Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 17, Number 114, Decatur, Adams County, 13 May 1919 — Page 3

/ 4® 'x® £ i 11 foil I &*%> t I I I are as delightful to your >-z taste as they are new. And, so ered carton. We strongly recommend this r, '-j . r . . . carton for the home or office supply or when satisfying that they meet every cigarette > ou lr ‘ v *'- desire you ever have had. 18 cents a package Camels are unusual; in fact they’re unlike any cigarette you ever smoked. That’s because they’re an expert blend T 5 ■ of choice Turkish and choice Domestic . ] lO *4l tobacco, producing a quality that meets W vour taste as no other cigarette ever did. ... J/ J Camels’expert blend gives that mellow- V '■2 bK '| f <L V mild-body and frees the cigarettes from 7$ any unpleasant cigaretty aftertaste or vl any unpleasant cigaretty odor. You J can smoke Camels as liberally as you like without tiring your taste. You have only to get personally acquainted with the expert Camel blend x?' to know that you prefer it to either kind / W W (’■ •■ of tobacco smoked straight! For your own satisfaction compare z ,/ Camels with any cigarette in the world / a’aHypric.! PW f , R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., Wiaiton-5.1.n,f1. C. fjl M S

■RHKB*** '-’■ ■ «.«-»■».-■; C -V , i,--- .. ■—— ; The Manufacturing Facilities of The Standard Oil Company {lndiana) UNDERLYING the manufacturing activities of tHc Standard Oil Company (Indiand), are the same high ideals of service; the same thoughtful consideration of detail; the same earnest desire to do a big job thoroughly and well, which animates the Company in every other branch of its business. Every facility which wide experience, ample resources, and the utmost skill of scientifically trained technicians can devise, or suggest, is provided to insure absolute uniformity and the highest standard of quality in each of the many products manufactured by the Standard Oil Company (Indiana). * The manufacturing facilities of the Company are concentrated in three great refineries, one located at Whiting, Ind., covering 700 acres; one at Wood River, 111 , covering 600 acres; and one at Sugar Mo., covering 200 acres of ground. The Whiting works is conceded to be the most complete, the most perfectly organized oil refinery in the world. Here practically every product of petroleum is manufactured,and here are located the great research laboratories where the problems of manufacture arc worked out and solved. The plants at Wood River and Sugar Creek are modern in every particular and so Oi ganized as to use every part of the crude oil. This enables tht Company to keep manufacturing costs at a minimum and to supply its patrons with prod- ; ucts of the highest standard at prices which otherwise would be impossible. The 7.000 earnest, industrious, well-paid men and women who make up the personnel of these three refineries, constitute, wc believe, the must loyal, the most enthusiastic, most efficient, industrial army to be found anywhere. The facilities alone for manufacture maintained by the Standard Oil Company (Indiana) represent an investment of approximately $50,000,000. This investment is growing constantly to enable the Company to maintain the high standard of service ; it has set for itself and which it believes the public is entitled to receive. Standard Oil Company {lndiana) 910 S. Michigan Ave. Chicago 1214 TRY A DEMOCRAT WANT AD” DEMOCRAT WANT ADS GET RESULTS;

