Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 20, Number 15, Decatur, Adams County, 18 January 1922 — Page 3
-OK Wflwßr \-au. 1 ! --5} "Who laid/Morri Cora g Ita/wiW Wr'»rfe J :::; W<©W• W/j KELLOGGS tor our ,up. xX>Ol»«Ml’ ’"-" '• ■“■ '"“ r \- '■?*' v, Leave it to the laddies to. pick Kelloggs Com Flakesthey are never sough orJeaihery] Put a bowl of KELLOGG’S Corn Flakes and a bowl of imitations in front of any youngster! Then seo KELLOGG’S disappear! Try theexperiment yourself! It’s great to know the difference in corn flakes—the difference between the genuine and the “just-as-goods” I Kellogg’s have a wonderful flavor that would win your favor by itself—but when you know that Kellogg all-the-time crispness! Well—they just make you glad! Kellogg’s are never tough or leathery or hard to eat! Kellogg’s will snap-up kiddie appetites something wonderful! And, our word for it—let the littlest have their fill “i ust like Dadd y must have his! You’ll never know how delicious TrtASTED corn flakes can be until you eat KELLOGG’S! You will know the Cv*»n KELLOGG package because it is RED and GREEN! Look for it! < FLAKES A w Baker* of KELLOGG’S KRUMBLES and KELLOGG’S BRAN, cooked end krrabled
FOR THEJARMERS Items of Interest to the Fanners of Adams County. CORN CLUB MEMBERS GETS A YIELD TWICE THAT OF DADS Occasionally one hears a remark or question regarding the worthwhileness ot club work and vocational agricultural teaching in our high schools. A very excellent example of the value and possibilities in this direction was furnished by the corn club in Hanover
A RECORD WE ARE PROUD OFI During the first two weeks in January nearly half ofour loyal subscribers renewed their subscription to the Daily Democrat and secured one of the Genuine Leather I Bill Folds. Folks living in this community cannot getalong without the county daily for its daily record ofhome and local happenings, the leased wire dispatches of the United Press and other items of interest and weare striving to renew every subscription this month. Anniversary offer continues thruout month I An A YEAR BY MAIL—RENEW NOW! (hQ AA I 0 Illi B In Ist and 2nd zones—within 100 miles —$3.50 elsewhere I O And get a 7-in-l Genuine Leather Bill Fold Free! wWb W I The Daily Democrat with special correspondents at Berne, Geneva and Monroe, and the United Press leased wire gives you the last minute news and keeps you posted on COURT NEWS COMMISSIONER’S COURT MARRIAGES COUNTY AGENT DEATHS CITY AFFAIRS BIRTHS MARKET REPORTS ROAD MATTERS REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS LODGE DOINGS LOCAL HAPPENINGS I Clip and fill out the coupon below, attach your check, and we will gladly mail the useful and handy bill fold to you and credit your account. I " DECATUR DAILY my subscription to the Decatur Daily Deniouat to 1923 and send the Bill Fold. V" 1 * W A DEMOCRAT St. or Route if 3,011 DECATUR INDIANA I
1 township in Shelby county this year under the direction of E. E. Privett. I Vocational teacher. Nineteen boys joined the corn club. Every one finished but the corn in one plot was shucked and mixed with other corn before the boy realized that lie was expected to keep his yield separate. The lowest yield of the thir--1 teen who completed every detail was 179.3 bushels. The highest yield was 90.2. There is nothing remarkable ( about this high yield. Many boys and men produce bigger yields but when jone stops to consider that,there were i eighteen boys in one township whose average was 84.1 buushels of corn per acre it begins to take on more signifiI canee. The averake yield of corn in
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1922,
Shelby county In forty bushels perl acre. These eighteen boys were more than doubling that average—all In one township. It took a number of things to do this; good seed, good sol), preparation, good tillage, proper use of fertilizer, etc. A ot of thought and work was necessary. It Is true that corn at present isn’t worth much, but one way to Increase profits Is to increase yields and hold down costs. These boys surely made more profit than their neighbors who grew forty bushels per acre. With the young people growing these big yields ami producing fine live stock land similar things in the line of agriI cultural betterment, a new day of bet- | ter things is not as far away as it once was. NOTH t: OF (.1 VKOIAVS SILK OF HUAI. IWI'VIF. In the matter of the guardianship of Linn 1,. Glendenning. Notice Is hereby given that bv virtue of an order of the Adams Circuit court of Adams county, Indiana the undersigned guardian of Edna L Glendenning, will, at the office of Clark .1 Lutz, over th,. First National bank. 1 on Second street In the city of Dec))tur, Adams county. Indiana on the tlth day of February, 11)22, between the hours of 10:0(1 o'clock a. in. and 1:00 o'clock p. m. (ami from day to day thereafter until sold) offer nt private sale for not less than Its lull appraised value thereof certain real estate in Adams countv. Indiana belonging to sal.l minor. Edna 'L. ' Glendenning and described ns follows 1 to-wit: The undivided two-tlfteenths (2-15) of the west half of the northeast quarter (>4) of section