Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 22, Number 212, Decatur, Adams County, 5 September 1924 — Page 7
fcScM |> Lesson' ■ r ,„.. r ' rl n ""' frX^ ?tt ' niber 7 ■ j£sis hcai.sa'ncb L eman'S son ,h " I ,J; ■'.«•- ■ frC. • «TF AND SKM"K TOF\,"h- 'Ahat h 8... — Kt "HI IM ASI) q . >I’IC ■ t E.o.u l u.lhZ ■ rbl . glorious revival anmng the being o'er. Jesus. «■ ■ I g for Hix countrymen, When He beHl work there it wns not apprecl!yjl should have been. His own h , lo nv la that a prophet hath no .nJ |,is own country. Having ls a reputation elsewhere He now ,hark to them. The Nobleman’* Earnest Plea (vv. 47). Till.’ father’s heart was in ,anguish because of the critical „ of his son. but he had the good i l 0 go to Jesus in his distress, •nts should eagerly bring their Im, to the Great Physician. This tion was used to bring him to JeMany do not think of Jesus until irhelnied with grief and distress, need that always brings men to Even when human physicians H ■i no case too hnrd for Christ nnd ■ there is no disease too difficult nor sor ■ rnr too great but relief can be found ■ kllhn. This Is true of our physical ■ EshiKlt Is pre-eminently true of our ■ mi!>. We se? here that a rich and in■fe'Mial man is in distress, showing Kit the rich nnd exalted are no more ■ n“ii!?t from afflictions and anxiety ■than are the poor. Cares and trouble alike. Tiie young are lln■fr t»disease and death as are the old. Bite nobleman learned of Jesus Knitigli the testimony of another (v. ■ fl. Had not some one told him about he would not have colled upon Kim. Before lost men can call upon ■ ftp Lord some one must tell them ■ iMitHlm (Rom. 10:14, 15). I 11. The Testing of the Nobleman’s I Faith (vv. 48. 49). I ’in hl* experience we lind an illustra- ■ tfnn of the development of belief. He Ito faith. but not an intelligent faith, nhre help could he given his attitude ■Hf min i must be changed. Jesus deEhred, “Except ye sec signs and won- ■ te. re will not believe," showing that Idle nobleman's faith was such as was ■ fated upon signs nnd wonders. The I Ban needed something more than the holding of his son. He must needs tow Christ ns Savior as well as dlealer. He did not allow himself to if put off, hut insistently demanded, "Sir, come down ere my child die." This shows that he was now willing to bake any experiment to save his boy. Ris very impotency forced him to lay I hold upon the Lord. Jesus desired this san to possess a faith which was , based upon His naked word, not mere signs nnd wonders. The way of Jesus Is to first reveal Himself as a Savior tnd then ns a Healer. 111. The Nobleman's Faith Victorious (tv. 50-54). Through his testing he passed with food advantage. He is now ready to twive the Lord's own word. "Go thy W: thy son llveth.” These words treated true faith and the man stepped nut upon them. Because he believed the words that Jesus spoke unto him "ent his way. Faith increases in brightness the longer It is exercised. The foundation upon which he reposed bls faith was the words of Jesus. On Is return his faith met with eonfirmn■“i. His servant met him and told "Un that Ids son was alive. Upon InQn n he found that the recovery of Ills W: S from the very hour In which •irsits sp n | ie the words. This was 1,111 ■ an unmistakable evidence of the h of Jesus that not only llie noblebm his household, was won for ‘■'t. This affords us an example of >' 'entity of household religion. May 11 learn that the words of Jesus , re »aNe- That which He promises rn.'n» t . aSSnreaS ’’""’Rh had already - to pass. The salvation of the one K 111 IS P f.-.r, i.', 21 he bai ' bppn in heaven and A'ivlm'.V'"’"’ ln the I ’’ ,lok of Life. tothetlVu* Rnn brou Sht salvation the whole house. „„ Evangelism "f ’’ no ‘ ,nere 'y « work I'nwrvnii V hp Sbppr law of "’'“i'liig ahi l J h H. hPatllPnlsni "' hlcb >s Is ’"utterin u * le fences °f society If I'hrlstln, 8 *? Beeds 011 1,0,11 sl des. 1 better t ß ' °, nOt ,nake the ' vorl,] Ch worse ”—Herald of HollHe th!??° Cent Rev enge Bn<l WletnesV " lth meekness ,llls ’’hem bv i,„/7 B Ve inJur,PS anrt surest war ? nn d the best and them : nar it is nn<l dp feating Veß «-Matthew Said Tw ° Choices Entice. “A! Sa]r t 0 tlle young ap- “ ®’>n o’ war, my m tW cbolces - One's Hdbum" Ea ’*ny,”-R 9v . a. S. ■.. . . ;
