Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 9, Number 270, Decatur, Adams County, 17 November 1911 — Page 3
■E3S®»=3SS3Sr^ agE3E:^ffl | Why Pay The Retail Price I Li 7ET^Su” b "*‘“' h -“- I I My Beer Prices | t^ POrt T- 50 P« of 3 do Z . R Export Large $1.60 “ « « 2 .< Extra Pale $175 <• .< „ (( Extra Pale large $1.75 •< « « 2 « I My Liquor Prices I lI.X. L. Whiskey, per Gallon My Retftil Price E g Cabinet g-W $2.50 tjf Old Canterbury Rye “ “ $3.00 H | Briar Ridge (A Straight Kentucky whiskey 5 ° $4.00 Lj Ui years old) per gal. J ■ Fl M. H. G. (A straight Kentucky whiskey 9 * m |S years old) per gal. J 0 ' Berline Kimmel per gallon ik™ f 6 IO i White Swan Gin “ “ g.OO $3.00 M Hamilton Blackberry “ “ $3.00 H ■ Pure California Port wine per gal H $ Grape Brandy per gal P « 2 to $2.50 || =5 Pure Califronia Sheery eFta $4.00 M . Apricot Brandy g. 50 | I . These goods are absolutely the best and purest lin the city 1 g I I. A. KALVER I Wholesale Liquor Dealer ■ Monroe Street, Six Doors West Os Old Adams County Bank 3 CZ2ZZZJ S 3 L.< .~Z3 r. . 7]r~~~l C ■sin b ■ ■ ■ oaaia & ■ k « NEW CORPS MEAL m We have the latest process for kiln drying meal ! and also purify it same as flour, which removes all Q ■ dust, leaving only the tiny golden granules. All S H grocers 5 and 10 lb. sacks. There is a difference ■ lin corn meal. Insist on having Bremerkamp’s. Fornax Roller Mills g
SEU I!NG TIME IS NOW HERE! © 17VERY Sewing Machine ■* in the city is just humhiing, and every woman in town is getting herself and her family into the prettiest clothing imagina- ffCdSable, as quickly as she can. Have you a sewing machine in your home? Wouldn’t you gladly pay $5.00 down and SI.OO a week to have the finest sewing machine that is made? You will never miss so little an amount, and you could have so many more pretty thing if you owned one. We are selling The FREE Sewing Machine on these terms and it is the most wonderful sewing machine that was ever made. It is a far superior article for far less money than any of the so-called ‘'old line” machines that you have used so long. The Rotoscillo movement, the eight sets of ball bearings, automatic lift, automatic locking drawers automatic tension releaae shuttle ejector, head latch, thread controller, etc, as well as the rotary spool pin, self threading shuttle, new French leg < esl^ n and other improvements makes the FREE first choice- ot all who have investigated-eome in and try “The F REE Before deciding. SCHFEPH'D’W. CO.
