Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 24, Number 35, Decatur, Adams County, 10 February 1926 — Page 6

Back-ache? Pains? May Be Your Kidneys if pains are uiukln* Ilf* m hern bin, atop ' u-sting tun»- mi Util* way* of getting temporary niter. Something I* rad leu lb | wrong, aome organ Lift doing Its work. | V mna rt rphgtbeni* weak kldneya, laay livt-r, aliigai ih bowel*. The blood MuriN 1 getting purer, appetite begin* to clamor, < dlgt'dloii geta right, and constipation tetVMk ToU f« • I ii b*n*Al proinpil v, und noon you’re wnlklng with n new ►tride, energetic, strong, nN** to enjoy ; life It hliH lifter! tiiousiindH out of bed* . of pain. Will you give it u chance? VIUNA TAc vegetable regulator SOLD BY CALLOW X- KOHNB KIMMEL GETS VERDICT AGAINST BANK OF PONETO (CONTINI ED FKOM PARE ONE) ' amount checked out by Mr. Kimmell was placed on the bank officials. Cancelled qhecks for several thousand dollars were Introduced as evl-| dence by the bank, but a majority of the concelled checks were missing. • The defense then attempted to use the entries in the bank's record books to show the amount paid out in cashing checks written by Mr. Kimmell The entries placed in the record books, or blotter pad as it was called, were merely daily totals of all checks cashed and the deposits made by each depositor. Inasmuch as the checks cashed were not itemized on the blotter pad, the court could not permit the records' to be introduced as evidence. He ruled that it would be necessary to assume that the cashier or bank clerk had read the amount of each check correctly, that he had placed It down on paper correctly, that he had totalled the amounts of the checks correctly and that he had entered the total amount on the blotter pad correctly. The verdict returned by the jury in this case will cause the stockholders of the bank, who have already lost more than they ever put into the banking business, to lose still further. The bank was a private bank and was placed in the hands of a receiver more than a year ago. Attorneys for Mr. Kimmell were Sturgis, Stine and Sturgis, and Eichhorn, of Bluffton, and Henry B. Heller. of Decatur. Counsel for the defense consisted of the firms of Simmons, Dailey & Simmons, and Hamilton & Wiecking, of Bluffton, and Attorney Clark J. Lutz, of Decatur. The defense has taken steps, already, to file a motion for a new trial and, in case a new trial is not granted. to appeal the case to the appeallate court. Sf house”: >■■■■■■■■■■■■ Suit On Notes A suit on notes was filed in the Adams circuit court today by Eli W. Steele against Warren Jones and others. Judgment for $1,250 is demanded. Attorney J. F. Snow is counsel for the plaintiff. ’ Suit For Partition A suit for partition of 110 1-2 acres of land,in Monroe township, was filed in the circuit court today by Peter P. Schwartz and others against Samuel Girod and others. Attorney Dore B. Erwin is counsel for the plaintiff. o Greenwood — On his second day at school, Robert Scandrett, 6, fell oft a slide and was severely hurt. ;»•' T “""“ . 8335,00 1 Star Touring 1925 QKKft All Balloon Tires, dem. .. tpDDU.Vv 1 Auburn Beauty Six Touring, Rebuilt and CQ7K AH Repainted spO I □.UU 1 Studebaker Light SixQQnr Aft Touring runs very good 1 Ford Touring 1924 rn An with winter enclosure spADU.Vv 2 Chevrolet Tourings, 1923, Superior Models, at any reasonable offer. 2 Chevrolet F. B. Model Tourings, at any reasonable offer. 1 Ford Coupe, runs QQI fl Dfi goed, lots of extras tbalvtVu 1 Ford Sedan, 1921 UJOQK AA model, good condition 1 Oakland Roadster C?Dflfl flfi 4 new cord tires 'ivviUU 1 Essex Four, Coach, repainted and in perfect (?PBA AH condition . 1 Hudson Coach, 1925. 8 months old. This car will be offered for sale within the next 15 days. Will be reconditioned, repainted and sold with a guarantee. P. KIRSCH & SON DEALERS IN AUTOMOBILES Phone 335

