Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 21, Number 230, Decatur, Adams County, 28 September 1923 — Page 2
DEMOCRAT W)NT ADS GET RESULTS ff Your Battery \ Needs Testing a WHETHER it seem* to need it or not, your storage battery must . have regular attention if it's going continue giving sure starts, and bright • headlights. AS’RIbL Don't wait for trouble to develop. Prest-O-Lite Service will keep your 5*W ) battery healthy and ward off unnecessary repair' bills. Even if you haven’t a sturdy, powerful Prest-O-Lite Battery in your car now, m some day you will have, so come in and r get acquainted with the service that r lengthens any battery’s life. | ACE BATTERY & TIRE SHOP, North Second Street fiioAtOJlto «■ IL nw w-wr-wmi —Tn ~i i~m rinaiiwii i u - — |CT£QFir£MKiL4K3QKK3Or/.WUKU9QKCnHMB|HHKHMHIHIBBHHMHUIBHIBHBMHHBB FREE* I Bl Mmm 9 ® For a limited AZjJifcMkt & & & • • i time only, I | with each \ / Vacuum Cup \ I TIRE ou we will give FUFF one TON tested H TUBE of corres--1 PONDING SIZE Recent price reduction on Vacuum Cup Tires, plus this FREE TUBE offer gives opportunity for an approximate SAVING OF 30% Offer strictly limited—Better take advantage NOW ELBERSON SERVICE STATION One block South of Court House —agaagawjiM— udrwmh iwwwwanßnK-,
1(1 II - MfCtWttsSTTXN E : A i _ , dij CnLl< r i« ? We could build a I i A..JwE, I wall around i Wall Street. I / Put these hats in the center and every banker * er and broker would turn out head first a win--Uw«*M*wi " Cr ' I Thai's how thorough we have cornered the hat market. We don’t take our hat off to any 'Wi other display the State affords—and men who | ' ** * iave cen llcrc arc voucllin <? for ll,is statement. T... X You can’t wear your old straw’ any longer— C ' and your Spring felt ought to be pensioned to ■ C l * ,e 1 Portis Fall Hats W $2.50 1 “ $5.00 O Fall Caps—a thousand Jr different patterns it seems! TeiuL-T’Aye€6 (3o J CLOTHSS L£S5 J MQNEY-ALWAYS" * DSQATUR - SHCIAMA-® ■
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1923.
LADIES! DARKEN YOUR GRAY HAIR Use Grandma’s Sage Tea and Sulphur Recipe and Nobody Will Know. The use of Sage and Sulphur for restoring faded, gray hair to its natural color dates back to grandmother's time. She used it to keep her hair beautifully dark, glossy and attractive. Whenever her hair took on that dull, faded or streaked appearance, this simple mixture was applied with wonderful effect. But brewing at home is inussy and out-of-date. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store tor a bottle of "Wyeth's Sage und Sulphur Compound,” you will get this famous old preparation, improved by the addition of other ingredients, which can be depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair. A well-known downtown druggist says it darkens the hair no naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears, and after another application or two, it becomes beautifully dark and glossy. o Mr. Krimmel, the piano tuner of Fort Wayne, is here for a few days. Parties wishing piano tuned can leave word at the Murray Hotel, phone 57. 229t2x *+++*++* + *+ + + + + * TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY * + * + From the Daily Democrat files + 20 years ago this day + *++*+*+ + + + + * + * Sept. 28. —Two big barns on the William Gerke farm destroyed by fire with loss of $4,000. Ladies of Presbyterian church open four-day fair in new building. Elmer Bryon fall from Hickory tree and breaks leg. Decatur defeated Portland ball team 7 to 2, Tom Railing pitching. Miss Cora Gottschalk of Berne and Ben. Welty of Lima married at Berne last evening. Mrs. Frank Downs of Monticello, arrives for visit with her mother. Uncle Jerry Archbold surprised last evening on his 74th birthday. Rudy Lehman of Berne while here announces trip to California and may locate there permanently. Harry Dibble chases masked burglar from the J. C. Moran home. C. E. Society announces lecture course of five numbers. j ~ . . SORE MUSCLES j from outdoor sports are relieved by messaging with— WICKS v J 7 Million fans Unxi Yearly
