Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 20, Number 263, Decatur, Adams County, 8 November 1922 — Page 6
Pontiac Arch Support Shoes and Oxfords for Women Who Care Made over a combination last embodying the scientific principles of perfect fit and natural support of every portion of the foot together with smart style. Every lady who cares about her feet, can’t afford to be without a pair of these shoes, or oxfords. They are of a corrective nature, they support the entire weight of the body. Made of India Kid. Goodyear welt sewed, straight tips, no perforations, one half rubber heels. Charlie Voglewede -j / ' The Shoe Seller
• ABOUT TOWN « ****** * * * *♦♦♦♦♦♦ Mr. and Mrs. Toni Kohne came over from Van Wort yesterday for a visit with friends. J. W. Meibers is able to be down again afer a several days illness. Titus Ernst celebrated his 77th birthday yesterday, the children joined in making the day a very happy one. Tony Hackman now traveling over lowa is here calling on friends. R. D. Myers of the Gay, Zwick &■ Myers is able to be out again after a weeks illness. Ned Miller of Grand Rapids, Michigan, was here for a short visit. He announced the recent marriage of his mother, Mrs. John B. Miller to Mr. David Smith at Fort Wayne. Mr. Smith lived here a number of yqars ago and is a contractor and elevator builder. He will be employed for a year or more on the First National Bank building at Fort Wayne. Mart Gilson is giving his business number of others went to Ft. Wayne this morning to meet Father Seimetz who is returning from a several months trip to Europe. Mark Gilson is giving his business house, Madison and Third, a coat of paint which adds to the appearance not a little. Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Knapp returned last night from their wedding trip to Chicago and other cities. They were married on last Sunday. Mrs. Christ Martz is a gueSSof her cousin, Miss Anna Adler, of Fourth street. Mrs. Minnie Wilkerson went to Hartford City today for a visit with her son and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wilkerson. Muncie —Police records here show that one night last week not a single arrest was made and no voilations were reported at headquarters. Fifty people in the pageant at Presbyterian church tonight. o A Lady in Chicago Telegraphs for Rat-Snap. Read Mrs. Phillips' wire: “Youell’s Exterminator Co., Westfield. N. J. Rush $3 worth of RAT-SNAP.” Later rcc’d following letter: "RAT-SNAP arrived. It rid our house of rats in no time. Just moved here from Pa., where I used RAT-SNAP with great results.” Three sizes. 35c, 65c, $1.25. Sold and- guaranteed by Holthouse Drug Co., Lee Hdw. Co., Schafer Hdw. Co., Callow ft Kohne, W. W. Parks, Willshire. Ohio
mire, milt). | ~ K]f| 1 1 II Illi! 1 1 1 11 11 “Someday” Savers E? Some people intend to save "when -• ZZZ they get around to it.” , - - - “When their earnings increase, after ~Z2 ■■■ they buy a few more things they want, --J - - - when they come back from their vaca- ZZZ .tion, or at the end of the year, they ZZZ will begin to save.” ZZ Z Two or three years ago they prob- fc "2 ably said the same thing but condi- ttZ_.Z| tions have never been just right for BZZZ, « them to start —and never will be. E~~] ZZz A dollar in a Savings Account is bet•~"M ter than good intentions to save SIOO, t~ which are never carried out. t-H -J ep FIRST NAHGRAL BAMKjfe :: I You Are a Slranier Hue lui Once _Z 2 2 r IM* YkiitmiraMiMMnS I —- J > I ffMffiorrirLiWi H, '- ,Er ’ vfc _Z3ißwW3Kow ■ ■ ct* ~ j >- | T"" _ “55 ■ iHnTr t 4. vs t J < —rt — j ] TJ
Allen W. Ross Expired Today (Continued from page one) tis. Mr. Ross was born in Adams county, August 27, 1851, and spent most of his life in this county. He was a laborer by occupation. His first wife Esther, is • deceased. His second wife, and the following children stir vive: Jesse W. Ross, of Willshire, ' Ohio; James and Charles Ross, of Decatur; Sam Ross and Mrs. Ed Schoppman, of Fort Wayne; Mrs. Thomas Gause, of Marion. Zulo and Frank Ross, children, are deceased. Th< ■ following brothers and sisters also survive: Daniel M. Ross, of Charlotte Michigan: Richard Ross, of Willshire, Ohio; and Mrs. John Chilcothe, of Decatur. Funeral services will be held from the residence of Charles