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, TUESDAY, MAY 13, 1919,

■ ■ 11 PUBLIC AUCTION. The Hoosier, Packing < .apany will offer at public auction to the highest bidder, beginning at 2 o’clock p. m. on Thursday, May 15, 1919, 1 their packing plant, including 2 1 /2 ! acres of ground anti all buildings belonging’ thereto, capacity 75 to TOO ; hogs daily, with a new artificial lee plant’in connection, Wolfe-Linde lee machine, 40-ton refrigerator capacity ■ daily, a complete set of modern sausage machinery, rendering and tank-; ago outfit, consisting of tanks, dryers, etc. Will also offer for sale our retail meat market on Second street. By DYONIS SCHMITT, Pres, i 105tll D. M. HOWER, Secy. Plenty of Linkage- at the I Hoosier- Packing Co. 113t3 • There will be a dance at the Moose hall Thursday night. Be-' ; ginnurs’ class al 8 o'clock. Reg- ■ ular assembly dance at 9 O’clock. Good music and a Igood time is assured. 10813 PUBLIC SALE°OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS The undersigned will offer for sale to the highest bidder at ! public auction the household goods belonging to the estate of A. N. Steele, deceased, at tlte late residence of said decedent at the corner of slh and Madi- | son streets, in the citv of Decatur. Adams Codftty, Indiana, fit II o’clock p. in.. Saturday, May. ’l7. 1919. Said goods consist in part of one Buick automobile, fourcylinder, good as new; one ’auto truck, one china closet. . 1 lot of bed clothing, one kitch- ( ’ eu cabinet, one gas range, one iextension table, two settees, one wash lavatory, one lot of soft ! coal in the bin, one lot of ■ dishes, two rugs, one base burner, two beds complete, one book case, one dresser, two small rugs, a number of chairs, including rocking chairs, din- ! ing chairs and kitchen chairs; I mirrors, stands, gas stove, matj ting, carpet, dresser, umbrella I rack, garden tools, couch, and many other articles. I AH goods must be settled for i on date of sale, either by cash ■or note to the approval ol the i undersigned executor. | DAYTON STEELE. Executor. | | Rov Runyon, Auct. _ : j W. A. Lower, Clerk 113 to , ■ ———————<3 - —1 ONE MILLION DOLLARS TO LOAN One million dollars to loan at j 51/2 per cent, on improved J farms. Ten years’ time with j privilege of making partial pay- j ment at any interest-paying I dates. Abstract of title on short order. JOHN SCHURGER & SON Office on second floor, over 1 Fisher & Harris grocery. »

MEM PUBLISHED Poem Submitted hy Guy Bess, of Decatur, Indiana University Student, to THE WRITERS’ CLUB For Membership—Published by Club in Indiana Daily Student. The Indiana Daily Student, published by the state university, contains under “The Writer ’ (Tub” page a loeni written by Guy Bess, son of T. W. Bess, of this city. The poem was submitted by Bess to the Writers’ club which requires the submission of three manuscripts from prospective j membership student-: If the three' manuscripts are uj> to the standard, the authors are admitted to membership in this “Writers’ Club." This was the first one submitted by Bess and to his surprise it was one selected for publication by the club for its ! 1 age in The Daily Student. J. Dwight I Peterson, of this city, is editor-in-chief ( of Tlie Student. 1 Bess’ poem, which possesses great I interest as to subject matter, is writI ten in a style that is remarkably fine, lit follows: Two Cups of Wine. No splendor of the autumn sunset I seen | I By that poor Flemish maid of sevenI teen! ' A faded beauty, figure bent and frail, : Retells her silent but. pathetic tale 'As she before th. kitchen window stands 'And breathless, blindly stares on | wasted lands. I The quickly passing scenes of two I long years 'That have transformed her life of joy to years; departure of her folks and friendly faces; , The coming of th‘> Germans in their ; places; All these before' L r like a phanton sweep. While nervous, hr athleSS there, ahG I ponders deep. I. ’ z . . , . i i '•)' i Alono in company with a Prussian | guard . Who .sits before her cottage in the I yard, Impatient, waiting for his ordered drink— Good cause has -he to worry and to think! Then quickly turning towards two ; cups of wine, One filled with drugs, one pure and I crystalline. She falters, stops and then again reflects—• Is it the poison one that she selects? A premise for revenge, she must ful- | fill—- i ’ls hate master of each human will? But. stay! for now she suddenly calls to mind The soldier's letter, she has chanced to find; And- then, how’ there his young and tender wife Tells how she prayed that. God would share his life: That he would soon be home; his liti tie boy ’ Had learned to walk to her delight and joy— The breathless girl—and is she really kind?— Tn hesitation pick, one cup of wine, i I —G. B. B. i j VULCANIZING. Have your tires cared for by A- IV. Tanvas. Vulcanizing, casings, 50c up; tubes, 20c up. '■ ’Phone 471. I

i BACK LIKE A BOARD? ■ IT’S '■ YOUR KIDNEYS ; There's no use suffering from the . inwfiil ngony of lame bacs. Don’t wait I till it “passes off.” It only comes back. ( Hind the cause and stop it. Diseased | conditions of kidneys are usually indi- ■ cated by stiff iarne backs and ether wrenching painz, which are nature's signals for help! Here’s the remedy. When yon feel the first twinges of pain of experience any of these symptoms, get busy at once. Go to your druggist and get T 4i ie P” re »«.original GOLD wILDAL HsarJtm Oil Capsules, imported fresh every month from the laboratories in Haarlem, Holland. Pleasant and easy to take, they instantly attack the poisonous germs clogging your system and bring quick relief; ior over two hundred years they have been helping the sick. Why not try them? Sold everywhere by reliable druggists in sealed packages. Three sizes. Money back if* they do : yo ?’ . Ask for "GOLD MLDAL and be sure the name “GOLD MEDAL” is on the box.

