Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 20, Number 168, Decatur, Adams County, 18 July 1922 — Page 6

FISHER 4 HARRIS CASH GROCERY 149-151 South Second St. Three 'Phones—s, 48, 231. Free City Delivery. Domino Cane Granulated Sugar, 5 lbs. in cartons, ,38c 10 lbs. for 75c | Light Brown Sugflr, 5 lbs. 37c 4x Powdered Sugar, lb pkg 10c The Ftaeat White Cobbler Potatoes you ever saw, 15 lb. peck 50c 60 lb. bushel $1.95 The Best Flour for bread; you get real value in Gooch's Famous Bread Flour, 24 lbs sl.lO 48 lbs $2.15 Pride of Decatur Flour for bread or pastry, 12 1b5...47c 24 tbs 84c 48 Ihs $1.65 Pillsburys Graham Flour. bag 25c > Pillsburys lx Patent Flour, „ I 24 Ihs $1.20 48 lbs $2.35 , A few more of those 10 Qt. Aluminum Preserve Kettles, guaranteed 20 years, special 99c Hebe or Nyko Milk, large can 3 for 25c Small cans, 6 for 25c Pet, Carnation or Borden Milk, tall cans 10c

Small cans 5c Eagle Brand Milk, can ... 20c Dozen cans $2.30 Quaker Corn Meal, pkg....11kLarge Quaker Oats. pkg....25c Large Mother Oats, pkg....33c Large cans Crescent Brand Hominy, 3 for 25c Wisconsin Peas. 3 cans.... 25c Ohio Pack Sweet Corn, can 10c Crescent brand Extra Fancy Sweet Corn. 2 cans 25c Royal Anne White Cherries in heavy syrup, can 35c Peaches or Apricots in syrup California pack large can 25c Scratch or Chick Feed 9 lb 25c Michigan Hand Picked Navy Beans, 3 tbs 35c Bulk Rolled Oats or Pinhead Oatmeal. 6 lbs 25c Tall cans Pink Salmon, 2 for All Scrap Tobaccos. 3 pkgs 25c R. N. M. White Naptha Laundry Soap, 10 bars 47c Flake White Laundry Soap. 10 bars 47c Lenox Laundry Soap, 10 bars 39c Sayman Toilet Soap, box of 3 cakes 35c Rod Ribbon Celery, thoroughly bleached; its different; large bunch 18c We have just unloaded a car of Stoneware; complete assortment at cut rate prices. Also all sizes of New Oak Kegs: 5 gallon size ...$1.98, Other sizes prices in proportion Keep Amazon Fruit Jar Rubbers in mind; the best for hot or cold pack, 3 dozen 25c Get your Fruit and Vegetable supplies here; complete line

FISHER & HARRIS Cash Grocery. MOYER AND JOHNSON'S BALLOON WENT UP IN SMOKE AT DOMESTIC A small cyclone played havoc Sin: ! day with the balloon ascension at Do mestic, to be given by H. Moyer and ('. Johnson. About 1500 people wore on the baseball diamond follow- , ing the baseball game between Port , Wayne and Domestic and the larg< , gas bag of the balloon was being fill- , ed when people were startled by see- , ing a big black cloud of dust coming , across the fields headed for the base , ball diamond. , All of the people present started in , wild flight for places of safety, leav- , ing the balloon tied to the anchot , ropes. The course of the cyclone , changed before it arrived at the field, ,

however, but the balloon during this time caught fire and burned up before the owners could get back to It. The cyclone and heavy rain which followed, did a great deal of damage to the corn fields in that vicinity. The crowd attending the baseball game and the cyclone exercises was the largest that has been at Domestic for some time. Fort Wayne won the baseball game, 2 to 1. i e INVITE PUBLIC TO HEAR IOC Al.

-1 yj MAN ON RADIO (Continued from page one) tasy," Frank Amato, tenor "0 Sole Mio.” "Mother Machree," John R. Wemhoff, pianist: "Poet and Peasant" (overture). "Minuet." - > Miss Bernice Leonard spent thjb week-end at Hamilton Lake.

