Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 8, Number 274, Decatur, Adams County, 19 November 1910 — Page 2
The Daily Democrat. Published every Evenlne, Exospl Sunday, by DECATUR DEMOCRAT COMPANY LEW G. ELLINGHAM JOHN H. HELLER Subscription Rataa Per Week, by carrierlo oente Per. year, by carrier>s 00 Per month by ma 1125 cents Per year, by mail>2.so Single Copies 2 cente Advertising rates made known on application. Entered at the postottlce at Decatu-, 'ndiana, as second-class mail matter. NOT SORRY FOR BLUNDER. "If my friends hadn't blundered in thinking I was doomed victim of consumption, I might not be alive now, writes D. T. Sanders, of Harrodsburg, Ky., "but for years they saw every attempt to cure a lung-racking cough fail At last I tried Dr. King’s New Discovery. The effect was wonderful. It soon stopped the cough and 1 am now in better health than I have had for years This wonderful life-saver is an unrivaled remedy for caughs, colds, lagrlppe, asthma, croup, hemorrhages, whooping cough or weak lungs. 50c and >l. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by all druggists. .— o— — Croup is most prevalent during the dry cold weather of the early winter months. Parents of young children should be prepared for it. Al that is needed is a bottle of Chamberlin's Cough Remedy. Many mothers are never wiahout it in their homes and it has never disappointed them. Sold by all dealers. ~ — - 1 - SAVED AN IOWA MAN’S LIFE. The very grave seemed to yawn before Robert Madsen, of West Burlington, lowa, when, after seven weks in the hospital, four of the best physicians gave him up. Then was shown the marvelous curative power of months of frightful suffering from liver trouble and yellow jaundice, getting no help from other remedies or doctors, five bottels of this matchless medicine completely cured him. It's positively guaranteed for Stomach, Liver and Kidney troubles and never disappoints. Only 50 cents at all druggists. Democrat Want Ads Pay. DO you believe in Protection? The muffler alone will keep you warm I All Bradleys are V necksand fit over the spine Your Husband may be a little careless madam, but you you can help him keep his health. Put a BRADLEY Full Fashioned Muffler on his neck. Get the color he likes. The Muffler will fit him, become him and keep his shoulders, spine, neck and chest warm and “comfy” 50c I — - THE MYERSDAILEY CO.
SOCIETY DOINGS Presbyterian Ladies Surprise Mrs. J. S. Coverdale Friday Evening. A CONTEST WINNER Miss Winifred Burke Will Entertain Chanticler Set * •« Thanksgiving. Work —for some good, be it ever so slowly; Cherish some flower, be it eve.* so lowly; Labor-r-all labor is noble and holy; Let thy great deeds be thy prayer to thy God. —Tennyson. The Presbyterian Ladies’ Aid society gave a surprise supper at the home of Mrs. J. S. Coverdale Friday evening that was one of the merry social events following the bazaar recently conducted by the society. Some time ago the society divided into sections, each to vie with the other in filling a box with fancy and ready-to-wear articles so rthe bazaar which has been conducted the past two weeks. At that time it was arranged that the section whose box brought the greatest sum from the sale should be given a supper by the members of the other sections. The sale just closed revealed the fact that the box gotten up by Mr. Coverdale's section was the winner, and arrangements were made for giving the supper next Friday. In the meantime the good ladies got together and planned to give it sooner as a surprise, which they did last evening, the supper consistng of all good seasonable things. The evening following the supper was spent in a general social way, music contributing much to the enjoyment. While all the boxes prepared | by the sections were representative of noble efforts, that of Mrs. Coverdale’s’. I section, which was valued at twenty J dollars, was the highest, and was. ! deemed worthy of the dinner promised in the following verse pasted on each . box given out at the beginning of the i contest: Fill me full what'er you do With any goods, red or blue; Make up anything that is fit to wear And save me till we have our fair; Because you know the winner Is going to have a good free dinner. The ladies met at the home of the t president. Mrs. Dugan, before going to the Coverdale home. oMatilda Sellemeyer, Goldie Gay, Electa Glancey, Ruby Miller, Lilah Lachot and Mrs. H. S. Lachot of the Entre Nous club spent a happy evening at the home of Miss Pearl Purdy on j First street. After sewing in the forepart of the evening, what was more appropriate for a change than the sew-1 ing contest, which was a a most | unique one? In this questions were to be answered with the names of terms used in needlework, and Miss Lilah Lachot proving the most successful, was awarded first honors, while Goldie Gay consoled herself with the booby prize. The club closed with a luncheon. Mrs. Ruth Lachot will entertain at the next