Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 20, Number 279, Decatur, Adams County, 27 November 1922 — Page 5

I LOCAL NEWS I 11

| .Mr. and Mrs. Albert Johnson, of Ft. ■ Wayne. returned to their home after ■ spending the week-end with Mr. and ■ Mrs. Tom Kern. i Dim Beery went to Berne today on I business. Mrs. Anna Malott and Mr. and Mrs. I J. li. Williams spend Sunday with I Mrs. Malott’s son. Chas. Malott and family, at Ft. Wayne. Dau Beckmeyer, of north of the city, was a business visitor in this city today. Henry Flagar, of north-east of the ! city was a business visitor here today. Miss Jirene Gregory, who is teaching at Garret, will return home to I spend Thanksgiving with her mother. Mrs. Jennie Ranier will leave toI morrow for Ft. Wayne, where she will spend Thanksgiving with her daughter. Mrs. W. F. Rosenwinkel and will also visit Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Ranier. Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Henderson and Mr. and Mrs. Perry Archer, of Fort Wayne, spent Sunday in Decatur as the guests of Mr. and Mi;s. W. A. Kuibler and Mrs. Christian Niblick and son Jesse G. John Baker, county sheriff-elect, has returned from Anderson, where he visited with his son and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. George Baker. Mr. and Mrs. H. D.Wyant and Mr and Mrs. Albert Beery were Fort Wayne visitors yesterday. Thetus Hocker, Herman Meyers and Dick Heller, students of Indiana University, will arrive home Wednesday night to spend Thanksgiving with their parents. James Harkless and daughters, Francis and Naomi, spent Sunday in Van Wert. Mrs. Harkless returned with them. Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hower and family, and Mr. and Mrs. A. B Ford and son Arthur, will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Dally of Paulding, Ohio, for Thanksgiving. Miss Bob Frisinger, of Monrpe, will spend Thanksgiving with her mother, Mrs. Jane Frisinger of this city. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Ford and son Arthur, of Portland, will arrive Wednesday evening to spend Thanksgiving with Mrs. Ford’s mother, Mrs. Dallas Hower, of this city. Mrs. Tom Fox, of Ft Wayne, was Instant Quaker Oats Cooks to perfection in 3 to 5 minutes Now Quaker Oats offer two great advantages over any other oats you can buy. First, a matchless flavor. They are flaked from queen grains only, so their flavor has won the world. And now a quick-cooking style, perfected by our experts. Itcooks in 3 to S minutes. It is the quick-est-cooking oats in the world. Made of the same queen grains, but the oats are cut before flaking. They are rolled very thin and partly cooked. So the flakes are smaller and thinner —that is all. And the small thin flakes cook quickly. Your grocer has both styles. If you want Instant Quaker look for “Instant" on the labei. You will get the quickest-cooking oat.* in the world.

11 STEPHEN DECATUR. a i '■ . ii Your Saving Power ] i * ' Earning power is not as important as saving power. & b Those who make the most do not always save the & ; most. r i; l| c 1 !,i I ; ' Steady saving is successful saving regardless of the amount of the weekly deposit. The big thing is to r. i reach a goal—not how long it takes to get there. $ . L . 3 Ur Tits t B Capital and Surplus

i a weekend guest of Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Gass. Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Gass, and son. Jr., will leave tomorrow for Culver, Ohio, where they will spend Thanksgiving witli Mrs. Gass' mother, Mrs. Peter Koller. Wilbur Porter went to Detroit to ■ drive a six cylinder Buick touring sedan homo Miss Fanny Hiti visited in Ft. Wayne yesterday. Karl Conner and son Jack and Mr. and Mrs. Ray McCullum visited at Geneva Sunday. The Red Cross drive made in this city Sunday and was quite successful. Adams county young people who are attending college at Indiana, Purdue, Notre Dame, Depauw, Crawfordsville and other places are expected to arrive Wednesday for the Thanksgiving vacation. Rev. L. W. A. Luckey of New York City has forwarded to this office a number of copies of a pamphlet entitled "Musing in memoriam,” a poetic remembrance of Lucy Stone Luckey and has asked us to see that they are given to friends who injure for them. If you care for a copy you may have same by calling at this office. John Carmody, manager of the Hol land-St. Louis Sugar company has returned from Tipton where he looked after business in the interest of the company. Charles Voglewede, Mrs. B. J. Terveer and daughter Miss Mayme and Mrs. Minnie Holthouse motored to Toledo this morning where they will spend Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs C. R. Uhl and family. The season of Advent, starts next Sunday and will be observed in the Catholic churches. Coimty treasurer Hugh Hite has ordered the tax receipts for 1923, ap proximately ten thousand receipts being printed for the spring and fall installments. Miss Ireta Miller stenographer at the Holland-St. Louis Sugar company who was operated upon for the re moval of the appendix is reported as getting along nicely. Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Anker and Mrs C. C. Rayl motored to Oxford, Ohio. Sunday morning and enjoyed the day with Miss Veronica Anker, student ai Western College for Women located there. William Aumann, of north of the city, was here on business today. William Springer, of Van Wert, Ohio, was here on business today. Miss June Ossenbarg, of Indiana University, will be the guest of Miss Helen Everett over Thanksgiving. Janies B. Plessinger, of Bluffton, visited friends here last evening. Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Burkhead, of Monroe, were here on business Saturday. The Ladies Aid of the U. B. church will hold a pastry sale at the C. J. Green Meat Market on Monroe street, Wednesday, November 29th. They will have home-made pies, bread, cake, cookies, buns, doughnuts and good things for Thanksgiving. The sale will begin at 9 a. m. Miss Dorothy Durkin, who is attending Miss Blaker's School at In'dianapolis will arrive home tomorrow evening to spend Thanksgiving witli her mother, Mrs. Dorothy Durkin.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1922.

