Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 19, Number 101, Decatur, Adams County, 28 April 1921 — Page 2
DAILY DEMOCRAT Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. lOHN H. HELLER Editor IRTHUR R. HOLTHOUSE. As»o,4ate Editor and Bueineee Manager JOHN H. STEWART City Editor | Subscription Rates Cash In Advance \ Jingle Copies 3 cents One Week, by carrier 15 cents One Year, by carrier $7.50 One Month, by mail 45 cents Three Months, by mail $1.25 Six Months, by mall $2.25 One Year, by mail $4.00 One Year, at office $4.00 Advertising rates made known on application. Entered at the postoffice at Decatur. Indiana, as second-class matter. Columbia, much talked of because this nation has handed her a neat little bank roll of twenty five million. | Is not the one we sing about as the , gem of the ocean. The primary next Tuesday is important and good citizens should vote. You may not think it makes j any difference but it does. A small vote cast next Tuesday will show a lack of interest in your local affairs, ] the most important problem you have. While we grunt about our taxes i and we have plenty of cause to do so it may help to know that in England ] the income tax alone is one-third of' the gross income and the local taxes: more than we pay for every thing oombined, but who wants to get in the same condition? An educated gorilla died recently j in New York and great scientists and . doctors have had a lot of fun disecting his body. They discovered that the appendix and brain are about the same as that of man and some one has added that the gorilla like a good many men. used one about as much as the other. With more than nine thousand acres of beets contracted for and 1,300 of this amount in Adams county, Manager Carmody has a right to smile. It’s exWllent support for a good industry and will pay good divi- I dends when the big mill starts next■ October by bringing to this county > several hundred thousand dollars. , It's time to clean up and the city will do their part. Street Commissioner Dowling is urging everyone to get their rubbish ready so the city: wagons can pick it up. They can't i make a dozen trips down your alley so the thing to do is to be ready sor 1 them by Monday morning. Pile the old cans and rubbish in the alleys. Tom will do the rest. hi ■ —— Big city factories are now looking for locations outside the crowded districts and within the coming year a number will open branches in the smaller cities. Decatur should land
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one or two of the good ones and knep I on going. Among those who are plan ning this are Henry Ford, the Underwood Typewriter Company " and others of considerable reputation. — The high tax you are paying under I the new law is a crime but those who spend the money from Indianapolis feel they have your endorsement according to the returns from the last election. We heard an official of the state tax board say that the people like high taxes and that the tax question has never effected an election and that’s the theory they are going on. Arthur Brisbane, the hundred thousand dollaf editor of the Herat papers offers the following: “Germany offers titty billion gobi | dollars to the allies, payable in 42 i years. The allies suggest, because I’nde Sam forwards the offer, that ihe should guarantee its payment. At the same time the birdhouse in New York's Central Park receives from • Martin Johnson a gift of the Australian cucoboro bird, or "laughing jackass." Only that bird can do justice to the guarantee suggestion." The newest word and one which promises to be used more or less as I time goes on and we all make an esI tort -to enjoy "normalcy” is "peptii mist." supposed to mean the opposite | ■ of pessimist and refers to one so tilled with “pep" that he bubbles over and who refuses to believe that the great IT.l T . S. must continue to go to hades because the people over across . the Atlantic prefer war and panic ] and famine to baseball and golf and politics. It's a good word at that and it won"t hurt any of us to take a dose. Bebe Daniels, a vamp of the motion pictures who gets her mail at j Los Angeles is getting a large portion of advertising free, which is alright but in doing it she is making a joke out of the law of the land and fools out of those in authority there. Some time ago she was arrested for driving her flivver at a rate of fifty some miles an hour and the ’squire I sentenced her to ten days in jail. She accepted and she had her cell j fitted in great style with a phonoI graph, bath tub and other fancies. She supplies elaborate meals, has ] fifty callers a day, more flowers than they can stack in the jail and in the i meantime her press agent is working himself nearly to death. That resolution tor immediate peace with Germany is having a rocky time and seems as far from adoption or perhaps farther than it did during the campaign of promises. It is not always what we want to do but what we can do and with the > present difficulties in Europe any es- • forts to break away or to make sepI arate peace which would be neces-
DECATUR DAILY, DEMOCRAT, THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 1921.
