Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 20, Number 39, Decatur, Adams County, 15 February 1922 — Page 3

I nySPEPS!A IS I OVERCOME IPN I fl SHORT TIME ■ — I taltoapolis Man H,<l Sus : I 'fered Eighteen Years and i thought Hist ase Beyond I Reach. I -Tanlac Has Bone What I I Thought Was ImpossiI |)| C ” He Declares in Ke- | in arkable Statement. I .. rin feeling more like ‘"'rty-two I of age "mn fifty-two and It is all I ' Lit of the w «y ,hiH Tanlac has I : n iit mo up-' said W. H- Fear, 818 I west 28th street, Indianapolis. Ind. I "For eighteen years I never knew I .. | t wIH to he free front stomach I trouble and had given up hope of ever I tinu like ntv old self again. I "Tanlac has done what I thought I uis impossible and I'm a new man I „,w Mv stomach has been so toned ‘i am eating anything and every hjng I want now and not feeling the Lt distress afterwards. The remarkable thing to me is how much IJ have improved in every way. I not "nly eat better, but I feel, sleep anil work better than in years.” Tanlac is sold in Decatur by Smith, Yager & Falk’s and by leading drug fists everywhere. —T I- ■ — like clouds across a summer SKY foretelling the dreaded storm are the symptoms of women's diseases which point the way to physical and mental breakdown.. The nervous irritability, the backache, the dragging pains, are not only hard to endure, but they bring certain knowledge of collapse unless something is done to relieve the sufferer. There is one standard remedy which has shown the way out for nearly fifty years. The women who have “come back" through the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound presen< an argument stronger than words could ever be.

-Mother, quick, look jVXZUEK ~\_* J' ffi what Billy hue gone \ > '<’ II and spilled—a whole ■ ..* «—«S big box of Kellogg's t vB Corn Flakes. I’ll say VV "'ll x I tie likes them a lot!" Tomorrowmorningby all means try Kelloggs GomHakes Tomorrow morning—set KELLOGG'S Corn Flakes before the family! A feast for the eye and a feast for keen appetites! For, Kellogg’s are as extra-delicious as they look—all sunny brown and wonderfully crispy, crunchy! My, but how they delight everybody! Kellogg’s Corn Flakes are not only distinctly superior to any imitation, but are the most fascinating cereal you ever ate! Kellogg’s appeal to every age! Little folks and old folks find in them the same joyous pleasure! For Kellogg’s have a wonderful flavor—- __ and Kellogg’s are never tough or leathery or hard to eat! Insist upon KELLOGG’S—the origz •*- inal Corn Flakes in the RED and GREEN package! It bears the signaF’fWM ture Kell °gg> ° r igi nator °i tunn Kellogg’s Corn Flakes. NONE ARE ftAKES GENUINE WITHOUT IT! CORNFLAKES *** maker, of KELLOGG’S KRUMBLES and KELLOGG’S BRAN, cooked aid knimbled CRYSTAL - Tomorrow Benefit Decatur City Band “Cheated Hearts” A big Universal special production featuring Herbert Rawlinson ... glamour of the far east has been retained in tnis thrilling drama of love and human sacrifice, which leads you half around the world with the most’ likable hero Jou have met in years. Help the Band Boys. Come to the show tomorrow night. Admission 10 & 20 cents.

++++++++ + ++ +++++ + ADAMB COUNTY + ♦ MILK CAMPAIGN + ♦ ■ I •!> 4* March 13 to 24 + ♦+++♦+♦♦+♦+♦++++

r- -» * i A iOW’«• I -■ - - i ; < L ■”?■ 1 Have You Had Your Milk Today? WHAT IS MILK? From an article by Dr. J. N. Hurty, State Health Hommissfoner The chemist proceeds with his analysis and finds a peculiar sugar in milk and calls it lactose, common name milk sugar. It is found only in milk. Nature know-ing the infants' needs did not use sucrose (cane sugar) and In this fact we have a hint not to give cane sugar to babies and young children. Yet, many parents there are who little heed this pointer by Dame Nature, and after allowing their children to consume cane sugar in cake, pies and candy, employ a doctor to cure their little outraged stomachs. We assault our children in

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15,1922.

other ways, and then wonder why one In four or five children die before they reach five years of age. Farther ort in his analytical studies of milk the chemist finds <nse in (cheese) and a substance he calls lactabtimen, which la very like egg albumen. Cheese has a wonderful chemistry. It Is the prominent nitrogen substance in milk and belongs to the chemical class nnnted protein. Proteins In our foods make flesh and murtf'le. parches and sugars (car bohydrates) make In at, and are truly fuels. Hnctd butter results from decontpo tition. It is principally butyric acid which gives the bad smell and taste to racid butter. "Renovated butter", the sale of which is not unlawful, is produced from old spoiled butler in the following ways: Hucksters gather in spoiled butter from country groceries, cold storage houses, and other places. It Is first, melted, and then strained through several layers of fine cheese cloth. Straining takes out any dirt, tties, sticks, stones, dead mice or other objectional things It may carry. The melted butter is then washed with hot water containing alkali enough to reduce the acids. Continued washing finally removes all the acids, also the salt and the spoiled butter is now "sweet.” . However the flavor is gone, and the taste greasy and flat. The sweet fat is now churned in sweet milk or thin cream, and this restores the lost butter flavor to a greater or less degree. The renovated butter is now colored a light yellow, salted and worked and finally moulded in forms and sold. The law requires that this made over butter shall be plainly labeled, “Renovated Butter." The fat of milk, is as we have seen.

