Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 17, Number 79, Decatur, Adams County, 2 April 1919 — Page 5

■ S' M sri ir S’ ? L*w 0H ’ BG¥! ' ?f< <:. ' S?e i p, Take a look at S these smooth, shiny I Sn 1 1 U, Jg iwmk Cocoa Brown !' jr j -.fewOl u 3 ■ JX/\J Shoes we are sell- ph g K rS ing at $9.00. Lr V\jk ‘ P,ain S ° ft T ° C ’ 2k V Kozy Kick Tip and k ■- 1 i Long Slim English HE L 3 styles. I ■ Il ■ CHARLIE VOGLEWEDE s the foot fitter - - . ■ ' I

■ SMggßsx’;: if:: :: r : I f WEATHER J ®::: :-. ■ ■m<iiana--l , r<>bably ram !at< tmmht J- and on Thursday, warmer tonight. |-*Mrs. G. E. Steele went to Fort Wayne this morning on business. ■'Mrs. L. E. Zi<-k was a F<-ri Wayirn Hhteines visit",' y ‘st'-rd ' v . i'i m noun M. Mr. ami Mrs. Harry Hike s. . nt ye. terday afternoon in Fort Wayne. ‘ Mrs Earl l». Conner wen- to Gem va yesterday afternoon for a visit ■witfc, relatives. Lowilda l.eliiirt .’i e'nrm d . te atcr a visit with tier Mini at JJort Wayne. G. C. Steele, of Steeln <f- Btaekc’s t"attended ’ivrcir. ><wW«-»i in <yrt Wayne today. ■*B. Emerson Heavers Wafttni •I‘oling, rhi|"fi in Fmt W yu ’t ; • I Ji ~ .4 Dpn is|,ranf mvl ; .l»:iw .Tucker, /Wen business visitors in Fori Wayne today. Dr. and Mrs. J. Grindstaff went' j. to 'Fort Wayne today. The (lector Will attend the Masonic meeting . -'Mrs. C. E. Hocker went to Monr •■• HE to spend yesterday . yftt rHOun,. with } . her-Tather. J. |* Jbhrtfoii «i Myt anniversa»yX*Ai'.ffil* 1. '» ' • Jffrs. Sain Howard. Mrs. Albert Schlickman called on their daughter* and sister, Mrs. Merl Laisure, at the I ,x-~.s . ••*

—lM—■ — i - - — — H _ r - «■ ■»!»!» —-nw 'll —«*«*- The Home of Quality Groceries ■ H ■ ~ —— —— —

WE SAVE MONEY FOR OTHERS - YOU TRY IT! You get your money’s worth when you buy of “The Home of Quality Groceries,” where all goods are quality and price right on , every article. A good variety of Early Seed Potatoes—home grown—pure and true to name, at, peck 40c Our Garden Seeds are all new, and best to be bought, pkg 5c Heavy Galvanized Tubs, No. 1-..» $1.10; No. 2, $1.20 Extra Heavy Block Tin Pails . ....65c Heavy Galvanized Tubs, No. 1 $1.0; No. 2, $1.20: Our special in Toilet Soaps interests everybody. Tar, Witch Hazel, Cocoanut Oil. Hard Water Casteel, Canary Rose, Ruby Rose and Shaving ’Soap, each 5c ■ All high grade Milks, 4 small cans 25c; tall cans, 15c 1 Gal. Oil Cans 25c Red Beans, 2 cans 25c Mouse Traps, best, 2 for 5c Kidney Beans, can 15c Carton 60 Clothes Pins 15c No. 3 can Spinach, can 20c 20 Mule Team Borax, pkg 12'/zC Succotash, can 15c Lutz Gloss Soap, 6 bars a. 25c No. 3 can Moss Rose Pie Peach.. 15c We pay cash or trade for country produce: Eggs, 38c; Butter, 35c io 45c. y [ M. E. HOWER *k>rth of G. R. & I. Depot. ’Phone 108 S’ S ■ SMOKE THE I W ’ “WHITE STAG” CIGAR ffi yr, in | YOUR TONGUE WILL TELL YOU | $ MORE ABOUT IT THAN A PRINTED PAGE g I I ASK YOU? DEALER FOR 'EM | ■ rP Hi THANK YOU. ifi. Ks yM i

