Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 24, Number 160, Decatur, Adams County, 8 July 1926 — Page 3
THREE
SCHOOL REUNION IS BIC SUCCESS Former pupil* «>id pu’rons of school Xo. 6. In Kirkland township, held the!,first reunion. Monday, in the grov; ~t William A. Myt s, near Bluffton The reunion was an enjoyable affair. At noon, a bounteous <\lnner was spread on several large tablt • under hade trees. Officers were de. ted following the dinner. Those elected werp; William A. Myers, president; Homer P ('rum, vlce-preiddent; Oilv(>r I'. Mills, .secretary; William O. Saiitbitie, treasurer. The p- esent officers will sei the time and arrange for the site for the 1927 reunion. An Jlsteinporane: np.ogram v.a i arranged and given Monday. Two readings were given by Ml-s Devona Welker, of Lima. Ohio; u reading was piven by Mary V. Scott, of Ossian; and about fifty short and interesting talks were given by former teachers and ho ars of the ■< h >ol. 11. H. High and Charles Beery rendered sevt al comic readings and songs. Those present from a distance weite: Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Walker. Miss Devona Welker, Mr. and Mrs. \V D Brown. Lima. Ohio. Mrs. Harley Utz. Englewood, Ohio; Mrs. Claud Kress.
gX" "™" Y The LAST TWO DAYS of the ECONOMY’S Big 8 I DEMONSTRATION SALE | y JUST A FEM MORE DAYS AND THE CARNIVAL OF BARGAINS COMES TO AN END. D* ’T , ' N ————- 111 . WaL v z Values Extraordinary in I Ladies voile |" ! -ie rcnsDro-e. gj, ie t; ., , e | • > Xd J \ mirM’c I ■ I /ta MEN 5 "Il I® a ■■ $3.00 value I 89c and g 7a X tw Summer Suits Jld _£±J AH new snapir. sty les, in a fine variety of colors. Ladies! Don’t Miss This! Good quality and regular values t 0 s,s - Cool, Comfortable, Economical. z yT y. J” 1 ;;" ' s>ie fl*A AC n* Syttsh cto«-iy woven PurejZ.. T/\ uizeu and S ped.tly reduced p. WS Cit TM < 52 95 S3 45 MW-vU Rayon Dresses ® jS] 1,11 C 9 QQ Rjirh IS MEN'S NECKTIES MENS STRAW HATS MENS UNDERWEAR I MENS OXFORDS MENS AND BOYS ’ Fine selection of patterns W c are doing to give you Athletic style in pink, I Al) new styles and popu- i r >eh 1n.jt...,,,.. . - l Atn y K ■ Popular colors, aii sizes. A run, lustrous, ttosel.v woven Raven—ll n •; w inbow \A\| .11 the latest for summer your choice of any hat m p „ ch , blue, orchid OQ ■ shades. Genume welts. Regular values to Q* ors—guaranteed fast and washable. The ■ ’ t this KAfC wear. Regular the store <JX/» .■. r-u I alues t 0 * 6 <‘> QX $2. Sale price <7e/V charm the woman who desire a frock 101 ei i . SI.OO value TOC for only and white, cho.ee ■ Pair j ■ economical, yet good looking. S- b ! Sj Good News For c v n> Boys Wash Suits I \ F. Your choice 1 a I.: t -t ■< i i Mens Silk Socks, fine selection colors. Childrens Slippers and Oxfords, over ar:l »t i t now ;•: < ; all sizes, specially priced Aftf* dozen styles to select front bP*i f TrVV and priced at pair t/0V I Ladies Comfort Slippers in all leather. QI All sizesand good stvles V loJV Xi£SS> XJ' tjV ; ’,X MANY OTHER BARGAINS THROUGHOUT THE STORE t M VI UdiM Gauze Vests, a wonder 1 U,.. 1° OOp jjj»—„ MTSl adies Summer Union Suits, fine mercerized | HR w JJK ilk etripe. special OOC | DECATUR’S UNDERSELLING STORE ’ «SJ
M s. Floy.! Myer*, Arcun.uu, Ohio Mr iiml Mr* G. 1.. Brown. Detroit, Midi . Mr. and Mas R. Dayintin, Porrintun. Mich., Mr. 1.. E Myers, Mr. and Mrs. I Ran Myers. Mt Pleaaant, Mich.; Mr. Jumes Whltelii'iii so. Chicago, 111. Mr. nnd M s. David Whitehearse, LakeI ton, Ind , Mts. (L K. Lutz. Huntington, • Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. 11. O. Human. Portland. Ind: Mr and Mrs <’. H. Houck. Muncie, Ind , Mrs. Alic ■ Moora Elwood, Ind., Mr and Mrs. ,1 L. Kase, Huntington. Ind;. Mrs e. E. Crum. ! Mr. and Mrs. Roy C tun, Mr. and Mrs Crtistuve Yager. Mr. George Yager, Mr and Mrs Bieber, Mr. and Mrs. N D. ‘ Mi.lhouse and family; Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Eicher. Miss Neva Zeckel, Messis. Ralph and John M; e- , all Fort Wayne. —— o Many Utilities To Ask For Lower Assessments > ' Indianapolis. Ind . July S.—t United 5 Prass)—More than lot) public utilitlei I nntl financial institution-; a • to ap > pear before the state tax board this I month adtlng fir reduction of the tax I asse-suments levied by the board dur- ■ ing its first session. In the group are twenty-three banks eleven building and loan a-ociations, ■ twenty one car equipment concerns, two pipe line companies, thirteen utl- . lities, twenty nine telephone com- . panics, one telegraph company, five
DECATUK DAILY DEMOCRAT, THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1926.
