Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 20, Number 51, Decatur, Adams County, 1 March 1922 — Page 3
New? March Records . '**'’*•. * ***'*’'. I •> * • mJ* MA<VIhW VQICt v'L ’'UJ F RbqltfflMft Number Size Price Frances Alda 66027 10 $1.25 Blew You Feodor Chaliapin 88044 12 1.75 S °”° Violin Jascha Heifetz 60022 10 1.25 Serenade Louise Homer 87334 10 1.25 My ai" Viennese Folk Song) Violin Fritz Kreisler 66023 10 1.25 paradise n , N „u John McCormack 60028 10 1.25 8 Violin MIUU • Dance—Part 1 Philadelphia Orchestra 74729 12 1.75 Salomes • Philadelphia Orchestra 74730 12 1.75 Saiome. Dance ’ Aa6h ' no Marie Cahill 45265 10 1.00 A h Chi P "of Old Block Royal Dadmun Man a Horse He Can Ride Royal Daomun 45200 10 1.00 Your Tears Lambert Murphy tk. Hand of You Lucy Isabelle Marsh 45267 10 1.00 / ♦ Vmi John Steel I II Forget You The World is Waiting for the Sunrise John Steel 18844 10 .75 weep No More. My -Mammy Peerless Quartet HI Be Glad to Get Back to My Home Town American Quartet 18847 10 .75 That’s How I Believe in You Henry Burr I Want You Morning, Noon and Night Charles Harrison 18848 10 .75 Dream Kiss— Waltz Hawaiian Guitars Frank Ferara-Anthony Franchini Laughing Rag .Octocho-da and Harp-Guitar Sam Moore-Horace Davis 18849 10 .75 Bcw Wow Blues—Fox Trot Original Dixieland Jazz Band Railroad Blues—Fox Trot The Benson Orchestra of Chicago 18S5O 10 .75 Sailin'—Fox Trot Green Brothers’ Mellorimba Orchestra Limewhere in Naples—Medley Fox Trot All Star Trio and Their Orchestra 18851 10 .75 Granny (You're My Mammy's Mammy) Yvette Rugel Ka-Lu-A Edna Brown-Elliott Shaw 18854 10 .75 in My Heart, On My Mind, All Day Long Aileen Stanley-Billy Murray 800-Hoo-Hoo Aileen Stanley Billy Murray 18855 10 .75 Dear Old Southland —Fox Trot Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra They Call It Dancing—Medley Fox Trot Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra 18856 10 .75 Wimmin—Medley Fgx Trot Club Royal Orchestra Good-Bye Shanghai—Fox Trot Club Royal Orchestra 18857 10 .75 When Shall We Meet Again—Medley Waltz Hackel-Berge Orchestra Down By the Old Ohio Shore—Waltz Green Brothers’ Mellorimba Orchestra 18S58 10 .75 On the 'Gin. ’Gin, 'Ginny Shore—Fox Trot Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra Marie —Fox Trot Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra 18859 10 .75 Coppelia Ballet-»-Festiva! Dance and Waltz of the Hours Victor Concert Orchestra Malaguena (Moszkowski) Victor Concert Orchestra 37714 12 1.25
IHE HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO.
Quick Relief for*' Stomach Trouble Money Bnelc If Dr. Jarknon’a Dig-ea-Uvr and Liver Powder Doesn’t Do It* Free Sample Sent On Heqneat* Dr. A. L. Jackson practiced medl. cine in Ohio during thirty busy years. A great many of his patients were sufferers from stomach Ills, ana for these he evolved Dr. Jack, sons Digestive and Liver Powder, using it for 30 years In his practice. L. Jackson's » ripe experience taught him the superiority of powder over tablets, capsules and pills. The stomach does not have to digest a powder. When it reaches that organ immediate action is possible. The swift work of Dr. Jackson’s Digestive and Liver Powder proves this. In cases of acute Indigestion ,J! usually brings immediate relief. Ordinary evils of indigestion—sour and gassy stomach, heartburn, bloating—are usually banished by the very first dose. If not satisfied with results after using the first box your money will be cheerfully rei™™''.At most druggists, 60c. “. e nJ for free sample. Jackson Medl«ne Company, Zanesville. Ohio. , i
stolen automobile CARRIES LOCAL LICENSES Efforts to solve the ownership of ■" Packard touring car now held by 1 mville. 111., officials following the ar--1 st of a man giving the name of Clar- • ’<:e Freeman, were being made by ! lice yesterday. In a message from e Danville police department receiv- • ! here early yesterday morning, it ited that Freeman claimed that the ‘ t was the property of L. Stevens, a ‘d.er of this city, by whom he was • ''Ployed. ■<° such person as L. M. Stevens ref -es in this city according to the city ’ rectory and inquiry at the office of 1 0 secretary of state, made by Chief • oeller, shows that the license numis of the car were issued by W. H. im. R. R. No. 6. Decatur, for a Chev- ’ let automobile. The belief that the machine had ’ .' en stolen "ome place in this section ' J. 10 statp ’ expressed by police c, als> following the of the 1 .!f, rain from tho secretary of state. ier efforts will be made to settle 0 Question of ownership.—Ft. Wayne • urnai Gazette. hospital news Patient Ar,llUr Stov «> who has been a returned", the Maßley ho ®P ltal . has i t hW hOme - Mrs - °' lIR nicely from her opera-
tion. Lawrence Beckmeyer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Beckmeyer. living north of Decatur, who has been a patient at the Magley hospital the past five weeks, is improving. For a time hs condition was extremely critical, but he is now out of danger, and on the road to complete recovery. Ted Hahnert. son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hahnert, living near Salem, is suffering from a very sore knee, the injury having been received when a mule kicked him a few days ago. The cartilege in the joint was badly bruised, making the injury very painful. The lad is now recovering nicely, and it is expected will be able to walk without the aid of crutches in a tew weeks.
