Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 20, Number 3, Decatur, Adams County, 4 January 1922 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

& •ttm’m* rarrr KtLLOGCS. »»/rf you cauld bur KkL- x > < LOGO S, but J could rarer »m g’« W* >■» ■Wfc, 'll bona! 1 aar I a»ll-l drill—!“ .t^,. 1 >V’< W^7fc^-Od l ■ - 5.. Our word for it! Ibiiff never know how delicious y Com Flakes can be till you eat Kelloggs Positively—the most joyously good any-time-cereal any man or woman or child ever put in their mouths! Such flavor, such crispness! Such big sunny-brown Corn Flakes! How you’ll relish a generous bowl-filled-most-to-overflowing; and a pitcher of milk or cream! Never was such a set-out! Never did you get such a universal vote as there’ll be for Kellogg’s Corn Flakes! Big folks and little folks will say “Kellogg’s, please, mother!” Leave it to their tastes —and yours! Prove out all we say! r ° r » Keii °?s’ s c ° rn Fiakes are a revelation in flavor; a revelation in all-the-time crispness! Kellogg’s are never I UA«*• w tough or leathery or hard to eat! Insist CORH upon KELLOGG’S —the original Corn 0i AIZPC Flakes—the kind in the RED and. J GREEN package! a ••"cornflakes Alto nakeri of KELLOGG’S KRUMBLES ind KELLOGG’S BRAN, cooked aid krombled Make Your Time Count Your time is your most precious possession. Make every day and month this year * count for something. The time to plan for this year is now. Don’t let a week go by ’ without saving a part of your salary. Start this week to place a definite amount in this bank. 4% Interest on Savings. The Peoples Loan k Trust Co Bank of Service.

THE COMMITTEES MET LAST NIGHT (Continued from page one) meeting last night, told of the benefits derived from the use of milk at the south ward school where she is principal. She says the improvement 1 is quite noticeable in a number of pupils and that they are now asking for more than is supplied them by the Red Cross. At the conclusion of the meeting

The First Hundred Dollars is the one that counts. Plan to save that money now. With the vear nearing a close, and 1922.ab0ut to enter—which means a brighter and more proserous year for every one —the first hundred dollars will be easy to get. Start the new year right. Resolve to visit our bank every week with your money set aside for this occasion whether your deposit be large or small and the rest will come easy. 4% INTEREST ON SAVINGS. OLD ADAMS CUUNTY BANK In the new bank building. Decatur, Indiana

Mr. Busche said he wanted to show the committee that he practiced what he preaches and served delicious milk with wafers. MEETS EVERY MONDAY? Second degree work Monday night. Encampment degree Friday evening. KKMQB

