Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 24, Number 247, Decatur, Adams County, 19 October 1926 — Page 3

I KvrilFKS 1 | BR< |\ CLUB SHOW judged by „t 1..1. Th, ' r,> 47 BW,. „f ...rn and displays of I be***" ■*T Corn Club Show .trails ’ fllsl ,Wen,y ■ Jf, tn Hub rb- » «-<s as follows: ■JL I S.bi.-.k, first: Joseph J ■M.. k „ id. Truman Hoile. ■■ . r.Jmi.l 1< Bivau. fourth. Floyd ■ S’ rl fifth. Koger Bryan, sixth. I |B I ( I Ht.aii. seventh. Clifford b9 b < .p:." Franklin C Mazelin. Sl | Kay »::.un'.. tenth. Leo Me- ■■ B el.v.r'i. Raymond MeAhrett. ' .t'een'h. Sylvan Nuss | ’ L,. Tilman Nussbaum. rb . h H-.-old Johnson, seven- ■ 9 h . E ; : Schwartz. eighteenth., ■ ft I'.o ■ um-teet 'ti Simon M L rt2 , twentieth The other of the Hub who had dis i tier.. Hit bald S Johnson. ■ Eldred V. Shifferly. Me.-.-•■..a Ivan Heser. Sylvan gjllfg.- i; :t Fifing ‘’- ike. ■[g s. 5-nek. Henry Bus. he, H | \ < .tThe.ul Stults. Ben H n \l.,zelm. Martin D. Habegg- ■ ».:. M-ury. La wt elite Bl'.im. Station Musser. Elizabeth Mqgser. Then. Walter Hildebrand. E B.une. Ban Habegger, Jr. Bl Nyft-iei Reuben I. Habegger. Cis'Ler II L-r. Clyde Gould and Nor f a» Kprunger. Sugar Beet Cub Show ten m the sugar beet club as follows: Glen Rupert, first: JM| Rupert second. Walter H. Moyer, •ird. Sylvan Habegger. fourth: MIM Habegger. fifth, Habold Johnjoa,| sixth Theodore Bleeke. Jr., wvjth: Florence Tinkham, eighth: N«®| L Schwartz, ninth: Richard S. tenth The other members’ whoUl exhibits here were: Eli M Simon M. Schwartz. Bertha M. iMiwartz. Hulda L Schwartz. Virgil J Henschen and Irene Rich. I (urn from I W.C. T. U. MEETINC (© KTIXVED FROM PAGE OVE) 1 ducti 1 a tour of the city for the visitor!. Lapoite is a beautiful city with Bas shade trees and wide streets. It has eon appropriately called. "The City >f Maples." There were about MH legates at the convention, in adtitlot to many other visitors. I I Oi of ihe most interesting talks gives at th>- convention was that given . by Barton Rees Pogue, head of the exgrew bn department »f Taylor UniMr. Pogue is an author and tales ed reader and he read many of Ms tj tn writings during his talk. He the pu’.pit incite First Methodist ChUH n this city recently, while the Dr. Somerville Light, was ill. HKgg’. Chool auditorium in this city on : Nfflgaber s. under the auspices ' f the t of ”*’* Decatur Women'- 1 ' dab. will be a public meetinglocal delegates to the convcnfida will give their reports on the seshlMHat tne next regular meeting of union, to be held on the secO Tuesday in November. ■SK 0 pSzes given for WINDOW DISPLAY ■■*l TISItED FROM PAGE ONE) (Co , $5 worth of milk tickets by The Swiss Dairy Farm. J Lee Hdwe Co. 5 gallons nn donated by the Canter Ice Jo. T(jjß OF QUEEN ■MARIE STRIKES I TWO SNAGS TODAY FROM PAle! OWE) ■MBclal salons buzzing. of the queen's diplomatic dinA- ga jd |) er impropriety could “Wg'een avoided, had she called at House immediately after ’ n 'Washington, the original WkbSmnounced by the state departthese worries on its hands, was undecided today •haßreply if a ny should be made to Protfcts of newspaper publishers »Kalkn alleged exploltaton by the W««n for of this WBiment’s hospitality. department is investigating obscene references to her which appeared in the editorljl of a Chj ca g o radical new-spaper. ■ —— o ligton —Construction of the hard road between Covington and slfurg by the state highway don has again been delayed ation, a suit having been filed injunction to prevent the work, tsee—Another municipality will yd to the list of towns ’f pßn- under way here are carried o °t. A movement is under way to inl or W at e Wawasee as a municipality. wortli more than $2,000,00 be involved in the incorpora- ‘ ■