wonderfully made. Gut all has not been told, for the scientists have discovered that it contains a substance they call Vitamine A, and which is destroyed by heat. Renovated butter and imitation butter called oleomargarine, contains only the minute amount of vitamine which was introduced bv churning in milk. Normal growth is impossible without Vitamine A. and so children who do not have a proper quantity of whole milk with its butter fat will be stunted in mind and body. Then milk contains enzyms. They are complex chemic compounds, capable of producing by simple contact the chemical transformation of other compounds. One enzym changes starch to sugar; another changes albumens into peptones, another splits up fat, and all these enzyms are produced in our digestive apparatus. Milk contains its own enzyms. WANT ADS EARN—$—-s—s — ——• + ** +<•* + •!•❖ + + ♦•!• + + + + RALSTON NOT A CANDIDATE ♦ ■ * * 4- Indianapolis. Ind.. Feb. 15 — + + (Special to Daily Democrat) — ♦ •> Samuel M. Ralston, former gov- 4- •> ernor of Indiana, announced + 4- definitely today he will not be 4- a candidate for the senatorial •?.• + nomination on the democratic 44» ticket. 4- + + + + + + + + + + -W + ** 4> Stomach Trouble Banished for 60c Quick Reties From Gas, Sour Stomach. Heartburn. or doney Free Sample oeut Oa Reqac-wt. Sufferers from stomach ills who have put chis powder to the test do net reed a money back offer to induce them to buy ajjain. The offer is made to those who have gone on suffering, trying doctor.-;' prescriptions a.id other medicines without a bit of success. but neglecting to try Dr. Jackson's Digestive and Liver Powder. This offer is made to prove the medicine-maker’s faith anti assure the buyer he doesn’t risk a cent. There is no risk to the health cither, for the powder contains no opiates or ..thnulants to harm the user. Buy a package today from your druggist, and begin the work of banishing your indigestion, sour gassy, bloated stomach, shortness c’ breath, heartburn, headache and for.! breath. If not satisfied after usir ; the first box. your money will 1 c cheerfully refunded. Free s.amnh sent on request. Jackson Medicine .Company, Zanesville, Ohio. Sold by Most Druggists Hl 1 1 | i | X r ; ; LMhf (I oL HOT WATER ALL THE TIIME That will be your pleasant lot when we have installed for your our hot water heating system. Any time you want hot water, just light the gas and in a few minutes you will have all you need. Let us install our modern sanitary sink in your kitchen and tubs in your laundry. It pays! P. J. HYLAND West Monroe Street

: End Rheumatism, i Weak, Lame Back: —■ ♦ ! f Old St. Jacobs Oil will stop • pain and stiffness in a I ' few moments | ' Stop "dosing" rheumatism. It's pain only. St. Jacobs OH will stop any pain, and not one rheumatism case in fifty requires Internal treatment. Rub soothing, penetrating #Bt, Jacobs Oil right on the tender spot, and by the time you say Jack Robinson out comes the rheumatic pain and distress. St. Jacobs Oil is a harmless rheumatism liniment which never disappoints, and does not burn the skin. I it takes pain, soreness and stifi - ness from aching joints, muscles and bones; stops sciatica, lumbago, backache and neuralgia. Limber up! Get a small trial bottle of old-time, honest St. Jacobs Oil I from any drug store, and iq, a moment you'll be free from pains, aches and stiffness. Don't suffer! Rub rheumatism away.

LAUDER NEVER BETTER

When Admiral Earl Beatty, the British naval hero, attended Sir Harry Lauder's performance in New York City, the Scottish minstrel, who had on several occasions been entertained on the admiral’s flagship, after entertaining the members of the crew by his songs and stories, met his distinguished guest in the lobby of the theater. "Well, well, Harry, it's good to see you—and how are you?’’ said the admiral, jovially. "Never better," responded Lauder —"and you, Lord Beatty?” "Oh, brawly, brawly,” was the reply—a bit of Scotch vernacular that brought a smile of satisfaction to the faces of the kilted members of a Caledonian club that had turned out for the occasion. Sir Harry will be at the Majestic theater, Fort Wayne, Saturday, Feb. 18th, matinee and night.

