Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 20, Number 122, Decatur, Adams County, 23 May 1922 — Page 4

DAILY DEMOCRAT Pubiisbtd Evary Evening Kaospt Sunday by THE DECATUR DEMOCRAT CO. vOHN H. HELLER Editor ARTHUR R. HQLTHOUSE, A«aoclate Editor and Bualneaa Manager J. R. BLAIR City Editor Subscription Ratea Cash In Advance Single copies . l cent* One Week, by carrier 10 cents One Year, by carrier $5.00 One Month, by mall $6 cents Three Months, by mall SI.OO Six Months, by mai1........... $1.76 One Year, by mall $3.00 One Year, at office $3.00 (Prices quoted are within first and aecond cones. Additional postage added outside .those cones.). Advertising ratea made known on application. Entered at the postofflee at Decatur, Indiana, as second class matter. 'fhu locution of a tourist camp near this city is a splendid idea which will attract travel and make a reputation for being coprteous and hospitable. Mr. Rcppert has donated the ground and its up to our people tq see that ' thu camp is made as comfortable as ' possible.

lieu Olcott, governor of Oregon took an open stand against the Ku Klnx Klau and that was the principal cause of liis defeat for renomiuatiou a few days ago, which is stepping some and sure showing hands. When we re fuse to recognize law and court we are breeding troubleThe railroad heads dp nqt seem inclined to reduce freight rates, going back (o the old cry that they can’t do t so unless they can reduce wages of employes. We can't understand why J it isn't good business to fix a rate un- j der which business will revive and produce several times the freight nqw beipg handled. Every class except the railroads have had to do something towards improving condUions of the country and unless they do we will just drag along. It's time they! stop kidding themselves and get down to real business. The Industrial Association is plnn . ning a one week membership cam ; paign during which it is hoped to Se-

Tfilmffe&rd atunwfrisufo "Sl/oer worthy > 1 of becoming . A r -A Zooms X The charm of hospitality is not 53 a matter of costly decoration, Q? fc but rather one of quiet cordial'ffij ity and good taste. Sir j For use in every home “Heir- jL jpa loom Plate” is appropriate and 8® ; KL desirable. \ JHk Any part of a silver service jL |£i selected at this store will become ||i a friendly member of your Ip Ji household. 1 H Pumphrey’s Jewelry Store m jWjj Brunswick Phonographs Gifts That Last. The ‘White Stag’ CIGAR affords such smoke sense satisfaction as was never known before Have you tried one lately? Do it Now! For sale by all dealers. Popular sizes—Popular prices.

cure a hundred or more additional names to the present list of 150. Why do you not belong? This is not a money making scheme for any individual but un organisation which works constantly for the good of this county, city and community. We should have 500 members willing to work and do thiugs helpful. The cost of joining Is nothing and the dues la but live dollars per year. Many plans are now being discussed and wo hope to go forward steadily from this time

Mr. Frink, president of the Yeomen Way delighted with Decatur, her people, the spirit mauifeuted here and the proposed sites for their npw fcOWP- lie says this city will be among the final six considered and there is no doubt we are favored in many ways. Let us not lose an ounce of our Interest but lets go on with this campaign for the greatest movement of its kind ever inaugurated, a school and home for the unfortunate children. They propope to sppiul many millions of dollars

and they will make this the most delightful place in which to live. Really its a great cause and a wonderful opportunity. We should lose no time in planning for a round up to which will be invited all the members of the board of trustees that we may show jqur cpjnunity and onr people. Speaking of the tarjff bill now be fore congress the New York World I ■ n order that all the evils may be ade 1 uuately distributed, the Fordneys and ,the M«Cumbers have produced sche dules which will, provide no needed protection for apy legitimate industry but which will play Into the hands of speculators up and down the Upe and boost the cost of living everywhere Fly the time they get through with it 90 per cent of the American people will be penalized to benefit 10 percent land the benefits even to the 10 percent are dubious. Ift he American consumer under ; stood what this Fordney-McCumber tariff bill was leling him in for no con-

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, TUESDAY. MAY 33, 1922

IgresH would ever have tbe courage to enact it. The bill, If it passes, will slide through only because the eoun try does not grasp Hb meaning. MeCumbers in congress are manipulating the tariff just as they are manipulating the bonus, in order to carry the next congress. They have forgotten all about 1934. As neither bill will be fully in operation by the November elections of this year, they assume that the opposition will not have hud time to organize, while all the beneficiaries will be duly grateful at the polls.

