Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 17, Number 292, Decatur, Adams County, 9 December 1919 — Page 3

THE schedule t 4« Traction Line—May pUtwy f ke c,rs off Later M ‘Lhrßhi'' ll 11( ’" 1 '' 1 ' it " l ' l ' 1 "" 1 ’ U " me F' Wayno & ir °*3s»W»Lit. , n | le'l. it was decided <>n this line bo left l<> the line fljowpver, it’ the coal sit-1

wjwant you to be personally acquainted with the oflicerߩf this hank. * Balking Service to be most helpful to you must be based oil a personal, friendly understanding of your needs. This Bank offers you all the facilities of i successful in- I stilutli'n, combined with a friendly, personal understanding tpat makes your banking relations congenial.

THE LARGEST |

mßßr^' 111 ,^, »«»»»«»»»»■ ■ ■ ■ mHiTin....".”'., To Get Ahead Look Ahead Look for the man who is successful and you will ' find that he is always looking ahead for the best in f life, preparing for the ills we are all prone to. He f is ffl'i paring for the worst and is read} to meet it if incomes. LOOK AHEAD and vou will always GET AIKAD—Save MONEY TODAY, TOMORROW and all the lime. I First National Bank I I UNDER U. S. GOVERNMENT SUPERVISION. | DECATUR, INDIANA. frrwMrw * t <'» ■ «i 1»11 vv 72c FOR YOUR BUTTERFAT AT OUR STATION, • 236 N. 2nd St. r $ j OPEN EVERY DAY AND SATURDAY EVENING | We sell butter to our cream patrons at butterfat prices. I'E' WE APPRECIATE YOUR PATRONAGE. SCHLOSSER BROS. | CREAMERIES J 58KKESE5 i 5® i OSKS&SHBtBi, I 81-GRADE Cane Molasses I I For Your Dairy Cows, Steck, Swine, I I Horses and Sheep I ■ Be your own feed mixer, mix high giadc | II cane molasses with your rouhage. Hi-G:ade ''' cane molasses will produce more milk, bin < || flesh faster, and save money for you. COME IN AND TALK IT OYER. I B For sale by I J. S. McCROY & SON

nation does not |nip’ ( >ve no doubt some of the trains will he taken off but they will make u Hpecla) ' elloi't to notify the public through the newspapers upon the chance of their schedule. Through propagation and protection 'the imported Chinese phesant has heeome one of the most abundant game i birds in western Oregon.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1919.

ADOPTS SLOGAN BASED ON FACTS i “Try Trutona” Appeal of Vincennes Lady to Those Troubled Vincennes, Ind., Dec. 9. —"Try Tru--11 lona and you will be sure to gain reI lief, is the slogan adopted by Mrs. I ( buries Bixler, a well known Vincen- | ties woman of 814 Carbon street. II “I’d suffered with nervousness, I stomach trouble and pains around my I heart for more than a year," Mrs. UixI ler said, in describing her experience I] with the perfect tonic. “1 was so restI less 1 could hardly sleep and 1 couldn't I do much better when It came to eatI ing. 1 could hardly eat meat of any I kind. Naturally 1 felt weak and run

I down. | “But I sleep well at night and get , up in the mornings feeling refreshed since taking Trutona. I can now eat a hearty breakfast and thoroughly enjoy it and I don’t experience the bad effects from my other meals that 1 formerly did. The pains around my heart have ceased to Ixither me now. I 1 say to others troubled as 1 was, i fake Trutona and you will be sure to I gain relief.’ ” II Trutona is now being introduced in I to Decatur nt Smith. Yager & Falks.