BOSSE OPERA HOUSE FRIDAY NOVEMBER Return of Last Season’s Biggest Dramatic Hit GILMAN & COMPANY Announces —— THE “ SQUAW MAN By Edward Milton Royal Now in it* Fifth Yca-Tf Unparalleled Success With a Complete Production and Meal Cast. Prices 25, - • >O, • 75, - SI.OO Seat Sale Usual
PUBLIC BALE. The undersigned will offer for sale at public sale on the Jacob Heller farm, 7Va miles southwest of Decatur, 3 miles south and % mile east of Peterson, on Thursday, Nov. 23, 1911, beginning at 10 o'clock a. m., the following property, to-wit: Seven Head of Horses: One bay mare, in foal, weight 1600 lbs; 1 black mare, 4 years old, weight 1400 lbs; 1 yearling mare colt; 1 yearling horse colt: 1 spring mare colt, a good one; one team, a 3-year-old and a 5-year-old, good drivers. Three Head of Cattle: One black cow, will be fresh first of June; 1 red cow, wdll be fresh in February; 1 white cow, will be fresh in February. Forty O. I. C. Hogs: Twelve brood sows, 5 sows with pig, 7 sows, open; 1 boar, weight 250 lbs; 2 boars, weight 100 lbs. each; 2 fat hogs. 225 lbs. each; 12 fall shoats, weight 90 Tbs each; 11 fall pigs, weight 40 Tbs. each. Grain: Ten tons straw in tnow, 5 tons timothy hay in mow, 400 bu. corn in crib, 150 bu. oats in bin. Farming Implements: John Deere gang breaking plow, McCormick corn shocker, hay loader, spring tooth harrow, transplanter, 2 one-horse cultivators. Tiger corn plow, 2 walking plows, double-shovel plow. single shovel plow, 2 ladders, 10 ft. and 18 ft.; bunch of scaffolding, pulleys and ropes, grind stone, mud boat, 2 buggy tongues, hay ladders and hog hack combined, set brass-trimmed work harness, set double carriage harness, set single buggy harness, set
~..Why Suffer With.... Goiter, or Big Neck MY GOITER SALVE WILL CURE YOU H. BUCKMASTER R. R. No. 2 Monroe. Ind.
,/jF GUARANTEED U FOR POULTRY W Sk can tell you. U Smith, Yager & Falk Lachot & Rice Holthouse Drug Co.
Zeake Evans and Jimmie O’Toale HORSE SHOEING Shop just east of Hale Ware house. We are not giving 8 new shoes for a big ear of corn nor 4 new shoes for second ear of corn but we can take the corns out of horses feet and put a new pair of shoes on that will make them go right. We stop all interfering by hand made shoes.
;• k Z . fc M; X p< Use Amalgamated > ARC ROOFING Got roof troubles, eh? Well it’s vour n n ftvult- Yon should use Amalgamated ARG ROOFING. It is the kind that wont drip in very hot weather, and wont crack when it’s bitterly cold. It’s all in the secret urjccss l.y ■ .licri mated ARC ROOFING is maSe. Nobodv has vet been able to successfully imitate it. Takeo the same r-'te of insurance as slate or metal. Our agents are authorized to refund your money if Amalgamated ARC ROOFING isn’t absolutely satisfactory. AMALGAMATED ROOFING CO. Chicago. Illinois DECATUR LUMBER CO. — |WW .
farm harness, 16 turkeys, 9 white and 7 bronze, 10 bu. winter apples. Terms: —All amounts of $5.00 and under, cash in hand; all amounts over $5.00 a credit of 9 months will be given, purchaser giving approved security; 5 per cent off for cash. No property removed until settled for. R E. HELLDR. Noah Frauhiger, J. N. Burkhead, Aucts. Frank Fugate, Clerk. PUBLIC SALE. The undersigned, having sold bls farm and preparing to move to Michigan, will offer for sale at his residence, 6 miles north of Decatur, % mile east and % mile north of the Fuelling church, on Thursday, No vember 16, 1911, beginning at 10 o'clock a. m., the following property, to-wlt: Three Head of Horses. One black mare, 12 years old, weight 1400 lbs; one 4-year-old in spring, weight 1600 lbs.; one 2-year-old, coming 3 next spring, driving stock. Three Head of Cattle: Three milch cows, 2 will be fresh in January and 1 in the spring. Hogs and Sheep: Two brood sows, pigs by their side; 8 shoats from April, weight about 125 lbs. each; sheep. Farming Implements: Milwaukee binder, hay rack, corn plow, Hoosier drill, corn planter, wagon, Champion reaper, top buggy, road wagon, spike tooth harrow, spring tooth harrow, hay ladders, bob sled, fanning mill, several hundred feet of lumber, corn in crib, Lay in mow, corn fodder, some household goods. Terms.