Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 19, Number 198, Decatur, Adams County, 22 August 1921 — Page 5
UESI i.Oim*. U, sl’ STYLES. BEST BBST VAU ES. IHESE AND MANY OTHER IRRESTIUI.Y GOOD QUAD- 1 ITIES AWAIT YOUR COMING HERE. I I . fit Bfew ! »KE A SQUINT A I THE NEW FALL DUDS DOLLAR DAYS, WED. & THUR. ,-t, f 4 8 Patrs oi fT*<d 6 Pair * H «avy Dress Socks . work Socks M Canvas Glove. $1 dovan? 0 ' 25c I Gcod c > ualit y sOx that I Heavy material, and I “ ■ wllt flive satisfactory ■ well made. Buy them ■ values, dollar days < wcar / Dollar Uay . £ Doilar f() / £ -•••'■ ”■ ■ ■■——» — I. . , Cfr-4 1 Fancy . 4 Pairs Black Stockings D - 8 Shirt $| wea C r k e«. at r?flulJ l r 9 40 l I 3hlrt S th’t’have n I Lay in a supply for I value. Dollar Davs ■ selling for $1.50. Doi- ■ the children's school H M lar Days JL wear, Dollar Days JL 1 — ___________ ___________________ SI.OO HAS AND BOYS* SI.OO I ,l : c selection of caps that have been selling lor d* 1 AA •T’j.'io, Dollar Days, take your pick lor JpAeVV Holthouse, Schulte & Co. Decatur, Indiana , I—lllll MM imu mi 4ju.---^siK t w..-» -~ tm ■■ ‘XM'aMMHS'MMHita
MR. FROHNAPFEL STATEMENT. I Editor Democrat: Would you pb e through the columns of your vaiaaffil’ daily paper make a correction to an article in Saturday evening News I Mrs. William Hohnlr.ms v ; not struck at the intersection of Hanna and Gby but along Hanna street near I Grand Vi«w avenue, followirt- her! husband, who was pushing a baby err-1 riage. Mr. and Mrs. Hohnhans wee walking along the curb on the rt ’. the driver did not see them <>a r.< - coent of the glarring lights of an-' other machine coining ami thia 1 , ng r weald turn on Grand Vi■■■;; awiw:. was the reason for the driver driving slow and not causing a more serious accident. Pedestrian’s should walk on side walks which Mr. and Mrs. Haim arreed was the "right place," but not 'till after it was too'late. F. FROII' D. (’
I PRICES PULSATING WITH ECONOMY—PRICES THAT SWEv i’ASIDE OPPOSITION — HERE IN ABUNDANCE A BETTER B: V x OPPORTUNITY WILL NOT OCCUR THIS SEASON WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY ARE DOLLAR DAYS GROCERIES || DRYGOODS 15 lbs. best lane Sugar. QI g H yards good quality Unbleached Qi Dollar Day vA Muslin, Dollar Days tp JL S lbs. fancv Rio Coffee, QI | 7 yards good Bleached Muslin, Q| Dollar Dav | Dollar D%ys tpJL 17 cakes P. & C -ha Qi 10 .'-aids best Calico (all colors), Qi Soap. Doliai 1)' t Dollar Days (Pl. 17 cakes Star Soap, Qi 0 yards best heavy dark outing, Qi 17 cakes Kirk’s Flak W kite Soap, Qi 7 yards best heavy light outing, Q i Dollar Da'. *pA Dollar Days 13 cakes Palm O « up, Qi ; vards 36-inch Percale (all colors), Qi Dollar Da> , Dollar Days M tarn fancyPeache QI 1 yards 42-inch Best Bleached. Pillow Qi Dollar Day ‘ Fubing, Dollar Days OA 1 cans fancy Ap. v- Qi || -> vards best Toweling Crash, Qi Dollar Day .... SJ * Dollar Days.' A ■ large boxes » Qg 7 vards best Apron Gingham, Qi .»ollar I>W •• JX I)() ||ar Days 51 JteZrSS SI yards fancy Cretonne, $1 S yards best Sh.rtings, «1 rank Earl, Ju ■ <CI hollar lays ■ ... lollar Davs 1 small roil Batton & 1 large comfort Qi 1 5 Ibt. fancv Bice. 1 size Batton, Dollar Days, both f0r....V1 Dollar Day's *£* i best Work Shirt and 2 pairs heavy Qi 5 lbs. sane; hand oh•*ed Bums, Qi Work Sox, Dollar Days both lor<PL Dollar Days - 31, yards best Black Sateen, Qi 13 lbs. fancy sweet Pi 1 : Dollar Days vA Dollar Days , •''' X' d»i 17 spools Clark's best Thread, Qi 2 gal. buckets Golden Fut) .sm up. QI Dollar Davs 'A Dollar Days ' Sam Hite’s South End Grocery and Dry Goods Store Opposite Erie Depot Eg Phone 204. _ jjj, ji. jmii mt ott.mfttf —
APPEAL BY MRS. EDWARDS. Women of Adams county: A serious situation exists in regard to this Amendment, the Citizenship and Buff- ' rago Amendment, to be voted on at tho general election September 6th. ; In a most amazing way men have or--iii'uu/el for and against the other i amendments to be voted on at this , time but it has been left for women to organize in behalf of the demand ’.hat ali Indiana voters should be citi-. zet’s of the United States. Whether it is because women felt more deeply than men the lessons of the war or whether because women I w.-re so long disfranchised that they prize the vote more highly than men. is hard to say. But the fact remains that except for the co-coperation of the American Legion, which the League of Women Voters has enlisted, no other agencies are supporting | this effort to make Indiana wholly [ American-
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, MONDAY, AUGUST 22, 1921.