I hospital in Fort Wayne. She is reI covering nicely. Take it from a wise one if your po(tatoes are not in you’ll have no crop. .The change of the moon occurred last night. Chickens figured in Edward Major’s divorce suit at Chicago. He charged Iris wife with maltreating his ■ gamecocks. | Mesdamee Martin Fuelling, Roy ■ Runyon and Rebecca Harkless went. ' to Fort Wayne today, combining bus- : loess with pleasure. > : Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Kelley who have lived on Fifth street for some ; time have returned to Kendallville to' | make their home. Mrs. ITtdt. Mangold and Mrs. Hugh Hitft visited with M?'sdatr.es Earl Wat jermann and Paul Tribclet in Fort I Wayut) tnrtay. ■, ■ Three unadressed postal cards mail|ed at the local 'office'are awaiting’the ' (Sender" ‘Bettor call and see whether ■ you forgot to address any you sent. 11 The American CoAirtiittee for D-r ■ltvastatedlt'raniiifis taking care especpally of Allot uffildreji. ,ar.d the aged When the children are the aged, this ! will be remembered. rfusban'ds, bdWare! It cost- David | Thurman, fifty bucks to spank fils I wife. “A, hobryiilsd ?hoe is no weapon to apply to his wife,” ruled Judge . I Fletuing. ! Whentr:r.i ting man.tasked Emmy] F*asli. waftTwsAsi th’ Kittle Gem res-, tauygnt, t’ open his boiled eggs, this ] * hiornhik she asked fer a vote o' confidence. Somehow you can’t help

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2, 1919

feelin that you're goin't' git th’worst g of it when your wife agrees with you. * —Abe Martin, in Indianapolis News. ; The local Democrat All-Star basket ® ball team will g oto Fort Wayne Fri- 0 day night, where they will clash with j the fast Senator team at the Olympic J gym. j Dr. I). Clark, of Chicago, who 1 spent a few days here with relatives j and friends, left for Van Wert, 0., to ! visit with a sister before returning to ; Chicago. I Mrs. Anthony Voglewede, a patient I lat the Decatur hospital, returned to I the farm today, having recovered | 'nicely from an operation performed I three weeks ago. Mr. and Mrs. George Wemhoff have - made a number of improvements on ' ■ their residence on North Eighth I street, in readiness for the spring, including repainting and interior redec- , orating. A lumber firm at Liberty is now 'making gels feeders for hogs, accordi ing to plans obtained from the rural engineering department of Purdue University. As a result, objections of several users of the old kind, have keen done away w’ith and the new feeders are being found satisfactory. Captains of the Hancock county threshing rings will demonstrate to the men in their rings how to treat seed oats to prevent smut. As a reI suit it is thought, the yield of this crop there will be increased several bushels per acre this year because of the eradication of mut. ( A community seed corn tester for Whitley county farmers will be in operation at Columbia City until corn planting time. The county agricul- ’ tural agent and farmers’ association I agreed to have the tester built when ■ several hundred farmers asked that they bring their corn to the city to bo tested for its germination qualities. In the village of Pernant, ten miles from Soissons, two hundred and siX- ' ty persons dwelt in happiness before ‘the war. High explosives wrecked every building in the village. Nothing remains of the quaint Gothic church but two blackened walls. Even the couraged inhabitants of this village in the work of rehabilitation. The music teachers of the state, 'Tcntavn'as the Indiana Music Teachers’ Association, are making plans to hold the next annual-meeting at Muncie, on April 2'J, till and May 31st. This meeting will, be" the forty-second annual convention, and according to the Plans which are being arranged by the Program Committee it will be, the first in order of importance. Fifty thousand people without any homes . have been officially assigned ■by the French government to the | American Committee for Devastated ; France .which has undertaken to supi ply them—everytlitti'g. From spools Ito schools, from barrels to buildings, I everything must be supplied before they can take up again the broken {breads of their lives. Uncle Sam has decided to take the fourteenth census on farms January i 1. 1920, instead of collecting this data as of April 15, as was done in 1910. 1 The date was changed because farmers ordinarily are very busy with the rush of spring work about the middle of April, also because the April 15 date comes during the midst of the breeding season when the number of CONSTIPATION ACCELERATES OLD AGE. How to Rid the System of Malignant Poisons and Toxins. “You can find constipation in the bottom of many malignant diseases. Constipation has caused more suffering than many other diseases,” claim ' ed a famous physician recently. ’'Not ! only that,” he continued, ‘‘but it does i certainly accelerate old age and brings a premature death.” Do not allow constipation to make you older than you are. It is not necessary.” You do not. alloiV the corns on your feet to get the best of you—you cut it. vou treat it —until they are entirely gone. Then why not treat constipation, when it is so much more important, especially in view j of the fact your health depends upon ' it. Stomach trouble usually follows ' chronic constipation, spare yourself all this trouble by using a good purgative. | It is strange how many people fail to heed friendly warning. How many people have been asked by their physicians if their bowel movement. was perfect or not. Still they do not take the friendly advice, which i is—use a good laxative —take plenty I of exercise and there is absolutely no reason why you should not be . healthy. i Try a box of laxcarin. Note the , wonderful improvement it will produce. It will help you digest your i • food, it will gently assist your bowels to move. While it is true that it is very gentle in its actions —still it , is very effective. i Surely—you consider your health < above all.’ It is one acquisition j which should not be treated lightly. ( Do whatever you can to help mother nature perform its duties Try a box of Laxcarin Send for it today and t feel better tomorrow. t Laxcarin is sold solely by The t LAXCARIN PRODUCTS CO. ’ Price —$1.00 per box; 6 boxes, $5.00 , Money Order. Cash, Registered Letter * Wil! send C. O. D Anywhere Dept. E-147 Pittsburgh, Pa. €

