Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 10, Number 122, Decatur, Adams County, 21 May 1912 — Page 4

o THE DAILY MARKET REPORTS o VI I -lE3ODOE3. Tt< £| Corrected Every Afte, noon IL-,——goaoEa k=t— i cjJ

EAST BUFFALO. East Buffalo, N. Y., May 21—(Spec-; ial to Daily Democrat) —Receipts, 1,-1 000; shipments, 380; official to New ; York yesterday, 475; hogs closing steady. Medium and heavy, sS.oo@sß.os; Yorkers, [email protected]; lights, $7.50@ $7.75; pigs, [email protected]; roughs, $7.00' @57.10; stags, [email protected]; sheep, 3,600; dull; top lambs, $9.00; cattle, $5.50; slow. 3. •<. BURK. No. 2 White wheat $1.04 j No. 2 Red wheat. $1.07 | Yellow corn 90c@96e Mixed corn 85c@92c i Oats 50c i Rye 84c Feeding barley 85c Feeding barley 85e Alsike seed $12.00 j No. 1 clover hay $22.09 I Timothy hay $24.00 | Light mixed hay $23.00! Mixed clover hay $20.00 j No. 1 oats straw $9.50 | Rye straw SIO.OO Clov'”' seed $12.00 WOOL MARKET. Bast. medium 22c lb Rejecting and fine 15c

R.L. Starkweather M.D.D.O. Eight Years Experience SPECIALIZING IN OSTEOPATHY Treats] every known disease by all latest proven methods manual and other, Electricty employed. Scientific dietetics, Examination free. County calls solicited, Methods unexcelled anc results positive. Indolent sores and surface cancers Cured. Satisfaction Guaranteed Office and Residence over Bowers Realty Company Decatur, Ind. Phone 314 Branch Office PORTLAND, IND. Dr. Davis Asst.

WOOL We Want Your Woo! Get Our Prices Before you sell THE BURK ELEVATOR CO Phone 25 Decatur, Ind. FOR SALE —Twenty-five head ewes, | twenty lambs, cheap, if sold soon.—J George Zimmerman. R. K. 9. 115t6 j

/ft 'T 1 •• J® ? Or yjll EARLY SUMMER STYLES Seasonable frocks for Street and House wear are shown in the Butterick Fashion Sheet for May FREE copies may be obtained at our Pattern Counter NIBLICK & COMPANY

LOCAL PRODUCE MARKET. > Spring chickens ..- 9c Bucks 10c Fowls 10c Geese 10c Eggs 15c Butter 30c Turkeys ...., lie Chicks 9c Old roosters 5c KALVEKMARKETS Beef hides 9c ! Calf 12c Tallow 5c Sheep pelts [email protected] 'Wool 18c 22c FULLENKAMP'S. i Butter 18c@22<Lard l>c Eggs 17c NIBLICK & CO. j Eggs 17c Hutter 18c—25c H. BERLING. j Spring chickens. 9c , 1 lucks 10c Fowls 10c Gees J 10c I Eggs 18c Butter 20c Turkeys .. ... lie j Old roosters 6c ! Chicks 7e

Getea Calf srCoit Every Time is a scientific German preparek remedy for barren maces, cows, sows and ewes with a success of over 35 years back of it. in not one instance have we learned of its failure. Anti-Steril is strictly guaranteed to do all we claim for it, or “Money back and back without a question" if it fails. Anti-Steril isonlyjl. a bottle, purchase a bottle today-make us prove our claims. | SMITH, YAGER & FALK Decatur, - - - - Ind.

