Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 19, Number 273, Decatur, Adams County, 18 November 1921 — Page 5

• THERE ARE HIGHER PRICED RUBBERS THAN “TOP NOTCH” BUT WE DON’T KNOW OF ANY THAT FIT OR WEAR BETTER. Charlie Voglewede Sells Scads of Them.

« about town ♦ »+«♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ Mrs. Jesse Cole returned from MarIde this morning, where she visited with her daughter, Mrs. Paul Sauerer for a few days. C. A. Dugan spent yesterday afternoon in Fort Wayne. Mrs. William Harting and daughter Mayme, visited in Fort Wayne yesterday. Mrs. Dore B. Erwin returned last evening from Fort Wayne, where she visited her nephew. Winfield Maddy, at the Luthern hospital. A hobby is a nice thing to ride but does not get you any where. Mrs. Mildred Lothrop, chief operator at Homer, Neb., has been awarded a gold Theodore N. Vail Medal for 1920, and with it a special cash ward of |l,ooo. —Bell Telephone News. Delicious home-made pies and cakes, fresh bread, cookies and candy will be sold by the Tri Kappas tomorrow at Mutschler’s meat market. Mrs. Roscoe Glendenning has as her guest, Mrs. Mary Craig of Portland, Ind. We wish to heartily thank the public for their loyal patronage at our dinner and supper at the Evangelical church yesterday.—Signed, the Ladies’ Aid. Carl Callow of route 5, was a Decatur business visitor yesterday. Walter Clem of near Preble was in Decatur today on business. Dan Smith from east of town, was a Decatur business visitor yesterday. D. F. Teeple was a Berne business visitor yesterday. Tom Vail made a business trip to Indianapolis this morning.

■ SMOKE I I ■ (2"”I5*) I I THEY ARE MILD 1 flk4L BURSLEY& CO., Distributors, Fort Wayne, Ind. LOOKING AT A DOLLAR FROM BOTH SIDES " --- Most people look at a dollar front --- one side only. They think of it in - — ”1 terms of what it will buy. There is another side. W hat did ::: the dollar cost? If people would consider where their dollars are Bz?coming from rather than where fc--"Z they are going, more money would E~~~ '.ZZ be put safely away in Savings Ac- f-- --- counts, and it would be put there to t__ = stay. » t = ■ FIRST NATIONAL BANK j| L : - bbT You Arc a Sirangzr litre ltd Once, =Z ’ —-I■■■i ■■ ■ m imi TBfctefcS* 5 ’ it “'ll I i ■‘ ~1 i | "T* Z- -

B. T. Owens of Detroit, arrived here last evening, driving through from that city. Mrs. Owen and daughter, Mary Bess, have been here five weeks because of the illness of her nephew, Winfield Maddy, and will return with Mr. Owen as soon as the weather and roads will permit, Mr. and Mrs. William Fonner and daughter, Mrs. Earle Bennett of Monmouth shopped here today. Mrs. Warren Sargent went to Fort Wayne on business this morning. Charlmer Edwards of Willshire, 0., was in Decatur on business today. Mrs. Luster Yager of Magley was in the city this afternoon shopping. Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Rich and daughter Edna, and Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Nussbaum and daughter, Violet, of Berne, spent the day shopping in this city. Mr. and Mrs. Dave Archer of Pleasant Mills, shopped in Decatur this morning. Miss Ruth Tinkham will entertain the King’s Heralds Saturday afternoon at 2:30 o’clock at her home on Monroe street. The first meeting of the South Ward Parent-Teachers club Thursday evening was a very Interesting one. There were twenty-three patrons present and were very much impressed by the talk given by Mrs. R. L. Lockridge, a very active worker in this line of work in Fort Wayne. The next meeting will be December Ist. Don't forget those good chicken noodles to be served at the M. E. ladies’ two-cent supper Saturday evening. L. C. Helm has returned from Indianapolis where he attended the state meeting of the Odd Fellows lodge.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER IH, 1921

