Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 23, Number 195, Decatur, Adams County, 18 August 1925 — Page 2

|^ te rAiR ■ tr» *" ?B' H* ld S, P* 7-12 ■ l rti'' on 1 ■ H. Am is-* B'** 8 '** ‘ iffi ‘ lßis ,he ii,ah ' nir H (f ’ 1 “"ieewas M-l in the senaro ■ * f ° thp Hat- house on plans ■ Ltlon *»“" "'” n,,,ers ~r I agriculture hope to | '‘'l- most suectssrnl State fair ■H a»if 10 ■ '” r Har “ ld Vl,n Ur I e- 881 '°' ernOr ' Har,y L ’T ■ ’*“■ ,f th- h'-‘‘ -of i-pn-s. nt UDd G * ' ■ “t the Pt.rdue university agM Ct ext-nstun service. were R^os- U,IHUI ' hP ro '" ■ Th Settle, president of the Ind- | .mm Bureau Ped-rat .on. Perry 9 * .erretarv of th- federation, ag. HTua «ents from twenty five I Tes in the state, railroad repre- ■ TL and ad. l-gation ot Indiana- ■ nt-n were also expected ■ "governor has alr-ady issued a ■ utie to the people of Indiana urg- ■ JSlr support forth- state fair ■ repletion of the important build- ■ „ project, at th- fair grounds has ■ Ln “an ideal place to spend a t-w ■ a,, for pleasure and education,-Gov ■ X Jackson said in his message. ■ ne opening day <d the fair on S-p- ■ tmber; will h.- later day. Secretary ■ a Labor James J Davis will be the ■ -imiple ’Peak"'- the program. I dick will s 'art at 10 am. ■ First of the grand circuit horse ■ ntH will he held on Monday after- - ■ mop There are tour harness events I Z«W for each of the five after- 1 ■ ,rt« of th- fair with a total purse ■ of J 37.000 offered.. H being spectators will find five thou. | ■ md additional seats in the grana I M>ds available this year. ■ Governor Jackson and his staff of I ■ ifrfrs will attend the fair on ■ ay tor Governor s day. On W-.lnes- ( ■ ft Mayor Shank of Indianapolis and ■ lit city officials will be present for ■ Myor s day- ■ Firmer's day is s< h-dul-d for Thin s- ■ jsr and club day for Friday. |g o ■ Bluffton—Some fast person has ■ been traveling ahead of Luther ■ Volte He had to have dust remov ■ td from his eyes. I ■ Rushville—Heredrith Flail planted ■ i field of corn April 28. cultivated it I forthelast time on June 22. Now he I has had roasting ears from the field. ■ Marion—Boys and girls are lookI ng rather long-faced these days. The ■ official list of books for the school ■ jiar has been given out to teachers. ■ Muncie—“ Why have drawers in ■ leaks of city councilmen?” asked the dtiiens. A table was taken from the , council chamber to police headquart- « The drawer was pried open, ! taring been locked since 1904. ! Atlanta—Property disposed of in a ■amunity sale here hail a total valuation of $6,729.82. |

ECZEMA You will be compelled to admit that the results of SSS.are really amazing! MANY people imagine that eczeina or tetter needs only some «ternal application on the skin in ffiier to get relief. This is because ike attention of the sufferer is so ■ Wlently directed to the intense burnI and itching which accompanies ““ disease. Try as they may— Immanent relief will never be theirs ®til the disease laden blood is uwoughly cleansed. I k now there is one thing that •tops eczema and that is more red-W-cells! S.S.S. builds them by the ■wion! You can increase your redto the point where it is fjjjwajly impossible for eczema to W e know that as blood-cells in■eas®ll> number, blood impurities gah! We also know that night Wows day. Both are facts! But you, eczema sufferers, ever J“Ua ly taken advantage of .this won®.iul fact? Thousands just like you never thought about it. Skin Wions, eczema, with all its fiery, ».n digging torture, and its soul- ; ’} nreac hable itching, pimples, “•“heads and boils, they all pack up r. s°. when the tide of blood-cells 1 Wns to roll in! Blood-cells are the ging giants of Nature! S.S.S. ! them by tho million! It Las . doing it since 1826. •Bk i’2 one ot the greatest blood- 1 builders, blood-cleansers and Wsi S m? n £theners known to us mor- ,? n you Put these facts toL. ,n. to continue to have eclik# • ■ .?k> n eruptions looks more tiin. t n , than a disease. S.S.S. cony»veßeta^e medicinal inS.S.S. does build He skin routs eczema , clears kllow n ’, hiuiids firm flesh, fills out ««re un and y° u that ' and going appearance. I S-S.il gold at ail good drug ia ‘wo aiaes. The larger aii» economical, C C Best olood Medicine " I

