Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 24, Number 100, Decatur, Adams County, 27 April 1926 — Page 3

■sulphur heals I SKIN ERUPTIONS

Moniho-Aulphur, a pleasant cream, will soothe and heal skin that Is irritated or broken ou t with eczema; that is covered with ugly rush or pimples, or Is rough or dry. Nothing subdues fiery skin eruptions so quickly, soys a noted skin specialist.

]P I ''ml I '/J $

I The moment tbi* sulphur prepara- ■ ‘ m applied th " it'**"* * t «P" and lift?- <wo or three applications. the ■?cz«ma is (tone an dlhe skin Is de’litehtfully 'dear and smooth. Sulphur ■ « HO previous a» a skill remedy be ■ lute the burning, itching or disflg- ■ urem*nt Mentho- Strtphur always ■ hrals eczema right up. . „, . S A jar of Rowles Mentho-Sulphur I mav be had at uny good drug store. ■ let a trial of Mentho Sulphur show ■ what this means to you. Send the ■ coupon for it. Clip it now. Whitehall Pharmacal . Company. IFUII I S«8 Madison Avenue.. „ ! New York, n. y. Free Dept. N 532 A Mail me a Free Sample of i Mentho-Sulphur. FRANKLIN road HAS FEDERAL AID (CONTINUED EHOM PAGE ONE) Highway has nine, and they are verydangerous and caused a great deal of trouble in the World War, and, from a Military standpoint, broke down. “I expect to call the National Executive Committee together within the next couple of weeks to map out a financial campaign. I was very anxious to have Ohio raise a bunch of money ahead of any other state, as a neucleus for organization, but they seem to think that we should have a "I think the Indiana situation needs National budget first. a litU ebetter state organization and I am in hopes that there will be a' meeting held there soon, that I cati attend. o— — BIRTH Margaret Ann, is the name of the tty pound baby girl born to Mr. and Mrs. Russell Funk, of Mishawaka. ! Ind., last evening. A telephone call to the proud grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Amos Lewton, of Root township, last night, said that the mother and babe were doing as well as could be expected. Mrs. Funk before her marriage was Florence Lewton. This is the first child in the family. COMING TO DECATUR Murray Hotel, April 29 FOR ONE DAY ONLY Hours 9 A. M. to (> P. M. International Doctors Specialist Brings the knowledge of a Great Medical Organization and Their Experience in the Successful Treatment of COMPLICATED CHRONIC CONDITIONS Expert Services Free of Charge: — Th e International Doctors Is an or-' panization of experienced, registered Physicians, for the treatment of stub-i born, chronic diseases. The International Doctors, experienced Specialists, treat, without SURGICAL OPERATIONS. OR HYPODERMIC INJECTIONS, diseases of the Blood, Skin, and the internal Organs. Rheumatism. Sciatica. Lung Tiouble, Old Ulcers, Tape-worm. Eczema, Asthma, Chronic Constipation, Epilepsy, High Blood Pressure, Bed Wetting and other morbid affections of the body. years’ experience andi the complete records of thousands of cases successfully treated prove that the methods of the International Doctors are very dependable. The Physicians of the International Doctors have at their command the knowledge and resources of the whole organization. Many people keep on suffering from ailments that might be greatly improved, because they cannot afford , to go to high-priced Specialists away, from home. Many communities have not a sufficient number of patients suffering from diseases mentioned to support local hospitals for needed special treatments in complicated cases. The International Doctors have solved this problem, and their highly trained Specialists travel from town to town to meet the sick. They instruct patients, recommend a course of treatment, and teach ailing men and women Ijew tu take care of themselves at home. To those having Ailments of long standing, whatever the trouble may be, and notwithstanding the poor results of former treatments, come and talk it over; it’s FREE OF CHARGE. Ladies are requested to come escorted. (Laboratories Milwaukee, Wisconsin)