: Bent Over With : | Rheumatism Pains | • . i ‘ Stop drugging and get quick » ; relief with a bottle of old J reliable St. Jacobs Oil | St. Jacobs Oil stops any pain and rheumatism is pain only. Not one case in fifty requires in-
ternal treatment. Stop drugging! Rub soothing, penetrating St. Jacobs Oil right into your sore, stiff, aching joints and relief comes instantly. St. Jacobs Oil is a harmless rheumatism liniment which never disappoints and can not burn the skin. Limber up! Quit complaining! Get a small trial bottle of old, honest St. Jacobs Oil at any drug store and in just a mom en t you’ll be free from rheumatic pain, soreness and stiff-
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ness. Don’t suffer! Relief awaits you. St. Jacobs Oil is just as good for sciatica, neuralgia, lumbago, back ache, sprains. Sold by Most Druggists For disinfecting clothing a Frenchman has developed an air-tight tank In which garments are subjected to a mixture of compressed air and chlorine or other gas, heated by electricity.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1, 1922
LOANS FOR EX-SERVICE MEN Commander MacNider Is Originator of Plan to Aid Men In Need of Assistance. Buddles who are “broken tn health and buttling their way through red tape fur their Just disability compensation" will be the beneficiaries of u big rotating fund, details of which are being worked out ut national headquarters of the American Legion. The fund is deslgued to provide loans, without security uud at a low rate of Interest, to ex-service meu in every state who ure in need of assistance. Commander MacNider, who originated the plau, suys that such a provision Is of vital necessity in order that worthy men may keep their selfrespect during a period of financial stress. Ex-soldiers who do not need the ready cash provided by the government's payment of adjusted compensation have signified their willingness to turn over their bonus to the fund. Hundreds of instances of sick and wounded ex-service men falling back on charity while their claims were being reviewed are shown by Legion reports. Tubercular victims whose condition has been brought on by poison gas or exposure have gone to sanitariums in the West and have been denied Immediate treatment and become public charges, It is declared. Some help for these men during the period of readjustment Is of prime importance, according to MacNider. HELPED ENTERTAIN THE BOYS Mrs. Jessie Erskine Danced in France —Now Treasurer of County Legion Committee. Mrs. Jessie A. Erskine says she used to dance Q.OOO steps a week at
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American Legion, in New York state. Mrs. Erskine was chief stenographer in the quartermaster department, and was also chief slater in the department of sports and pastimes, which was less official but Just as interesting, She succeeded in being A. W. O. 1., twice without being given her sailing papers.