1 Watttuiaya That Art Small but Important To be told that there Is an American waterway a little les. than tlx tulles In length that carries mure freight than the entire Uusl.slppl river from Cairo to New Orleau. would be startling to geography classes, let such la Newtown creek, a short tidal arm of the East river, that winds its way inland and, with three , miles of main channel and two miles more of tributaries, furnishes hundreds of New York Industrial concerns a waterway service. No one has been named great in the school histories as the discoverer of Newtown creek, and its muddy waters resemble most of the streams that carry more than their share of commercial burdens. But the spars of shipping and the tall chimneys of factories tell its story. It is dirty and lacks romance, because it Is used for other purposes. These short streams, that seem to have no particular usefulness suddenly take on great importance when located where they can be utllilzed hy an Industrial population. The Chicago river is hardly on the maps, but its importance In giving Chicago several precious miles of port facilities has never been underestimated. The Big Muddy In southern Illinois may some day be one of the greatest coal carriers in the world. In the waterway world a stream does not have to be large to be useful. Size counts for little. The wonder Is that In places where nature has been so generous with her waterway bounty we have made ao little use of IL — Quincy Whig Journal. Clock Seemed to Him Some Strange Animal The pendulum of Mrs. Winthrop's antique floor clock had an irresistible fascination for the children of the I neighborhood, who often came In to watch it. 1 When Ted, a newcomer in the 1 neighborhood, came In, he immediately ■ spied the clock and rushed up to take I hold of the tick tock. When told he must not touch It, he put his hands ! behind his back and stood and watched | it with rapt altention. A few minutes later Mrs. Winthrop i was called from the room, and on her , return she saw his hand reaching out 'to grasp the pendulum. At her sharp exclamation he turned and, with quivering lips, said: “I wouldn't hurt It; I was Just going to pet It." Largest Water Wheels Water wheels in the western world i are rivaled in size by four giants • which have served to make famous the town of Hama, in northern Syria, on ■ rtie River Crontes. The largest of the tour wheels is of wood, and is about seventy feet in diameter. XTbe wheels are driven by means of ’ what is known as tfie undershot principle, the wheel being turned by ■ water flowing beneath it. The creaki jug of the wheels is Incessant day and I night, for they are never stopped. The water is used not only to supply the j needs of the town, but for irrigating ‘ the surrounding gardens as well. This is a most primitive form of water supply, but is, nevertheless, quite adequate to meet the needs of the town of - Hama. Wet Subject Asked for a composition on “water,” | a schoolboy wrote: "Water is a liquid. . so is beer and milk, but the first is called licker because it’s adulterated; i that is sugar and hops are added. Water is very useful, ships float on it and men and boys swim in it, we also drink it, and In the summer boys use It to wash their faces. Salt water is salt and is useful for all kinds of fish such as the cod and whales and sometimes seals. Rain Is water and Is kept.ln old tubs and barrels to wash dirty clothes. Sometimes water is hard and then we have ice.”—Boston Transcript. Two Months to Make Hat Cabo Rojo, near the southwestern corner of Porto Rico, is a straw-hat weaving center, fn that place rain never falls and the weavers may spend the available working hours of two full months to fashion one of the fashionable high-grade Porto Rican panamas, which the weaver may sell at his doorstep for as much ns S4O. The threads of flue straw are laid on the grass to absorb the dew in early morning and late afternoon to make them pliable. They are not worked when the moisture has left the straw. Chile in History Chill or Chile, on the western coast I of South America, was discovered by . Magellan, who landed at Chiloe In 1520. I It was explored by Diego de Almagro. one of the conquerors of Pern, in 1536. I The capital, Santiago, was founded In 1541. Chile was subdued, but not | wholly In 1546. In September, 1810, Chile declared her independence of Spain, and war was carried on until 1826. A republican form of government was established. Would Draw the Line A dear old lady entered a book shop. "I would like a book to give my grandson.” “Yes, madam,” replied the book clerk. "What sort of a book?” The dear old lady considered, then went on, "I think I iiad best leave that to your Judgment. You see, my grandson is graduating this year, and I want to present him with a book that will give him ambition enough to become rich, but not, you know, vplgarly rich."

