Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 10, Number 165, Decatur, Adams County, 11 July 1912 — Page 7
|p REMEMBER THIS H TfWTJ DO NOT SELL TO TrtE || E S ALOOIN trade j| THAT I ONLY SELL TO THE CONSUMER DIRECT, SO YOU SEE I DO NOT HAVE TO PROTECT ILvj! THE SALOON-KEEPER WITH MY PRICES TO HOLD HIS TRADE. YOU CAN BUY BEER, JF'-S WINES AND LIQUOR FROM ME JUST AS CHEAP AS THE SALOON-KEEPER HIMSELF CAN BUY FROM HIS WHOLESALER. WtlM | Seipps Beers From $1,35 to $1.75 Per Case j WE HAVE A 10-YEAR-OLD STRAIGHT KENTUCKY WHISKEY OVER 100 PER CENT PROOF, AT $3.75 PER GALLON. MY SPECIAL, A 5-YEAR-OLD RYE WHISKEY AT $2.50 PER GALLON, j ABSOLUTELY THE BEST RYE WHISKEY EVER SOLD IN DECATUR, AS IT HAS THAT SMOOTH AND MELLOW TASTE. IT DOES NOT BURN NOR BITE. A FOUR-YEAR-OLD BOUR[rys BON WHISKEY AT $2.00 PER GALLON, A WHISKEY THAT CANNOT -BE DUPLICATED ELSE BCASi Kctl where at $3 PER GALLON. BRIAR RIDGE, A 5-YEAROLD STRAIGHT KENTUCKY WHIS- tTrji yCy; KEY> OVER 100 RER CENT PROOF AT $3.00 PER GALLON; WORTH $5.00. I HAVE PURCHASED 100 BARRELS, IN GOVERNMENT BOND, OF THE FAMOUS KENTUCKY WHISKEY, THE COON HOLLOW BRAND WHICH I AM NOW SELLING TO THE TRADE AT $2.50 PER GALLON, OUR CEDAR VALLEY WHISKEY AT $1.75 PER GALLON IS AS GOOD IF NOT BETTER THAN peg ANY WHISKEY YOU COULD BUY FOR $2.50 PER GALLON ELSEWHERE. I. X. L., A WHISKEY SKT& FOR sls ° FER GALLON, AS GOOD A WHISKEY AS YOU CAN USUALLY BUY OVER THE BAR LAJ’ FOR 10C A DRINK. gWH 5.4 t - THE BERLINER GETREIDE KIMMEL, A DOUBLE STRENGTH KIMMEL, MADE AFTER AN OLD GERMAN FORMULA, AT $2.00 PER GALLON. I HAVE HAD SOME OF MY TRADE TELL g£3l ME THAT THEY PAID $4.00 PER GALLON FOR KIMMEL THAT WAS NOT AS GOOD AS KBi MINE. WHITE SWAN. A HOLLAND TYPE GIN, FOR $2.00 PER GALLON. WHY PAY FROM B&0 SI.OO TO $1.50 PER QUART FOR GIN THAT IS NOT ANY BETTER? A 5-YEAR-OLD PURE CALIFORNIA PORT WINE FOR $1.25 PER GALLON. THINK OF IT. OTHER WINES AND CORDIALS AT PRICES ACCORDINGLY. ABSOLUTELY THE BEST AND PUREST GOODS IN THE CITY, DECATUR I I A IX a i \ / r— ■ D I PHONE |SS INDIANA I I. A. KAL V C.K | NO. 581 Monroe Street, Opposite The New City Hall Deliveries made to any part of the city. Mail orders solicited from out Km . of town trade. «■*- W ■ IHH 1 ll*
BERGHOFF BEER A Reap German Brew We Absolutely Guarantee That This Beer Will Never Cause Biliousness Costs no more than any other first Class Beer Instead of machine-forced methods, we use nature's method—time, and store our product for months to get the proper age and that pleasant mellow taste. The brewing secret of the old German masters, the material, the water, the equipment and the will, combine to produce a beer whose nourishing, nerve-strengthening and stimulating qualities are unexcelled A beer whose purity, wholesomeness and flavor have seamed for it friends unnumbered, Delivered!By The Case CURLEY’S
USE ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE. The antiseptic powder to shake into' the shoes. Makes tight, or new shoes ' feel easy. Relievos painful, swollen,, tender, swecling, aching feet and , takes the icing out of corns and bun-:
T*»‘ ,O1 ir-^i— — Use Bug Finish i For 5 our Potatoes and Plants. It is also I a fertilizer, and will prevent Potatoes from being watery which is sure to be the case if you use Raw Paris Green. Just received a car of old fashioned Salt that will not harden in the barrel. Buy your ! Coal now and save the advance the first of July. If you want the best of Cement I have it for Cistern work by using our water proofing, I guarantee a water tight Job. I I I II E.L CARROLL i
