Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 18, Number 83, Decatur, Adams County, 7 April 1920 — Page 3
■ The Royal Welcome chib will meet ■Tuurmlay evening ut the Royal NeighKoi' hall an devery Royal Neighbor i.< ■equested to be present. splendid ■rograin has been arranged and will K' in charge of Mrs. Richards, Mrs. ■wf'i-Hon and Mrs. Mayer. Refresh. Kncnta will be served.
I Why Measles May' I Be Dangerous I \ I ssSxG, I favorable foothnM f/ ■ ■’ con B ested state, thus affording a I Rugy K»g6» “ >“■ VW. V.„„. Z-
Few of us escape measles—it is one of the commonest of childI hood diseases. Every mother § knows the symptoms, but the I mistake that most mothers make || is in failing to realize that the ■ | child is not fully recovered after | the eruption and fever disappear. The air passages are still inflamed | and if this inflammation is not I cleared up, the air passages may • I be weakened, thus paving the | way for pneumonia or serious I disease of the lungs. Nightly applications of Vick’s I Vapoßub will aid nature in I relieving this inflammation. BeK cause Vicks acts locally by stim--11 ulation thru the skin to draw ■ ' out the inflammation, attract the I blood away from the congested | spots and relieve the cough. In I addition, the medicinal ingrei dients of Vicks are vaporized bv K' the body heat. These vapors ■* are breathed in all night long,
I % A7ICKC I fi.2o > VapoßubuJ More Than 17 Million Jars Used Yearly >s' ■UMMMURdK. tr> L-r.r.aci-vj _ ... x-1 * Your Dollar ■Today and Tomorrow I Your dollar today buys about forty cents as fl much as in 1896, but there is a bright side to the I dollars you save today. The time v- corning when ■ the purchasing power of a dollar will be 109 cents. I Evcrj dollar vou save now will carry a premium I with it in the future. Deposit your dollars in a | Savings Account. In the meantime they will earn I ■ 4'< compound interest lor you. I J First National Bank I I DECATUR. INDIANA. [
j Just a Little Wint’ry Just Now— Byt it will I Soon Be Corn Plantin' Time I Time Now to Decide on that Corn Planter I There Is No Question as to the Accuracy of the e Corn Planter No. 999 I * • in a Corn Planter is what fills the corn crib and I Ano ace • n | an t er is not accurate, it would pay better to plant | saves time— ,i van tage of using the John Deere No. 999 is that by by hand. ‘ wi y plant two, three or four kernels in a hill, just | moving one k ■ there—no mo-e—no less—you can depend upon I ! he : FROM HILLING TO DRILLING or changing back I to hilling is made instantly. t tts THE PLANTER YOU WANT BECAUSE I it DELIVERS THE GOODS-WE’LL PROVE IT. I Lee Hardware CoI Everything You Need In Implements. » f
« '••’■'"'TMEXT <H- FVIUITO,, -Noth,. | M |„. r ,. by K lv ( >n. thttt the iiiK i'isigned tins |,e<m iipnnlntetl executor of the estate of l,„vlnn Acker The AI.HEIIT lIimTEL. April «, 11)20.' Executor. Alorryinnn & Sutton, Attys. 7-11-21
bringing the medication to bear directly upon the inflamed areas Children’s digestions are delicate—easily disturbed by too much “dosing.” Vicks, there fore, is particularly recommended since it is externally' applied and so can be used often and freely without the slightest harmful effects. Vicks should be rubbed in over tlte throat and chest until the skin is red—then spread on thickly and covered with hot flannel clothe. Leave the doth ing loose around the neck and the bed clothes arranged in the form of a funnel so the vapors arising may be freely inhaled If the cough is annoying, swallow a small bit of Vjfks the size of a pea. Samples to new users will be sent free on request to the Vick Chemical Company. 233 Broad Street, Greensboro, N. C.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, 1920.
