Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 19, Number 54, Decatur, Adams County, 4 March 1921 — Page 2

ieifSKv Ah.o'LuCy - ~ L I ■■ | f« ■».*»» ff-HHtt HMH U>A»fIJU-»MWIt> <X»MJO »!(► foKtt- .C«tl A . t«V T»V- .J .■< 1 'if VO" CBHUIOWH- . it. TCAAT --- 1,. /.* ? £‘“' , ‘ o "r*y > .* N *''*• f pk ' hash anNiiTKr’HM«- ] 1 ;ox , coio (cum O'»»*i.(vw) J* ~ .. r , .... Q «*» WAM DCPC Oam C | <A T CTXj-txt* AUaTTD *, sjffi**?** 1 ? FlMft./ <N<*WIP . | TfASHtM V-. l/j ''Ju «hh eier ■ '»■ ’e- ■’ „ZZZ7I <* 'A nw* »«*«». | wmmi ui(e siir«»a>w» ' —pl* . ji* I rMMIiAK’A ».•»• .{.‘■a’.vAHWATteiWKM Q •« IWMtSkooH *caOWWH'«. -2’imtiPcoj, to'Ui. ...„t t ~ — 1 XM»Utv o« cnttrr tv-. . 7> , .WWIOS-ONCI-I, *««,•<" >1 I „ AS{UOM SAL-r WASHOOM {ALT- 1 , ' %t. .■ . * r4AL-__aCXJ!S’:*U,.Jj I cEJ ViXifc- l I .—. XK? , -H 1 Wil ■ XtT&lrSXWtf »“lwrM »\ j IXEVERyBOOVS SERVING *EA4 now* Sv A R CANNED AIEATS ; riwn«^iw W ..tT!i 'mm m ■■» ~ ~~ ~ ”"***—'- ‘- r ~—— - 1 - Wherever women congregate; you are likely to hear t?scm telling each other what delicious, appetizing dishes are being prepared with War Department Canned Corned Beef and Corned Beef Hash, and how The Whole Family Can Dine for Ja Day for. a Dollar - ’. Your Sealer hafr—or should have —a supply of these meats.’ Be sure and get your shared Insist, if he hasn’t them; that he get you a supply of . War Department CannedjCorned Beer and Corned ?eef Hash. ; 9 Tell him you know there’s a legitimate profit in them for him (at the wholesale prices shown below) and that you and yout neighbors can make big savings by purchasing these nourishing foods.? / THE WHOLESALE PRICES. .. are prlated They will give yeu toms Idea bi wkst yeu will save H ■ - ypu; purchases. \ CORNED BEEF HASH CORNED BEEF —' y I lb. cans, 15c per can He. I cam, <5: per caa j 2 It. CSEJ, JOc per cas No. 2 cans, 27c per cad I j ** 1 lb. cane. He per caa /* 6 lb. can?, SI.OO per tsp. J TABLE OF DISCOUNTS Discount, to apply oa all purchases c! aurplua canned •£ tri sent J tlbgDevot' > Nars-ber 15, 1130, are as follows: 1 < Z " 1 a al ’ B » 250 to Si.oeo .el ? Quartermaster at J ;SIS 4,001 and over.... 20 per cent * Sroeklya, J»th St JU Fir.!' v The Government will pay freight on carloid loti to toy p»!at la tha Uaittd . ij. * ***&.* 1 Statu lectted znore than twenty milti from shipping point ' Olt Anty Supply Base, 1 CUMULATIVE PURCHASES COUNT .-‘ ic *‘* J?’*’ 1 * Wl ’*? 5t .,.,W When purchne. r«=h $50,001, 24% net to prevaU; when purcha.es f..U ♦ ' Q*.. Tra=.P«rt.tio. SIOO,OOI, 28% net to prevail; when purchases reach $500,001, 32% Eei4«’TPS»'jf ®*“ >, vail; whsa purchases reach sl,oos,Ml and ever, 55% r?i t» prtvuk 7*® SB FSactsce, Callft MINIMUM ORDER ACCETTEDa 125 fl ? ' BRANCH | c .jj ‘ DEcaWijie Quartermaster Genera!, ■* I Buy It by the - I WAR DEPARTMENT CANNED MEATS

DEMOCRAT WANT ADS GET RESULTS

Save Your Money / For Future Investments For the Habit of Saving For the Interest It Earns For the Money Itself 4'o Interest On Savings Old Adams County Bank Resources Nearly $2,000,000.00

LOANS ■-—on—*— - Farm and City Property At low rate of interest and reasonable terms. THE DECATUR ABSTRACT / & LOAN GO. 157 South Second St. Decatur, Indiana Henry B. Heller, Pres. E. Burt Lenhart, Sec’y.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1921.