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, TUESDAY. AUGUST 18.1925.

RESUMPTION OF THEIR DIVORCE CA3E HEARING BRINGS OUT NEW SENSATIONS.

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Representatives Frank O Scott of Michigan and his wife, parties to the divorce suit which was resumed Tuesday. Aug. 11. in Alpena, Mich Alpena, Mich. —An effort to prove that an unusually < lost' friendship existed between Frank I). Scott, Congressman from the Alpena (Midi) district and his private secretary, Jane Two Chicago Policewomen Killed In Auto Accident Chicago, Aug. 18. — (United Press) | For the first time in history, full police funeral honors may be accord- 1 ed two veteran Chicago police women. killed in a grade crossing accident at Tvorth Judson. Ind. The dead police women afe Mrs. Lu- , lu Burt, 50, and Miss Marie Crot, 38.1 The former had distinguished herself numberless times by skilful detecive work and through her handling of women bandits. The latter made a name for herself wth the Chicago detective bureau by using her charms to rap “boulevard vamps” and "motor morons." Almost daily Miss Crot drove to police headquarters with some male "masher’’ who had ‘‘picked her up on a street corner only to have a gun

* jMWeMust Work Together j CX?very thoughtful citizen of this comt /munity is interested in its development an d P r °£ ress - There’s no question [ about that! We all want our children to I enjoy better homes, better schools, better ■ parks — more agreeable surroundings an d & reater comforts. - -w want ° ur town to keep step with ; its neighbors, to take the lead in civic < \\ affairs. So there is only one sound plan f° r us to f°H° w: X\ \ We must work together to increase the j \ wealth of this community by doing everything we can to encourage local business. When you and your family patronize our advertisers — the stores and banks . > of our town — and keep your money in circutation right here at home, there is no power on earth that can prevent our progress. Read the Ads in this Paper ■ and save yourself money by trading at home ) V — iia——■w—nmrwrnn-——■■■■■— m—■

I Kennedy, was the feature of the Scott > divorce case, which was resumed here • Tuesday, Aug. 11, with the reading of depositions. 1 Neither Scott nor his wife has the slightest intention of ending the suit - now or making any compromise, it • was evident. As both sides lined tip • for the opening tilt in the adjourned jlthrust in his ribs ami hear himself f ordered to drive at once to the police ‘ station. i I Mrs. Burt and Miss Crot had been 1 connected with the Chicago police deIpartment for 13 years. They were on their vacations when a train struck their automobile near their summer cott.r.e late yesterday afternoon. ■ . o <■' Greensburg—A hoisting engine was f necessary to lift a horse belonging to ■ John Castor from a well The animal g fell through while hauling logs. Alexandria —A youth, driving home o in the morning, after working all night i at Muncie, went to sleep in his auto- ■ mobile. The machine crashed into a i bridge, but the youth was unhurt. > .Bloomington—Jesse Polley of here. • held in the Marion county jail, was ' t eleased long enough to see his sick i wife and cHiltL The child died while

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action, it was freely admitted that disclosures more spectacular than were aired at the last hearing may be expected. The divorce suit adjourned seven months ago, just when the entire country was beginning to thrill to Mrs Scott’s revelations of social high jinkin official life at Washington. he was at homo, but Mrs. Polley probablv will recover.

