Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 20, Number 244, Decatur, Adams County, 17 October 1922 — Page 3
® Gifts A Bj| That Please Friends are more precious than riches. Don’t miss a single one from your list this year. Choose the right gift to carry the warmth from your heart to your friends. Our selections are more complete and different than ever before. it is a pleasure to show you, come in. Pumphrey’s Jewelry Store BRUNSWICK PHONOGRAPHS AND RECORDS Experience || An Asset One writer says that it takes us half our life to find out what not to do—then we are too old to make experience count for much. There are two ways to gain experience. We can find things out for ourselves or we can profit by the experience of others. This bank is a clearing house of business experience. Officers’ time is always at the command of depositors. We Pay 4? On Deposits Id Adams County Bank The Oldest Bank in Adams County
U« A "1 ,r- i Please Let Us Have the (Facts We want all our customers to have perfect gas service. Therefore, we are very anxious that the facts be given to us at once whenever there is any difficulty with the service. We wish to impress upon our consumers that we are not merely in the business of selling gas and appliances but in insuring satisfactory results from these sales. If troubles are not reported to "us, of course, w e have no way of correcting them. Let’s co-operate for our mutual advantage. • - « Get Your Gas Heater Now Have it ready lor the first cold, wet days and frosty BBllllPliliiiMfiSMmiM nights. With it t<> rely upon. you can postpone for weeks II IL the lighting of the expensive, w ' >»“*• * bothersome furnace. Real comfort with real economy. Stop in at the Gas Office and see the radiant type gas healing stoves. See a stove lighted. Get the full elicit ol its instantaneous warmth and its beautiful log fire enect. Northern Indiana Gas & Electric Co. THE GAS CO. Telephone 75. 105 N - 3rd Su
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1922
Huntington College Makes Big Enrollment Increase Huntington. Ind.. Oct. 11—An enrollment Increase of 350 per cent In the lust three years is the remarkable record mude by Huntington college, located at Übee, a suburb of this city. The college is maintained by the United Brethren church, although the school is non-secturlan. Lust year the enrollment was 100 per cent over that of the year before, and this year is 50 per cent over the record made [last year. I). A. Ellubarger, president, and Marshall J. Searle, dean, attribute the phenominal growth tq the facts that the work of the school has been greatly extended and strengthened i so that local people ns well as those in other states are better appreciating the services given and that athletics are now being Indulged In to a great extent. A new gymnasium was built last year, the male section of ■ the student body aiding in the erecI tlon hy pouring the concrete foundation and carrying timber. The gym- ’ nashtm will be improved this year by ; the addition of shower baths. Quartet Tours Country The college has lately realized the power of advertising. year a quartet composet of college students traveled more than 9.000 miles, giving concerts daily. The quartet made the trip in an automobile and the territory covered included Canada. New York. Pennsylvania, Maryland, New Jersey, Virginia, Ohio, Michigan. Illinois, Kansas and Indiana. A continental tour will be made next summer in advertising the college. Five courses are now taught that are accredited by the state teachers’ training board and the state board of education in addition to Class A and B courses. Prior to 1919 the school was only accredited with Class A and B courses. The school also gives a regular four-year course leading to the degree of bachelor of arts and maintains a state accredited high school academy in addition to the teachers training courses leading to state life licenses without examination. These courses are two-year elementary teacher’s course; twoyear supervisor’s course in home economics; two-year supervisor's “ course in agriculture; two-year supervisor's course in art, and two-year supervisors course in music, the r latter having been added since 1919. Advanced work in theology is also taught. — Teacher's Practice School The college maintains one of the best practice schools for teachers in the state, employing a critic teacher
utartf blood circulating Sloan's draw* new fresh blood to the aching part — scatter* coneation and thus relieves the pain. Stop sufiering, apply Sloan'a I Slo*n'»«ootbe» •trained muMle.. Re hevea klhh* bedu. Stope neuralgia. LhecU colds In cbeet Good wherever „nu«(tion<auaeaparn. Keepitbandy. Sloan’s Liniment- kills pain! from the University of Chicago in a newly remodeled township building where students studying this line of work teach under her supervision. Hlntington c liege has been in existence since 1897 and is ideally located for biological and geographical study. The ampu.i cons'sts of fifty acres, containing eighty varieties of trees and shrubs. The location Is on the Maumee outlet of the old glacier lake. There are many outcrops of t limestone rich in fossils and crystals, t A stream runs through the worje-l rr vine which forms a part of the ex- i t< nsive campus. 1 With the building of the gymnas- i iuin last year, the school employed a 1 physical director and put a strong i basket ball team in the field. This i year a football team has been form- < ed. Other athletics consist of callsthenics, tennis and volley ball. Last year the faculty consisted of. twenty members. The staff was increased to thirty this year and more will be added as the need arises. Fred A. Loew, formerly Huntington county agricultural agent and a graduate of the University of Michigan, heads the biology and agriculture departments. The school has an agricultural experiment station and has equipped a new biological laboratory. 14 States Represented A large portion of the new students I of the school are from surrounding | states and Canada. Fourteen states' were represented in the 400 students , who attended the school last year. The. main college building consists of three stories and contains eleven recitation rooms. The upper section of the building contains an auditorium and literary society rooms. The two literary societies are the Phil- | omathean for men and the Zetalethean for women.