meeting in two weeks. Twenty-five of the ladies of the Mite society of the M. E. church found the regular session held Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. C. R. Dunn a delightful one, this meeing being in charge of Mrs. F. V. Mills’ section. After the business period, a word contest with other diversions, made the social hour a pleasant Ona. Mrs. Dan Beery will be hostess at the next meeting in two weeks. The Ladies’ Aid society of the German Reformed church which recent!? closed a contest in which it raised $908.86 for the building fund, has added to this the full amount they had in the treasury, making the sum contributed by them thus far, for this purpose, $1,135. Mrs. Amos Lewton entertained a large number of classmates of her daughter, Mabel, at dinner today at the Lewton farm in Root township, in honor of the sixth birthday anniversary of Miss Mabel. It goes without saying that the day was a merry one for all concerned and the Lewton farm rang with good cheer and happy voices all day. The Coon Skin club held no session this week, postponing it until Thanksgiving day, when there will be “one grand” all-day and all-evening session at the Meyers farm south of the city, with both a Thanksgiving dinner and supper. Miss Martha Heckman proved a de-
lightful hostess yesterday afternoon to the Little Quilters of the Zion Lutheran church. The little girls pieced quilts and had a delightful social time while they worked. The ladles of the Zion Lutheran Aid society quilted yesterday afternoon in the parochial school room on Tenth street. Mrs. Tillman Gerber as hostess, served a tempting lunch much appreciated by the busy workers after their labor. The society will meet again in two weeks at the same place. Miss Winifred Burke will entertain the girls of the Chanticler set, including also Lillian Rice, Florence Meyers, Neva Brandyberry, Winifred Sowers, Reba Quinn, Naomi Dugan, at a house party over Thanksgiving. Miss Margaret Todd of Bluffton will also be a guest and on Thanksgiving evening a party will be given in her honor by Miss Burke, a number of the young gentlemen of the city being also included in the guest list. ——o Mrs. John Evans and daughter. Miss Helen, spent the day in Fort Wayne. Loyal Woods was a Fort Wayne visitor yesterday. Mrs. J. C. Magley and daughter, Hattie Florence, of Monmouth were shopping here today. Henry Hite, who has been confined to his home the past week, was able to be at the store a while today. Mrs. Asa Engle left this afternoon for Auburn, where she will visit with her daughter, Mrs. Marvin Mygrant. W. T. Braun of Pleasant Mills has returned to his home after being a business visitor here this morning. Miss Allie Burrell of Fort Wayne is here for a week’s visit wth her hister, Mrs. Elmer Miller, and other relatives. A number of people were on the streets today and the business men reaped good business profits from their shopping. W. C. Bishopp of Fort Wayne, representing the Lincoln National Life Insurance company, was a business visitor here yesterday. Edwin Boese went to St. John's this afternoon to repair a puncture in the tire of his bicycle, which he was forced to leave there following the acci- ' dent during a trip there recently. Mrs. Sherman Powell went to Green- ' castle this morning to visit with her son, John Sherman Powell, and wife over the birthday anniversary of the i son, which occurs tomorrow. Miss DeVona Doetirman arrived today from Fort Wayne to spend Sunday with her grandfather, T. H. Ernst, and family. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Will Doehrman, and daughter, Mildred, will come tomorrow. Henry Rodenbeck and son, Herbert, ' went to Fort Wayne this morning to call on Mrs. Rodenbeck, who is a patient at the Lutheran hospital, where she underwent an operation Wednesday. She seems to be getting along well, though the crisis will not be reached until next week. Wonderful Invention ONE PINT OF MILK MERGED INTO ONE POUND OF BUTTER Never before in the history of the world has a household article been discovered that will be so much benefit to Families that have to work for their living. Just stop and think a little machine has just been invented that will merge one pint of milk into one pound of butter in two minutes. This wonderful discovery must surely be a godsend to those who have to pay such high prices for food. A pint of milk weighs a pound and costs on an average 4 cents. This wonderful invention merges it inv one pound of butter in two minutes, producing a product you cannot tell from the best creamery butter, gets just as hard, tastes sweeter and is used for the same purposes, and only costs 4 cents a pound. No chemicals or drugs are used, it is absolutely pure food. This almost takes your breath away, but it is the truth, just the same. This machine is being manufactured in Indianapolis, Ind., and you must write to the Company there and gei their circulars. They will sell you one on trial. The price is $3 and they want some one to be agent for the sale of it in every town. Now write to the Family Butter Merger Co., Indianapolis, Ind., and they will send you their circulars and pictures of the machine and tell you all about it Don’t fail to do this. Send yout name and address to them on a postal card. They will send you the illustrated circulars free. If you are looking for some kind of business, write to this Company at once. They pay Agents $ 18.00 a week to start with or one hundred per cent commission, and will give any honest person credit. Every family will buy one of these machines, for it is the greatest money saver on Earth. FAMILY BUTTER MERGER CO., Court and Ogden St, Indianapolis, Ind