ifi II ix« • • • | He Distinguished Himself in the Service of His Country | ' —— VANCE & HITE’S CLOTHES B HAVE DISTINGUISHED THEM- Lfi F SELVES in rendering a high type Si WHww of clothing service: Offering at Lu / ' times long wear, the newest and ■ most forceful styles, and the lit- ffi tie refinements that only the most yp •ft clever and expert tailoring can I Ml give - g I®' ® IB* Our Kuppenheimer and Best Ever Clothes FOR SPRING ARE BETTER B * i : THAN EVER ’ Not a trafe of ,ast 1 S WMHHI season’s designs. ONE 0F TIIE NEW INNOVAmu S TIONS IS THE WAIST-SEAM B '1 ' 'W? STYLE COAT ? OUR BEST-EVER KNEE S PANTSUITS !fi ifi m - Wfi have double seats and knees in the trousers, insuring almost douffi b,e wear - B fir W'*'' W W; x t Our Boys’Suits range from $5.50 | M to $16.00. S VI Hi Our Men’s Suits range from $12.50 ■II* .... y «?n Rouna of Ktippsahouaeß 'x '' J * A I VANCE & HITE I Hi —<--—-- - - ■ -- --

<i —i ,'m — /young stock is not ccmparble between northern and southern regions, and /finally because the returns on the [crops obtained during the winter are • more accurate than those obtained I later and comparable with the Decern- • her estimates of the Bureau of Crop I. Estimates. I Hundreds of colts, calves, pigs and ' lambs are lost,in Indiana each spring , because of failure of the owners to ’ see that the mothers get plenty of ex--1 ercises while carrying their young I says Dr. I* C. Kigin, veterinarian on ‘ the Purdue University extension staff ' Many of the breeding animals die dur1. ing the act of parturtion for want of .exercise during the period cf getta- ■ tion. ' i The program for the several hun- ' deed Hoosier boy and girl club men'.- ’ bers who will attend the annual Roundup at Purdue University, April ! 21, 22, 23 and 24 was completed today , and promises plenty of pleasure as ' well as work. More than 500 young- [ sters are expected for the round-up which is the first time that the Club I 1 members have gathered here except at the time at the annual farmers’ short course in January The French rinance ininistcr reports i that the war cost France $24,700,000. 000, or Fes. 123,500,000,000. The an- ’ nual tax budget of France is quadruple what it was before the war and ' a deficit of Fes. 22,000,000,000 to be met —somehow! American has spent more than $25,000,000 already. But the bills are not all paid—not nearly all paid. How are they to h ' paid if the people of the United States show the white feather? There’s only one I way: Buy your utmost part of the Victory Loan Bonds. More than a million dollars worth of furniture is Imported annually by, the West Coast countries of South America—Chile, Peru. Ecuador, and Bolivia, —and there is to bo an in . crease as soon as normal conditions are restored. A report issued tbdny; by the Bureau of Foreign ami Domes-: tic. Commerce, Department of Commerce, states that a great many of- - inhabitants have accumulated money during the war and that they will buy highgrade, v.ery ornate turn-1 iture as soon as they can get it. People generally think of money in a small way. The U. S. treasury j has to think of it in a large way. For example: The March 15 income tax payment will reach $1,200,000,000., Os that nearly $1,000,000,000 wil have to be spent immediately by the treasury to take up I. O *U. certificates ir the hands of the banks as security for the money they, have advanced to pay bills at the store since the Fourth Liberty Loan was sold., There no way 'out of t-foe narrows except straight sailing toward the

