Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 21, Number 97, Decatur, Adams County, 23 April 1923 — Page 4
DECATUR PAJJLY DKMOCRAT PubllehMi Every Evening Eeoept Bunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. 3 H Heller—Pres. and Geu. Mgr. E. W. Kampe—Vice-Pres. A Adv. Mgr. A. R. Holthons*—Bec'y aad Bus. Mgr. Entered nt the Postoffice at Decatur. Indiana, aa aecoud clean matte#/ Rubecrlptloi Rates Single coplea > cents One Week, by carrier 10 centa One Year, by carrier..., «.&... 15- 00 One Month, by mail IS centa Three Month a, by mall 11.00 Six Months, by mall 11.76 One Year, by man 13.00 One Year, at office *... 13.00 (Prices quoted are within flrat and second zones. Additional poatage added outside those sones.) 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. May Ist is just a week from touior- j row and marks the beginning of “CLEAN-UP” week in Decatur. The city adniinistrat|on aided by every good citizen will work a week brighten up the old town. Did you plant a tree? its not too late and the main thing is that you do for by that means you are making this a more wholesome and happier dwelling place for yourself and fori
** W>. At* WR feA ; iSW®*S» -'" ■£ sWM 'Silk lr : Vxr ■HF IMUIH I Still Look 20 after 32 years as a star By Edna Wallace Hopper
Some of you remember me as a famous stage beauty over 30 years ago. Perhaps in "The Girl 1 Left Behind me," in “La Belle Helene, in 1 "Wang.” or “Florodora.” Many of you see me now, playing young girls' parts, still looking like a girl in her 'teens. Thousands of women have asked me the secrets of this perennial youth. I have supplied them to many, and they, like I, have kept their girlish charms. Now for all women Now’ 1 am persuaded that I owe this information to all womankind. 1 have obtained by world wide search, the Ircst beauty helps in existence. I know they could bring to millions what they brought to me. So I have arranged to supply these helps to all who want them as a duty to my sex. 1 have had them prepared with the utmost, skill, without regard to cost. And they are sold at modest prices, (with small regard to prolit. Thus 1 hope to bring to girls and matrons everywhere the benefits I got. And no woman could ask for more. My beautiful mother My mother died at girlish beauty at the age of 57. From my earliest years she taught me her secrets. Then together we traveled the beauty loving world in search of better methods. We consulted able scientists, beau ty specialists and famous beauties everywhere. The search cost us a fortune. But it brought to me and mine, and friends of mine, decades of added youth. Now those helps are yours if you desire —the best that science knows. And I hope that my results will lead you to employ them. White Youth Clay I I owe my debutante complexion largely to a superclay. Not like the crude and muddy clays so many use today, but a. clean, relined day which dries white. It is based on 2ft years of scientific study by the ablest of clay experts. One who applies it feels the impurities fairly drawn from the skin. All that <logs the skins comes out —the causes of blackheads and blemishes. The blood is brought to the surface. Large pores, lines and wrinkles yield. Wash it off when it dries, then behold a new complexion, soft and rosy, clear and firm. The results will amaze and delight you. Many wo, men in those 30 minutes seem to’ dron ten years. Clay is a beauty essential. No woman looks her best without it, none keeps her youthful bloom. Women who use clay today stand out in any crowd. Don’t use crude and muddy days, for they will disappoint. Try this su preme erentiOH —the last word in sac lai clays. It will be a revelation.
those who come after you. Its not much trouble to plant a tree and it keeps on growing when you sleep and when you wake and—well Its just a fine thing to do. According to news dlspatclMN a l'resideut Harding will have a real M task in convincing the politicians ■ that his world court is the thing. It 1 is said all the cabinet members exi ) cept two, Jim Watson, every member • of the senate foreign relations com- > mittec and others of the powerful [ clique iu Washington are "trreeonI cilibly” forniust the efforts of Hard- ' ing, Hughes and Hoover to take care of the European situation. It listens like au old fashioned Wilson thuuder storm. The supreme court of Indiana has i held that its uot illegal to Lave liquor jin your possession. Anti-saloon I workers are urging the governor to ! call a special session of the lefflsla-. t iie'^to^strengthe n the law but TP’ . has refused. After his recent experi- nce of sixty days he has no desire: to plunge iuto the roaring furnace again and of course one can’t expect it with summer just breaking. Few could stand a repetition of that memorable last session during hot I weather and it might be worse.
