Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 9, Number 188, Decatur, Adams County, 10 August 1911 — Page 4

£ If You Want Anything In My g Line, Come And See Me S I sell the famous Beer, real Ger- X man brew, the best made, at $2.00 per case, S gE in pints or quarts. Its the best for every pur- X A pose. All kinds of whiskeys-Kentucky Bourbons, Jg X and sour mash, Pennsylvania rye, Maryland S rye and all the others, from $1.50 to $6.00 per G w per gal. Wines and cordials of every kind at S prices to suit. Corner Second and Madison’S is. 1 CURLEY RADEMACHER 1 •3 X

OB 0801010 BOBOS OB O ■ Ol O IO BOBOS 2 Q EVER AL Reasons why you can save from sl. " Oto $2. per gallon on whiskey that you buy ■ ■ from me. ° Reason No. 1 I buy direct from the disq tiller and rectifier. ■ Reason No. 2 Ido not have the high license ■ to pay. ■ Reason No. 3 Ido not have to pay the high 2 ■ rent for my place of business, nor keep three or 2 four clerks. E Reason No. 4 The whiskey business is a side W 2 line for me and lam satisfied with a small pro- H fit on same. O Absolutelv the best whiskies at the least cost. O • 3S 5S You will find my prices on same in another ad. ■ LA. KALVFR | Wholesale Dealer S 3 lei. 581 Monroe St. & G.R.&I. R.R. 0 Q OgOBOIQEOBOBOBOaOBOBOBOBOWOH

ZEMO CURES ECZEMA, PIMPLES, I DANDRUFF, PRICKLY HEAT, SUNBURN. I < and affords you skin comfort during the hot weather. We give you three reasons why we recommend Zemo for skin trouble. Ist. Zemo is a clean, scientific liquid preparation— pleasant and, agreeable to use. 2nd Zemo stops itching at once and allays the irritation and promptly ; soothes and heals the skin. 3rd. Zemo gives universal satisfaction and is recognized by skin specialists as the standard remedy for all skin and scalp troubles. If you wish to try a bottle of Zemo

~~—nnr-zz] i jo? . ..-..-Z. I Do Not Sell To The SALOON TRADE Why? Because it takes too much money to do business with them 1 sell to the 'private trade only, just as cheap as the saloon keeper can buy. I save the expense of doing business with the saloon keeper and you save their profit by buying your beer and liquor from me. Why are CERTAIN PEOPLE knocking my goods am I selling too much of my goods to please them'SAVE THE RETAIL ERS PROFIT My Beer Prices Seipp’ j Export $1.50 per case of 3 doz. “ Export Large $1.60 “ “ “ 2 “ Extra Pale $175 “ “ “ 3 “ Extra Pale large $1.75 “ “ “ 2 “ My Liquor Prices My Price Retail Pride I. K. L. Whiskey, per Gallon $1.50 $2.50 ■ Cabinet " “ “ $2.00 $3.00 Old Canterbury Rye “ “ $2.50 $4.00 Briar Ridge (A Straight Kentucky .whiskey 5 years oldl per gal. $3.00 $5.00 M. H. G. (A straight Kentucky whiskey 9 years old) per gal. $3.75 $6.00 Berline Kimmel per gallon $2.00 $3.00 White Swan Gin “ “ S2.M t $3.00 Hamilton Blackberry “ “ |1.50 $2.50 Pure California Port wine per gal. $1.25 $3 to $2.50 Grape Brandy per gal $2.25 $4.00 These goods are absolutely the best and purest in the city I. A. KALVER Wholesale Dealer Tel. 581 Monroe st. &G.R.&I.R.R.

for yourself or one of your children and it does not do exactly what we say, we will return your money without quibble or question. Smith. Yager & Falk’s Drug store. o FOR SALE. Fine residence, an modem improvements, on comer of Fifth and Jeffer i son streets. Price right. Good residence corner Eighth and ■ Jefferson streets, cellar, drove well, I cistern, plenty of fruit trees, at reas- ! enable price. Vacant lots, almost any part of the city. No better asset to borrow money on when you build. See Arthur Suttles for prices. 146tf