iDkcu.c. ct Apples Found in Storage Percentage Depends on the Growth and Preparation. (Prepared by tbo United state* Department ot Agriculture.) The percentage of diseases, purtit’Ui larly rots and seald, found in apples in ! storage and on the market depends, I according to the United States Department of Agriculture, upon their whole past history; that is, upon the condlI tlons under which they were grown i and prepared for market, the amount l of disease they showed when they , were shipped or when they went into storage, and finally, upon the conditions under which they were held, in transit or In storage. The percentage of disease depends to a considerable extent, also, upon the length of time the apples have been kept in storage, those stored longest being the most seriously affected. Inspection of the commercial apple crop over a fourye®r period showed that the box crop suffered from a steady increase in percentage of disease from October till June; the barrel crop only from December to June. ' An analysis of the records of the inspection service for 5,222 cars inspected during the four-year period, 1917 to 1921, is published in Department Bulletin 1253, “Diseases of Apples on the Market.” Considering the inspections for the four-year period as a whole, blue-mold rot occurred more commonly than any other disease. In the box crop, scald was second and other rots third; in the barrel crop, other rots exclusive of black rot came second and black rot came third. Summer and fall varieties showed less disease, on the average, than winter or long-storage varieties. In the barrel crop the percentage of disease was less in cars from New York, Michigan, Virginia and West Virginia than in those from all other , eastern states, considered as a whole. The percentage of disea c < in the box crop was slightly heavier in cars from Idaho than in those from afl other western states, considered as a whole. A copy of tliis bulletin (Department Bulletin 1253) may be secured, as long ns the supply lasts, from the United States Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. ■ Selling Inferior Stock to Purchase Pure Breds In connection with the “Better Sires - —Better Stock” campaign conducted by the various states and the United States Department of Agriculture, many farmers are disposing of inferior live stock nnd are replacing them j with better bred animals. The rea- ' sons for the change are believed to be of Interest to live stock owners ! throughout the country. < A Texas dairyman who had been using a grade beef bull at the head of his dairy herd was readily induced to ' obtain a pure bred dairy bull, to qualify in the better-sires campaign. J A West Virginia stockman replaced a ! grade ram with a pure bred because the latter was a better individual and ' he believed it would help him to dis-' ' pose of surplus stock. A Vermont dairyman disposed of an Inferior pure bred bull because he was unable to obtain satisfactory produc- , tion records and was “rather mediocre as an individual.” I An Okbihoman, in qualifying for the I better-sires campaign, stated that he disposed of a “red bull” of unknown | breeding in order to purchase a pure bred. Influence of Industry Industry largely controls produe tlon. In regulating supply it controls i markets and fixes Its own prices. | Farmers, unorganized, cannot do this. Instead of regulating supply and fixing prices, less cost of production, farmj ers take the other fellow’s offer, less I nil charges.—E. J. Leonard, President Colorado State Farm Bureau. .sag Shipping associations pay. ♦ * ♦ j Good hogs and good dairy cows ! make a good combination. | Cruelty to animals is, after all, the most extreme form of cowardice. * • • j Prosperous farmers are reading ' farmers. They keep up to date in their profession. » ♦ » The management of the farm has a two fold aspect, that of a business and that of a houxe. * * • Growing alfalfa brings profits beyond the bay pay, many grow it alone for tiie land’s sake. I* * » Let us never forget that the cultivation of the earth is the most important labor of man.—Daniel Web- - st er. Save a few tomato seed from your best plants for next year’s crop. Thio is a good method of keeping out diseases. • ♦ • Calcium cyanide may be used to control chinch bugs. The Illinois experiment station at Urbana has just issued a bulletin on the subject. * ♦ ♦ Instead of pulling fodder for hay, plant a late crop of German millet, of Sudan grass, and get more hay with less labor and save the corn crop., ■ i wr. ... — -
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1921.
