Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 18, Number 230, Decatur, Adams County, 29 September 1920 — Page 5

It Can Be Done > I T I •a h ' WC are d °’ ng r *^ ht now ’ tl I Selling mens fine welt shoes at prices I (l I that men are ready to pay. p Men s Mahogany Bal, rubber heel ° $7.50 a Men’s Black Bal, rubber heel i> g OR Charlie Voglewede • fl I THE SHOE SELLER n gr—r~— u.— ii

♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ABOUT TOWN ♦i ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦>♦♦♦ I Phi Delta Kappa announces the opening of their fall and winter ac- i tivities with an informal dance, to be held at the Masonic hall, Friday, Oc- j tober 15th. Good music has been al- ( ready secured and a good time is as- , sured to all that attend. Norbert Holthouse, Elmo Smith and Hubert Schmitt spent last evening in Fort Wayne. Elmo Smith left today for Chi;cage. where he will enter the Hines School of Pharmacy. Grow Your Hair GET THIS FREE If you hare dandruff, or if your hah is fallinr out, or if you have a bald spot, you should know that legions of persons have overcome these troubles through a genuine Indians’ recipe, which will be mailed you free with a proof box of the wonderfully efficacious ointment, Kotalko, if you tend only 10 cte. (silver or stamps) te pay the cost of this notice, to J. H. Brittain, BZ-301, Station F.. Now fork Eczmof Money back without Qucsttcn if HUNT'S Salve fnite in the treatment oHTCH. ECZEMA, ff ,‘.M RINGWORM. TETTER ot f Otter > tching .kin dlseara. Try 4 I j aJS cent boi at our ruk / f J THE HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO.

WihiFilli Rill If ■ nlwU I w SKfllH o package |g||; * before the war M ' ™W 1 fIBHBn 58381 package fj|o 11 > during the war ■ and |Mb ' S£ a package a ®» ■ jslSwi ' r hOw g| .The Flavor Lasts ||| -So Does the Price! BK A-151 1 Il ; fl ; I IliSKrl <>t'Mr y\ f A\i4 t,'A? '-x2'' j'"'._i, li" 1 WK

J. H. Stewart returned last even- 11 ing from Warren where he went to *' assist Mrs. Stewart’s mother in mov- 6 ing her household goods. Mrs. Stew- p art and son, Max, will remain in 1 Warren this week. 11 Dore B. Erwin, Fred Mills, Guy 11 Brown, W. A. Lower and Hoy Mum- ( ma wili go to Indianapolis next week | to attend the Knights of Pythias grand lodge. Several Adams county democrats • c attended the Taggart meeting at Bluffton last evening. 1 f E. A. Beavers was a business visitor in Fort Wayne today. < The Knights of Pythias home will ( be opened for the fall and winter on , Thursday evening. All the Sunday schools in the city , will observe next Sunday as Rally ( day. Each will have an interesting program. The jury appeared in court this morning to hear the case of the State of Indiana vs. Ernest Smith, charged with larceny. They were released until 3 o’clock this afternoon because the main witness in the case, Roy Smith, bad not arrived from Plainfield, where he is serving time in connection with the theft of some chickens from a Geneva man. A telephone message to Plainfield brought the information that Smith left the reformatory with an officer at 8 o’clock this morning. The judge released them until 3 -o'clock this afternoon.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29. 1920.