ATTENTION, PUBLIC. In the stud season of 1912, the mag--11 nlflcently bred stallion, Glideheart 52468; he is a rich dark bay stallion, stands 16-I'hands high and weighs 1200 pounds, foaled in 1906 by Greatheart, 2:12*6. Individually he is a l horse of grand finish and disposition and style. A glance at his tabulated pedigree will show you 1 hat his blood I lines are of the best, the kind that has reduced not only speed, but ex- : treme speed. He Is a good going trot- : ter and in 24 days’ work, steppea a mile In 2:50, and showed a 35 clip. ' He is only 6 years old and has a colt : eligible to the 25 list. He is a halt ' brother to Anto P., 2:0416; Wllksheart 2.06%; Greatline, 2:06%; Octoo, 2:07% Noma. 2:J9%; Great Medium, 2:o9*' ; Thelma, 2:09%, and 36 others in the list and his dam is by Guarantee, gradnson of George Wilkes, 2:22, : sire of Dan Patch, 1:55*4; Au- : dnbon Boy, 1:59*4; Deriel, 2:00%; ' John R. Gensley, 2:00%; The Bron--1 cho, 2:01%; Capadora. 2:01; Anaconda, 2:01%, and his colts have always w-on the blue ribbon in the show ring. He will make the season at sls ‘ to insure standing foals, with return ' privilege In case of bad at my ■ bs'-x in Monroe township. All care will be taken to prevent accidents, but will not be responsible should ; any occur. ; JAMES M. ANDREWS, T&F Owner and Keeper. ATTENTION PUBLIC! , In the stud season of 1912, the mag- . nlflcently bred stallion Original 5883, , registered as a belgian draft stallion, will stand for the season of 1912 at . sls to insure standing foal, with re- . turn privilege in case of bad luck at . the farm of Martin Gerke in Root twp. five miles north t f Decatur. Original is a jiandsome rich strawberry roan stallion, weighs 2200 pounds, foaled in 1908. This horse as an individual can’t be beaten He has never been beaten in the show ring. An ideal stallion; his pedigree is rich in the blood that has made the history of the breed. He is the personification of perfection, has a tine head and strong deep shoulders, short back, perfectly rounded quarters, clean, flat legs and fine mane and tail, and best of feet. For further information see Martin Gerke or Jacob Fuelling. Will not be responsible for accident, should any happen. t&F -—r — ' o —- NOTICE. We have plenty or money -o loan on farms. Long Nt commission charger, < T4F-U ERWrw* LAW OFFCE. USE ALLEN’S FOOT EASE. The antiseptic powder to shake into the shoes. Makes tight or new shoes feel easy. Relieves painful, swollen, 'ender, sweating, aching feet and takes the sting out of corns and bunions. Sold everywhere, 25c. Don’t accept any substitute. Sample free. Address, Allen S. Olmstead, Leßoy, N. Y. f --— ! FARMS STOP-Read The Bargains 160 acres, level, brick house, bare outbuildings, an goo 7 or new, 5 nxilas > from the city, on pike road, mail route past the door; $75.00 acre. 160 acres, 60 acres of bottom land, black, the rest rolling and level, 4 miles from city, mail route, 4.5 acres □f timber, white oak worth $4,000, good fruit and water. Price, SBO.OO an acre. 113 acres, new frame house, frame barn, 1 mile from city on pike, SSOO worth of timber, good fruit and water. Price SIOO an acre. All level land. 196 acres, all level, frame house and barn, in good living order. 2% miles from city, OH pike, mail route, good water and fruit Price, S6O.W ah aere. SO acres, level land, frame house and barn, good order to live, touching city limits, oi like, 12 acres timber worth $3,000. Price, $125.00 an acre. 307 acres, all level, two sets of buildings, as good as new, on pike, I mile from city, 75 acres in timber land, good pasture and some good timber, finest stock farm in the state of Indiana. Price, SBO.OO an acre. 120 acres, level, and little rolling, frame house, barn in good shape, l’> miles from city, on pike, mail route, fine miik and dairy barn for twenty cattle, and two silos for feed. Price, $60.00 an acre. This is the place to invest your money. This will sell for $l5O to S2OO an acre in the next year or two. This land will raise any kind of crop, 75 to 100 bushel corn to acre; alfalfa and hay; will be a traction line near this farm in the next year. Don’t fail to write or see these bargains. Come and see them. WM. F. POHLAR, G*>orge St. Batesville, Ind.