T7Z~ . -r! D For Sick Motors ■ When rout Motor ha> loat it> Pan - 3 I. hard lo Mart— Hu • Moudk Kaoch — Uaaa an e«tr» amount of Cai Ana or CM— JM up M amoothly and mwloah W Don’t Experiment p h Mala • traatmanl on M No. 5 Marvel * Cylinder Re-Boring Machine ’■ 4*4 Finn* MM* put pep m aidi «no<oo — R-Mtoce !00'C •ompruMn in y A marvrktua machme far qutdk and eaMMcal work—* Knap your prevent car tn M condfoon w At the Shop / \ E of Better Service \ 11- \J J E * known a# M SCHMITZ & THICKER I GARAGE ■ ’Phone 505. » Look fur Th* Sign to Our Window ■ AN OPEN LETTtfi TO WOMEN Mrs. Little Tells How She Suffered and How Finally Cured Philadelphia, Pa. — “I was not able to . do my housework and had to lie down
■ most of the time and ■ felt bad in my left I side. My monthly ■ periods were irregI ular, sometimes five ■or seven months I apart and when they ] Idid-appear would last I for two weeks and : B were very painful. I | was sick for about a ■ year and a half and I doctored but without ] any improvement.
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A neighbor recommended Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to me, and the second day after I started taking it I began to feel better and I kept on taking it for seven months. Now I keep house and perform all my household duties. You can use these facts as you please and I will recommend Vegetable Compound to everyone who suffers as 1 did.” —Mrs. J. S. Little, 3455 Livingston St., Philadelphia, Pa. How much harder the daily tasks of a woman become when she suffers from such distressing symptomsand weakness ; as did Mrs. Little. No woman should allow herself to get into such a condition because such troubles may be speedily overcome by Lvdia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, which for more than forty years has been restoring American women to health. BAD BREATH ~ Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets Get at the Cause and Remove It Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablet-, the substitute for calomel, act gently or. the bowels and positively do the work. People afflicted with bad breath find quick relief through taking them. Dr. Edwards’ Clive Tablets are a vegetable compound ci cd with alive dl.t They act gcntlv tut firmly on the bowels and liver, stimulating them co natural action, clearing the blood, and purifying the entire system. . They do that which calomel does, without any of the bad after effects. Take one or two every night for a week and note the pleasing effect. gary if the resolution passes, would i not only be serious but impossible, i The separate peace idea is going to I come back £t us some day in a man- • ner that will be regretted and the • wise boys in Washington should re- • member that when this happens they • I cannot possibly charge it to Wilson as they have about everything else they didn't care to father themselves. K. OF P. TONIGHT. The rank of esquire will be conferred on twenty candidates by the K. of P. lodge this evening. Members and especially those having a part in the work, are urged tobe on hand • promptly at 7:30. —J. H. Stewart, C. C. The American Legion indoor fair and bazaar. which was held at the American Legion hall, will be continued Saturday afternoon and evening on account of inclement weather Tuesday and Wednesday. Teamster’s Life Saved "Peterson Ointment Co., Inc. I had a very severe sore on my leg for years. lam a teamster. I tried all medicines and salves, but without success. I tried doctors, but they failed to cure me. I couldn't sleep for many nights from pain. Doctors said I could not live for more than two years. Finally Peterson's Ointment was recommended to me and by its use the sore was entirely healed. Thankfully yours, William Haase. W»st Park, Ohio, care P. G. Reitz. Box 19».” Peterson says: “I am proud of the above letter and have hundreds of others that tell cf wonderful cures of Eczema, Piles and Skin Diseases.’’ Peterson's Ointment is 60 cents a box. Mail orders tilled by Peterson Ointment Co.. Inc., Buffalo, N. Y. PRAISES THEM TO HIS FRIENDS Hackache is a symptom of weak or disordered kidneys. Stiff and painful joints, rheumatic aches, sore muscles, puffiness under the eyes are others. These symptoms indicate” that . the kidney and bladder need help to do the work of filtering and casting out from the system poisons and waste products, that cause iuuulc. Beu Richard- ■ son, Wingrove, W/Va„ writes: “I will praise Foley Kidney Pills be?ausethey have helped me.” Sold everywhere.