Ross on North Third street, at 10 o’clock FriIday morning, and burial will be made 'in the Willshire cemetery. Mercer Avenue Gets Ornament Street Lights (Continued from Page One) . Ct, si:: 1 nr,. Triangle Coal Co., $847.00 Bissell Co.. $3.48; Knox Coal Co.. $336.13; Citizens Coal Co.. $335.13; Citizens Phone Co., $7.53; Ft. Wayne Oil , Co., $12.06; Corroll Coal & Coke Co.. , 216.25; Schafer Co., $1.52; Lee Hdw Co., $13.08; Geo. Miller $1.85; John . Thomas $39.26; Schafer Hdw. Co., J $24.17; T. St. L. W. R. R. Co., $2,664.72 Erdman Fuel Co.. $400.00; Ideal Dress- , er C0.,54.70; Liberty Mfg. C0.,516.41: , Hauling Coal $52.75; Electric light pay Toll $240.00; plant pay roll $481.50; General Hocking Fuel Co., $654.50; . Millard Baumgartner $4.50; National , Mill ft Supply Co., $5.00; T. J. Dur , kin $10.75; James Elberson $22.35; Schafer Hdw. Co., $5.70; Lee Hdw. . Co., $12.05; Electric Light Dept, $67.00; Flora B. Kinzle $10.00; F. J. Schmitt $58.33; Decatur Steam Laun- . dry, $2.10; Citizens Phone Co.. $11.50; Volunteer firemen $12.00; Orval liar 1 ruff $62.50; Volunteer firemen $54.00; Police pay roll $114.00; City firemen • $145 00: plant pay roll $16.00; St. commissioner pay roll $226.25; Yost Bros. $25.30. Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Egley, of Fort Wayne, are visiting with their son and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Dan TynI call.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1922
FUNERAL Os MRS. 8080 ON FRIDAY Remains Os Former Resident To Arrive In Decatur ; Thursday Afternoon A telegram was received this morning by Yager Brothers that the body of Mrs. Elmira Bobo, whose death occured Saturday at the home of her daughter near Denver, Colorado would arrive in this city Thursday afternoon accompanied by the daughter, Mrs. Minnie Eson. The body will be taken to the home of Mrs. James Bain on North Third street. Funeral services will be at 9 o'clock Friday morning, from the St. Mary's Catholic church, Rev. Father Otto Peters officiating. Burial will’be made in the | St. Joseph cemetery. ADD EQUIPMENT AT NORTH WARD Teachers Purchase Stereoscopes And Stereographs For Visual Education A set of six stereoscopes and two hundred stereographs has been purchased by the teaching corps of the North Ward school, to be used in each room of that building. The set is used 1 in visual education which is becoming popular throughout the country. It is manufactured by the Keystone View company, of Pennsylvania. This is the first visual education set in Decatur. The purchase of the stereoscopes and stereographs was made possible by a play given by the North Ward school last spring. The teachers in' the school are very progressive and much good has been accomplished in that ward. Mr. J. R. Parrish is principal of the North Ward school. LISTEN TO LEW Indianapolis, Nov. B—“ The8 —“The Harry New men did it.” declared Mayor Lew Shank today in discussing defeat ■ of Albert J. Beveridge whom he attpjnpted to elect to the U. S. senate over Samuel M. Ralston. Shank referred to the dissention between the organization controlled by Beveridge and Senator New whom Beveridge defeated for the nomina-: tion. “All over the state the New people got together and knived Beveridge,” he said. “Maybe Beveridge’s stand on the labor question hurt him a little but not much because 90% of the labor vote ordinarily goes to democrats. “It looks to me like we’re going to have a right good panic to bring people to their senses. Looks like they have elected a democratic congress. "They'll probably knock out this tariff and then they will elect a dem ocratic president in a couple of years and then in about three years more there'H\be a panic.” Good Seed Potatoes Net Fine Profits Certified sebd potatoes, introduced to Perry county farmers last spring through the efforts of County Agent G. O. Standley, meant SIO,OOO to them this year alone, according to data collected in that county recently. The average yield of potatoes from homegrown seed was 95 bushels per acre, while that from the certified seed, with exactly the same soil conditions, cultivation, etc., was 238 bushels, an increase of 1,3 bushels per acre. Seventy acres were planted with the certified seed, which means an increased yield for the county of 10,010 bushels. At SI.OO per bushel, the prevailing price there, these will bring the farmers SIO,OIO more for their potato crop than they would have received front home-grown seed. The extension department of Purdue University was Instrumental in getting 100 cars of certified seed brought into the state last spring, and uniformly good results have been obtained. 