ATTEN’ID’’, PUBLIC. I wish to call your attention to the Kentucky brel, u oiung stallion. Bris- . to,, registered in Volume XX; a chest-I nut sorrel, 16% hands high; foaled in 1903, weight 1225 pounds, sound and right, fine style and kind disposition, and his colts are the same. This horse has a trial of 2:30, in a mile; quarter in 36 seconds. Here is a trotting horse that ought to suit the farmer as a general purpose horse, on the toad or farm, for he Is a big, stoutly made horse. He stands at my farm tae first four days in the week, four miles south of Decatur on Mud Pike; Friday and Saturdays at Major feed barn, opposite the sale barn. Don t fail to come and sec this horse be fore you breed et"_-where. t&f R. A. HUNTER. o " A B. OINTMENT Has cured hundreds of cases of eczema, barbers' itch-, itching piles, ivy poisoning, pimples, scalp eruptions, cuts, chapped hands, or anv skin trouble. B. B. Ointment is a true, antiseptic disinfectant, and should be in every home. Price of Ointment, 50c. If not handled by your druggist, send 50c to Brudg Bros., Mfgi., 217 East Monroe street. Decatu r , Ind. 39-2tw-5m ■ - Aid For Fisnermen. Drive an old broom handle three and cne-half feet long into the ground three feet where there are fish worms. Then rub a rough board over the end of the handle which should be left six inches out of the ground, and you'll be able in a few minutes to pick up a pail full oi worms that will come to the surface because of the rubbing vibrations. Try it. o NOTICE. A reduction will be made on all new buggy and wagon ’ires during the month ui April, Gfet your w.heels in at once and get the benefit oi this low price as this is only good until the Ist of May. - C C. CLEMENS. Corner First ana Madison, opposite Madison House. 81t6* NOTICE TO PUBLIC. We, the unrjeislgned merchants of the citv of Decat’:.' agree to close our respective grccery departments at 8 p. m., except Saturday nights. This agreement will go into effect on Wednesday, ‘lay 1t~1912, and doses May 1, 19’j All customers that a l -" in the store before 8 p. m. are to be waited upon, but. the doors are to be locked promptly at 8 p.m.: NIBLICK -L CO. THE K . EBLER CO. F. V. MILLS. M. FULLENKAMP. RUNYON. ENGELER & CO. EVERETT & HITE. HOWER & HOWER. BRUSHW.LLER & BAE R. SAM HITE. 104t20 oLOOMING PLANTS, The ladies of the Christian church will have another sale of potted blooming plants and ferns at the old city hall building on -Madison street. A rush order has been placed for geraniums, pansies and ferns, and they will be he re the last of the week or tile first of next x 116t6 o OPERATORS’ TEST. The G. R. & 1. operator examination car passed through the city at an early hour, from Fort Wayne, this morn ing. picking up George McGill and M. A. Kenworthy, second and third trick operators, and taking them to Winchester, where the test was made br officials of the line. o FOR SALE—S. C. Rhode Island Red eggs from flock selected because of the beauty of form, color and general fine qualities. Eggs, fifty cents a setting. Inquire of Mrs. Dale Moses, corner Fifth and India*”’ streets. 76t* HOUSE FOR SALE —Known as the Miss Dolman property, corner First and Adams street; must move off lot at once to make room for new building. Call at residence and leave your best price.—C. H. Colter. 121t3* Miss Pearl Baumgartner of Bluffton spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Baumgartner. LOST —Bill-book fold s containing sls in paper and $3 check Issued to owner. Fiiidei returu, to this office. Reward. 118t3* Conkey's "Poultry Remedies are the best on the market. A separate remedy for each disease. Sold on moneyback guarantee by Smith, Yager & Falk. 116-t&f-lmo IOR SALE —All kinds of early vegetable plants. See Tony Holthouse. No. Fourth St. 115112 FOR RENT — T ®o furnished bedrooms for genti -men. Inquire at 1017 Monroe street 116t6 FOR SALE —House and lot at cost of construction; money to loan on city 1 property at 5 per cent interest. See the P. K. Kinney Real Estate agency, over interurban station. 121t3 <5”

