Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 20, Number 257, Decatur, Adams County, 1 November 1922 — Page 5
WOLVERINE 1,000 Mile Shoe This is a man's work shoe, made of horse hide leather, taken right off the saddle of the horse, the best part of the hide. It is claimed by the manufacturer that they can only cut from one pair to a pair and a half of these mens A grade shoes out of a horse hide, the rest of the hide being cut up into gloves, etc. Now if you want a good work shoe next time try the Wolverine 1,000 mile shoe. 4b .1 . Price $5.45, $4.45 a n,i s3.9B Charlie Voglewede The Shoe Seller
»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ • ABOUT TOWN ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ John I). Rioter of Bluffton transacted business and visited friends here yesterday. A number from here attended the meeting at Geneva last evening and report a good time. D. B. Erwin, C. J. Lutz, Kennith Shoemaker and T. A. Gottschalk were the speakers. A banquet was also given. Mrs. John Magley of near Monmouth is reported improving from a serious illness with gland trouble and erysipelas. Remeber the Pat Harrison meeting here Saturday afternoon and come early. Judge Smith and Senator Tyndall with also speak. Dora Bennett, of Bluffton, is looking after business matters here and is planning to open a business in this, city. He sells tire extinguishers. Everybody invited to attend the barbecue and campaign festival at Berne .tomorrow evening. Speeches by Tyn dall and>L. Ert Slack. The W. H. Fonner family has received word from Heber Fonner, a former Adams county boy, who is now living in Evansville, "Indiana, stating that he has been appointed regular clerk in the Evansville postoffice. Mr. Fonner has been working as a sub stitute clerk in tho office since last July. Uncle Billy Frazier and H. S. Mischaud visited in Blue Creek town- 1 ship this morning. At the Mathias Miller farm they saw an apple tree - partly in blossom and with a number 1 of second crop apples on the tree. To prove it they brought blossoms 1 and some of the apples to town. The coffiinittee which is soliciting funds for the St. Jo? basket ball team is meeting with splendid success, over $130.00 having all ready been ■ donated towards the buying of suits ' and basket balls for the boys. Today was the Feast of All Saints and it was fittingly observed in tho i St. Mary's Catholic church, it being s a holy day of obligation. Masses were said at the same time as on Sundays, with an extra mass at five o'clock.
t fOUGHS Apply over throat and chest —swallow small pieces of — WICKS ▼ VAPoRub Over / 7 Million Jars Used Yearly
ffrni 1 11 1 1 11 ii 1 1 ij iii . — ip -»j. tF-' the ::: depositors' I3t VIEWPOINT E Wo cannot consult depositors when B-rn .:Z we formulate policies and make im- »--4 portant decisions. But we believe it w~~~‘ Z” will interest them to know their wel- g—■j] fare and their viewpoint are always til • r-J considered first. KZZZZZ By daily contact we learn, to know fl ~ - --S the kind of banking they like and our w~~‘ IZ ZZ® first concern is to please them. New i T depositors will receive the same con- t--’rrw sideration. KZZ ~ - • "J -■* fl FIRST NATIONAL BANK !|| i::: WKr You Are a Stranger Here lid Once I®? W•- H - -PHL- ~ I ' - .! 3$ J■SJ-£ jt z jJJJluffi® ! 1
GENEVA MEETING ATTRACTED MANY Enthusiastic Political Meet ing Held Last Night By Democrats Geneva, Ind., Nov. I.— (Special t< The Daily Democrat.)—One of th, most enthusiastic political meetings held here in years was conducted bj the democrats here last night. A banc concert attracted a big crowd am speeches were made by C. J. Lutz Dore B. Erwin, T. A. Gottschalk am Kennith Shoemaker. The latter is ; local young man, who is making goo< as a public speaker and for whom e successful future is predicted. The meeting was attended by a numbe: from Decatur and other parts of tin county. A delegation from here wil attend the meeting at Berne tomorrow evening and a large number will gc to Decatur Saturday afternoon to heai Senator Pat Harrison, Judge Smitl and John Tyndall. - Mrs. R. D. Myers has returnee from Bloomington where she visited with her daughter, Miss Josephine Myers,- who is a student at the uni versity. Robert Wemhoff, who has been confined at his home for the past week with a gathering on one of his legs, is improving under a physicians care. Floyd Baxter, who underwent ar operation at the Magley hospital a few days ago for appendicitis,, is improving rapidly. Mrs. H. F. Ehinger was hostess to the Ladies’ Shakespeare club at her home, 727 North Fifth street, this aft ernoon. Current topics were discuss ed with Mrs. Helen Blossom in charge Wild Canadian geese are often hatched by domestic geese and kept successfully. 1 • NO HUNTING ALLOWED Hunting) or trespassing on the farms owned or tenanted by tin undersigned is forbidden and violat ors will be prosecuted according tc law: Mart Stalter. John Kintz, John Arnold. Frank Brown. Clem Lengrich Lawrence Braun. Guy Parkerson. Philip Carper, Fred Baker, Tone Voglewbde, Cecil Harvey. W. E. Kinte. John -Apploraan, William Kit son, Mrs. E. Egly, Anthony Lengrich, Kohne Bros., Gerhard Kohne. 256-Wed-Fri. fit