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CLUB CALENDAR Friday Presbyterian Ladies' Aid Society— Mrs. Fred Smith. St. Marys Township Economic Club J —Pleasant Mills High School, 1:30. . Epworth League Social of the M. E. t church, Kenneth Miller, 7:30. ■ laidies Aid of the M. E. church, 1 Church parlors, 2:30 p.m. I Baptist W. W. G. Girls, Lois Ogg. Saturday 1 Woman's Foreign Missionary So- [ ciety of M. E. Church, Pastry sale ut . Central grocery and Porter grocery, i Monday 1 Research club, Mrs. C. D. Lewton. Tuesday , Corinthian Class of the Christian i Church —Miss Grace Lichtensteiger. I 1 Psi lota Xi, Mrs. F. 1. Patterson, ’ 7:30 o'clock. The Historical club held a very en- ’ joyable meeting at the home of Mrs. f Mary Ahr, East Monroe street, Wednesday afternoon. There was a large attendance of the members. 3 * Mrs. Ira Fuhrman, of North Second £ street, was taken in as a new member. Mrs. Fred Ahr had a very in- ( ereating paper on, "The Use and I, Abuse of Ornaments.” The hostess F served a delicious lunch. The next J meeting will be held with Mrs. Fred ~ Ahr. with Mrs. Paul Edwards as lead- , er. Mrs. C. C. Pumphrey, Mrs. Dore Erwin and Mrs. James L. Kocher gave a lovely dinner bridge party last evening at the Kocher home on Adams street. A profusion of garden i 1 Sow ers were arranged in baskets and , ■vail pockets in rft<- spacious living ' ■•ooms. The small tables held low i bowls of pink and white cosmos and astors as centerpieces and the dainty nut cups and place cards were of a harmonizing nature. The Misses Helen Kocher, Josephine Suttles, Eleanor Pumphrey, Betty Erwin and Gretchen Kocher served the four, course dinner. Mrs. Crawford and • Mrs. C. S. Niblick were awarded I seizes in five hundred and Mrs. Fred Patterson, Mrs. Herman Ehing-<-r and Mrs. L. G. Ellinghain, won prizes in bridge. Out-of-town guests were Mrs. R. D. George, of Mentpe- 1 Her; Mrs. L. G. Ellinghain, of Fort Wayne; Miss Mildred Pumphrey, of Delaware, Ohio; Mrs. Crawford, of • «s Angeles. Cal.; and Miss Catharine Shatz, of Danville, Illinois. * Mrs. and Mrs. Alva Nichols entertained at dinner yesterday for Mr. nd Mrs. Lewis Miller, and children of Huntington; Mr. Claude Gay and , Mrs. Roese. * The Baptist W. W. G. Girls will iiie: t Friday evening with Miss LoisOgg, at her home on the corner of i'ifth and Adams streets. — » DIVORCE CASE ENDS ABRUPTLY THIS A. M. I (Continued from Pago One) or a divorce and alimony on Sep-. I 'ember 8. She demandetd alimony in the sum of SIO,OOO. Judge Bales Appointed. Following the filing of the new complaint, Judge Jesse C. Sutton, presiding judge, declined jurisdiction in the case, as he had been of counsel for the prior to his appointment as judge. The court appointed Judge Bales of Winchester, to sit as special judge in the case. Judge Bales assumed jurisdiction. Attorneys Aiken, Douglass & Aiken appeared for the defendant. I Cannot Be Tried Now. The new case cannot be tried during tha present term of court, since an act passed by the last legislature provides that a divorce case must be ,on file at least sixty days after the {summons is issued before it can be tried. Must Pay Allowance This afternoQU, the defendant filed :an application fur a. temporary allow xuc<- for her support and for her at- ‘ torney fees. The plaintiff! filed a ' counter showing an answer. The, court granted the application ami or- I dircd the plaintiff to pay the sum of! 51b per week for the support of the J dittendant during the pendency of the cause until further order of Hie court.' Ebe court also directed the plaintiff I to pay. the sum of SSO for the dufeu- J daut's attorney fees. To Be Trjed On Nbv. 27 1 After granting the application for an allßwauce the court set the case for trial on November 27. . •— BIRTH An girl •an bttg to I Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hammond at I