WORKMEN RIJII D EMPLOYMENT‘S OFFICE. ! — West Virginia Laborers Gave Their J Time and Labor to Put Up Tempo- • rary Quarters for Clerks Placing < Soldiers in Jobs. Workmen of a West Virginia city J gave their time and labor willingly ■ for the construction of a temporary • employment booth In that city when ! it was learned that the Uniled States J Em ploy merit Service Would have to ' give up its quarters for lack of funds, ■ according to a report by a field speak- J er of the Information and Education ; Service, Department of Labor. The necessity for continuing the ! office as a clearing house for jobs was J considered so urgent that the work- ' men of the city, on their own initia- < tive. decided to build quarters for thel! work. A site was found and mater- * ials given, and men in the building ; trades, refusing to accept any pay for < | their services, quickly put the office ! ' into commission. J j Throughout West Virginia there is • a splendid spirit of cooperation be- . tween em; loyer and employee, and in ! i spite of the uncertainty that has fol- J lowed the armistice business is going ■ ahead, the speaker reports. There has . been an excellent response to the I “Build a home” movement, and in al- ' most every municipality public works • held back by the war are being push- , (d forward as a means of providing ] buffer employment in the emergency, j ■j --n 3 LABOR DEPARTMENT ASKS ij UNIONS’ HELP IN ELIMIN- jf ATING -HAZARDS. “Gassing” is a peril of industry as: I well as war. the Working Conditions) Service, Department of Labor, points■'out in a request to labor unions in air ■ parts of the country for cooperation j in eliminating health hazards. Ftirn-j /ace tenders in steel mills, boiler clean: j ers, and men employed in work along l ( ' gas mains are all in danger of beingl gassed' in the course c,t their work un-| less the most careful precautions are; taken. ' > | “The percentage of deaths from tu-. berculosis in the industry trades is | I large,” the service points out. "Sharp’ .'hard particles cut and injure the'. • I lungs and prepare a breeding place 1 , J for tuberculosis germs. Glass blow- , ers are likely to be disabled for their | ( 1 trades by cataracts. Those employ- j ,ed ip bleaching processes, ip using benzol. wood alcoh'cT, chemicals, mak- ■ ing dry batteries, have special oci cupational hazards." II The service urges iho workmen to i 1 .guard’ their health with the greatest /'care, pointing out that sickness means] ! loss of wages find increased expense, if, indeed, it does not mean loss of a . job. Sickness may often lie caused by materials used in work or by coni ditions in the workroom. Some of I these health hazards can be easily ; ' eliminated, and others can at least . lie guarded against, . $..108n h..u6sls HlL.shrd shrrshrh . o- — j <| BUY BABY BONDS S Indianapolis, May 13—“ Cut your ’ coupons aud buy Baby Bonds” was J ■ the advice given holders of the Sec- . jond Liberty Loan today by the Indi- ' '.ma War Savings Committee. Wed- • nesday, May 14. is the day the gov- . . emment pays interest on the 4 per [ cent bonds of the Second Loan, and • the 4!i per cent bonds into which • j Second Loan bonds were converted. . The committee's statement said: J “Liberty bond interest coupons ; should be clipped promptly, and ■ | prbmfly reinvested. Thriftless money ! or money which lies idle, is of no J | benefit to the iiidividual. or the com- ; munity. Money should lie put to • | work where it can earn the most in j, the safest way. just as the individual . ■ should be kept busy. The govern . ment. foliowin:- the Victory T.oan, is • i now paying interest to the people at . i the rate of nearly a billion dollars a G i year. This is tho money earned by ;; the savings of the people invested in <> the securities of the government. ! J These earnings should be put to work. ’ J and there is no better, safer place of • > employment, for money than the Wat < > Savings Stamps and Thrift Stamps J J issued by the government. • “Two semi-annual interest coupons < clipped from SIOO 4’ t per cent trends ! will more, than buy a War Savings J Stamp, costing $4.16 in May. In Jan- ' uary 1924 this War Savings Stamp < will bo worth $5.”. < JOHN C. MELLETT. ; Director of Publicity. •

