Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 24, Number 129, Decatur, Adams County, 1 June 1926 — Page 3

I'SoFast I Cook a hot breakfast I „o» in 3to 5 minutes I I PICK QUAKER cook* in lew I 0 time .han it take* you to preB ofc pi» in ,o » st ’ | Th»t >”« n » a ,ICt ’ nouri,hinK br ' ak ’ | (1 L ia a hurry. ■ n mean* an excellently balanced ■ L- combining protetn, carbo Bl‘irate» and vitimine* — plus the ■ to make laxative, les* often ■ JSed-covked and served without B muM of bo!her ‘ . . B Why 6° 00 w:th IfSS n6uri,h,n « B Jj.- Quaker Oats and milk is the ■ SJic today. Start every ■ & th»t way. I Quick Quaker ■Rhio 162,000 Seedlings B” P From State Nursery j B one hundred and sixty-two td seedling- were shipped from thf ( Bjttt, nursery at Henryville to various Brcuctifs in this state and to pointe Bln oth«- r sla,pq ,his sprinK ’ Charles Bf PM®- sta,e forcMtpr ’ rp P°fts to Bibthard Letter, conservation dlrecBtor of Indiana. ■ - ! ■lUte institutions, some were exBtW?* l for sped,in^a frflm othpr Bitates, and a large number were sold Bfor actual cist of production, bring- ■ |C g iß 811111 59&6.75. B Dea ms ' p P ort shows 'eighty-seven Bpurchasers, and seedlings going to Bforty-twu counties. Trees were sold Betdr for forest planting, the idea beBlrr to utilize the waste fields ami Hmaie them produce timber: and for Bvlnd breaks around farm buildings. ■ she species sent out included white B>*h red cedar, back .locust, white l Buk tulip or yellow popular, black ■ walnut Norway spruce and Austrian ■ ipnice. Jack, western, yellow, Jap- ■ t iese red. Scotch and white pines. ■ lu addition to seedlings sold the ■ lUte nursery also produced 78.524 ■ young trees which were planted on ■ the state forest over an area of about 913 acres. Forty acres in Me Cor- ■ Kirk's Creek Canyon State Park ■ trre also planted, and the forestry ■ dirisoin plans to complete planting ■ the 65acres of cleared land in this ■ reservation using this tract as an ■ auuillary demonstration forest. ■ Dram reports almost universal in- ■ terest in the reforestation movement ■in Indiana and ’calls attention that ■ termers are realizing that it is good 9 business to plant worn-out acres to ■ timber The state nursery output. ■ compared to previous years, doubled ■ this season, he says. ■ 0 _ 9 New Leprosy Remedy I Claimed In Brazil 9 Rio De Janeiro —(UP) —A decisive ■ remedy for leprosy has been found 9 (rowing in abundance in Brazil, 9 claims Dr Geraldo Kuhlmann. Brazil--9 bn botanist. 9 A plant from which an oil is ex 9 fracted superior in activity to cal--9 moogra oil which has long been etn- ■ flayed extensively to relieve the le-' 9 prous. thrives in abundance through 9 out thia country. This Brazilian oil I- cw be produced at a considerable tesscost than the Indian Chalmoogra nil, stated Dr. Kuhlemann in a lecture brfore the Association of Commercial Employees. | •'‘rom this plant,—the “Carpotroche commonly known in Brazil as the sapucainha plant. —is •xtracted an oil, which, when an•lyxed at Brazil’s principal research •tetlon, that of the Oswald Cruz In•titute. showed optical activity of more than that of the best chaimooFa oil, declared Dr. Kuhlmann. 812.50 Offered To Boys And Girls In State Fair Contests — 11 l Indianapolis, June 1. —(United re B 8.) — Cash prizes, trips and k( 'l>olarships totalling $6,812.50 will bej **»rded to boys and girls club mem Ws ' n contests at the State fair, ac-, c °rdlng tp E. J. Barker, secretary-j Usurer of the Indiana State Fair. pig, lamb, poultry, corn, po,al9' Be wlng, canning, baking and' 1 Blog contests are included in the r °gram of competition. I A] l club work will be judged Sept. t ’ « opening day of thffe fair, and a * re wi " be several hundred boys it* J lf ' 8 compe, f n K * n the contests t “ at time, Barker believes.