NEW CORYDON Harry Buckingham and family and Wm. renters were guests Sunday of relatives at Eaton. Mrs. John Lafontalne is not so well at this writing. She had the worst I hemorrhage Sunday she has had yet and passed a very bad night Sunday. 1 A nurse from Ft. Wayne Is In attendance. Mr. and Mrs. (). C. Simms of Bar'liourvllle, Ky„ are visiting Ills sister, | .Mrs. Orlon Hunt, Mr. Simms, who is studying for the ministry, very ably lilted the pulpit at the Jay City church I Sunday. Wm. Shepherd and family and I Misses Geraldine Gibson and Martha | Butcher spent Sunday with James Snyder and family. Miss Nina Betz lias finished her I work at the Dr. Campbell home in 'Geneva and is now employed at the l-afountaine home. Miss Maxie Woodruff, who has been on tile sick list is improved. Rev. and Mrs. O. E. Brown and family took Sunday dinner at RoyBoehm’s. Miss Olie Bochin of Toledo is visiting relatives In this section. Mrs. Orion Hunt was able to attend S. S. after a several weeks illness. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Betz and family

• visited her sister and family at Rock- ;] ford, 0., Sunday. I Miss Miriam Stoltz, who is attend- • Ing school at Muncie, spent the week I end at home. - Ed. Kelly has sold his farm, crops, stock and all to Troy Huey for a con- - sideration of $12,000. and will give immediate possession. Chas. Stolz and family are entertaining guests from Muncie. Miss I’ermella Harshbarger is on , I the sick list at this time. Mr. and Mrs. James Snyder. Roy Hunt and O. C. Simmj transacted i business at Portland last Wednesday. | Milo Uptegraft, who is employed at Muncie, spent the weekend with his ■ wife at the home of her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hisey. Tile M. E. church held an Ice-cream social at New Corydon Saturday night ■ but not a very large crowd attended. Wm. Fogle and family took dinner Sunday with I.ee Fogle’s and called lon Mrs. Edward Fennig in the after- | noon. She has been on the sick list | for several days. , Mrs. Wm. Epley and grandson of I Elwood have returned home after a two weeks visit with her daughter. Mrs. James Snyder and family. John Felt;: and family spent Sundav with her father, O. J. Boehm and family. l?veretts Walters has been ill for several days suffering from a compli .cation of diseases. Mrs. Delaney Monsey spent Sunday with the Elias Buckingham family. About half of the farmers around here have their wheat threshed al- . cady. Willis Burdge is not much improved at present, the wound where he was

bit with the hay fork, is almost well but he is suffering now from uncers of the stomach. He spent several days last week at the Scott McDaniel home zclu ruing to the Janies Snyder home Saturday. Q- 1 — ++++ + + + + •> AMERICAN HISTORY 4 ❖ DAY BY DAY + <• By T. P. Green 4- ; Tuesday, July 18. 4 .{. 4, ; 4' Fort William, Ga.. drives off 4 i 4 1 the Spanish, op July 18, 1742. 4- i 4- — 4 •fr Famous U. S. Frigate “Const!- 4 1 4 tution” escapes from the British; 4 1 + and British forces capture Mack- 4 4 inaw, Mich., on July 18, 1812. 4 1 +— 4 ' 4 Siege of Fort Sumter, where 4 1 + the first action of the Civil War 4 J 4 occnred in 1861, begun by the 4 Foderals on July IS, 1863. 4 ( 4 — 4

4- 500,000 Volunteers called for 4 + by President Lincoln, with the 4 , 4 provision that a draft would 4 ♦ make up any deficiencies, on 4 + July 18, 1864. 4 . 4 j. I * ♦ Recognition of the Maximilian 4 ♦ Government, of Mexico refuse I by 4 < the United States, on Julv 18, 4 ' '' ♦ 1865. ' 4 , +t++ + + : New York. July 18,-€h ar l eß R. Mil ler. editor of the K,.w v™ n,,..

ir t , Honor O1 me Now York Times, '' ) died at noon today. I •—- Decatur, T.H.—Newsboys are on 1 - strike. Some one issued an order that * ‘carriers must have clean faces, hands l' and clothes. The strike vote followed? It was unanimous. New York — Firemen chopped through doors and walls in response to j entreating yells nt a Chinese restaurant and rescued a bull pup. ’Z—: w .- r — r ~

