Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 19, Number 3, Decatur, Adams County, 4 January 1921 — Page 3
Harry Harland of the. Lenh T‘ep«*r i company, Indianapolis, was a business ; I' l ' i i * UIAD COLDS Melt in spoon; inhale vapor*; “ • apply freely up nostrils. * V|C>SS ▼ VAPORdH Otiet 17 Million Jan Use J Yearly •MW TRRHIUII ■ - -| m" 'l7 J" ~Q |l’~~ 7 ? ~l IMM ~*MS.i ft**’’*’ > e Wlard ; 'O., o 0 3t B New Price ° Level s Effective with e the publication of this announcement, .Wiilard Batteries will be sold on a new and materially lower price level Thd* same Willard quality — backed by the same authorized WiZlard Service. HOLTHOUSE GARAGE First, Second & Jackson Sts. Willard Batteries DFDYOU HAPPEN S TO MENTION-THAT VOVR PIPES7 NEED j Yr <JT^TIOH < ± = - J ■" !■■ M—W—g —■- - HARRY DANIELS V The Live Stock and Farm Sale Auctioneer. Decatur ’Phone 861-N. 'Phone me at my expense. 208-3 t » : wk , J Ashbaiicher’s FURNACES LIGHTNING RODS SPOUTING SLATE ROOFIKG PHONE 765 or 739
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am, tn r- .bma . I Rann-dom Reels i By HOWARD L. RANN t’ rurr . THE SLEEPING PORCH ryVIE sleeping porch is something JL wlftch is added to a house in i order to provide more room for fresh , air andtfeet. Every night during the heated term thousands of new, expenI give sleeping porches are crowded j with feet which protrude carelessly I from the coverlets, instead of having j to be run out of a hall bedroom winI dow in the effort to cool off. Ail over I the middle West, at this time of the I year, myriad number of faithful feet | wearing patent corn pads are led into I sleeping porches by their owners and I put where the mild evening zephyr ! and the stray lightning bug can roam I over jheir surface. Nine times out of ten the sleeping ] porch is an afterthought. It is one of the iffost high-priced thoughts a man | can have, if he is going- to keep up with some neighbor who started his sleeping porch immediately after the cistern was dug. It costs more to tie a 12 by 18 sleeping porch to the second [ it ainT much for. J/ looks- is rr, mim / .- z wecam ' S TkAIN JO X £> vw« to //. hyj- pS -f r Ove R. g- 11 J b Jdwe. < ’« T ihz j? I LACE- W Wo Cu.iTAiNt F (J; 1 S. j: •; i rfi? Nine Times Out of Jen the Sleeping Porch Is an Afterthought. • •• story of an old house than it docs to build a bnpgalow from the ground up, including a hot-air furnace and openwork plumbing. This is because the two rk is never started until a hot night comes along and parboils the entire famiiv to a delicate pink hue. Most people never use the sleeping l>prch except when it is necessary to spvc human life. It is sad to see men pht,hundreds of hard-earned dollars ihto a capacious, hard pine sleeping pbrch and allow it to stand idle ami dust and autumn leaves. It is equally sad to see«h large family troop info one.of those porous pordhes on t?if filst hot evening and discover that tbh hSis'liave not been made up since 1 the 31st of the preceding August. This chisijsinuch.discontent on the part of hpSbahd’s "ho were led to expect dis- : fijfent' treatment prior to the wedding I IlftWj ; Sphip'. enthusiasts use the sleeping pOToh' tlio year around, retiring in the dead of winter with a soapstone, a set ' of epulaps a fur boa and four pairs ! of wWi’ii underwear. This gives them pfcbty of. fresh air and also encourThe growth of the unobtrusive cliHilain. After a while they get so I !)*<Wosed to it that they can remov'e oiu- layer of underwear and substitute ! adidtwnlei hag, located in the small of ’"’hose who think that all of the heroes and heroines were in the Ehropegh war'should try this next winter for one week-, and jot down i tlfcir impressions after coming out of | “RA"?* , cok ,„ mj o < Very American-Like. Before she would consent to marry the marquis of Cellani of Italy, Inez Sprague Stiness of New York re- i quired an ante-nuptial contract that I required he install modern bath rooms in his twelfth century mansion in ! which she was going to 'live.—-Ohio ! State Journal.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, TUESDAY. JANUARY L 1921.*