MODISH EASTER MAIDS IN GAY SPRING CLOTHES | By Marjaret Rohe for U. P. (United Press Service) New York. April fl.—Some Spring hats early 'gin to sprout and February brings some out but Easter’s the official day when In full bioQin they come to stay and every head that bows In prayer is sure a chic chapeau to wear. If skys are blue and sun shines the church parade is something flue and latest hints from Paris vie with home grown garments and they tie. This year’s parade is |ure to bo more colorful than all to see and Easter eggs, all hectic dyed, will look quite wan when side by side with maid or matron on display in latest mode for Easter day. For colors vivid and blzanre it Is decreed that we must wear and slurring shiny things as well and so the modish Easter belle will gleam and glisten, glow and glint till ardent eyes will have to squint, of Easter hints, 1 do aver, who gaze adoringly at her. Oilcloth and lacquered stuff are fine to give them necessary shine, metallic fabrics, jet and beads and now to meet these shiny needs they’re even using bits of glass and it is not considered crass to wear a frock with quite a bit of broken glass set into it. with silken and metallic stitch in Oriental manner rich. A bit of pain ’twould give me, tco, to wear a bit of pane but true it is that many a lass feels all dolled up in bits of glass. The Oriental touch is such a hit 'twill over shadow much all other trends of Fashion’s whim and even bouffant models dim. ’Tis true the frock of taffeta with puff and fluff will show but la! It simply cannot supersede those models of the stamp. They’re worn by ingenue or vamp with equal charm and savoir faire and win for each admiring stare. The gloves for Easter most ornate show stitching colorful and quaint, insets of different tinted kid for Fashion's favor make a bit around the wrists in set design. They’re really something very fipe and when you are thus hand in glove there's something more that you will love to have forever well in hand on Easter when you join the band of gay paraders as you go devout to church to doubly show devotion and your new Spring clothes and that’s a bag of suede that show.a new Egyptianesque addition of some gay colored comoposition that forms the clasp and top from where a gay medallion hangs bizaare and adds ar. Oriental air that’s very stunning, 1 . declare. These same medallions or quaint plaques of composition that so smacks of Egypt and the ancient Nile are also i seen in striking style adangle from i the either side of turbans or the brims ■ more wide of mushroom hats add a touch of piquancy that pleases much Wet Feet—Look Out for Flu! DID you get your feet wet today? Did you go out without sufficient clothing? Do you feel a cold coming on? Then at once get a package of LIGHTNING LAXATIVE QUININE TABLETS Will Not Gripe or Sicken and you can stop that cold in 24 hourt You may save yourself a bad sick spelt! Thousands of homes are never without Lightning Laxative Quinine Tablets. See your druggist or dealer—They cost only asc.
—t*n tt~— ~i -r.-nj . -inif »ipwmrfti rw i mwiuiiniiwn ■ ■i_uinn wmju m iuj r— m— fmmm—mm -SPEINGIOEREBUTARE : YOU READY TO PARTAKE OF PLEASURES OFFERED? Trutona Is Daily Winning Unstinted Praise From Hundreds for Overcoming Tired, Draggy ‘No-Account’ Feeling So Prevalent During the Present Season
Does the coming of Spring with all its pleasures mean anything to YOU? “That all depends,” maybe your answer and admittedly "it all depends’ —it all depends upon whether or not your system has withstood the ex acting siege of winter that leaves in its wake so many many thousands of people with completely run-down systems. In tact, conspicuously in the minority are those who have completely avoided the ravages of winter maladies. True, there are thousands who were successful in warding off attacks of Influenza and still more thousands who escaped pneumonia, but WHO IS THERE THAT DID NOT EXPERIENCE AT LEAST ONE HEAVY WINTER COLD DURING THE PAST SEASON? Remember, only second in severity to pneumonia and influenza, is tlie heavy, winter cough or cold. Like pneumonia and influenza, winter coughs and colds tend to weaken and materially affect every I vital organ of the body. People who have suffered a heavy winter cough, yet feel that their systems have es- . caped the strain of winter weather, are sadly mistaken. If they could but grasp the facts, they would not wonder why they feel so tired, sluggish I
* ' " Hut all these things cost so much money I really think the Easter bunny this year should be the golden goose that lays gold eggs or what's the use. LIFE SHORTENED ■ From Two and One-half to Five Years by Presence of Tuberculosis ACCORDING TO FIGURE Compiled by Life Insurance Company—Affects Every Individual New York, April 7. —From two and one-half to five years of life for each individual in the United States can bo saved in this country if tuberculosis is eradicated. In terms of money vai ue, at SIOO a year per person, which is a moderate estimate, this mea-s a piocpective saving of about 25 to 50 billion dollars to the people of the timed States. These are concm-uons •i ached by the National Tuberculosis ■iss-ociation on the basis of figures complied for the association by Miss Jesamine S. Whitney, research -secretary, and Dr. Louis I. Dublin, statisaician of the Metropolitan Life Insurance company. Miss Whitney and Dr. Dublin arrived nt their conclusions by an injenious method. Basing their studies separately on the population of the United States according to the census for 1910 and upon the experience of the Metropolitan