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. WEDNESDAY. JANUARY LlF£

♦ DOINGS IN SOCIETY ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ CLUB CALENDAI WEDNESDAY. Bachelor M«W», 6:3^—Mrs. Dick Both. St. Vincent Do Paul, 2:3o—Mrs. R. J. Holthouse. Shakespeare Club —Mrs. F. EFrance. Bachelor Maids—Mrs. Dick Boch. U. B. W. M. A.— Parsonage. Historical Club—Mrs. S. E. Hite. THURSDAY. Evangelical Ladies Aid — Sunday School rooms, 2 p. m. Calvary Ladies' Aid —Mrs. Curtis Miller. Five Hundred Club —Mrs. Glen Cowan. Zion Luthern Aid—3 o'clock on Thursday afternoon at schoolhouse. Presbyterian Misiionary Society— Mrs. L. A. Graham. Monroe M. E. Ladies’ Aid —Parsonage. Mt. Pleasant Ladies’ Aid Society— . Miss Esther Fuhrman. Social of Ladies of Calvary Church —Postponed. Ever Ready Sunday School Class — Mrs. Elpha Christy. FRIDAY. D. Y. B. Class of U. B. ChurchMrs. Roy Mumma. M. E. Woman’s Missionary Society —Mrs. J. L. Gay. Members of the Catholic Ladies of Columbia are planning an entertainment for one of their number, Miss Mayme Harting, who will be married ' next Tuesday morning at the St. Mary's Watholic church. The entertainment will be Friday evening. ♦ The ladies of the Calvary church have been obliged to postpone their social until one week from Thursday because of illness. ♦ k The Ever-Ready Sunday school class will meet tomorrow evening at the home of Mrs. Elpha Christy on the corner of 3rd and Madison streets Assistant hostesses will be Mesdames I Foley, Dickerson, Claude Gay, Erwin Elzey and Brushwiller. Every mem- ' ber is invited and urged to attend as the Christmas exchange will be made at this meeting. ♦ Mrs. Roy Mumma will be hostess to the members of the D. Y. B. class of ; the United Brethren church instead of Mrs. George Mumma, as announced yesterday. She w’ill be assisted in the entertainment, however, by Mes- . dames George Mumma and C. J. Miner. The meeting will be Friday afternoon at the Mumma home on Adams street. ♦ Miss Mabel laque living southeast of Decatur entertained a few friends and neighbors at her home Sunday evening in honor of Eddis Johnson’s return from Bloomington for a short visit. The home was decorated very prettily having been draped In red and green crepe paper. The dining ' room was also a delightful scene, the v table having a beautifully decorated t Christmas tree as the centerpiece and four candlesticks furnishing the light. Through the evening the guests were entertained by many games and music. Those who participated were: Misses Grace Butler, Ruth Martin, Rhoda Jones, Ruth Geisler and Mabel laque, Mr. Eddis Johnson, Homer Ellsworth. Oscar Yost, Wilbur and Everet Hawkins. After being served to a delicious two-course luncheon they departed exL - pressing themselves as enjoying a >• well spent evening. ♦ Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Tague of southeast of Decatur, entertained as their Sunday dinner guests Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Dellinger, daughter Viola, and sons Frank and Henry, Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Wilson and son Robert Jean, Misses Clara Spuller and Mamie Hoblet all of Willshire. Mr. Ernest OallmeMr of Allen coun- 1 ty invited his neighbors and relatives to help him celebrate his 70th birthday on New Year’s day. At 6 o’clock a delightful dinner was served. Those present were: Mr. and Mr. Henry Gallmeier, Mr. Fred Gallmeier, Sr., Mr. and Mrs. August Gallmeier and children, Albert and Fred, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Bultemeler and children, Melvin and Hilda, Mr. and Mrs. Herrnah Fuhrmann and children, Elda and Meta, Mrs. Christ Nieter, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Schroeder, Mr. William ’ Rodenbeck, Jr., and Mr. Henry Wischmeyer. All departed at a late hour wishing Mr. Gallmeier many more happy birthdays. ft . j interurban ran first car * FIFTEEN YEARS AGO JAN. 1 ‘ .. , i it was fifteen years .ago on IS[ew 1 Year’s day thit the Fort : Wayne and < Springfield interurban line, now the .. tort Mayne-Decatur Hne tan the first j car to Fort Wayne. On New Year’s f day an express edr was operated be- 8 tween this city and Fort Wayne. W. * H. F iedderjotau was then the presi- r ; dent and general tnanager of the com- *• 1 pauy. a

