Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 20, Number 230, Decatur, Adams County, 30 September 1922 — Page 5

Long Time Comfort This is a ladies shoe, made of black vici kid leather, nice round toes, short vamps, flexible soles, rubber heels. There’s comfort in these shoes from the time you start to wear them until they’re wore out. Price $5.85 Two Toned Sport Oxfords This is a ladies oxford, made of cocoa brown, and tony red calf leathers, combined, wing tip and military heels. LAf ft < Price ,■_ , .. $5.85 . Charlie Voglewede The Shoe Seller

• ABOUT TOWN « ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ School children deposited fire and one-half million dollars during the last school year in their school savings banks systems, according to the third annua! compilation just completed by the Savings Bank division of the American Bankers Association. This is an increase of 40 per cent, over the preceding year and of 100 per cent, over the yeai 19191920. Schol savings will occupy a prominent part in the discussions of the division at the convention of the American Bankers association in New York City during the week beginning October 2. * During the month of August accidents at coal Quines in the United States resulted in the death tff 98 men, according to reports received by the Federal Bureau of Mines. Os these fatalities, 96 occurred at bituminous mines and 2 at anthracite operations. The total output of coal for the month, including a small amount of steam sizes of anthracite, mostly from river dredges, was 25,776,000 tons. The fatality rate for August was therefore, 5.80 per mflliop tons

I THE CRYSTAL I THE MECCA I TONIGHT LAST TIME TONIGHT. ■ t ST "DANGEROUS TOM MOORE 1 p PARADISE” in M A big sensational al- gg “MR. BARNES OF NEW YORK" ■ traetion ’ featuring Added Attraction: ■ Louise Hull Larrv Senwn M ....... gg Added Attraction: ■ | in ;f“The Rent The vi B lllh e P iso,le Collectors” ■ o f the serial 2,000 ft. of fun. I “White Eagle” 8! ■ ■ featuring ff Coming ■ gia .... .. ■ Ruth Rolland Dangerous Curve T* I Ahead” ■ 10c “ 20c ■ Safety for Your Bonds As soon as you own a single bond B--fIZ you need a Safe Deposit Box. There is £h also room for all yoqr other papers as B~! "2 well as jewelry, small silverware, etc. B~~i Our Safe Deposit Department is unusually convenient. Coupon rooms ■ j are provided where you examine your j valuables in privacy. Access to the flfl tz Boxes may be gained any time during ZZj "IZ banking hours. ZZ2 Rent a Safe Deposit Box of your --- fl- own. qz z:: H FIRST NATIONAL BANK |:: ' ‘ You /Ire a Stranger Here Lui Once iff ■I - - - ? in I N e stu* l RF.scpvt jSnßMtfwjffff B■ B i I ; — | ~ SVsT^^^| — | * j Si s±itz xe z: z -LIE: S

1 as against 3.69 for the same month ' last year. The average fatality rate , for August over a nine-year period (1913-1921) i/4.15. , Mr. and .Mrs. J. F. Arnold motored- . to Ft. Wayne l?st evening and saw i , Leo, Ditriehstein in ’’Under b.ils-j . IPmenses" at the Majestic. i Pgt Costello was a visitor in Ft. ■ Wayne last evening. George Wemhoff was a business ! visitor in Fort Wayne last evening. ; L. G. Kllingham at the Ft. Wayne I 1 Journal Gazette will next week ! 1- . . ‘ on a wcca - trip to Q-ebe-.', Canada, i being the gupst of M.\ Fearing of the International I'apc. < r.-tipauy. Robebrt I’etwyim <f ndianapolis is: visiting in the city with his parents.! Mr. and Mrs. Dick Peters >n and ‘ children and .Mrs. 11. L. Koontz and ' I’lpugbier Carol, of Indianapolis, r-o J tcred here yesterday for an over Sunday ’vl. ; with relatives. William Tague of .Monroe was a I . business visitor in the city today. ■ The board of hospital trustees of : ■ the Adams County Memorial Ilospi-! I, tai met today at the office of A. J. : I Smith, the chairman. Mrs. Clara B. U Anderson of Geneva, Ed Ray, of