Grove's Is The Only Genuine Laxative BROMO QUININE tablet-’. The first and original Cold and Grip i Tablet. (Be sure you get BROMO.) : 30c. , fri DEMOCRATIC COMMITTEE The members of the Democratic Central committee will meet Friday evening at 7:30 at the offices of J. Fred Fruchte for the purpose of electing a city chairman. All members are requested to be -present at this meeting as it is very important. J. FRED FRUCHTE, 52-3 ts County Chairman

“GETS-IT" ENDS ALL CORNS Just As Good For Calluses. Money Back If It Fails. I Thirty seconds after you touch the 'corn with this liquid corn remover'the jabbing, stabbing pain or it stops, for all time. i No More Coro Torture. A»k Yuur Friends About Ko corn, hard or soft, is too old or Immediately it dries and shrivels, the too deeply rooted to resist •Gets-lt.” I fulges loosen from the true flesh and son you can peel it right off with your lingers us painlessly as you trim your nails. Don’t < <|(hlle corn pests. Don’t nurse and pumper them. Don’t cut J and trim them. REMOVE them with I‘‘GETS-IT.” Costs a trifle at any drug i store. , Mfd. by E. I/twrence & Co., CHicajS*. Sold in Decatur by Holthouse Drug Co.. Callow & Kohne, Smith. Yager & balk, and Enterprise Drug Co. SMALL FARM FOR SALE I will sell my eleven acre farm, 1% I miles east of Decatur. Improvements i ; include good eight room house, with i electric lights in each room, good j barn, chicken coop and other buildings. For particulars see the underi signed or Call phone 690. 150-Gt WILLIAM BREINER.

♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ DOINGS IN SOCIETY ♦ ++++++♦+♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ Club Calendar FRIDAY. Queen Esthers—Dorothy Walters. Zion Lutheran Aid—School House., Womans Home Missionary Society' [of M. E. Church -Mrs. Robert Case. U. B. Ladies' Aid—Mrs. John Hill. SATURDAY. Christian Ladies' Aid, Apron and [ • Pastry Salo—Schmitt Meat Market, i Methodist Home Guards —Postponed [ Monday. Pythian Sisters—lnitiation and Pot Luck Supper. K. of P. Home. Research Club—Mrs. J. T. Merryman. ■ Woman's Club —Masonic Hall. Tlie Pythian Sisters’ lodge will initiate a number of candidates Monday evening, and following the initiation a pot luck supper will be enjoyed. All members are urged to attmd. ♦ The meeting of the Methodist Home Guards announced for tomorrow at the Methodist parsonage lias been postponed for a week. Members please note the change. * The Research club will meet Mon day afternoon with Mrs. J. T. Merryman at her home on Second street. ♦ The dramatic section of the Wtomn’s dub will have charge of the pro- ■ ram Monday evening nt the Masonic ball. Members will invite guests to njoy the program with them. Officers will also be elected at the Monday night meeting. ♦ The Monroe Ladies’ Aid society f the Monroe M. E. church met at the home of Mrs. E. W. Busclie on March 3rd for an all-day meeting. The meeting was called to order by the president. Mrs. Busche. at 3 a m. and about thirty ladies were presnt. The day was spent in quilting •nd a good social time. At 12 o’clock ; sumptuous dinner was served by the hostess, to which all did ample ustice. Those present were: Mrs Xrider, Mrs. J. F. Crist. Mrs. Hattie Sells, Mrs. Ella Shirk, Mrs. L. C. Mills, Mrs M. S. Leichty, Mrs. Anna Haggard. Mrs. Amos Lehman, Mrs. Allie Andrews. Mrs. Phil Heffner. Mrs. Martha Thomas, Mrs. Jacob Jxmgerberger. Mrs. W. S. Smith, Mrs J. F. Hocker. Mrs. W. L. Keller, Mrs. Mary Merriman, Mrs. J. A. Hendricks, Mrs. D. Fuhrman, Mas. Grover Sells. Mrs. Mary Andrews, Mrs. Allie Johnson. Mrs. G. J. Hoffer. Mrs. Ella Johnson, Mrs. Ruppert. Mrs. L. A. Thomas, Mrs. Sallie Busche. Mrs. E. W- Busche. Mrs. M. F. Parrish and Miss "Helen Sells. Judge J. C. MorJn attended to bus ness at Fort Wayne yesterday afternoon.