GENEVA MEETING A GREAT STARTER (Continued from page one) lonury record of Senator Harding's J ij|d said that America could not go , >ack, but that we must progress. Mr. j Taggart also urged the election of < Carleton McCulloch as governor of his state, stating that the democratic candidate was pledged to give the 1 people a new tax law and that he ’ would always act in the( j if the people. j Others Made Talk, I Mrs. McCulloch, of Fort Wayne, * ( state chairman of the woman’s or- j ganizatlon spoke for half an hour 1 and gave a most interesting talk, urg- ' ing every woman to vote and to support the democratic ticket this fall , on the grounds that the democratic i party stood for the League of Nations 1 and that the mothers of the country wanted the league. During the noon hour Dr. Paddock 1 and Judge Hughes spoke to the crowd and these two gentlemen were , also given a great reception when they discussed state issues and the failure of the republican congress to make an honorable peace. Meeting at Berne At one o’clock word was received at this office that the party arrived In Berne and that the meeting would be held in the open. A good sized crowd was there to hear the speakers. At three o’clock the party will go to Monroe and from there come to this city where tonight a big meeting will be held at the court house at eight o'clock. The democratic campaign is now opened, come on men and women, let’s win. We can do it. Many Went From Here. Leaving this city at about ten o’clock this morning a halt dozen automobiles carrying local democrats and those persons interested in the success of the party at the coming election, including one machine load of women, started on their way to Geneva where they joined the big crowd which gathered there to welcome and hear Senator Thomas Tag gart, Mayor Bosse of Evansville, Mrs. Alice Foster McCulloch, democratic state cheirwoman, Fred Van Nuys, district attorney, Dr. Charles Paddock and other well known and leading citizens of the state who formally opened the democratic campaign in this county and who will tour the south part of the county during the day and this evening will hold a big meeting at the court house in this city. Among the women from this citv who went to Geneva were Mrs. Fay? Smith Knapp, Mrs. O. L. Vance and Mrs. Fristoe. Rev. C. J. Miner, pastor of the United Brethren church, officiated at the marriage of Mrs. Lodetta Urbine and Mr. Simon N. Spencer, at the parsonage last evening at 6 o’clock. The ,couple was unattended. The groom lives at Monroeville, and the couple will make their home at that place. BROKE WINDOW Several boys, playing with a foot ball on the court house lawn this morning threw the ball into one of the large windows in the clerk’s office. Shattered glass flew all over the ; room, and frightened the force at , work there. In the past few months several of the windows have been broken, and other depredations committed about the court house and the monument Efforts will be made to stop playing by youngsters on the county property. s—s—s—WANT ADS EARN—s—s—s FAIN NOW What Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Did for Mrs. Warner. Onalaska, Wis. —“Every month I had such pains in my back and lower part of niiiinniriiiiiiiiiiiirri s tomach i could not H Um H I l> e > n bed. 1 sufsered so it seemed aa 1 would die, and I was not -aws TH regular either. I USSiiW HI suffered for a year Utr * * ’ll an< i wa9 un fi t k* do UI J housework, could only wash lllgfeafe. , dishes once in a i -f ’ while. I road an $ advertisement of W-'i’ni,' , -,l what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound had done for other women and decided to try it. i It surely did wonders for me. 1 have ] no pains now and I can do my housework without any trouble at al). I 1 will always praise your medicine as I ; do not believe there is a doctor that can , do as much good in female weakness, , and you mav use these facts as a testi- ‘ moni'al.”—Mrs. Lester E. Wabneb, I 1018 Pine St., La Crosse, Wis. , The reason women write such letters to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co.;' and tell their friends how they are 1 helped is that Lydia E. Pinkham’s | Vegetable Compound has brought health ( and happiness into their lives. Freed from their illness they want to pass the good news along to other suffering l women that they also may be relieved, j

