Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 27, Number 271, Decatur, Adams County, 14 November 1929 — Page 4
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DBCATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. j, H. Heller Preu, and Gen. Mgr. A. R. Holthouse Sec’y & Bus. Mgr. Dick D. Heller Vice-President Entered at the Postoffice at Decatur, Indiana, as second class matter. Subscription Rates Single copies I .02 Ono week, by carrier - .10 One year, by currier 6.00 One month, by mail 36 Three months, by mai - 100 Six months, by mail — 1.75 One year, by mail — 3.00 One year, at office .. 3.00 Prices quoted are within firet and second zones. Elsewhere, 13.50 one year. Advertising Rates made Known on Application. National Advertising Representatives Scheerre, Inc., 35 East Wacker Drive, Chicago 415 Lexington Avenue, New York Charter Member , The Indiana League of Home Dailies. If the rains ever stop long enough we are sure every one will get the leaves off the yards so the street force can haul them away or burn them. An Italian is said to be circulating hundred dollar counterfeit bills over Indiana and Ohio it is reported. Os course that is not near so dangerous for most of us as dollar bills would be for its a long time between notes of that size for the average bread winner. They may knock Moses off as the chairman of the republican senatorial committee but they will probably not be able to close his mouth. He has j a habit of speaking out in meeting and usually says the wrong thing. With all his ability as a speaker who attracts attention his party would be as well off without him most of the time. The “sons of wild Jackasses" evidently do not all live in the middle : west. Begins to look like the New York stock exchange needed a tinner to plug the holes in the .old seive, winch has been leaking for some three weeks now. No sooner are the boards opened than the holders of about every kind* of s’ock start unloading and the prices continue a downward trend. It is effecting general business in many places and there is talk again of government control similar to that of England and other foreign coun tries. When you help to save the roads in the county you are helping yourself as much as you are your neighbor or any one else. It costs a lot of money (to build roads. We have millions in them. We should do all we can to keep them in repair so that we will not have to rebuild them. Won't you be one in your community to assist in keeping the highways in the best condition by not permitting over hauling when the weather is soft? If you hide your money in a tin can and it is stolen or destroyed, yon are the loser. If you buy stocks and the market goes to the bad, you are out. If you gamble and lose as you usually do In the long run, you are eventually broke. Why do those things when the end is inevitable? You can invest in Adams county real estate, save your money through a savings account in your bank or otherwise place it where it will be safe and thats the thing we all ought to do. Bluffton is jubilant over the landing of a wood working factory in the Bay piano plant and we are glad for thorn. The factory, it is announced will begin operation within a few weeks, employing 150 men and adding as the business grows. They expect to use five hundred within a short time. That will add much to the prosperity of the city and we congratulate the citizens of our neighboring (town on their progressiveness. We hope you keep on going and growing and we are sincere in that wish. We wonder sometimes just where a lot of young folks are drifting, though we don't believe in calamity howling and we opine that a lot ot
TODAY’S CHUCKLE Washington, Nov. 14. — (U.R) — The Army has undertaken to r assist Santa Claus and the Poet r. Office this year by loaning spare t motor trucks for handling Christmas mail. 9 public speakers who say they don't, q are just trying to be popular. A few 0 months ago Gene Alger was a student 0 in Butler University, modest and re51 tiring. He married a girl attending j the Danville Normal. Then they became bootleggers and bank robbers. Both are now under arrest, charged with numerous crimes and with a future that seems so dark that it will 9 not begin to pay for the fling they have had. Mention was made in these columns a few days ago that it was necessary ’ tor the newly elected city officials to 1 qualify within ten days. We had 5 never heard of such a law and based I our remarks on a news sitory sent 1 from Columbia City. We are informed by attorneys that this is not the law and that in most cases the offic- ' ials cannot qualify because the council has not yet had an opportunity to fix the amount of the bond to be given. We understand that the of--1 ficials can qualify any time before the first of the year. I Seven boys, aged from seventeen to nineteen, were sentenced to prison for from one rto ten years, in a Fort Wayne court this week. A few days ago two others arrested with | them were taken to Hillsdale. Michigan. and sent to prison to from fifteen to twenty-five years. Several cf Che boys either previously lived here or frequently visited here, making the case of greater local interest. ! Each day either here or some where near similar cases are reported and the serious thing about