Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 20, Number 51, Decatur, Adams County, 1 March 1922 — Page 2

• A new dovi-.e to bo hung on itu automobile wind *lii. Id to protect a driver's eye* from glut Ing headlights conHiHta of a frame filled with a acreeu of finely woven wire netting. Cleopatra apoke nine language*. The Bahama Islands number 29. Au eye shade and battery fed electric lamp light enough to be worn on the head in comfort have been combined by an Illinois inventor for reading or writing whereother lighting is not available.

~Kempsl Balsam COUGH/

A GOOD PROGRAM Has Been Arranged for Presbyterian Mite Box Opening Wednesday Evening The Presbyterian Woman's Missionary society will hold their annual mite-box opening service Wednesday evening at 7:30 at the church to which all members of the congregation—Men, women, children and the public are most cordially intited. The following program will be given: Devotional Exercises —Mrs. Wertzberger. Song—Miss Conrad, accompanied by Mary Catherine Schug. Brief reason for our interest in other people's uplift—Mrs. Beavers. Piano Duet —Mrs. Jean Lutz Smith and Mrs. Clyde Noble. Reading—Mrs. Faye Smith Knapp. Group of songs—Dr. Fred Patterson Reading—" The Sky Pilot of the Desert" —Clyde Noble. Hymn. Mite-box offering and collection. Social and refreshments.

THE CRYSTAL Last Time Tonight Louis B. Mayer presents Anita Stewart As Kate Prentice, heroine of Caroline Lockhart's Famous Book, “The Fighting Shepherdess” A girl alone, scorned and mocked for accepting the only protection offered, fights unaided her grim, merciless battle for life, honor and love, using man’s weapons but not in man's way. A First National attraction —Also— Pathe News Prices 10c--25c TOMORROW "Winners of the West” and Mae Marsh in “Nobody’s Kid” 10c—15c

Get Into The Big-Paying Oil Business— We Start You Hundred* of men tire making big incomes supplying lubricating oil to owners of autos, trucks and tractors. A big-profit cash business with lots of repeat order*. Start in backyard garage or small space anywhere. No big investment. Experience not needed -- we teach you and supply everything, including your letterl'.eads( An unusual opportunity for one man in eacli town to get into business for himself. McKinney Company 1303 Carland Bldg. Chicago

Used Car|Show & Sale February 27 to March 11 Using two entire floors of old Wolf & Dessaucr Bldg. Fort Wayne 100 SLIGHTLY USED CARS Valued from SIOO to $2,000 will be sacrificed from stock of used cars of twenty-one Reliable Fort Wayne Dealers Co-operating under one roof. THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS SAVED TO PROSPECTIVE BUYERS ITS A REGULAR AUTO SHOW Music, Novelties. Added Attractions OI’EN NOW Afternoon and Evening

i !♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ADAMS COUNTY ♦ ~ * . MILK CAMPAIGN ♦ if ♦ * * March 13 to 24 ♦

. HU Mi ll I !l * 1 ; S. H B -- 'tec. , I L X I- EffJ .'■■ i iit’Mi" i Il x ! Have You Had Your Milk Today? :l' ! ! MILK BETWEEN MEALS HELPS CHILDREN GAIN .. One of the most convincing things a community can do is to carry on a supI plomentary feeding demonstration folI lowing weighing and measuring of itk 1 ! school boys and girls. The addition of cne half pint of milk in the middle of J the morning and the middle of the afternoon to the diet of the school child has been found well wortii the effort '.as shown by the following results giv’len by nutrition specialists on the) I home economics staff of Purdue Uni ! : versit y. In a country in which 9 per cent of the children were underweight, by this I simple method in two months time the | underweights'were eliminated in three I of five schools. In a fine Indiana dairy county where 500 out of 1300 children used no milk, this same plan was used. In two i weeks time, during which one-half of milk was furnished children the middle j 10 fthe morning and afternoon, 37 chil-l Idren gained 57 pounds. The normally! expected gain for these children during . I this period of time was 8 pounds. ; The results of supplementary food,ing shows in rapid gains in weight for j 1 the first four or six weeks, then the• gains settle down to more nearly nor-1 nial. A child Bto 12 years old should gain an average of one-half pound per I month. Parents should take warning ’and search for the cause should a child for any length of time fail to gain or remain stationary in weight. ! Everywhere demonstrations in I I school feeding have shown that adding! nutritious foods to the diet of the child 'has been accompanied by mental improvement. Teachers in every case state that the children are easier to it ach, make better grades, and have more power of concentration and attention. I Children sometimes are so retarded • mentally because of malnutrition that they are regarded as mentally deficient. These cases, however, respond readily and soon become normal when malnutrition is overcome. PUBLICITY COMMITTEE "MILK CAMPAIGN" -» According to an Austrian naval officer gas bubbles rising from a depth bomb dropped into a stormy sea quieted the water as effectually as oil would have done. * The Face in the Mirror Your face, does it wear the contented expression of good health, or arc the features drawn and pallid? In the latter case, your story is read bj ail who see you. and what woman of spirit wants to be pitied for her physical condition? There is away to get the nervous, tired lines out of yom- face and the slump out of your body. The use of that standard remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, will strengthen the nerves and tone up the system to resist that • excessive fatigue.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1, 1922

