Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 18, Number 188, Decatur, Adams County, 10 August 1920 — Page 2

- : —, Saturday Noun 7 PETEY BOY I Just a night flash by fast mail to uncork you a real fuss-stirring idea that has five aces shaded! Z'*\ Now, bolt this down:—no two people, VL' \ unless they run a circus or write enoyclol F, pedias, ever agree offhand on which is a V., I ’ camel and which is a dromedary when you ? Vw line the t,wo up and check off one hump on B / one and two humps on the other. You J 2. can't do it with the sun shining! XKm ? Spill this “hump” question first time t WroL you're in a bunch of live ones —if you want to see fur fly! Never heard such a • wind-jamming squall in my life as tonight \ when I passed it to our crowd! You know / f V x. Betty Ellen Josies. Well, she said a drome- /a. | f \ \ dary was a he-camel hunting a date in / -yrT \ \ A /Jj the desert! And, Betty’s “Vassar, '2o'—l r ' K? rah ’ rah * All right ’ ® etty ’ | \l</ I AH you’ve got to do is dig out your deck // \ * of Camel cigarettes. That “bird” out front // I k ’ clinches the argument— apparently— but! // ♦ I V— In the classic language of biggei business y circles —“you tell ’em Cricket, Katy did!” « Report your luck quick. Try it on old Jig Jones! And listen, Peter. I’ll shortly slip you some smoke news that'll make Jake’s ideas rattle like a tin can tied to a to wser dog’s tail! S’long! t Yotirs for warm socks next winter!

AMERICAN RENTS WARWICK CASTLE Hoary Feudal Palace, England’s Treas urc, Occupied by Mr. Marsh of Chicago and Boston. (By George T. Bye.) Warwick, England, July 28. —Henry Wheelright Marsh, an insurance capitalist of Chicago and Boston, has taken i ■ -;ion a- tenant of Warwick Castle, one of the grandest and hoariest roots of English history. When th l .- little, ancient town of Warwick, which for so many centuries has looked up trustingly and obeisant-

.. — — — , You Are Welcome To Our |- Record Department While in the city—come in and hear our BRUNSWICK records. You will enjoy them. Our stock is complete al this time, of all kinds of enjoyable music, from a dreamy waltz to a snappy fox trot. Make Ibis store your Music headquarters. Our records will please everyone from “Billie” to grandpa. r s. —„ ... - .. -

■■ — — — ! For Particular Housekeepers :'■s.iluiSS;B3r The more particular you are. the more you will apprcz . , . ciate the work of the Thor Electric Washing Machine. . a: . "OCtriC Drop in at our store and watch it work. See how it reWashiag moves the dirt without wear. machine Revolving, Reversing Cylinder—j _ Washes Clothes Clean Without Wear fl AZL.'™? \ j You will trust your daintiest garments to the gentle ach- A m .—JI tion of the revolving, reversing cylinder. And you will ! A ■ lb 6§?.sg» HMM/k find that even the grimiest clothes are washed clean by M t (V __ ~-~~jjLW4'fn the constant dropping through clean swirling suds. L The Thor does an average family washing in one hour. •» nJlwift. You will be through early without being tired. I ,S | ' ijl uulsl ' Come in or Phone 41 _ “"*■• 'Tt’r jw J,lKt l ,iloil<! wc w ’h deliver your Thor and arrange for payments. Hut it you prefer, come in and sec what the Thor does and how it ' dOe.lt. ’ 4 - 5 ., JUST RECEIVED— A s.sHMEA < OF KOKOMO FENCE—26, 32 and 39 inches high in 6 and 12 i meh stay, it you can uso any of this fence come at once, it will not last long. ! be Hardware Co. 1

ly to the castles great battle tower.,], ul partially recovered from the ; diock of an American commoner oc-: ; tying the seat of the great Earl and I : •iiot.l of Warwickshire, there came 11 : second earthquake. . The rumor is that Mr. Marsh is so pleased with ; the place he is negotiating to’buy it! ].. Mr. and Mrs. Marsh, recently ar- ]' I,- .1, had commissioned an agent to] i . • li“h country where they might live fu: |> :i few weeks, “expense no object." 0 Radium is not scarcer than bouses in |; Gri it Britain. But the agent was v bnally gloriously /successful in get- j

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, TUESDAY, AUGUST 1(1, 1920.

in rent quoted for Warwick Castl -. . ar taxes have embarrassed the Earl ; id Countess of Warwick, who have tother enormous estate at Eastop >dge, Dunmow, Essex. They needed r. Marsh’s money, and be was de- . rhted to get their castle with all . . gnificant furnishings and price- ' ss objects of art. Warwick Castle W even more iirt.(.Solve than Windsor Castle, f..; home of the royal family, and mud. older. We speak of a man’s man Warwick is a castle’s castle, with a view up and dawn the Avon as ma j Stic as any in England. The pr-’s it towers and 15-foo-t walls werunpleted in the fourteenth century but parts of the strongfold date bac! ct least 500 years earlier. English i digs have occupied the castle. EthelI eda. daughter of Alfred the Grea - . sai dto have erected a dungeon keep i a fortress mound, within the inne rirt. in 915. A great sensation lias been caused . Allahabad, India, by a photograph t iken of the body of a native previous to the burning of it. Five other figures appeared on the photographic 1 late, two of them being the dead 1 'an's wife and son who had been dead for years. They were instantly r cognized. . WANT ADS EARN—“Bulgarian Blood Tea” Will add many years to your life. ’urifies the Blood, Flushes the Kid ■leys, Gently Moves the Bowels and ■Sweetens the Stomach. Try it just once —you will never use anything else. Druggists and Grocers Everywhere. <

<♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦; ♦ DOINGS IN SOCIETY ♦ / ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ Club Calendar Monday Delta Theta Tuu - Miss I'loronc Holthouse. Seventy-live responded to invna thins issued by Mr. and Mrs. J. F Peterson to meet their son and dan ter-inlaw. Mr. and Mr... Robert 1! Peterson, at the Peterson home on J< . (arson street last evening. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Peterson were married early in July at Columbus, Ohio, and tliis was the first visit here of the couple. The home was beautifully deeo- ( rated for the occasion, this being neat-, j 1.. done by Mrs. Peterson and Miss I Mary Frlsinger. Assisting in the re ] reiving and in the serving of refresh- , ments were Misses Elizabeth Peter-1. son, Eloise and Carolyn Parker of,« Mishawaka, and MisSi Lois Peterson. .nd Miss Mary Erisinger. Out-of ' lawn guests were Rev. and Mrs. Earl) Marker and children of Mishawaka.. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wilson and children ofr Fort Wayne, Byard Smith ofPort Wayne, Mrs. Frank Alwine and hildren of Shelby. Ohio: Mr. and Mrs. Tom Peterson of Morris, 111.: Mr. and i Mrs. Dick Peterson of Connersville.] hid.; Mr. and Mrs. Gregg Neptune of I !Canada. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Peter I on left today for Columbus, Ohio, but j will return in a couple of weeks for a i1 nger visit. ♦ Mr. and Mrs. John H. Schug enter-1 tained Sunday in honor of the birth anniversaries of little Louise Hauboid nd Richard Schug. A dinner was served at the noon hour, she guests Icing the members of the Schug family, the Dr. Thomas and Carrie Hau-, I old families, Mrs. Mary Woodwtifd i -nd Charles Woodward. The event '-I bserved annually one year at the: Schug home and the next year at the ] homas home. The birthdays of the] I’ctle tots come a few days apart. Mrs. S. Billman is entertaining all] her relatives this week, during the] home coming and fair. They are: ■ Mrs. D. B. Cramer, Washington, I). C : i Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Rogers. Cleve I land, Ohid: Mrs. M. C. Briener. San ■ Francisco. Cal.; Mrs. A. E. Scott, Ft Wayne. The Above named, people were * ■II guests at the R. B. Stoneburneri home at dinner today. + Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Holthause id 'hildren of Muncie, motored ti day to spend Old Home Week wita the Minnie Holthouse family and other relatives. Mr. Holthouse is manager of the pioneer Pole and Shaft company if Muncie and formerly lived at Jonesboro, Ark., where the family moved l orn Decatur about eighteen years ago. rhe 160th Boys Met Here Today (Continued from page one) ourt house up to ten o’clock where ' djutant John D. Andrew’s was in charge and where tickets for dinner were issued and badges given out. At ten o’clock they joined in the parade nd accompanied by the boys of ’6l and those of the world war, marched with heads erect and the old step to Bellmont park where they are guests of the fair association. The attendance was average and the setting for i big day all that could be asked. Major Ed P. Miller who led the roys out ami served during the war. was in charge of affairs here today ind called the business session to order at noon. There was no program other than this and the day was pent in taking in the fai- and enjoying the pleasures of meeting each other. One of the events of interest was the photographing of the inen for a moving picture. The people of this community well hi ‘inber the day twenty-two years | jc when the hoys of company B : I‘fi here for Indianapolis. It was not] !s.Mike those of more recent years I and Hie lads who marched away then' c u rled under their blue coats the 11 .- ime patriotic feeling as did the ! khaki of two years ago and the bravo j mnn of the civil war. Decatur extends to them the hand ■ I of real welcome today. i .