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1922
— SPORT NEWS • Ix - --7 Coach Tommy Moore has handed out a few new plays to be used against 1 the Marion high school eleven at Marion next Friday, The Yellow Jackets learned them Monday evening and last night they had them fairly well in hand. Word comes from Marion that Decatur Is due for a walloping in that city by at least twenty points next Friday. The Marion lads will have to play mighty hard to prevent getting beaten that badly. Having engaged in a good skull practice Monday night and with another one scheduled for tonight, the Decatur A. A. should be ready to play the game by Saturday when they hold their first outdoor scrimmage. Elated over their victory over the Bryant high-five in the first game of the season, the Catholic high school basket shooters are working hard for i their next game, with Van Buren in Van Buren on the night of Novembei 10. It looks like the citizens are behind . school athletics in Decatur. Recent ly the sum of $125 was raised within a few minutes among the business men on Second street to aid in equipping the high school football team. - Yesterday more than a hundred dollars was raised in a short period of time for the benefit of the St. Joseph Catholic higii school basket ball team. The following story on the Deca-; ur-Van Wert football game last Sat ! irday was carried in the Van Wert Times Monday. Although it is brief, lie Ohio scrib did give us credit for 'lavng a good fotball team. The story: i Lads Defeated 'The local high school lads were de- ] eated by the Decatur high school i 11 to 0 Saturday afternoon. The lo•als were outweighed about 25 lbs, md faced one of the strongest teams n this section of tho country." o CONFUSING TERMS IN EVERYDAY ENGLISH COMPLIMENT—COMPLEMENT Compliment (pronounced compliment with the accent on the second yllable) means an expression of adniration, an act of courtesy. Complement means a full or complete number, or amount, the state of icing ful) or complete. Example: He vas lavish in his compliments on the ■ icauty of’ the place. The vessel has icr complement of men. > e NOTICE OLD SOLDIERS Be at the G. A. R. hall Friday ivening, November 3, at 7 o'clock. Something doing. o Gertrude Moses Goes To Arizona For Winter Miss Gertrude Moses left yesterday cr Tucson, Arizona, where she will spend the winter months. Miss Mos:s went to Chicago yesterday and ■ est that city at 6:15 o'clock yesterday ivening for Arizona. She is afflicted . with rheumatism and is unable to stand the damp climate of this section of the country during the win ter. Last winter she was in the Tilden Health School Denver, Colorado md returned to her home here in the spring. She was unable to receive jailers all summer. Miss Moses will be located at the Santa Rico Hotel in Tucson, this winter. Stomach Bad? Bi*i Free Sample on Keqne.st Dr. Jackson's Liver Powder certainly does felve swift relief to acute indigestion and lasting benefit to hosts of sufferers from indigestion. dyspepsia and their long train of evils—palpitation of heart. sour, bloated, gassy stomach. heartburn, short breath. At most drug stores, 60c and SI.OO and money back if first box is not satisfactory. Jackson Medicine Co., Zanesville, O. > Old Folks Made New "It is now five months since I took a course of your medicine for gas and stomach trouble and I am feeling entirely well. My friends all tel! me I am looking twenty ytjars younger and I certainly feel us they. say. 1 am repommeqding Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy to all ailing with stomach and liver trouble.” It is a simple, harmless preparation that removes the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the inflammation which causes practically all stomach liver and intestinal ailments, including appendicitis. Ona dose will convince or money refunded. For sale by Holthouse Drug com'pany and druggists everywhere.