AMERICAN •LEGION® ; (Coty for Thio D«p»rtm«at Hupplhd hf the American Lafun Newe Uervioe.)

EX-SERVICE MEN’S HOSPITAL — Dr. Albert W*h*nk*l Head* Detroit Institution—All Employe** Have Bean In Service. The only hospital In the country operated by ex-service men for the

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benefit of ex-serv-ice men has been opened at Camp I Custer, Mich. It I is the new Roose- | volt American L*- | gion hospital con- j ? verted from a foraer community house at Camp Ouster and turned (over to the Legion by the state. The superintendent 1* Dr. Albert

M. Wehenkel, of Detroit. Mich . Dedicated by Marshal Foch, the hospital opened Its doors to former service men of Michigan suffering from tuberculosis. Each doctor, nurse and employee at the institution has been in some branch of the government aervice. Each patient is given a separate room, tastefully decorated and supplied with running water. They are kept nt the hospital until their case has been pronounced “arrested" and then are placed immediately in vocational training to prevent a period of ! idleness. Doctor Wehenkel has been tuberculosis expert for the Detroit board lof health for seven years. He saw two 1 years of army medical service during the war, STEPS FROM NAVY TO STAGE Charles Hanford, Shakespeareian Actor Who Served a* Chief Yeoman, Returns to Footlights. * To doff the robe* of King Lear for the blue wool of the gob was no exer-

: tion for Charles ' B. Hanford, one of Xnierlca’a foremost ! S li a k e s pearean actors. Often h* ! had said, in his role as Hatnlet, j “Now might I do it pat.” He did it pat: he enlisted and became chief yeoman in the navy. Hanford didn’t consider this

i tragic. To give up a bright stage 1 career for life on th* ocean wave was, ! as lie put it, merely playing a role in I a bigger drama than Shakespeare ever thought of writing. Today he is back on the job, and recently staged "The Merchant of Venice” for the benefit of the George Washington post of the American Legion—the first post organized. KEEP AWAY FROM THE ORIENT Ex-Service Men Ar* Warned That Jobs Are Scarce and Only Native* Are Employed. Whipple S. Hall, who traveled 10,000 miles to represent the department of the Philippines at the national convention of the American Legion, warns all ex-service men to keep away from the Orient unless they have enough money to bring them back home Discharged veterans of th* Siberian front, many accompanied by Russian wives as destitute as their husbands, worked their way to the islands as merchant sailors and are now in the hands of the Legion and the auxiliary. Many of them, penniless, worked their way down through China in the belief that the Orient blossomed with good jobs. Virtually all manual labor and small clerical work is performed by native*.