Life Insurance company from 1911 to 1916, each of them prepared life tables showing the normal number of years a person might be expected to live if tuberculosis were present as it now it, and if there were no deaths from tuberculosis whatever in this country. Dr. Dublin found that the number of years lost to each individual in the United States on account of tuberculosis varied from 2.6 for white women to 5 years for colored women. The average loss for white men is 3.48 years, and for colored men 4,95 years. Miss Whitney's figures, taking into consideration the entire population, both white and colored, show that tu berculosis shortens the average life time of ever> individual in the United States by approximately two and one half'years. DEMOCRAT WANT ADS PAY BIG! STOMACH UPSET?" Get at the Real Cause—Take Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets That’s what thousands of stomach sufferers are doing now. Instead of taking tonics, or trying to patch up a poor digestion, they are attacking the real cause of the ailment—clogged liver and disordered bowels. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets arouse the liver in a soothing, healing way. When the liver and bowels are performing their natural functions, away goes indigestion and stomach troubles. Have you a bad taste, coated tongue, poor appetite, a lazy, don’tcare feeling, no ambition or energy, trouble with undigested foods? Take Olive Tablets, the substitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil. You will know them by their olive color. They do the work without I griping, cramps or pain. Take one or two at bedtime for quick I relief. Eat what you like. 10c and 25c. a
lifeless and generally out-of-fix, when they know they should be full of "pep” and vitally in perfect |inrmony with the vtgorating breezes and sunshiny weather of Spring. Thousands of people arc now Trutona, the Perfect Tonic, to overcome this weakened physical condition so prevalent at the close of winter and hundreds of public statement’ now being made dally prove that none has been disappointed in Trutona as a reconstructive agency, system purifier and body invigorant, Trutona does its work quickly, it speedily attacks the impurities in the blood that might, if left alone bring serious results. It rebuilds broken down tissues, strengthens the nerve centers and produces proper digestion and assimilation of food, at the same time throwing off any decaded matter that may have accumulated. In short, Trutona thoroughly and efficiently i tones up every organ of the body and J gives to your physical being the vigor land vitality, which alone can place ■within your reach the many pleasures which Spring offers to the healthy man J and woman. Trutona is sold in Decatur at Smith. , I Yager & Falk's drug store. 7-14
THE STORY OF SMOCKS //MSCb iW I I WfW V '/ UM i—// ■ The story of smocks is long already 1 —nnd it is to be continued. Their popularity grows and has not reached its peak; hence designers are giving a great deal of attention to varying and ’ elaborating this graceful garment. Just now crepe de chine and crepe georgette are oftenest employed for making the I smock, either of them providing a suitable background for rich embroideries ■ and beautiful stitching done in silk 1 or yarn or beads. Hand painting, outlined with silk floss, has made Its appearance among the latest embellishments. The smock shown here is a dark blue crepe de chine. About the bottom there I is a border of embroidered grapes and j leaves, in several colors. The neck is ! outlined with an embroidered band j which is repeated at each side over the j shoulders. 4. 4 4. 4 4 4 4. 4. 4. 4 4 4 4 4 DEMOCRAT WANT ADS PAY BIG! I 4. 44444 4 4, 4 4 .j, .% 4 4 I
I Every Evidence of Superiority 7 In Styles Developed By This Store Introducing New Fashion Ideas I* l Smart Tailored Spring fW®| S * T °Pcoa!s "NA- 'A _ J Models that are distinctive, embodying style features that are exclusive. Rich fabrics and j' j ! V; Wi P/ weaves in all the new spring color tones. Supreme Values in Men's and Young Men’s ■MI S4O Boy’s A wonderful showing (£Q?7 (lkf*A rn ¥ '’ ra(,( ' S , r °m t(> tPVI J 1 OffS NPMHgI The Finest Shirts in All the Town. Myers-Dailey Company “Suits That Suit” wwww | iMS««nwmMWgflr.vg»nwiMi»w ■! i»j miL.rrr-iiirr-— r—.-jTt-rrur.u.rju— -iniiii —n
l"7 - '::::. \ iib mi irmi i..i.miiiMißiniiii iww 1— WE WRITE TORNADO AND WIND STORM INSURANCE FARM AND CITY PROPERTIES BEST COMPANIES Lenhart & Heller ’PHONE No. 2. 157 So. Second Street I Decatur, Indiana. ||Feeling “AtfHome” Onp of our ambitions is to have folks feel at .home in this bank; to cultivate geniality and good will; to promote that feeling that The Peoples Loan and Trust Company is a home institution, ready to serve our home people at all times. You will find a welcome here; you are entitled to our time and attention, whether you bank here or elsewhere. We invite you to investigate our savings account, the best way to save for a definite purpose. Let us tell you about the “Victory Account.” Our insurance on our safety deposit boxes makes your bonds and other valuables secure, come in and let us explain. MAKE THIS BANK YOUR BANK. | Tlie Peoples Loan & Trust Co BANK OF SERVICE ! ■ — * — u This Bank is a public institution run for the private good of its patrons and | friends I I in cu: public capacity we work for Hie good of the community al large. Privately, a much closer relationship exists between ourselves and our customers. If you want a Bank Service that seems bin'll specially for you, we invite your account. ; - - ’A ml IL