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lift. 1980, WvNlurii Ncwnpupvr Uuluu.) It la well to know something about everything and everything about something. Hot-dee of tiny tollers are working In our service night and day to keep the world wholeeome and all the rave ot beings supplied with Hfe-stuft. CARE IN ILLNESS 1 Contagious diseases are due to dis tlnct living things which

ported from one person to an other and live like parasites upon a patient. This knowledge should warn us to guard our-

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selves and our loved Vies from spread ot contagion. Another point to, tie remembered is that contagious diseases are real things, and cannot be dealt with as Imaginary ills. The utensils used by a patient, or Indeed anything else that he handles, during illness, may become a menace, as they are easily contaminated with infectious material. The bacteria and microbes which we cannot see are more deadly than any animal which we see and can kill. A diphtheria patient will contaminate spoons, cups, forks or anything which he handles or uses; this is true of any contagious disease; too much care cannot be taken of everything which comes in contact with the patient. All should be regarded with suspicion and treated accordingly. Allow no one to use any of the utensils used in case of contagious disease, even after thorough sterilization. Keep such utensils for the patient alone. After recovery allow them to stand in a disinfectant solution in boiling water for several hours. Boiling for five minutes will sterilize • most dishes. The best protection against all contagion is robust health. Tills is secured best by wholesome food, plenty of exercise and fresh air, as well as plenty of sleep in a well aired room. Fresh air day and night, witii plenty of sunshine during the duy are the best of health producers. Delicate children now are allowed to He in the direct sunlight for hours, thus gaining vitality and strength. Rheumatism and kindred ills are cured by the sun treatment; exposing the body to the direct rays of lhe sun has brought healing and health to many ap invalid. /Kux M. (©. 1926. Western Newspaper Union.) We can never replace a friend. When a man is fortunate enough to have several, he finds them all aifferent. No man has a double friendship.—Schiller. FAVORITE f RUiTS i Next to the taste and paiatabillty of' I our food, we like to have it appeal to

the - eye. Food I daintily gar-' [ Dished and nicely served will be more appetizing • than that which is served carelessly. For a center-

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piece a luscious basket of fruit garnished with its own leaves when possible, is an ornament to any table. When fresh fruit is not available, mold a few preserved berries in orange, lemon, or pineapple gelatin. Serve the quivering mounds with whipped cream and a few of the berries. Halves of muskmelon filled with ice cream and garnished with j of candied or preserved ginger to sim-| Ulate seeds, are both pretty and palatable. Muskmelon or watermelon, cut with a French potato cutter Into balls, fill-1 ing sherbet or cocktail glasses with same, and adding a sauce of lemon or ginger sirup makes a most delicious first course for the beginning of a dinner. Grated apple, added to egg white and powdered sugar and beaten until stiff, then served surrounded with a thin custard, is a most acceptable dessert. Stewed pears cored and the cavities tilled with jelly and served with whipped cream, Is another dish worthy of trial. Baked pears dressed with lemon juice, butter and sugar and basted while baking, Is a delicious dish to serve with meats. Peaches put through a sieve after , removing the skin, add to Ice cream mixtures. Serve with fresh sliced ' peaches. I For those who cannot eat uncooked fruit try this: Stew apples or pears (coring them first), In a lemon or sugar sirup flntll tender, then decorate with quartered blanched almonds, sticking the tender fruit quite full of the nuts, so that ttte apples look like young porcupines. Sprinkle with pow-; dered sugar and set In the oven to brown the tips of the almonds. Serve with whipped cream.

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT TUESDAY. OCTOBER 19.1926.