thirty-three (33) township twenty-five north’ range thirteen (13) east containing eighty (80) acres of land. ’ i . And the t wo-tlfteenths (2-15) part ,tof tile south half of the southeast quarter (’, ) of the northeast quarter (’4) of section thirty-three (33) township twenty-five (25) north range thirteen (13) east containing twenty a. res (20) of land. And also the two-fifteenths (2-15) part of the east half of the northwest quarter of seption thirty-three (33) Township twenty-five (25) north range thirteen (13) east excepting therefrom the following: Commencing at the southeast corner of the northwest quarter (’4) of Section thirty-three (33) Township twenty-five (25) north range thirteen (13) east running thence north forty rods, west twenty (20) rods, south forty (JO) rods, cast twenty (20) rods to the place of beginning, containing seventy-five (75) acres of land. Said real estate will be sold free of liens and will be made subject to the approval of the Adams Circuit court and on the following terms and conditions: One-third cash in hand, onethird in nine and one-third in eighteen months, deferred payments to hear 6 percent, interest from date and to be secured by mortgage on the real estate purchased or by freehold surety to the satisfaction of the guardian and the approval of the court. Purchaser may have the right to pay all cash If desired. RACHEL GLENDENNING. Guardian. Clark J. Lutz, Atty. 18-25 GOITRE RELIEVED Chicago Lady Tells How Mrs. M. H. Evans, 3412 N. I lid pre way Ave., Chicago, says she will ted I or write how she was relieved of a 20year goitre with Sorbol Quadruple, a colorless liniment. You ran see the treatment and get the names of many other successful users at the Holthouso Drug Co., drug stores everywhere, or write Box 358, .Mechanicsburg, Ohio. - — — WANT ADS EARN—-s—s—s
IT DOES THE WORK MILLER DECLARES Fort Wayne Citizen Says He Now Feels Good Clean to His Finger Tips. "Tanlac did the work for me and I am willing to say so anywhere, anytime to anybody,” said August Miller 1513 Boone street, Fort Wayne, Ind. ''Rheumatism bad me in its clutches for three years, and besides that my stomach was out of order and it was seldom that anything 1 ate agreed me. Tile combination of rheumatism and stomach trouble had gotten the best of me and I was about 'all in' when luckily for me, I began taking Tanlac. "1 am like a new man now. my stomach is as sound as a dollar, 1 haven't a touch of rheumatism and I feel good clean to my finger-tips.” Tanlac. is sold in Decatur by Smith, Yager & Falk's and by leading druggists everywhere. FIGHT FOR PEARLS Strange Tale of Romance Behind Litigation in New York Court Today MRS. DODGE OWNER Os String of Jewels Worn by Member of Czar's Family—Worth a Million. New York, Jan. 18. —(Special to Daily Democrat). —A strange tale of romance plottings, assassinations and revolutions lies behind the litigation over a string of pearls worth $1,000,000 in the New York courts today. Mrs. Horace E. Dodge, widow of the wealthy Detroit automobile manufacturer. is said to be present* owner of the gems, which were originally in possession of Empress Catherine II of Russia. The jewels have a bloody history. Their royal owners were involved in intrigue and tragedy from generation to generation. Finally came the revolution, the massacre of the Czar's family. The pearls then were put on the market. Horace E. Dodge purchased them, it is reported from the Paris house of Benguiat Bros., and the American house of Cartier. Shortly afterward he died. Benguist is now suing Cartier alleging the latter failed to hand over a fair share of the purchase price, sl,000.000, after the sale. The defense is that the jewels did not. bring sl,500,000.
The pearls are believed to have been worn by Mrs. Dodge when she was In New Btrk recently. Many per- < sons noticed the beautiful necklace t which was one of the most magnificent I ever seen here. . i
I You Don’t Need A I I “Divining Rod” I ONCE in a while there appears in farming centers a mysterious gentleman who claims to locate hidden water through the agency of a hazel twig held in his hands. The twig guides him, so ’tis said, by turning in his hands, and where it inclines toward the earth, there the ■ You need no divining rod to locate' the things you want. Read the advertisements that appear daily in this paper. They are bonafide guides to buying—shorn of mystery and The advertisements tell you plainly where to go for what you want. They show you how to save steps—and money—and time. By watching them carefully, each day, you are enabled Anything that adds to the purchasing powi er of your dollars is working hard for you. Make the advertisements serve you well. I Read them regularly 1
— (Special to
AN ENJOYABLE AFFAIR. Many of the member* of the Knight* of Pythias and Pythian Slater lodge* and their fgDnlles enjoyed a dance at the home on Tuesday evening, in fact it was one of the most enjoyable
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dances held in Decatur this winter, and the older members as well as the young thoroughly enjoyed it. Music for the occasion was furnished by Miss Edna Snyder, Donald Farr and Charles Fike.