SLOW DEATH Aches, pains, nervousness, difficulty in urinating, often mean serious disorders. The world’s standard remedy for kidney, liver ! bladder and uric acid troubles— | COLD MEDIAL brine quick relief and eftan ward off 1 deadly disease*. Known as the national 3 remedy of Holland for more than 200 j years. All druggists, in three sires. I Look for Uo ».m« Gold Modal on »„ r7 box I and accept w imitation Q

SEW TASTELESS CASTOR Oil AIMAKS MARKER KELLOGG'S To Get Genuine Kellogg's Tasteless Castor Oil, Insist on Laboratory Filled and Labelled Bottle. If you want a castor oil, absolutely without nauseating taste, insist on Kellogg's Tasteless Castor Oil. Every bottle is tilled at the laboratories ot Spencer Kellogg & Sons. Inc. Genuhie is sold only in bottles plainly la* belled Kelloggs. In strength and purity Kellogg’s Tasteless Castor Oil is exactly the same as old-fashioned ci'agreeable kind, but with the nau eating taste removed—a 100% P u ’’ e castor oil. Nothing has been put in to disguise the taste. Children will take Kelloggs Tasteless Castor Oil willingly. You can now get Kellogg’s Tasteless Castor Oil at all good druggists. Accept no substitutes. Insist on genuine laboratory filled bottles, plainly labelled Kellogg's Tasteless Castor Oil. Three rizes, 15c., 35c. and 60c. Advt HE IS WELL AND FEELING FINE “This leaves me well and feeling line and enjoying myself without pain end feeling bad like I used to.’ writes James Carman, Mayfield. Ky. “My back used to hurt me and I could not traighteu up. Since I took Foley Kidney Pills I have not had that trouble.” Good for lame back, sore muscles, stiff joints, rheumatic pains and other symptoms of kidney and I.ladder trouble. Healthful days <)F FORMER YOUTH ARE NOW ENJOYED Why Shouldn’t I Praise Trutona” Asks Mrs. Lindsey After Being Greatly Benefited. L • Terre Haute, Ind.. August 9. —“I cat I: mostly say that 1 feel in bettei health and stronger now. than I eve 1 ive since 1 was a girl, and its becau.-a I've been taking Trutona.” says Mrs Clara A. Lindsey, 60 years old, whi liver in TWTe Haute at 23* South «MV i nth street. "For two or three years I have suf Fred with kidney and bladder trou hies. Pains in my back caused m< uch suffering, and I would feel stiti and sore all over at times. My blad der was badly irritated, causing mt vere pain. I suffered an attack o the la grippe several weeks ago, am t’:is left my system in a weakened am run-down condition. My food didn': taste right and I was so nervous could sleep but little at night.” “I can truthfully say that I fee like a different woman since takinf Trutona. My appetite is so improvet that I can pctually enjoy a real mea nowadays. Everything tastes so good 1 haven’t had a pain in my hack foi two weeks, and the pains from nr bladder are much improved, too. sleep soundly now. and get up in thi morning feeling refreshed. Trutom has done- all this for me, and whj shouldn’t I praise the Perfect Tonic?’ Trutona is a great reconstructs tonic as well as an unsurpassed com batant of stomach and liver troubles Trutona strengthens the nerve cen tors, rebuilds its broken-down am wornout tissues, revitalizes the blend and gives to your body vim and vigoi of the kind that scoffs at age. Trutona is sold in Decatur at Smith Yager & Falk’s.

Fair W eek-The Fair Store Two Old Reliables One is here but once a vear wHk ti.;. of the year. Both serve you well Durin, ? l ° re at your service every day educational features. During the vear th U! is amusement and ing the Fair week, you attend the fair ihiT nee ds to be supplied. DurSTORE customer. Come in whde in th. ? tl '7 e,r be a FAIR open another year of friendship bv th. . ty an , d get aci iuainted. Let us Make Your Dollars Pay | They will here. Make everv com r pay tor every dollar you spend-eet full "P d ? llar work - You have to S’ q "uaX hndiSe I The Fair Store I Fcrd Bl«ke, P ropi . ietor

nFMOCRATWANT ADS GET RESULTS i EAGLE* MIKADO For 3.1. Ith« Fine«t Pencil made far g.n.r.l ( EAGLE PENCIL COMPANY, NEW YORK | attentionT Watch thi. space for Studabaker’. advertl.ement Insurance of every description carefully attended to. Farmer’s Insurance— Fire and Tornado One of my specialties. See me before placing your tornado butlne... ■Phone No. 392, or write me at Decatur, Indiana, and I will call and see you. D. E. STUDEBAKER, 418 Jefferson St. CRYSTAL THEATRE TONIGHT “WOULD YOU FORGIVE” A William Fox production featuring the delightful little screen star, VIVIAN RICH A social drama of absorbing interest with a vital message that everv one should see. “WINNING HER WAY” A two reel Reel Cross Eduealional film containing something of great interest. Note—All Red Cross nurses admitted free. Coming Monday & Tuesday—“ The Confession” We Are Here With our modern and highly sanitary packing plant and market. You knew that. You have heard of MUTSCHLER. But—do yon know why we are here? Let us tell you. To Give You Fresh Meats That is our mission. When we say fresh meats for your table, there lies a great service to the public. All meats bought of MUTSCHLER have been butchered and prepared for you, in our own slaughter-house and packing rooms. ■ Get What You Pay For ou do that here. There is nothing to good sot your table. You should obtain the best. When Tk' in " , nieat —buy (he best. It costs no more. serv ’ ce you save money. Once a ML Ist HLER customer, always a MUTSCHLER customer. Fred Mutschler Pkg. Co. Market 237 West Monroe St. Telephones 106-374-