♦ DOINGS IN SOCIETY • r Club Calendar ( Thursday. Bachelor Maids —Miss Rose Tonnelier. M. E. Young People’s Auxiliary — i Urcile Amspaugh. « Zion’s Lutheran Aid—School House. D. O. D. Class — Bertha Baughman. Madison Street. Evangelical Ladies’ Two-cent Supper—Evangelical Church. Root Township Home Economics Club—Mrs. Dick Hill. ' Friday. U. B. Ladies' Called Meeting—Mrs. , Blanche Elzey. Called meeting, Delta Theta Tau — Miss Glenys Mangold. Saturday Tirzah (Ben Hur) (Mke and Candy J Sale —Schmitt Meat Market. Pythian Sisters’ Two-cent Supper — K. of P. Home. MONDAY. J. T. Kelly’s S. S. Class —Evangel- | ical Church. The Tirzah club of Ben-Hur lodge will have a home-made cake and candy sale at the Schmitt Brothers’ meat : market Saturday morning, April 30. 98-t5 ——— There will be a called meeting of the Delta Theat Tan sorority Friday evening at 7 o'clock at the home of I Miss Glenys Mangold. All members are requested to be present. 2t LOCATES AT LAKE GEORGE Mr. and Mrs, B. E. Miller, rMs. M. Whirter and son, H. E. McWhirter returned from Kalamazoo after a short visit. While there Mr. and Mrs. Miller went to Lake George ' where they purchased a grocery store and a cottage. They will leave next week to clean and open up the store. The Millers will make Lake George their i summer home. The jury at Van Wert. 0., trying the Lampe murder case will probably ■be permitted to take the case for I deliberation late this evening. The I arguments were made by attorneys i during the day. The introduction of I evidence required nine days, being one of the longest criminal cases ever tried in Van Wert county. HELPED HER LITTLE GIRL Children need all their strength for growing. A lingering cold weakens them so that the system Is open to attack by more serious sickness. Mrs. Amanda Flint, Route 4, New Philadelphia, Ohio, writes: "Foley’s Honey and Tar cured my little girl of the worst - tickling cough. I had tried many things and found nothing to help until I got Foley’s Honey and Tar.” Gives immediate relief from distressing, racking, tearing coughs. Sold everywhere. KIWANIANS TO CLEVELAND Cleveland, 0., April 28.—A1l rail > and water routes will lead to CleveI land the latter part of June when I 8,000 Kiwanians will journey here to I attend the International Kiwanis ' Club convention. Already 3,000 Ki- , wanians have made transportation res- . ervation. it was announced afc convention headquarters, which have been | opened in Cleveland. Here are a few special trains and 1 chartered steamers, which various > Kiwanis clubs have arranged for: I Special tmin from Fort I Worth. Texas, bringing 150 delegates. Special train from Atlanta, Ga., and (other southern cities, bringing 150 deli egates. Special train, running via St. Louis ' | Peoria, 111., Indianapolis, Ind., and I j Cincvinnati, 0., bringing 150 deleI I gates. 1 Pullman cars from New Mexico, ■ j Colorado, Wyoming and Utah, arriv- ; ing June 20th, bringing 50 delegates. Leave Denvor June 17. 1 Chartered, steamer, "The Tionesta,'* leaving Duluth, Minn., in the evening of June 15th, bringing several hundred delegates from Duluth and nearby cities. Chartered steamer from Buffalo, bringing 300 delegates from eastern Pennsylvvania cities, arriving June I 20th. i Chartered steamer from Buffalo, bringing at least 100 delegates from i New England cßies. Chartered steamer, arriving June I 21st, bringing 900 delegates from I New York state. Ten car special train, bringing 250 I delegates from Pawtucket, R. I.; I New Haven. Conn.; Springfield, Mass. ] and other New England cities. I In addition to these special trains I and boats, there will be thousands I who will come in smaller bodies. I Many will drive here by Automobile. I Os these, 125 will come from New I York towns. Other auto delegations I are to come from Indiana cities. The I Richmond, Va., delegates plan to take I the boat as far as pssible and com- I plete the trip by rail. Many clubs I are planning pleasure trips in con-, | nection with the convention trip andj| are arranging for stop-overs, coming. I and going. j
