Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 21, Number 56, Decatur, Adams County, 6 March 1923 — Page 3
HOARSENESS ViCKS W VA I*oßua Thit 17 A" lheJ Yra, ' Q I
Your Spring Footwear Is Here I rhe young limn who desires neat I attractive and dejniidable footwear $ for spring wear wilt do well by visit- & ing our store. w We are now showing Men’s Spring Oxfords, brown, black or patent, new I patterns and lasts, priced at 1 $5.00 to $7.50 Bl Y FOR CASH and BUY FOR LESS People’s Cash Shoe Store | [_ i I CENTRAL GROCERY I “OF COURSE” Phone 31 Free City Delivery ■ BEANS S 3 2c Prunes 35 c I MEAUi 15c I Salmond 25c I SOAPb'2 5c SEE OUR LITTLE ELF WINDOW. Envelopes for mailing your INCOME TAX BLANKS I * Large enough so the blanks fit in them. Second Sheets Just the thing for the stenographer to use in making duplicate copies of letters. How’s your supply of Letter Heads and Envelopes? The Daily Democrat
Ft. Wnytio Limin Rnglon told Hpeclul Judge Doui'lis hr whs Infovor of iiioiv hlili-i <‘iii'or< i iiK'iit of tho prohibition liiwh, btH-nuse the hirge number of boot lev gers wiih culiiitir his profit and Irmlo in two. He wn.s Hird lion mill < os!m by tho judge vs ho iilllrinisl liis opinion.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. TUESDAY, MARCH «, 1923.
COMB SAGE TEA INTO GRAY HAIR Darkens Beautifully and Restores Ils Natural Color and Lustre' at Once t’ommon garden sago brewed into a h ivy tin. v.itn sulphur nmt alcohol milled, v.iil turn gray, Treuked anil Ituii'd hair lii'auliftiliy dark mid luxm Innt, mixing tho Sage Tea mid Sulphur recipe id home, though. Is i troublesome. An easier way is to get Ithe risidy-to use preparation improved |by the addition of other Ingredients |u large bottle, at little cost, at drug! loris, known uh ‘Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," thus avoiding a lot of muss. While gray, failed hair is not sinful, we all desire to retain our youthful 'appearance mid attractiveness. By I darkening your hair with Wyeth’s 1 Stipe and Sulphur Compound, no one ;•■■•11 tell, because it does it so naturally so evenly. You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw tlita through your hair, taking one mall strand nt a time; tiy morning tall gray hair have disappeared. After another application or two your hair In iones beautifully dnrk. glossy, soft and luxuriant mid you appear years younger. ,11 , I, . —.——— 0 I I—- ♦ TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY ♦ + 4 + From the Daily Democrat filet ■» 4> 20 years ago this day + ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ George L. Nickols (loses last saloon I in Urrne one day earlier than he had iplanned mid calls oil big celebration. Materials arrive for new (1. 11. ft. I. tank just north of town. Concrcti Block & Stone Manufacturing company of Berne organized with $5,000 capital stock. —— The Minerva Society gives high school exercises. On program are Fanny Hite, Charles Knapp. Ray Knoff. Opa Crawford, Leota Hower, Charles Lock, C -Ha Mayer, Zoa Miller, Harry Andrews, Vada Martin, Ray I Allen and John Jones. Kahle Miebers went to Williams to link' up iar of steers for Henry • Komienrinn. Mt. and Mrs. J. from Sandusky flhio ’to make home ar jPleasant Mills. F. Woods selis Blue Creek quarries to Julius Haugk. I'rctracted meetings dose at Zion chinch item Peterson after four siteeessllll weeks, ADVERTISED LETTERS — Mrs. Ann:! Koopleman, Mrs. Dorr Sexton; Mrs. Opal McClymonds. Mrs. Hi ving Arnold, Mr. Janies W. Teeple, ' Mr. Edward Meyer, Mr. E. I Davis, Mr. E. C. Hurst, .Mr. 11. B. Thompi son. Mr. Orin E. Braselton. Mr. Roland Baily, Miss Opal McClymonds, .Miss Ester Meyer Irma Scheimann, J. W. Ray. D. J. Green, E. G. Peel. H FRFTZLNGER. P. M. o North Webster A friendly spirit is being developed between cities of Northern Indiana through a series of inter-city dinners. Business men of Milford were hosts to business and professional men of North Web- ! ster, Leesburg and Millersburg. OUCH! LAME BACK. RUB LUMBAGO OR BACKACHE AWAY Kikneys cause bachache! No! Lisiten! Your bachache is caused by him- ’ bago, sciatica, or a strain, and the quickest relief is soothing, penetrating St. Jacobs Oil. Rub it right on •your painful back, and instantly the soreness. stiffness and lameness disappears. Don't slay crippled! Get a small trial hottie of St. Jacobs Oil from your druggist and limber up. A moment after it is applied you’ll wonder what became of the backache or lumbago pain. Rul> old, honest St. Jacobs Oil whenever you have sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism or sprains, as it is absolutely harmless and doesn’t burn the skin. ——■ i Attention Moose Regular meeting Wednesday night. —Dictator.
