Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 25, Number 249, Decatur, Adams County, 21 October 1927 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAI Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. J H. Heller Pres, and Gen. Mgr A. R. Holthouse Sec’y & Bus. Mgr Di<jk D. Heller Vice-President Entered at the Postoffice at Decatur Indiana, as second class matter. Subscription Rates: Single copies „.. _.—..._—| .05 One week, by carrier...... ............ .If Ono year, by carrier....- ............. 5.0 C One month, by mail — .35 Three months, by mail I.OC Si\ months, by mail 1.75 One year, by mall ____ 3 00 Or"' voar, at office _ 3.06 [(Prices quoted are within first uuu aecouu auues. Addmumd postage added outside those zones.) Advertising Rates: Made known by Application. Scheerer, Inc., 35 East Welker Drive, Chicago 200 Fifth Avenue, New York. Over at Lafayette the high school girls are wearing smocks and the hoys overalls. Fine if they will just live up to their dress now and do a little real work. We should think the conscience of that fellow who stole seventy-five dollars from the Ira Bodie home and then returned sixty-five of it the next night would still bother him ten dollars worth. Stanley Frost, a political writer of self clahned fame says if the Democratic party splits next year it will take a place alongside the whig and know nothing party of history and will be forgotten. Roland S. Morris; former ambassador to Japan, however says the party is stronger now than in years and will continue to live and govern. President Coolidge has scolded Senator Feu, of Ohio, for keeping up his campaign to nominate him for another term but so far as has been reported he hasn't spanked him and Fess is so mischevious that he just won't let up until he is taken to the wood shed. Any way thats the impression one gets from reading his story of an interview yesterday. Emma Latzko, a nineteen-year-old flapper of Whiting, Indiana, had her mother arrested assault after she had been given an old fashioned “tanning" for some antics. The police judge ruled she was too old for a spanking and charged the mother up with a dollar and costs. Don't look like it can be broken up if the courts are to side iu with the girls. « A United States senator speaking in Gary the other day is reported to have asserted that the business lull is due to the uncertaiuity of next years election. Surely some day the voters of America will become wise enough to laugh a politician of this sort off the platform. Such propaganda does not help business and we doubt very much if it makes nfany votes. Wc regret that the paper has come to Decatur homes a little late the past week or two but there are many details and a number of reasons which w. are trying to correct and will if you will he as patient with us as you have been. We are trying to give you all the news, to take care of our advertising customers and to please everybody and we ask your continued cooperation to that end. The other, day Mr. Campbell of the Detroit chamber of commerce came here from French Lick to visit his friend. Col. Emmons. He left Taggart's hotel early in the morning and arrived here late in the evening, tired after an all day trip. Some idea of what will be done in the near future is shown by the fact that CM. Emmons and Lieut. Hopkins made the same trip Sunday afternoon in an hour and a quarter. Col. Emmons who is recuperating at the Adams County Memorial hos pital after an accident near here Sun day night is one of the most enthus iastic boosters of commercial avi ation in America and has been deep!] interested in it since the war. Hi laughs about his recent accident am says that if an automobile happens ti strike a post and turn over, no om thinks much about it.. In his casi