L J ’TIs something ft-eat to be a queen, j And bend a kingdom to a woman's will; To be a mother such as mine, I ween. Is something better and more noble still. —May Riley Smith. i« Summer Salads. With head lettuce in every garden and n n abundance of the leaf lettuce, peas, oniohs, and other crisp flavor ! vegetables, one need never want for • salad material. A sa>d b?wl c.f crisp fresh lettucf ’ I served with French, mayonnaise, I Thousand Island driving, or *ven the ’ ( common variety of boiled pressing, ; makes a palatable salad. 4 : ' | A small besof mustard (the smalt ; '■ black-seeded variety) makes a most I ’ excellent salad plant and affine dish 1 of greens. The leaves may be picked ' I and served alone with salad 1 or jjiixed with lettuce. The pungent . taste and good flavor is most ' ' ing. Added finely minced to any vege- ; table salad from potatoes to pea* it I 1 adite to the flavor. ’ Salads riclfe mayonnaise will ’ be sufficiently nourishing tp serve as ' ’ ‘ a main dish at luncheon. cart— j, iCabbage Salad. 9 Select a small heavy head of white cabbage. Cut a slice off the top and i ■ coon out she taterbd* leaving a tlii? shell. Shred fl* inner portion and : chop fine in a chopping bowl, mix with ; an equal portion of celery, also j chopped, ,«dd a few nut meats, mix with and fill the shell. Servikgarnishftl with lettuce. ♦ 4 Cherry Conserve. t’ Cover pitted cherries with vinegar and let stand overnight.• k Pour off the vinegar and add to the cherrieis an equal weight of sugar. Stir uhtil the sugar is dissolved. Place in a jar covered with cloth and plate and keep in a cool place. Tomato asri Cucumber Arrange overlapping slopes of p?eled and uniformly sliced tomatoes on a chop plate. Alongside of the tomatoes arranfjb peeled sliced cucumbers. Gar- ’ nish with lettuce or parsley and senve with the dressing passed in a bowl. • « 6 ’ "Houc ' (Copyright, 1920, Wastern Newspaper Union.) o I Brain Youth | A’ ’g: By GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS SOMEONE has given to us the strlk- I ing sentence: “To the young, Na- ■ I ture does nothing but give; from the i I old she does nothing but take away.” j ; Your brain is the only Power in your entire body that may not age. Keep Youth alive in Your Brain. Tis your Brain your Will may say: I "Life at its longest is but like the looking back and reviewing of a single day.” For Youth never returns to your muscles and to your bones and to your arteries —but Youth trots ! I along with your Brain—if your Will , says so. _ - _ Keep Youth alive in xour Brain. William E. Gladstone, past eighty, ! chopping down trees, translating the | | Classics anew, tramping the fields j ' and solving mysteries—stands out as i one of the most striking examples of ; ' those who kept their Brains young as ' their bodies grew old. Keep Youth alive in Your Brain. It is Interest that puts Youth into i your Brain and drives away age. Just i so long as you are Interested in the i things you are doing, just so long work will grow upon you, strengthen- | Ing your loyalty and enthusiasm and | every ounce of your effort. Keep Youth alive iu Your Brain. I
Commissioners Name Trustees for Hospital (Continued from page one) «■*< ■ Under the law no provision is made for a fifth or deciding member of the" board when it comes to a-vote. If a deadlock should occur on the board I in some way one of the members must I chtuige his vote in order to makogho ! necessary four members have entity supervision and control of the hrapital and will later on appoint the nou«< physician, advertise for bids, etc. With ! the appointing of the trustees all con- i trol of supervision passes from th- I county commissloncrs j» the new board. • Voted for the Hospital. At the primary election on May 4th ■ the question of building the *>unt.v> hospital was voted on and curried iA a majority of 242 votes. The voters appropriated the sum of $100,006 for' the building of the hospital.