Edna Wallace Hopper’s White Youth Clay comes in tubes, at 50c and sl. • Facial Youth —————— This is a liquid cleansing cream ; which I learned about ir France. It ontalns no animal, no vegetable oil. ■<> it cannot assimilate with the ■ kin. It simply cleans to the depths, hen departs. All the grime, all that logs the skin goes with it. 1 use it 'light and morning, and whenever else my face needs cleaning. Compare it with any cleansing I cream or any cleansing method. You . will be surprised at the extra dirt -my Facial Youth removes. And a 1 -lean skin is essential to beauty. The greatest beauty experts in the 1 world now advise this formula for ■loansing. But'they charge a very high price. Edna Wallace Hopper’s 1 Facial Youth sells for 75c per bottle. I —- Youth Cream i This is my cold cream which I ipply at night. Also in daytimes as i powder base. Also after every ipplieatfon of my Youth Clay or ’’acini Youth. Youth Cream contains both lemon ind strawberry. Jt is the only •ream, 1 believe, which combines hese fruit effects. , It softens, whitens, feeds and firms th" skin. After its use I awake in > the morning blooming like a girl in her ’teens. In all my many years of searching i I have never found a cold cream to compare with this. Nor has any I woman whom I know. Edna Wai lace Hopper’ Youth Cream costs 60c , per jar. ’ Hair Youth My hair is my greatest glory. It is 1 thick, silky, lustrous, and grows finer ■ every year. Before 1 bobbed it, it ‘ fell below my knees. I have never ha<l falling hair or dandruff, and never a touch of gray. Nor has any friend who uses my formula. Nor . had mother, who 1 found this formula in France. She 1 died at 57 with hair like mine today. 1 This is due to my hair youth. 1 apply it daily with an eye-dropper—--1 fust enough to dampen the scalp. This method does not muss the hair.. Hair Youth daily combats the hardened, oil and dandruff which ’ stifle the hair’s growth. It stituulates ami fertilizes the hair roots, ’ from which come hair health and ■ hair color. Look al. my luxuriant hair. Then ’ ISC what I used to get it. Eduu Wallace Hopperls Hair Youth costs 50e amt sl, with eye dropper. Every store around you which sells' toilet articles, supplies my preparations.
it! If you are running truo to fonu it you have twice as much money in p the bank today as you had In 1914 at s this time? According to the accurate flgures«of a careful statlstican we have something over fourteen billion ■ dollars on deposit now as compared 4 to a paltry seven billion uiue years s ago. Os course that's necessary. tor t a dollar now is worth only forty l- cents as compared to 1914 and so r we are really no better off. But' the i* wise ones who keep those dollars a d tew years will be the winnWs for ol >• course the pendulum will swing back !• to a point where the dollar of today '• will be worth two. That's always s been true and always will be. r — We watched au automobile sail west on Adams street last night at a • rate of forty or fifty miles an hour, r It was loaded with a crowd of young i people who were singing and yelling. ( Several ears had to side track to get out of the road and they flirted with death or disaster at each crossing. They violated the laws of the city • and state and worse than that they r wopld have been crimuuilly liable ■ had an accident occurred in which . pedestrians or Jother autdists were injured. Its time to halt such driv- ■ ing and it seems the only way to do it is to file a dozen affidavits each evening for a week or two. If you. are caught don't squeal and don't make silly excuses. It will be too late. Postmaster General New has uoti-' tied Senator Watson that he will take care of the postoffice and other appointments in the five congressional districts where democrats were elect’d last November. Well that's that end is just a glimpse of the real feeling betwe<-n New and Watson. The haltle will wage hotter and hotter. New is for President Harding and his world court. Watson is opposed to it and is organizing the United States. Both men want to select a state chairman to succeed Lyons. The fur is going to fly one of these lays and the scrap is reaching a point where poor old Beveridge is being absolutely forgotten. It would | he funny if that sly gentleman would ’ low slip in and