Worse than that, there is a growing undercurrent of opposition to the amendment in some sections of the state where political bosses can control the alien or "first paper” vote. This opposition does not come out in the open because it is not popular to make public the opinion that citizens of foreign country should vote and help make Indiana laws but it is nevertheless reaching and influencing large voting groups. Also do not for- . get that these same “first paper” voters can be voted in huge blocks on September 6th against Amendment i No. 1. Unless an intelligent AraeriI can vote is mustered for the amendment it.will fqiL. ( .1 Sincerely yours, CARRIE STUART EDWARDS. First vice president national league of women voters. Miss Elizabeth Dailey of Bluffton is the house guest of the Dan Beery family. . X.. . ■«
■ Pretty Wedding ’ At Smith Rome I (Continued from page one) I The bride Is a daughter of Dr. and || Mrs. W. E. Smith, and following her | graduation from the Decatur high I school taught in the schools of this I county, and later completed her edit I cation at the Valparaiso school Last year she taught in the high .«• i,.oi at Pleasant Mills. The groom is a druggist and is engaged in the profession at Valparaiso, where they win make ’heir home. Each has scores of friends who hasten to extend heartiest congratulations and best' wishes. Guests at the wedding today besides the parents ano brother and si st of the brido wete: Mr. and Mrs. QU icy L. Eicher, Ashland, 0., parents of the groom; George Cline, grandfather of the bride, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Cline and son Eldred, Dr. and Mrs. J. 8. Cover dale, Mr. and Mrs. Mel J. Butler and daughter, Mrs. Martha Spuller, Miss Loraine Eosfer of Fort Wayne; Mrs. A. H- Saunders and the Misses Agnes Kohne and Leona Bosse, ——• +4-+++++++ + + + + + + 4- ♦ ABOUT TOWN ♦ ++++++++++++++++ Mr. and Mrs. Robert Garard returned last evening from a visit with friends and relatives at Fort Wayne, Auburn and Wabash, Ind. Mrs. Arilla Burkhart and daughter Blossom, left for Fort Wayne for a visit with the James Stogill family and othei relatives. Clark Brothers, who has been quite ill for several days, is slowly improving. Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Brothers of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. John Baker and neiee, Hazel, of Lansing, Mich., will arrive in the city tomorrow to be the guests of Dr. Burns and other rela tives and to attend the Schnepp reunion to be held at Bellmont Park next Thursday. Mrs. Charles Christen and da igh ters, Germaine and Bernadine, h.’.ve returned from an outing at Lake James. Mr. and Mrs. John Wilson and children, spent the weekend as their guests. Lawrence Smith spent his vacatim with his sister and family ai Lake James. Henry Re.'nling of Union townshii, was a business caller in this city to day. —« STOCK FALLS. WIFE PINCHED Los Angeles, Cal. —Mrs. Mary L. Lyons, wasn’t a stock market speculator. Yet she suffered every time the market slumped. Her husband, Thomas Chester Lyons, speculated. And every time his stock fell one point he gave her a pinch, she charged. Once it dropped 29 points in a day. She suffered 29 pinches. Judge Wood gave her a divorce decree. > GETS $7.61 FOR S3O New York.—Jacob Leiktmd, 25, attempted a year ago to send S3O to his widowed mother in Russia. The territory was inaccessible and impossible to make delivery. The S3O had been converted into marks. 'When these marks were reconverted into dollars all they were worth was just $7.61. This amount was returned. The Coming Blues. ‘ The worst is yet to come?" "Yes?” "Yes, I hear that even lollypops are to be prohibited on account of the I stick in them.” —Wayside Tales. Contrary. A woman will contradict a fact that is as plain as a chaperon.—-Wayside Tales. LOCOMOTIVE IN BAGGAGE New York.—The baggage of G. Bruce Smith, of Lima, Ohio, who ! sailed on the Vatiben for Brazil included a 27-ton locomotive which he is taking to South America as a sample. He is going to show it to officials of the Leopoldina railway. It was the largest piece of baggage ever taken out of this port by a passenger. FRONT, PAGE M. PONZI. New York.- u Four boys arrested in the Grand Central Terminal by an agent of a stamp-vending machine, are eaid to have learned how to make a penny do the work of a quarter by placing a penny under the wheels of a steer car and inserting the flattened coin in the slot of a machine which gave up 24 cents’ worth of postage stamps. —. • ' PAUPER GRAVE FOR BARON Marseilles. —Baron Gualmer de Linder, a former Chamberlain of the Czar of Russia, and who before v the war was attached to the Embassy in Paris, committed suicide by cutting his throat with a razor. His suicide is attributed to financial troubles. He left a note saying that he be buried in a coffin similar to those used lor destitute poor.