SUNDAY SCHOOL CONVENTION AT PLEASANT DALE (Continued from page one) Congregaton Song, led by Addle Martin. Bethel Center. I:3o—Child Life—Eva Trostle. Congregation Song, led by Mary Bird, Maple Corner. 2:30 —Primary Class Room Equipment —Lula R. Tinkle, Portland. Congregation Song, led by Gladys Terhune, Pleasant Grove. 2:55 —Round table, conducted by Eva Trostle. 3:30 —Closing. Evening Session--7:l—Lecture by Eva Trostle.

DECATUR CITY BAND TO GIVE BENEFIT SOON (Continued from page one) ing blonde and is a comedicne of no mean ability and she features Russian dancing. Miss Margaret Deßairie is the gill that works in the box and she is not a small girl. Miss Deßarie is 5 foot l inch in height and weighs 137 poun i - . Eddie Buster, blackface impersonater is very clever and features a laughable skit, “The Colored Parson" The table and box used will be found on exhibition at the Schafer Hardware Co. Also photographs. Remember this is for the benefit of our own city band and back them up. An admission of twenty and thirty cents will be charged for the concert and vaudeville acts.

Anthony Lengrich from west of the city was among the morning's business callers in Decatur. STEEL GOLF SHAFTS SANCTIONED BY W. G. A * Last Tuesday the Western Golf Association at the Edgewater Golf Club, held a field test of the new steel shafted golf dub. The experiments were made by Bob MacDonald and Allen Gow, Chicago professionals and Chick Evans, former amateur and open champion. Each player drove six balls with steel shafted clubs and six with hickory shafted clubs. The executive committee of the Western Golf Association on the fol lowing day announced that its investigations and tests showed that steel shafted golf clubs give no mechanical advantage to players and their use would be permitted in tournaments conducted by this association. It will be remejnbered that the United States Golf Association recently barred the steel shaft, but in offi eial circles it is understood that this decision may be reconsidered.

Golf club manufacturers admit that the hickory supply is very low and growing scarcer each year. They also say that only a very few good hickory shafts can he produced from every batch of hickory cut. This, of course, gives some goiters better clubs than others. It also gives every golfer a different quality club. The new steel golf shafts, however, provide every golfer with exactly the same quality clubs. This new development gives the 100 and over player just as good clubs as the professional or champioit has ha - Golfers say tbaf these new steel shafts make their dubs feel good and hang right. They are lighter tham hickory so that the weight of the club is brought lower and the balance is consequently more perfect. This nicety of balance, of course, is what golfers are constantly looking for. It permits them to feel the head and thus hit the ball mpye naturally.

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Yeast Foam Tablets 'are recommended for lost of appetite indigestion , lack of energy under weight pimples * boils malnutrition run-down conditions Remember this: these tablets are the only pure whole yeast in easy-to* take and convenient-to-carry tablet form. They do not cause gas; their vitamin potency is tested; they are unequalled for children as well as adults. Ask for them by their full name- Don't accept substitutes! i Sold by all druggists Northwestern Yeast Co., „ Chicago, lli. Malm of ike famous Saling ye-aiu. Yeast Foam and Magic Yaag