take the power away from both of them, wouldn't it? We are. glad the eight woodchoppers and-the stranded searchers who were marooned on South Fox Island iu Lake Michigan and were widely advertised as starving have been brought off. One of the three men who worked his way across on the ice a week ago said Saturday that it j was all a joke perpetrated so the, woodsmen could get some “chewin.” I From all accounts the men while not; exactly starving were in a rather elose place and were happy to get I out. It begins to look as though dories from northern Michigan would have to be taken with a grain as salt and that's going to be hard on the fishermen who have always been able to get away with their yarns up ' there. - ' 1,1 '■■■ " ' We ReadIn the Exchanges k— —- ■— . An automobile struck by a motor j • section car on the Cloverleaf at Pe- > terson belonged to Orval Grim, cream ( collector from Tocsin. • The Boys' Baud, of Bluffton, gave i a concert Friday night. It was their | first appearance. Ralph Bailey, of Marion, who wants to organize a! ' boys' band iu this city, is director i of the band. Boys Weeks, April 29th to May , 4th. will be observed in Bluffton, aud a. big program has been arranged. ' Martha Fern is the name of the | ’ girl baby born to Mr. aud Mrs. Ralph , i Starr, of Bluffton. Mrs. Roscoe Slusher, age 37, diod ' at the Wells county hospital Sabur; , day afternoon as result .of burns she - suffered from a kerosene explosion. ■ The Weils .county '.arm bureau has , gone on record in favor of the coun- . ty agent’s office, and C. O. White. 3 president of the organization, issued a statement in opposition to the . steps being taken to abolish the office.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, MONDAY, \rRYE 23, 192 X
J A new switchboard has been In- , stalled lu |Ai' Bluffton telephone ofJ flee. Decatur gets the new system. i _____ i Bluffton friends and admirers of Everett "Scotty" Scott, shortstop for ' the Now York Yankees, are planning Ito give their former townsman u floral offering when he plays his 1000th consecutive game. Scotty played his 990th game Saturday. Funeral services for Mrs. Elizabeth Ehrsman. former resident of Adams county, whose death occured Thursday at her home in Columbus, Ohio, were hold Saturday at the Reformed church. Berne, Rev. O. Sherry, of Vera Cruz, officiating. Her marriage to Jacob Ehrsman took place in Switzerland in 1861 and in 1884 she came to America, settling in this county. Mr. Ehrsman died a number of years ago. The mysterious aged man found in a barn east of Bluffton Thursday has been identified as Simon Pickering, age 74, -of Flushing, Ohio, ami it is said he is insane. e- - and Mrs. Ralph Amriue aud son, Junior, of Anderson, visited relatives here over Sunday. YOU CAN SAVE” 15 MINUTES Quick Quaker Oats cooks m 3 to S minutes as well as it cooks in an hour. No other oat flakes cook nearly so quickly. Yet the flavor is identical with regular Quaker Oats. That superflavor which comes from flaking the 11nest grains only. In Quick Quaker 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 those small, thin flakes cook quickly. Tell your grocer which kind you want—Quick Quaker or the regular. Now, a Quick Quaker Oats * Coo&a in 3 to S minutes -- U, MPb Satin-Like, Mellow Tinted Beauty Whit a product — this mediumgloss, waterproof enamel, known to thousands of satisfied users as KYANIZE Celoid Finish. In twenty.four hours it’s dry —a delightfully even washable coating, with the fine texture of a bandrubbed effect You should know this new KYANIZE product, for walls, woodwork or furniture. In eight tints or Pure White. TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS TRIAL OFFER Cut out this sd»er'i»ement, bring it to the More below and pay 25 centa for a food brush to apply the Kyanite. You'll receive free of charge a half-pint can of Kyanite Washable Celoid Finish. Choice of ci<ht tints and white. i Callow & Kohne 1 J ATTENTION HOUSEKEEPERS Beginning Monday, April Kith we will clean carpets *and rugs witji air by our modern improved machine. All work guaranteed. We call for and deliver same at the following prices: 6x9 SI.OO 8-3x10*6 1.25 . 9xJ2 1.50 11-3x12 1.75 12x15 2.00 15x15 2.25 Carpet, per yard 20e , Cash on delivery. Phone SGI or 411 * COLCHIN BROS.