Po»r Man’* Prid*. So many men to whom the East side missionary had given money had expressed a preference for a certain lodging house that he wondered what constituted its particular attraction. “It makes us feel self-respecting," said the meu, when questioned. So far as the mission worker could see, It was the typical cheap lodging house, whose to self-re-spect were not discernible to the ordinary eye. So he interviewed the nanager. "That's easy.” replied tlie latter aud [ pointed to a sign above the desk: “Gentlemen Are Requested io Leave Their Valuables With the Clerk."— American Legion Weekly. Last Man Killed in War. A sergeant of the Serenty-nigth division who left his lines at 10:55 a. m. ot? November 11. 1918, and was killed in attempting to capture a German machine gun, Is cited at American Legion headquarters as a el»im»nt ter the honor sf being the last m«n killed in ths wgr. At 11 o'.elory sharp- recording to the report, th* doughboy was picked up and carried to American lines. i

♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ DOINGS IN SOCIETY ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ CLUB CALENDAR Wednesday Bhake«peare--Mra. Jesse Button. Historical Club—Mrs. Ed Ahr. I'rosbyterlau Missionury Meeting— Presbyteriau church. W. M, A.—U. B. Parsonage, 2:00 THURSDAY Ladles Auxiliary of the American Legion—Legion hull. Mt. Pleasant Ladies Aid —Mrs. Frank Kitson. Kvery-Reary Class of the M. E. church —Mrs. Walt Johnson. Concord Ladies' Aid —Mr*. Sum. Mag ley. a Friday Ladies of Calvary Church—Mrs. Curtis Miller. Womans Home Missionary—Mrs. Chalmcr Schafer. Zion Lutheran Aid Society—School house 2 o'cock. —— r Members of all the churches and the public as well as the entire congregation of the Presbyterian church are cordially invited and urgently requested to attend the Presbyterian Woman's Missionary society's special program in the church Wednesday evening at 7:30. After the program a social will be held and refreshments served to which all are invited to remain. * The Homans Home Missionary society of the M. E. church will meet with Mrst Chalmer Schafer Friday afternoon at 2:30 sharp. Mrs. Tinkham will have the lesson study and the enigmas will be found in the February Home Missions.- ♦ The ladies of the Zion Lutheran Aid society will hold their regular meeting at the school houseon Friday afternoon at 2 o’clock.

Mrs. Sam Magley will entertain the Concord Ladies' Aid Thursday afternoon. ♦ The St. Vincent DePaul* society held an interesting and delightful meeting at the home of Mrs. James Q. Neptune yesterday afternoon. Mrs. James Arnold assisted the hostess in entertaining the guests. About thirty members were present and the membership committee reported the receiving of four new members in the society, they being. Mrs. Dan Falk, Mrs. Fred Fwllenkamp, Mrs. Jack Brunton and Mrs. Vincent Borman. A delicious luncheon was served and the next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. E. X. Ehinger, corner Monroeand Fifth streets. ♦ Mrs. Theodore Graliker entertained the Bachelor Maids at 6:30 dinner last evening. After dinner "500” was played and prizes were awarded to Mrs. Wai Wemhoff and Miss Adelaide Deiningen Mrs. Avon Burke entertained the Auction Bridge club last evening at her home on North 4th street. Club guests were Mrs. Faye-Smith Knapp and Mrs. John H. Heller. After cards a delicious luncheon was served by the hostess. + /Die Annual Prayer Day Service of the Woman's Missionary societies of the Reformed church will be held at the church bYiday evening at 7:00 sharp. Members please take notice. The publie is also cordially invited. • • I Oregon is making a special effort to protect the antelope.

Radium the Miracle Coal From old Kentucky A Bushel of Ash Io the Ton. This is a high fusing coal of intense heat, and burns up clean. Used by the United States navy in a steam size. In Lump or Egg Size $7.50 Per Ton 75c per ton off at the yard. Carrolls Coal Yard Phones No. 770 or Nd. 8 1 Udilll—l ■■*—■■>■l Will UH IHUU*!.* ■ .

IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL Sunday School » Lesson 1 (By MV, P. B yrraWATEM. P. »» Taacher of En*U«h Blbl* In th* Moody Bibl* Inatltut* of Chicago > CowrlgUt, Uli. W»i*«rn X«w»p»v»r Uplon r." 3 ■ i. LESSON FOR MARCH 5 JEHOVAH'S MERCY TO A HEATHEN CITY I LESSON TEXT—Jonah »:1-4:11. GOLDEN TEXT— lx>t th* wicked for•ak* hla way, and th* unrlghteou* man hi* thought*: and let him return unto th* Ix>rd, and he will have mercy upon him: and to our Ood, for he will abundantly pardon.— lm. tt:7. REFERENCE MATERIAL-laa. «®- U: 4*:S-7; Jonah Mat. 110, U; John 1:14. PRIMARY TOPIC—God Send* Jonah on an Errand. JUNIOR TOPIC—How God Spared a Wicked City. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC —Jonah'* Missionary Adventura YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC -Th* Missionary Teaching of th* Book of Jonah. That the book of Jouah 1* historical we believe for the following reason*: First, its record and use In th* Scriptures. That the writers of the Bible intended the Impression of ■ Its historicity Is without the shadow I of a doubt. The suggestion that It Is I a parable is absolutely gratuitous. I Second, the unbroken testimony of I tradition among the Jews is that it is J historic. Third, the testimony of Jesus Christ (Matt. 12:39-41). The words es Jesus Christ are final. I. Jonah'* Second Commission (vv. 1,2). • 1 When called the first time to go to Nineveh, he found the task too great for him. For his unfaithfulness, he was chastised. He repented and God restored his commission. The Lord said to him, “Preach the preaching ■ that I bid thee” (v. 2). God knows how he wants His work done. Happy Is the missionary, minister, Sundayschool teacher, who preaches God’s Word just as He gave It. 11. Jonah’s Preaching (vv. 3,4). 1. His field (v. 3). “Nineveh was an ( exceeding great city." Not only was i the city large, but its inhabitants were < noted for their cruelty. 2. Hfs message (v. 4). “Yet forty , days and Nineveh shall be overthrown.” ; This means that forty days were given i by God for repentance ere the judg- i ment would fall. God Is long-suffer-ing, not willing that any should perish, 1 but that all should repent (II Pet. 3:9). ' Though He is merciful, yet there is a limitation to it. He says, “Yet forty days.” 111. The Repentance of Nineveh (vv. 5-10). ’ 1. They believed God (v. 5). They believed that God was speaking to them through the prophet about their sins and impending judgment. 2. They proclaimed a fast (vv. 5-8). The king and people joined sincerely in this movement. The call was for them to turn away from their sins. Their penitence was genuine, for they not merely put on sackcloth, the visible sign of mourning, but they cried to God (v. 8). 3. They reasoned that God would repent (v. 9). Though they had no assurance that God would have mercy, yet they reasoned that the sending of a prophet and the giving of a time before the fall of doom Implied that God would be merciful if they repented. They were wise In so doing. We today know that God will have mercy if we repent (Acts 3:19). What utter folly to go on in sin in the face of the assurance that God will jmlge. 5. God’s mercy shown (v. 10). “God saw their works that they turned from their evil way.” God’s eye is omniscient. Wherever there Is a soul who Is turning from sin In penitence, lie sees. No one has ever wept over sin unnoticed by God. God rejoices when a sinner repents (Luke 15:10). In the Book of Jonah we have portrayed the typical history of Israel: “1. Jonah was called to a world mission, and so was Israel. (2) Jonah at first refused compliance with the divine purpose and plan, and so did Israel. (3) Jonah was punished by being cast Into the sea, and so was Israel by being dispersed among the nations. (4) Jonah was not lost, but rather especially preserved during this part of his experience, and Israel Is not being assimilated by the nations, ( but being kept for God. (5) Jonah, repentant and cast out by 'the fish, is restored to life and action again, and Israel, repentant and cast out by the nations, shall be restored to her former national position. (6) Jonah, obedient, goes upon his mission to Nineveh, and Israel obedient, shall ultimately engage tn her original mission to the world. (7) Jonah Is successful in that his message is acted upon to the salvation of Nineveh, so Israel shall be blessed In that she shall be used to the conversion of the whole world.” —Dr. Gray’s Commentary. Th* Apostles Work Wonders. And by the hands of the apostles were many signs and wonders wrought! among the people. And believers, were the more added to the Lord.' multitudes both of men and women. —Acts 5:12-14. Death In Life. For we which live are always delivered unto death for Jesus’ sake, that the life also of Jesus might 1 ’ ingfis minifeet in our mortal flesh. So then death worketh in us, but life in you.—H Corinthians 4:11-12.