DIRECTS MORTARS OR SOULS Eliot Porter, State Chaplain of Legion in Montana, Recognizes No Denominational Bars. Eliot Porter's efficiency in directing trench mortars was no greater than
his proficiency in directing souls. As state chaplain of the American Legion in Montana, he built up a splendid reputation as notable us that which he won as captain in the British field artll--ler y. Mr. Porter, who is a
Presbyterian, was one of the three men who wrote the national ceremonial ritual for the Legion. He worked in conjunction with a Catholic priest and a Jewish rabbi. He recognizes no denominational bars in his Legion work, and at the 1921 convention nominated a Catholic to succeed him as state chaplain. I I | Carrying On With the i American Legion I The 53 Americans who received the Congressional Medal of Honor will each receive the Italian war cross, General Zaecari, chief of staff of the Italian army, has announced. * * • The National Guard of the country, with an enrolled strength of 132,000 men, has reached a point only slightly below that of the nation's regular army. • * • During the war the British Red Cross collected $95,000,000, of which $70,500,000 was expended. The membership was 126,000. Women members numbered 90,000. A proposal has been made in Washington that the President give an American flag to the next of kin of each deceased soldier whose body Is not returned from France. * * * The Congressional Medal of Honor laid upon the tomb of Great Britain’s unknown soldier will be encased in a glass-fronted box and affixed to the tomb, according to the wish of the dean of Westminster Abbey. » » • The annual report of the commissioner of pensions discloses on its rolls the names of 64 widows of the War of 1812; 109 soldiers and 2,156 widows of the Mexican war and 3.784 soldiers and 2,569 widows of Indian outbreaks prior to 1891. World war veterans are not mentioned in the report.
(Copy tor Tbit Department Supplied by the American Levlun Newa Service )
HE LOST BOTH HANDS IN WAR Paul Bazaar, Rochester (N. Y.) Legion Man, Given Special Consideration by President Harding. “My boy,’’ suld Senator Harding, in October, 1918, "if there is ever anything I can do for
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ding suspended the civil service rules, making a special case of it, and Bazaar Is now employed by the Veterans' bureau, and is punching a typewriter (Hunt system) at a great rate of speed with ills artificial hands. In a letter to comrades In the American Legion, Bazaar said: "I have taken my draw with a grin; that same grin is still with me. I have found the sledding exceedingly rocky at times, but my philosophy of a smile and no worry, coupled with an Insatiable desire to get somewhere, have helped me surmount most of my difficulties." Premature explosion of a defective hand grenade at Fort St. Mange, France, was responsible for the, loss of Bazaar’s hands. He is equipped with a complicated double hook attached to the stump of his right arm which enables him to write legibly, drive an automobile, and attend to all his personal needs unassisted. LEGION POST AT WEST POINT Andrew Rheude, a Sergeant, Heads Organization in the Country’* Greatest School for War. In the heart of the country’s greatest school for war, a post of the Amer-
Tours, France, for the edification and amusement of gobs, doughboys and leathernecks, some of whom, she admits, were attractive. No w she dances almost as many steps in holding down her job as treasurer of the Nlagnra county committee of th!
lean Legion flourishes and celebrates peace. West Point is the home of the Stewart Whiting Hoover post, which is under command of one of earth’s glorious species, a hi g h-ranking non-com. Andrew Rheude, a sergeant, was chosen from
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a roster of 75 officers and 300 enlisted men to lead the post, and under his guiding hand it Is being built up into an organization which promises to become one of the leading Legion units of the Empire state. Named for Stewart Whiting Hoover, the first officer from West Point to make the supreme sacrifice in the war, the post was organized In 1920 by enlisted men. The retiring commander Is also a sergeant—Joseph Grady—and he claims credit for having built up the post from 15 members to its present enrollment of 375.
CENSUS OF EX-SERVICE MEN Five Million Questionnaires to Be Used In Obtaining Views on Compensation Drive. A nation-wide census of ex-service men will be taken by the American Legion. Five mil’lon questionnaires have been printed for use fn the Legion’s “service and compensation" drive, which will alm toward the compilation of vital statistics and which should afford a definite indication of the exact cost of providing compensation to all veterans. The various state organizations of the Legion will conduct their drives separately, and at their own date. Every man Interviewed by the census taker will be informed of the five options of the pending compensation bill and be asked to signify his attitude toward the measure and his choice of the five features. He will also record whether he was ever wounded, gassed, or suffered an injury in service. Assistance will be provided In filing compensation claims, and all ex-soldiers will be urged to carry government insurance. The Legion’s plan for a rotating loan fund will be explained, and every man Interviewed will be asked whether he would be willing to turn over his compensation toward such a fund for the relief of needy service men. True Talk. It was during the impaneling of a Jury in a New England town that the following colloquy occurred between the magistrate and a talesman: “You are a property holder?” “Yes, your honor." “Married or single?" “I have been married for five years, your honor.” "Have you formed or expressed any opinion?” “Not for five years, your honor.” — American Legion Weekly. -F L .-CSSt