Huntington college is represented by a strong debating team which has made a record for itself in competing with other schools in the intercollegiate debating league. This year the team will be matched in the finals with DePauw and Indiana universities in the triangular debate. Among the successful graduates of the school are Earl Noss, for the past two years honor student at Yale university; Chester Phillips, one of the leading authorities ion banking in lowa, and head of the economics department at lowa university, and C. E. Dull, one of the leading high school chemists of the East. A special drive is being conducted in churches of the United Brethren denomination for funds to erect a new science building whih is expected to be built in a few years. Political Turmoil On In Marion County Now By FELIX BRUNER (Written for United Press) Indianapolis, Oct. 16. —As usual at this stage of a campaign, Marion county is in the midst of a political turmoil. Possessing as it does more than a tenth of the population of the state, Marion county is always considered as pivotal. It is the largest single factor when the returns begin to come in. Marion county has been for a number of years a republican stronghold The G. O. P. has gone through a number of changes and struggles during that time, but it has always come out on top when the votes were counted. It is now going through another period of stress. No republican denies the party here is having its troubles, but. none will admit they are serious enough to cause a loss of the election. Democrats, on the other hand, are confident, that republican troubles spell democratic success. They always feel that way about three weeks before an election. The party here is divided into factions and efforts to bring them together thus far have failed. The most powerful faction, probably is that headed by Mayor Lew Shank. This crowd is out for Beveridge for senator and is paying little attention to other offices. The other faction is that which remained following the disintegration of the workers who fol-1 lowed former Mayor Charles W. Jewett. William F. Evans, Marion county prosecutor and candidate for re-elec-
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tion, has rapidly come to the front as a leader in this particular crowd. The republicans led by Evans are not openly opposing Beveridge, but they are openly quarreling with Mayor Shank and his friends. Not long ago Evans forced a shake-up in the police department and has threatened city officials, policemen and other friends of the city administration with a grand jury investigation of police affairs here. To date, however, there have been no signs of an investigation. As this is being written, a report is circulated that Evans will issue a statement that he is standing for election as» an independent candidate, free from party factions. Evans has denied he has any such intentions. All of these things are pleasing in the eyes of Marion county democrats. On the other hand, the democrats are I having their own troubles. In the pri- ' mary it was necessary to draft candlI dates. The result is that not one per | cent of the voters in Marion county can name the democratic county OUCH! PAIN. PAIN? RUB RHEUMATIC, ACHING JOINTS St. Jacobs Oil stops any pain, and rheumatism is pain only. Not one case in fifty requires internal treatment. Stop drugging! Bub soothing, penetrating St. Jacobs Oil right into your sore, stiff, aching joints, and relief comes instantly. St. Jacobs Oil is a harmless rheumatism liniment, which never disappoints, and cannot burn the skin. Limber up! Quit complaining! Get a small trial bottle of old, honest St. Jacobs Oil at any drug store, and in just a moment you'l be free from rheumatic pain, sorenes sand stiffness. Don’t suffer! Relief awaits you. St. Jacobs Oil is just as good for sciatica, neuragia, lumbago, backache, sprains.
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ticket. All the republican candidates are well known and have personal followings. The fight betwewen the parties here is progressing merrily. The only thing
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, missing is speech-making. There have 1 not been a dozen political speeches delivered in the county. During prev- * ious years they ran into the thousands ; 1 at this stage of the game,
