Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 9, Number 276, Decatur, Adams County, 24 November 1911 — Page 6
ifToiiMENONG FRIDAY |! -ooaBMW— MWMEII ■—l 1 We Will Give On All Suits i D ONE THIRD to ONE HALF OFF .""" j I ; x| We Have Some Good Things | f //} f | For You. Now Is The Time To (h | I YGJJ'f Make Your Selection. -1 "W •>T •« fci..ini'll O | w I COSTS FOR I.A.;ItS AND CHILD! LN I ‘l' j’i; " , Novelties T 1 I ip l j Plush Caracuie Cloth In Sf Cloth £ I | I I O(JR DRE.SS GOODS. SEE THrE I H 8 | Now is also a good time to make your selection | | for Christmas, our stock is not broken up now as p | it will be later. 1 m Many other good things all over the store. Again j| Thanking You We Beg To Remain §j m jj TRUE & RUNYON
PUBLIC SALE. ' The undersigned will offer for sale c a. his-residence. Vi. mile south of the f city of Decatur, on the Monroe road, < on Wednesday, December 6, 1911, be- .. ginning at 10 o'clock a. m,, the follow- 1 iug property, to-wit: Four Head of 1 Horses: Two bay horses, coming 3 1 years old, driving stock; 1 bay team, i 6 years old, weighing 3,260 tbs. This i is a fine team. Two Head of Cattle: One red cow, 6 years old, will be fresh 1 the 14th of January; 1 red and white i spotted cow, 4 years old, will be fresh i in April. Hogs: Three Duroc Jersey i sows, one sow with 7 pigs by her i side, 1 with 6 pigs by her side, and 11
Com at its Best \\ / , v, tv f , -s,, \i >• MtVfc ■V~ ' 5 Ym '■ VJ /ISSvJfS i f ) \A fLj k ' p&attes /I ' C Virginny” corn pone? Ripe, juicy corn on the d!s[ rj7>^\ v Wjj Roth mighty goon -but they’re not in W j MprW —THEMU^ALp SIGNATURE , • - I \« , ,
- * " ' with 5 pigs by her side; 100 head of chickens. Farming Implements; One farm wagon, John Deere check row corn planter, John Deere cultivator, John Deere breaking plow, spike tooth harrow, top buggy, grain drill, hay ladders and box combined, set work harness, set buggy harness, set fly nets, set single fly nets, 500 bu. corn In crib, 75 bu. oats in bin, hay in mow, 7 acres corn fodder in field. Household and Kitchen Furniture, all as as new: One malleable steel rahge, Favorite hard coal stove, dining room table, 6 dining room chairs, 4 rockers, kitchen table, 6 kitchen chairs, parlor stand.
divan, buffet, bedroom suit, iron bed. spring and mattress, kitchen cabinet, three carpets, two 9x12 rugs, be clothing, all kinds of dishes, plat" cups, saucers, knives, forks, spoor.: . 1 graniteware of all kinds and man; other articles too numerous to mor. 1 tion. Everything goes, i Terms:—All amounts of $5.00 a' -' . under, cash In hand; all amounts ov • 1 $5.00 a credit of 10 months will be' ,! given, purchaser giving note wits. ■ good bankable security; 3 pef'cent off ! for cash. No property removed unt : l j - ; settled for. <EDW. L. GASE. i i John Spuhler, Auot. , I Fred Fruchte, Clerk.