ions. Sold everywhere, 25c. Don’t accept any substitute Sample free. Address, Allen S. Olmstead, Leßoy, N. Y. FOR. RENT—OId city hall building; will make a good nusiness room. See Mrs. A. C. Gregory. 151tf
ENOS HUNT FOR RICH GIRL. Often the hunt for a rich wife ends when the man meets a woman that uses Electric Bitters. Her strong nerves tell in a bright brain and eves temper. Her peach-bloom complexioi and ruby lips result, from her pure blood; her bright eyes from restful sleep; her elastic step, from firm, free muscles, all telling of the health and strength Electric Bitters give a woman, and the freedom from indigestion, backache, headache, fainting and dizzy spells they promote. Everywhere they are woman's favorite rem- j edy. If weak or ailing, try them 50c at Holthouse Drug Co. o MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN. Relieve feverishness, bad stomach, teething disorders, move and regulate the bowels and are a pleasant remedy tor worms. Used by mothers for 22 years. They never tail. At all druggists, 25c. Sample free. Address, A S. Olstead, Leßcy, N. Y. o NOTICE. If the .wo dresses taken from the house on Monroe street are quietly returned the matter will he dropped; -Otherwise the detective employed will arrest the guilty party and make the matter public. 152t6 o 1 GOOD HOUSE FOR RENT. A seven-room apartment in one of tlie double houses on Third street, just opposite court house, electric lights, gas, good bath room, etc. Inquire of A. D. Suttle?, at Old Adams County bank. 122tf o ASTOUNDING. STARTLING. ASTONISHING, Has be~n the sale ot ntoodine during the past few days. We never have had such a tremendous sale on any remedy in our store. Bloodine is highly endorsed by some of the most learned physicians in America for Brighi/s disease, diabetes, stone in the bladder, rheumatism and catarrh, and if you are suffering with any of these terrible diseases you should not fail to buy a bottle of this wonderful remI edy today. Usual SI.OO size bottles for 50 cents at the Holthouse Drug Co. or from The Bioodine Corporation, Boston, Mass. Holthouse Drug Co., I special agents. FOR SALE. i Sweet potato and cabbage plants, 25c per hundred. Plenty of time yet this week for setting sweet potato plants. I have them by thethousands. 25c hundred, corner Adams and Fifth streets. —Raymond Gass. 162t3
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Her Hat. Apropos the latest foreign limousine—the limousine with a roof that slides back for aviation meetings Frank Coffyn, of hydroplane fame, said the other day in New York: "This car reminds me of a conversation I overheard between two girls. “ ‘lt was an awfully smart crowd at the flying,’ said the first girl. ‘I saw some awfully nice folks.’ “‘And who flew?’ the second inquired. “‘Don’t ask me!’ said the first girl. ’Do you think I was going to take oft my new hat just to see a lot of aeroplanes?’” Was Good for Murderer. “You ought to be glad that you will I be electrified instead of hanged,” said I a prison visitor to a convicted murderer. "Why?” asked the felon, in surprise. I “You suffer greatly from rheumatism, don’t you?” “Yes.” “Well, electricity is the best known I remedy for that.”—Epoch. Coal Supply. | "The coal supply of the earth is limited,” said the scientist. "No one I can say how long it will last.” I “Great Scot!” exclaimed the man in the back row. “And here we’ve gone and wasted more’n a sack of it heatin' | i the hall for this lecture!” Another Matter. ! “According to this newspaper, a man has gotten a divorce from his spirit wife.” “Oh, bosh! There’s no such thing as a spirit wife.” “Wait a bit. I was mistaken. The adjective is ‘spirituous.’ ” DOOM SWIFT AND SURE.