Heavy Hauling (Continued on two) times the drivers become quite insolent when taken to task. The men with the outfit which forced the Rev. Betts into ibe ditch were very rough in their treatment of the minister. Coolidge is Now Vice President from pace one) announced the arrival of President Wilson and President elect Harding, who amid grat applause, were escorted by the joint congressional committee on arrangements to seats directly in front of Vice President Marshall. Finally Coolidge was escorted to the chamber and standing with upraised hand before Marshall, took the oath to uphold the Constitution. This done, the ceremony and the life of the 66th Congress came to an end with the dropping of Marshall’s gavel. Marshall and the retiring Senators became private citizens with the sine die adjournment of the old Congress. Immediately after Coolidge’s inauguration was completed, a procession began from the chamber to the stand at the east front of the Capitol, where Harding was inaugurated.

Jhis&JSiiiiffles Sniffled, sneezingarr •4.-rS feverishness are evi ! -fIWK donees of an »p---v./'* % preaching eold. zS#>2siV) Heed the warning! \ BeglntakinglJght-, \ jj&ff fpr\ ning Laxative JWF Quinine Tablets at ’ J fw once and cheek de-i ' f velopmonts, stop the . . * cold and .'eel fine with-: in 21 hours. Neglect these symptoms and you risk a spell of sickness. I Lightning Laxative Qnlniite Tab- B lets are safe and sure and pieajdnt. ■ They stop headache quickly, reduce ■ fever, cause mild but prompt and I thorough bowel action, drive out I body poisons. No bnd after effects ■ : no griping or sickening. Just quick I relief and benefit. Your dru'*'*!' * ■ guarantees tlie’in—2sc per box?*"’*'”

President Harding in First Public Address (Continued from page one) with the nations of the world, great j and small for conference for counael, to seek the expressed views of wodd opinion, to recommend away to approximate disarmament and relieve the crushing burdens ot military and naval establishments. We elect to participate in suggesting plans for mediation, conciliation and arbitration and would gladly join in that expressed conscience of progress which | seeks to clarify and write the law of international relations and establish a world court for the disposition of cush justiciable questions as nations are agreed to submit thereto. It expressing aspirations, in seeking practical plans. In transplating humanity’s new concept of righteousness and justice in its hatred of war into j recommended action, we are ready | most heartily to unite but every commitment must be made in the exercise of our national soverignty. Since freedom impelled and independence inspired, and nationality exalted, a world super government is contrary to everything we cherish and can have no sanction by our republic. This is not selfishness, it is sanctity. It is not aloofness, it is security. It is not suspicion of others, it is patriotic adherence to the things which made us what we are. Today, better than ever before we know the aspirations of human kind and share them. We have come to a new realization of our place in the world. The unselfishness of these United States is a thing proven our devotion to peace for ourselves and for the world is well established, our oncern for preserved civilization has had its impassioned and heroic expression. There was no American failure to resist the attempted rever■lion of civilization, there will be no failure today or tomorrow. Rests on Popular Will. The success of our popular government rests wholly upon the interpreation of the deliberate, intelligent, lependable popular will of America, in a deliberate questioning of a suggested change of national policy, where internationality was to .superede nationality, we turned to a referendum to the American people, "here was ample discussion, and .here is a public mandate in manifest understanding. America is ready to encourage, eager to initiate, anxious to participate in any seemly program likely to lessen the probability of war and promote that brotherhood of mankind which must be God’s highest conception of human relationship. Because we cherish ideals of justice and peace because we appraise international comity and helpful relationship no less highly than any people of the vvorld we aspire to a high place in the moral leadership of civilization, and we hold a maintained America, the proven republic, the unshaken temple jf representative democracy, to be -tot only an inspiration and example but the highest agency of strengthen ing good will and promoting accord on both enntinents. Mankind needs a world-wide bene diction of understanding. It is need ed among individuals, among peoples, among governments and it will inaugurate an era of good feeling to .nark the birth of a new order. In ;uch understanding men will strive confidently for the promtion of their better relationships and nations will promote the comities so essential to peace. “Trade’ ties closey.” We must understand ties of trade bind nations in closest intimacy anti none may receive except as he gives. We have not strengthened ours in ac■ordance with our resources or our genius notably on our own continent where a galaxy of republics reflect he glory of new world democracy, but in the new. order of finance and rade we mean to promote enlarged activities and seek expanded confidence.