it is that the epidemic of crime seems to be growing rather (than diminishing. Its so alarming that it seems to us the young folks themselves should begin to realize that its easy to wreck one’s life. Its high time that parents, teachers, children and every one else settle down to genuineness, even ft is a little old fashioned. O • TWENTY YEARS AGO * | • Twenty Years Ago Today * * From the Daily Democrat Fi’e • Nov. 14, 1909 was Sunday. . o ♦ ♦ | CONGRESS TODAY ♦ (U.R) ♦ Senate: Continues debate on rates in tariff bill. Judiciary subcommittee continues lobby investigation. House: Meets for introduction of bills and to adjourn for three days. o STOMACH GAVE 35 YEARS PAIN Mr. Baxter Tells How Viuna Has Restored His Health Readers who have suffered so long with stomach trouble that they almost despair of relief, may take new hope after reading how My. Samuel Baxter, Route 1, Bloomington, Ind., soon got well after he found the right remedy. Mr. Baxter says: “For 35 years, I suffered severely with indigestion, gas pains and bloating. After meals, gas would push up around my heart and make me short of breath. My appetite left me, and often 1 would take a lunch to work and bring it home at night, almost untouched. I had severe back pains , and got up 3 to 6 times a night for kidney relief. Constipation also bothered me, and laxatives were needed all the time. I spent hundreds of dollars seeking the right medicine, but never found it until just recently, i "Since using Viuna I eat heartily . of any food and not have a sign of indigestion. Even cabbage, pickles 1 and beans that used to cause trouble , every time I ate them, never bother me now. 1 hadn't touched these • foods for years, but surely enjoy them . now. The back pains and dizzy spells are all gone and my system is regular ' as clockwork. My sleep is not dis- , turbed by my kidneys now, and I get up feeling fine each morning. Viuna ' is the medicine I sough for 35 years, . and I hope my experience will save years of suffering for others.” Thousands of hopeless sufferers 5 from kidney trouble, back-ache, stomache trouble and rheumatism, have 1 been restored to perfect health by this wonder medicine. Why shouldn't it do as much for you? Try one bottle of Viuna under positive guaranty. VIUNA The Wonder Medicine Sold by Callow & Kohue
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1929.
• BIG FEATURES • • OF RADIO • Thursday’, Five Best Radio Featurss Copyright 1929 by UP WEAF, NBC network, 7 cst.—Fleischmann Hour, with Rudy Vallee. ‘ WABC. CBS network, 8 cst —True Detective Mystery. ’ WEAF. NBC network, 8 cst. - Seiberling Singers: Melton, James. Shaw and Glenn, with Orchestra. WJZ, NBC network. 9 cst. - Atwater •Kent dance hour. WEAF. NBC network, 9.30 cst.—Victor Hour. 0 Friday’s Five Best Radio Features Copyright 1929 by UP WEAF. NBC network. 7 cst.—Cities Service Orchestra. WABC, CBS network, 8 cst. —True Story Hour. WJZ, NBC network, 8:30 cst. —Philco Theatre Memories. WJZ, NBC network, 9 cst.—Armstrong Quakers. WEAF. NBC network. ,9:30 cs't. — "Mystery House." Household Scrapbook By ROBERTA LEE Mending Gloves When mending gloves, first put the finger into a thimble and then into the glove- This avoids pricking the fingers. Gloves of leather or skin should be mended with cotton thread, never with silk. Phint Brush A used paint brush can be softened by boiling it in vinegar. If very hard repeat the operation. Icy Streets Many a slip on icy streets can be prevented if a two-inch strip of adhesive tape is attached lengthwise to he sole ot each shot. ; —o MODERN ETIQUETTE By ROBERTA LEE Q. How may one quickly judge as to whether a person is well-bred? A. An infallible indication is that a well-bred person never attracts attention to himself by saying, doing, or wealing noticeable things. Q Who is the first to cut a wedding cake. A. The bride cuts the cake first and divides the first piece with t*W’ then each one cuts hisfjir -h-’T ofcvn
KONJOLA ENDS COMPLICATION! MAN BACK ON JOB After Years of Suffering Victim Found First And Only Relief In This Modern Medicine MR. Q. M. GUY “For ten years I was a victim ot chronic constipation, indigestion spells of gastritis, kidney trouble and rheumatism,” said Mr. Q. M. Guy. Lake Cicott, Ind. “My food did not digest: pain, bloating and heart palpitation followed every meal. I had to get up several times every night due to disordered kidneys. Rheumatism caused me no end of suffering and I was greatly discouraged. “Friends recommended Konjola to me and insisted that I try it. Within a few days the constipation was relieved; then my stomach became normal in its action; the kidneys were strengthened and my liver set to work as it should. The rheumatic pains became less and less and at the end of a months treatment 1 was in a state o< health I had not known In more than ten years. 1 can readily see why Konjola is he most talked of remedy in the world.” i Konjola is sold in Decatur. Ind., at . the B. J. Smith Drug Co., drug store, • and by all the best druggists in all ; towns throughout this entire section. —— ' Colds are serious. Even mild cases are dangerous. Remember KONJOLA COLD COMPOUND (tablets) is giving amazing relief to thousands of cold sufferers every year. These tablets are of the'same high quality as Konjola.