We’re Handing Out J DOLLARS r We’re handing out Dollars Io our Patrons, these days, right along. On most any ordinary Shoe we hand you hack a Dollar from its regular price. i Should you buy more Shoes we hand you back more Dollars. Your rebate • is sure. ‘ ATTEND OUR GREAT SHOE SALE It will pay you well to do so, and you'll be surprised, when you learn how many Dollars we are actually handing back. Shoe opportunity you can ill al- '■ ford Io miss. We’re closing out our Spring and Summer slock and every Shoe must go. Forty pairs Women’s White Shoes and Ox- Men’s Buck Work Shoes, fTA fords sold for $3.00 to $6.00. Sale QQ (Brown and Black,) per pair . «««: ~53.50 pair ;... to Every pair of Women’s Oxfords at a reducChild’s Strap Oxfords Ql QK i ’ on on Qi Your opportunity for saving Dollars is money earned, which you cannot afford Io miss. Winnes Shoe Store CORNER SECOND AND MONROE STREETS v j
THE FARMERS MEET. Kendallville, Aug. 22. —(Special to Daily Democrat). —The first of a series of district meetings for the Indiana Federation of Farmers was held here today. Charles Anglin Ward, Warsaw, director of the second district had charge of the meeting. The purpose of the meeting is to strengthen the
I it W I (vl \y O I I I M i 5 \2 n f 'I \J‘ \ \ \ A — - -13 tz 1 •Jr /\ \ v I z > v X- I 1 • I <y S " < xJ L I ALLURING ARRAYS OF NEW GOODS — OPPORTUNITIES THAT WILL I IMPRESS A MULTITUDE—ADVANTAGES THAT WILL APPEAL TO ANY < | SHOPPER WILL BE FOUND HERE. I Dollar Days--Wed. & Thurs. 1 N• • < 2 Men ’ s Bov’s P Ov"ralls B ° y S ° F Men ’ S Work Shirts B LL Sweaters I Good Quality QI c . 27 in’ With Collar Qi j Dollar Days „... *1 Sizes-4toDo, gl Dollar Days »1| i — — —• i Men’s Fleeced 10 Pair • 0 Aards l ancy Union Suits Ladies’ Hose Heavy Outing | Heavy Quality QI An extra value QI Light and Dark QI I Dollar Days .... Dollar Days .... 1 Dollar Days ? > I 6 Yards s'/2 yards of standard 11 Yards Dark Shirting 36-inch Percale Unbleached Muslin ‘ | Good Quality QI Light and Dark Qi Heavy Quality Qi I Dollar Days .... Dollar Days .... Dollar Days .... 1 r j- » 1 Fair Men’s $ 1 Ladies n two Outing Gown „a i p Window Shades Get then, on QI L Green Only (ftl ; I Dollar Days .... M “'s ... $1 Dol,ar ,hl ’ s U ) I ' I 5 ~ ' f i Children’s Felt r- % . ~ Three House Slippers A..,;* Crib Blankets Sizes 9to 2 r , n rr»u White with Blue or J ■ I The pair 1 !° ri « l a,,ty $1 Pink Border <M i Dollar Days .... s>l Dollar Days .... MX ])o|lar i ( - | SPECIAL LOW PRICES AND BIG SAVINGS ON OUR ENTIRE STOCK 1 § OF SHOES. r $ I BERNSTEIN’S 1 | DECATUR, INDIANA r I I
farmers organization and to prepare for the organization of the U. SGrain Growers, Inc. John G. Brown, president of the Indiana Federation of Farmers was to leave Chicago today for Sprnig field, Mass., to attend the meeting of the national executive committee of the American Farm Bureau Federation, August 23 and 24. The second district includes, Elk-
hart, LaGrange, Stueben, DeKalb, Noble, Whitely, Kosciusko and Allen counties. The meeting will adjourn tomorrow night. Mr. and Mrs. William Dowling and children of Fort Wayne returned to their home last evening after a visit with Mrs. Mary Terveer and other relatives.