Perhaps we can make no more helpful contribution by example than prove a republic's capacity to emerge from the wreckage of war. While the worlds embittered travail did not leave us devastated lands nor desolated cities, left no gaping wounds, no breast filed with hate, it did not invove us in the delirious of expenditure in expanded currency and cred its, in unbalanced industry, in unspeakable waste and disturbed relationships. While it uncovered our portion of hateful selfishness at home, it also releavel the heart of America as sound and fearless and beating in confidence. Amid it all, we have riveted the gaze of all civilization to the unselfishness and the righteousness of representative democracy, where ouri freedom never has made offensive warfare, never has sought territorial aggrandizement through force, never I has turned to the arbitrament oi' arms until reason has been exhausted.!' When the governments'of earth shall 1 ' established a freedom like our own ' shall have sanctioned th pursuit of’ peace as we have pracf csed it, I be(Continued on pt.'e three)

Mecca Theatre The Place They All Go. LAST—TIME—TONIGHT TOMORROW “THE BIRTH OF A RACE’’ “OLD WIVES FOR NEW" The »upreme wonder picture A Paramount-Artcraft euper. In eipht big reel.. Year. production, featuring a cast In the making—cost over of .lx great star., $1,000,000 —employed over The same class of picture as 10 000 people. A picture other Paramount-Artcraft specials, that will hold you. “Why Change Your Wife?”, etc. Also—A good two reel comedy. Also—Good two reel comedy Ten big reels tonight making a real show. Admission 10-20 cents. Admission 10-15 cents.

Save the Fruit By spraying your fruit trees now with Lime and Sulphur before the foliage appears. We have it. in the dry form, from one pound to a ten pound can. Callow & Kohne Drug Store DRUGGISTS On the east side of the street.

Crystal Theatre THE HOUSE OF QUALITY TONIGHT “THE VENGEANCE OF DURAND’ Vitagraph special and one of the big ones, featuring the delightful star. ALICE JOYCE. Also—The next episode of the famous serial, “The Silent Avenger,” featuring William Duncan. Don't miss this episode. 10-15 cents. COMING TOMORROW—“TIN PAN ALLEY”, pox special. Also Hank Mann comedy.

Curtain Goods for Spring With the first touch of Spring, the housewife’s fancy turns to thoughts of fitting draperies and curtains that will meet her ideals of the beautiful, and harmonize perfectly with the furnishings of her home. And al this store such a bewildering confusion of pretty styles and colors await your inspection, so that even the most fastidious will have no difficulty in finding here the drapery or curtain she had pictured in her mind as being the only one that will blend into the settings of each and every nook and corner. SCRIMS Either plain nr bordered. Also some with fancy colored borders. A choice selection in (.ream, Ecru and White with prices ranging upward from 15c per yard. NETS White or Ecru in a variety of Beautiful J ,n f. ed per yard at stk ‘- (isc t° $E 15. LADKAS Curtain material with plain border, which we are offering special at 15c per yard. Announcing a Corset Service That W ill Take An Important Place in Milady’s Plans t or Easter Apparel College Girl and J. C. C. Corsets $1.50 to $5.50 Tnd SV* 1 niode,s fort, slender, average and stout figure types. hiiw L?n l t ‘T’ d ! Uni I . ow busl * yk ' s with kmg hips, long skirts anil modish fiat backs. • a’gihW ly A' l ’ l °‘ hers ~ n ore heavily boned, orset is Essential to Correct Dress. The Fair Store I’erd Bleeke, Prop. p honc 84