—For all amounts of $5.00 and under, cash in hand; over $5.00 a credit of 9 months will be given, purchaser giving his note with approved security; 4 per cent off for cash. No property removed until settled for. WILLIAM WIETFELDT. John Spuhlcr, Auct, Fred Jaebker, Clerk. o PUBLIC SALE. The undersigned will offer for sale at his residence, 2 miles northeast of Pleasant Mills or 3 miles southwest of Wren, Ohio, on Tuesday, November 14, 1911, beginning at 10 o’clock a. m., the following property, to-wit: Two Head of Horses: One brood mare, 7 years old. weight 1300 lbs.; 1 sorrel mare, 3 years old, weight 1300 Tbs. Five Head of Cattle: One cow, will be fresh by day of sale; 1 cow, giving milk; one cow, giving milk, will be fresh May 2nd; 1 yearling calf, 1 spring calf. Hogs and Sheep: One brood sow, will farrow December 1; 12 head breeding ewes. Farming Implements: One good Troy wagon, set double breeching harness, mower, hay rake, hay tedder, cultivator, 2 breaking plows, 10-disc drill, pair bobsleds, spike tooth harrow, clover buncher, single shovel plow, double shovel plow, corn in the shock, 2 turkey hens and 1 Tom, Collie dog pup. 2 iron kettles, and otner articles not mentioned. Terms —For all amounts of $5.00 and under cash in hand; all amounts over $5.00 a credit of 9 months will be given, purchaser giving good bankable note: 4 per cent off for cash No property removed until settled for. W. O BIGHAM. John Spuhler, Auct. DANDRUFF AND ITCHING SCALP YIELD TO ZEMO TREATMENT Why should you continue to experiment with salves, greasy lotions and fancy hair dressings, trying to rid your scalp of germ life. They can't do it because they cannot penetrate to the seat of tne trouble and draw the germ life to the surface of the scalp and destroy it. Why not try a proven remedy? One that will do this. We have a remedy that will rid the scalp of germ life and in this way will cure dandruff and itching scalp. This remedy is Zemo, a clean, refined, penetrating scalp tonic that goes right to the seat of the trouble and drives the germ life to the sur face and destroys it. A shampoo with Zemo (Antiseptic) Soap and one application of Zemo will entirely rid the scalp of dandruff and scurf. Do not hesitate, but get a bottle of Zemo today. It acts on a new principle and will do exactly what we claim for it. Sold and endorsed in Decatur by the Smith, Yager & Falk drug store. HUNTING FORBIDDEN. Notice is hereby given that hunting is forbidden on the A. J. Smith farm, north of city; also on A. J. Smith farm, in Washington township, south of city. Any person who violates this notice will be prosecuted to the full extent, of the law. 26112 A. J. SMITH. — -o .. — FOR RENT —8-roorn house, 1% story, good cement cisteiii, barn, chicken park, fruit, an acre of ground, on So. Chestnut street. All in good condition. Inquire of Mrs. Agnes Andrews, 208 So. Tenth street. 265t3
HARD PROBLEM FOR WOMEN A‘h»r» Shall Mlnlater Be Entertained When He Makes Pastoral Call on Servant! “About the hardest problem I have tad to solvo in my brief housekeeping :areer,” said the woman, ‘‘is what to Io with the pastor when he calls on i servant girl. We have a good girl. Bhe is a regular attendant at a chapel n the neighborhood. Every so often he pastor or his assistant in his :ounds of the perish calls on her. “I am a heathen myself in the matter of religious observances, nevertbeess I know what is due to gentlemen if the cloth. The best room about lhe house should be at the disposal of me’s spiritual adviser always. Should Lucy, then, receive her guest In the yarlor, or should they compromise In '.he dining room? The kitchen as a ylace for entertaining the minister is luite out of the question, “So far. the ministers calling at my aouse have been spared even the indignity of a dining room reception i have taken to the back regions myself while Lucy held forth in the paror. I know other women with churchsoing maids who are equally considerite. Altogether this Is a delicate point m which we need some enligntennent from the etiquette experts.” FINE PRE-NORMAN CHURCH Remarkably Well Preserved Edifice at Worth Was Built Long Before the Conquest. Many churches in Britain owe their jrigin to the piety of the Norman invader, but these which antedate this treat period of church building are not so numerous. One such pre-Norman idifice is