cc TO EVERY READER ln There is no pure herb family medl cine in the world today that can equal 1 ' the power and give such grand results 111 in regulating the bowels, stimulating w the liver, flushing and cleansing the kidneys, sweetening the stomach or purifying and enriching the blood— " than w BULGARIAN B, ™ D ‘ * Tboeo who suffer with stomach, liver, kidney, rheumatism or blood 1(1 trouble* will And Bulgarian Blood Tea the best medicine to relieve and cor- (l] reel these ailments. It U wonderful how quick you will begin to pick up and be your old-time self again. ft During the 1818-lsl-2U influenau epl ,] deiulc Bulgarian Blood Tea was used by countless thousands of sufferers with marvelous success and millions R ot people took it steaming hot to pre ri vent and ward off the disease. n As a general first aid family modi cine it has no equal and every person n should have a box constantly on hand for any emergency—to kill colds, allay ] ( fevers and guard against Influenza, . pneumonia or other serious sickness. And all mothers and fathers of fam <’ Hies should apply at once to their drug y gist or grocer tor a trial box of Belga v rlan Blood Tea. 1..' '' NUXATEO pIRONn “Time and again I have prescribed organic iron—Nuxated, Iron—and surprised patients 1 at the rapidity with whichtheir weakness and general debit- ( tty was replaced by a renewed feeling of strength and vitality,” says Dr. H. B. Vail, formerly Phy- , sician in the Baltimore Hospital and a Medical Examiner. “I took Nuxated Iron myself to build me up , after a serious case of nervous exhaustion. The effects were apparent after a few days and within three weeks it had virtually revitalized my whole system and put me in superb physical condition. BETTER SERVICE In Transportation Facilities for Farmers is Advocated Through Bureau of FARM FEDERATION Farmers of Country Will Attempt to Get Better Routing, Minimum Rate (Indiana Farmers' Association) The American Farm Bureau Federation has already decided to establish seven bureaus, each headed by a I trained expert. Included in these bureaus is one on transportation. This will demand a highly trained traffic man for its head. We farmers have a very limited comprehension of the history, development, complexity and great? variety of freight rates in North America. Distance rates, percentage, classification, breaking points, long and short hauls are ujst meaningless terms in the main. The larger business coni cerns have for this reason found it 'very profitable to employ a traffic ; man to see that their goods are properly packed, properly loaded, correctly routed and that the correct freight rate is charged. Rates and classification east of the Mississippi river are on an entirely different basis from those west ot it. South of the Ohio river is different from north of it. Texas is very different from Arkansas. Direction, whether east or ' west, frequently makes a difference. Then a rate or a classification frequently becomes obsolute and expensive because no one has been interested enough to take it up with the Interstate Commerce Commission and got a new ruling on it. A pamphlet issued by the Western Association of Rolled Steel Consumers, 1305-6 City Hall Square Bldg., Chicago, illustrates this case. Farm machinery is manufactured extensively within the corn belt. This machinery is made from rolled steel. At one time Pittsbu ? was the center of the rolled steel industry, but because this quality steel can be manufactured more economically around Chicago than any place else, the center of this business has changed from Pittsburg to Chicago. Not so with the freight rate. Regardless of whether this rolled steel is bought in Pittsburg, South Chicago, Hammond or Mary? it is priced F. O. B. Pittsburg. Let’s suppose that Janesville, Wisconsin, wants rolled steel to manufacture plows. Naturally this steel should be shipped from around Chicago syid doubtless would be. On the other hand, it would be priced from Pittsburg. The manufasturer would pay from $4.00 to $5.40 per ton freight rate for a service that was not rendered. Since this steel was not hauled from Pittsburg to Chicago, this s4.o'’ • to $5.40 per ton should not be charged | to the manufacturer. This amounts to from twenty-five to j forty million dollars a year. The manufacturer must pass this increased