17 DAIRYMEN “MAKE” 300 POUND COW CLUB Four Win Gold Medals for Herds Averaging 500 Pounds of j Butterfat Lafayette, Ind., Feb. 15. —Seventeen Indiana dairymen have herds which qualified for the 300 pound cow club last year, according to announcements made today by E. A. Gannon, of the dairy extension staff of Ihirdue University who has charge of the cow testing association work. Os the 17, four won gold medals for having seven or more cows which produced 500 pounds of butterfat or over during the year; three won silver medals for a herd of eight or more in the 400 pound class and ten won the bronze medals with ten or more cows each producing more than 300 pounrs each. For the second year, the Gossard Breeding Estates!, Martinsville, was in the 500 pound class or among the gold medal winners with 17 head of Ayrshires. At Purdue University, 12 head of the herd composed of the four leading dairy breeds jumped from the 400 to the 500 pound class: .1. A. Driscol, Liberty, had seven Jerseys in the gold medal list and C. M. Bottenia and Sons, Indianapolis, bad nine of their Holsteins above the 500 mark. The silver medal winners or 400 pound herds were Morgan Bros., Chesterton, with 15 Holsteins; Dan Haxton, Hobart, 10 Holsteins, and J. F. McCulloch, Charlestown. 8 Jerseys. Bronze medal winners, or 300 pound class follow: H. A. Hellmich, Greensburg, 14 Jerseys; F. H. Turner and Sons, Paoli, 14 Jerseys; J. P. Ice and Son, Mt. Summit, 12 Jerseys; John T. Carr, Charlestown. 11 Jerseys'; George Lute, Hobart, 11 Holsteins; Marcene Haxton, Valparaiso, 11 Holsteins; C. O. Prather, Memphis, 10 Jerseys; George Schlosser, Jeffersonville; 10 Jerseys; E. C. Pickens, Mitchell, 10 Jerseys; Whitford Bros., Kendallville, 10 Jerseys. All these herds were in cow testing associations or on official test so that accurate records might be kept of all them. They are especially good, when it is considered that the average Indiana cow produces only IGO pounds of I butterfat and about 2500 pounds of I milk. The average of all cows in the I cow testing associations of Indiana is I pounds of butterfat per year, which I 268 pounds of butterfat and 5,647 I shows what the more successful dairy- I men are doing through the use of bet- I ter breeding stock, better herd man- I agement and better feeding practices, a MUST NOT NEGLECT BOOK, SAYS OPIE READ I "The world must not neglect the I book”, says Opie Read, well-known I novelist, who will lecture here Monday I evening. | "In the book,” he continues, "man- I

« Michael Stern & Co. Value First Clothes Just Came In New Spring Suits--Top Coats Especially do we mention the High School Fancy Models Boys! A little early perhaps but come in and look them over any way. In Boys Knee Pant Fancy and Blue Serge Confirmation suits we are mighty proud of our new spring stock and know the Big Reductions in prices will please you also. We invite your inspection. TefuvT-Ayfxt> Go J BETTER CLOTHES FOR LESS JMO HEY-ALWAYS-” • DECATUR • INDIANA*

kind finds the record of itself during the ages in which it has risen to its present development. History is the I biography of men, and to neglect it is worse than neglecting to remember what one’s own life has been. “If it were not for the book, each man would start where his father 1 started and any progress that he ! might make would be lost with his death. The trouble with the world today is its neglect of the study of the book. The possession of the bookmarks the difference between a dark age and an age of enlightenment. “The thing that threatens to destroy the world at the present moment in political history, is not bolshevism, it is not extravagance, is not lack of religious fervor, is not spiritualism, or any of the other evils that are cried

“Somebody to see you!” IF everybody with something to interest you should come and ring your bell, what a nuisance it would be! Think of the swarming, jostling crowd, the stamping of feet on your porch and carpets! 'WNHB Every day we know of many callers who come to see you. They never jangle the bell—they don’t take up your whole day trying to get your attention. Instead, they do it in away that is most considerate of your privacy and your convenience. They advertise in your newspaper! In this way you have only to listen to those you know at a glance have something that interests you. They make it short, too, so you can gather quickly just what you want to know. You can receive and hear them all without noise or confusion in comparatively few minutes. - ■ ■ ■ ■ ■, In fairness to yourself look over all the advertisements. The smallest and the largest—you never can be sure which one will tell something you really want to know. 4

vow* ~ about the streets of the nation in the press. The thing that is undermining the foundations of our civilization is the growing contempt among the rank and file of the people for what is called 'book learning’. Book learning is the only learning in the world. It is more than the facts of which it is made; it is the light of the world, and each man should know it as well as he knows his own life.” e THE GOLOSH MUST GO (United Press Service). Denver, Colo., Feb. 15. —Wool stockings got by. The low necked waist wasn't taboo by any means. Short skirts were even acclaimed. But the galosh must go. This is the edict of social leaders

among the male students at Denver University (as regards co-eds at that institution. The men believe it's the girls’ business to wear what they want, but the flopping of the ungainly galosh causes the university males some concern. When it’s snowing or raining, the galosh is quite the thing, the men believe, but they can't understand why the co-eds want to wear them down the streets when there’s no dampness under foot or overhead. CANDIDATE FOR SHERIFF Please announce my name as a candidate for sheriff of Adams county, subject to the decision of the democratic primary election May 2nd, Yoqr support will be appreciated. S9-3t JOHN BAKER.