EAST BUFFALO. East Buffalo, N. Y., Aug. 19-(Bpec-lal to Daily Democrat)— Receipts, 1,920; shipments, 380; official to New York yesterday, 570; hogs closing steady. Mediums and heavy, >7.90 —>8.00; Yorkers. $8.00©58.05; pigs, *B.oo© 38.05; roughs. $6. 50© >6.85; stags, |5.00©56.00; sheep. 2000; strong: lambs, 25c @ 40c higher; tops, $7.15; cattle, 325; slow. G. T. BURK. Timothy seed, prime ... .$5.00© $5.7 > No. 2 Red wheat 83c No. 2 White wheat Sic New corn White corn ■ BB< ' Rye ' • 7Sc Barley, No. i *® c Alsike seed Jfi.7s Oats, new 26c No. 1 clover hay [email protected] Timothy hay 316.00 No. 1 mixed hay sl3@ $13.50 Mixed clocer hay 315.00 No. 1 oats straw $4 00 No. 1 wheat straw J 4.00 Rye straw 34-50 M. -MkurJlKAH’’! Lard 7c eggs 46c Butter 15c@22c nim.;uk a cg. Eggs 15c Butter 17c@22c LOCAL PRODUCE MARKET. Spring thicken; 10c Ducks Sc Fowls 8c Geese c 5 Eggs 43c Butter 12c Turkejs 8c Old roosters 5c - -o MONEY TO LOAN. Plenty of money to loan on farm at 5 per cent. Privilege of partia payment at any interest paying time SCHURGER & SMITH, o The Bowers-Niblick Grain company wants hay. 185tf FOR SALE —A fresh cow, and a calf. Will sell cheap. See Noah Frauhiger, Preble, Ind. 182t3 FOR SALE OR TRADE—WeII equipped property in Bobo; modern conveniences; well kept up. White Sarah M. Cowan, Bobo, Ind. 185t12* See the Bowers-Niblick Grain company before selling your hay, 185tf A Welcome Chance to Those Who Suffer.

Coming to Decatur, Indiana On Tuesday, August 15th. stay at Hotel Murray. One day only. Dr. Albert Milton Finch of Jamestown, Ind. Consultation and Examination Confidential, Invited and FREE. To see all of his regular patients and such new cases, as may wish to consult him. Dr. Finch enjoys a state wide reputation among the profession and the public or Indtana, where for more than forty years he has devoted his entire time to the study, treatment and cure of chronic diseases. The doctor has had wonderful suc- ; cess in his chosen work, that of curing chronic sufferers, men, women and children. The patients he has restored to health after they had given up all hope of being cured are numbered by the thousands. He is a kind, generous, democratic gentleman to meet, of high scholarly attainments, and dignified personality. Coupled with a fatherly Interest, in all who seek his advice. He does not take a patient for treatment unless be can forsee a cure of the case. The most comusendable feature of his work, and one that appeals to the ordinary sick person, is the fact of his charges being so reasonable and moderate as to make it within the reach of even the very poor. At no time do the charges amount to more than $7.09 a month or about $1.50 a week. He gives his own medicines, and there are no extra charges. It takes him never more than from four to six months to cure a ca»> under treatment. All cases, those who have been given up as tecurable or hopeless, have been <-ured and restored to perfect health by this brilliant physician and the wonderful methods he employs. If you want to meet him and have trim examine you, go to see him, and talk the matter over with him. It will.coat you nothing If he does not put y«»u under treatment If he takes your case, it will cost you a very small sum to get well. Remember the date, Tuesday, August 15th, and come early.