i ! Port of Success'for the Victory' Lib-i 1' erty Loan. the , 3gte; \ April 21. Bo ready to buy. - — —° t -See us for your tractor oils. We have the best.—Kalver-No- i [) ble Garage Co. 79t6 ' O —1 , THE FARMER’S OPPORTUNITY j ' ' —r-r ' . • . ? The First Joiilt st’dek Land Bank* o at Fort Wayne Is organized to loan' :- money on farms’ oh the government g I plan. The Federal Farm Loan Act', n was passed by congress to provide f capital for agricultural development. - It provides, money to the farmer at a f, low rate of interest for a period of 33.1. i- years. No commission. Money fur-1 nished the borrower at cost. No re- j i. newals. Partial payment privileges. I ~ Borrower may borrow up to 50 per I cent of the value of his land, not 1 counting in improvements and in ad- . v I dition 20 per cent of the insurable s value of the improvements. The i . loan never matures but is paid off I 3 on the installment plan at so much a 3 year. This cheap long time money is ’ ; a wonderful thing for the borrower. ' ■ He can buy more land, fix up and imI >rove what he has, invest in farm , machinery and stock and otherwise!, put liim:;elf in shape to make money. 4 f Coroe in and talk this matter over ! 4 with French Quinn. President of Tho J i Bowers Realty Co., offices over Vance j . and Hite’s clothing store, diagonally: | across from court house. ts 4 "VULCANIZING. $ Have your tires cared for by t A. W. Tanvas. Vulcanizing, * eastings, 50c up; tubes, 20c up. * Phone 471. * .UIIIX RELIEF I FROM mon !| Get Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets < That is the joyful cry of thousands 1 Ince Dr. Ed wards produced Olive Tablets, J he cvb state for calomel, •? Dr. Edwards, a practicing physician for •• 17 years and calomel’s old-time enemy, Jscovei-ed the formula for Olive Tablets 12 .vhile treating patients for chronic con* etipatlon and torpid livers. j Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets do not 4 ont-ain calomel, but a healing, scotiiinfi 4 vegetable laxative. j No griping is the “keynote"of these! ■title . ugar-caated, olive-colored tablets., 5 They cauac the bowels and liver to act i 3 mrmr’ly, Titoy never force them to 4 rir.natural action. j It you have a “dark brown mouth” now 3 and then —a bad breath —a dull, tiled 4 feeling—sick headache—torpid liver and j i are constipated, you’ll find quick, sure and 1 only pleasant results from one or two lit- 4 tie Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets at bedtime, i Thousands take one cr two every night 3 lust to keen right Try them. 10c and =* ’•sc per bCK, Aii drtiggists. \ 4 I .

!I ii ruaitßi—l an i , iiiiiwiii »rr^«miiwii—i GOOD WILL | The policy of this bank has been to use its re- | . sources for the sustaining and upbuilding of the | j commercial interests of this community. By these methods we have made our bank pop- | * ular in this city. j We solicit your business. I FIRST NATIONAL BANK £ Member Federal Reserve System I r l Decatur, Indiana X .. ■ .. * ■■ i I £ ilai! X i: Jit | THE DAY you determine to save regularly is the 4 | real starting point of your business life. J No fortune, large or small, was ever made v Hhout X | the start. •’ £ Every day that goes by without your starting an ac- | $ count removes you just that much farther X I FROM SUCCESS IN LIFE t * t Why not open an account with us at once and take * t your first step towards success? * .ilMWwwl j r .... ♦ |l44HH**4^ , 4^*M , *+*^*****+*4 I W*++*++4’** , i-++*****+****'*