Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 13, Number 225, Decatur, Adams County, 21 September 1915 — Page 2

IF BACK HURTS BEGIN ON SM.TS Flush the Kidney* at once when Backachy or Bladder bothers—Meat forms uric acid. No man or woman who cats meat regularly can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a wellknown authority. Meat forms uric acid which clogs the kidney pores so they sluggishly filter or strain only part of the waste and poisons from the blood, then you get sick. Nearly all rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble, nervous ness. constipation, dizziness, sleeplessness, bladder disorders come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts, or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage or attended by a sensation of scalding, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any reliable pharmacy and take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts' is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia and has been used for generations to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to activity, also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes irritation, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot injure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which all regular meat eaters should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and the blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney complications | DRINK HOT TEA FOR A BAD COLD Get a small package of Hamburg Breast Tea, or as the German folks call it, “Hamburger Brust Thee,” at any pharmacy. Take a tablcspoonful of the tea, put a cup of boiling water upon it, pour through a sieve and drink a teacup full at any time during the day or before retiring. It is the most effective way to break a cold and cure grip, as it opens the pores of the skin, relieving congestion. Also loosens the bowels, thus driving a cold from the system. Try it the next time you suffer from a cold or the grip. It is inexpensive and entirely vegetable, therefore safe and harmless. BUB SfflCM WB W| OUT Rub Pain and Stiffness away with a small bottle of old honest St. Jacobs Oil When your back is sore and lame or lumbago, sciatica or rheumatism has you stiffened up, don’t suffer T Get a 25 cent bottle of old, hours St. Jacobs Oil” at any drug store, pour a little in your hand and rub it right into the pain or ache, and by the time you count fifty, the soreness and lameness is gone. Don’t stay crippled! This soothing, penetrating oil needs to be used only once. It takes the ache and pain right out of your back and ends the misery. It is magical, yet absolutely harmless and doesn’t burn the skin. Nothing else stops lumbago, sciatica and lame back misery so promptly! SAGE TEA' OW TO DARKEN Mill Look years younger! Use the oldtime Sage Tea and Sulphur and nobody will know. Yon can turn gray, faded hair beautifully dark and lustrous almost over night if you’ll get a 50 cent, bottle of “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy” at any drug store. Millions of bottles of this old, famous Sage Tea Recipe are sold annually, says a well-known druggist here, because it darkens the hair so naturally and evenly that no one can tell it Iras been applied. Those whose hair is turning gray, becoming faded, dry, scraggly and tbin have a surprise awaiting them, because after one or two applications the gray hair vanishes and your kicks become luxuriantly dark and beautiful—all dandruff goes, scalp itching and falling l»air stops. This is the age of youth. Gray-haired, unattractive folks aren’t wanted around, so get busy with Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur to-night and you’ll be delighted with your dark, handsome hair and your youthful appearance within a few days. o J HEAD STUFFED FROM I CATARRH OR A COLD * •. ❖ Says Cream Applied in Nostrils £ ‘ I Opens Air Passages Right Up. Instant relief—no waiting. Your fclogged nostrils open right up; the air passages of your head clear and you can breathe freely. No more hawking, snuffling. blowimr. headache, dryness. No struggling for breath at night; your cold or catarrh disappears. Get a small bottle of Ely’s Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply a little of' this fragrant, antiseptic, healing cream in your nostrils. It penetrates through every air passage of the ■head, soothes the inflamed or swollen mucous membrane and relief comes instantly. It’s just fine. Don’t stay stuffed-up with a cold or pasty catarrh. - - —— -»■• -Q • 1 • Democrat Want Ads Pay.