I JuditiTl I of Blue Lake | _ Ranch By Jackson Gregory The ranch ku stoeled to its utmost capacity. Carson had bought another herd of cattle; Lee hud added to Ida string of horses. The dry sea aou was on them, herds were moved higher up the slopes Into the fresh pastures. Canon, converted now to the silos, was a man with one idea and that Idea ensilage. Again the alfalfa acreage was extended, so that each head of cattle might have its dally auxiliary fodder, Carson now agreed with Judith In the matter of holding back sales for the high prices which would come at the heels of the lean months. The man Donley, who had brought to the ranch the pigeons carrying | cholera, was tried In Rocky Bend. The evidence, though circumstantial, was I strong against him, and the prosecution I was pushed hard. But it was little surprise to any one at the ranch when the trial resulted in a hung Jury.- Tliq ablest lawyer in the county had de] fended Donley, and finally, late in Auj gust, secured his acquittal. The man I himself did not have ten dollars In the world; the attorney taking his case was a high-priced lawyer. Obviously, to Judith Sanford at least, Bayne Trevors was standing back of every play ids hirelings made. Doc Tripp had the hog cholera In hand. And every day, out with the live stock whose well being was his responsibility, he worked as he had never worked before, watchful, eager, suspicious. ‘‘lf they'll drop cholera down on us out of the blue sky,” he snapped, ‘‘l’d like to know what they won't try.” • * • • « • * 1 For the first few days following the dance Bud Lee had within ids soul room but for one emotion: he had held Judith In his arms. He had set his lips on hers. He went hot and cold with the remembrance. Being a man, he made his man-suppositions of the emotions that rankled In her breast. He Imagined her contempt of a man who by his strength had forced her lips to wed his; he pictured her scorn, her growing hatred. He told himself that he should go, rid the ranch of ids presence, take his departure without a word with her. For, already, he had fitted her Into Ids ' theory of the perfect woman, lifting I her high above himself and above the ' human world. It was a continued insult for him to remain here. But, after careful thought, he remembered what Judith hud already told him; he was one of the men whom she could trust to do her work ' for her, one of the men she most needed, a man whom she would need sorely If Bayne Trevors were lying quiet now but to strike harder, unexpectedly, later. Judith did not dismiss him. as at first he had been sure she would. So he stayed on, remaining away from I the ranch headquarters, sleeping when he could in the cabin above the lake, spending his days with his horses, avoiding her but keeping her personality In his soul, her Interests In Ids heart. When the winter had passed I when she had made her sales and had the money In hand for the payments upon the mortgages, then he would go. Whereat, no doubt, the high gods ' smiled. ' As time passed, there came about a subtle change In the attitude of the outfit toward Pollock Hampton, whom they had been at the beginning prone to accept as a “city guy.” It began to appear that under his lightness there was often a steady purpose; that If he didn't know everything about a ranch, he was learning fast; that In his outspoken admiration of things rough and manly and primal there were certain lasting qualities. Whereas formerly his being thrown from a spirited mount was almost a dally occurrence, now he rode rather | well With tanned face and hard , hands, he was, as Carson put it, "grow, to Judith one day serious- ( faced, thoughtful-eyed. > •‘Look here, Judith." he began ah- , ruptlv, “I’m no outsider just looking on at this game. You're the chief owner and the boss and Im no kl.k- | lnK at that any longer. dour dad raised vou to this sort of thing and 'vou have away of getting by with It. . But. on the other hand, I’m part ownI er and you’ve got to consider I Judith smiled at him. I “What now, Pollock? she a t • j -Jou e the boss,” he repeated 1 stout v. “But I’ve got a right to be X in authority. Under you you I , , whv bv cripes, Igo around feeling as If I had t 0 tHkP Carson or Tripp or any other is good!” laughed "t’s'an,” l^ ’’insisted. “You can

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, Tuesday, June 1, i92S.