SIM Mill IM EDUCATIONAL WORK CARRIED ON FOR TWO GENERATIONS. “Back to The Farm” to Be Eopoclally Emphasized at Big Exposition Week of Sept. 4. With “tack to the farm” as Ito slogan this year, the Indiana Stnto Fair will, during the week of September 4, get closer to the ( agricultural interests of the State than it has ever been before. The Indiana Fair has for nearly sixty years been a powerful educative force among the farming and live stock element and, while never departing from this leadership in promoting the farming welfare, it has sought to quicken the interest of its visitors by offering rich programs of attractions. But for the coming Fair the exposition will concentrate practically its entire energy in spreading before its friends a magnificent display of all that is best within the State that the . farming element may see in a great bird’s-eye view what the agricultural and live stock resources of the State amount to. It is not proposed to measure these resources in dollars and cents, but by exhibiting the best horses, cattle, sheep, swine, poultry, orchard and field products, show what | the State is producing in quality. From other States, too, as in other years, will come specimens of live stock which will offer means of comparison with these products from Indiana. The ’ back to the farm” movement does not mean that the Indiana Fair is going to tie the men and women who visit it to sober programs requiring brain-fagging effort to get the educational values, but each day’s affairs will be spiced with clean and wholesome entertainment Less emphasis will be placed on the lighter forms of entertainment, however, but the band concerts, live stock parades, the Parker midway shows will afford abundant diversions for the pleasure seeker. In the night shows, and in the day exhibitions of live stock and other regular departments the displays will keep pace with the high degree of , excellency which now marks country life In Indiana. The horse show will be of such quality that vaudeville features will not be necessary to enhance Its value. The farmer who is interested in shorthorn cattle will find these animals in such quality and abundance that if he desires he may spend two or three days at the Fair studying the good points of animals that are brought before his eye. J The farm woman who is especially interested in poultry will find the Fair offers an endless amount of information along this line, or if she is particularly interested in her home dairy she may spend the entire week at the Fair, if she so desires, and give the time to a study of dairy methods. The State Fair, in fact, proposes to become a higher school of information along all lines which will enable the farming people to improve their crops, herds and flocks and in this improve ment bring greater wealth to themselves. A short course September school, when work at the farm may for the time be put by,—a school for the farmer, his wife, sons and daughters, an inexpensive and effective college course In agriculture and industryl—- — is the Indiana State Fair. Setting off one superb herd against another, one breed of poultry matched against anuthar, field products from one portion of the State seeking greater favor than the products from another section, giving the visiting farmer opportunity to make comparisons, all will tend toward giving the visitors schooling of the valuable and pleasant sort. Os course, it is the ambition of the exhibitors to win prize ribbons, may be to dispose of some blooded stock to a farmer that is ambitious to improve his home herds, that brings the highest quality of exhibits to the Fair, but this competition is lost sight of by the visitor who would make of the Fair an educational force and turn it to his personal account. it is this line of educational work that the Indiana Fair has been doing among the farmers for two generations, and the exposition may to very large degree be credited with having brought about better homes, better farming, larger and finer herds, more industry through the use of better farm machinery, increased happiness, more money in bank —tn fact, a new era of better living at the farm homes of the Hoosier land. State Fair Open at Night. The Indiana State Fair, at Indianapolis the week of Sept. 4, will be open at night ia a number of departments aad it will be the first year in the history of the exposition that th* night displays have been undertaken on ouch sxtensivo scale. The coliseum with its horse shows, and the big brick barn for horses adjoining it, have for some years been gay with light and coloring after night, and in one ar two years the Fine Arts hall has been open for about two hours in the avonlng. But during ths coming Fair, ths coliseum show and the brick barn will not only bo lighted and open to visitors, but the Fine Arts, Agricultural, Horticultural and Poultry buildings, all of them arrayed with their wealth of Indiana farm and homo products, will be brilliantly Illuminated and open to all visitors without extra chargn