the fine old parish church of Worth, near Three Bridges. A little look, written by Rev. Arthur Bridge, the rector of Worth, tells the his ;ory of what is aptly described as me of the most remarkable relics of 1 bygone age. It seems probable that the church passed with the Manor of Worth under the will of Alfred the Sreat to his third son, Ethelward. Archaeologists will be lavish of thanks to Mr. Bridge for the interesting and useful Uttle record of his unique ehurch. He tells us that Worth exhibits the earliest example of the purely English cruciform building, and its jemi-circular eastern end is of very ancient date. But the whole church, as might be gathered, possess many features which make it of peculiar fascination to the student of the antique. The windows, for instance, have not Buffered “restoration,” and are well known to all students of architecture here and on the continent. —Dundee AdvocateThree Hundred Proposals. “I received more than 300 proposals of marriage in my mail this morning,” remarked a sedate and elderly gentleman to his wife, whom he was entertaining at luncheon down town the other day. The white-haired lady gasped. "Don’t be alarmed, my dear,” her husband went on. “It was only a thick Uttle pink pamphlet from a town in Michigan. It was sent by a man who calls himself the “Cupid” of that state. It contained the descriptions of innumerable women who want to marry. I don’t know why It. was sent to me—probably just an arrow shot in the air. Judging from the catalogue of aspirants for my hand the marriage market is overstocked with widows just now. The oldest I noticed was 75, and the youngest 17. Delicate way for women to propose, eh?” A Window Washer’s View. A window washer was called upon one day to clean the windows of a business concern on the nineteenth floor of a skyscraper in lower Broadway, New York. The cleaner paused in wonderment as he passed through the lines of typewriter operators as they clicked off their correspondence and went to the window and fastened the two straps dangling from his belt to honks at the side of the window frame. He cast another surprised glance at the men operating the typewriters, and as he strung outward over the dizzy height, his weight sustained by the slender straps, he muttered: “It’s mighty odd how some people do make their living in this world, anyway!” The World's Languages. According to the authorities on languages, there are approximately 3,424 spoken languages or dialects in the world. They are distributed thus: America, 1.624; Asia, 937; Europe, 587; Africa, 276. The English language contains approximately 600,000 words, about onehalf consisting of scientific terminology rarely encountered outside of text books and archaic, obsolescent, or obsolete terms. A careful study of 100,000 words by authorities showed that 60,000 were of Teutonic derivation, 30,000 of Greek or Latin origin, and 10,000 from other foreign sources. Two Wealthy Cities. Frankfort probably shares with Amsterdam eminence as being the wealthiest city in the world per capita. There is an Immense Investment fund in this city garnered through centuries. Frankfort has long been one of the great money markets of Europe and banking ing in Germany centered here until recent years, the great Frankfort private banking houses leading and being assisted in their operations by such houses as Mendelssohn* aud Blcichroeders ’n Berlin and the Oppenheims in Hanover.
f It is not alone the convenience, or the freshness, or the crispness, or the unusual food-value, or the digestibility, or the cleanliness, or the price, that has made Uneeda Biscuit the National Soda Cracker. It is the remarkable combination of all 7 of these things. If everyone, everywhere, knew how good they are, everyone, everywhere, would eat them—every day. Sold by grocers in every city and town —Bought by people of all classes. Never sold in bulk at —always 5 cents in the moisture-proof package whi cji keeps them ovenfresh. NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY
I THE I g First Sugar Beet Factory in Indiana; Dec- ■ g atur has them all “Beat” In cigars too H I THE WHITE STAG | I beats them all at. sc. Made in Decatur that makes || I them right. Try it at any smoke shop. S