ost on the purchaser of the farmng implements In short, the farmer >ays this unnecessary freight. Our ational traffic department, together vith that of the manufacturers of oiled steel do not want It changed lecnusc it means an income to them vithout any cost of service render’d. The railroads are not interested n the change because it does not as ect their receipts one iota. Ground limestone for agricultural ind for road purposes arc identical In te preparation and loading. The dlference in name, however, makes a inference in freight rate. Road buildms, thoroughly organized, have seen o it that they get the best possible •ate. No one was interested in the ither rate for the farmer, so It renalns. We farmers are too trustful. The ocal freight agent is not dishonest, but he naturally works for the railroad company, not the shipped. He finds you a route, classification and rate, whether it is the best or not. He is not interested in freight claims. It lust means more work for him. The thousands of claims on damaged freight go unpaid, because the claim cither is not tiled or it is improperly tiled. This is a great field tor the American Farm Bureau Federation end it will save the farmers of this country far more than it costs. Not only will it be a great money raver to the farmers, but it should be co thoroughly organized and efficiently managed that each of the states would not need to have a similar department, doing the same thing, thereby saving the states much money. Where duplication in state and national organization can be avoided, it should be done during the organization period. The Illinois state organization has already created a very expensive traffic department. but It will likely be discontinued as soon as the national bureau of transportation is set in motion. Churngold Oleomargarine received fresh every week. Try a pound and eat the best.— Steeles Grocery, Phone 31. EIGHTY-YEAR-OLD SOLDIER WRITES W. H. Clough, Co. E, Ward 5, Soldiers’ Home, Cal., writes: “I hare been troubled with constipation for years. I have found Foley Cathartic Tablets keep me in a better and natural shape than any medicine I ever have taken. lam almost eighty years old and I am pleased to tell you of the value I have received.” Foley Cathtic Tablets cause no pain, nausea nor griping. They relieve Indigestion, sick headache, biliousness and sour stomach. Sold Everywhere.—Adv.

Il ———=i| The Reduced Cost of Tire Mileage forYour Small Car Do you realize that Goodyear Tires are priced no higher today than in Uthat their mileage actually than it did a decade ago? lis period Goodyear has been lily to increase the amount ge built into its tires and, jntly, the cost of Goodyear tas actually declined. rt of the Goodyear line has ne been more marked than esent 30 x 3-, 30 x 3’Z> and ch sizes of Goodyear Tires, ecially for small cars. /n a Ford, Chevrolet, Dort, or other car taking these o your nearest Service Staiem—get the unusual value I in their construction and in their mileage. - ac. —^n* l i II I 130 X U ?' z X G°odye ar Goodyear Heavy Tourist Tubes cost no !' ‘ Aii U tir u tC t i* /■ more than the price you are asked to pay All-Weather Tread for of k .„ ment _ why rigk 30 x 3 1 /z Goodyear , casings when such sure protec-Single-Cure Fabric, S/| 50 tion is availableT 30x3 l /2size Anti-Skid Tread in waterproof bag £ s^ — “ ii ~_.r^—l

Strength Grove's Iron Tonic Syrup is an Exceptionally Good, General Strengthening Tonic for the Child, for the Mother or any of the Family, young or old. When you see how it improves the appetite, brings color to the cheeks and increases vitalty and energy, you will then realize its true tonic value. You can soon feel its Strengthening, Invigorating Effect. It is acceptable to the most delicate stomach and is very pleasant to take. More easily digested and assimilated than Iron Pills or Iron Tablets. Ask for “Groves Iron Tonic Syrup.” . Look for signature of E. W. Grove. Price 75c. areTyouand Ej YOUR BANK REAL FRIENDS? IZZ I Or Just Acquaintances? Z> Analyze your present relations: --- When money perplexities arise, Z Z ZZ is it your bank you instinctively turn a IZZ to for advice? IZZ And does your banker seem to ZZZ understand and show a Jcindly inter"I est in helping you smooth things ziZZ :z z ° l| i ? zz z -~2 Then you’re friends and our ad- ( vice is “Stay where you are.” ZZZ • --- If, after doing your part, your banker is not meeting you half way, > --- it’s time to change banks Change ZZZ over to this one. a ::E FIRST NATIONAL BANK ii: You Arc a Stranger Here hit Once. BSI Z-Z J' ' . M ?? a-- ZE. -B ,I—— m ■« mal »m »■ r I ■ 1 JJ.L-X '• :zzttz::z"iz::E:i?H ziffizzSzJlilLxbiiZ r IIIIU II 111111111} I H-l IHI H 111 i I'l-111! I i