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, TUESDAY. .IUIA. IS, 1922

PREMIER LESIN MURDERED TODAY Given Poison on Board a Train and Thrown Into The River Don I nllril l-re— Muir Correspondent Copenhagen. July IS —(Special to Daily Democrat) Nicolai Lenin, Russian premier, was murdered while en route to a Caucasian watering place, according to ti dispatch received today from the Riga correspondent of the Evenska Badbladots. The report, which lacked confirmation, said that poison was administered to Lenin on the train by Moscow radicals and that his body was hurled into the river Don while the train was crossing a bridge near Rostov. It was reported from Riga that one of the accomplices in Lenin’s murder was an executive in the third internationals who is now impersonating Lenin at the Caucasian bathing resort. PRESIDENT TO SEND MESSAGE TO GOVERNORS (Continued from page one) is is upon the mine owners. It is no

one else. No matter what the government may say, what the mine owners may say or what hostile newspapers may say the mine owners are the guilty parties. “Let it not be forgotten that the strike was caused by the wanton disregard of their contract by the mine owners. They treated their pledge to the miners as a scrap of paper. They- refused to confer with the miners. They sought to treat the miners as serfs and the miners refused to accept such treatment. They ceased mining coal.” The veteran labor leader predicted flat failure for President Harding's plan to resume operations at the mines. The striking miners, he said will not dig coal under such a plan and non-union (miners or strikebreakers cannot be obtained in sufficient numbers to man any considerable number of mines. ’ I’rewM StnfT CorrrNwn«kiit Washington, July 18 —(Special to Dally Democrat) —President Harding and his cabinet met as a council of war today, determined to force the production of coal in the face of the strike of 600,000 miners and the refusal of their leaders and operator chieftains to submit to arbitration. Harding “invited” the bituminous operators late yesterday to reopen their mines when the owners accepted in part his arbitration proposal and offered to put their mines and services at the President’s disposal. Keeping in mind the massacre of mine guards and non-union miners at Herrin. 111. and the fatal battle between deputies and mine strikers in West Virginia yesterday, the Presi

dent and. his cabinet discussed the advisability of placing federal troops on guard at all mines accepting the invitation to reopen. The situation is now regarded more serious than at any time since the coal strike began April 1. The fear is openly expressed here that the nation faces one of the greatest industrial battles In its history. The President is planning on cooperation between the state and federal military forces to bring al>out coal production. County and state authorities will be asked to give adequate protection to mines that attempt to reopen with strikebreakers. If state forces cannot maintain order at the mines, federal troops will be used. Harding takes the view that the overshadowing need of the country now Is the production of coal and that it must be brought about regardless of how it will affect either the operators or the striking miners. The President is determined that the Herrin and West Virginia epi-

sodes shall not be repeated. Many operators will attempt to open their mines as the result of the President’s action, A. M. Ogle, president of the national coal association said today. In an emphatic manner, John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers, asserted that virtually none of the army of striking miners will return to work until their demands are met. It is probable that the first attempts to operate the mines with strikel)r(‘sll<Prs Will 1)0 niUrla In fVizi xirncinrn

nreaKers will be made in the western Pennsylvania bituminous fields. Governor Sproul of Pennsylvania is ready to call out the Pennsylvania 1 state troops and take any other ac- ’ tion necessary to protect mining in 1 this region and the President’s plan for forced coal production will be > tested out in this state. I| President Ogle of the operators de- j clared that coal mining is not such skilled work as is generally assum- : ed, and that new men can be "broken 1

in” within a short time The miners are skeptical of the. President's plan to resume coal pro-. ■ duction. ' "What if the mines are re-opened and troop protection is afforded?" Lewis inquired, “if the operators cannot get the men to mine coal? Not j enough unskilled workers are obtainable in the districts tied up by the strike to take the place of the 600.000 skilled miners on strike. Operators the mines with unskilled labor will n prove a disastrous undertaking, in i. fact it is an impossibility. Only a o handfull of skilled men can be found . to act as strikebreakers. “The plan seems to me to be hope f less.” Other labor leaders privately expressed the opinion that the Presi- .. dent’s plan is dertaln to bring on j. strife in the coal centers. “Nothing that could have been done 5 would have made coal production more difficult or law and order more , difficult to maintain." said one labor r leader.

