Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 21, Number 153, Decatur, Adams County, 28 June 1923 — Page 2

J tilL-118 \ 1 I Why You t Should Use 4-' Burdsal’s Paint YJURDSAL’S Homestead Paint j fr" '7 -U' may coat ycu a little more per V 7 gallon than some other paint —because itcosts more tornake—because it is better paint But the actual cost of Burdsal’s Homestead Paint cannot I be measured by the price per gallon alone. Leas of it is required to cover J®| ’ "■H a given surface. It flows more evenly - cutting down the time required to ’ HOMESTEAD M apply it. And it outlasts two or three . Hljffl'jd paintings with cheaply made paint - saving both on materialsand labor 7j for repainting. That is why Burdsal’s jl Homestead Paint arftua Uy costs you less than paint that sells at a lower • •".’lggy price per gallon. i«m LEE H ARDWARE COMPANY RUKDSAUS Paints for DEMOCRAT WANT AOS GET RESULTS When Planning a Pleasure Trip or Vacation x THINK EXCURSIONS Every Tuesday sl3 io NIAGARA FALLS $13.10 81638 TORONTO $16.38 $7 (»o DETROIT $7.00 sß*so PORT HURON $8.50 Other points correspondingly low. Stateroom and berth reservations made. Cool. Clean Interurban and Great Lakes Trips. 'Phone Local Agent or write Traffic Department, Fort Wayne. Indiana for complete information. Fort Wayne and Decatur Traction Company

Mr. Farmer: \\ -• have several fields of hay which will be ready to make soon. Anyone needing hay can get half of our crop by cutting all. store one half in our barn and the other half is YOURS FREE. Col. Kneisley Phone 606 Decatur, Ind.

Our Service to customers does not end at the Teller’s Window nor does our interest in them. Complete facilities and the varied experience of our officers are at the command of every patron. When yc i deposit your Savings with this Bank al 4'f Interest, compounded twice a year, you have at your command every hanking service and you know that your money is safe. Old Adams County Bank

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, THURSDAY, JUNE 28, 1923.

• CLASSIFIED ADS • FOR SALE FOR BALK -A few used oil stoves and coal ranges. The Oas Co., 10# North Third it. 46tf FOR SALE An Ivmy Lloyd Loom baby buggy, in good condition, and a reed stroller, cheap. Used only a short time. Phone 517 Black. 149tf FOR SALE Sit heavy double work harness. Good M new, Ernest Perret, 949 Mercer Ave. 150t6x i-Olt SALE H.ibv chiiks: Rhode Island Reds. Plymouth Rock, White Wyandottes and Brown Leghorns, Sc and up. O. V. Dilling, Decatur R. 2. Cniigville phone. 151t12 FOR SALE—Cream colored Reed stroller; $lO. Cull 109 So. 9th at. 152t3 nut SALE —Eight room house and lot on West Monroe St., semi modern. paved street, priced to sell. See .1. J. M.igley or leave word at People's Cash Shoe Store. 15t!-3t_X FOR SALE—Chevrolet Roadster, driven 3.000 miles. See owner at 109 South 11th St., Decatur. Ind. 153-3tx FOR SALE Aster and Salvage plants. 3 dozen for 25c. Call phone 738 153t3x MISCELLANEOUS G()C A RTS R E-TIR ED—Decatur Au to Top and Paint Shop; phone 494; 203 South First street. 148t6 — — — ■■ ■ - -— • ■— —— , ■ .. FOR RENT FOR RENT—B room house, opposite court house. Modern, except heat. A. D. Suttles. 148tf FOR RENT —Several fields of hay to rent on shares. H. B. Kneisley, Phone 606. 149tf FOR RENT Four room cottage, furnished, on 4th street. Call phone 355. 153t2 LOST AND FOUND WANTED WAN T E D—Young man to learn a business. High school graduate preferred but not necessary. Must he active and have a hankering for hard work. Reply in own handwriting, stating wages expected. Address, “Opportunity, c < Daily Democrat. 15212 WANTED—Dining room girl. Call Murray Hotel. ' 15211 WANTED Lady to wash dishes. Eats Restaurant, phone 28. WANTED Junk, rags, rubber, paper of all kinds, iron, metals and hides. We will call with our truck for any junk you wish to dispose of. Phone 442. The Maier Hide & Fur Co. 710 W. Monroe St. Near G. R. & I. Crossing. Ise Deering Twine. Buy it at the Schafer Hardware Co. / 15116 HOUSEHOLD SALE I will sell at public auction at my residence at 1115 W. Patterson street Saturday. June 30th at 1 p. m. the following articles.: One dresser; 2 stands; 5 dining room chairs; 2 beds and springs; clothes chest; trunk; 3 rockers; small refrigerator; sink; clock; 2 tables; 3-burner Florence oil stove; cook stove; 9x12 rug; 3 carpets, and small rugs; piece of linoleum; tubs; copper boiler and wringer; a complete line of dishes and kitchen ware, garden tools; hanging lamp; lounge; and many other articles too numerous to mention. MRS PETER SEITZ, R. N. Runyon. Auct. 26-28-29