Declares He Has New Lease On Life “Since taking Tanlac I am hungry all tile time, and eat and digest anything I want and feel I have a new lease on life,’’ declared Fred W. Break, 2332 Kirby St., W. Detroit, Mich., employee of the Detroit United Railway. "About a year uro my health began going down hill. My stomach got in awful condition and I had indigestion so bad I couldn't find anything to give me relit f. 1 suffered from constipation, terrible headaches and my whole system seemed full of poison. Myblood was affected and I was troubled a great deal with boils. I was far below normal weight, so nervous 1 couldn’t sleep and so weak and dizzy 1 actually, wobbled while walking. "But Tanlac toned me up in fine shape so I sleep sound, eat hearty and never have a trace ot my old troubles. I can tell anybody Tanlac is the greatest medicine in the world.” Tanlac is sold by all good druggists. YES or NO? A Test of Your Intelligence / The eorect answer to one of these problems is YES, to the other NO. STOP TO THINK! Questions Answered Tomorrow 1. —ls mercury (the fluid in a ther mometer) a chemical substance? 2. —ls a tomato a vegetable? Yesterday’s Questions Answered 1. —Did lhe Greeks create culture? Answer —NO. Culture, the develop ment of the arts, was created l>y the Chinese, although in ancient Egypt there was cultural thought before written history. 2. —ls Boston. Mass., called “the Athens of America” because it is likened to ancient Athens, in Greece as the cultural center ot the country? Answer —YES. Athens, in Greece, was the center of culture, which term is applied to Boston, the idea being that Boston excels in learning and the arts. o_. 0 _. Mrs. P. H. Kilbourne, of Ft. Wayne, spent Sunday with her mother, Mrs U. Deiningen of this city. Emmett Rector, of Bluffton, was here on business today .- Joseph R. Carrier, ot Hoagland, at tended to business here today. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Arnold, of Peter son, were shoppers here Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Miller, o? Union township, were in town Satur dav. William D. Rewnell, of For! Wayne, was here on business today. W. F. Burkheart, of Monroe, at tended to business here Saturday. Lloyd E. Jackson, of Fort Wayne, ; was a business visitor here this morning. Mrs. Chas. Jqhnson. who has been sick at the home of her sister, Mrs. Nora Parrish, was slightly better to day and was able to be removed to her home in Root township. Frank Breiner, of Washington township, was a business visitor here Saturday. ’ William Rodenbeck of Root town ship, attended to business in this city Saturday. Orlando Sprunger, of Bobo, was in ' this city today. Milton -Chronister, of Bobo, was a business visitor here today. The Misses Margaret Moran am’, Germaine Christen, of St. Marys of ’• the Woods College, will arrive horn - Tuesday to spend Thynksgiving with their parents in this ci&. Arthur Hyland, Richard Deininger. Othmar Smith and Elmo Smith, students of Notre Dame, will arrive home tomorrow to spend Thanksgiving with their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Bailey, of Fort Wayne, spent Sunday with relatives in this city. J. W. Hopple, of Blue Creek township, was a business visitor here today. Janie? Rittet, of Kalamazoo, Michigan, was here today on business. Dick Tonnelier visited friends in Ft. Wayne, ybsterday. Misses Mildred Leonard and Ger aldine Everett went to Monroe yesterday to attend the Eworth League Convention. Douglas Haney i;p ml yesterday in Ft. Wayne. , , _3-. - Reserve Thursday, December 7th, A big entertainment. 279t2 0 OYSTER SUPPER On oyster supper will be held at the Brandyberry school, 1 mile south and 2 miles east of Mour.rn, Wednesday,. Nov. 29. A good program has oe u prepared. Everybody coble. Thein.a Burkhead, Mabel Bess, teachers. 278-3 tx o NOTICE LEGIONAIRES Regular matting Monday, November 27, 7:45 p. in. All American Legion members are. urgently requested to attend. This will be a joint meeting with the Ladies’ Auxiliary. Bookoo eats. V. J. Bormann, adj. 3t