CAVERLY HAS MIND MADE UP (Continued from Pago One) er will work with mo. 1 expect to return to Chicago Hie night before 1 the sentence” Loeb's father, who is ill at the Loeb summer home in Charlevoix ' Mich., plans to be here for the sentence. Members of the family, and physicians are making every effort 1 to keep him away for fear the exper-' fence may prove fatal, regardless of whether the sentence Is death or life in prison. Hartford City Youth Is Released From Jail Hartford City, Ind., Sept. s.—Will-1 lam Duff, 17, whose blow during a fist l fight caused the death of Raymond Morris, 19, another high school student, was released from the Blackford county jail today under light bond. No formal charges had been filed against Duff. Prosecutor Maddox said’ he expected an indictment of manslaughter i would be returned by the grand jury, 1 which meets Monday to investigate the killing. | Funeral services for Morris were held today. 1 The fatal fight followed an attempted hazing ot Morris' younger brother. , Benjamin. I Hartford City, Ind., Sept. 5. —Cor- ’ oner C. A. Sellers today announced that bis verdict in the death of Raymond Morris, IS, who died in the Blackford County Hospital Wednesday as the result of injuries received ‘ in a fist fight with William E. Duff 17. would be that he came io his death as the result of blood clot on the brain, caused by concussion and that the latter was caused by a blow on the chin from the fist of Duff. It has been announced that Duff xvHl remain in the county jail until after the grand jury has had an opportunity to investigate the case. The grana jury is to meet Monday. Made Careful Autopsy Coroner Sellers states that the physicians' autopsy was conducted very carefully and that no injnr<“ a were ■ disclosed, except those that could j been delivered in a fist fight, or re-1 suited from the fall when the blow was struck. The coroner states that the evidence brought out the fact that the fatal blow was an uppercut to the young man’s jaw. The funeral of Morris was held this 1 afternoon at 2 o'clock at Grace M. E. Church here. The pallbearers were fellow workmen of the dead youth from the plant of the Fort Wayne Cor-' rugated Paper Company. o Rejoices Daughter Can Resume Studies "Everything my little 12-year-old g'rl ate distressed her; even a glass cf water would cause h“r to belch gas and she was unable to go to school for nearly a year. I bought her a bottle of Mayr’s Wonderful. Remedy, and since taking it she is | eating us cut of house and home and ; is attending school again.” It is a ' simple, harmless preparation that removes the catarrhal mucus from the ntestinal' tract and allays the in-j flammatton which causes practically ail stomach, liver and intestinal a lments. including appendicitis One 1 dose will convince or money refunded. For sale by The Holthonse Drug Co. and druggists everywhere. o —— Gary In Midst Os Great Expansion Gary, Ind., Sept. 5. —Gary today is' in the midst of* one of its "greatest: period of expansion since its found-1 ing. eighteen years ago. It has an improvement program to
Very Special! Just Like Home Made Candy ONLY BETTER • MAPLE CREAMS FULL POUND 29c Chocolate Covered Assorted Creams Ci?ocolatc Covered Hard Centers Chocolate Covered Carmels Per Full Pound Callow & Kohne |
cost nearly $34,000,000, Int luded In this program are the construction of new industrial plants, 1 new business buildings, churches, and 1 homes, and the extension of street lullways transportation and municipal 1 improvements. Industrial construction now going I on Includes Gary tube mill:, for which ■ s2l,i 00,000 hag been appropriated',' ; Calumet Power plant, $500,000 and transmission lines for the plant, sl,000,000; Gary street railway power I station, SIOO,OOO, and industrial coni structfon for the future includes a I United States Steel Corporation coke oven plant to cost $3,000,000. A new theatre, hotel, church, and K. ot C. and Masonic temples are] planned to cost a total of $3,000,000. I o I “Back To The Farm’’ Move In Howard County Kokomo, lnd„ Sept. s.—The "back- , to-the-farm” movement is on in How- , ard county today, according to the Kokomo branch of the United States ! Employment service. According to the bureau, thousands ] of factory workers have decided an all-year job on the farm is definitely better than a hit-or-miss plan of living which is dependent upon the industrial plants of the larger cities. I Several hundred men, most of them with families, were placed on f irms last autumn through the agency of the employment service. It is ex Don’t Pay For beauty you fai! to get By Edna Wallace Hopper I am not a cosmetic maker not a beauty expert. My work is on th • | stage and screen. But I have had i advantages which most girls and
cost nearly $34,000,000.
i Edna Wallace Hopper Photo 1923
I women lack. I hud a rich, ambitious mother who took me in a world-search lor the utmost |;u beauty helps Then when I became a famous beauty, /every great -eientist who made a discov- | !< ry sent it at
i cnee to me. Now I wish all gills and woman to share that good fortune with me. 1 I found helps which multiplied my jI , :iuty, and which have kept my i youthful beauty to my grand old age. ! And great experts tell me that every woman can in like ways secure like ’ i esults. So 1 am placing these helps, which 1 spent a lifetime in finding at every woman’s call. All druggists and i toilet counters now supply them But v.’th each comes a guarantee. 1 in- : sti net every dealer to return the i money to anyone disappointed, and ; charge the amount to me.