THE INDIANA AMATEUR BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT Indianapolis, Ind., Nov. 18.—Plans are all made, dates all set, district tournaments scheduled and everything is ready for the third annual Indiana Amateur Independent basketball championship, where the Independent Champions of the Hoosier state will be decided in a "championship way." Twenty sectional meets will be held over the state and the winners of these sectional meets will njeet at Indianapolis on February 23, 24 and 25th to decide the state title. The district tournaments will be held at Frankfort, Indianapolis, Gary, Terre Haute, Auburn, Carthage, Thorntown, Rushville, Bellmore, Converse, Boswell, | Sullivan, Sandborn, Plymouth, Valley Mills, Orleans, Brownstown, Scottsi burg, Greensburg, Crawfordsville, Vincennes and Hamilton. • Last season, 238 teams took part in the great classic, and it is expected that at least 400 quintets in the state will battle for the crown his season. The tournament is open to every independent team in the state with an amateur standing. The annual affair has proven a great success as it give the ex-high school and ex-college men an honor to tight for, as when these men were members of a school team. The tournament games, both the sectional and state final meets, have brought forth good basketball which was clean and all players showed good sportsmanship. Last season the state championship was won by the Trafalgar Independent team. This team represented a town of only 400 population. The Indiana Amateur Independent Basketball Tournament is the largest state tournament in the country for Independent teams. Wayne Emmelmann of Indianapolis, who is at the head of the project, t asks that all teams be entered as early as possible. Practically every team i is now organized and it is expected that all entries will be in by the first . of next month. , All teams expecting to take part in the tournament are requested to write . Max Emmelmann. 219 West Washing- , ton street, Indianapolis. — • t It was discovered some years ago , that common short-haired cats grew . long, thick coats in cold climates. The idea was taken up by one man, 1 v. ho made a large sum of money by l exporting cats to Kamchatka, in Asia- ; tic Russia, where he bred them for - the s>ike of their skins. 1 A caterpillar does not breathe • through its mouth, but through holes 3 in the sides of its body. There are I nine of on each side. 3 Don’t forget those good chicken noodles to be served at the M. E. II ladies' two-cent supper at the • church Saturday evening. f e ATTEND IN BODY. 3 The members of the C. L. of C. society of the St. Mary’s church will receive Communion Sunday morning in a body. The ladies will meet at the church and all members are urged to attend.

QUARTERLY MEETING The quarterly meeting of the Evangelical congregation will be held this evening at 7:30 o’clock at the church on Winchester street, the Rev. J. O. Mosier of Van Wert being in charge. Members of the local church are requested to be present. JAPENESE LABOR (Continued from page one) Washington conference. "War never benefits the laborer, whether it is victorious or not,” he said. ‘‘War means for the workingman suicide by the weapons he himself has forged.” s EDWARDS STUDIO 12 photos make 12 gifts. Make an appointment today. Phone 964. 273 18t K. OF C. Regular meeting Monday, November 21st. Make it your business to attend. 273-3 t G. K. Card Party & Dance K. of C. Hall Tuesday eve-, Nov. 22nd Play starts at 8:00 Prompt Admission 25c 273-It Committee. MOOSE DANCE The Moose Lodge Will Start regular weekly dances Friday evening November 18th at the Moose hall. Good music. Dance starts at 8:30. Admission, gentlemen, 50c; ladies free.

QUICK RELIEF FOR ALL RHEUMATICS If So Crippled You Can't Use Arms or Legs Rheuma Will Help You or Nothing to Pay. If you want relief in two days, swift, gratifying relief, take one teaspoonful of Rheuma once a day. If you want to dissolve the uric acid poison in your body and drive it out through the natural channels so that you will be free from rheumatism get a 75 cent bottle of Rheuma from your druggist today. Rheumatism is a powerful disease strongly entrenched in joints and muscles. In order to conquer it a powerful enemy must be sent against it. Rheuma is the enemy of rheumatism —an enemy that must conquer it every time or your money will be refunded. Rheuma is the one remedy that has relieved the agonizing pains of rheumatic sufferers who thought nothing would give relief. Holthouse Drug company will supply you on the no-cure-no-pay plan. •———— CHAMPLAIN UP FOR LIFE. Saginaw, Mich., Nov. 18. —(Special to Daily Democrat!. —Swift justice was meeted out to Richard Champlain, confessed murder of his parents by Judge Browne in circuit court here today. He was sentenced for the state prison at Jackson, Mich., for life and started for there this afternoon less than four days after the crime was committed. WILL CONTEST ELECTION. Evansville, Ind., Nov. 18—Fourteen suits drafted by republicans and contesting the election of Mayor Bosse, democrat, were to be filed late Friday. The suits it is understood will charge the illegal use of absent voters ballots by the democrat. Mayor Bosse’s only comment was that “he wished they would get it over with so he could get to work on his new program. ■ » THANKSGIVING SERVICES There will be Thanksgiving services at the Pleasant Dale church a/ 10 a. m. Thursday, November 24, also a sermon on Wednesday evening as well as Thursday evening. Elder J. H. Wright of North Manchester, will be with us to deliver the messages on these occasions. —• A MARRIAGE LICENSE. A marriage license was issued at the county clerk’s office at 2:30 o’clock this afternoon to Joseph E. Gerber, tile maker, French township, born April 25, 1595, son of Jeff Gerber, and Sophia Ellen Isch, housekeeper, born January 1, 1999, daughter of Ernest Isch.