& in time Z small dosage brings quick relief to scratchy, irritated throats. Cough' eases, phlegm clears away, inflamed tissues are soothed. Now — before a slight cough becomes a serious ailment- break it up wit DuKING’S discovery I -a syrup jbr coughs &coltis J WE SELL AND RECOMMEND CALUMET the EBBn'o~m7 ti/IKING POWDER E.'D. Engeler & Co.

STAMPS Will BE REDEEMED SCON War Savings Stamps To B< Cashed For Face Value On January First Those who have faithfully retained the War Savings certificates they ac . quired during the titanic world strug gle making investments at a time when business sagacity was given ai added impetus by patriotism, wil reap a harvest on January 1, 1923. On that date War Savings certifi cates to the value of $625,000,000 wil i mature. It is reasonable to believi that holders of at least some of these ■ securities have probably forgotten the possession of such .valuable prop erty. Scores and hundreds and thou sands of persons bought tho certifi cates, to the extent they felt thej could afford, and placed them in safe . ty deposit boxes, forgetting that thej will mature on January 1. For the payment of these bonds the government lias nledged itself am preparations are being made for theii redemption. Cash will be paid oi they may be exchanged for treasure savings certificates of the series o! 1923. It is urged by government offi cials that the holders of war savings ! certificates exercisq good judgment ' when the time comes for cashing ir cn the great savings represented. Those who have been enabled to re ' tain their certificates until this time are just that much money ahead With many, it will be akin to the un 1 expected finding of several hundred dollars. The money to be paid sot the redemption of the securities wil! ’ be divided among the hundreds and thousands of holders. Many local peo ■ pie. recognizing that Uncle Sam's pa per is always good, have held their certificates and are willing to trust the government farther, if necessary The W. S. S. campaigns conductei after America entered the war mad< 1 urgent appeal to young and old alike with the result that nearly three-quar ■' tors of a billion dollars were investee in the certifiactes soon to fall due. ' It has been a wonderful lesson ir r thrift, one that should prove profit atle to citizens of the United States 1 in further opportunities of the saint character afforded in peace time. 0 ' Huntington Press Will Broadcast Radio Program » The Huntington (Ind.) Press has . prepared an exceptionally good program for broadcasting from the Press . radio station, WHAY, beginning at . 12:30 o'clock the morning of Saturday, November 25. The program will . include vocal, saxophone and cornet solos and various combinations of inj struments. The program, which is ar ranged to continue until 2 o'clock, is prepared especially for wireless operators at a distance from the Press , station who have bqen unable to listen in on the Press programs at regular ! hours earlier, because of interference from other stations. The program also is an experiment. If a sufficient number of replies are received, the ! Press will put on a program of this , kind at stated intervals. The Press will appreciate word trom anyone hearing the program. o i CONFUSING TERMS J IN EVERYDAY ENGLISH REAL—VERY “Real'’ is very often misused for • "very”, as for example, "It is real ■ ■ cold.” Correct, "It is very cold." o Mrs. Jane Lower, who has been ill i several weeks of complication, shows' . no improvement today.

+ FOOTBALL RESULTS •! Harvard, 10; Yale, 3. Ohio Northern, 6; Case, 7. Notre Dame, 19; Carnegie Tech, 0. Army, 17; Navy, 14. Indiana, 7; Purduo, 7. Dartmouth, 7; Brown. 0. Chicago, 0; Wisconsin, 0. Wabash, 30; Depauw, 0. Denison. 13; Wesleyan. 14. Ohio State, 6: Illinois, 3. lowa, 37; Northwestern, 3. Michigan Aggies, 45; Massachusetts Aggies, 0. Bethany, 29; Butler, 7. Nebraska, 54; Ames, 6. Alabama, 10; Georgia, G. Franklin. 27; Earlham, 0. St. Xavier, 32; Otterbein, 0. Michigan, 16; Minnesota. 7. Culver, 44; Rose Polytechnic, 0. OBITUARY Bessie June Johnson, daughter of a Vm. A. Bowman ami Mrs. Abbie Bow nan, was born in French township,