o cd ic ttaction companle , and three steam railroads. Several of the gohearlngs have already been held this week by the I board. South Bend Ind, July. S t United | i’resa) —After long nnd bitter lltign i tion dating back to 1914. the i‘ase of I Christian Christensen vs. the Indiamij Pipe Line company, has been brotigh* i to the St. Joseph Superior couit No J One from the Starke circuit court. Christen ■< n, a Starke farmer Is rsk-i ill)' judgement of $40,000 for the alleged ruining of his farm by tile burst-1 i:u of pipi containing oil and owned by the I ipe line company. Aceordliig to complaint on file in ei.irt here, the pipe lines which cross Christensen’s farm at Pine Creek, burst in 1914 fl Hiding the creek with oil whi -h spread to the surr nindlng i I land, making it impossible t’o - any! ' kind of crop to be cultivated. He was pwa’ did a judgment for the rental value of the land in 1920.by the Laporte ciicult court but since that time, the complaint stales, the conditions have become worse and Christensen. for that reason, feels that the < art should award him s4o,but) for the less i t fertility. See the Utenco Ironer demonstration Thursday, July Kth at Yagers Furniture Store. 158-3 t Get the Habit—Trade At Home, It Pays
Sunlight Loses Health Giving Qualities When Filtered Through Glass , Wooster, Ohio, July S. — (United ■ Brass.) Experiments conducted at 1 I the Ohio Experiment s'allon here in plicate that sunshine filtering through | window glass, upon infanta and inI valid* fulls to bnlld health nnd vital- [ by. Dr. R. M. Bethke, conducting the study, is using three gioup* of baby ; chicks, n hundred Io a group. Each group is housed and fed exactly alike - the only difference being In the sun porches attached to each of the three houses. One sun porch is covered with win I dow glass; a second with a substitute | for glass, and the third with an ordinary wire screen. Results carefully kept and recorded by Dr. Bethke have tevealed that the. group of chicks kept under the wire screen and the glass substitute, are even in size, and all heulthy and scratching. But the group securing Ils shar n of Old Sol's rays strained through the I window glass, is a sore and motley crew-some, larger, some smaller than others, many of them sickly, puny weaklings, and almost all of them afflicted with “stiff-legs' or rickets, causing thm to fall over themselves as they walk. The lesson to be found from these ——— >— — ■
I —- i testa, Dr. Bethke points out, is that window glass prevents the passage of the all Important ultra violet ravs. necessary to life and health. “.Sun parlors, especially where they ' are to be used for babies," Dr. Bethke advises molliera, "should have one | section of some other substance than I glass through which the sun’s rays can reach the Infant direct. The cril>| inn he moved us the sun passes west ! ward. "Glass permits the passage of the red or heat rays and rays which kill germs That is why we put many windows in a house or n burn which We desire to be especially sanitary. Physicians use the ted rays of light In treating many forms of disease, I but it is the ullra violet rays that arej necessary for proper bone development In children." ' i —o— ——— Number Os Spring Pigs In State Is Average — Lafayette, Ind., July S -(United I Press) The number of sp.ing pigs) cn Indiana fauns this year is practically the same as a year ago, accord-1 ing to a survey cf the spring pig; crop just completed ,by the Purdue department of agricultural statistics.' According to the report the number of sows farrowed this year was 196.3 percent of last year and the number, of pigs saved per saw is only 5.901
while in 1925 It was 6 30. ( It was Indicated Unit thirty per cent , more MQIVM will he hied for fail fit this year than last fall An in■ r*-i of 36 4 per cent In -ow- I.nd Io IJI furrowing was indicated for the entire corn belt group of states. i 4et the Habit—Trade At Home. It Pays
No weather affects Frigidaire Summer's hottest day means II HMramSaN nothing to Frigidaire, the mod11 ern ’ c^ec '‘ rjc refriget at or. It goes II nunwß on ee H‘ n 2 Perfectly all foods, II mmMMK supplying ice-cubes, making many frozen desserts. UIHMMm Como itp and see the new lovzIbIHRh priced njetrd cabinet Frigidaires. HUanUk They ale sold cn the GMAC g.ra.'Mi payment plan. liM Frlr?<xj'. flflllßKMUMl llectki '. O <u. i; a r 1 .j .j **' VuiWcrL Ol.io ■ ** 1,1 ’’
— ■ ■—II — •» ——M If «■ 111 !■■■ ■■ill—ll W — . Unolaimed Letters Jann Jaurique ; Mr. Fic.l (binznlitz i Wm. Ho derbc.g Mt. Fruncls Beitlrr H. Fritzfngcr, PM.
