of the surplus | sugar they have on hand with the ■ view of devoting it to public use. The embargo proposed is for six months or as long thereafter as the president may determine by proclamation. ’ ’llal ■ to J^6inQcr|t)r-L-iu^rs! ot b.th parties* tt> the senate’b'tpected to vote I 'today en*U»e Shantung am'eTdmeut' to j the • reaty of pejice. i' Tins ‘amendment would alter the 'treaty. It would changp the clause relating to Btrnutunr so as to restore that province in its entirety 1 instead <Jf givipg-Ja|’ail to-tab (Jerman mining and railroad cortcessions i'it. j .White■tlt&fifranf.eared mpAilftce for| tho.' SUhttfiffSg’' an>ffn'rflfl?nt republican teaders believe a reservation exprdss- ■ ing dissent, from, the transfer of Shan-1 tung to Japan afid reserving complete) freedom of action on the part of the 'United States'in any controversy that) Ynay arise between China and Jap.’ il j will pass by a majority vote. Folio'wing the Shantung vote, an' hour’s' reading of the treaty will bring the Johnson amendment before the senate. This proposal, would i give the United Stales six votes in the ' league assembly, wjll be rejector!, administration kiaders believe, although possibility of adopting a reseravation ■ would declare thht in any.controversy 1 involving the United States only one : vote could be cast by the British empire. Administration‘leaders believe that ■*o amendment** to the treaty ean be passed. Announcement in Paris tliat an indefinite d- ’,iy will result b-f* ■■ tin treaty is nut into effect, was not held to change the sifitatron in tho senate. Are you feelin.!? blue; See! ‘“Oh. Oh. Cindy!” and enjoy' an evening of laughs. TO TAX PAYERS. Nctico is hereby given that Minelay, Nqvember 3, 1919, will be the lasl day for paying yout i fall installment of .taxes. -The. treasurer’t, office will be open] froju 8 a. m. until 4 p. m. during tjic Jax -paying season. All taxes not paid 4,y that time will become delinquent, and a penalty of 10 per cent will be added. Do not put off your taxes, a:-, they must be paid, and the law points out the duty of the treasurer. Those who have bought or sold property and wish a division of taxes Should come in at onjfce. Don’t wait for the rush 1 No receipts can be. laid away for any-1 one, so do not ask for it. GEORGE KINZL®, ■ l: . ■ Treas-. Adam ’County, j
WHISKERS AS OLD AS HE IS And Former County Auditor in California Is Hovering Near the Eighty Mark. Saqtn Ana, Cal.—Who's got the oldest whiskers? | Other towns have entered contestant** in the race for oldest hirsute : adornments, but Santa Ana only now I jumps into the fray with a set of I whiskers sixty-one years old. If anybody can heat that, let them come forward or forever hold their peace. The proud possessor of the aged beard is J. H. Hall, former auditor of Orange county, who is now dividing his time between Santa Ana and the East. Captain Hall, a G. A. R. man. never has shaved, and the whiskers which now adorn his face are on the roots of the “fuzz'' which showed up when he was In his teens. BLIND, HANDS GONE, WRITES ——• Crippled Soldier Becomes Competent Typist Through Patient Training. London.—Blind and deprived of both hands, Sergt. Alan M. Nicln Is of the Second Durham light infantry refused to be classed ns Sin “unemployable.” : nnd today can write letters as profi- , ciently as any normal stenographer. Niihois’ rest, ration to a self-support-ing basts was accomplished through patient training, a spe.dully constructed typewriter, a pair <uf artificial aluminum hands and hisp r. Indomitable i spirit. Recently he {pMused a writing ; teet of two hours and, fifteen minutes, i his “copy” necessitating only two corrections. Warts to Change Absurd Name. Ni v, York.