Kiddie*’Colds Can Be Eased Quickly Dr. King’s New Discovery will do that very thing, easily and quickly. Don’t say, “Poor little kiddie, 1 * ,s h 1 Hnew whattodofor.yon! ’ Uhen , the cough first comes, give a little Dr. King's New Discovery as directed, and it will soon be eased. It’s a good family cough and cold remedy, too. Loosens up the phlegm, , clears up the cough, relieves the congestion. No harmful drugs. For fifty years a standard remedy for colds, coughs, grippe. At your druggists, 60c. a bottle. Dr. King’s New Discovery For Colds and Coughs Constipated? Here'sßelief! Cleanse the system, with Dr. King s Pills, They prompt free bile flow, stir up the lazy liver and get at the root of the trouble. All druggists, 25c. vx PROMPT! WON’T GRIPE Dr. Kind’s Pills RICE’S SCHOOL OF MUSIC Teaches how to play the following Instruments correctly: Violin Clarinet Cornet Saxaphone Alto Trombone • Drums, Etc., Etc. Personally Directed. 216 N. 7th St. Phone 886. J r~~ —\ Apply Now For Your Automobile LICENSE Do it TODAY. Don’t Delay. Make application for your 1922 Auto License. Applications mailed every day. See— RICHARD C. EHINGER Notary Public Democrat Office THE NEW STATE BOARD. Indianapolis, Jan. 4. —(Special to Daily Democrat). —Seven members of the state board of agriculture were reelected here today and Guy Camtwell of Gosport was elected to succeed Chas W. Lindley of Salem, who withdrew from the race. Those reelected were S. W. Taylor of Booneville; E. W. Pickhard of Huntington; S. J. Miller, of Indianapolis; L. N. Wilson, of Jonesburg; G. Y. Hepler of South Bend; U. C. Brouse of Kendallville and Thomas Grant of Lowell. The election was held by the various agricultural organizations as provided by state law. s—s—s— WANT ADS EARN—■s—s—s IT’S A BUSY PLACE (Continued from page one) In athletics, the employes are taking a deep interest and they have a number of the best to be found in the city. In a basketball game last evening the General Electric team won from the Moose team in the industrial league, the score being 23 to 6. In the bowling contests, the several teams of the plant are rolling each week, and the standing of the teams follows: Transmitters, Stattors, the former team winning two and the latter one; Relays vs. Maintenance; Relays two and Maintenance, one; Collectors Vs. Nite-Lights, Collectors, two and Nite-Lights, one; Finishers vs. Roters, Finishers, two and Rotors one. The members of the Gecode club will meet this evening at the plant, 5 o’clock being the hour set. Supper will be served and the girls expect to have an enjoyable time. RUB RHEUMATISM PAIN FROM SORE. ACHING JOINTS Rub Pain Away With a Small Trial Bottle of Old “St. Jacobs Oil.” What’s Rheumatism? Pain only Stop drugging! Not one case in fifty requires internal treatment. Rub soothing, penetrating “St. Jacobs Oil" directly upon the “tender spot” and relief comes instantly. “St. Jacobs Oil" is a harmless rheumatism ipid; sciatica lihinjent. whifch never diSqPpolntk aild cannot burn thh skfii. Limber up! Quit complaining! Get a small trial bottle from your druggist, and in just a moment you'll be free from rheumatic and sciatic pair soreness, stiffness and swelling Don’t suffer! Relief awaits you. Old. honesit St. Jacobs Oil has cured millions of rheumatism sufferers in the list half century and is just as good for sciatica, neuralgia, lumbago, backactie sprains and swellings

BIGGEST CHILDREN IN GOLDEN WEST i Washington, Jan. 4.-(Special to Dally Democrat).— California, sunny land of fruits and flowers, also produces the best children of any section of the union. | The children of the far western state Mx year of age and under are slightly taller and heavier than those of any other group at same age. it has been found by the Children’s Bureau of the Department of Labor, which has just completed a compilation of the larg est mass of data along this line ever gathered in the United States. A total of 172,000 records were tabulated. The reason attributed by the Bureau is the favorable climate of California. The children of smallest statue, on the other hand, are found in the other corner of the country, In New York City. The presence there of so large j a number of short-statured races such as the Italian and the Jewish Is the cause, the Bureau believes. As to city and country, the records show that children who grow up in the | freedom of the rural districts are I slightly taller and heavier on the aver- j age than their city bred cousins. It was also shown by the investiga , tion that negro children under four years of age are slightly lighter in weight and smaller of stature than white children of the same age, thought at five years of age prac-I tically no difference is noticeable. The I deficiency at the early age. the Bureau ! believes, is due to poor nutrition and . unfavorable social and economic conditions that cause a high mortality among colored infants and also to a possible racial difference in ratio of growth. As to difference in male and female, it was found by the Bureau that boys : under six years of age average from one-third to one-half an inch taller and , weigh about a pound more than girls of the same age. C. L. OF C. DEGREE TEAM. Members of the Catholic Ladies of Columbia degree team are requested to meet at the K. of C. hall Sunday afternoon at 3:30 for practice. Please be present at that time. B. F Beery of route 2, made a business trip to Decatur today.

