Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 17, Number 105, Decatur, Adams County, 2 May 1919 — Page 5

| Mr. Business Man— 1 The thoughtful shoe-buyer—is one of || our most prized customers. It is such a satisfaction to demonstrate our ftS jfi values to a man who knows and appreciates So It is gratifying to have these men come !Hni u back and ask for another pair “just like I S haveon ” i |j Won’t YOU make this store YOUR store? S§ : |g BUSINESS BRINGING SHOES, $7, $8 and $9 jj| I CHARLIE VOGLEWEOE |

♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦+♦♦♦ + WEATHER + +*++++**++++*++* Fair tonight and probably Saturday, rising temperature. Miss Mary Laughlin went to Fort Wayne yesterday noon. Mrs. Freck Hower and daughter, Cleo Virginia, went to Fort Wayne to visit with her mother, Mrs. Oilier Butler. Mrs. Ora Hinton and babe returned to Fort Wayne last evening after a visit witli her mother, Mrs. W. .T. Miller who is ill. Mrs. Dan Tyndall went to Berne on the 1:05 train yesterday afternoon. Mrs. Elizabeth DeVilbiss of Detroit, is a guest at the A. R Bell homo and with other relatives in this city. Trustee Felty. of Wabash township transacted business here yesterday. C. C. Schafer who has been quite sick for a week past is reported to be improving slowly. Mrs. it. K. Allison, of Indianapolis, is here for a visit with Mrs. Dan Beery and other friends. The thirtieth annual conference of the employed officers of the Indiana Y. M. C. A. will be held at Richmond today and tomorrow. These conferences were organized by E. E. Stacy, state secretary, in November* 1890, and the first one also was held in the city of Richmond. All of the various city, railroad and college associations will be represented at the meeting.

The Home of Quality Groceries WE SAVE MONEY FOR OTHERS—YOU TRY IT! No need to wait for Saturday to do your grocery buying. You can save money at “The Home of Quality Groceries” any day in the week. Prices always right and Quality the best. 25c can Sterifoam and 25c Brush for toilet bowls 25c 5 cakes of Crystal White Soap and 10c bar Creme Oil Toilet Soap 30c Brush tlroom for carpets, rugs, linoleum or walls, each SI.OO bO finished, 4-inch Clothes Pins, in carton 15c 15c pkg. Redel's Marshmallows 10c Liby's Kraut, large can 12'd>c 10c Toilet Paper, 3 for 25c Self-rising Biscuit Flour, pkg 15c 5c Toilet Pape-, 6 for 25c 50 lb. Block Salt, each 65c Vegetable Toilet Soap, 3 for ...,25c Kidney Beans, Liby’s, can 10c Jap Rose Soap, each 10c Evaporated Corn, pkg 15c Lana Oil Toilet Soap, 3 for 25c We pay cash or trade for country produce: Eggs, 40c; Hu tier, 40 to 30c M. E. HOWER <orth of G. R. & I. Depot. ’Phone 108 WHITE STAG : SEGAR 1 ' » I I • 1 j| -a friendly smoke ’ I ■ > £ atisfy your | :! wyen senses for | iJPeven cents I :: | :: Ask your dealer j

’! Mrs. Harry Fuhrman and children, I i of Monmouth, were shopping here 1 I I yesterday. Mrs. Albert Aeschliman and chil-' ! dren went to Fort Wayne last even-, 1 ing to call on her mother-in-law, Mrs. Minnie Aeschliman at the hospital. What’s worse’n somebuddy askin’ you if you’ve been sick when you hain’t? Cheer up. think how hard ■ | mother works for jist board an’ , clothes. —Abe Martin in Indianapolis News. Mrs. Edward Miller, wife of a widely known farmer, at Noblesville, is in a serious condition from ptomaine: poisoning duo to drinking coffee that had stood overnight in a copper kettle. Following a banquet at the ! church, the occasion being to promote | an interest, in the Victory Loan. drive, Mrs. Miller went, to the church with , a iiumJvcr Os other women for the pur-| fuse of cleaning away die dishes and , putting the church in order. At noon , they v. armed over some of the lunch j that had been left. Included in the lunch was some coffee that had been left in the kott.le over night. jflrs. Miller drank some of the beverage, ■ her condition soon became alarming, and she still is very sick. When the after-war need is past Red Cross canteen workers will be enrolled as canteen reserves, ready , to serve in any emergency which may ' | arise in Lake Division communities. 1 in Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky, there are 148 disabled soldiers who i are learning new vocations at. various