0 Diphtheria Breaks Out In Piano Factory At Bluffton Bluffton, Ind., Nov. 8. —There are two cases of diphtheria which developed today as reported by County Health Officer Morris. Miss Mae Heller, living near Linn Grove, and Miss Mildred Summers, living north of town, < both have pronounced cases of diph- i theria and the homes were quaran- 1 tined by Dr. Morris this afternoon. ' The young ladies have been working i at the H. C. Bay Piano factory. The ; Bay managers have taken extra pre- I cautions to prevent any spread of the t disease. - ..... o < WANT ADS EARN— ( I
Attention Moose Regular meeting Wednesday night. -—Dictator. USE SULPHUR TO HEAL YOUR SKIN Broken Out Skin and litching Eczema Helped Over Night. For unsightly skin eruptions, rash or blotches on face, nack, arms or body, you do not have to wait for relief from torture or embarrassment, declares a noted skin specialist. Apply a little Rowles Mentho-Sulphur and improvement shows next day. . Because of its germ destroying properties, nothing has ever been found to take tlie place of this sulphur preparation. The moment you apply it healing begins. Only those who have had unsightly skin troubles cun know I the delight this Rowles Mentho-Sul-phur brings. Even fiery, itching eczema is dried right up. Get a small jar from any good druggist and use it like cold cream. ■ SPORTS New York —Twenty four players and coaches from Louisiana state unij versity arrived here today for their i game with Rutgers tomorrow on the Polo grounds. It will be the southerners first game with an eastern team. Washington, Penna. —Narle Neale, outfielder for the Cincinnati Reds and head coach of Washington and Jes ferson eleven, has received an offer to manage the Atlanta southern association team next year, it was learned. o Stomach Trouble Banished for 60c Iliu Free Sample on Request The stoma- h does not have to digest l»r. Jackson's Digestive and Liver Powder —its swift work in acute indigestion proves that. Ordinary evils of indigestion—sour, tcassy stomach, heartburn, bloating often yields to first dose. At most Irug stores, GOc and SI.OO. If not satisfied with results after using first box. drimglst will refund purchase Brice. Jackson Medicine Co.. Zanesville. Ohio. * Smith, Yager & Falk / \ yORT NEWS I / Jack Teeple, Star backfield performer on the Yellow Jacket football eleven, suffered an injury to the thumb on his right hand yesterday afternoon while working in the manual training department, which may keep him out of the Bluffton game. White operating machinery in the shop, his thumb was caught and a portion cut off the end. By bandaging it carefully it may be that Jack will be able to play but no doubt, he will be handicapped greatly. A game between Warsaw and Emerson high school of Gary, has been scheduled to be played in Warsaw on November 25, which those two schools claim, will decide the football championship of Northern Indiana. Both teams are undefeated and by comparative scores are about evenly matched. Those two schools are evidently unawares that Decatur, another Northern Indiana eleven, is undefeated. Robert Hartley, a member of the Muncie Central high school football team, played ten minutes in a game against Newcastle last Saturday with a broken arm. A substitute wt\p sent in for him but he told none of his injury until after the game. Real grit. “The Striking of America’s Hour,”' Presbyterian church tonight. Civic Section Os Woman’s Club Will Meet On Friday There will be a businet.-; meeting I of the civic section of the Woman’s club Friday evening in the assembly room of the Old Adams County bank. The meeting will begin promptly at 7 o’clock and will adjourn in time tor all members to attend the first number of the high school lyceum course nt the gymnasium, if they so desire. All members are urged to be present and to bring their subscription to the Ladies’ Home Journal.