WHEELERJS MAD Characterizes New Beer Regulations as “Break in Dyke of Prohibition” CALLS IT A FAKE Four Major Measures Before Congress and Old Time Fight Seems On Washington, D. C., April 28—<(Spe- • cial to Daily Democrat)—Character-I izing the forth-coming new beer reg-1 ulations as a "break in the dyke of] prohibition” Wayne IL Wheeler, gen- < eral counsel for the antl-saloon league today isused a call for the . drys of the nation to seal the break help the drinkers to get beer for ( beverage purposes by geting a physician to certify, to an imaginary ill-, ness,” said Wheeler, “All the medical properties in beer are asily obtainable in any number of drugs. "Its ala fake and its up to the ' friends of prohibtion to uphold the , principle for which we have fought for so many years.” Four major measures touching on! the liquor question are now before i congress. One bill seeks the repeal I of the Volstead act; another in the, new Vdlstead act to prohibit the pre-. scribing of beer for medicinal pur-] poses and tightening the liquor regulations. A third bill would give American ships the right to carry, liquor for sale when out of the three ■ mile zone and a fourth bill would transfer .the prohibition enforcement department to the attorney general’s office. WHO’LL WIN? — Oakland, Calif.. April 28. —(Special: to Daily Democrat). —Fred Winesor.i discoverer and first manager of Champion Dempsey: "Dempsey will win in four rounds. Carpentier .cannot withstand the attack of the champion. Dempsey is a cruel punisher. He doesn’t have to: inflict his damage at long range. He’ll start Carpentier on his way in the clinches with short punishment deal-1 ing blows. Carpentier will be ready j to fall when the Referee separates! them. Four rounds will do for the j Frenchman —maybe less.” RHEUMATISM LEAVES YOU FOREVER Deep Seated Uric Acid Deposits Are Dissolved and the Rheumatic Poison Starts to Leave the System Within Twenty-four Hour*. Every druggist in this county Is authorized to say to every rheumatic sufferer that if two bottles of Allenrhu, the sure eonquerer of rheumatism. does not stop all agony, reduce swollen joints and do away with even the slightest twinge of rheumatic pain he will gladly return your money without comment. Allenrhu has been tried and tested for years, and really marvelous results have been accomplished in the most severe cases where the suffering and agony was intense and piteous and where the patient was helpless. Mr. James H. Allen, the discoverer of Allenrhu, who for many years suffered the torments of acute rheumatism. desfres all sufferers to know that he does not want a cent o 4 anyone's money unless Allenrhu decisively conquers this worst of all diseases, and he has instructed all druggists to guarantee it in every instance. CUT THIS OUT — IT IS WORTH MONEY Cut out this slip, enclose with 5c and mail it to Foley & Co., 2835 Sheffield Ave., Chicago, 111., writing your name and address clearly. You will receive in return a trial package containing Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound for coughs, colds and croup; Foley Kidney Pills for pains in.sides and back; rheumatism, backache, kidney and bladder ailments; and Foley Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome and thoroughly cleansing cathartic for constipation, biliousness, headaches, and sluggish bowels. Sold everywhere.
1 Coming Tomorrow ■ VSTfI I Friday and Sat. ‘The Birth • iv a j th e Mecca of a Soul.” TONIGHT “Out of the Snow” fI ‘ , || Benjamin B. Hampton x T Presents , - F I Roy Stewart and Mildred Manning I V — in— I “The Westerners’* B A Thrilling Story of the Great West It AIso—“SNEAKX SPOOK,” a Bud comedy. Coming Tomorrow HARRY MOREY 8 —in—--7 “THE BIRTH OF A SOUL” Admission 10c-15e (Tomorrow and Saturday at the MECCA “OUT OF THE • SNOW”
For Sale! NEW U. S. ARMY TARPAULINS Extra Heavy Water Proof Canvas Re-en-forced with Rope. Just the thing to co\Tr your machines. 15 by 12 size $15.00 Original Army & Navy Goods Store No. 14 243 Monroe Street Pipe at Half Price White the supply lasts, we offer iron pipe, suitable for fence posts, gates or arbors at half price. HERE ARE THE BARGAINS: 2 inch pipe, weight 3.71 Ibs„ per foot, 5 cents3 inch pipe, weight 7.5 lbs., per foot, 15 cents. 4 inch pipe, weight 10.98 lbs., per foot, 20 cents. 5% inch pipe, weight 10.5 lbs., per foot, 25 cents. 6 inch pipe, weight 19.48 tbs., per foot, 50 cents. 8 inch pipe, weight 25 00 lbs., per foot, 75 cents. We have all sizes of pipe for plumbing, heating, water, oil or gas wells. Prices upon request. J. F. ARNOLD COMPANY j New Spring Clothes $20.00 to $45.00 I I We have those fine new woolens you’ve been waiting to see; the latest and smartest in style designs; the smooth fit and easy lines that only a skilled tailor can produce; we have them in double and single breasted, blue, brown and green stripes. Are you interested? - ■ -‘ -r w- Wk;v ■ toP 11 ' - ■ Teeple & Peterson Deecatur, Indiana ' 1" ■ ■ - -I I ■■!!■■« .1 111 HIM I, MOI „W- ■„ .numl. I ■—* • ■ ■