OPERATORS AND FIELD MEN MEET teONTINUES FROM FAME them out and send them to the local office. Mr. Martin Speiks E. L. Martin, president of the organization, who is also one of the best butter makers in the country, said a few words to the operators, asked for their cooperation and help and stated that when the company was successful the operator was successful and the farmer was successful. In other words, the more the wairy industry is developed in this territory, the more money will be paid to the farmer. The Spencerville, Mendon and Delphos delegation came here in three trucks and about 25 cars. William Conterman. territory man-, agcr, estimated that nearly 400 people were in the party. The crowd was happy, sounded horns and whistles and sang as they drove up Second street. The LaGrange and northern Indiana counties, in charge of S. E. Btown, fieldman. met at the north outskirts of the city and paraded up Second street, headed by the--G. E. band. Oth r towns represented here today were Van Wert. Berne. Monroe, Kokomo, Frankfort, Markle, Zanesville. Uniondale, Plymouth, Warsaw, Topeka, Albion, Huntertown, Auburn. Richmond and several others. o EVANSVILLE — Unable to open ’he three hundred pound safe at Zernow’s barbecue stand, thieves, ipparently husky piano movers, picked up the safe and made away with it. If they were able to force it open they were rewarded witij $375 fdr their trouble, police said. SEYMOUR —After he had run a borrowed automobile into a fire hydrant, causing a young geyser to spout forth. Jack Gager tried his hand at being his own attorney and lost the case. He paid $25 and costs for his escapade. WABASH —After a local newspaper had announced the possession of a "gigantic" squash weighing 90 pounds, a farmer entered the office and informed them their "giant” was little morn than a dwarf. He brought a 125 pound squash with him to demonstrate his idea of size. BRAZIL—BIind people of Clay county met here to perfqpt an organization to get a pension bill through the next legislature. The new organza t ion will be known as the Clay Countv Boosters for Pensions for the Blind. Bloomington—TWe Bloomington I. 0. 0. F. will start work at once on remodeling their lodge rooms The Odd Fellows plan to spend SIO,OOO tn bringing their rooms up to date and enlargI fug them. Plans have been drawn and the contracts will be let soon. I Brazil—Horace E. Abbott, for eight years <»ounty agricultural agent ot I Clay county, has handed in his resignation He will accept te position of agricultural agent of Vigo county with headquarters in Terre Haute, he announced. East Chicago—Attorney Lester Hurphy made himself to object of much gnyy wliin lie showed frier’s a. gen- . in,. At no-N,.or game in Chicago. It is the fic«t reporthere and althougs hundreds ot fans 1 ' wan’ to take in the game few tickets I aro expected here. Decatur Is Growing . and it’s a safe and profitable investment to own property here. Why Pay Rent? IWe have several good properties listed for sale and will be glad to explain to yon how : they can be purchased. Five room house, South First St. Five room house, Grant St. Seven room house, North Second St. Seven room house. South 11th St. Six room house, Russell St. Eight room house, Nortli Second St. Seven and five room house, Indiana St. Seven room house, Winchester St. Seven room house, Marshall St. Eight room house, North 11th St. Six room house, North Ninth St. Seven room house, North Ninth St. i Seven room house, in Pleasant Mills. Will trade this house for a small piece of land. Most of these properties can be purchased with small payment down —balance like rent. H. S. MICHAUD Farms and City Property. 133 S. 2nd St. Phone 104

HANDWRITING f IS IDENTIFIED I — . i Expert Identifies W riting On Grocery Slips As That Os Mrs. McPherson > Loe Angeles, Oct. 19—Minton Carl-, ' son. handwriting expert, took the wit-. ■|ne«s stand in the "Aimee Semple Me-1 herson hearing today and Identified ’ the signatures found on grocery slips ’i at Carrnel-by-the Sea as those of the ‘ | evangelist. I Carlson also Identified the signatures 1 ' of Kenneth G. Ormiston, fugitive radio 1 operator who the state claims shared • a cottage at Carmel with the evange*l list during her disappearance, as ’ found on hotel register, telegrams, 1 hotel room slips and numerous receipts. — ——o SUBPOENAS ARE ISSUED FOR WALB 1 AND PETERS TODAY (COWTINCWD FROM "*»«» ’ in Chicago was almost simultaneous ■ with the arrival of process servers , in Indianapolis. ~ The subpoenas for Clyde Walb, - republican state chairman was serv--1 ed on him at state republican headquarters here. Walb said he planned to leave at midnight tonight for 1 Chicago. t Indianapolis, Ind, Oct. 19 —(United ’ Press) —The hunt for missing letters i and checks of D. C. Stephenson, forr mer grand dragon of the Indiana Ku Klux Klan, was renewed today in the ’ Marlon county grand jury investigaj tion of state politics. 1 Although Mildred Meade, Stephen- * son’s former stenographer, took beI fore the grand jury yesterday a safe- . ty deposit box believed to contain f — - j i, —e 3 * SAVE io? 1 DISCOU NT s , ON YOUR ; Electric Light Bills BY PAYIN6 ON OB BEFORE Oct 20 POWER BILLS 1 3 are also due and must be PAID by twentieth of month at CITY HALL II