_ ~..... —- — — | I piece. I Q. What are a few intimate closings l for a letter? A. Devotedly yours, Lovingly yours. * Affectionately yours. * GENEVA NEWS Mis. Ralph Snyder and children spent Sunday in Grover Hill, Ohio, with Mrs. Laura Banta. Mrs. Mina Whiteman Is spending a few weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Meade A spy. Miss Kugena llunicut returned to Fort Wayne Mommy after spending the weekend hero with relatives. Several members of the American Legion attended the banquet at Decatur, Monday. Miss Dorothy latrue is absent from ■ her woik because of illness. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Shoemaker, 1 spent Sunday witli Mr. and Mrs. Leon Rupley of Columbia City. Word was received here of the birth of a bahy girl to Mr. and Mrs- Virgil Runyon Marysville Michigan. Mrs. Runyon was formerly Lois McCray. __ .. —I Daphne Trie-Step Shoes i/ wra — Comfort in Fashionable Shoes Herfs a shoe carefully built by foot-experta anil lightened by a dash of modern style at an amazingly low price. Small wonder then, Daphne True-Stepa are in great demand. Their perfect support is so restful to weary arches and overworked muscles, in fact bare-footed freedom is assured always. Trim, attractive patterns make Daphne True-Steps the favorite for all occasions. Make your selection today and be assured of foot comfort plus style ... always. Prices Reasonable k - Nichols Shoe Store A Sound Investment for your Christmas Savings It is so easy to spend money foolishly, that we should weigh each investment. What can provide as much happiness for the whole family as a good Radiola radio set? With < millions of dollars being : spent in providing the i greatest artists and pro--1 grams, you owe it to yourJ self to come in and hear a 1 Radiola. You will agree f l that you have never heard ( finer reception. i We have a set to suit the size of every check. H.-Knapp & Son Radiola & Apex dealers.
Mrs. C. R Graham and children ot Bourbon spent Sunday here with Mary Macklin. Mr and Mrs. William Heller and son Warren have of Pontiac, Michigan aj’c spending a few dayA here with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brown. The Past Noble Grand Club of the Rebecca Lodge weer entertained Tuesday evening. Mrs. K. F. Shoemaker and Mrs Charles Shepherd were hosChildbirth a happy event "Mother’, Friend relieved ,4k * s me ot the itrain and the Z77M, / piin that came from the ' titretching of the akin and tissues" writes a young mother. "I did not suffer as I have heard other women say they did My T .XYjiflEß doctor recommended AyirMiZr Mother’s Friend to me.’’ T Countless thousands of •£ expectant mothers have w had the same experience with "Mother’s Friend.” Naturally, mothers have ! recommended it to their daughters. .. " Jr, . 1 "Mother’s Friend” ia a Mother s Friend scientifically-prepared skin lubricant and pain-reliever. It originated fn ti e prescription of an eminent obstetrician, and nas been in use. for 60 years. _ , You owe yourself <h« comfort “mother’s Friend” gives. It is so soothing and relaxing! It is used externally only—gently rubbed into the skin. Brings relief promptly. Very valuable in keeping the breasts in good condition. Also puts you in fine shape for the approaching ordeal. "Mother's Friend" is on sale at r I V C all drug stores. $1.25 per bottle, p* < Try a massage with ft tonight riOOK and notice the ease and comfort it gives. A booklet on "Things to Know Before Baby Comes" will be mailed in plain envelope; free, on request. Address Bradfield Regulator Co., Dept 14, Atlanta, Ga. ,
Men who like V? to be dressed in WvA style, like this type / ll Z o7Overcoat by H r Hart Schaffner wl •& Marx X/wp 4 * \ ; Lx ft*s a neat double breasted body fitting coat, •sometimes it has a half belt. . Jt’s colors are all the new shades of Brown. Blue or Greys, in plain colors or fancy patterns. II / The materials are all the newest. The popular 11 materials you art looking for. I | Il And the prices are—s22.so to $47 50 Vopynfbi Han a Man 1 Os course we have other Overcoats at $13.50 arid up CHRISTMAS IS NOT FAR AWAY Here are suggestions to think over: HATS SOCKS SHORTS CAPS BELTS ATHLETIC SHIRT' SCARFS SHIRTS PAJAMAS GLOVES GARTERS COLLARS LUGGAGE SUSPENDERS HANDKERCHIEFS OUR BOY S GIFT DEPARTMENT IS VERY COMPLETE.’ Or, why not a nice Hart Schaffner & Marx Suit bought on oui Christmas certificate plan $22.50 and up. • Decatur, Ind. •vm-——i... ...K
’ teaneu. Mr. and Mrs. Areh Chew and children and Miss Adelino Brown spent the week-end with Clara Chew at Spring ifcld. Ohio. o Notice Patron* Former patrons leaving wearing apparel at my office should call for it at Dr. Frohnapfel's office, Corner Third and Madison Sts. itx
STOCK SALE Tuesday, Nov. i 9 12 O’clock at the Wcisell Farm, 2 miles west of Ossian Registc’X'd Holstein and Grade Cows, Heifers Sows, Pigs, Horses and Chickens. Cummins and Lytle
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