■ to Decatur nt Smith, Yager & Falks. I ■■. . . .. — N i-H. i NOTICE i The date of the cow sale which was i Ito be held Friday Dec. 12th at the 1 Horse Sale Barn on First street Decat'nr Indiana is changed to Saturday Dec. 13th. Farmers please take notice. BUTLER & AHR. | A winged bicycle, driven only by human power, recently made a flight of twelve meters in France. izr —————— _ WINTER WEATHER AND HEAVY FOODS ! Comparatively few persons exer- | else as much outdoors in winter as 1 in summer, and at the same time al--1 most everybody eats more heartily in I cold weather. The extra work put i upon digestive organs leads to indi--1 gestion, biliousness, headache, bad i breath, coated tongue, bloating, gas, (constipation. Foley Cathartic Tablets thoroughly cleanse the bowels, sweeten the stomach and benefit the i liver. They cause no griping or nausea and are liked by over-stout persons who welcome the light, free feeling they bring. Jj XOTIt l-: or PETITION TO SELL I HEAL ESTATE. i I Probate Pause No. 1699. ', Barbara Bremerkamp. Executrix of the estate of Henr> H. Brtxnerkamp. deceased, vs. Otto Bremerkamp, Haymond Bremerkamp, Clara Bremerkamp, Clarence Bremerkamp, Earl 1 Bremerkamp. Eugene Bremerkamp, 1 Estelle Krone, Adolph Krone, et al. In the Circuit Court of Adams Clunty, Indiana. November Term, 1919 Notice to Non-residents. To Otto Bremerkamp, Bremerkamp, Earl Bremerkamp, Eugene Bremerkamp, Estelle Krone and Adolph Krpne. » You are hereby notified I hat the above named petitioner as Executrix of the estate aforesaid has , filed in the Circuit Court of Adams — County. Indiana, a petition. making you defendant# thereto, and praying therein for an order and decree of ■' said Court authorizing the sale of verfl lain real estate belonging to the es- ■ tate of said decedent, and in said petifl /lon described, to make assetts for the ■ payment of the debts and liabilities ■ of said estate; and has also tiled an ■ affidavit averring therein that you B ami 'each of you are non-residents of U the stat eof Indiana ami that you are ■ necessary parties to said proceedings, fl and that said petition, so filed and ■ which is now pending, is set for hear- ■ ing in said Court at the Court House fl in Decatur, Indiana, on the 14th day of January, 1920. Witness the Clerk and seal of said Court this sth day of December, 1919. JOHN T. KELLY. ' Clerk Adams Circuit Court. Merryman & Sutton, Attorneys for Executrix. 10-17-7 T NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT OF ESTATE. Notice is hereby given to the creditors. heirs and legatees of llalph It. Spade. deceased. to appear in the Adams Circuit Court, held at Decatur, Indiana, on the 3rd day of January, 1920, and show cause, if any, why the FINAL SETTLEMENT ACCOUNTS with the estate of said de cedent should not be approved; and I said heirs are notified to then and there make proof of heirship, and receive their distributive shares. FRANK W. SPADE, Administrator. Decatur. Ind.. Dee. 8, 1919. Lenhart & Heller, Attys. 11-IS

Il 72c I For Your Butterfat I : At the Creamery or Station :; I 2nd door East of Postoffice I:; It pays to sell us your Cream i MARTIN-KLEPPER CO. II CREAMERIES

ARE BACK OF IT Veterans of World War Show Keen Interest in the Fight Against T. B. BOOSTING SEAL SALES American Legion Passes Resolution Favoring the Sale of Seals.

Indianapolis, Ind., Dec. 9—Veterans ' of the world war evince a keen Interest in the fight against tuberculosis - , a personal problem with many of ■ them as shown by the military rec- • ords. Official support of the Red Cross 1 Chiestmas seal campaign is announced 111 zx % »»1 oeln n I Aoinn wlllz-.1l ewLlTlt.