Onion Sets Adams Co. Equity Exchange 722 W. Monroe St. Phone 233. 93 «od ts 1 ATTENTION BREEDERS r — 5 My Belgian stalllonw, Nalmont 2nd i find Dyke P. Sorrel, will make the season at the Gunder farm, 2 miles northeast of Decatur, near Dent ’ school bouse, Phone 690-K. W. L. GUNDER. 97t2wka Owner and Keeper, ■■■■■ — -s
f 111 IM.— ■ —— — n ■ ■ ZVHWMiaB 111 —W————————i II ~ ' !l 1 0 ‘ Fll ’ LPM O'o '**■ 1 f 'tHs. •' ■ jJbwbW S *■ \x Standard of Comparison Once A Buick Owner— Only Buick Satisfies In every community there are a number of instances where once a Buick has been purchased by one member of a family, others of the same intimate group have become Buick owners. Buick dependable performance, luxurious comfort and the fact that there is a type of Buick to fit every • motoring need, leads to the selection of Buick as the family car. Significant also is the fact that today a majority of new Buicks are purchased by motorists who have been Buick owners before, and for several years. Fours Sixes Prices f. o. b. Puich Factor- 2 Pass. Roud. - $ 565 J Pm* Road. XII7S 4 P«m. Cmtpr |lg<Js ies; government tar tn be 5 Pi«. Tour. - BXS . _ , „ _ added. Ash about the G. M. 3 P««. Coupa - 1175 5 p *«-Tour. - 1195 7 Pom. Tour. - 1435 A. C. Purchase Plan, which 5 Puv Sedan - 1395 5 Pnaa. Tour. 7 PW. Sedan - 7195 provides for Deferred 5 Paw. Tour. Payments. Sedan - - - 1325 Sedan - . . 1935 Sport Road. - !62S Sport Road. -102 S 5 P. M , Sedan - 19»5 Sport Tonrint -147 J - —- ii ■ ■ ..... . n —_ —■■ ■ ■ -i., ' ■ -. WHI N BEnEK AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT. BUICK WILL BUILD THEM PORTER 4 BEAVERS Buick Distributors. Automobile Tires and Accessories ICorner Monroe and First Streets ns A I I “SAVE IN TIME” ] _ —one of these docks will help We have just received our initial shipment of ■■■MMHBM *he new "TIMESAVER" savings banks. Shop early on Sat., April 21. bo These "TIMESAVERS" arc combination timetbat you will bo pieces aud savings banks, finished In ebony for tho offlce ' aud ivoly or nickcl for tl,u ,10Ule - ing at the court house at 7p. m. if you w j a | ( t 0 Be cure one, wc Urge you not to delay, for our present supply will be gone witbin a ii tow days. ; i j M f.' i Come in aud let us explain Hie plan whereby you cau obtain one of these clucks free of charge. | J Old Adams County Bank
PHI DELT NOTICE Regular meeting of the Phi Delta kappa fraternity at 7:30 o'clock this t evening, in the club rooms. All members urged to attend. Joe Brennan, president. o > Burdg’s Millinery will have > wonderful bargains in a ONE DAY ONLY Millinary SaleWednesday —of 200 trimmed J hats —vour choice at $-1.95. ~gBB
J- K. Ulman, of ut 7r"' was a business visitor here toe,/ 1 ’ John Losho, of east of . h . was here today on bu ß | pwt , CORE THROAT VISKs i Ovst l/MillhnJ °' a