My marvelous complexion is largely due to a super-cream. It combines the products of both lemon and strawberry. Also all the best that modern science knows to foster, feed and protect the skin. I use it as a night c: earn,.also daytimes as a powder base. Never is my skin without it. And my baby skin, at my age, shows how much it means to
3ii Edna Wallace Hopper Photo 1923
i women. No woman 1 have ever met has ever found a cream -to compare. Edna Wallace Hopper’s Youth ; Cream is now supplied by all drug- ; gists and toilet counters at 60c per I jai and 35c per tube. But I shall be glad to s«nd a free sample, if you | wish. Just mail the coupon for it, j and my Beauty Book will come with i it. Trial Tube Free Edna Wallace Hopper. 809 536 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago. 1 want to try Youth Cream. 1
j pected that this number will be increased this year. — oMany H. S. Graduates Are Going To College Those students who are going to attend colleges and unverslties this I year are urged to give their name, either to E. S. Christen, county superinlcnndent ot schools, or to M. F. Worthman, city ■ superintendent of schools. A list of the boys and girls who graduated from the local high .'school last May and who will attend | college this year will be published as I soon as all names are sent to Mr. ■ ' Worthman. It is estimated that 30 of the 54 graduates of Decatur high school will go to colleges this year. — ---—o How Expression Started “The greater the crime the higher the gallows,” was at one time a prnc- . tical legal maxim in English common , law. In 1638 Patrick McGregor, alias Gilderoy, a notorious robber, was hanged at Edinburgh on a gallows so high that his body “looked like a k<te * in the clouds." Tradition says the i gallows were 30 feet high. The ex ,- presslon “higher than Gilderoy’s kite" . is an allusion to this famous hanging . It means very high. BEST TO ASK FOR ■ Imai ' * r k Eg | soJBFee I ■
h 3 fg I Sam Hite’s S I Big South End Grocery I II Our Delivery system passes your door twice daily. Order from jfe IPhone 204 —and be sure of the best quality and service and the Jt t lowest prices. H iiwstwßamMw in m i|iißn iBMMr - Tnihrnff ii , 'r~:'' .~'_~T'rL:"fL'~r~"2TTr~i:~_T* i ~' , TTT -^i, i~ Ka-MiMPB&EORZ SUGAR p “"I<b“i, 1 < b“i, 75c I APPLES ftgfr 51.98 I RAISINS less Per Lb. i I Potatoes f ®Kpl 30c | I Per Bu. sl.lß | | FLOUR y 98c I 15 cakes Sweetheart Toilet OQ/» I Prunes, Fancy large sweet | Q Soap ZiOL | Prunes, lb 1 ’■ ~ V ZmMSMi 10 cakes Van Camps White HA 8 Good 1 Sewed ztßp Naptha Soap OtJ V 8 Brooms VUV M Extra Fancy New Early June i r 8 i ancy Dryed Peaches 15 C M Peas, per can IOC B P° un d Fancy New Seeded Raisins £ Barge I ancy Apricots R 2 full pkgs A'JC H Pound - ?V/ fii Fancy Blue Plums lA n £ J cakes Palm Beach 9Sr ■ per ( . an Ivl g Toilet Soap *jdt I 100 lb. hag Oyster Shells | W 2§£ ■ 11 I EXTRA SPECIAL S | I i CALIFORNIA APRICOTS — Large cans 23c I I 5 I Fancy California Apricots, per can I E H Phone 204. Opposite Erie Depot [j'i
England’s Tobacco England always trikes the best of th< Havana tobacco and allows the rest of the world to get along wtlh the lenv Ings. An English iihpdrter of Hnvana who has been in the trade for 3< years says there are lOOJIUO cigari smokers In England, and that those! islands consume 2S.(mmi,<Km) llttvana cigars In tt year say 310,000,000 worth This Importer put the number of other sorts of cigars smoked in Britain al 4(IO,(XX),(XX).
Superior Bread f' “Made With I. BAKING, I! » ' •«. CO. vi i I , yg'-’op There is nothing so \OUR deliciously wholesome GROCERY’ and nourishing as HAS IT! SUPERIOR BR E A I). FRESH That’s why everybody TODAY! “ who once tastes it always insists on SUPERIOR BREAD. J W-i.'A* j. I ■' '
W. A. Klepper has returned from a business trip to Cleveland. FOR WORKING PEOPLE The best of workers get out. of sorts when the liver fails to act. They feel languid, half-trick, “blue" and discouraged ! and t hink they are getting lazy. . Neglect ’ of these symptoms might result in a sick spell, therefore the sensible course is to take n dose or two of Herbine. It is just the medicine needed to purify the system and restore the vim nnd ambition of health. Price 60c. Sold by Holthouse Drug Co.