ICE CREAM SOCIAL Miller Brothers store at Magley Saturday, June 30th Special Fireworks Displav. 150t4 o Visiting In Willshire John Straubinger and family of Eldorado. Kansas, arrived in Willshire Friday evening and are guests at the Willshire Hotel of Mrs. A. Straubinger and family. It has been several years since John has visited the old home town. They came east by auto, but before they got a good start they were marooned by the high water in their section of Kansas. John is now operating a meat market Eldorado, one of the best county towns in the Sunflower state, and is meeting with success. George Straubinger and family, of Toledo, were also guests of the Willshire Straubinger family over Sunday, as were Mr. and Mrs. Russell Straubinger, of Rockford. —Willshire Herald —• Attending Uncle’s Funeral Funeral services for Mel Johnson, well known resident of Wells county and former trustee of Lancaster township were held this afternoon. Mr. Johnson's death occurred Monday, death being due to Bright's disease. He was an uncle of Mrs. Martin Jaberg. wife of county auditdr Jaberg of this city, they attended this aftersoon.

CLUB CALENDAR Thursday Philamath Bible Study Class of Mt. Pleasant Church—Esther Fuhrman. Ladles Aid Society of E. V. Church —church parlors. laidies Aid Society of Christian Church with Mrs. J. E. Anderson, 2:30 p.m. Silent Workere (flass of U. B. Church—Mrs. W. P. Barkley. Baptist Woman's Society—Mrs. Ira Bodie, 2:30. Young Woman's Auxiliary ot M. E. Church —Mrs. Virgil Krick, South First street, 7:30 p.m. Friday Minnehaha Club —Red Men Hall. Economic Club of St. Marys Township—Pleasant Mills School House, 1:30 p. m. Zion Lutheran Aid Society—Mrs. Henry Schoenstedt Friday Night Club—Mrs. J. S. Peterson. * Saturday G. A. R.—At Hall, 2 o'clock. Monday Delta Theta Tau —Miss Germaine Christen, 8 o'clock. Tuesday Ladies Aid Society of M. E. Church Cherry Pie Social —Church lawn. Psi lota Xi—Mrs. A. R. Holthouse, 7:30 o'clock. A birthday party was given Monday evening at the home of William G. Hollenbacher in honor of the sixtennth birthday of his daughter. Miss Lula. The evening was spent playing music and games. Dainty refreshments were served at a late hour. Those who attend were William G. Hollenbacher and family, Cornelius Eggar, Carl Linn, Homan Lankhart, Orval Gibbons. Ralph Lafever, Pete and Gale Butcher, Earnest Bollenbacher, Raymond Fiekert, Dewey Keebn, Gerald and Ernest Farlow, Leslie Becher, Jud Mason, Archie and Vernon Hollenbacher, Charles Andrews. Roy Riffle. I>eo Slusser. Freda Kessler, Verla Huffman, Hulda Bollenbather, Martha Smith, Matilda and Viola Hollenbacher, Grace Huffman, Glendola Bebout, Oina Berger, Helen and Lucille Hollenbacher, and Marie Woodruff. ★ The St. Vincent de Paul society held a very interesting meeting yesterday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Nicholas Brown, at her home on Fifth

street. Business of importance was discussed by the large tiumber in attendance. Two new members, Mrs. Lee Meyers and Mrs. John Miller, were taken into the society. Delicious refreshments were served by the hostess and her assistants who were Mrs. Mary Older and Mrs. JackBrunton . Meehan Porter Cards have been issued by >Mr. and Mrs. diaries Porter announcing the marriage of their daughter, Jeannette Helen, to Mr. James Leo Meehan .which took place in Los Angeles, Cal., on June 2. The bride is the daughter of Gene Stratton Porter, the famous novelist. Mr. Meehan is a son of Professor and Mrs. .1. Leo Meehan, of Los Angeles. He is associated with a motion picture production company at San Diego. The bride and groom have returned from the west and are spending the summer at Rome City. They will return west in the fall and will be at home after October 1 at 145 South Beechwodd drive. * Miss Germaine Christen will be hostess to the Delta Theta Tau sorority Monday evening at her home on North Second street. * Mrs. A. R. Holthouse will entertain the Psi lota Xi Sorority at her home on North Sixth street, Tuesday I evening at 7:30 o'clock. A report of the convention will be made by the delegates at this meeting. Other business of importance will be discussed. ★ The Cherry Pie social which was to have been held on the M. E. church lawn Friday evening has been postponed until Tuesday evening, July 3. —• o You Must Get Up. Yet a little sleep, a little slumber, a little folding of the hands to sleep; so shall thy poverty come as one that trnveleth and thy want as an armed man. —Solomon. Youthful Mrs. Malrprop. She was a nice little thing, but somewhat of a Malaprop turn of ! speech. ‘‘You know,” she Mid, “I I think we shall be going this year to dear little place tn the Austrian Tyrol. It s \ery hilly, but they've got a lovely vernacular railway."—London I Tit-Bits. 1

