Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 21, Number 159, Decatur, Adams County, 6 July 1923 — Page 7

n , other Women Know Al l fruit should be carefully walked "'lino 311 !’’ useful for covering ' tl . he , on mahogany furnit uro. * that is not badly soiled cup jeaned with fine oatmeal. « lk stocking should be washed

Special Sale oMiwa Canning Sets and Racks*Roasters, Double Boilers, Pudding Pans, Refrigerator Pans, Percolators, Liuonade Shakers, Cake Pans and Teake|tles. Prices Surprisingly Low We furnished the Aluminum Kitchen Equipii’ent for the Adams County Memorial Hospital, * also for a number of lodges and churyhes. Wherever real service is required the SUPERIOR QUALITY of “Mirro” Aluminum is recognized. The Brock Store I — I I II I"" >1 1 —-==■-> / Their Purity and Consistant Good Quality Never Vary No Matter What the Weather —No Matter What the Season— Superior Corn-Top, Holsum and Superior Breads I are the Best in Town! Their uniformly fine texture, their lightness, their tastiness, their genuine goodness make them the logical Bread for the whole family from baby to grandpa. One of Superior’s Breads is sure to please your individual taste. .baking , Eat More Wheat! Fresh Daily At THE GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC TEA CO., Decatur, Indiana THE EVERETT GROCERY, Pleasant Mills, Indiana THE HOME STORE and T ABLER’S Monroe, Indiana SATURDAY SPECIALS j Fancy Bunch of Spring Chickens Nice Bunch of Hens for Roasting Choice Cuts of Tender Native Beef Nice Fat Veal and Pork Roasts and Chops Plenty of Fresh Spare Ribs and Shoulder Ribs Fine Flank and Swiss Steak Armour’s Star Boiled Tenderloin for Luncheons Sar-A-Lee Sandwich Spread (The Best) Good Fresh Creamery or Country Butter Fresh Made Cottage Cheese I huringcr, Lebanon and Farmer Style Summer Sausage Home Made Garlics and Bologna Dandy Bunch of Smoked Tongues—Mild Cured Nucoa Oleomargarine. Try It. —Smoked Meats— New York Shoulders and Picnic Hams Smoked Jowels and Bacon Ends for seasoning Smoked Pork Sausage and Cottage Rolls Regular Smoked Hams' and Fancy Backs Call 106 or 374 and we will send your meat direct to your home. —TRY US.— FredMutschler Pkg. Co. Market

after each wearing to inaure durability. , Use a fork when cleaning butter and sugar, and the process will be hastened. A few drops of turpentine added to the starch will make collars and cuffs beautifully glossy.

r HOW TO SAVE MONEY WHEN SHOPPING > By MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN (0. 1931. Harland H. Allen.) L „ LAUNDRY SOAP How Khali wo choose soups? The* I problem of finding a really good snap I for dully use is of no small importance, when we consider tTie utmost | constant need for soap in the home, und what a considerable monthly and . yearly expense, that single item may | be. In the first place, it is a good plan to use only soaps put out by reliuble : tlnns. It is never an economy to use cheap and poorly made soaps in the laundry. And we must not make Ure mistake of thinking that one kind of soap will answer for every purpose. Soaps are classified into mlid, medium und strong, according to the amount of free alkali present. Nearly every home laundry should be equipped with nt least two «f these, und very probably you will need all three. Neu- | trnl or mild soaps should be used for I woolen materials, delicate colors und ! itil fabrics which even the smallest amount of alkali might injure. A me- | dlum soup is best for durable fabrics. I A strong yellow is all right for rough work and for washing greasy overalls and men's work clothes. Tile yellow or dark brown color of soaps is generally due to the presence I of rosin. It is hard to say Just when I rosin added to a soap ceases to be an I advantage und becomes objectionable. I In small quantities it is believed to I help whites) the clothes, but too much I will yellow the clothes, and forms a sticky scum in the wash-boiler, which settles into the clothes and may cause trouble In Ironing. You can generally tell whether rosin has been added in excessive quantities or not, by the peculiar resinous odor, and hy the sticky feel of the bar when handled. The presence of too much free 1 alkali is also serious, even in a strong i soap. It is hard on the clothing und hard on the hands. There ure several good tests for excess alkali. Soup salesmen try for it by holding a bit of the soap on the end of the, tongue, i Alkali is very caustic and will bite, j Many housekeepers learn to recognize [ its presence by the shriveled, drawn and dried-up feeling of the hands ’■ after using. A safer plan, as well as cheaper, is to buy a good mild soap, snd then add the washing soda your- ■ self to tlie wateof if more alkali seems desirable. S—»—f—WANT ADS EARN—s—»—s $ J—WANT ADS EARN—»—S—I

