Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 21, Number 89, Decatur, Adams County, 13 April 1923 — Page 6
tete. 4— t sflfrngSMi i / : <a\ Mk£'-_ arjf Let the Attic Disgorge Chairs, dressers or tables now resting in dust laden repose should be in active service downstairs. Save them with KYANIZE Floor Finish, the ideal, easy-working, waterproof varnish. Bight shades, i from Light Oak to Dark Mahogany or clear varnish if you prefer. Tough enough for floors —the rury reason it’s ideal for furniture. GUARANTEE - Absolute tatiafac* tion when applied aa directed, or "hbOfity back fur the ewp'.y can.'* Here's Our Free Trial Offer un Kyanize Fluor Finish Cutout thia advertisejne nt, brinj» it to the store below, pay 15 cents for a good brush to apply Hie Kyanize. You’ll receive Tree of charge m quarter-pint can of i Kyanite Fluor Finish, enough to finish a 1 chair or small table Choice of 8 colors. Sold By Callow & Kohne
The Secretary of the Treasury I in a recent circular, requests that all Victory 4%% Notes be forwarded for redemption immediately. This includes those maturing May 20. 1923 as well as those called for redemption as of December 15, 1922. This bank offers its services free of charge in forwarding those notes for redemption and invites the holders thereof to use our banking facilities for that purpose. Old Adams County Bank
you think that’s a lot of Underwear I look under there!” “Seems to me you’ve got enough Spring Underwear to outfit the Navy,” remarked a I customer 'J* w - “If y OU think that’s a lot of Underwear—look under there!” we replied as we called his attention to the bottom shelves of untied boxes. • We have to stock enough to outfit the Navy —look at the army of men who are depending upon us! Chalmers Union Suits SI.OO o $3.00 Shrts and Drawers 50c o Tofub* co Go K s-* J BETTER CLOTHES FOR LESS J MONEY-ALWAYS- Blouses •DECATUR* INDIANA*
wi—ii FOR SALE Sweet Peas, l ine Blooming Plants I and Cabbage Plants DECATUR FLORAL COMPANY I Phone 911 | fi'iwm i-rym—-*— ITHEMECCA | TODAY & TOMORROW § Charley Jones 9 “BELLS OF SAN JUAN” A truly Western story 9 for lovers of Western 9 pictures. 9 Charley Jones goes 9 after action like a duck ng I.ikes to water. . S A story of a lady Doc- B tor and a he-man. You will like this one. B Also Clyde Cook Comedy S reels in all Children 10c B Adults 20c g
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. FRIDAY. APRIL 13. 1923.
a— — ——■— —o FRIDAY, THE 13TH ■I Q O C (United Press Service) v New York, April 13. — (Special to ■ Daily* Democrat I—Refusing to sit, ■ down nt n table at. which he would I have made the thirteenth, Richard I Carver Jett a rreptagrunt and was ■ truck in a t.ixi before he had gone ■ i a block. Trrti Haute, led, April 13. (Sp< < ial to Daily Democrat) —Egyptian - up< r*.iiion, and Friday the thirteenth ■ Imran nothing to the “six society ■'- jnroputors" a negro organization I "Mysteria" the ' initial King Tut ball" ■i will be staged under their auspices I here tonight. J -o —■ — I Cafeteria Supper at M. E. Church Saturday Evening I A Delicious cafeteria supper will be I served in the basement of the MethoI (list church Saturday evening from
I five to seven o'clock by the M. K. ■ .Sunday school. A cordial invitation Ii is extended to the public to attend I and enjoy the fine meal. Following I is the menu which will be served: Impressed ( hi-ken. mashed potato*-. || gravy, noodles, baked beans, scalloped Ijeorn. potato salad, veal loaf, pickles. 11 hot rolls, fruit salad, pie, cake and I coffee. I MfiRKETS-STOCKS Daily Report of Local and Foreign Markets I New York. April 13—Black Friday the thirteenth started inauspiciously ’ for the bear element. Weekly state ments of the federal reserve banks demonstrated that any immediate !change in the rediscount rate was out of the question and showed how absurd it was to talk of inflation in the present economic situation. Stocks in the general list displayed a relatively buoyant tone in the , early dealings.’ Steel, republic. Steele Americas Can. California Petroleum and Studebaker and other market leaders scored good gans over the previous close, while the entire list . was free from selling pressure. East Buffalo Livestock II P.eeeipts 8,800 head: shipments i 5.130, official to New York yesterday 1,520; hogs closing slow: heav1 ies $85008.75; mxed and mediums $8.75® 8.85; yorkers $900; pigs $8.50 roughs s7oo® 7.25; stags [email protected]; cattle 250 bead; strong; sheep 5600 head; best wool lambs $14.75® 15.00; elipps $12.00 down; shorn .Aged wether [email protected]; clipped ewes $6,000 7.00; calves 1200; tops $ll.OO. LOCAL GRAIN MARKET Corrected April 13 No. 2 Wheat, bushel sl.2t> Good Yellow Ear Corn, peq 100 SI.OO White or mixed corn, per 100....95c Oats, per bushel' 42c Rye, per bushel 70 Barley, per bushel 60 Clover Seed SIO.OO DECATUR PRODUCE MARKET for Delivered Produce Corrected April. 13 Chickens 17c Fowls 18c Ducks 11c Geese 11c Old Roosters 8c Leghorns 12c Stags s<• Eggs, dozen 22c Local Grocers Egg Market Eggs, dozen 22c Butterfat Price, Butterfat 48c