BAR MEMBERS AT WEST BADEN State Association To Hold Annual Meeting At Popular Summer Resort According to word which has been received by attorneys in Decatur, the twenty-seventh annual meeting of the Indiana State Bar Association will be held at West Baden Springs Hotel on Thursday and Friday, July 5 and 6, 1923. The principal address will be delivered by William Marshall Bullitt of Louisville. Kentucky, noted Kentucky lawyer and former solicitor general of the United States. Others on the program include Hon. Lewis B. Ewbank, judge of Indiana Supreme Court; Judge John M. Smith of Portland; Judge James A. Collins of Marion criminal court; Judge Elmer Q. Lockyear, of the Vanderburg probate court. ( The Indiana State Bar Association is at present engaged in an extensive campaign in co-operation with the Departmnt of Public Instruction for education in Constitutional Government and it is anticipated that the Americanization work of the Association will be one of the chief matters of discussion at the jneeting. it is the intention and hope of the board of managers that the meeting will be made the occasion for a general outing for the members, their families and guests in much the same way as are the meetings of the Ohio State Bar Assiciation held annually at Put-In-Bay. Use Deering Twine. Buy it at the Schafer Hardware Co. 15116 o 2.7.._.. t . o A Complete Hotel On Special Train o —o Chicago, June 27.—One hotel complete from bathtub and kitchen sink to lace curtains and parlor lounge—will be rolled from Chicago over the western prairies and mountains to Longview, Wash. 1 $ ? The shipment will go by special train of eighteen cars, and will be placed in its final resting place, the Hob ! Monticello, Longview. The Coffee shop and hotel barber shop will be included in the transfer. The total valuation of the equipment is $200,00Q. The hotel will become a part of a specially built city which the Long Roll Lumber Company, formerly of Kansas City, is erecting in its big lumber tracts in the northwest.

There’s a ban on Fireworks and Fire-water—-but there is no embargo on Style W ttfk. —so fire away! I * | y Ncxt Wednesday the whole town is going to x 7.. he dressed up. / r j The children are going to get along without Z"'“AA their cannons and we grown-ups are going to get / along without cocktails—but we're all going to , have a tdorious Fourth—in the most wonderful 7 ‘I VS new suits, hats and furnishing goods America I / ever P l 'oduced. ■ j Drop in—Dress ujf—Fill up the tank with ’// bas—and get ready for a wonderful day! ii Cooi Suits slo.oo to s ls - 00 " 7 Tropical Suits $17.50 to $27.50 Collar attached shirts. .SI.OO to $4.50 > Straw Hats 75c to $5.00 New Neckwear 25c to $1.50 Vacation Needs Co °’ Underwear 85c to $3.00 TefuL-T-Myeo Go M/ J SttrEßctortts k* J mqkzy-always- ,v I r •DECATUR’ INDIANA* < *

The real reason for buying Columbias —they last longer The largest laboratory, devoted to dry cell research, experiments continuously to make them ’’last longer.” Columbia Hot Shot or Columbia Ignitors are “right” for your needs. That’s why people have the habit of asking for Columbias. Columbia Dry Batteries for all purposes are sold by hardware and general stores, electrical and auto supply shops, garages and implement dealers, Columbia Dry Batteries —they last longer PcmSmISS v M HOT SHClgCoi < / Mfi'A ■' W “ST CEU rwro* Fahnratock Sprint Clip Bindin* Poata on Igaiiara »• extra charge

SAVE YOUR MONEY and save it now. What did you spend last week that was unnecessary? Teaching people how to save is one of the chief features of this Bank. We welcome the small depositor for as the days and weeks go by we are building substantial incomes for substantial people. We urge you to send the children in if you cannot come yourself. Every courtesy will be extended to them. The Peoples Loan & Trust Co. Dank of Service