the Adams County Memorial hospital I shortly after noon today. The par- I ents reside in this city. Mother and I baby are doing nicely. g - —- U. S. a Country Which Works With Both Hands London, Sept. 28—(Special to Daily, Democrat) —David Lloyd George is, coming to the United States to see a country which works "with both hands,” he told guests at a luncheon { given his honor today by the Ameri-. can society in the Hotel Savoy. The former prime minister Will I sail for New York tomorrow on the I Mauritania. 5 Lloyd George praised the United, I States for its industry and develop-:’
• « * Flow to tell for sure —what oil your car needs No. 6 in the series ——— - Perhaps you own a Studebaker (Big Six—Special Six—Light Six Models) If you don’t own a Studebaker, cut this out and hand it to a friend who docs t 4 Studebaker engines are of the six-cylinder, four-stroke, cycle, vertical type. The cylinder head is detachable and the valve ' arrangement is of the L-head type. Studebaker pistons are equipped with a special od rerum groove and oil drain holes which allow excess quantities of oil .1 on the cylinder walls to drain back into the crank-case reservoir. I* The Studebaker lubricating system is of the splash circular- i ing type, employing a gear type oil putnp located on the outside of the crank-case and considerably above the oil level. The lubrication of the cylinder walls, the pistons, piston rings, and piston pin bearings depends upon an oil mist. This mist is created by splashers fitted on the lower side of the connecting rod bearings dipping into oil in troughs located under each cylinder bore. A suitable lubricant for these engines must be of such body < and character as to meet the operaung temperature and dis- • tribution requirements. ' Gargoyle Mobikoil "A” will provide adequate engine lubrica- x tion and thorough distribution during summer; its use is therefore recommended. Because of the well-finished cylinder bores, close-fitting 4 pistons and the adequate drainage of these pistons, Gargoyle I Nlobiloil "A will not form objectionable carbon deposits and t thorough and efficient sealing of the pistonrings willbeassured. ; Under winter operation, it is imperative that the oil used be of the proper fluidity to provide a positive priming of the elevated oil pump. Otherwise, failure of the pump to deliver oil to the engine will result. Gargoyle Mobiloil Arctic is of the proper body to assure positive priming of the Studebaker pump under winter operation. Because of its character and fluidity, it will atomize readily and thoroughly, thus providing proper distribution to all engine < parts, even when freezing temperatures are experienced. Gargoyle Mobiloil “A”and Gargoyle Mobiloil Arctic respectively are best suited to the summer and winter lubrication * r requirements of these engines. Their use will insure maximum engine performance with a minimum of wear and depreciation. next taesday we will tell you about the Corm t r .uL rication of several I—l i c«rs. <• may be among « g -s « Mobiloil Make the chart your VACUUN • - OMPANV . I We hande all grades of GARGOYLE j I LEE HARDWARE COMPANY | I Buy your GARGOYLE from ? PORTER & BEAVERS I Monroe Streets I
-l' "I want to see a continent which j
I Brazil Block We have it, the only GOOD COAL mined in Indiana for tloniestic trade, which sells for sl.so’to $2.00 higher than any other Indiana coal, as well as being much HARDER and CLEANER. This mine is owned by a Steel Corporation whose surplus output we market to the retail, and steam trade in this state. We have a car now in stock at our yards on 7th street. Il is very LARGE and BLOCKY. Try a load and be convinced. $6.00 per Ton, Delivered. $5.50 per Ton Loaded in Your Wagon. I Carroll Coal & Coke Co. - ■■ ■■ 1 llw
Is biiildiUß With both hunils grossing," Lloyd George said.