BE PRETTY!TURN GRAY HAIR DARK * — Look Young! Nobody Can Tell If You Use Grandmother’s Simple Recipe of Sage Tea and Sulphur. Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compounded, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streaked or gray. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which is mussy and troublesome. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound," you will get a large bottle of this famous old rccept, improved by the addition of other ingredients, at a small cost. Don’t stay gray! Try it! No one can possibly tell that you darkened your hair, as it does it so naturally and evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hqir disappears, and after another application or two ,your hair becomes beautifully dark, glossy and attractive. Alternate applications hot and cold cloths —then apply— VICKS ▼ Vapoßub Over 17 Million Jan Used Yearly r> fr kUMBING YOUR MORNING SHOWER will do you a world of good—ask your doctor! It is refreshing and invigorating and you will feel its good effects ail day long, bet us place an up-to i ate shower bath in your bathroom. It should be t part of your equipment. P. .1. HYLAND West Monroe Street

Jdf I <&' Children’s Clothes These grimy sticky rompers of your small boy—the little “jumpers” that seem to take up all the dirt in the neighborhood, dean them with Grandma’s Powdered Soap. Without ■ rubbing. Without boiling. When they are unbelievably dirty—when it looks as if nothing will ever make them clean e/Vfi/V again, soak them with Grandma. The next day, without any more than squeezing them -a out, they are clean once more. No hard chemicals in Grandma’s Powdered CA”* ’ C Soap—it can’t harm any fabric—no solid soap ' ’Jwip m to chip and slice. Grandma is a powdered soap. No wasting—use just what you need and W * J - W™ 1 '* 1 At the price you pay for Grandma, it is the. most economical soap you can use. ** A big, generous sized package for sc. YOU CAN BUY GRANDMA’S POWDERED SOAP AT M. E. Hower Grocery Sam Hite Albert .Acker The Fair Store Niblick & Company Giles Porter Engler’s Grocery Store Hays & Gilpen ISSSI Powdered SOAP J . Try This Powdered Soap Today ’Ybisr Grocer lias K 2 Tte Globe Soap Company. Cincinnati

BIG MILK CAMPAIGN WAGED AT HUNTINGTON — - One of the most succesful educational milk campaigns ever conduct ed in Indiana was completed recently in Huntington by Agricultural Agent F*. A. Loew, and the Huntington County Tuberculosis Association. A total of 123 meetings, including schools, were held, and between 8,000 and 9,000 persons- were •reached. Upwards of 100 persons in both the city of Huntington and Huntington county assisted in the campaign. The campaign was carried to every township and district school in the county by the local women who were spurred on for the work by preliminary weighing and measuring of all the school children in the county by the Tri-Kappa sorority and the farm survey of 24 square miles in Huntington and Union townships to learn the use of mill and dairy products. The Purdue workers visited every high school in the county. Miss Edith Hawley, a local volunteer worker, who has been much in-I terested in the health work, was in-, strumental a year ago in getting a [ survey made of the school in which weighing and measuring of children was done. In one school, 43 percent of the pupils were underweight a year ago, and in another 37 per cent wore not up to standard. Milk lunches were started at once. This year, when the weighing and measuring was done, the school with 43 per cent last year, had only 22 per cent below normal this year, while the other school reported but 25 per cent not up to standard, which showed the value of the work. The Purdue workers carried the milk gospel to factories at noonday meetings, to business men and all local organizations. To wind it up, a mass meeting was held at which 1,500 people were present. Billboards and window posters were widely) used throughout the city, and window exhibits on the food value of mail were arranged. The milk fairy play was given by school children and "everyone in town” was talking and drinking milk. A continuous advertising campaign will be carried on during the year by local agencies. Be sure to attend the all-day bazaar i giyen by Presbyterian Aid Tuesday,' November 22. • 267-ts i

LOANS —on— FARM AND CITY PROPERTY At low rate of interest and reasonable terms. THE DECATUR ABSTRACT & LOAN CO. 157 South Second Street Decatur. Indiana Henry B. Heller, Pres. E. Burt Lenhart, Sec’y. HOMELIKE ’Though In New Surroundings , Wo wish to assure all of our friends, that we will continue the personal attention to every one’s affairs that has been the policy of this institution since its inauguration. Bring your troubles to us —Our experience and resources are at your disposal. Four Percent. Interest on Savings OLD AOAMS COUNTY DANK 4 In the New Bank Building DECATUR, INDIANA

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