CLOSE THE DOORS Three More New York Brokerage Firms Compelled to Suspend. ALLEGED MEMBERS OF “Domino Club” Appear in Court—Deny Connection With Swindling Scheme I’nltrd Prc»« Sluff Correupondrnl New York, Mur. I.—Three more brokers announced suspensions of business today, bringing to 28 the number of brokerage houses to close since Feb. 1. Walter J. Schmidt & Company announced “in order to conerve the interests of all onr customers nnd creditors during the period of uneasiness wo have deemed it necessary to announced “in order to conserve the inat this time." The other firms to close were Hall & Company, and Howell & Wates. ■ * New York, March 1. —Charles 11. Sagin, president of the Guaranty Trust company, and W. Averill Harriman, well-known financiers, were the only alleged members of the "Domino Club” described by Alfred A. Lindsay to appear at the district attorney's office today to confront the broker, accused of swindling prominent women. Both denied knowledge of the club whose members Lindsay is said to have told his women victims, came masked and formed gigantic combinations to control Wall Street. Other financiers named by Lindsay including Percy Rockefeller and Thomas Lamont were said to be out of town. Harriman in his statement to the district attorney said he "didn't know how to play dominoes anyway.” . * A six-pound mackerel produces 1,500.000 eggs at a time. IS STANDING PAT (United Press Service). Okmulgee, Onia., Mar. I—(Special to Daily Democrat) —County Attorney James Hepburn, prosecutor in the grand jury investigation here of Okmulgee’s alleged bank failure scandal, today stood pat in the face of Governor Robertson's demand that the state executive be allowed to testify before the Jury. “I do not intend to permit the governor to swerve me from the ordinary eburso'of iaw laid out for grand jury
yon, write me or ask me.” So Paul Bazaar, of Rochester, N. Y„ who had both hands blown off during tlin war, waited until the senator became the President, and then asked him to help him get a Job. Har-
■p. $ 1 I
I Lend Them Your Eyes! EVERY time you see an advertisement, someone is talking 1 to you. He doesn’t intrude, he doesn’t argue. He simply tells you about something he feels will interest you in away that he thinks .will please you. There are many advertisements in this paper, therefore at least that many persons talking to you. But you have only to listen to one at a time, calmly, at your leisure. They’ll tell you many a thing you’ll want to know, give you many a pointer on careful buying, tell you just where to go for something you want, and altogether save you countless steps and many pennies. I Lend these folks your eyes I for a time each day
AVateli the little folks KJF HI speed home ISfefeyjJ for Kelloggs Com Flakes "Mudd.r, / alwayt uiina tha fact whan I tarry homt Kellogg’e Corn Flahee. / can’t hardly wait till I have tome quick, madder!” It’s great to see child-enthusiasm for Kellogg’s; great to see every one in the family enjoy their crisp crunchiness and wonderful flavor I To sit down before a heaping bowlful of these joyous oven-browned “sweet-hearts-of-the-corn” and some milk or cream —and fresh fruit, if it’s handy—is just about the very last word in appetizing appeal! And, your good taste will prove that! • Kellogg’s Corn Flakes ought to be superior—they are the original Corn Flakes! Kellogg’s are never tough or leathery; never hard to eat; never a disappointment! Be certain t 0 g et Kellogg’s—tho yySJLWffi 9 delicious kind of Corn Flakes in the TOASTED and GREEN package—because ■ none are genuine without the signature COR” of W. K. Kellogg, the originator of f I AKES Toasted Corn Flakes. CORNFLAKES Ab* «»km of KELLOGG’S KRUMBLES end KELLOGG'S BRAN, cooked and krumbled
procedure and I have been unable to find any law permitting a person under investigation to testify before a grand jury,” Hepburn said. FIRE AT HOLLYWOOD — (United Press Service) Hollywood, Calif., Mar. I—(Special to Daily Democrat) —Hollywood, home of the movie industry, was threatened by fire early this morning. The fire started in a lumber yard at the edge of the "motion picture belt” and spread qquickly to an adjoning factory sweeping an entire block at a loss of $200,000 before being extinguished. Movie folks by the scores
I turnedout in various stages of “early morning dress” to watch the i fire. ———- , A ton of soft coal produces 10,000 feet of illuminating gas. THIS MAN WAS HELPED John Grab. 2539 Jackson Ave., Now {Orleans, La., writes: "My kidneys were weak and had a soreness and dull pain across my back. 1 fell dull arid lan- ' guid and my kidneys didn’t act right, i I began taking Foley Kidney Pills and I they soon put my kidneys in a sound healthy condition.’’ Foley Kidney Pills help the kidneys rid the system of acids and waste that cause Isjmeness, ; backache, sore muscles, swollen joints i and rheumatic pains. Tonic in effect, quick in action