Suppose hT «tigge«ed*7a guely7 "that ' you left the ranch a day or so. Or even longer, some time. There's got to be some one here who la the head when there Is need for It." Judith mirthfully acquiesced. Hampton's Interest was sufficiently heavy fur hltu to be entitled to some consideration. Besides, she hud come to experience a liking for the boy and had seen In him the chuuge for the better which his new life was working in him. Further, she meant to muke it her business that she did not | leave the ranch fur a day or so, or | un hour or so, when she should be | there. Consequently, within a week j Bollock Hampton was known humorously front one end to the other of the big ranch as the Foremun-at-I.urge. Murcia Langworthy, visiting tn southern California, wrote brief, sunny notes to Hampton, Intricate letters to Judith. The mystery of Bud Lee of which she had had a glimpse when the urtlst, Dick Farris, and Lee recognized each other as old frfends hud piqued her curiosity In tt way which allowed that young daughter of Eve no rest until she hud made her own Investigations. She wrote at length of Lee. How he had been quite the rage, my dear. Oh, tremendously rich, with a great ranch In the South, a wonderful adobe hacienda of the old Spanish days, where, like a young king, he had entertained lavishly. How, believing in his friends, he had lost everything, then had dropped out of the world, content equally to allow that world to believe him soldiering In France or dead in the trenches and to take his wage us a common laborer. Wasn't It too romantic for anything? In due course, following up her letters, Murcia herself came back to the Blue Lake ranch, Judith's guest now. The major und Mrs. Langworthy were visiting in the East —it seemed that they always visited somewhere—and Marcia would stuy at the ranch Indefinitely. Hampton drove into Rocky Bend for her and held the girl’a breathless admiration all the way home, handling the reins of bls young team In u thoroughly reckless, shivery manner. “Isn't he splendid?" cried Marcia when she slipped away with Judith to her room. Under the bright approval of Marcia’s eyes Hampton flushed with pleasure. Could Mrs. Langworthy have seen them together she would have nudged the major and whispered in his ear. Lturing the two months after the dance, Bud Lee and Judith had seen virtually nothing of each other. When routine duties or a necessary report brought them for a few minutes into each other's society there was a marked constraint upon them. Never had the man lost the stinging sense of hfs offense against her; never had Judith condescended to be anything but cool and brief with him. While no open reference was made to what wrts past, still the memory of It must lie In each heart, nnd though Lee held Ills eyes level with hers' and drunk deep of the warm loveliness of her, he t'dd. himself angrily that, be was he-

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L eenth b»r contempt. The chivalry within him. to great and es**nttal a part of the man's nature, was a wounded thing, hurt by his own act. The old feeling of cumuraderle which had sprung up between them at times was gone now; they could no lunger be “purdnera” as they hud been that night in th* old cabin. told himself curtly that be did not regret that; that now it was inevitable that they should be less than strangers since they could not be mure than friends. That the girl was reudy to furgive hltu, that she had never been as harsh with him us he was himself, that there was n gulden, delicious possibility that she should feel us he did—so mud an Idea had not come to Bud I*e, horse foreman. A few days after Marcia's arrival there came to the runvh a letter which was nddressied: “Bollock Humph-n, Esq., “Geneal Manager, •'Blue Lake Ranch." , It was from Doan, Rockwell & Height, big stock buyers of Sacramento, submitting an unsolicited order fur n surprisingly lurge shipment of cattle nnd horses. The price offered was ridiculously low, even for tills season of low figures due to the fact that many overstocked ranches were throwing their beef cattle and range horses on tlie market. So low. In fact, that Judith's first surmise when Hampton brought it to her was that tlie typist taking the company's dictation had made an erfor, Judith tossed the note Into the wastebasket. Then she retrieved it to frown at It wonderlngly, and, finally, to file It. It began by having for her no significance worthy of speculation. It soon began to puzzle her. Finally, It faintly disturbed her. Here were two points of Interest. First: Doan, Rockwell & Haight was the cbmiiany to which Bayne Trevors, when general manager, had made many a sacrifice sale. Because the Blue Lake had knocked down to them before, did they still count confidently upon continued inismanage‘ment? Surely they must know that the management of the ranch had changed. And this brought her to the second point: How did It come about that they had addressed, not her. but Pollock Humpton? Was this just a trille? (TO UK CONTINUED) President To Speak With Sweden’s Prince; Princess To Unveil Washington. May 29 —(UP)—President Collidge delivered the principal oration at the unveijing of the new John Ericsson Memorial in Potomac Park, on May 29 at 3 P. M. Crown Prince Gustavus Adolphus, of Sweeden, attended as the representative of the inventor's native country, made a short address in English, while Crown Princess Louise officiated at the actual unveiling of the monument. The sculptor is James Earle Fraser, the designer of the Buffalo Nickel, All proceedings were broadcasted by radio. |