WITH THE CUSTOMER WHEN the Old Adams County Bank considers the problem of its customers, it aims to do so from the customer’s point of view as well as from the banker’s. Your business is held confidential. THAT’S one reason why THIS bank grows. Its service is based on understanding individual requirements and characterized by the genuine desire to co-operate. We by and sell Liberty Bonds and other high grade securities. WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS. Old Adams County Bank

PUTSTOMACHIN FINE CONDITION SAYS INDIGESTION RESULTS FROM AN EXCESS OF HYDROCHLORIC ACID. Undigested food delayed in the stomach decays, or rather, ferments the same as food left in the open air, says a noted authority. He also tells us that indigestion is caused by Hy-per-acidity, meaning there is an excess of hydrochloric acid in the stomach which prevents complete digestion and starts food fermentation. Thus everything eaten sours in the stomach much like garbage sours in a can, forming acrid fluids and gases which inflate the stomach like a toy balloon. Then we feel a heavy, lumpy misery in the chest, we belch up gas, we eructate sour food or have heart-burn, flatulence, water-brash or nausea. He tells us to lay aside all digestive acids and instead, ‘get from any pharmacy four ounce® of Jad Salts t and take a tablespoonful in a glass of? water before breakfast and drink while it is effervescing and furthermore, to continue this for a week. While re-; lief follows the first dose, it is import-! ant to neutralize the acidity, remove the gas-making mass, start the liver, ’ stimulate the kidneys and thus pro- i mote a free flow of pure digestive; juices. Jad gaits is inexpensive and is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia and sodium phosphate. This harmless salts is ■ used by thousands of people for stomach trouble with excellent results. FORTUNEHUNTERS Milwaukee Men Search for Gold and Whiskey Reported Sunk Years Ago REPORT _IS BASED On Story Told by Dying Indian Befriended by White Man —Form Company. United Press Service. Milwaukee. Wis., March I.—Lured by tales of buried treasure, including $2,000,000 in gold and 360 barrels of whiskey, now 56 years old, a party of Milwaukeeans will leave here Friday in an effort to recover the prize. The party, including seventeen persims, will proceed to the. California coast and attempt to locate the spot where the government vessel Brother Jonathan sank fifty-six years ago.

Savings Accounts For The Children fitart an account for the little one today; it will come in handy twenty years hence to defray college expenses. One Dollar will open such an account here. It will surprine’ you how the odd pennies, nickels or dimes, placed in a toy Bank each day and deposited with us at the end of each month to the credit of this account, will amount up. The little sacrifices made in this way upon your part today will mean everything to your child later on. It will later encourage THRIFT, and Saving will become a fixed rule through life. When through college and ready for the world’s battles, it will be no hardship to lay aside part of the earnings for a ‘rainy day’. Saving spells SU C C E S S We pay 4% interest on Savings. The Peoples Loan & Trust Co. BANK OF SERVICE

According to a tale told by a dyin, digger Indian, the Brother Jonathas contained the whiskey and gold. The story came to light when Silat White, editor of the (’resent City Cal ifornia Courier befriended the Indian. In return the Indian gave White details of the exact spot where the Brother Jonathan sank. He claimed to have witnessed the sinking. White, years later, met E. S. Manafield of Milwaukee and told him the story. Mansfield organized the doep sea reclamation company incorporated for $25,000. Under the terms o' incorporation if any treasure is rt covered, it is to be divided equally among the seventeen members of ths company. f — * When a wood block, rufl>D> r covered paveinent on a busy London street was taken up after eight years of usi it was found that the greatest wear |as an the under sideof the rublnr. .. —, «<* i Using water at itcariy boiling tern- | pepatura holding certain chemicals in ■ solution a machine has been invented I for quickly removing paint rfom ve- ; hides that are to be repainted. AT REFORMED CHURCH The first midweek Lenten service wil Ibe heldat the Reformed church I tonight at 7:30.

JHcik «||-L®-:- B 11? SYSTEM n M PURIFIER fi wr What Tanlac has done for others it will do for you. Get a bottle from your druggist today.