some of the Stephenson documents, | it was learned that more documents were being hunted. William H. Sheaffer and John L. Niblack, deputy prosecutors, left the city on what. Prosecutor Remy said I was qn "Important mission" In connection with the inquiry. "They will not be back until they have th° goods with them." Atemy declared. Remy withheld their destl.nation but said they were going to a "more than 100 miles away." | Thomas Adams, head of a committee of editors whose charges of corruption under the Stephenson regime precipitated the grand jury quiz was also absent from Indianapolis. Adams was reported in an Ohio city seeking documentary evidence from one of Stephenson’s former associates in the klan organization. Ralph Kane, deputy prosecutor, said Adams’ movements were known to the prosecutor’s office and that h* had not evaded answering a subpoena as a grand jury witness by leaving lhe city. Miss Meade, it was definitely learned today, went to the safety deposit box in the Indiana National Bank on the afternoon of Sept. 20 and removed most of the Stephenson documents she had in her possession. This visit occurred four days- before Adams published the first of a series of letters from Stephenson in the state prison at Michigan City, where the former dragon is serving a life I sentence for the murder of Mtes ’ Madge Oberholtzer. The letters were smuggled out of the prison to Court Asher, one of 1 Stephenson’s former henchmen in i the Klan. Under guard of Prosecutor Remy

I ■■■"■[■.■'".■I 1 IN THE MH ~ SF HUEIN THE BAKING r , Avoid low, grade leaveners. Don’t take chances. For sure • and satisfactory results use SP CAIVMET the world's greatest wgj)!’ BAKING POWDER MAKES baking easier—its double acting BALES TIMES THOSE OF AWT OTHER BRAND • -■ * ■ .. . . . , TOPCOATS Styleplus I Topcoats \ f Ol - ear r ° u n wear 1 ‘ $20.. $35 : 'WI Topcoat is adapted to your own I \ > X needs and serves best for so many VXvlVftWtx.occasions that it is an extremely l\\ popular coat. Scarcely any young man is without a topcoat in these days and — x - better dressers everywhere have a \ GrMO topcoat for business, sport and \ pWi - * social wear. >* Styleplus topcoats are distinctive /(Tvll and stylish, well tailored, novel HI x patterns, rich linings and are guaranteed by the known label ~JI 17 in the coat. / Come in and see them. Teeple & Peterson «

and if iletective she removed the I box from the hank yesterday and It was taken with her into the grand jury room. Russell Duncan, a member of the I | house of representatives in the last session of the state legislature, was culled before the grand Jury at the i opening of its session, today. ’ J. W. Ebaugh, another state representative, was waiting outside the grand jury room to testify. o 1 * To Tttend Muller Funeral Indianapolis, Ind . Oct. (I ailed P:ess) —Arthur L. Gilliom, attorney general and attaches oL-his ottice will Evansville Man Enjoys Health Kidney Trouble, Gaitritu and( 'onftipationHud Alnu/st H recked His Health. Samuel L. Martin, 713)i Main St., Evansville, Ind., 'a success! uldecurat or, says: "When 1 liegan taking Tanlac, - * I had almost given SE • up hope of recover- wßfe ing my lost health. From ’ morningy till night 1 suffered: My x nerves were jumpy • and I never slept , soundly. Indigestion made it agony for me to eat. Hours of pain followed every meal. I was tired all the time, no energy to work "I believe Tanlac is the greatest tonic anybody can use. for it has returned to me mv lost health, banished all signs of stomach troubles, built up my strength. • Tanlac relieves constipation, tonesup sluggish liver, puts stomach in shape, build’s strength. Take this great tonic. At your druggist's. Uver 40 million ’ bottles sold.

' go to Vincennes tomorrow to attend the funeral of George J Muller, leputy attorney general who died here Sunday. The furu ral will be ivud at the home jof Muller's parents. o G. E. Masked Ball, postponed until Saturday night. Oct. 30. Set Alarms later now Breakfast cooks in 3 to 5 jQ _ minutes 4 QUICK QUAKER, hot and enticing, is faster than plain toast. For scores of thousands it is solving 1 the breakfast problem. The most delicious of breakfasts, it provides an excellent food “balance" of protein, carbohydrates and vitamines— plus the "bulk" to make laxatives less often needed—that authorities have made the dietetic urge of the world. Less nourishing foods, less delicious foods, simply to save time arc a folly. Start now every day with food that "stands by” you through the morning. Get Quick Quaker at your grocer's. Quick Quaker

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