Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 20, Number 269, Decatur, Adams County, 15 November 1922 — Page 4
DECATUR DAILY_DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. J. H. Heller— Free, and Gen Mgr, £. W. Kampe—Vice-Pres. & Adv. Mgr. A. R. Holthouse—Sec'y and Bus. Mgr. Entered at the Poetoffice at Decatur, Indiana, as second class matter. Subscription Rates Single copies . ........ 2 cents One Week, b.» carrier .10 cents One Year, by carrier ........... $5.00 One Month, by ma11........36 cents Three Months, my mall <... SI.OO Six Months, by mail $1.75 One Year, by ma 11...,. $3.00 One Year, at office.... $3.00 (Prices quoted are within first and second zones. Additional postage added outside those zones.) Advertising Rates Made known on application. Foreign Representatives Carpenter & Company, 122 Michigan Avenue, Chicago Fifth Avenue Bldg., New York City N. Y. Life Building, Kansas City. Mo. Just to prove that things are dull after a long period of sensational .murders, scandals and unusual episodes, some one has dug up old Belle Sunness who years ago murdered about, every body around Laporte, Indiana, and then disappeared. That's the final bing. I We are again hearing much about the discard of the seaioris( 1 < rule in congress and the selection of chairmen because of fitness. Os course that's the way it should be but we don’t always get from congress just what should be. Evidently the politicians down in Washington are ] after some one's scalp who would by . right of age become head of some i committee and so it is necessary to ( make a change. A check up of the vote in this I ‘ county for the recent election shows, 11 that John Tyndall carried the city of, Decatur by an even 1,000, receiving i ‘ 1,640 votes in the six precincts while ‘ his opponent, Mr. Vestal was given | but 640. No greater honor could have been given Mr. Tyndall for the i man who is supported by his nearest neighbors who know him best, it is safe to say is about right. ■ He carried every precinct in the county but two and was given a ma- i jority of 2,579 in the connty. The truth is that Mr. Beveridge was beaten by the soldier i vote, the red radical vote, and a portion of the Old Guard vote. , That's all there was to the matter and any informed and think- / “A n IW t Character ? Cigar” White Stag I: I Londres Cigar 8c |f|| i 2 for 15c For sale by all dealers. "■ - A NOTICE ; TO TRUCK OWNERS lj Firestone |- and . i Goodyear ’Solid truck tires. W’e have a I complete line of tires and press I 1 them on while you wait. Craigville Garage Craigville, Ind. Distributor for Adams and Wells counties - - ----- -I | lii I— iim— I—MUIUILUII_J_—LI^U—ULIMMI-
ing man in the state knows it.— Fort Wayne News. By "red radical" they probably refer to the laboring men of Indiana • who almost to a one voted against . Beveridge. They would also like to ' insinuate that Mr. Ralston was favored by the wets but they know they cant get away with it. The senator elect is a high class Christian gentleman, in every way fitted for his position and the attacks being made now by such papers as the News are for the purpose of spreading propaganda which will interfere with the efforts of friends to secure for Ralston the nomination for presidency. It’s too early to predict but just now the chances for the Indiana man look rather bright and the flews fears the | results of the next election. Mrs. Robert Thomas, mother of nine children, was this week granted a divorce from Robert in the Marion county superior court. The husband testified that his wife had always I made a good wife and had worked | hard. Other testimony showed that | Thomas had made a pretty fair hus- | band, as far as a laborer drawing S2O I per week could. He had paid $2,500 | on their home in eight, years, and I kept up his life insurance. Evidence I showed that the father objected to a I daughter “keeping company" until I she was 16' that the husband and | wife had gone to church twice in | their twenty-two years of married I life, and that Robert took a drink I now and then, the last occasion, he I asserted, being upon the birth of the I ninth child, whether in celebration | or otherwise not stated. Not having | any other place to go, they have re- | sided together since the divorce nit I as filed last summer. They are no | 'setter off now. What a pity that | people should thus ruin their lives 11 after so long. Divorces are too easy s to get in Indiana. — Indianapolis | Times.- g Men who have reached a ripe old | age and have a fair measure of sue- 1 i ess to look back upon, almost with- B on t exception counsel the younger 5 generation that the real secret of H being successful lies in devotion to I duty and hard work, says the Dayton | News. Samuel G> Bayne, president || .»f the Seaboard National bank, Newlg • rk city, rounded his seventy-eighth 6 birthday the other day and told a | newspaper reporter: “I love my work f and 1 love to be at it all the time.’lj It has become a rather common || th. ught among aspiring young men’s and women that success is something 11 to be achieved and, having been I r found, all industry or activity then|| may cease and the man or woman j | having gained such an eminence may|| take things easy for the rest of their | £ ii-. -s. enjoying the fruits of their ac- 3 tivity. But the life stories of the | great financial, industrial and com-|| mercial successes of this and other ( t countries do not read that way. || Most of these men pass away while ij '■ngaged in their business with great 8 energy and enthusiasm. Few men, | after all, retire from active life, no j matter how much of this world’s! | goods they may obtain. There is asj| much pleasure in continued work | and service as there is in acquiring j a fortune. Work is the greatest thing I jn life. When we arrive at a point ] where we want to abandon work we I . o into a decline. E CONFUSING TERMS I IN EVERYDAY ENGLISH RAISE—RISE These are two entirely different’! verbs and not to e confused. (Princi- I pal parts Raise, raised, raised; rise, I rose, risen). Rise never takes a object. raise always does. For example. He raised the flag above his head,” "Watch the flag rise." “She rose very early in the morning." "Rise up”, J net “raise up" a moment” Note —We I rear children, not raise them. Raise is a vulgarism in this sense. , | .They Keep Clean In I City Os Logansportd Logansport, Nov. 15.—Logansport claims to have the cleanest people in Indiana. According to statistics compiled by the local laundrys residents have more laundry work done per capita than any other town. '
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1922.