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, FRIDAY, MAY 2, 1919

trade schools, colleges, business and • I professional offices. Almost all of Lthent have been reported to the Fed-! I j eral Board for Vocational Education j: by Red Cross Home Service workers. | J j W illiam Page, of Butler, stopped j I here between trains yesterday. He! j j took possession of his newly purchased store at Butler yesterday, j Mesdames J. O. Sellemeyer and J. I Q. Neptune went to Fort Wayne for | tho day. j Mrs, Dennis Brandyherry and son, I Doyle, went to Fort Wayne to call on ! I her mother, Mrs. Ed Marschand. Every minister in Indiana has re- 4 | ceivwl a personal request from Louis jC. Hucsmann, Federal I>abor DirecI, tor, to devote at least a part of his || program Sunday, May 4, to the subject ,<>f the employment of discharged sol- | diers, sailors and marines, in keeping i with the federal government’s plan. ‘ Many individual ministers have assured Mr. Heusmann of their wildug- ! | ness to do all possible and from, many j associations of ministers have come resolutions pledging the full support and co-operation of their membership in making Employment Sunday successful. The observance of the day will be nation wide. W. E. Johnson is attending the T. ■P. A. convention in Indianapolis, be- ! ing a delegate from the local Post. The regular business meeting of ! the Rotary club was held last eveni ing at the city ball. Robert Allison of Indianapolis was ' in the city tgday looking after business matters. Those who went to Fort Wayne this morning on the 10 o'clock car were Mrs. W. M. Phipps, Miss Irene Nidlinger. Mrs. Helen Blossom, Mrs. Oscatv Hoffman and son, Billy. ) Mrs. Rufus Franks, of Portland, Oregon, is hare visiting with her uncle, James Steele and family. FOURTH DEGREE NOTICE. ; j There will be a meeting of the Fourth Degree Assembly. No. Bfi4, K, of C'., Sunday afternoon at 3:30. Alt members are requested to be present as there is a matter of importance to como before this assem-! bly. By order of F. N. 203t2 j ■* l