I Make Our Place Your Stopping and Shopping Place. || Meet Your Friends at the ■ CENTRAL GROCERY I ■ Phone No. 31 Free City Delivery U i|| Loyalty, the Highest Quality Flour, lor I White Lily Flour, the Quality Winter Ig B Mon• and Better Bread. 1 iA g Wheat Flour for Bread or Pas- gst p O 21 lbs tbl.lv I try, 2IL tbs? ; OvL Choice Hand Picked Michigan 1 fl„ g Boyd Mason Lids > g Navy Beans, lb lUC g Dozen OVL H ! Best California Lima OPxz» I "Central Best Bulk Rio 9(lf* |s .Beans. 2 tbs | Coffee, lb ■ Bulk Rolled Oats or Pin S FoultFb Macaroni, Spagetti or W Head Oats, 6 4bsl Egg Noodles. 3 pkgs ArfW ra Fruit Jar Rubbers, best grade Qf,. 3 Large Size California Sweet 9Qz» 3 dozen g Prunes, 2 tbs-....00l B| Jello and Jello Ice I REMINDERS Certo ’ makes wonderful ■ ' & Cream Powder, j* Jellies and Jams package I ’ bottle £ *g| Iff t g Olives, Pickles, Sar-a-Lee IvC Salad Dressing. Tuna, Sarl£gdines, Shrimp, Oysters. Dried Ci. 411 Scrap Beef, Potted Meat, Bacon, Perfection Crackers, Tnhkccos Summer Sausage, Picnic the better kind, I ■ a ..t o? Hams, Cheese, Pimento, 2 lbs. p ” ’ Candv, Fruits, Ice Cream |> 25c - !S W ’ Exl,acls ’ I,akcd 25c | H Little Elf Pork & Beans or Red Df | El Yam pi rp Fly Powder, fTp K • U Kidney Beans, .2 cansg Regular It) cent pkgs., each tFV ■ ■ i Regular 10 cent Rolls Toilet m Extra lender Early June Or L pa - ir ~. , f Z9C R ■ Pras ’ V !,US | Look! 5 bars Soap. 1 bar Washing I’ow- ■ 's Extra Good Grade Sugar ' c " | o Scouring Cleanser, 1 cake H Corn, 2 cans p ToiEi Soap and Pure Aluminum I 30c i 25<: I ? Large Post Toasties or Shredded QKz* I Lewis or Red Seal Lye B;’' k gS Wheal, 2 pkgs| 2 cans Aut/V Fruity and Vegetables at “Central’s Invest” Prices, I Owen Ss Davis I £ F The Appreciates Your Business.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, FRIDAY, JULY «, 1923.

DEMOCRAT WANT ADS GET RESULTS - The Cort T-H-E-A-T-R-E Extra—Big Double Program—Extra Could you blame her - - - ?? ? ; Circumstances conspired Io make her desperate - ller beauty attracted an artist—She Made a Mad Bargain! Accepting $50,000 hound her to *a e strange pact. • ~ What wuld most women do with out a year of lite in which to spend a fortune? .y iiwfr xMWWW’ \ I niimiiviw star- \ Would they lull ii; lov< as thj v \ girl v does one Ls fl 3? It 3A*? ? \ month from the .■ ._<„ day her bargain \ fails due? C A1 U M/f 4 \ CTmßteff Ew J. Wk ARrrt / WatioxMl / Added Attraction—“FßESH FROM THE CITY Sennett Comedy Fox News EXTRA—EXTRA—EXTRA We will again give the local movie fans a treat and will tonight onlv show the home talent picture. ; “MISS DECATUR” taken in this city years ago. Don’t miss this one. 10 Reds 10c-25c