MR. FREDRICK VISITS DECATUR THIS MORNINC (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) none.' Discusses Farm Problem "In till parts of Indiana, we find the farmer struggling to make a living with his produce selling in competition wl|h the low paid labor of Europe while all that he buys is pur- ( chased in a protective market where ( labor is four times as well paid as in Europe. "The purchasing power of the farmer has been cut practically in half and because the farmer can purchase only half as much as he formerly purchased those who sell to him j cun mak« only one-half the goods they formerly made. The result Is that manufacturers are either em-] ploying fewer mm or working their plants shorter hours, that merchants are either throwing up their businesses or doing only half the volume they should be doing. Business is proceeding In a halting manner and there is a general grouping for the remedy. "In my opinion the time has come for dractic measures for the relief of the farmer and I believe that the only relief that, can bo satisfactorily j applied to his condition is governmental aid in marketing his products. I favor an export corporation through which the government can maintain a fair price in the domestic market and help the farmer dispose of his exportable surplus. Presents View on Tariff “Some Democrats advocate an immediate and ruthless reduction of the tariff on the theory that the price which the farmer pays for the commodities he purchases should be brought back to the level that prevailed before the world's war, which is about the level that the farmer finds when he trios to sell his products. "But these advocates forget that the wages of our working men have been established at such a high level that today eighty-five percent of all | we pay for our commodity represents labor costs. Prices cannot be reduced to the former level without reducing wages and it is never a desirable or sound economic program that involves taking away from any one those things which he has. I “If the Democratic party will simI ply advocate those things which are so sound and logical that it will be impossible for the republican party to f convince the business man and the ' working man that Democratic, success places his chances in jeopardy, it will get the support of the voters of this state who are plainly dissatisfied witli the Republican leadership and the Republican policy of proteting the few and neglecting flumany. “X find, in my visits to the various, cities of the state that faith in the democratic principle of tariff for I revenue only has never been stronger than it is today. But, I also find that democrats, everywhere, are realizing that they will never have the opportunity of applying the party s i principle to the tariff until they have j convinced the voters that they intend to apply it in such a sane and careful manner that they will not thereby disrupt business and pro-’ dtice unemployment and poverty. among the working men. “We have no right to do anything that will disturb the right of our business men to prosper or of our working men to obtain the highest wage it is possible to obtain. For 1 that reason, I am advocating that we proceed at once to relieve the distress of the farmer by governmental; assistance, and then, on a parity, that we attack protective tariff with a view to eliminating prohibitive tar iff and moving gradually toward that tariff which will produce no more 1 revenue than is necessary to the maintenance of government. ’ THREE TICKETS NOMINATED FOR BOYS’ ELECTION (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Eiting and Otis Baker; clerk, Donald Klepper; treasurer, Carl Hurst. The election booths will be placed in the library assembly room. The ! polls will be opened from 11:30 a. m. | until 12:30 o’clock at noon and from 3.30 until 4:00 o'clock Thursday afternoon. All the boys in the fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth grades are’ invited to particiapate in the election. Plans for boys’ week are being completed and the program will open with a big loyalty parade on Saturday afternoon, at 2:30 o’clock. — o WAR VETERANS TO MEET The Spanish-American War veterans will hold a meeting Sunday afternoon, j , at 2 o’clock, with the American Le|gion in the Legion hall. j

DECATUR DAILY. DEMOCRAT, TUESDAY, APRIL 27, 1926.