-—Justiv Callahan, in the supreme court, has reserved decision in the application of Leon Abouta 1 Beokh to change his name to Leon Atfdlah. Abouta Beejth said he was born in Damascus, Syria. February 10, 1577, and has three children. The name Abouta Dei kh. he said, means “father of cooking,” and is so absurd that ft has all his life subjected him to ridicule. He said lie wanted to prevent his ciijldron fmm enduring the siimc ridicule X-RAY PICTURE TAKEN J Vera, little ten-year-old daughter of ! Mi\ and Mrs. Sherman Pierce of Mon* ) mouth, had an X'-Ray picture taken of her right foot to xietermine what trouble was. l.ast June she ran a needle in her foot, part of it break: ing off and remaining in the foot. The foiit. is now inflamed and it was found by the picture that part of the needle still lies in the foot near the bone. They are-taking measures to have the needle removed. LOST—A "HUBBY” | Kind and gentle, answer;; to name I of “Eddie”—last seen trying to open g his suit- case. Finder please return g to “Scottie" or . "Ginger" , and receive | liberal reward. Will pay .a quarter if I returned at once. 246-tl |
EASE THE PAINFUL I RHEUMATIC TWINGE Sloan's Liniment will bring comforting relief quickly NpVER breaks faith, Sloan’s Lini- E rtienf doesn’t. Just penetrates g •without rubbing and eases the external ’pain and ache, rheumatic twinges, lumbago, neuralgia, sciatica, i la mg. sore, strained muscles, bruises, I sprains. For 38 years it has gone ahead win- | ning new friends, holding old ones, strengthening its reputation as the B World's Liniment. Clean, effective in | relieving the aches and pains of men and women, tins old family standby can be relied upon to do its work promptly and surely. Don’t be w ithout a bottle another day — keep it handy. W All Druggists—3sc., 70c., $l4O.
Maynard Goes To The Ground (Continued from pnge one* died feet through u mountalu iiliazi .'U, i the Deluiviland piano currying Lieut, i French Kirby and his observer, Lieut.; Stanley C. Miller, trans-continental ai<; racers, dashed its occupants to death near Evanston, Wyo., Iptn yesterday, bringing the total dead in the air race reliability race to nine fliers. Kirby died instantly; Miller soon I after the crash. Os tho five planes making the return flight, four are still in the running. Captain L. H. Smith, returning to his home hangar in San Francisco, arrived yesterday at Buffido, where his plane was destroyed by fire while in the hands of repair men. Major Carl! Spatz is due to leave Rochester. N. Y.,[ on his homeward trip west today. Three east bound home-going flyers, | led by the flying “sky pilot”, Lieut.
HHWIII imf Mii—Mri .mbwsm Economy Day Is Every Day AT THE Morris 5c & 10c toi e Our enormous buying power enables us t< get the rock bottom prices—that’s why v e can 3 offer you cut rate prices like those listed below. Every time you buy ;>i forris’s y< save I money. So don't simply glance over these Penis but READ them carefully—you need -omcthing—maybe it’s here. EXTRA SPECIALS 1 lardwater Castile Soap Children’s Parasols, / 6 5c bars all sizes V:OC I it) qt. Galvanized Pail, 04) 'nite Porcelain Slop Jar, rQp 18c value OOC 98c value ' T - 1,0 z-1 Glass Tumblers, 1 Az* Light-House ( leaner A <r> Special, 3 for j vfC •’oceans IVI 65c Rolls Toilet «Pp Floor Oil Polish, :* _ p;i V er (Crepe) 4 3 10c bottles O C Rolls Toilet Paper MV I Tanglefoot Fly Paper, 1 Fancv Baskets, . double sheets IvC 98c values and IBC I LADIES HOSeI CHILDREN’S WQSE | >E Ladies’ Black or White xxwou Cotton 1 >se— I Hose — Exceptional Children’s Hose —A special bargain in medium rib- I | quality and a true bed hose. White or black and test the hoee for Good sturdy no ; 111 in 0I "a S this scho °l- Come in and see! AU sizes. I ail -dors and izes. j price, A big 4to 5%, 30c value, the pair 20c I Til - y ' : | Pa»r 6to 7.35 c value, the pair 24c i too! The ,air on , to 8. 