ignorance Os Table Etiquette Causes Burglar’s Arrest St. Louis, Mo., Feb. 10. — (United' Pit-HR) Table etiquette wasn't purl of thn education taught John fleynor, so he's in jail today. Patrolmen walking near a restaurant heard an unusual noise coining from the darkened building. It was a steady clicking accompanied by loud sighs. Entering the building they found Reynor stolidly tearing a piece of beef with his teeth-—and making u horrible din about it. He admitted btyglarlzing the place. •'lf they had just taught me to eat quietly at home I wouldn't be arrested now," Reyqor said as he was led into central station. Q GAS COMPANY NAMED IN BIG UTILITY MERGER (CONTINI En FROM PARE ONE) Northern Indiana Gas and Electric company would be converted into common and preferred stock of the Northern Indiana Public Service company, share for share. The combined capitalization is J 44.928.000. The "super power” idea which Insull is applying to the utilities in which he is interested, through a program of consolidations, would be carried out In the proposed merger. The Northern Indiana Public Service company owns a 132,000 volt super power line extending from the Indi-ana-Illinois state line to Michigan City, Ind., and is building an extension between Michigan City and South Bend which will form an inter connection with a system reaching as far east as Pittsburgh, Cleveland, Toledo, and points in Virginia, West Virginia and Kentucky. The other end of the gap bridged by the line is the Commonwealth Edison company system in Chicago and the Public Service company of Northern Illinois. Eleven gas manufacturing plants, with a combined daily capacity of 25,320,000 cubic feet, a 28,000 watt electric generating plant at East Chicago, and other properties, will be consolidated, under the merger. Operating reeviues of the two Companies in 1925 aggregated in excess of $10,000,000. The combined nurwber of customers served with gas in 1925 was 119,091, and with electricity, 58.430. o Twelve Billion Pounds Os Sugar Used In 1925 New York, Feb. 10. —* During 1925, ' the American people used 12,157.064,640 pounds of sugar or an average of

Velvet Jf&Bv \ A,au Dealer, / Wdy Snpreme 77 in their class. ff> ■■'■■ AsSmooth as Velvet. (Trite for trial tampla • „ J American Lnad Pencil Co, New York k, MaW. ./t*. yk~~ FEVCB F— m 2. A I—MW.IWIIIMWI uninii.wiiwmi I 4^7A a Ji Officers Serve Customers U The officers of this bank arc ®. here to serve customers just as ? much as are tellers behind the . i 9 wickets. Consult us if you are S facing unusual financial probit lems in which a bank can properly participate. You do not li need an appointment. Things 9 are informal here, though al- j i s ways business-like. BqhK Capital and Surplus y 5120,000.00 n ^' il

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 10.1926

107 pounds for every person in lhe 1 country. This Is the largest amount of sugar over consumed In one year by any nution and represents an Increase of seven pounds per person over tiie consumption of 1924. Even witli the record breaking quantity of sugar used In the United States during Ute past year Americans cannot claim to be the champion siifcar eaters of the world as Individuals. The annual per capita consumption in Australi and Now Zealand is over 130 pounds. Os lhe total amount of sugar used In 1925 a little less titan half or 5,700,000,000 pounds was produced I nvarlous parts of the United States, including the sixteen slates from Michigan and Ohio In the east to California and Washington in the west in which sugar is made from sugar beets, the states of Loulsana, Texas and Florida in the south and the various Insular territories — Hawaii, Porto Rico, the Phillipines and the Virgin Islands. The balance, about 6,500.000,000 pounds, was supplied by Cuba. The total sugar bill of the American people last year, taking the average retail price in New York as the basis of computation, was roundly $790,000,-1 000 or over $2,000,000 a day. .This, of course,4s the amount paid by consumers. The value of the crop to prolucers was much less, about $485,900,000, the difference representing the cost of refining and distributing and the profits of wholesale and retail dealers. The sugar imported was brought into the country in a raw state and was refined by American refgineries but even so, it represented a payment to foreign producers for this one item In the nation’s diet. o Pleasant Mills Lyceum Course To End Friday The last number of the Pleasant Mills high school Lyceum Course will be given at the high school auditorium in Friday evening. Feb. 12. The number will begin at 8:15 o'clock, because of the meetings in progress at the Methodist church and will be rendered by the "Gypsy Serenaders,’’ a trio of young ladies of fine musical ability? New Beauty Cream Gives Lovely Complexion Amazing new kind of cream quick'y gives the texture and appearance of a wild rose petal. You’ll notice a startling change the moment you put it on. The effect is lasting—you cannot wash it oft Whitens, nourishes, purifies. Can be left on all night or used as a powder base. Not a bit. sticky or oilyt. Get this new wonderful beauty cream called Mello-glo and try It. , The Holthouse Drug Co.