• CLASSIFIED ADS • FOR SALK FOR SALE-A ?ew~used ’ Oil stoves and coal ranges. The Ga» Co., 105 North Third st.£Gt_f FOR SALE Second hand bicycle in good -hnpe Inouire at the A. A P. T.-a Co. st.•:•**. _ _ J B,f FOR SAl.il -it. .-.t'babr carriage, in good 1. p<-. I). E. TumbJesun. east of Map!- wood cemetery. SSl3s FOi. "A E- Fullblooded Silver \ ; t ’CI for hatching pur pc- g per setting. George Thur T R. No. 10. 88 3tx FOR S White Leghorn hatching i ■ $1.50 a setting. High eggstrain. $5 P* r 100. Mrs. D. E. Stud»i l>aker, phon** 392. 88tl2 FOR SALE Two Duroe brood sows, dm- to farrow within a few days. Call G9UJ. George Crainer. 89-31 i FOR One Moores range stov - one kitchen maid cabinet; one piece kitchen linoleum, size 11x13; good condition; also one two burner: oil stove.. See Ira Fuhrman, North 2nd st. 89t3x
FOR SALE Gladolia bulbs, mixed 1 colors. Phone 263. kSt.'l ] Z s —r For Rent FOR RENT Furnished room. Call , telephone 550. 615 Madison St. 85-61 FOR RENT —Eighty-acre farm, 2’6 : 1 miles from town. Immediate possession. See John Meyer, 316 North Fourth street, 86-Ctx FOR RENT Good farm residence eart of city, pleasant place to live 1 with fruit and garden, pasture for I cow <1 .i fine place to raise chick ens. See Ed S. Moses, at Green-
house, North sth st., phone 476, Residence 195. 86tf FOR SENT—Modern - house, on No. Second street. Phone 183. 88t:lx FOR RENT —3 or 4 unfurnished rooms for light housekeeping; also 2 sleeping rooms. Modern. 115 No.| First st. 88t:: WANTED WANTED —Woman to sell Nußone Corsets in Decatur. Address, Box 319, Fort Wayne, Ind.S4-6tx your order for spring sewing with Mrs. M’ C.i Bradin, 115 North First st. BSt3 WANTED —To rent house or unfurnished rooms for family of two. [ Call or see Robert Atz. 89t3x WANTED gentleman of good standing to seil World’s Best Value mens and women's shoes direct to consumer. Liberal commission. Experience not necessarv. TANNERS SHOE MANUFACTURING CO.. 498 C St. Boston. Mass. lx WANTED —Several loads of corn—, Krick-Tyndall Co. 89t3 ( WANTED—Energetic reliable iua li at once. Permanent position with big returns and opportunity for ad-' vanceiuent to man who can produce: results. Write or call Grand Union! Tea Co.. 226 E. Main St., Fort Wayne I Ind. S9t3x' WANTED —Hemstitching and pivoting. Eight and ten cents per yard. Mrs. Hazel Aeschliman, over Decatur Laundry. 89-ltx LOST AND FOUND LOST —Log chain, 12 ft. long, on No. Second street, near Luther Hower, residence. Oscar Sprague, phone] 938. SBt3 SALE OF I. - EHOLD GOODS Iw. s--’l ■ public auction at my r Adams street, on April 14, 1923, me o’clock the followi. M goods: Sewing machine , table, bed springs and mattre wn mower, heating stove, 8 doz. glass fruit cans, dishes, glassware, kitchen utensils and many other useful articles too numerous to mention. W. H. MYERS. J. H. Burkhead, Auct. Hugh Hite. Clerk. 84t6 1923 Acts Are Being Distributed Today Indianapolis, April 13. —(Special to Daily Democrat) —Bound copies of the laws enacted by the last legislature were being distributed by Ed Jackson, secretary of state, today. Provisions ol the law calls for distribution of copies to state officials,
hiewspapers. and a certain number of copies to each county clerk, proportionate to the population of his ’ county. As soon as the receipts for the copies have been returned to the secretary of state, the governor is authorized to promulgate the acts, whereupqp they become effective as laws. _o No Shake-Up in National “ G. O. P. Organization Now (United Press Service) • Washington. April 13— ; Special to Daily Democrat) —There will be no I shake-up in the republican parties national organization at this time. In the interest of party harmony and acting upon the expressed wish of President Harding, party leaders will snuelsh all efforts to force out John T. Adams, chairman of the 1 national committee who today returned to his desk here after an European vacation. Harding will take an early opportunity to evince his confidence Id Adame. They will meet at the White House within a few days.