A HALF MILLION To be Added to Depauw University Endowment Fund if Aim is Reached. I BY JANUARY FIRST I Sixty Thousand Dollars Needed to Complete the the $400,000 Fund. Sixty thousand dollars in six weeks! The raising of this large sum in that short time !s * lie tremendous tu.l. before the friends of Pepauw university—an Indiana institution of
I Old Adams County Bank Decacur, Indiana. I M. Kir-srhand John Niblick P K X. fchinper, Cashier, jj Resolve j , * Start Something! »I' Fj .. able Rates. \ WHY NOT “ f, jj.verv A Bank Account? Accomoda- j . tionCon- fi 1 hen Later On sistent g 1 You Will Be Prepared banking g To Start Something Else! e t th( jH I But-Make The Start! w I • Patrons | We Pay 4 Per Cent Inter est on 1 Year Time Deposits | sHHKßanßNnoHnHKannßnnKnHßi'
j higher learning which has a large num- ! her of friends in this city and county. The raising of this amount before j January 1, 1911, will mean an addil ! t.ion of a half million dollars to the ■ endowment of Denauw. The General Education Board, a group of well known experts in the field of education and finance, having at thetr disposal the income of an invested fund of $53,000,000, after careful inquiry into the character and work of the institution, some months ago offered to contribute SIOO,OOO toward a fund of $500,000, the remainder to he v, ‘ised by friends of the university before the end of the present year. This entire half millioin is to be used in maintaining the teaching force of the institution. From less than two thousand persons in the state of Indiana $340,000 of the necessary *400,000 to complete this fund has been raised. Only a few weeks remain iu which to raise the remainder and upon the outcome of this effort will depend the success of the movement for the placing of Depauw university upon a higher plane of usefulness to the people of Indiana and of the entire country. It is not believed that the appeal for the funds necessary to enable Depauw to eralize large opportunities for service to the state will be made in vain. State pride is added to church pride as an incentive for the most liberal response to the cry for help which comes from Greencastle. For nearly seventy-five years Depauw university has played a large part in the Indiana scheme of higher education. Though founded and maintained under the auspices of the Methodist Episcopal church, its doors have been opened on equal terms to young men and women of all creeds, and there has never been a time when the student paid any part of the large amount necessary for the ] compensation of the faculty. The incidental fees paid by students are exhausted in the current expenses for j the care and upkeep of buildings and ; grounds and general administration 1 The institution has been maintained for three-quarters of a century only by the generosity of the people of Indiana interested in higher education. The raising of a half million dollars would substitute the steady income from an endowment fund for the uncertain returns of temporary plans for appealing to the public for assistance. Those who are pushing the cam paign for a large permanent DePauw endowment do not feel that they are begging—but rather that they are giving to the people of Indiana an oppor tunity to pay back to the venerable ! institution at Greencastle some part , of the debt the state owes to it -this money to be safeguarded tor all ti::i to come as a perpetual source of sup port for the teaching force of the uni versity. Four years are allowed under the terms of the arrangement with the General Education Hoard for the payment of the pledges made to the hal: million endowment fund. Already substantial support has been given from thi section of Indiana to the move- ■ ' meat, and it is believed that the peo- j pie of this city and county will do then j full share in the remaining weeks o , the campaign now in progress to a sui cessful conclusion. a ; FOR SALE —Establisheh business in a ncaroy county. The J, R, Watkin j Med. Go. Reason, death of agent. 8..- , ! C. R. Dunn. 270t3 ( FOUND —Black velvet pocketbook with brass trimmings. Owner can ' have same by calling at this office, do . scribing property and paying for ad. j
| Soda crackers are ( | more nutritive than I any other flour food. Uneeda Biscuit are | the perfect soda 1 ji crackers. Therefore, ;; Uneeda Biscuit i Five cents spent for l a package of (Jneeda \ Biscuit is an investment —an investI ment in nourish- ‘ ment, in health, in good eating. Though the cost is but five cents, Uneeda Biscuit are ! too good, too nourishing, too crisp, to be bought merely as an economy. Buy them because | of their freshness — j buy them because t of their crispness— I buy them because . of their goodness— ; buy them because of ; ! their nourishment. ; 4 R i Ahyays 5 cents. Always fresh and crisp s in the moistureproof package. Never sold in bulk. » j national biscuit COMPANY i j I I i j Storm Fronts of All Descriptions at The Lowest Prices ♦ havel fnnf* in ? eCaturfor the celebrated Star Vestabule Storm Front. We me o square blankets at prices ranging from $1.25 to $6.00 Special Hood Storm Fronts SI.BO lowing 1 p'rices' 1 nl ' f " rtil ' er Roticc wc will clean and oil your harness at the folBreeching harness $2.00 per set Hip strap harness $1.50 per set Single buggy harness 96c per set Double buggy per set ATZ and STEELE North 2nd. st.