THRILLS IN STORE FOR 1 • THE MIRACLE” PATRONS < AT AUDITORIUM, CHICAGO i ■ ( Witnessing Morris Gent's mnr.nill- ( cent production of the music-drama . pantomime, “The Miracle." during its | limited engagement in the Auditorium ( Theatre, ending March 20th, Is like witnessing the Imposing ceremonials . at St. Peter's in Rome, visiting the , site of Herod's Temple, the Halls of , Karnak and Philao, attending Mohum-, medun services on the Peak of Mount , Moriah, and religious and ceremonial service, and the representation of music-drama in many other parts of the world all in one The only audience comparable to that in the Chicago Auditorium these days was that which, in the days before the war, filed out of the Festsplelhaus at Bayreuth after the rep resentatlon of the great Bavarian music-dramas. As the audience gathers to witness "The Miracle.” It sinks into place und keeps as quiet as though attending a divine sei vice. The ushers, clad in black with veils, are cultured young women instead of chattering girls, and perform their duties quietly as t well as intelligently. It is hard to tell when the performance actually begins. The stage gradually fills with a congregation of picturesquely clad characters of the Middle Ages—knights, beggers, nuns, monks, the afflicted, and th e gentry. Soon a mass is being sung and the action starts with the veiling of a novice nun. | The beauty, the completeness and the impressiveness of this scene has never been equaled on our stage. It |is overwhelming, overpowering, allembracing. i Therefore, it Is of the utmost value and interest to those who attend the performance of "The Miracle” to be in their seats fully ten minutes before the performance, which begins promptly at 8:00 o’clock in the evenings, and 2:00 o’clock at the matinees on Wednesday and Saturdays, with an extra holiday matinee on Uncoin’s and Washington’s birthday, i It is a miracle of organization, of' detail carried out on a colossal order. | The Auditorium Theatre is trans-

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formed tn represent a medieval Gothic Cathedral of great beauty ami impressiveness, with hug' -lain glass windows high up on •'««» of the auditorium, and with graceful and high Gothic arches In plate the usual proscenium openiii:’. 111 1 11 theatre. The whole theatre Itself forms the setting on the ntage. 'Hie Gotliii columns rise to u vaulted celling ol Incredible height, und big'll in I background are stained gins- win dows. A great altar with n lieiiuttful wrought iron grating before it stands toward the rear of the stage, and nt large certain moments of the piny, this altar opens to disclose a !<•«»’’ vista of stairs which provid.- a effective entrance for the play-: Running back on either side of the theatre auditorium are cloister:, through which nuns and monks enter or leave the scene. Around tit'' tailof the mezzanine boxes und two bal conies Itang hundreds of medieval banners, and at intervals tmr, batteries of many colored lights whirl throw magic over tile seem- below. It is ti singularly beautiful s. which Mr. Gest hits provided. Just What Are You Doing For Your Puny Child? One boy gained 11 pounds in “ weeks and is now strong and healthy. For weak, frail, under-developed children —and especially those that have rickets, and need a sure builder that promotes the growth of teeth and bones, cod liver oil is the one medicine supreme — nothing helps like it. But it Is nasty and repulsive and evil smellihg and nearly always upsets children's stomachs —so now up-to-date chemists advise McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Compound Tablets. Children love them as they de candy, because they are sugar coated and easy to take. One boy gained 11% pounds in seven weeks, and is now healthy and happy— thousands of other children have grown stronj and robust. Sixty tablets for 60 cents at Holt house Drug Co., and ail druggists but be sure and ask for McCoy’s—- , the original and genuine. | Give them to the sickly, frail'chip ' for 30 days, and if they don’t help I wonderfully, your druggist is author ized to hand you back the nionej you paid for them.

o look nt this marvelously beautiful cathedral Interior In a theatre is in'"ynT then there is lhe music of "Th Miracle,”'which Humperdinck ‘ his* very b-st not forgetting even his wond.i'ftil composition of "Hansel 3* (1 t.-l" und the bxqulalte beaut es of |he "Koenigs Kinder.” From be-

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ginning to end them ls I stant succession ot rn „ lo()1>s «' H forth by the orchestra or ] . .. ** fi pipe organ and chorus, whiu n ■ again the sonorous t olleii “* ■ chants resound through the ~,,u * ■ placed In the theatre fl itx fl —The Daily Democrat-Voy,, I