THE NOSE A FILTER TO STRAIN THE Catarrh Clogged Nostrils a Breeding : Place for Deadly Germs. The nostrils are perfect “air filters,'' and, when kept in clean, healthy state, strain every bit of air we breathe, catching all dust particles, foreign matter and germs. The air is full of germs. You cannot dodge them, but you can sale-guard yourself against catarrh and other diseases contracted in tile process of breathing by keeping the nostrils clean and healthy. Catarrh germs will sometimes get in their work, and you may mistake the symptoms for an ordinary cold. Don’t take any chances. If you have a stuffed up feeling in the head, or if yxxir throat is sore or filled with phlegm, just grease the nostrils with a little Elx's Cream Balm, draw the pure, aromatic fumes hack in the head and you will be astonished at the effect. In a few minutes you will feel a loosening up In the head, the nasty discharge will soon be stopped, the soreness gone, and you will feel a sense of genuine relief. Ely’s Cream Balm not only wards off catarrh, but will quickly cure even a chronic, longstanding case of catarrh. It takes the trouble right where it starts, in the nose and throat, cleanses, heals and strengthens the raw, sore inside skin, or membran-?, 1 and in this way drives out. < atarrh ami makes you proof against, this filth;-, disgusting disease. Summer colds, which often .bang on for weeks, can be quickly cured with this cleansing, healing, antiseptic balm. All druggists sell it for fifty cents a bottle, and the one bottle is generally all that is needed to effect a complete cure. Try it today, t-t-s Q AUDITORS WANT MORE MONEY Salaries termed the most important topic discussed by the County Auditors' assaciation of Indiana at the Denison Hotel. With a few minor exceptions, it was sa:J, the pay of the auditors has remained stationary since 18 , while iu many cases tne work oi the offices hga increased greatly. Data on the situation will be collected and presented the special legislative committee by a committee of fifteen, to be composed of one member from each congressional district and two members at large, all to be appointed by Calvin H. Brown, of Ft. Wayne,*i president of the association. In addition to the salary increase, relief bills in other lines wil be asked. The auditors say that their proportion of the county work is too large and they desire to have part of it transferred to other officials. The State Board cf Accounts will investigate this phase of the complaints. Addresses were made by John Boltz and Millard Cox' of the state board of accounts, in | which the move for salary increases was indorsed, phases of the joint work ' of the state and county offices ex-! plained and co-operation in every way ; invited and urged. Owing to the rush ■ of business in the auditor’s offices at this time, only twenty-five members j were present, byt it is expected that the full membership will attend the annual session here Aug. 21 and 22. o GRANDMOTHERS USED SAGE TEA. To Darken the Hair and Restore Gray and Faded Hair to Its Natural Color. It is easier to preserve the color of the hair than to restore it, although it it possible to do both. Our grandmoth-' ers understood the secret. They made a “sage tea” and their dark, glossyhair long after middle life was due to this fact. Our mothers have grayhairs before they are fifty, but they are beginning to appreciate the wis- ' dom of our grandmothers in using “sage tea’’ for their hair and are fast' following suit. The present generation has the advantage of the past in that it can get a ready-to-use preparation called Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hun- Remedy. As a scadp tonic and color restorer this preparation is vastly superior to the ordinary" “sage tea” made by our grandmothers. The growth and beauty of the hair depends on a healthy condition of the scalp. Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy quickly kills the dandruff germs which rob the hair of its life, color and luster, makes the scalp clean and healthy, gives the hair new strength, color and beauty, and makes it grow. Get a fifty-cent bottle from your druggist today. He will give your maney back if you ai- e no t satisfied after a fair trial. m-w-f o DECORATION DAY PROGRAM. The committee in charge of the ; exercises for Decoration day. May 30, ’ have completed arrangements for the ■ memorial tribute to their deceased ■ comrades, and with Son of Veteran , D. F. Quinn as marshal of the day, : the following order of exercises will