raw ref ' A- * ji nfliiiirm ::==* = w. f. t. bushnell co Aberdeen. South Dakota, November, 10, 1* PUBLISHERS ’ - • — HERBERT MYRICK, President raPI IBS' W. a. WHITNEY, Adv. Director W. C. ALLEN. Manager E.W 1 MDLIOi O tTO H. HAUBOLD, N. W. Mgr. M. F. GREELEY. Editor BY w F T , BUSHNELL PROF. THOS. SHAW, Asso. Editor Affiliated With The Phelps Publishing Company Which Publishes the Leading National Farm Semi- ’ Monthly, “Farm and Home —500,000 Cncuiauon Our New Plant at Aberdeen, South Dakota.. Reinforced Concrete-Fireproof--Most Modern in the Northwest. OTTR PT ANS ’ YOUR TRADE vun. rUM o New Home oJ The Dako|a Farmer . Th. W,. W.-TL: Aberdeen, South Dakota lath oi eacn mon in. padmvp The Dakota Farmer remains in- , , dependently edited, managed and Thia P ublicßtion ’ the wonder of printed in Dakota by Dakotans for ,he agncul,ural P ublishing world, the farmers of Dakota and the I" has the strongest of a hold upon neighboring states. its subscribers, an influence every The Dakota Farmer remains an advertiser can make a treraenexclusively northwest institution, >'j£S "JI dot's force in the development of the greatest single publishing pow- FkHl’2' 1 ' 0 trade. er in the Dakotas, Montana and I £<* I | j'» Fl Local dealers as well as that Wyoming. RHH BP iBBwjeMK ; ■ CV-l—> KyJ't IJIFI sreat constituency of prosperous The Dakota Farmer is not to be | I r " <I?F (■■BnS farm owners in the Dakotas. Mmerged with any other publics- b- 7 * iiW'SSkf — sal §Rla'v I tana and Wyoming know the Littons, nor is its name, territory, to- B Mia mJJJ i KOTA FARMER as they know t I cation or editorial management f IgRHI . Bl FT - ] ’ 1 [i I .if II FnFI ether farm paper. changed. M M II I ill 81 if. They tie to it. They apprec- I The Dakota Farmer’s advertis- ""*'Bl ILj • ■ iate it. They read it. They wu t g ing policy which has made it so wST . IIT I- -j i it. It is their guide and friend in | phenomenally successful will, like ~i 'J' ir J.- • : their operations in the store and that of the Phelps Publishing Com- T-'? on the field; merchandising and pany, be even broader, more liber- ‘ f "t' * ' larm ing. al and farther reaching than here- ~ * g et j n <;>osest comuiunica tof °[ e ' r. , nv.— , will rnntinne to have at heart the welfare and with this big family of loyal and enthusiastic subscribers to the DAThe Dakota Farmer will con KOTA FARMER, use advertising colums which offer the best and biginterest of its intelligent and wealthy subscribers and ihe success opportunity at the lowest comparative expense for efficiently deof its reliable advertisers. veloping your trade. . . »s further Sova' Dakota farmers are prosperous. They have had many years of conTh? Dakota Farmer is inaugurating new plans for the fuither de e. secutively big paying crops. They are well fortified financially, opment and settlement of that great magnificent empire which it They have money in the banks. They are well-to-do. They are big covers in the northwest. operators and big buyers. If you want business in the rich and growing Northwest, you simple The Dakota Farmer’s advertising management and representation must advertise in the Dakota Farmer. will be stronger, more helpful, complete. Dakota Farmer’s subscrip- a locad institution, yet broader and more powerful for the good of tion and advertising rates remain the same, except for minor details. th e Xorthwest —the Dakotas, Montana and Wyoming in particular. Reaching Over Three Million Rural Buyers Thus the two most powerful and influential semi-monthly farm papers in all America will be in’future operated in harmonious cooperation. Dakota Farmer k* the post offices in the coun- o . „,, „ Aberdeen S. D. try and The Dakota Farmer Chicago—Springfield, Mass. “THE LEADING FARM SEMI-MONTHLY OF THB W ith W circulation in ’THE LEADING^AWNALJARM SEMI-MONTH-northwest.” the agricultural stronghold ly of America. caaaac I. of the great Dakota Empire For over 30 years champion of our farmers’ rights, Teacher, fnend and guide in over 60 000 farm homes , H edited in their interests, regarded by [them .and their in the Dakotas, Montana and Wyoming. dllG dUJOlIllIig bldieb. families as the paper to tie to. The Phelps Publishing Company Aberdine, S. D. Minneapolis, Chicago, New York, Springfield, Mass.