YES or NO? A Test of Your Intelligence » .„■■■■■.— > The correct answer to one of those problems is YES, to the other NO. STOP TO THINK! Questions Answered Tomorrow 1— Is "love at first sight” a sentimental emotion more than the result of natural law? 2— poes a mother exercise n greater ' influence over . her child than its father? Yesterday's Questions Answered 1 — Is avarice a vice more than a virtue? Answer—YES. Avarice is a vice since it encourages greed and envy to the detriment of the people as a whole. 2 — Is thrift a natural human quality? Answer —NO. Thrift is an acquired virtue. Human beings, unlike any of the lower animals, are not by nature thrifty. It Is a cultivated quality. o Banker R. R. Schug, of Berne, was looking after business here last evening. s — —_ A Rat That Didn’t Smell After Being Dead for 3 Months"I swear it was dead at least 3 months,” said James Sykes, Butcher, Westfield, N. J. "We saw this rat every day. Put a cake of RAT-SNAP behind a barrel. Months later my wife asked about the rat. Remembered the barrel, looked behind it. There was the rat —dead, not the slightest odor.” Three sizes, 35c, 65e, $1.25. Sold and guaranteed by Holthouse Drug Co., Lee Hdw. Co., Schafer Hdw. Co., Callow & Kohne, W. W. Parks, Will shire, Ohio. r 0 q. .J. 4. 4. + 4. 4* + + + ♦ * ♦ + * DEMOCRATIC MEETINGS + ■:• •?•!• + + ++ 4- + + + + * + + Wednesday, Nov. I —Jefferson high school auditorium, Jefferson town- ■ ship—Judge John Smith of Portland 1 and 11. B. Heller of -Decatur. Friday evening, Nov. 3 —Kirkland township high school—Clark J. Lutz and David J. Schwartz. Saturday afternoon—Decatur, 1:30 band concert Speeches by John W. Tyndall, Judge John Smith and Senator Pat Harrison. e 2c supper, M. E. church. Sat. Nov. 4th 5 o’clock. 25611
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Bonus for Tariff Profiteers. Bonus for Millionaire Ship Owners. Not a Dollar Bonus for the Soldiers. That is the program of this Republican administration. The tariff’ profiteers have already got theirs. A special session is Io be called to fix the Millionaire Ship Corporations with their subsidy in November. All the soldiers got from this administration is broken promises. Vote Against this Profiteers’ Congress (ADVERTISEMENT) I Let Our Trust Department Manage the Money You Leave By Will In the event of death kt our Rank protect your family. Property cares were never so burdensome as today. Investments need watch-ing-—careful watching; and every change in interest rates affects values. Income tax provisions, too, arc difficult. • *'■' You can save your family these troublesome details by placing your estate in trust with this bank. With all its advantages, the cost to your heirs for our expert service is no more and is usually less than would be paid an individual exec- • utor trustee for less competent service. Old Adams County Bank I Decatur, Indiana