CUT cPRICE SALE SPECIALS I, — 09 « In our Men’s and Young Men’s • Suits we have forgotten what ~ they cost and have put reduced fl tickets on every one of them. /• I Prices are now from , \ I H 2,45 to s3si ■ ' Boys’Knee Pant CIA AA Suits, $2.50 to Boys’ Knickerbocker Suits Reduced 1-3 1-2 ’ ‘ I Men’s and Boy’s Sweaters, SI.OO to SB.OO . r \ Men’-s Pants to sell you at prices that you will surely be pleased > . $1.75 to $5.75 IWI . Our Flannel Shirts will go quickly at . F I|H $1.95 to $3.45 ' LIO EXTRA SPECIAL l| W Y*l I Men’s Ribbed Shirts and Drawers, sold at |j 7 \ i | $2.50 per suit, ‘ ‘ O s^• /I/ v\ Y\ I per piece ... In. $3 Very heavy Colton sg(| K cfei? • fleeced Unionsuits T I 17 V /iiA - - - OA.BAC. Special Low prices on all grades ot cotton | . and wool underwear ‘ >nrmg Watth I Big Saving on Overcoats | Special Priced $ 9.95 to $ 35. A splendid work sock for Trunks, Suit Cases and HATS AND CAPS I 15c I Traveling Bags 1-3 Off j | 1-3 off I J i John T. Myers Clothing Co. I. ■^■•■inwwMwrwniTjui„ ■ m
§PORT NEWg ———; Northwestern in Lead Evansville, 111., Jan. 4 —Northwest-! ern was off in thn lead today in the' i big ten conference basketbaU | sis a result of its victory in the openling game »with Wisconsin here last! night. Northwestern won 13 to 12. five thousand saw the game. The! game was won in the last mlnutal lot pluy. Palmer scored the necosstf’y point fop Northwestern on a free throw. Mfis Mary Heavilon’s Big Free Cooking School is now in session in the lower room of the Public Library building. Third street. 2- it.
Much Interest is Manifested (Continued from page one) General public opinion seems very I much against the dredging proposiIt ion as proposed, y Mr. E. E. Zimmerman, viewer who j refused io sign the report, is devoting much time to defeat the pr< seig 1 plan, though he favors the improvement under proper conditions and a I square deal for every one. Mr. Laughlin Has Resigned !> (Continued from page one) the county infirmary for the next three motghs: Nitpick & Company, groceries, $85.78; Niblick 11- Co., dry goods, $13.82; Fisher & Harris, to- ‘ bacco, $13.00; Miller's Bakery for I piMnd and one-half loAes of bread, at twelve cents each.
■*■■**■■***■*—. tAMNNMMMart FUNERAL Funeral services for the late Elijah Walters will lie held Wednesday afternoon from the homo at 1;30 and from the Methcdlfit church at 2:30 o'clo< k. The Rev. Charles Tinkham will preach the sermon, and the mem- j burs of the O. A. R. will have charge of the service. Burial will ibc at the Decatur cemetery. IT'S CHILDREN Mrs. C. E. Schwab, IM7, St. Canton, Ohio, writes: ‘‘We use Foley's Hortey and Tar for coughs and find it one of the best remedies on the market, especially good for children's coughs, as it does not contain any drtig that is harmful." Serious sickness oftfen follows lingering colds. Hard coughing racks a child’s body and disturbs strength-igiving sleep, and thw poisons weaken the system so that dis/ ease e.oiut be warded off. Take Foley’tf In time. —Sold Everywhere. —.II ■■ .. ! .II I 111