< > " J * i • I: Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company ;j •• • » • i ;; If you are Thirty (30) years of age and buy a ;; Penn Mutual complete Protection 20-Payment ;; ;; Life Policy it guarantees a cash value of $555.22. If ;; ;; issued at the ages indicated below the guaranteed ;; ;; cash value would be as stated opposite the age. ;; II Age Cash Value J | •• 21 $468.00 26 $514.30 •• 22 476.80 27 524.23 II ;; 23 485.83 28 534.37 “ 24 495.10 29 544.71 «• II 25 504.59 30 555.22 - « i i 1! Save this for future reference 1 a » a II Besides these amounts you will have had the 20 I II years’ profits, payable each year, beginning the I II first year. Read YOUR POLICY and see what it • 11 guarantees. I • For full information concerning insurance, fill ;; ;; out the following blank: ;; a i Name :: a i Address II ;: Date of Birth II ai ! I Mail blank to: II ai • * II JOHN H. STAROST, Agent, j| | The Penn Mutual Life Ins. Co., £ | Decatur, Indiana. | jT"' — *?'' p —■■■■ ■ ' wwwar w«a«HHFr».T-<»w ' ■■■■ MORE RED BLOOD AND STEADIER | NERVES FOR Hi DOWN PEOPLE The World Demands, Strong, Vigorous, Keen-Minded, Men and Women lj | , It lias been said of Americans that they work Iheir habits over- ■ | time. Many become nervous and inefficient by overwork. ' Bv worry, despondency, social affairs, robbing brain and body ;| of needed rest; excessive use of tobacco, indulgence in strong alco, >! liolic drink—excesses of every kind that burn up tin* vital powers ’• .so siecessarj in these trying limes to make both men and women lit to be of help to themselves and others. It in lime to he temperate in ail things. The man or woman wilii impaired nerves caused bv impoverished biood lacks vigor, 1 the ambition, the endurance and the keen mind of those who avoid excesses. I Tiinluness, despondency, fear, trembling bands, want of confidence and eve:: cov.-urdliutss, arc due in a large measure to abused nerves. People with plenty of red blood corpuscle* and strong:, healthy nerves have sic desire to shirk work and lean on others for guidance and support. There is hardly a nerve-shattered man or woman (unless of an organic cLVenoe) in America today who cannot become alert and clear in miiia, vigorous and energetic in body in u very few weeks and at trilling cost. To become strong and ambitious, to feel that, work is not. drudgery; t«> i hive r-seedy nerres, abundance of red blood and power of endurance; to be’not only a man but. as men now go, a superman, you must take seven tablets of Bio-ieren every day for seven daya—and take them faithfully. Take two after each rr*al and one fit bedtime a:: I after seven <la~s *ako enr only alter incut until the supply is exhausted. Turn ; that any claim made in this special notice ir, untrue—if your nerver urt not tv.i-e as steady as before; if von do not feel ambitious, n " r and kern-minded, the pharmacist who dispensed thz tablets to V iil gladly hand yot; back just what you paid for them. Bio-feren Is without doubt the grandest remedy for nervous, rundown, ■weak anaemic- men and women ever offered direct through druggists and is U n ‘ , * t ai A c n r"‘'tive All druSfifcfc ;a this city and vicinity Lava* a supply on

BURIAL SATURDAY Funeral of Diedrich Scheuman of Near Hoagland Will be Saturday. ULCERS OF STOMACH Cause of Death—Forty-six Years of Age — Widow and Seven Children. Tile funeral of Diedrich Scheuman. aged 46, residing near Hoagland, who di“d Wednesday morning at the Lutheran hospital, Fort Wayne, following an operation two weeks ago for ulcers of the stomach, will be held Saturday afternoon at 1:30 o’clock from the residence and at two o’clock from the St. John’s Lutheran church, with burial in the church cemetery. The deceased was born February 6, 1873, in Allen connty, and lived practically all his life in Marion township. He was a member of St. John’s Lutheran church at Bingen, and is survived by the widow and seven children —Edwin. Elmer, Arthur, Irma, Hilda, Bernice and Leona, and also by the following brothers and sisters: Charles, William, Theodore and Martin Scheuman, Miss Minnie Scheumann, Mrs. Sophia Freuchtenieht, Mrs. Mathilda Auman, Mrs. Julia. Seddlem°yer, all of this vicinity, and Mrs. Lyseita Dirkson, of Hobson, Mont. ■■■ — - o DECATUR M. E. CiRCUIT Mt. Pleasant —Sunday, May 4, Sunday school at 9:30 a,, m., J. E. Spangler, supt. Preaching at 10:30 a. m„ subject: “Our Father in the Present Day Kingdom Work." Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at 8 p. m. Washington—Sunday school at 9:30, a. m.. B. F. Breiner, supt. Preaching J at S:00 p. m. VERNIE C. ROGERS, Pastor