40c value, the pair 29c t -g — 5 2 to 9 ’a, 45c value, the pair 33c ! I.DC I V- > k— — / I At a time when prices are so high on nearly everything, surely you can appreciate w offers we are making you. We arc constantly on the lookout for items we can offer : u at considerable savings. Consider us your friends and make this store your first stop when shopping. B JQdec iurl mu i iii—w ~b TiffiHa jksbl-s«khm Going Some Place ? Then It’s Luggage You Need! And we have it! Just what you want, too. You know the present pri son luggage and you know that leather is going up daily. But we have some :cepg tional pieces to offer at prices that will surprise you. Buy now! K A Good Karate! Suit Case—24 inch size, straps all Genuine Cowhide Bag—Walrus grained, ed on Q around Brass Pl ate d steel lock and catches. Anch- frame (English.) Comes in 18-inch size, black ■ or handle. Handy shirt folds in ,cop and full set ot , ■ inside straps. A good service Plfl ' exce I^ good bag and at price | case. Special Price .! u»O.DU whlch cannot be duplicated in ( » fa g Others up to $12.50 in leather, an cowhide bag t J»eJv I I A COMPLETE STOCK OF THOSE WAR I I Men’s Work Coats I And forecasters are predicting an unusually cold and severe winter wi i lots I | of norili wind! The warmest coats yon can buy are heavy wool-lined co; ; and 1 I that’s the kind you’re going to need. Very practical and an economical ly at I these prices. ; Special Heavy Duck Coat-Mara- An assortment of Rubber-interlin- A splendid assortment oi imt'ort- I tex lined, a heavy all wool lining, ed, wool lined work* coats, with able and serviceable its in ■ warmer and more durable than sheepskin collars. A bear for Heavy Canvass, with rduroy S sheepskin lining. Heavy steep- wear. Absolutely waterproof. An Wen" 3 nrlde Tnd I skin collar. This coat defies wind all around coat for winter wear, vears. Special < »rn I and snow And look' 9 fr/x Special (?lAAA Price ■ ).W | at the price, 0n1y... at SW.OO (others from $3.50 1-) VANCE & HITE; £1 JljnlwrnrTi~Binw ur Wil ningwswi Tin w II-
18. W. Maynard, were on their way' yeatenlay. M tynnrd. who left Sun | 'Francfeco shortly after noon Tuesday. | h« an« tn Sidney, N «h, today , <« 1 IVUt m 11n-• TT*w«» ' - - - -4 -<r- * 'ciscn nnd I.lßffi trim Mineola. Six pilots are eligible to start return trip.i today- three from each terminus. Lieut. H. F. Kiel, Llcnt. M. E. I Dr C c. K\YL Monro- indk.n* I Special atirnlton given to ! '-utxery and to th< Die- ■ qisc-i. us the Abdomen and v<*r»>nle Pelvis uutoped to Jo Cysioacoay and - *l* ■-« Cath»t«ruatlas I
' Qilvttns and Lieut. L. Wor ilngton at ; Mineola, and Captain H. < Drayton, ' Lieut L. 8. Webstar an Captain I Hurry Smith at Sail tear co plan1 ned to tyegin the last lap ay. The female hornet only is armed with a sting. In oni> year 3,000 lettei ; with no address nt all reached the sad letter OtfiM. THEY GST ACTION Al ONCE Foley Kidney tells nvigorate, strengthen and heal inact *•. weak and diseased kidneys am bladder. 'Mrs. C. J Ellis. 505 Bth / ~ Sioux Falls, 8. D„ writes: "I suf ed with kidney trouble; used to h e severe pains across my back ani Celt miserable and all tired out. but after taking Foley Kidney Pills I a 1 well. I have not been bothered w h kidney trouble since.” They relieve headache, rheumatis pains, swollen or tiff joints, 'puffiness under the eyet floating specks. Sold Everywhere.