Sam Hite’s 1 South End Grocery and Dry Goods Store I hone 204. Opposite Eric Depot The policy of this store will be the same this coining year as it hi been in the past, that of giving fresh dependable merchandise for it money than can be purchased elsewhere. Tremendous buying pw and low overhead expense enables us to do this. Dig Dry Goods Special;—Best Hope Muslin, yardl* « GROCERIES DRY GOODS ~'flout . sack P ° lar B Ti r rr Larse Comfo rt Size Batton. >8 Qt. Galvanized Pail O sack - Ba -- F : n Qt. Galvanized Pa,... ! 1 Bbl. Polar Bear F10ur..58.35 Grade 15 c 11 Qt. Galvanized Pail... • H, “VlouT’ Cake Wal « L ’ sht or Dark luting Best Galvanized Tubs 59etii | b --::::::. BcsSy^ng^.:.;*** 5 < 17 lbs. Best Fine Granulated Bcst T «" elinjr Crash, yard 15c Cans I c 5 & ncy ' Z" £ Urßr Ti " Ph *" 3,ll i n’X’p.iG.whii.^: 00 U! " rs ”*■“ B I tha Soap $1 00 crca ' e ’ (36 in. wide) yd. 18c Dish Pans I 21 cakes P. &G. White Luna Goo< J Bleac hed Muslin, yd. 15c Galvanized Fire Shovels. < t SI.OO ( ’ ood Unbleached Muslin, T o » lancy Evergreen vard j- Japaned Steel Dust Pans .•<’ 8 cans Fancy ’ Eariv” j U np°° !? nCy P,aifl Git,^ha ™. yd. 20c Lar^e Ja P a «cd Steel Coai . S cans Best Pink Salmon SI on 1 Clark’s Best Thread n r 4 cans Peaches or ApricZ $1 00 tGalvanized Coal Hod Ho a Sv ta " S Hoo<ls Heavy Half Bleached Nine-'' D Qt. Heavy Granite Di* 1 gal. bucket White’ ’ Karo •• ‘ iuar ‘j r Sheeting, yd. ... 45c Pan | I Syrup P a,r Work Socks... . ?5e ■ 1 gal. bucket Golden Karo 2 pair Go °d Canvas Gloves 25c 3Qt Heavy Gral " te \ (1 L Fhke PaCkageß Fresh Gor " 8C 1 r v/b-v*; 1 pi "C : jj Dozen large cans FaneJ h! !??. UIT SPECIALS ! Dozen large cans Fancy LemonTli ' n i t > aPP I e in heav J' syrup ■?. i dozen.cans Fancy Red Pitted CheVrPes fah^T* he “ Vy ByrUP ’ these delicious fruits win k ies in heavy syrup 150 sample and see what you get aJri i Samp cd out all da y Friday. Come” you want. you gct and 'eave your order for as many ia" s ’ Sam Hite’s I ~. s ““ ,h “ Grocef y and Dry Goods Store ' - Opposite Erie DfP°*

Superior & Holsit I I bread L How Well Named They Are! *** Fverv cent you spend for SUPERIOR or HOLBUII ♦♦♦ BREAD goes Into making BETTER BREAD. It s wonderful how much food value and delicious i. ness can be found in one loaf. Kvl A Loaf Today Will Prove It! Tfi Made By jf SUPERIOR BAKING CO. ftG Fort Wayne, Ind. — January Clearance Tr " at 14 SALE = 1 Ovt Womans Box Side Lacc £ | = UNI Womans Brown Calf Lace J’ Hon Age: Womans Brown Kid Lace <££ Afi — SIO.OO to $14.00 values at | OFI won Bargains in every line of Mens, Womens am! trea childrens Shoes. No goods charged ?r” d a LO! during Clearance Sale. »« Pht Winnes Shoe Store E; es—BMi own tn II W I—'l ‘ - ■ —MM