Are You Tortured By Indigestion? There is more real suffering in Indigestion than in almost any other human nilmeat. Constipation, sour stomach, gas distress, heart-burn, shortness of breath, pain and burning sensation In th.-stomach ' — a il these things pursue the victim until I the rei> Sight or food nauseates him. Vitina has lifted this curse from thou--1 sands of tortured sufferers. It acts upon Sluggish bowels, torpid liver, aud weak kidneys. Right away, you can tell it s helping you, and before long, you feel like a different person. You eat fearlessly ' and with appetite, yon get restful sleep, you walk with a new stride, and you know what It Is to enjoy vigorous health. Will you "Ive It a chance? „ . VIUNA i The vegetable regulator SOLD BY CALLOW & KOHNE

Believe Missing Aviators “ a{VI £ bf „- "“ ,e °“‘,‘ n ' r-a i t t i i • lak* Re ot Garr reported Drowned in Lake Michigan n iplvtt . uppar ,. ntlv ln dl „ Chicago, Aug”Tx-tl’nitnd PrMS ) • treus. flying over the city on the dav the three Chicago boys started fur —Claws indicating the three young p,. (rc ( aviators, mining since they took off, fho misslnf uirmen—Morris Gather for Detroit July 28, may have been coa | ( gujene Coutolter and Bail P. swallowed up by Lal:- Michigan caused , f l . er , ri . ||, z ajfrplanei searchers to abandon their hunt to- automode aU d motor boat in the hope day that they had been forced down on A swimmer at Gary, Ind., reported lflB(| hll(| were Htlll al | V( ., ho had seen what appeared to be a—— wrecked airplane BUbmerged in the f — B—s WAN'I AH ■ h.ARN—S

WE ALL AGREE ThatI—TOMORROW 1 —TOMORROW is a word too often used in framing an exciiso. That: —Seeds never grow until planted. That:—Dollars do not increase unless theY are set to earning interest. That:—TO WAIT for the ship to come in may result in a big disappointment. That:—Pl TTING AWAY a portion of your income as soon as ydu receive It Is the only safe way to keep it. That:—POSTPONING starting an account until you have a large sum may result in never having one That:—YOUß SURPLUS wUI grow faster here than in your pocket. START YOUR ACCOUNT AT THIS BANK THE PEOPLES LOAN & TRUST CO. Bank of Service Fisker & Sarris CASH GROCERY Dealers in Granite, Tin and Aluminum ware. Phones 3-4-5. Free C ity Delivery Quality Service and Low Prices 'MBMKHManflMnaßaKMaMnwjsgMmw-nKsrKMUMsaMMMnaMi CI If A D 10 poul,ds €ane 59c uUbAfl Granulated Soap C hips, in Bulk, 25c 2 pounds WR.N.M. White Naptha 25(* Laundry, fi for Sunmaid Seeded Raisins, 25c 2 pounds Large cans Van Camps Pork and Beans 25c Can, 10c; 3 cans —urn—Hßgg— f—IM ■■ ii—T nm~iiin Ti iw Large Fancy Ripe Bananas, Pound ■■■■WMMMMiiwiMMMMCi-ri-TT-n--------- — 1 !»im will Irish Grey Watermelons. 40 x ‘ Guaranteed Ripe Mason Glass Fruit Jars, 78c Pints, dozen 68c; Quarts, dozen Fouids Macaroni, Spaghetti and Egg 25(‘ Noodles, 3 pkgs Santa Clara Prunes, 10c Medium size, pound MH K « ef ’ ,i' a ' ,la(i ' in t n orden 10c Small cans sc; Tall cans Peanut Butter in bulk, real quality, 20c Nice and smooth, plenty of oil, pound ■■ll— ■iiiiiii—Miiiiiiiiiiffliiiiiiwir miH.iiLin.iriwion • MORE ! ®| and Better BREAD I 1