— ' ' —' 1 “Your Health” Thl* Column la conducted .-by the Adame County Medical Society and the Indiana , State Medical Aseociation in the Interest of the public's health. POISON IVY "Polson Ivy, the bugaboo of many| outdoor Hoosier enthusiasm need lessly claims hundreds of victims; this time of year,” nccotdlng to the bulletin Issued today by the Public ity Bureau of the Indiana Stale Medical Association. “This plant from which so many suffer is easily distinguishable by its Bulletin. "Although poison ivy, poison oak, poison sumack abound in three divided leaves.” continues the this state, poison ivy is the plant most freuenlly encountered by the unsuspecting city visitor to the country In spite of the fact that it may bo soeasily recognized. "Since the advent of the automobile poison ivy has become a city as well as a country problem due to the fact that more city 'folks' get to the country than before and come in contact with the plant when changing tires or making roadside repairs "Poison from tie* plant is thought to be transmitted to the individual through the volatile oil given off by the plant. When this substance comes in contact with the skin it sets up an intense irritation in susceptible individuals. The disease starts with the exposed parts first. The hands, wrists and forearms are usually first attacked, the irritation often spreading to the face. “The symptoms of ivy poisoning are comparatively easy to recognize. A more or less mild attack may be ushered in by burning or Itching of the skin. Within twenty-four to for-ty-eight hours a red rash appears. This is followed by more or less swelling and itching, then small blisters filled with serum make their appearance. “Recently a series of experiments into the causes and effects of poison ivy was carried on in one of the large east< rn universities, medical stu- ' dents submitting themselves to tests. As a result of these tests it was learned definitely that irritation resulting from contact with the plan' was variable n different people. A > few blisters resulted in some indii viduals, while others have tremen--1 dous swelling in the parts of the ! | body involved. “The attack may last from four days to several weeks, depending on the amount of irritaift ami the sensi- | tiveness of the skin. Persons wito

».—■ i. ■■■■ have uhce been affected ale biUeVcd to be niost susceptible. "A person may ue poisoned either by coming Into direct contact with the plant or coming into contact with some agent that has come in contm'' with the ivy. A dog may roll in the. poison ivy and although he isn’t ' affected may carry <he poison to atii individual. “If you come in contact with pulsion Ivy immediately wash the parts | ■of the body exposed with soap ami. water followed by benzol, gasoline' < or ether tc dissolve the oil from th -] plant. 1 "Medical science has found a pie-, • | i ventive for poison ivy which may be i helpful to sufferers from this affection. The preventative treatment i 'consists of a course of medication J . t'sually coni|dete<| in three weelU. i The mediclna Is a tincture of the . offending poison (Rhus toxleondent dron). It should be given only under , a physician's super islon. This treat- . meat sornetlint h has been found a help to those who have to work near I poison Ivy, und is an absolute pre- . | vcntlve in most, cases.’’ Coast Guard Saves Lives Os 100,000 i Washington, Juno L- tU P)— Heroic work of the (’oast Guard dur- , ing the last six years has resulted In I saving the lives of more than 100,000 . persons from the perils of the sea

I Decatur Quality Chicks I —from thoroughbred farm range flocks, § Bred right and hatched right. Ask for I Our Reduced Prices | || on June and July chicks. Thousands to I* offer ev ?ry I Monday and Thursday | ■ of each week. tp 0 Brooder stoves, poultry feeds S and supplies for sale. S Custom Hatching 1c an egg. | The Decatur Hatchery B 136 E. Monroe St. Phone 197

l' Statistics us th. Guard operations, just made public, that since the ' world war the service has assisted hundreds of yeMelr with a total value of more thuu $267.175.(Mi0 and I r» covered derelict* valued at $2,858,1 010. Fines and penalties Incurred by I vesaela vlulatiug the custom laws I during the period were reported at $1,739,734. Dining the la t two >ears U’G Guatdimen met death in Hue of duty I and 652 were injured. ■■ ■ O'Get the Habit —Trade At Home, It Pays A Farmer Boy’s Success | From hard work on a farm to the study of medicine was tlie course Dr.

Pierce pursued. Finally he determined to put up in ready-to-use form his ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ so the public could easily procure it. This ‘1) i scovery’ is a tonic in its effects on the stomach and digestive apparatus; an alterative in its

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(action on the blood, liver and skin. It increases tlie appetite, stimulates the digestion, enriches the blood, and makes - both men and women feel as they did . when they were young All dealers. I-irge bottles, liquid, 11 $1.35; tablets, $1.35 and 65c. '• Send 10c to Dr. Pjerce, Buffalo, N. Y-, for a trial package tablets.