'illy 9. 1888 and departed this life \’ov. 23, 1922, her age being 34 years. I months, and 14 days. Bessie was he fourth child of a family of eight hildren. This is the third death in he family as she was proceeded by no sister about 36 years ago, and by ier' father about 4 months ago. The ’eceased was married to Elmer D. ohnson, Oct. 14, 1922, and had gone a house keeping in Fort Wayne, Ind., hen about two weeks ago, she sufered an attack of inflamatory rheu natism, which resulted in her, death, iessie was prepared for this change, is she had been converted about 15 cars ago, having been a member oi he Beulah Chapel church. She javes to mourn a loving husband, and wo children, Dale Edward and Lloyd Ibert yers. Also her mother, two sters and five brothers. know that my Redeemer lives, /hat joy the blest assurance gives! le lives, he lives, who once was dead; le lives, my everlasting Head. ’» A i 4 i 4 1 ,I . .. ; le lives, and grants me daily breath: le lives, and I shall conquer death; le lives, my mansion to prepare; le lives, to bring me safely there. le lives all glory to his name; le lives my Savior, still the same. Vhat joy the blest assurance gives! know that my Redeemer lives. 0 I Carl Gass. Bernard Myers, amt Pau | riodc, of PorUand, motored to Pert I and yesterday to attend the footbal' I game. '

4 \ \ >z' • \ vw* \ s' 7 / \ ' y;-' 7 / The Standard of Comparison \ 7 Roadster Luxury Unexcelled The Buick Six-Cylinder Sport— $ 1625 As strikingly beautiful as it is luxuriously : j "S3®®’ — appointed, the Buick Six-cylinder Sport Road - r vl - ster brings new zest to motoring. ' Riding on the long wheelbase Buick chassis with the distinctive Buick spring suspension <v Ot and the famous, powerful Buick valve-in-head °< engine, this superbly fitted roadster contains K \ *< ’ l / every refinement for care-free travel. The fine s 5 **" I ’xS 1 A leather upholstery, the shining nickeled fittings, \ r*' 'M - the com P lete instrument board, windshield wings, tailored top and snug fitting storm curtains are among the many features that disPerfect Fan Operation tinguish this car in appearance and in comfort, Tension on the fan belt of all . Buick models is maintained con- Anywhere you meet this de-luxe motor car, u“Ttr b t dc“h P .nd S J e « h oMh” k not onl y is the center of attention but bolt. This figure contributes motorists also mark it as the car that sets at naught and makes driving a st aii times. continuous enjoyment. D-M-18-NP The Buick Line for 1923 Comprises Fourteen Models: Jf™ r » ■ Ro '’ <l "A r ' S8«S; 5 Paaa. Tenting. SMS: 3 Pass. Caupe, sll7'- 5 Pass. Sedan, $1395: 5 Paw. Touring Sedan, $1325. bixe»—3 Pass Roadster, $1175: 5 Pass. Touring. $1195; 5 Paw. Touring Sedan. $1935; 5 Pass. Sedan, Sl9S»r 4 Pass. Coupe, 511195; 7 Pass. Touring. $1435; 7 Pass. Sedan. $2195; Sport Roadster, $1625; Sport Touring:, 4'67*. Priow Lo« b. Eumjk Uctonea. Ask about the Q. M. As C. Purchase Plan, which provjiies for Deferred Paysucnttk WHEN BETTER. AUTOMOBILES ARM BUILT, BUICK WILL BUILD THEM' PORTER & BEAVERS - ” Buick Distributors. Automobile Tires and Accessories Corner Monroejand First Streets m ■ w..» rv

The Cort T-H-E-A-T-R-E TONIGHT TOMORROW “Foolish Wives” A big 9-reel production featuring VON STROHEIN Supported by a wonder cast. The first VonStroheim $1,000,000 picture and one of the big ones of the year. Fox News. 15c and 35c ■■■■ ■■ itMl You Can Walk We Far If —you .strike an easy, steady gait and slick to it. * You can save a 10l of money on the same plan by depositing a . small but lixetl amount in our J 1 a"/ savings dcptirtinenl each week or each pay (lay. I'ry a few dollars a ptty day—it's regularity and sticking to it • that counts. The l'< interest, ' compounded semi-annually, r which we pay will help along. We Welcome Such p . Deposits Sa¥ln§s Old Adams Accounts County Bank | Thrift is KEEPING UP— W , rot CATCHING UP