NOTICE. The party that picked up a box containing a suit of clothes on the roat> east'of Decatur last Friday must positively return or send the same to the Myers-Dailey Company clothing store at once or legal proceedings will be commenced. The parties are known . and I have witnesses that saw the box picked up. If brought back at once no questions will be asked, but if not the partTcs will be exposed. MISS ALLIE WASS. R. F. D. 12. 274t3 o - INFLAMMATORY RHEUMATISM IMMEDIATELY RELIEVED Morton L. Hill of Lebanon, Ind., i says: "My wife had inflammatory'! rheumatism in every muscle and joint, l her suffering was terrible and her j body and face were swollen almost l beyond recognition; had been in bed six weeks and had eight physicians, | but received no benefit until she tried Dr. Detchon's Relief For Rheumatism. It gave immediater relief and she was able to walk about in three days. I am sure it saved her life. Sold by the Holthouse Drug Co. wed&sat-3mo.
PUBLIC SALE. The undersigned will offer for sale at his residence, 1 mile south and 5 miles west of Monroe, and 2 miles south of Honduras, beginning at 10 o'clock a. m., Tuesday, November 29th, ! 4 head of horses, 5 head of cattle, farming implements and tools, 1 water tank wagon, 1 wood saw with truck, 1 saw mill, harness and fly nets, 100 chickens, 150 bushels oats, 450 bushels of corn in crib, 190 chocks of corn I in field, 10 acres of fodder, 4 tons of ■ hay, 1 feed grinder, 1 large feed kettle, 4 coops combined for small chickens, 1 hog hut, some building stone, 1 1200 feet 2 inch stable plank, some i board fencing, 1 roll of barbed wire, 1 150 feet of hay rope and pulleys, 1 I 14-foot extension table, 1 sofa, bed, ' sink, gasoline stove, 600-pound plat--1 form scale, set log bunks, set skid hooks, log chain, grind stone, cream separator, 5-gal. milk can. and other articles, at the usual terms. Four per cent off for cash. C. H. WALTER. John Spuhler, Auct. o .... Democrat Want Ads Pay.
I’ 5885 ' yll AiF I Sand ’ Watcr m ][n[wl \| W tHland Port! '.r.d R 11"'™" 111 . I ' lll 1 ..U.ia, r iHu.Li, tF , Mamh Cement only & fl re q u ’ red ' We furnish all equipment at small cost Kgj The demand exists now, the profits are large, and the business grows rapidly. The Pettyjohn Co. has established thousands ot successful big paying plants. A hundred dollars will start you | right, fe BE THE FIRST IN YOUR TOWN TO WRITE FOR PARTICULARS We refer you to the publisher of this paper. she PETTYJOHN COMPANY, 666 Canal St, Terre Haute, Indiana
; :*♦ ♦ ♦ i, ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦+♦« ; J. D. HALE SEEDS, COAL AND FEEDi • —■—m MM—_____ I ♦ x °rtland Cement, Gypsum Rock Wab Plaster, Lime and Salt ;: We make a specialty of furnishing Seed Goods good ;; in quality in price. < ;: Call, Write or Phone No. 8. 201 S. 2nd. St '*********** * *