GOOD HOG HOOSE ft PROFIT-MAKER Cleanliness, Warmth and Sunlight Are Important Essentials. HAS ALL MODERN EQUIPMENT 1 — V Interior So Arranged as to Make Disinfecting Easy—Wall Construction Is of Hollow Cement Blocks or Hollow Tile. By WILLIAM A. RADFORD Mr. William A. Radford will answer questions and give advice FREE OF OHT on all subjects pertaining to the lubjet-t of building work on the farm, for he readers of this paper. On account of .Is wide experience aa Editor, Author and Manufacturer, he is. without doubt, the ughest authority on all these subjects. Adires. all Inquiries to William A. Radford, x’.i. I-J? Prairie avenue, Chicago, 111., and .nly lnclo«e two-cent stamp for reply. While this hog house bus been anMnged to give u sales pavilion space n its wider portion It must not be supio«ed that a piggery of this type Is for the breeder of pedigreed hogs only, in the contrary, it would be an investment that pays big for anyone who s raising hogs. Naturally, It is asinned that the hogs will not be scrubs, mt of some recognized breed ttiCt re•ponds to favorable surroundings and ft eding. The wall construction Is of hollow ■euient block or hollow tile. The under side of tile rafters ought to be ined with matched lumber to give an iddftlonal dead-air space like that of he walls. Note that the celling is reasonably high—an aid to ventilation, inti that the floor is cement, resurfaced in turn with removable plank flooring. The location should be chosen with two things in mind. The first would
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be to allow ample space lor a welldrained yard; and the second, to place the building so that the sloping roof windows would convey sunlight to the farthest pen In winter, and again so as to give the most shade In sutntner. As shown the hog house is 58 feet 4 incites by *29 feet 2 Inches, and has IS pens. There are two extra pens at the far end of the wider portion of the structure. These would come In useful nt rutting periods, at farrowing time and when new hogs are purchased. It Is not always the best (tian to turn strange hogs In among the regular herd until at least two or three weeks after their arrival. By its very nature a hog house of this description should be warm enough for Hie animals through even a severe winter. However, Inasmuch as there is ample space for n fuel cooker. It also would help greatly In maintaining warmth and besides would aid In air circulation and In keeping the air dry. Ordinarily all necessary ventilation could be had from the pen doors, the side windows and the Sir vents In the cupolas. The troughs are of cement, easily tilled from the feed alley. The floor of the latter might be depressed some inches to give a better view of the pigs—as might be the requirement in the case of blooded stock being Inspected by prospective purchasers. The sales pavilion would be serviceable, not only for the use for which It is intended, but for turning the pigs into In inclement weather for exercise and to enable the pens to be cleaned. One feature of construction of this kind—concrete floor with a removable plank floor superimposed—ls that cleaning or flushing Is easily accomplished, and there is no piacfe where tilth can gather and breed (Unease. Then, too, the whole arrangement is such as to make disinfecting easy. No matter how healthy your pigs are, once a year the hog house ought to get a thorough disinfecting. It cannot be too strongly emphasized that the outdoor yard adjoining this hog house ought to be cementlaid, or if flat quarry stone is cheap and plentiful the yard should be paved
with It. Otherwise the hog house Is in a fairway toward becoming filthy, and in wet weather would be the cause of rheumatism, bronchitis, pneumonia and scours—very common winter troubles in swlue that are not allowed to keep themselves eleuu. We all know that, left to Itself, the pig Is a genuinely clean atiimsl and responds gratefully when provision Is made fur thorough cleanliness In Its living quarters. ARCTIC SPOT NEVER FROZEN Wafers of the Gulf Stream Prevent Formation of Ice on the Murman Coast. When it Is realized that the Murmati coast Is on the Arctic ocean, one uatur-: ally pictures a frozen waste, with even ' a solid sea in winter. But the long arm ,of the Gulf stream, stretched across the Atlantic, around the northern tip of Europe and along the coast Just beyond, makes the Arctic waters which bathe the northern end of Norway and the nearby strip of Russia more