Late News!; Flashes ;! ' ■ (United Prenn Service). =B 1 ■ . a E! e ■ ■ ■ 5 BB■ B_• • a n B R B H Bliißliilß B a B B ’ Washington, July 18 —Naming of John Ward as postmaster at Gas today e.t request of Senator New. ■ City Indiana, was held by the senate ■ Charges against Ward are in the mail nomination is confirmed, New told > and should be received before the . the senate. Xenia, 0.. July 17 —Rev. Culp. Spring Valley, 0., who eloped with Miss Mary Esther Hughes, was fined SSOO and costs and sentenced to one I year in the Dayton workhouse here ■ today. Culp was charged with abandoning his wife and nine chill dren to flee with Miss Hughes, his ; affinity. Washington. July 18 —The first war fraud indictment since the congres sional attack on. Attorney General Daugherty for laxity and delay in prosecuting war profiteers was returned by a federal grand jury here. John D. Phillips, republican national ■ommitteeman of Georgia; Charles Phillips, Jr., and John Stephens of Atlanta; Frank D. Sullivan of Buffalo and six others were indicted on charges of defrauding the government in the sale of surplus lumber. London. July 18 —Miss Edwina Ashley. England’s $100,000,000 "deb" was married today to Lord Louis Montbatten, the Prince of Wales’ most ultimate friend. The royal family, including King George and Queen Mary, attended the ceremony which united the granddaughter of Sir Ern ist Cassell and Lord Montbatlen, a var hero. New York, July 18. —Tear gas bombs will be used in case of disorders in the railroad strike in eastern New York and New Jersey, authorities said today. Hundreds of deputy U. S. marshals were being trained in their use. Dis orders in the district have been slight. Atlanta, Ga., July 18.—Governor Thomas W. Hardwig has authorized the sending of state troops to Way Cross, Ga., to quell reported strike disorders. London, July 18. —Reginald Dunn and J. O'Sullivan, assassins of Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson, were sentenced to death today. ICO YEARS AGO AND ITS GIRLS Philadelphia, July 18. —f’antellettes peeping from under swaying hoop skirts and curls dingling demurely over the ears were just as shocking to the matrons of 1822 as the prevailing mode of bobbed hair and knickers are to conservatives of this day and generation, according to Mrs. Mary Montague, of this city, w-ho has just celebrated her 100th birthday. Mrs. Montague has lived here nine-ty-three years, having come here at the age of seven from Dublin, Ireland, where she was born. With rosy cheeks and blue eyes sparkling beneath a halo of snowy hair, she contrasted Philadelphia of yesterday with the present. Pantalettes and curls were as much censored by my parents and older persons as are the bobbed hair and knickered flappens,” she said. “Girls of today are more capable than they I were in those days. Any career ex cepting marriage and establishing a home was out of the question. 1 remember 'hearing of a girl who went to ja clothing factory to sew pants. “A girls friend and I decided we would like to do it, too, so we ran away and went to see if we could. 1 hadn’t been there more than two min

lutes when the manager wanted to know what a girl with fluffy golden] curls could do. I had thirty-five or (more on each side of my head. So yon Lee a business venture in those days was attended with th<* same discouragement encountered by many bobbed . heads In business today. "It is wrong to say girls are llghi I and frivolous because of this. In reality It is as indication of progression) | Little is accomplished by the everconservative spirit that clings too long to things passed. “I should like to see the girls wear pantalettes as they did when I was a girl, and, of course, knickers are preferable to the extremely short skirts they wear now.” Many beautiful gifts and congratulatory messages have been received by Mrs. Montague. Among them was a cable from Pope XI. s_s—s—WANT ADS EARN—s—s—s