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30,1922

Berne, und Frank Heiman, of Wash ington township attended the meeting. The Tri Kappas will give a benefit show at. the Cort theatre Monday eve Hing, the proceeds from which will be used in furnishing a room in the I Adams County Memorial hospital. The Jewish fast day of Yom Kipper [will bo observed on Monday, October i 2nd. it is one of the most important II days in the Jewish calender and is I observed generally. The I. Bernstein store will be closed ion Monday, October 2nd, on account of the Jewish holiday. , i Mr. and Mrs. John T. Myers ant! , Mrs. D. W. B«ery motored to Pauling I Ohio yesterday where they visited ' witbh Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Dailey anti I familly. Marietta Dailey returned I with them and will visit over the I week-end. Mr. and Mrs. W. Winebener and sor Jack, of South Bend and Mrs. Henrj Schear, of Huntington, are the guests of -Mr, and Mrs. George Steele and family of North Fifth street. Silas Hale, of Geneva, was a visi tor in tho city today. The county commissioners will bt jn session next week at the auditor’s office*. Henry Schultz brought a couple of corn stalks to this office yesterday i which he raised on his patch. The > stalks ffre about ten feet high and 1 had some wonderful ears of corn on them. » ■ I- A. A. Kist, of Portland, was a bus | iness visitor in Ft. Wayne last eve- > ning. In order that workmen might in stall larger wires at the municipal plant tomorrow, the light and power will be shut off from 8:30 Sunday morning until 3:30 Sunday afternoon. Patrons will please take notice. > Barney Kalver will leave for Fort Wavne tomorrow morning where he ■ will visit relatives and attend a Jewish holiday returning to this city Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Hosapple left lor Red Key this afternoon where they will spend Sunday visiting with relatives and friends. The Hosapples were former residents o? Red Key, leaving that city about fifteen years ago. Charles Tingle, the community song i leader, stopped off here a few hours this morning on his way to Hammond where he will direct community singing and games for the next three weeks. Mr. Tingle is connected with ' the Reed community service of New York City and trained the chorus for the Yeoman day celebration held in ■his city last month. . A bicycle belonging to one of the Durkin boys was stolen, no doubt by mistake, from the football field yesterday afternoon. The person having it is requested to return it to the Durkin garage. The Misses Genevieve Borling, Lois Connell, Toots Keller, Margaret Smith, Florence Holthouse, and Mrs. Glenys Kern, will go to Portland tonight where they will be gnfists at a house party given at the home of Mrs. Paul Briede. Mrs. Briede was formerly Miss Mathilda Berling, ’ of this city.

Mrs. E. F. Gass and Mrs. William Murtaugh have returned from Terre Haute where they attended the state < onvention of the Women's Auxiliary to the American Legion. Thep stopped in Indianapolis on their way home. Joseph Walker who is teaching school at Matthews, Indiana was a business visitor in the city today. He will visit, over Sunday with his family at Geneva. The October issue of the International Auctioneer will be issued from this office next week. Court Frees Harry Poulin (Continued from page one) When the statement was made Mrs. Tiernan was leaning over the babyexhibit A—and smiling. Like a flash she was on her feet and jumped toward the attorney. “You sit down, you sit down, you” she shouted. Court attaches and Tiernan quieted her. » • British Again Order Turks to Evacuate (Continued from page one) held in strict accordance witli the law. Those who are believed responsiblbe tor the debacle are now underarrest. The revolutionary government of three army officers headed by Col. Conatas — the powqr behind the throne'of King George IT—dispatched orders today foi- the gathering together of the fragments of the Greek army for the occupation of Thrace. Fresh Oysters at West End Restaurant. It WANT ADS EARN—s—s—s WANT ADS EARN—s—s—s s—s—s—WANT ADS EARN—^—s—l