' MASONIC NOTICE. J Tuesday, May 13, 7:30 p. m. ' Regular meeting of the Blue Lodge. < Business of importance. All mem- J bers please attend. J GEO. E. KINZLE, W. M. < Vulcanizing with modern ; equipment. Prompt service.— j Holthouse Garage. 78tf ’

fei -Z / * E will waM ? BE PLLA'jEO L-jOL- . * • T to open an V. ifAliw W.X falgaM EaFrMIl : IT SAVES TIME—IT SAVES WORRY | ■ and gives you a feeling of protection against ■ possible misfortune * ;; No ma tter how independent you are today * ;; there is no telling in what position you will be to- ■■ ;; morrow. :■ A SAVINGS ACCOUNT : • WILL PROTECT YOUR FUTURE ;; We solicit the accounts of WOMEN and promise YOU special COURTESY AND :: CONSIDERATION ;; :: » J JLJJll! :: i i MORE RED BLOOD AND STEADIER NERVES FOR RUN DOWN PEOPLE The World Demands, Strong, Vigorous, Keen-Minded, Men and Women It has been said of Americans that they work their habits overtime. Many become nervous and inefficient by overwork. By worry, despondency, social affairs, robbing brain and body of needed rest; excessive use of tobacco, indulgence in strong alcoholic drink—excesses of every kind lhat burn up the vital powers so necessary in these trying times to make both men and women fit to be of help to themselves and others. It is time to be temperate in all things. The man or woman with impaired nerves caused by impoverished blood lacks vigor, the ambition, the endurance and the keen mind of those who avoid excesses. Timidness, despondency, fear, trembling hands, want of confidence and even cowardliness, arc due in a large measure to abused nerves. People with plenty of red blood corpuscles and strong, healthy nerves have no desire to shirk work and lean on others for guidance and support. There is bnrdly n nerve-shattered man or woman (unless of an organic disease' in America today who cannot heroine alert and clear in nu'ud; \igorous and energetic in body in a very feu weeks and at trifling cost. To become strong and ambitious, to feel that work is not drudgery; tf> have steady nerves, 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 ofj Biu-feren every day for seven days—and take them faithfully. Take two after each meal and one at bedtime and after seven days taka one only after meal until the supply is exhausted. Then if yoe £>el that any claim made in this special notice is untrue—if your nerves are not twice as steady as before; if vou do not fe<l ambitious, more vigorous and keen-minded, the pharmacist who dispensed the tablets to you will gladly hand you back just wnat 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 iiot at all expensive. All druggists in this city and vicinity have a supply oa hand—sell many packages. i Loans Loans Loans;; ? wsHwrafijirafsa#! ajssacsEsafi-’s erasaatTirASSS?! ‘ ;• We make loans on farm property for 5 1 /? per 3 ;; cent on ten years’ time, with privilege of partial " I payments. I We also have plenty of money to loan on city I property. ;; i Let us know your wants. ;; i THE DECATUR ABSTRACT & LOAN CO. I ; 157 So. Second Street ♦ I Decatur, - - Indiana ? ! Henry B. Heller, Pres. E. Burt Lenhart, Scc’y * r-.». -f- -T- -f. ,f. -T- -T.-V- T- ,9. .f. J. .f. . -T. ,T- -f, ■?. ... ■*. -t. ts- -T- -t- -f - -t- -t- ,? X .t. J, 3 1 » hltA »t» ■T» A A J.X A i .’tvtt V*r• •• • BINDER I TWINE | : J • > • , t , B ■ I ; We still have a small amount of twine* on hands :: ; that we are selling at 18 cents. Remember, this is I! ;; International Harvester Co. Twine, and an actual j! ’; saving of 6to 7 cents per pound to any farmer that ! i !: is going to need twine. Better come in and buy i J I! what twine you need before it is all gone. ? T fSchafer Haniwi’t' to./

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