by the American Legion, which adopted resolutions to that effect at the national convention at Minneapolis recently. The Pennsylvania convention passed similar resolutions in October, endorsing the campaign for! more than $(1,500,000 by the sale of Red Cross Christmas seals, which beban December 1. under the auspices of the National Tuberculosis association. Tn placing the American Legion on record as enlisting in the crusade against the White Plague which claims 150,000 lives yearly, the sponsors of the resolution called attention to the fact that according to draft figures. enough men to comprise nearly three divisions, were marked as unfit . for military duty. “Whereas the fighting and working efficiency of the nation depends upon the public health, all organizations f whose efforts minister to healthier 5 manhood and womanhood deserve support of the members of the Atneri- > can Legion. "Especially mindful of the ravages > of tuberculosis, as revealed not only by the military records but by the statistics from civil life, we recommend . the work being done by the national. i state and county anti-tuberculosis asL sociations. We. therefore, commend I to our membership and to the public , the campaign to promote the sale of • Red Dross Christmas seals and pledge ; our support to the efforts being made r to eradicate the White Plague.” t "MURDER FARM" BONES HELD AS EVIDENCE v Lawrence, Kas., Dec. 9. —(United Press.)- —The fate of Rufus King, held f for trial in the triple murder skeleton I, - mystery, may be decided on the basis ; of data regarding the supposed skele- ’• ton of John Woody, alleged “murder * farm” victim, which has been prepared by Hubert Shepard of the Univer d- . ty of Kansas department of anatomy. 1 King’s trial is scheduled for the '1 March term of court at Lvndon, Kas. s s At the continuance, Shepard appear- £ ed, ready to present what may be de- | ciding evidence, regarding age. sex, - height and nationality of the supposed - John Woody. The skeleton was sent s to the Kansas University school of [' medicine, after being unearthed r last August at Maple Hill, Kas., on !, property formerly occupied by King. Two other skeletons unearthed on “ property said to have been used by King may be sent to the University i. for identification. They are suppost ed to be the bones of Reuben Gutsr chall and William F. Ringer. 4 r TALK OF THIRD PARTY b St. Louis, Mo., Dee. 9. —(Special to ii - Daily Democrat.) —Talk of a third ’ party in the coming elections turned ; into gossip of Presidential possibiliii ties today as the conference called -by the committee of 48 opened first session of its three day caucus. If a Presidential possibility can be s produced the new political party will - ,I.—■ —■ l -— —— -

be born, delegates declared, before the i convention opened. They discussed Governor Frazier of North Dakota; Frank P. Walsh, Kansas City and , John L. Lewis, acting president of the United Mino Workers of America. | Represented in the conference to(day were "liberals" from all sectlois of the United States. The caucus call I I J

A man*s best pal is hissmoke * !r ” “Knew we’d get together” —Ches. Field HERE’S where the particular smoker meets the particular smoke —Chesterfield. Particular is right! Not only do we use the four choicest varieties of Turkish tobacco —Xanthi, Cavalla, Smyrna and Samsoun—but to these we add the rich, sunripened leaves of specially choice Domestic tobacco. Fine as these tobaccos are/ it’s the exclusive process by which they are blended that gives to Chesterfields that satisfying body, that mellow richness which makes a smoke mean something. i Chesterfields certainly do satisfy as no i other cigarette has satisfied you before—and to top it off, they are packed in a glassine paper package that preserves for you all of that delicious flavor. *i| r f e g W B It IO t . / ' -—and the blend ’ be I WINTER IS HERE! I Is vour car equipped to make cold weather driving - both Sale and ( om- H sortable? If not we can supply you with Hood and Radiator (’overs; Alcohol and Glycerine Non-freezing Solution: Anti-draft Shields; Motor Meters; Coil m Protectors; Tire Chains; Windshield Wipers and Weather Strips; Spot fl Lights; and in fact everything in the accessory line including the well ® known makes of tires: Goodyear. Norwalk, Portage, Marion. I Special While They Last I A good red combination QO QQ dandy Ford hood and t OF Ford tube V-radiator cover ■ I ELBERSON SERVICE STATION f Where Your Dollars Have More Cents fl ’PHONE 373. FREE AIR ‘ I

,■1 >!*,». ml by the committee of 4S in also ran-i->»senhilive of the Non I’ai'tisnn le.iguv Woehl Wnr Vetei'iinK, the National }<ahor party and other "liberal" organization*. Non-I’iirlisan leugui'.-i are utrongly repregented. Indication;; were that tney would dominate Hie | convention.

jwaaaj ai.imn - — - . - - ■ - - ■——Min-l-r RETURNS TO CLEVELAND, O. Miss Lona Dlcklzon, trained nurse who Jum lii-en attending her uncle, William Scherer, 101 l this afternoon for her home at Cleveland, Ohio, being called there on a special case. $ $ $ S—WANT ADS EARN—I I $ I