I STOCK REDUCTION SALE [AT BERNSTEINS Two Doors South Interurban Station Decatur Ind. Studebaker Block | Commencing Saturday August 12 and Ending Saturday August 19 We will hold our great stock reduction sale. The reason for holding this reduction sale is to make room for our fall stock-which is daily arriving. Do I not miss this opportunity a chance of a life time. ! Below are a few Bargains many more in the store SHOES! SHOES’! SPECIALS! SPECIALS! $2.50 and $3.00 Ladies two strap all pat ox- . $2.50 and $3.00 Mens dress panto $1.75 I ford also lace 51.89 Just received a new line of Black petti$2.25 Ladies two strap all pat oxfords sl-49 coats worth $1.50 sale price •'•■•9Bc $2 00 Ladies Blucher Vice kid shoe. . $1.39 sl-50 White petticoats double flounce lace or I_ . embroidery 98c $2.50 Ladies Pat leather Lace or Button also I cloth top shoe $1.95 $1.50 Ladies white shirt waists while they , . a- 1a5t.................. ... 89c $2.50 Mens box calf also gun metal shoe sl.w ~,a 124 c Lawns yd 84c $2.00 Mens plain toe shoe »4.®» , , $1.50 Full size bed spreads 98c $2.00 Mens heavy tan work shoe sl.b» , . $1.50 White or Ecru lace curtains full width $1.35 Boys shoe 9to 13 98c , 3 j yds I<>ng 96c pair I $1.50 Boys shoe 134 to 2 sl— Ladies gauze vests 8e ea $1.85 Boys shoe 24 to 6 51 4- Ladies gauze uniensuits lace trimmed. .23c ea 35c Grade Mens underwear 19c ea Unbleached muslin 5c yd 75c Mens porsknit unionsuits 42c Outing flannel in stripes and plaids 5c yd 175 c Grade mens dress shirts without collars 18c p. ade oil c toth 12 yd evot style 45c ; 25c grade window shades green 6ft iong sale Just received a new line of ladies hair price lie ea switches sale prices $1.25. $1.50. $1.75 Children Hdkfs 1c ea BERNSTEINS

PUBLIC SALE. The undersigned will sell atSHR The undersigned will offer for sale at the late residence- of Mrs. Elizabeth Sells, 521 South Thirteenth street, beginning at 1 o’clock p. m., on Wednesday, August 16th, her household goods, consisting of stoves, beds, beddings and all other articles contained in said home. Also farming tools, plows and harrows, two single buggies, surrey, two sets single buggy harness, one set double light harness, and numerous other articles. Terms made known on day of sale. ORA SELLS. GREEN BURKHEAD. J. N. Burkhead, Auct. 187t6 FOR RENT —Upstaors flat—seven rooms. Inquire South Side butcher shop. 188t6 Special sale on trimmed hats at Boese's millinery store. All trimmed hats will go at 98c, regardless of cost 175t3

GAS CONSUMERS No Discount after the 10ta.. Please call at office. Indiana Lighting Company. FRENCH DRY CLEANING Steam Cleaning Coloring Repairing Pressing Panama Hats. Gloves, etc. Cleaned All work guaranteed, called for, and delivered. Marion Garton, Prop. Norbert Holthouse, Agt Phone 43 ' Patron’s Notice Until October first our dental offices will bejclosed each Wednesday at noon for the remainder of day and evening. Dr. Roy Archbold Dr. Fred Patterson Dr. J. Q. Neptune Dr. Bert Mangold

' The Bowers-Niblick Grain companv pays the market price for hay. 185tf FOR SALE —Four-chair modern bar ber shop.—W. T. Spach, Elwood, Indiana.

M 8 B T. H. SOLDNER ■ i ■ Dentist , m Over Vance. Hite and J H Macklin’s Clothing ■ STORE. E E * ■ Decatur. - - - - Indiana

TD An r In Your Old I IvriL/L_ Separator for a New DE DAV AL More than 15000 users of infe ior and worn-out cream separators of various makes traded them in last year on account of new DE LAVALS, and doubtless there are many more owners of such machines who will be glad to know that JB. 11 the De Laval Company still considers it good business policy to make literal “trade” allowancesfor them. While the oia machines are worthless the demonstrated differences help the jiT sale of many new DE LAVAL machines. Why not take advantage of this opportunity? W -1 ! Come in and see us and we can allow on your old machine toward the purchase of a new W DE LAVAL. Important to Users of Old DE LAVAL Separators lAVA?^ y Jki ProV l mentJ!^ avcbe « n incorporated in the present DE LAVAL machines that make them simpler m construction, easier of opWin d mlLT in ?L an< l more effectiye in skimm ing- ...» ward the a l £ eral trade allowance for your old DE LAVAL towart the purchase of an up-to-date machine, ft will pay you to invest!I - | deca^ h . n .

Coal Consumers Before you buy your Winters supply of coal come down and get my price. I handle White Ash and Kentucky Cook Coal. Emerson Bennett Located G.R.&I. & Adams St Phone 639 Dr. C. V. Connell VETERNARIAN PL nyw Office 143 i.L none Residence 102