SEEN AT THE FRONT IOIOSYNCRACIES OF SHOT AND SHELL ARE MANY. Correspondents Tell Remarkable Stories of Scenes They Have Witnessed—Lives Saved by Articles Carried. In a photograph which comes from the front I see a man has had his hair neatly parted by a bullet In the center with the art and exactitude of a hairdresser. A visit to the hospitals at the military bases in France made me acquainted with some Idlosyncraeles of shrapnel which are well-nigh unbelievable. One man, whose name was Williams or Williamson, 1 forget which, had his Initial W plainly outlined upon his back by a fragment of shrapnel which finally settled in his boot. The man was very proud of hfs wound. “I wouldn’t have n-’sred that for a quid,” he earnestly rerwked. It certainly was a distinction. I told this story to one of the king’s messengers a noble and hard-working duke, and he capped it by telling of a case where a trooper mounting his horse was hit with a piece of shell which cut round the top of his trousers like a pair of sefssors, dividing the leg part from the body. At Hartlepool a 12-fnch shell went clean through a house, continued Its career up the street and went through another house. Each dwelling was occupied by a person of the same name. The signalman who was on the bridge of the British ship which sank the Emden writes: “A shot cut away the port signal halyards, cut through the range finder—about six feet of brass — blew off the range taker's leg, cut a rail off, came through the hammocks lining the inside of the bridge, through the screen and through the ship’s awning, which was launched outside the screen, and then burst. One lump of shell hit the deck only a foot away from me (I have the piece), shooting by my head by Inches, and another piece hit the deck and then bounced up and through the bridge screen, taking exactly half a pair of binoculars with it. Not bad for one shot, was it?” I saw many prayer books, watches and buttons with marks of rifle bullets upon them, and other souvenirs treasured as the saviors of men’s lives, from which the owners drew various Inferences. A dent in a cigarette case or a hole through a pocketbook seems to give rise to graver thoughts than jlo actual wounds. The British soldier reaches down Into the unknown further than people think, and he draws conclusions which cause him to relapse into silence as he smokes his pipe over the campfire. The Idiosyncrasies of shrapnel and the eccentricities of shot supply him with all kinds of weird inferences, which he weaves Jnto his belief, and the soldier's creed Is no mere piece of formalism It Is a real spiritual compass, very different in Its ethical value from the mawkish platitudes of the "pimply pious” who remain at the base and shirk duty and the firing line to distribute tracts of sickly sentiment. The soldier man, when he faces the unknown, is not weighed down by his creed. He rises buoyantly where many of his sectarian superiors would founder hi the storms of warfare.—London Globe. A Case of Bible Reading. Rev. W. Y. Fullerton of the Baptist Missionary society told a good story at the anniversary meeting of the International Bible Reading association. As showing that some people needed guidance in the,selection of their Bible reading, Mr. Fullerton, says the Westminster Gazette, recalled an incident reminiscent of his mission days, when a man came to his meeting and told of his efforts to comfort his wife as she lay upon the sick bed. “I read the Bible to her every night,” he said. “What did you read?” inquired the missioner. “Well,” said the man, “I began at the first chapter of the Book of Proverbs, and when I had finished the book she died!” Wild Kurd Girl Russian Mascot. Hadzhlna, a wild little six-year-old Kurdish girl, has become the mascot of a Russian artillery regiment operating on the Persian frontier. She was left behind when the population of the Armenian village of Hazar fled and Russian soldiers found her, clad in a filthy shirt, hiding in the depths of a bake oven. After she had recovered from fright under the kind treatment of her captors, the little one told through an Interpreter how she had been left behind by her mother, who escaped, taking with her another child. Her father, she said, was a soldier, and had been taken prisoner by the Russian troops. Her Idea. “Ma, your bank account Is overdrawn.” “What does that mean, pa?” "Simply this: You’ve written checks for $63 more money than was in the bank.” "The Idea! If $63 will break the bank I’d 2nd auuiuer one to do business with. I supposed they had thousands of dollars on hand all the time." —Atlanta Constitution. A Recipient of Hard Knocks. “Do you believe life is a game of give and take?” “I Certainly do.” /‘On what do you base your assumption?” “The fact that I have to take bo much more than I can give.”

(ißy theTtouse of'Kuppenheimed r® $ xjWfx MfrS i / 7 M *IV kF a distinguished A I group of KuppenM he r Models this season, one of the most en- K gaging is the BEAUFORT —-a young men’s style with the shapely lines of the current mode. The coat has three buttons, but // iOW it is worn open to the third, which // LOi O 7 fastens in the usual way or with Z< -H l a link button—while the waistcoat has the new fold military collar. 1 __ - TpiOr • 7 a jZ.,. tifc. ~~—/ Young men \ arc growing X more critical * ' \ as to-the sxuv? of- < .X* . ' \ =tiflrfr fashions. £, . 7 ... „ A They have more \ regard every day for- X ' \ correct style and show X . M . J a decided tendency to k \ rely on the broad guarantee V w of the Kuppenheimer Label, p V* • 7 x x The House of Kuppenheimer |K W supplies young men’s styles to the & , \ tw! j W best metropolitan trade. The values « / W V I are as right as the clothes. W X f ■ 4 ' \ > Prices—s2o to S4O Vs- - \ \ I ( IHh a I The HQiueofKupptnhtirMf Inmasn • ■■w. -ct.iii i i ■ .<>;</■■■■: % rwBMBa — ■ ■■■"■ /■ /- : ..y a, J ’•W, n i nmrtOl f 7 VANCE & HITE DECATUR CLOTHIERS’

****4-** + * + ** + ** ♦ TOO CORDS ♦ * of good dry ash cook wood. * * Call ♦ + BENNETT’S COAL YARD ♦ ♦ ’Phone 199. * 4.4.4.4.4.44.4.4.4.4.4.4.4.4. "auctioneer Harry Daniels, the live slock and farm sale auctioneer 10 years experience Phone at my expense E. W. FRANCE at Pleasant Mills, Ind. or CHARLES W. YAGER Decatur, Ind,

Dr. C. 0. Petry VETERINARIAN Ph nnna office 34 1 noneb Residence 30 MONROE, IND. Dr. L K. Magtey VETERINARIAN Corner Third and Monroe Streets. Phones DECATUR, IND.

Dr. C. V. Connell VETERINARIAN Ph rvn o Office 102 lllvilv Residence 143 150 CORDS DRY WOOD We have turned cur wood business over to EMERSON BENNETT Call Phone 199 for quick delivery of good dry white ash cook stove wood. SMITH & BELL,

LOOK HERE If you intend to make a sale this fall, and want satisfactory results, get a date with JFW I IFChTv LdiyuUl X Live Stock and General Auct. Phone 16 or 43 Monroe, Ind. Speaks English & Gsiuian. Satisfaction Guaranteed. FOR RENT-Seven room house on ofTsVT' AUmode ™- inquire lof 8. Spangler, 240 N. sth St. 2 2 3t3 ,

RED CHIEF Seed Wheat ADAMS COUNTY GROWN For Sale At Tkie Burk Elevator Co. Phone No. 25 PORTLAND CEMENT. Best Portland cement, 1.40 barrel, at Acker Cement Works. 224t6