KEEP AMERICA'S WAMPUM SOUND! By SAMUEL H. BEACH, President, Savings Bank Division, American Bankers Association. Although the United States is today I rpon a solid gold basis, we nevertheI less kuow of our own knowledge what inflation means. It would take long tq recall in detail the bitter experiences which this nation suffered during the Civil War and the years which follow- . ed it, and in our I present easy condi--1 ——- tion wo might think 8. H. Beach such conditions could never again arise. But with such men as Henry Ftnjd and Thomas A. Edison talking about commodity money there is no foretelling what may happen. One of the plainest lessons taught by ' financial history Is that, whenever a j nation issues paper money with noth ing back of it, that nation is on thy road to disaster. Look at Russia with its worthless rubles and Germany i with its worthless marks. Think of what happened in France during the j ears immediately following our Revolutionary War. The common people of France rose In their might, tore down the L’astile, and made reprisal for centur? Mi of kingly crime and oppression. The profligate court had piled up taxes until they were unbearable. The enraged populace killed King Louis XVI, and also his queen, Marie Antoinette, i But they only threw themselves out of the frying pan into the fire so far as finances were concerned. Unsound Money Tyranny At the very worst point of their currency inflation they found themselves under the absolute doqiination of Robespierre. In order to meet the growing scarcity of coin, paper money called assignats were issued. Fi/st 400,000,000 francs wortj). then 800,000,000 were added with the distinct understanding that the 1,200,000,000 ' would be the full extent of the issue. This pledge was soon broken and fur Cher issues brought the total up to 3,700,000,000 francs. I Frightful depreciation was the in- ■ evitable result; and legislation was ■ passed making it. a crime, with six , ■ years’ imprisonment as the penalty, if I any one should refuse to take the pa- ' per assignats at their fate value. Justj I think of it! A French peasant aft' r ; . working the entire year to prodvee a’ crop was compelled by law to accept j payment for that crop in paper money, which he knew to be worthless, or I go to prison. It was simply legalized robbery. ■ When the penalty was increased to I twenty years imprisonment the inevi- ■ I table climax came. The Reign of Ter- . I ror was at its height. Robespierre I I was in supreme power. He suggested i I that more assignats be issued and if I the people did not take them the guil- : I lotine should be the penalty. ? Robespierre's End ’ This unheard of outrage was more I I than the people could stand. An unI known man arose on the floor of the | I convention and denounced RobesI pierre, reciting the heinous crimes he 1 I had committed, and so worked upon I the feelings of the audience that I Robespierre, the tyrant, became I Robespierre, the convicted criminal. , I Two days later he was led to the gull I lotine. France had learned her finanI cial lesson well—that money must ' I have value back of It* I The fallacy of unsound money is I sure to confront us again. Never is I there enough of everything for all the I people. 1 ' The struggle for existence is I a real struggle, and those who find I themselves in the lower strata of huI man society are ready at any time to I grasp'at fiat money or auy of the othI er things whish misguided politicians I hold out to them. I My whole purpose is to drive home ' I the fact that danger lies aJiead aid to I urge every one to let no opportunity I go by to use voice and influence toI ward keeping the wampum of these I. United States, as it is today, the \ I soundest currency in the world. SOME BANK SALARIES Investigations made by the Missouri ■. Bankers Association have revealed that 368 banks in the state in towns | of under 2,000 population are paying i their cashiers and chief executives an j average of only sllO a month. Only 273 of the 1,162 reporting banks in towns under 5,000 population pay the president a salary. The report says: "It indicates that, even allowing tor I ‘ tho economy of living in small com I i munities, the cashiers and managing I officers of those 1,162 bank* who reI celve an average of $l4O. per iqonth, I either must have personal means to I begin with, or must maintain the I standards necessary to their positions I as the leaders of their communities a-fid I the builders of the commonwealth by I means.of 'side lines,' such .as selling I insurance, collecting commissions on I farm loans, and trading in- real estate."

Table Silver * It is no longer considered good fona to make u display of your t“Hle silver, and those pieces fJial uro not in frequent use are best put away wliura they will nyt tarnish. % INVESTIGATE CHIROPRACTIC jSly For Your ■*A HEALTH Phone 828 over K c N er ’ a Jewelry Store Zn® ai \ Cails made daf CHARLES A CHARLES, U. C. Lady Attendant. Free f $ , * (For This Week Only) To induce you to teat the jd superior q ua litiea of 7 V/e offer you FREE OF CHARGE tins modish and ever useful housedress pattern FR~EE of charge Just bring thiw coupon with you and ask for size of Pattern desired Cull at our Excella Pattern D'C partmcQt J j Ldf/i ■ J s > b ■ - : ?es 36. 43, 44. 48 and 50 bti w LADIES SLIP-ON KIMONO HOL’SEDRESS Size 36 requires 3’4 yards of 32-inch materia! or 3'2 yards of 36-inch material c 3’< yards of 40-inch material — YOU CAN EASILY MAKE I THIS ATTRACTIVE AND I CONVENIENT CARMI NT IN I IU O HOURS OR LE S S I We guarantee r’l GU T & HAT SHOPPE Mnnrne* Stre*»* i Let those who serve you best, serve most We serve you well is our proud boast. —Star Co’s Serviceman Says ENriIRIENCE’D electrical service Wiring - - repairing — from doorbell !to library—from cellar to roof our help will help you toward • comfort. J? ** STAR ELECTRIC CO. I OVER VOGLLWEDE SHOE Store I Phone 405 Delco Light Products - Tl |o wrong tli" I RE rl l expense. The —— ri S bt tire ib an f ev:'lastin'; investment. The H " ;l ' tn iivo ' ! & trouble and exIAI Ji pi n- 1 ' i-- 4 to purchaje your tires iRH of us. .You will mH then be assured o f getting the MMv Y HH proper mileage at the proper price. Vulcanizing and Rctrfcading -The Shop That Gives Your Dollar a Long Ride STEPLER BROS. ■ Accross from Interurban I