INDIANA BRIEFS EVANSVILLE — Since attorneys have riused their fees to fifty dollars divorces have decreased. LAFAYETTE —Wedding bells rung for Mr. and Mrs. James Turner, of West Point, sixty-seven years ago today, GREENFIELD-v-An unusual operatipn, considering his age, was performed on Robert Vetters, aged three, for appendicitis. SOUTH BEND—Eluding their children, Oscar Powell, 75, and Mrs. Sarah Blaine, 70, of Grand Rapids, eloped to this city and were married. MONTICELLO—Before being taken to the reformatory by an officer, Paul Rector relieved William Mabb, a fellow prisoner, of $8.75. GREENSBURG—PoIice Chief Flint hurried to -Gas Creek on a report that a woman’s head had lodged in the debris there and found a store dummy. LEBANON —Charles Pankonen, who was injured when a still exploded, has recovered sufficiently to pay a fine of SIOO and go to jail. SPRINGFIELD, Ill.—Because Philip S. Coe persisted in "holding down" hi« fob after he had discharged him, Circuit Judge E. S. Smith has issued an injunction restraining him from en tering the plac e of business of his former employers. INDIANAPOLIS—Congress makes laws for the people. Governor McCray is a United States senator and Washington, D. C., was first president, an applicant for naturalization said in an examination. • • WISCONSIN GEOLOGIST HUNTS MOTHER LODE Racine, Wis., Sept. 30. —(United Press).—When glaciers crept down from the north, gouging out th e great lakes and upset primitive topography, they left a trail of gold which Hugo Meyers, geologist, expects to follow in an attempt to locate the mother lode. Gold nuggets, worth as much as $4( ! apiece, have been found on the Dr. Harrison farm near Canton. 111. Geologists explained that th e gold has been carried south by glaciers during the ice age. On his annual prospecting tour, just completed, through Wisconsin and Illinois, Meyers found S3O worth of gold. "The trail is fairly well defined,” he said. “It is littered with gold and with diamonds. Geologists advance the theory that the glaciers swept across the source, or mother lode, somewhere in the far north and carried the nuggets south.” Meyers is preparing for his next journey into the north country. He recently returned from Vie Yukon, where* he completed preliminary steps of his plan to prospect for the mother lode.

Philadelphia — A fairly lucrative business has sprung up here, prohi bition officials say. Pictures are being sold at $5 a copy to bar-tenders sc they’ll know who not to sell a drink Wilmington, Del. —Housewives hen are using kerosene soaked salmoi bricks as a substitute for coal. They said to furnish plenty of heat and burn freely. Cleveland, O. —John O’Reilly bump ed into John Thomas on the street Thomas told O'Reilly he “was so clumsy he should wear a fender. Thomas was taken to the hospital. O’Reilly is a policeman.

MICKIE SAYS ( VUUUGY MORE 1 BESEECH A AM' IMPLORE NOO TO GRAB UP ATfeLEPHOME 'W SUP | US AWW ITEMS NOU KMOWI | FOLKS SAN VJE GIT OUT A I MEWSM PAPER, BUT VJEVE g ALWAYS GOT ROOIA PER > OWE MORE ITEM V =1 f El