1 pLtJP UM-M-M-M ! Home-made bread, still warm Try this Recipe from the oven! It tastes SO good, rich BREAD—Take 1 qt. luko-wnrm water, add 1 and sweet and fine in flavor. Bread baking £& with DIADEM is a real pleasure, because it “ h iard ’'('about gives such splendid results and is so wonderfully easy to handle. make a dough—not too stiff, but just so you J J can work it. Knead dough for in minutes. ~, r . __ . , . . Let rise to twice its size. Shape into loaves You il nnd j'ou can use DIADEM with equal nr,d |Jllt into Let rise again until - , , , . n twice its size. Grease loaves on top and bake success tor bread, cakes, pastries ana all other ln moderately hot oven for m to cu minutes, kinds of baking. DIADEM is an ideal all- la ,„ purpose flour—always highest quality and always the same. 'r ~ t ' Get a sack of DIA DEM and see the i ' * difference it unit make in your baking. /• c ) Milling Company ‘ Boniface, Weber & Allen Wholesale Distributors for Diadem Flour Muncie, Indiana

PLAN ORGANIZATION WORK FOR THE YEAR. Peru, Tnd„ May 2 —The newly-elect-ed members of the executive commit- , tee of the Woman’s Franchise League | of Indiana, state organizers, chair- • men of standing committees, and a • other state workers will gather in ] Indianapolis Monday, May 5, to dis- • cuss the league organization and the 'f special needs of 'each district in the > state. A program for the year’s work J and plans for the speaker's bureau to • be maintained by each district will • , be outlined. The plans will in turn | be presented to the presidents of the ■ 225 branch leagues of the state, and * il —- —

• v.v.s **•» v:v .. It You emit -*vnff battery-'* • I • Nothing contributes more to the pleasure of your motoring than that sudden “zip” of power that spins your engine into instant activity; and you can’t possibly have it unless your battery is right —powerful, sure, dependable. The energy of a starting battery is a great deal like the energy of a lighting man; it must be able to deliver its blow quick and straight on an instant’s warning, and to put behind that blow sufficient power and punch to make the effect thoroughly telling. Into the development of the power and punch of the Batftey has gone the experience of thirty-one years of storage battery designing and building. The “JExi&C” Battery is it fighting battery---put into your ‘Solvin'; the individual nv.l oriel 1 individual hatu ry probcar to fight your starting, lighting ami ignition battle it k:i;s.” It tan and is ready to solve yours. ‘if 1 /! every detail as nearly infect in itself IMvp aroum! aitd se e „s today. Vic ran give mu “ExldC” and in its rclatjon to other ch ;-..5, as the knowledge and Service aU jls ,K.rorghn. sc. 'K il us jus. what you facd.ues of the largest ma.ai .titurer of storage battencs m t /rom ymlr battery and under just what conditions •fa lhe ' vorld can n,akc “* you operate your tar. We are organized and equipped to “E.XtC'C” Service is not confined to “Exi&C” see that you gel the best your battery can give regardless Batteries. It is based on the broad principle of of its make. £|iP ff Durkin Modern Garage Decatur, Ind. THIS SIGN . ' Batftey . " ,m ■

! suffrage leaders are confident that the j year 1919-1920 will be the most suej cossful year in the history of suffrage in Indiana. The state board of directors will hold their regular monthly meeting in the Claypool hotel Tuesday, May 6, at which time Miss Helen Benbridge, the new state president, will preside. - MUSICAL AT CHURCH One of the sections of the I). Y. B. class working to raise n.onev for the j t uilding fund, will give a musical at the United Brethren church next Thursday evening. The public is very ; cordially invited to this concert, I I

PAGE FIVE

MONDAY THE LAST DAY Under the new law, next Monday will be the last day to file mortgage* exemptions, instead of today, the first of May, as prior to this. TWO-CENT SUPPER TONIGHT | A two-cent supper will be given toj night after Ben Hur lodge for ail Ben Hurs and their friends who wish to ! come. Everybody is invited. TuiAANIZiNG. Have your (ires eared for by A. W. Tanvas. Vulcanizing, casings, 50c up; tubes, 20c up. 'Phone 471.