SAVED HIS LIFE SAYSKIPHIRT I - - Declares Tanlac Restored Him Fully After He’dj Spent Fortune Trying Other Things. “If it hadn't been for Tanlac 1 don’t believe 1 would b»* here now much less enjoying such splendid health," states Harry L. Kiphart, 419 8. Illinois St.. Indianapolis, Ind., popular employee of the People's Outfitting Co. "I suffered from stomach troublein its worst form and spent a fortune trying to get reb’ef. My bladder and kidneys causey me agony, and 1 was told 1 had gall stones and an operation was my only hope. 1 had intense pains in my stomach, terrible headaches and dizzy spells, ached all through my back, and could hardly I drag to and from work. I had lost over twenty pounds, was just sick all over, and thought 1 didn't have much longer on this earth. Will, the Tanlac treatment has ended all my suffering and restore I my lost weight with twelve pounds extra. I feel so line I go to work • very day whistling and come home that way. Tanlae ia simply great.” Tap lac is for sale by all good druggists. Take no substitute. Over million bottles soli. Love Not Necessarily Blind Says Court Judge — Indianapolis, April 13. —Ixive is not necessarily blind, said Judge Frank
I*. Lahr of Juvenile court here today, j Persons in love can think of the true meaning of marriage but too often they do not he said. “Marriage must be put on a thinking as well as a romantic basis," Judge Lahr said. “Women are more loyal to the home than men." Sitting in the courtroom where he sees only the unhappy side of marIried life and the results of broken j homes, the judge affirmed his belief in the success of marriage as an institution. ! “I cannot judge it by what I see t here,” he asserted. “I like to get out and see the many happy families.” There would be no divorce and “triangle” problems if young people and those slightly older, well, only gave the problem more real thought, according to the judge. “It is a matter of education.” he said. “Young people are not trained to think of the faffifly, which is the fundamental institution of life, but . only of the pleasure of marriage. 1 That is why trouble, when it comes, too often breaks up the home. The young man and wife did not expect it." Behind the judge’s chair hung a large American flag. Taking as an illustration the institution for which the flag stands. Judge cont in ued: "To many people, our government is just the shouting of a campaign parade, the touch of a policeman's hand, the traffii: regulations. Other.-, study civil government and know fur what surface indications stand. "So, it is with marriage. We must study it. And we can. without robbing it of romance. “I believe every high school and j college should have a course in domestic life.” According to the judge, it is the most instinct which makes the woman more loyal to her home. u Three-Cent Supper at Monroe Saturday Eve. The Ladies Aid society of the Monroe Methodist church will hold a three-cent supper in the basement of the Monroe school building on Saturday evening. A fine menu has been prepared and the public is invited to partake of the meal. o
Save Money—Get twice as much at 1c sale Smith, Yager & Falk 800 cec /dp’',''" / —L— —'V-Zfef OF course you expect to get back safely on all fours but one of your tires may get crippled—such is the luck of the highway awaiting every man. Take an extra tire along—we’d say take two, you| can’t be certain when you'll need ’em. Vulcanizing and Rebuilding All Work Guaranteed The That Gives Your Dollar a Long Ride STEPLER BROS
1 IT'S new! IT'S great! It s here! “Saw < "■ ; River - Vx,/ Road” »rISHAM JONES’ ORCHESTRA . , ’ No. 24H—Saw Mill Rlvar Read fox Trot Iron. " 'Ja&r«, I Farewell Blues— fox Something new on Bnmsv.i.k 47 Records EVERY DAY No waiting to the end of the n-.onth UDwyHy Always new Brunswick Recor,), Brunswick Records can be placed on any phonograph The World’s Truest Reproductions. Hear! Compare! « Pumphrey Jewelry Store BRUNSWICK PHONOGRAPHS AND RECORDS Mr Tractor Owner: If your tractor is not working properly see us before you start your spring work. Mr. Joe Sovine, expert Tractor man will take care of your needs. Stop in and see our display of tires and tubes before you return home. Lion Associated Store 221 S. 2nd St. Clyde Noble Joe Sovine Joe Brennan Tho Cort T-H-R-A-T-R-E . TONIGHT ONLY fe f.l\ A Wonder Picture of Love Everlasting with Lloyd Hughes and Madge Bellamy The story of a boy husband and a girl wife who learned i the abyss of despair that “Love Never Dies’ ADDED ATTRACTION—“HEARTS AND FLOWERS Paramount Sennett Comedy. Fox News. 10 Reels 10c-25c_