D. M. HENSLEY SPOKE TO THE PHI DELTS LAST NIGHT AT THEIR 81-WEEKLY BANQUET Mr. D. M. Hensley, the South Main street jewler, was the speaker at the bi- weekly banquet of the members ol the Phi Delta Kappa fraternity, held in the pitner Case last night. Mr Hensley gave a very interesting talk on business and the great opportuni ties open for the young man. Music was furnished by the J’aka Duo of th< original Toots I’aka and Company, which will appear at the Crystal theatre tonight. The members of the Paka Duo are Hawainans who enter tain with their Hawaiian steel Guitar ahd Ukelele. They formerly made Columbia and Victor records. Their concert at the banquents last night was very good. ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH Members should note the change of the service this week from Wednesday to Thursday evening—Ascension Day Pastor Paul Miller will preach. s ... - CARD OF THANKS Just after the recent primary 1 or dered a card of thanks inserted but through an error the wrong name was signed. While a little late I want the voters of Root township to know that 1 appreciate the support given me and assure you if elected to serve you to the best of my ability. SAMUEL FUHRMAN DID HIM MORE GOOD Many men and women suffer from backache, rheumatic pains, stiff points sore muscles and other results of kid ney trouble because they neglected tlie first warning symptoms. Folej Kidney Pills aid the kidneys to throw out poisonsous waste matter that cans es pajn and misery. Stephen Eldridge, Ky., writes: ‘Foley Kidney Pills did me more good than ail the other medicine I eves took. I had kidney trouble ten years. I don't have any pain like I had before I took them.” Sold everywhere.

FROM GIRLHOOD TO WOMANHOOD Woman Relied Upon Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Emporia, Kansas. —“I began using Lydia E. Pinkham’s medicines years ago nimiiiiiiiiiinim' w ** en I was a B'riI MUfUim For several years I had severe pains at menstrual periods, making me very yj- Bp weak and interfering Mp IP* with my regular du--I*| ties. 1 tried several c jwr jffJl remedies withoutobjjljj taining relief. I was IP'*; Hill induced to try Lydia || I|| E. Pinkham’s Vege--1 table Compound by ‘friends and it restored me to normal health- I often have occasion and do recommend your i Vegetable Compound to my friends who have troubles similar to my own. You may use these facts as a testimonial. ’ ’ — Eva Aldrich, 218 Union St., Emporia, . Kansas. •? * •** ''" . V There are many women who first used ; our Vegetable Compound tjuring their . girlhood <Jays. They found it 4 valuable help during trying periods. , In later 1 years they use it whenever they feel 1 those annoying symptoms which women ■ often have. • " r Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- * pound is a woman’s 'medicine. It is pre--1 pared carefully from the best quality of r medicinal pipits, whose properties are - especially adapted to correct the troubles women have, *