MfiRKETS-STOCKS Daily Report of Local and Foreign Markets ~~ Foreign Exchange I New York. July 18—Foreign exchange opened firm. Sterling $4.45’4 French ®842 Lire 0463 ’4. Belgian 0793 Marks .0021% Cleveland Produce Butter —Extra, in tubs 41@41%c; prime 42@42%c; firsts 29@39%c; packing stock 23@25c. Eggs—Fresh gathered northern extras 28%c; extra firsts 27%c; Chios 24@24%c; western firsts new cases; 23%c. ] Poultry—Live heavy fowls 25® 27c; roosters 15c; spring ducks 26® 28c. Potatoes —New stock $3.9004.00 a barrel. New York Produce Flour —Dull; unchanged . Pork—Quiet; mess $29.50@30. Lard—Firmer; middle west spot, [email protected]. Sugar—Firm; raw $4.99@5; resin-

ed, quiet; granulated [email protected]. Coffee—Rio No. 7 on spot 10%@ 10%c. Tallow—Dull; special 6%c; city,l. 5%c. I Hay—Dull; prime No. 1 sl.6o®] I. No. 3 [email protected]; clover sl@'< $1.60. Dressed Poultry—Dull; turkeys 25] ®ssc; chickens 28@43c; fowls 16® 30c; ducks 20@25c. Live Poultry—Easy; geese ll@l7c, ducks 14@23c; fowls 25@28c; tur- ' keys 20®35c; roosters 14c; chickens,! broilers 30®38c. Cheese—Quiet; state milk, common to specials 17@22c; skims, com mon to specials 15%@16’4c. Butter — Dull; receipts 17,571; creamery extra 36*4®37c; state dairy tub< 37’4@38c; imitation dreamery firsts 30@36%c. Eggs—Firm; receipts 27.360; nearby white fancy, 46c; nearby mixed, fancy 22@38c; fresh firsts 24@32c; Pacific coast 28@40c. East Buffalo Livestock East Buffalo, July 18—Hog receipt 4000, shipments 760, official to NewYork yesterday 2280; hogs closing slow. Medium and heavies sll@ 11. mixed [email protected]; Yorkers, [email protected]; lights and pigs $11.90. @l2; roughs $8][email protected]; stags ss@ 5.50; cattle 600 slow; sheep 1800; best lambs sl4; best ewes s6@7; calves 800; tops $10.50; few $ll.OO. New York Stock Exchange New York. July 18 —After a period of hesitation in the early afternoon the general matket turned strong was continued in the morning's active again before 2 p. m. and the advance stocks. American Woolen rose to 92%. Davison Chemical reached 47, a new high, Coppers showed a better ! tone under lead of American Smelti ..i * • . .

Ing which gained about a point to 63-%. Prices advanced vigorously in broadening bgroup of industrial features during the latter part of the morning. Studebaker attained a new high for the year above 139 and Chalmers at 50%. Sears Roebuck bettered its previous 1922 top in the advance to 50%, following publication of Dow Jones of the statement by Vice President Loeb that the company is in position to retire notes due this October and $17,000,000 maturity due Oct. 1925. Crucible's strength spread to other steels and substantial advances were scored by Vanadium, Republican Iron and Steel and Replogle during the second hour. Indianapolis Livestock Hog receipts 5000; market steady to 10@15c higher; best heavies $10.50 @10.85; medium mixed [email protected]; common choice [email protected]: bulk of sales [email protected]. Cattle receipts 1000; market steady' steers [email protected]; cows and heifers $2.5<>@9.85. Sheep receipts 300; market steady tops sl@s. Calf receipts 600; market steady-' tops sll. ’ Grain Market (By the Burk Eleva for)

nV me csurK c.ievator) No. 2 Red Wheat $1 00 No. 1 Red Wheat 2c premium' No. 3 Red Wheat 3c discount No. 2 White Oats 32c Yellow Corn " o n „ White Corn Barley ... ... 50c Decatur Produce Market 1 Large Hens , gc Leghorn Hens ' " 13c Colored Broilers 23c 1 Leghorn Broilers Old Cocks Ducks Geese Turkeys 14c Egg Market Eggs, dozen 2 0c r—n , L ? cal Creamery Market Butterfat 33<J

-— —— CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS, NOTICES, BUSINESS CARDS

+♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦*♦ ♦ CLASSIFIED ADS ++++++++♦+++♦♦♦ I — for sale l-'OH SALK \ *’ " •‘ hal " l ‘/"J ranges - Gas Office. 86tt FOR SALE — One 12-HP Ruoely Traction engine. Good condition and a bargain. Decatur Foundry & Machine Co. FOR” SALE—West Virginia Block Threshing Coal. Adams Co. Equity Exchange. 163-ts. FOR~SALE — Kendallville Wind Mill and pump. Reason for selling, have installed electric pump. Inquire phones

59-595-194. 164-ts. ( FOR SALE Fresh cow. Address. 8. ■ D. Henschen, Magley, Indiana. Craigville telephone. 165-6tx. I FOR SALE Ane good fresh cow with 1 calf by side. W. H. Stults, R. R. 9. Phone 566 R. 166-3tx. FOR - SALE— Bab,“chieks. Leghorns. 8 cents. Heavy breeds, 9 cents. Custom hatching. 5 cents. Henry Yake. Craigville phone, Magley rural route number 1. 167-2 wks. FOR SALE—Good hard sidewalk brick. SIO.OO per thousand. Leo Yager. Phone 105. 167-3 t. FOR SALE—3 ton trailer, $85.00; I half-ton trailer. $20.00; Ford touring car. $85.00; Ford runabout, $85.00; Ford 1-ton truck $115,00. W. D. I Cross, Geneva, Ind. lGBtl2 FOR SALE—Ford roadster, demountable rims, new tires, A1 mechanically. Inquire at 903 South Winchester st. Phone 917 Red 168tf FOR SALE —Good strain Shepherd pups. Out of good heel driving stock. Males SIO.OO. Females $5.00. I Hugo H. Gerke, phone 874-C 168-3tx

LOST AND FOUND FOUND—A. K. of C. ring. Owner may have same by calling at this office, describing property and paying for ad. 166-3tx. , LOST—Tail light and Indiana lil cense plate No. 370962, northeast of Decatur. Finder please return to I this office. 167t3x For Rent GARAGE FOR RENT —First class. fire-proof garage, brick alley en- 1 trance; will rent for $3.50 per month. At 225 N. Ist st. 167t3x FOR RENT —House on No. Ist St. Inquire of John Wagoner. Phone 737 WANTED WANTED—Position as truck driver, in or near Decatur. Address G, c.o. ( Democrat. 167-2tx. WANTED —Some one to saw up timber from old barn on shares. Inquire 326 Winchester street. 168-3tx JUDGE EICHHORN FINDS THAT AN ICE TRUST EXISTS IN THIS STATE (United PreHH Service.) Indianapolis, July 18—(Special to Daily Democrat)—An ice trust exists

' in Indiana according to the findings today of W. H. Eichhorn of Bluffton ' special judge in the state’s suit [ against a group of Indiana dealers. The judge found an “understanding” existing among the companies for dividing the city into districts for the handling of the ice business ' among themselves at regulated prices 1 Attorney General U. S. Lesh and I counsel for the defendants companies will present arguments later as to whether the facts Judge Eichhorn found are a violation of the law. “The understanding so had and I now existing among the defendant , manufacturers results In the control | of the price at which ice is sold and I the supression of competition against I themselves and with others in the 'manufacture, sale and distribution of | ice to the people of Indianapolis and is unlawful,” the court said. An investigation of records of the company for the period of the war revealed that they "seemed to be more prosperous and to have made

more money after they were called , upon to make sacrifices for their country because it was at war then they had made in time of peace," the judge remarked. Attorneys for the Ice companies said if it were not for the rail strike I “and this coal thing we might put another schedule of prices in effect”. I Lesh attacked the assertion as showing a combination still exists. — New York Liberty Bond ■ II First 414 s noo ' 9o Second 4’zis' KMis •’••• Victory 4%s 10054