truly Atlantic waters, says a bulletin of the National Geographic society. This Is an open coast the year round, while Arctic waters to the east and the gulfs of the Baltic far to the south are frozen solidly for many months. Foreign fishermen have been making ttie most of this region of Iceless waters, where, in the proper season, schools of cod, herring and salmon abound. Chiefly, the fishing vessels are those of British and Norwegians who have maintained that they have the right to carry on their trade out-1 side the three-mile limit. The Russian fishermen of the Marman coast are a nomadic lot w-ho live along the coast in the spring and summer and desert the country In winter. The Murman coast was practically ! unknown to the outside world until the [ blockade of the Baltic and Black sens I during the World war made necessary ! dependence on the unused possible doorway in the north. An urtny of RM>.j iMtO laborers was set to work pushing a railroad from Petrograd to the port of | .Vurmau, where tn uu inlet 30 miles
I from the open sea, in a wide, deep harbor free from both current and ice, the i largest ocean freighters could dock. In ! spite of the greatest engineering difficulties through a country of bogs by | summer and lee by winter, the line was ; completed, but only a little while be- . fore the Russian revolution came to make it useless. — Blueberries an Inch Thick. According to a bulletin of the Uni- , ted States Department of Agriculture ' a blueberry an inch In diameter is not a dream but a possibility. At the United States Department !of Agriculture testing station at Whltesbog, four miles east from Brown Mills, New’ Jersey, about 25,000 blueberry hybrids have now been fruited. Many of them have produced berries three-fourths of an Inch iu diameter, several four-fifths of an inch, and one of them readied almost seven-eighths of an inch. Among these large-berried hybrids several have been selected for propagation. The progress of blueberry culture Is shown by the fact that during the season of 1922 nearly a thousand bushels of blueberries were picked at xyhitesbog. These sold in the open market in New York at about 75 per cent higher than those brought by wild blueberries. In the fall of 1921 more than 250,000 cuttings of selected blueberries were made by nurserymen. Curiosity. She always took a cold bath In the morning. She filled the tub the night before and so It was the temperature of the room the next morning. And not long ago when visiting she did the same. At the end of a week her hostess spoke to her: "I don't mean to be curious, but you know my room Is next to your bathroom and every night I’ve heard yon run your water and I've not heard a splash or anything after that. Do you take a noiseless bath, or what? I can’t live with my curiosity any longer.” She explained her system —New York Suu. - -f- - - - - .- -
The Law of Growth With Age Comes Knowledge. One of Hie most important truths Io learn is Hie Itiw’of growth. Ideas grow, nations grow, character grows, the great fortunes of the world have grown from little beginnings. Make your eginning now in a Savings Account. Come in and let us talk Io von about otii INSURE!) SAVINGS ACCOUNT. WE PAY YOU TO SAVE The Peoples Loan & Trust Co. BANK OF SERVICE One Won? Three Adams County Citizens Desired To Make Their Savings Work. lite First was timid. He confined himself to the best known and most widely distributed low interest rate, listed bonds. Hr achieved safely hut lost income. the Second xxas greedy. He looked at the interest rate and accepted investments of doubtful security. He thought only of income and came Io grief. 'Hie Third was a common-sense investor. He searched carefully for Hie best interest rale combined with safety. He won. We recommend R. L. Pollings Co. Supervised First Preferreds as safe investments. The interest rate is Seven per cent (7'< ). The Suttles-Edwards Co. Securities —Loans—lnsurance O. P. Edwards. Pres. A. I). Suttles, Secy-Treas. Morrison Building. DECATUR. INDIANA No Discount on Gas Bills After 10th of Month All gas bills must be paid on or before the 10th of the month to secure discount Northern Indiana Gas and Electric ■ ompany Wm. O’Brien, Local Manager • ) ” The Man Who “I Gets Ahead I Who owns his own home Or his own business, Is the man who spends Less than he earns And who persistently Banks a fixed portion Os every pay check. DO YOU? Old Adams I ■■ County Bank J
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