WEWI? of BLUE LAKE JSfPj RANCH By OREGOFOC 4 •W’ eomUGHT BYv* <HARU3 SCMBRIXS MTi

Synopsis — CHAPTER I.—Bud Le*, hors* foreman of the Blue Lake ranch, convinced Bayne Trevors, manager, la deliberately wrecking the property owned by Judith Sanford, a young woman, her cousin. Pollock Hampton, and Timothy Gray, decides to throw up hie job. Judith arrives and announces she has bought Gray's share In the ranch and will run It. She dischargee Trevors. CHAPTER ll— The men on the, ' ranch dislike taking orders from a girl, but by subduing a vicious horse and proving her thorough knowledge of ranch lire, Judith wins the best ot them over. Lee decides to stay. “Thanks,’’ she said. Clicking off, she put in a cull for "Doc" Tripp ln> Rocky Bend. "Get him for me as quickly as you can, will you, please?” she asked of the operator in town. For five minutes she munched at a sandwich and pored over the papers before her. When at last her tele-phone-bell rang she found that It wus i Tripp. “Hello, Doc," she said cordially. “I haven't seen you fur so long I almost have forgotten how you comb your hair!” Tripp laughed with her at that; across the miles she could picture him running his big hand through the rebellious shock. “Yes, I’m back to stay, and from the looks of it I didn’t come away any too soon. What was the trouble with you and Trevors? What was the excuse for canning you?” “Case of lung-worms,” he told her. "Some of the calves, I don’t know Just how many yet. He insisted on my treating them the old way.” "Slaked jime? Or sulphur funjvs?" she said quickly. "Ams you Insisted on chloroform?" “You’ve hit it!" he exclaimed wonderit.giy. “How’d you know?” "I haven’t been loafing on the Job the last six months," she laughed. ' “I’ve been at the school at Davis and hobnobbing with some of the university men at Berkeley. They’re doing some great work there. Doc, I’ll want to talk to you about It. You're going down there, expenses paid, to brush up with a course or two this year. Now, how soon can you get back here? —Trevors? Oh, Trevors is fired. I’m running the ranch myself. And i I®H ' OFX 1 'liiL ■ &W* “You’ve Hit It! How Did You Know?” Doc, I need a few men like you! Can you come early tomorrow?— Tonight? You’re a God-blessed brick! Yes, I’ll ; stop that murderous sulphur treatment If it isn’t too late. Goodby.” She lost no time in calling for Bill Crowdy, the man whom Trevors had put into Tripp’s place. “By the way," she said when the man with the voice which had sounded so boyish in lier ears answered again, “who are you?" "Ed Masters," he told her. "Electrician. you know.” "What are you doing this afternoon?” she demanded sharply—“ Just banging around rhe office? I’ll tell you one thing, Ed Masters. If you are one of the loaf-around kind you'd better call for your time tonight. If there's anything for you to do, go do It. Don't wait for Trevors. He’s gone. Yes, for good. You can report to me here the first thing in the morning. Now send me Crowdy.” “He’s down in the hospital and the hospital phone is out of order.” I “And you’re an electrician, hanging around for orders! That’s your first job. Send the first num yon can get your hands on to tell Crowdy I say not to touch one of those calves with the lung-worm. And not to do anything else but get ready to talk I with me. I’ll be down in half an ] hour.”

As she rude the five miles down to i office at-the 'Lower End, Her thißights wen?.,constantly charged with an appreciation of the wonders which bad 1 been worked about her everywhere since that day, teu years ago, when she had first come with Luke Sunford to the original Blue Lake ranch. Then there hud been only a wild cattle-range, ten thousand acres of brush, timber and uncultivated open spaces. But Luke Hanford had seen possibilities and had bought the whole ten thousand acres, counting, from the first sight of it, upon acquiring as soon as might be those other thousands of acres which now made Blue Luke ranch one of the biggest of western ventures. It was late May, and the afternoon air was sweet and warm with the passing of spring The girl's eager eyes traveled the length of the skyseeking cliff almost at the back door of the ranch-house, which stood like some mighty barricade thrown up in that mythical day given over to the colossal struggle of a contending race of giants, und she found that there, ■ lone, time had shown no change. Elsewhere, improvements at every turn were living monuments to the tireless brain of her father. Stock corrals, sturdily built, outhouses spotless in their gleaming whitewash, monster barns, fenced-off fields, bridges across the narrow chasm of the frothing river, telephone-poles with their wires binding into one sheaf the numerous activities of the ranch, a broad, graded road over which she and her father hud come here the last time together. "It’s a big, big thing!" she whispered, and her eyes were very bright with it all, her cheeks flushed. “Big!" Passing one of the great barns, she heard the trumpet call of a stallion. From the Instant her eyes filled to the massive beauty of him, she knew who he was: "Night Shade, sprung from the union of Mountain King and Black Empress; regal-blooded, ebon! black from silken fetlock to flowing mane; a splendid four-year-old destined to tread his proud way to a first pr' e at the coming state fair at Saerimento, a horse many stock fanciers had coveted. At the store, where a ten-by-ten , n was partitioned off to serve as , “ e, she swung down from the sad-

wwwvwwwwwwwwvw*; | SUNDAY i: i EXCURSIONS: t j via <! NICKEL PLATE: ;! ROAD !; <May 2 and Sundays follow-]; ling during the ] i Summer Season. Low Excursion Fares ] ] To Many Points. Address C. A. Pritchard, !j D.P.A., Ft. Wayne, Ind. ] [ MMWWVWWWWWVWWVWI Our New GROCERY means a new opportunity to buy your goods. Call 965 and the merchants delivery will bring it to you. Our board and room accomodations, with dining room in connection, is now open. Our rooms are going fast. Phone your reservations. Let it be our pleasure to serve your wants. ERIE GROCERY & RESTAURANT CASH STORE.