+ ♦ + + + + + + ♦ + + + ♦♦! Il ♦ business CARDS , ■ll ++++++++ + + + + + + i - j is YOUR SPINE PERFECT? Bl J If not, it may be crooked. Vital ■ nerve force that Is impeded in H the progress through the Human system soon becomes dt vital!:If your back Is not straight let me make the proper adjustment. FOR BETTER HEALTH SEE B DR. I ROHNAPFEL, I). C. B Chiropractic and Osteopathic H Treatments given to ault your need ■ at 144 So. 2nd St. 'Phone Bu. K

Office Hours 10-12 a. m.—l-5 68 p.m. H BLACK & ASHBAUCHER I UNDERTAKING AND EMBALMING Calls answered promptly day or nlgu Private Ambulance Service. Office Phone: 90. Home Phones: Black, 727—Ashbaucher, 510. Agents for Pianos and Phonographi. DR. H. E. KELLER H, Decatur, Indiana GENERAL PRACTICE OFFK’i: SPHCIALTIES: Diseases o| women ami children; X-ray examinetlons; Gloiirscopy examinations ~f the Internal organs. X-ray and ele. tri.al ri treatments for high blood pressure iml hardening of the arteries. X-ray : treatments tor GOITRE, TL’BEItCULOSIS AND CANCER. Office Hours: 9 to 11 a. m.—l to 5 p. m.—7 to 9 p. ra. Sundays by appointment. Phones; Residence 110; Office 409. N. A. BIXLER I OPTOMETRIST ■ Eves Examined. (Hasses Fitted HOURS: 8 to 11:30—12:30 to 5;00 Saturday 8:00 p. m. Telephone 135. Closed Wednesday afternoons DR. C. C. RAYL ■

Practice limited to Surgery B and diagnosis of B Abdomino-pelvic Disease Office Hours: 1 to 4 and 6 to 8 p. m. Sundays. 9 to 10 a. m. Phone 581. FEDERAL FARM LOANS ■ Abstracts of Title. Real Estate. Plenty money to loan on Government Plan. See French Quinn. B Office —Take first stairway south Decatur Democrat. DR? I RANK LOSE - ■ Physician and Surgeon Located in office formerly occu- 1 pled by Dr. 1). D. Clark. B North Third Street Phones: Office 422; Home 41:5 | office Hours—9 to 11 a. m. 1 to 5—7 to 9 p. in. Sunday 8 to 9 a. m. ' - " Callow & Kohne B Sell Hoosier Paint—lt’s the best B NOTICE OF MEETING B Notice is hereby given that the an- , nual meeting of the stockholders of the Ohl Adams County Bank will be hehi at their banking house. De- B| catur, Indiana, at 10 o’clock a. m.. on Tuesday, August 1, 1922, B . for the purpose of electing nine dirertors to servo for the ensuing year anil to transact such other business as may come before them. ’ E. X EHINGER. B , 158 to Aug 1 Cashier. ■

0 —_ () Smith’s Bath House Over Morris 5 & 10 cent store. For Ladies and Gents Shower, Tub Baths, Sweat Baths. Salt and Sulphur Rub Baths. Also a Rest Room for Ladies and Gents. O —- — _Q Tues., Thurs., Sat., tl —•—« — —0 s'/?% Money Do You Want It? Graham & Walters have it; all you want on farm lands. Most liberal plan. See us. I GRAHAM & WALTERS East of Court House. I Decatur, Indiana O -0 Tues. & tn- — —>-■».. — — LARGE CLAIMS AWARDED TO SIX RAILROADS TODAY BY THE I. C. COMMISSION Washington, July 18—(Special I" Daily Democrat) —Six railroads today were awarded a total of $6,054.159 by

d the I. C. C. in payment of claims arisr ing out of losses sustained during the a first six months following federal cone trol. The largest amount, J 5.355.449. was awarded to the St. Louis and San 9 ! Francisco railroad. Other repayments 0 authorized were: ,*■ 1 St. Louis, San Francisco and Texas $314,967; Forth Worth and Rio Gran- - B |de, $251,885; Quanah, Acme and P a ’ dfic of Texas, $72,226; Paris and (Great Northern of Texas, $25,111 and 1 the Brownwood, north and south of j Texas, $6,551. » • - ] Miss Lucille Butler, Naomi Myers j and Allen Stalter spent the week-end 1 at Clear Lake.