1 THERE is a pair of shoes here that will ' ‘ p ] eaS e you and the values that can not be beaten AT "peoples & GERKE New Location In Meibers Block First Door South of Schmitt Meat Market. j.-’ - -Z— J SMOKE THE WHITE STAG 5 CENT SEGAR The True Havana Taste Without The Havana Cost < FIVECENTSAT ALL DEALERS Either Broad Leaf or Samatra Wrap|>er

be followed: At 9 o’clock the comrades of Sam Henry Post and the Ladies of the j Relief Corps will meet at post hall. ExI soldiers will march to old Catholic | i and city cemeteries and decorate | graves of deceased soldiers. At 10 o’clock a committee of the comrades of the Grand Army and Ladies of the Woman’s Relief Corps will proceed to decorate the graves ' of deceased soldiers at the Maple- | wood and St. Joseph cemeteries.” Ladies of the Relief Corps will serve I lunch to all ex-soldiers at post hall, | from 11 to 12 o’clock. At 1:30 o’clock in the afternoon the I post and Women's Relief Corps will I meet at post hall, march to the court ' house lawn, where the comrades of | the Grand Army will decorate the I cenotaph and the Woman's Relief Corps will decorate the miniature i grave, in memory of all soldiers of I the civil war, buried in unknown ! graves. ' Firing of salute, by J. D. Andrews and his firing squad. I Flag pole drill, by twelve school • girls, under command of Mrs. E J. ■ Bailey, after which the organizations ' will proceed to the circuit court room, where the following program for MeI morial day will be observed: Music—Methodist Sunday School Orchestra. , Invocation-Rev. R. L . Semans. Readings of Orders—Adjutant T. R. Moore. Saluting the Dead, j Song—Male Quartet. , Lincoln Address- Otto Rice. Reading—“ Blue and Gray”-Miss Alta Teeple. Ritualistic Service. Music—Methodist Sunday School Orchestra. Song—America. Address—Hon. C. L. Walters. Closing Prayer and Benedictioni Rev. J. H. Rilling. tht f Mn theSerViCeSat,h, ‘ the following line of march will be formed at 4 o’clock sharp. len C t lt> J >and ’ SPhoo ' ChiWren ’ benevo“t orders, drum corps, Women s Re- , ° fps and coni fades of the Grand Army and all ex-soldiers. Line wW orm on Madison street, right .’ ’ ing on Fourth street, south on Four h street to Adams street, east on Id ams street to Second street, north on Second street to Monroe street, east X th! to post hall, where they will <n k ladies of the ” c ' quest that every gi r ] bnv w Orp# r “' man tn Decatur and county b X n fl and ers to post hall befo-e n™ 5 fl °" ' ration day ‘,, “ “ on Dec °- COMMITTEE

Geraniums, in bloom, 10c to JI.MO per dozen, or 3 for 25c; small size, sc. Plenty of bedding plants of all kinds at the greenhouse.—Moses Greeni house Co. 120t3 j WANTED —Two or three rooms, furnished or partly furnished, for light housekeeping. Inquire at Democrat office. 121t4 FOR SAIJd —Bate burner; bargain: call ’phone 168. 119t3 WANTED—Men to learn the barber trade. Here is an offer that includes tools with tuition. A method that saves years of apprenticeship Positions waiting in city or countryshops. Write Moler Barber College, Chicago, 111. 121t6 FOR SALE —Two brood sows, ea h with litter of eight pigs; two fresh cows, and fourteen shoats, weighing about 100 pounds each.—Charles W. Johnson, on'e-hrlf mile east of Monmouth. 121'6 FOR SALE—Barred Plymouth Rock eggs: seeting of 15 eggs, 50 cents, or SI.OO per hundred. The kind it Pays to raise.—Bernard Beckmeyer, Decatnr, No. 1; ’phone 14-L. 119t12 " ——

1 y_TZj WUR /kcoumt .C J iMrr'ji W> |; ' “SERVICE” Is the one by-word at this i bank: you will find us aci comodating, courteous and conservative. A visit will convince you. > . 4 per cent i Let Your Money Be Earning Money and put it in a bank where you know it’s safe, i FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF DECATUR