WILL REPRESENT DOLLINGS CO. | Tho DoMings Co. will be represented I by the new firm of Suttles-Edwards R in Decatur und vicinity. They now I have over 100 offices in Indiana, with I hundreds of customers in Adams I county. I The high standing of their securi I ties is due to the fact that they have I always dealt In conservative issues, I never had u loss or passed a dividend. I Q I Weber Place Citfar Store Changes Hands "Mots” Sether has purchased the I Weber Place, cigars and soft drinks I on Second street and has already tak- I en posession. In addition to operat I ing the place and dealing in cigars and soft drinks as heretofore, Mr. I Sether will serve hot soup and lunch's during the winter months. Mr. Setlier was a former cigar maker, be- I ing connected with his brothers in the j Sether Cigar Factory. CHICAGO MARKET CLOSE ■ Chicago, Sept. 30 —Wheat: Sept. I $1.10%; Dec. $1.05%; May $1.09. Corn: Sept. 62 1 /9c; Dec. 59%c; May,; 61%c. Oats: Sept. 41%c; Dec. 37%e1| May 38%c. WANT ADS EARN—s—4—s s—s—s—WANT ADS EARN—-s—s—s O ■ - I Smith, Defeats Hearst in N. Y. (Continued from page one) I No word has been received hero I yet as to what action, if any Hearst I will take. Up-state leaders are not | showing the least apprehension over Hearst’s attitude, however. l*4*4**4* + + * + 4* + * + +* + CHURCH ANNOUNCEMENTS + > 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. 4. Johnny Tobin hit two home runs ind Van Gilder’s fine pitching tied up .'.he White Sox, the Browns winning, 3 to 2. Rommell won his twenty-sixth tame and Hasty also took another me, tho Athletics winning a double leader from the Senators, 4 to 3 and 8 to 4. Fresh Oysters at West End Restaurant. 11 MODERN WOODMEN! Notice is hereby given that your payments are due October Ist. Delinquents will automatically be suspended. 228t3 Fred E. Kolter, Clerk HUNTING NOT ALLOWED Notice is hereby given that hunting and tresspassing on the S. W. Beineke farm in Preble township is forbidden. 229t8x S. W. BEINEKE. Tri Kappa benefit show, “The Sweetheart Giri” at the Cort Monday ■ '■ning. Paul Saner will sing. 229-2 t

Cort Theatre Program For This Week Matinee Every Afternoon at 2 p. in. Evening shows at 7 p. m., except Saturday show starts at 6:30. WvIWWIftAMVMWVWWVWWVWMWWWVWWWVWWWWWWWWVVWVWWVWWWVV (TONIGHT I Tri Kappa Night TUESDAY | „ .... > MONDAY ;! wAmwi Herbert Rawlinson in ‘THE BUTTERFLY GIRL’ ’I WHIM ERING WOMEN > “THE MAN UNDER C featuring !' A big production with I > COVER” 2 Marjorie Daw ... . | 5 ;> Also— 1 : an All-Star Cast C —Also— $ Harold Lloyd comedy i[ _Also— ■ > “The Rubberneck” “Get Out and Get Under” ] • i u” I A good comedy with ![ 7 Big Reels '! Nothing lake 11 3 Lee Moran 10c and 25c ![ A good Christie comedy > International News Paul Sauer, of Markle Fox News g 8 reels—loc A 2oc < [ will sing. 1 ! reels—loc A 2.>c g « VWWVVVirWMWVVVVMAAA*VVWVVVVUVVVVWVVVVVVVVVVVVWVVVVVVW4MWVVVVVWVWW< I WED. &THURS. ;! FRIDAY ;! SATURDAY “HILLS OF ]! Ruby de Renier in ;I “THE WISE KID” MISSING MEN” | [ “THE UNCONQUERED <• featuring fealuryig ![ WOMAN” ]! Gladys Long J. P. McGowen I ! J b —Also— —Also— ; , —Also—“Now or Never” ]’ Lloyd “Ham" Hamilton in “The Dark Horse” i® A3 reel comedy with i[ “Robinson Cruso, Ltd.” i[ with Harry Sweet Harold Lloyd |» Fox News > International News | 8 reels—loc-25c |! 8 reels—loc-25c > 8 reels—loc-25c This Is Our Weekly Program-Cut Out-Save f When Better Pictures are Shown-The Cort will Show Them

GIRLS Learn to make Glaves. Your working conditions are ideal—the factory is centrally located and’ modern in every respect. The work is very light, easy and pleasant. We PAY The Highest Wages BONUS GIVEN • WHILE LEARNING —APPLY— Waring Glove Co 119 W. Monroe St. « i. .... I——s' 1 :’ .......... .. _u, We Buy Them * Holders of a portion of Victory 4% Bonds must deliver their bonds to the Treasurer of the United States at par value December 15, 1922. Consult us regarding the selling of them at a PREMIUM now and re-investing the proceeds in longer time and more profitable securities. Our securities feature the highest safety and greater earning power. The. Suttles-Edwards Co. Insurance—Loans—Securities INDIANA SECURITIES COMMISSION Dealers License No. 2317 Rooms 9 and 10 Morrison Bldg.