Unde And Nephew Blay On Muncie High Team Muncie, Nov. 15. —Muncie's high school football team lay claims to bring the only football aggregation in the IT. 8. on which both an uncle and a nephew are playing. The uncle is Walter Thornburg, a member of the senior class, and the nephew, Paul George, a sophmore. Each holds an i important position on the team. o 4,511 Accidents In Indiana Industries Indianapolis. Nov. 15.—There were 4,511 accidents in Indiana industries in October, according to state Indus-1
i|| OVERCOAT DAYS HI U ' • 111 ARE HERE. I II Every man braces I /' up these crisp ’ tiding | 11 />' i days. Every man feels the I I Z / urge to be out of doors and ) I 11 /' J ' breathe deep of keen win- i I i I U ■ * er a * r ‘ Every man wel- 11 I F ’ W comes the opportunity to | il <C T A invest in a I x X I U "'A • I Wk Kuppenheimer . V UA overcoat SI \ Bl 'A WwWk - I II \I V WRA Irai I When we sell you a Kuppenheimer overcoat, B M we feel we are doing you a genuine service. If > W W % ilk We give you the absolute maximum in style, S | ft \warmth and comfort at the lowest possible In W i II r •XX W x7- I f r This season's values surpass aH previous llKllbr- ... 'X standards. See the wonderful range of \x, x "'v fabrics and styles. ■I X \ 'X # 'J**.*. L -il | t Every man can afford a '■ Kuppenheimer overcoat U $32-50 to $45'00 Other makes in all the various models and $ 1 E? .00 | | colorings . . . . . . and up. I The jg) The I ■ house of house of | Kuppenheimer I H I |J Kuppenheimer i|
I trial board records today. Thia compares favorably with the 4,325 in September. During October there were 14 fatal ( accidents. Injuries about coal mines ' lead the list with 19, four of which J i were fatal Accidents to two hundred ninety five employes driving autos was second aud iron and steel Indus : tries claimed third place with 198. 0 i Chicago—“ Big Tim” Murpny, "back o’ the yards,” labor czar, notified the ! police force they might take a three , weeks vacation. “I am leaving town for three weeks", he said. "That will j give us both a rest." New York—While C. Huntington Erhart was getting married his half i
1 brother, James J. F. Faye was served with divorce papers in the some room. Foxy Grandpa story is a Decatur' story and is interesting. Read it in! Democrat Nov. 18, 267t5 ( Jas? Watson Says, “I’ll Never Forget When Father's Hogs Got Cholera." "One morning he found 20 hogs [dead and several sick. He called in the Vet, who after dissecting a rut < aught on the premises, decided that the rodents had conveyed germs. Since then I am never without RATSNAP. It's the surest, quickest rat destroyer I know.” Three sizes, 35c, 65c, $1.25. Sold and guaranteed by Holthouse Drug t’o., Leo Hdw. Co., Schafer Hdw. Co., j Callow & Kohne, W. W. Parks, Willshire, Ohio.
If yon want to see how a happy [ bride gets by in Decatur read Foxy I Grandpa story in Democrat, Novem- I ber 18th. 267t$ I DANCE Moose Hall Friday Evening, Nov. 17th 8:30 o’clock 4 50c per couple. Music by FEATURE FIVE
rDancell K - » f c. Hall I Thursday, N ov , 18 Beginner’s class . 7 .,. Assembly.. H •• 0:45 Music by G. E. ORCHESTRA iou are invited.’ Fred Sclmrger, Mgr. —