DEFINED DUTY OF CHRISTIANS IN LIFE WORK (Continued from pape one) never have been 3,000 souls saved on tho day of Pentecost. “We have turned the Grek l Commiesiou wroug end tp. upside down, and Inside out. We do not expect tbe fish to swim up to the water's edge, flop out on the sand, and come wriggling to our feet to be caught. No! we go where the fish are. We do not expect the sheaves to come in from the fields to be threshed- We so out and gather them in. Neither can we expect the dead to conic to the place where they can receive life. There is not a single command In the New Testameut to sinners to go to Church, but there is command upon command for Christians to take the good news to sinners. The sower went forth to sow. He went into the field. The field is the world. An Indiana farmer would not have much of a harvest if he stood on his doorstop, and sowed his yard knew, deep in wheat. Yet the churches are doing that very thing in sowing the jeed of the Word. "The Great Commission does pot lay ‘send’; it says ‘go.’ Some have laid, ‘if you cannot go, you can send mine one In your place.’ You can do nothing of the sort! It is God who sends. There is just one command to jvery Christian in this town and that jommand is G-0 ‘go’. There is not a in Scripture to pray the prayer, ‘Q Lord, send us a great harvest of souls.’ The Scripture says, Pray ye therefore the Lord of the larvest, that he would send forth laborers Into his harvest.’ This is the Divine program. “God has called the church to the service of leading the unsaved to the Lord. Jesus Christ. The Devil does lot like this program. He hates it ibove almost anything else that you :an think pf. The early disciples darted out with nothing. The whole ■vorld was against them. At the end >f the first hundred years the entire iarth had been evangelized. The Devil, therefore, made tip his mind to imash up the working of that program. He put one —the larger group of Jhristians over here in one place, and he smaller group he put over here in mother place. The fi r st group he called ‘the laity’, and the second ;roup he called ‘the clergy’. Then the work of soul-winning was delegated to the clergy. Then followed the Devil’s millennium, which is called the Dark Ages. This is not the Lord’s program. The pastor is to be the eader and trainer of a company of soul-winners. This program still works.” Dr. Conant then cited various instances where this program is being carried out today with marvelous success, one of which was the First Presbyterian Church of Seattle with 7,000 members, Dr. Matthews, pastor. He said this was the secret of the great tuccess of Spurgeon in the Metropolian Tabernacle, London. He continued by saying, “If we ire not winning souls, there is sin in iur Hyes. If we are saved, nothing in he world, expect sin, will shut our ips. The Lord does not ask us to lave certain ability or equipment, but just to tell what we know about him.”

WERE MARRIED IN WISCONSIN Ernest Pro of Berne Married Ruth Kattman in Wauau Last Friday

Berne, Ind., May 23.—The wedding of Miss Ruth Kattman to ftrnest Dro superintendent of the Berne Witness Co., took place last Friday evening at eight o’clock at the bride's home in Wausau, Wis. The ceremoijy was performed in the parlor of the parsonage of the Reformed church at Wausau. The bride's father, Rev. H. H. Kattmann, former pastor of the local Reformed church, officiated. The bride's mother played the wedding march, while Miss Lucile Kattmann, sister of the bride, sang, “I Love You Truly,” with the violin obligato by Paul Kattmann. Both Mr. and Mrs. Dro are well known in this community. The bride is a graduate of the class of 1915 of the Berne high school and also has a degree from Heidelberg University. ~ She? has just recently finished'a successful term as principal of the high school at Lykens, O. Mr. and Mrs. Dro arrived her this nboi) from Wausau. They will make their home at 409 West Main street, where Mr. Dro has a beautiful home furnished for his bride. • — Mrs. Franklin of east of the city shopped here this morning.

’ Minneapolis—"He tickled me until l cried,” Grgco Marchand, 16, declared ip asking a divorce after live months marriage. M

Crystal Theatre TONIGHT 3 BIG VAUDEVILLE ACTS LEON NORTON The Lonesone Little Coon, extemporaneous singing and talking, in a comedy act entitled ‘THIRTY YEARS AGO AND NOWADAYS’ PAKA DUO : of Original Toots Paka and Co. Hawaiian Steel Guitar and Ukelele. These are the people that made the Columbia and Victor Records. MISS MARIE SPARROW IN SONGS THAT YOU WILL LIKE. —ALSO—HARRY CAREY In the First Western Super Production . ever screened THE FOX In 7 Big Reels. ADMISSION 10 and 25 CENTS. MONSTER BENEFIT for the Decatur City Band —at — THE GYM Friday and Saturday Nights at 8:15 p. m. sharp May 26 and 27, 1922. KENNETH MALCOLM Presents Prof. Lassiter assisted by Madge De Barrie Sawing a Woman In 3 Parts $25.00 reward to any girl or woman who will have nerve enough to get in the box. The sensation of the age. —ALSO— Eddie Buster, the Colored Parson. Miss Eva Simmons in Songs and Dances with a Concert by the Band. ADMISSION - 20 and 30 Cents

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Kowanee, lil.-Mlke Wl)« had two hearts, died bem of k truuble. He H • 1,„. he ,„ ’*■ «■'! - »«■! ... ,