dle and, leaving her fiori* With drugging reins, went in “Hello, Oharlie. You’re still left to us are you?" she said, us she stepped forward to shake hands with Miller, the storekeeper and geuerid uLUilv linn of the Settlement. “I'm glad te see you.” "So'rn I, Mfsa Judy,” grinned Chas'le, looking the part. “Howdy." “I wanted to see Johnson and Dentings. Are they here yet?" "No," answered Miller. "Johnson, !he ditch man, you meun? He's somewhere ut the Upper End. Has got a crew of men up there making a new dam or somethin’ ®r other. Been ut it purty near u week, now, 1 guess. They camp up there." (TO HE (ONTINIED) The local troop of Boy Scouts will meet at the Industrial Association rooms at 7 o’clock tonight. An important meeting will be held, and all Scouts are urged to attend. Dr. Fred Patterson will speak. Such Flavor as this comes only in real Quaker O 'Jr The price you pay for substitutes is the same as for the genuine Quaker Oats. The difference is in the flavor. And flavor, above all things, is important in oats. That rich and toasty Quaker flavor is the result of some 50 years milling experience. Once you taste it, you are spoiled for ordinary oats. That is why millions demand the Quaker brand—why you should accept no other. Quaker milling, too, retains much of the "bulk” of oats. And that makes laxatives less often needed. Protein, carbohydrates, and vitamines and “bulk” are thus combined to make Quaker Oats an excellently “balanced” food. Get Quaker Oats today. Grocers have two kinds: Quick Quaker, which cooks in J to 5 minutes, and Quaker Oats. Quick Quaker

' This Store Is An ‘Everydody Store’ h/ While we sell only the Highest Quality jewelry wo do not /// /a*/// ' retend to be Exclusive we feel there are only two ways to /// - one is to break into society and the other to be II llin/l// 111 i :,il i llsl 11S l '’«' l ' billows day so real values al honest I ///sFf prices always make for a big business. U / // Square Deal price tags are cut to fit working 1/ I men's pocketbooks here are a few examples. ■">N e w rectangular Handsome, Blue While | case in w,li,e flawless 1 Mamond, flank- I Fitted with jeweled by sea blue sapphires. I I cd. adjusted inoveNewesl type white gold I ' I mold of accuracy, mounting. I shown at 1011. $25 .o SSOO ' slst" $i()0 _*-■• 111111111 111,111 1 11 '''J J> _ "i I It .11 I / * i z«yi ss • m . gii * - - IzMKy I -<k MrL Shcall'er Pen and Pencil in matching de- Here is a sturdy Strap Watch tlud will signs. Writing aids that are invaluable. ippeal Io the outdoor in:Hl h>-jrwel. With distinctive gold mountings. Very Standard movement. Dust and moisture • i proof white gold, reclangular case. $4.25 s'™ $25.00 This quadruple plate *1- Handles and cover that 3 Silver Vegetable Dish. ina S l )e usc< * u ’ so as a ’’ dish. A practical addi- I ~ lion to your table. JEWELRY STORE L ■„■ in—..!■ lJ

* £ sa i p ~ f IS I 5 s I fi \ I I -Mv I I Jfi //1// 7 /\ .£> I I i / I 1 ] -I w ‘I / oIV i m !fi J srf I New and Smart | THIS Store is famous for being' ® first with the new thing's, but Jfi these new things must be smart first of all —and Reliable. S This Styleplus model is right ffi 8 and the Styleplus label in the » soat is your assurance of satisfaction and sensible price. S I $25.00 to $40.00 | * Teeple & Peterson * DEMOCRAT WANT UPS GET RESULTS

3