| they happened to drive too close tc f a tree just at dusk aud their car up set. It has not in the least dampened his enthusiasm. Will H. Hays, that master diplomat J? and strategist, Is in tor a terrible in it ning. Even his big salary and his r powerful position in the motion pic ture industry won't save him. The Irish have their Irish up and are g 0,2 ,2 ing after William in regular Irish 0 fashion. The Irish are dead tired and 0 5 plumb weary of having fun , poked at 0 Irish characters on the screen. They s|have organised and got on their tight--0 ing clothes. We feel sorry for Will Hays. We don't envy him or his job one bit. My goodness, if England with all its "sun never setting on the Empire" power couldn't successfully cope with the Irish what chance has Will Hays? Nothing short of a master stroke in compromise and concili- - ation will keep Will's movie throne d from tottering.—Lebanon Reporter. ( Slowly we are learning that low wages for labor l do not mean necesit sarily high profits for capital. We are learning that an increasing wage . level is wholly consistent with a |. diminishing commodity price level. I We are learning that an increasing , productivity of labor is not measured [. alone by the hours of work, nor even by the test of physical fatigue in :» particular job. What we need to deal f with are not the limits to which men . may go without physical exhaustion, 1 but the limits within which they may 1 work with zest and spirit and pride I of accomplishment. “Are we doing . well with our lives? Are we provifl- • ing for our families —not merely i clothes and food and shelter while I we are working, bet an insurance of them when our working time is ended by age, disability or death? Are we ■ providing more cultural opportunities . for ourselves and our children? In a - word, are we free men? Here in i America we have raised the standard I of political equality. Shall ye be able to add to that full equality in econ- > omic opportunity? No man is wholly • free until he is both politically and 3 economically free." Who has just spoken? Some socialist on a soapbox, some walking delegate, some I agitator? The gentleman who said ' these words is Owen D. Young, of the General Electric Company. He was speaking at the dedication of the Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration. And his remarks were read by President William Green into the minutes of the American Federation of Labor convention last week in Los Angeles.—lndianapsi; nines. 0 ' Misses Geraldine Hower, Vivian • Thomas and Blanche McCrory are in ; Franklin, Indiana, where they are at- . tending the High School Press Association meeting. Miss McCrory is the senior class guardian of the local high E school, and Misses Hower and Thoms as are members of the Raveling’s f staff. , .DYSKINESIA II f Dyskinesia or habitual constipation wrecks more health every day than ' any other single thing. It saps e strength and vitality, causes scrP ions diseases of the stomach, kidneys and heart, brings on high e blood pressure and makes yon old 1 years before your tfme. The insidious condition of Dyskinesia is the result of our abnormal habits of living which place too great a strain e upon the vital organs, especially the liver. The liver becoming weak e or sluggish fails to supply the bows els enough bile. The bowels “tie up" and the poisonous waste retained effects <he whole system d including the vital organs. The iivI er occasionally. needs a little help, and there's nothing better tor this, 'f :,a medical men now know, than a e little ox gall. Ox gall is a remarkable natural stimulant for the hu- *' man liver, promoting its normal e active functioning, so essential to internal cleanliness and- health. II Dioxol tablets are genuine ox gall in dainty and tasteless form, each tablet representing 10 drops of pure ox gall. To be sure of getting K the genuine ox gall be sure of gets- ting Dioxol. They cost less than 2c each at good druggists, and a fewsoon tell. s- Mail me Free Dicxol Samples ' Wyeth Chemical Co. Inc CfafiTctd ly 578 Madison Ave., IlCCleo! [ e New York, Dept. L 35 id to .". le C' ie __________________________

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT FRIDAY, PC I OBER 21. <92/.

o * BIG FEATURES * a * OF RADIO * ************* Saturday'* Five Best Radio Feature* it Copyright 1927 by United Press WBZ, Springfield, 333, 7:30 CST—- , Boston Symphony Orchestra. 8 WRC, Washington. 469. 7 CST Army -J Band (also to W.I’Z. WHAM). iWOR, Newark, 422, 7:15 CST—Supc i pe's Operetta, "Boccaccio." >• WEAF. hookup. 9 CST Act 11. Broad- , , I way'Musical Comedy. WEAF, New York, 492. 6:30 CST<I Atyvater Kent Auditorium. ' Saturday'* Radio Football Schedule y I Copyright 1927 by United Press I- WJS, hookup—Yale vs. Army. WEAF. hookup — Harvard vs. Dart- , mouth. b WHN. New York, 395—Columbia vs.' h t Williams. IWJAX, Jacksonville. 337—George vs. ■I Florida. y WEBH. 366. and WGN. 306, Chicago I —Northwestern vs. Illinois. s KYW, Chicago, 526—Pennsylvania Vs. t-| Chicago. , |WIP, Philadelphia, 508 — Lehigh vs. Villa nova e WBZ, Sitringfield. 333 — Harvard vs. Dartmouth. *************[ i* TWENTY YEARS AGO * .* * ♦ From the Daily Democrat File ¥ I ♦ Twenty Year* Ago Today * ( t ************* Oct. 21—Plans started for annual ■ ; poultry show in January. 1| John Schultz has hand mangled J while threshing at the Jacob Omlor farm. I Dispute over payment of extra ten