BULLETIN (Continued from Page One) showing new strength was'pressing Governor Preus In the gubernatorial race. Boston, Nov. B—Massachusetts has | returned Senator Henry Cabot Lodge to the United States senate with a plurality of 194 votes, complete state returns show today. The democrats will ask a atate I wide recount. Bluffton, Nov. 8. —George L. Saunders was elected joint senator of Adams, Wells and Blackford s>y 2,647. Oflicial figures give him a lead of 1665 over Pyle in Adams, 69 in Black ford and 913 in Wells. Simmons, republican, for prosecutor defeated Burns, democrat by 46 votes. Burns carried Wells county but lost Blackford. Fort Wayne, Ind. — Congressman Fairfield was elected to congress from the 12th district, defeating Branstrator by about 1,000. The entire democratic tickets was elected in Allen county by majorities ranging from 575 for Bobilya to nearly 5,000. Huntington, Ind. —Judge Cook was elected to congress from the eleventh district defeating Congressman Krauss who has served six years. According to reports here Miss Esther O'Keefe was elected in the thirteenth. Even in Hawaiian Islands Honolulu, Nov. B—The democratic trend of the election hit the Hawaiian islands. William Jarrett, democrat, defeated John H. Wise, republican, for delegate to congress by an apparently overwhelmingly margin. Jarrett will bo the first democratic delegate Hawaii has sent to congress. The island legislature will be largely republican. Willmar, Minn., Nov. B—CongressmanB—Congressman J. Volstead, again dropped behind Rev. O. J. Kvale, in the race for congress from the seventh district. With 161 precincts reported out of 379 in the district, the vote stood: Volstead 12,788; Kvale 15,576. Seattle, Wash., Nov. B—Former8 —Former ' Congressman C. C. Dill, democratic nominee for the United States sen ate, was leading his republican opponent, Senator Miles Poindexter by 3,428 with considerably less than halfj;ejturns tabulated. All of the five republican congressional candidates have been returned. Columbus, Ohio, Nov. B—With one third of the state out, Victor Dona- ■ hey, has a margin of 18,555 votes over Carmi Thompson, personal , friend of President Harding, in the Ohio governorship race. Congressman Simeon D. Fess, republican is leading Senator Pomerene ( democrat, for a seat in the United States senate by 15,056 votes. t
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[*- — ■■ — ' ■ ■ Instant Quaker Oats Cooks to perfection in 3 to 5 minutes Coffee 10 Minutes Oats 3 to 5 minutes now t Now there’s an Instant Quaker Oats—the quickest-cooking oats in the world. It cooks in 3 to 5 minutes, and cooks to perfection. Your grocer has both Instant and regular. So you caa, if you wish, have the oat dish ready before the eggs or coffee. Quickness, plus super-flavor Quaker Oats won their world-wide fame through flavor. They dominate all the earth over, because people love that flavor. They arc flaked from queen grains only—just the rich, plump, flavory oats. We get but ten pounds of these luscious flakes from a bushel of choice oats. Instant Quaker is flaked from the same queen grains. But the oats are cut before flaking. They are rolled very thin and partly cooked. So the flakes arc smaller and thinner—that is all. An 4 those small, thin flakes cook quickly. Now. if you want that exquisite flavor, you must get Quaker Oats. If you want five-minute cooking you must get Quaker Oats. Get either style you like best. But, for one or both of those reasons, get Quaker You want the utmost in this food of foods —the greatest food that grows. Regular Quaker Oats Come in package at left — the style yon have always known. Inttant Quaker Oats a Come in package at right, with the E “t.- b “Instant” label. MOSmihß "J Your grocer has both. Be sure to KHIUHr get the style you want. Packed in sealed round packages with removable covers
Five thousand four hundred thirtysix precincts have reported. Democrat were claiming they had elected eight congressmen, s—s—s—WANT ADS’ EARN—s—s—s
Proceeds of silver offering at Presbyterian pageant tonight go to C. E. I Winona Fund. o Mrs. E. W. Kampe is visiting relai tives in Fort Wavne.
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