I I The roots of Farm B crops will grow a long ag ways down into the soil j® if the soil is drained, but Ig the roots will not grow p* in water filled soil no l*« matter how much plant food is there. The KrickTyndall Co.

Factory Prices Again John T. throws his entire clothing stock on the market to you at factory prices. All new Fall suits in men’s and young men s —new, three and four button models in all shades. Every Saturday our sales grow bigger—and the cool crisp weather will make tomorrow the greatest day oi all. Every Suit in-the store in this ale —no exceptions. « These Prices Make Our Business Bigger Think! All New Suits - See For Yourself $45.00 ■ SUITS $33.78 $40.00 ■ SUITSS29.IB $35.00 ■ SUITSS24.73 • $30.00 ■ suits s22.l9 $25.00 ■ SUITSSI9.9S $22.50 ■ SUITS SIB.BB iB7 Boy’s 2-Pant Suits Formerly Sold $8.50 to sls -- Now $4-95 —— "ZZL » Husking Gloves . Neckties Over a I ’ 20 dozen husking gloves 275 neckties, new patterns Big, roomy, heavy 8 oz. overall ‘ We formerly sold for $1.25 dozen values with S P !in & spender. s l - 7 ° va Saturday 99c 59c Saturday $1.19 II —; ” ~ ~ Many More Bargains In Store We Haven't Room to Mention Here | fohrvT-Myeid & Son J CLOTHING AND SHOES J FOK DAD AND LAD -DECATUK- INDIANA- •

cent fee is cause of a law suit filed Beulah Chapel hero on change of venue from Allen Beulah Chapel will hold a Rally Day ~ Cox ... r.e,ne E xpress company. c L Waltere , o f Decatur, will deliver E. E. Moser buys Luckey block addletls Everybody invited. next to his gallery. Aubust Schlickman, .Superintendent. Will Parent celebrates 34th birthday o W ‘L“ M. o. Klnilrx. 111.. I. Ounce Con.., h». [visiting here vlg,t ,n r,ary ' H ° reP bu,,neM The Passioti play at the Electric condition* there rather slow owing to theater. 4,000 feet of Him. the fact that the rail mill h«s « Oscar Hoffman goes to Winchester Mr. and Mis. ( li.ilmer o , on business. spending a couple <>f (lay,i ln < hlca f”

| I £ The Future fe| Fol Most of our thinking- is Vj ||S| about the future. To some « O the future means trouble Ig R and fear. W Sft To others it means joy. M cjtt One of the best ways to W I make yoflr future rosy is to EgjH RS have a savings account. KmH Start saving at , E9I Eg9 this bank. ■S3I Peoples Loan & Trust Co. |g|j j BANk oF service -

Saturday Selling Fortunate Purchase Results in a Truly Great I Coat Event ■ i More Attractive Than Ever in Beauty—in Value $45 Ex<|'.iisit<' bnbrics, (lorgccus* Furs, Brotulclolh, Vcnise Duvblooin and many others. Fur trimmings, Bed Fox, ' Pointed Wolf, French Beaver, and many others. Mrs. Louisa Braden’s Fashion Parlor 715 No. 2nd St. Phone 737 aaKaHnBaEKBKEHaHBuaMmiMMnBEHBmsEiHMm! DEMOCRAT WANT ADS GET RESULTS