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Lady—Aren’t you the low wretch that stole my new batch of biscuits ylstiddy? Sandy—Yes'm; but don't say no more. I ate dem biscuit. Prejudiced. Some things there are we do not like— Ot which we quickly fire; The man upon a motor bike We never coutd admire. Progress. “You have tried to fashion a gov- ' ernment on the lines of the American Republic?” “Yes,” replied the Chinese philosopher, "but up to the present time we haven’t been able to get much beyond the Fourth of July accidents.” * No Risk. "Jagbitters tells me that he Is thinking very seriously of taking up literature as a profession.” "How will he live?” “In clover. His wife is going to op= erate a big boarding house.” Father's Little Speech. Tom—l told her father that I expected to inherit several pieces of fine property. Dick—What did be say? Tom —He said that deeds speak louder than words. Condeneed Milk. "Do you call this a pint?” asked the sharp servant girl of the milkman. "Yes.” “Well, it won't do. When we want condensed milk well buy it at the grocer’s.” Looked Like Ready Money. "How did he succeed so long in fooling his creditors into believing that he was wealthy?” "He had every member of hla family operated on for appendicitis.” Hie Job. T never worry or hurry.” "What department of th* city serv* . »• are you las” I
LOME IS NEi Century Old Vessel to Journey 6,000 Miles. Schooner of Thirty-Four Tons Is Bought by Norwegian Captain for Use in the Sealing Trade in South Indian Ocean. Loudon. —The oldest craft to be found in Lloyd's Register is a schooni er or ketch of 33 tons burden, called I the Purveyor, having just 102 years of service te her credit. A few weeks I ago she was purchased by a Norwe- ! gian. Captain Reinertscn, who is now ' preparing to sail her from Biddeford, ' in Devon, to Durban, in the South Inj dian ocean, a distance of 6,000 miles. The Norwegian has renamed the ' craft the Seal. His enterprise is purely commercial, for he purposes to use : her in the sealing trade. He hopes to reach Durban in 80 days, but will be provisioned for six months. The Purveyor was built at Southas a government barge In 1X10; it was one of a number made ; ready to convey troops rapidly along the coast or to the warships in case | of the expected invasion by Napoleon, On being sold out of service after the 1 battle of Waterloo, in 1815, she was owned at Bude and Biddeford, and has since been engaged in a coasting trade along North Devon and Cornwall. Her biggest trial was in the great blizzard over twenty years ago, well remembered in the w r est, when so many coasting vessels foundered. The Purveyor was blown from the Bristol channel out into the Atlantic, where she rode out the gale, and many days later, nattered but triumphant, returned to her port. Ever since that day she has had nailed to her sternpost a§ a mascot a rusty horseshoe—i with points up “to keep in the luck.” as Devonians express It —and her new owner will carry the same mascot with him on his long voyage. Captain Reinertsen, a quiet-spoken capable-looking sailor, with the clear eye of a man who has spent his i life on the sea, looks upon a 6,000i mile trip in a 33-tonner, as quite an or- ' dlnary undertaking. He will navigate the boat, and has shipped a crew of three Biddeford sailors. In conversation Captain Reinertsen said, after fitting the Seal out with tanks at Durban for her new tride, he will sail to the Crozet islands, some 1,380 miles southeast of Durban, where he has a permit from the , ' French government for seal-hunting, a business in which he has been engaged for some years. 1 PERFORM TRICKS FOR NATIVES Missionary Tells Students How Circus j “Stunt” Is Employed to Attract African Crowds. Philadelphia. Pa. —Tom Jays, M. D., of the London Church Missionary society, in an address to University ol Pennsylvania students told them ot the great opportunity for service in the foreign mission field and many of his own interesting experiences. Dr. Jays is an Englishman who has given his life to the medical mission work In Africa. In his talk he told how he and his friends often gathered a crowd of native Africans about them by doing tricks on bicycles in the squares of the villages and cities. At times, he said, as many as five thousand would crowd around to see the missionaries ride, and some of the preachers and physicians have be come experts. I When the missionaries have gathered the people about them they tell them something about Jesus Christ. While the acts draw the crowds foi big mass meetings, it is through medicine and education that the people of Africa are most easily reached by the missionaries. FINDS $15,000 IN OLD HOUSE ’ New Jersey Man Is Glad He Fixed an Ancient Fireplace That Contained Treasure. Asbury Park, N. J. —Borden Jeffrey | of Deal Lake is $15,000 richer today as the result of spending a few dollars in repairing an ancient fireplace in an old colonial homestead which he pur- , chased recently. Workmen while fixing the fireplace turned up a cache which contained an oak chest full of gold and silver coins. Their value. It is said, is in the neighborhood of $15,000. I There ha» long been a belief that much treasure is buried in this section of Asbury Park. In the early days Deal Lake was a shipbuilding center, vessels at that time being able to sail from the lake out to sea. A changing coast formation and diversion of industry to other more favorable harbors closed the shipbuilding industry. The homestead is one of the country’s historic relics. The house has had so many tenants it is impossible to trace the ownership of the chest of silver. "Mock” Wedding Is Binding. Bridgeport, Conn.—Dr. Howard P. Mansfield and Miss Clara Georgia are trying to become divorced. They went through a mock marriage ceremony twelve years ago and now find the wedding was binding. Debutante Captures Thieves. Philadelphia.—Racing two blocks. Miss Sophia Dllles. a society debutante, caught two youths, recovered her velvet handbag and turned the two young thieve* over to a policeman.
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Pleasant Thoughts. ' “Sorry, Brown," said the doctor, after tie examination. “You’re in a very serious condition. I’m afraid I’ll have to operate on you.” “Operate!" gasped Brown. “Why, I haven’t the money for operations. I’m i only a poor working man." “You’re Insured, are you not?” “Yes, but I don’t get that until aft- ' er I'm dead." “Oh, that’ll be all right,” said the doctor, consolingly. Too Much Paint. I He —What Is al! this talk about | Mrs. Bullion? She —Why. she engaged Dauber, the artist, to paint her and when she arrived for the first sitting he declined to complete a job that had already been half finished. —Cincinnati Enquirer. What She Thought. > “Miss Peeeh," stammered the bashI ful young man at the other end of the sofa, ' would you—er- consider me bold if I were to—er—throw a kiss to ', you ?" I “Bold!" quoth she. “I’d consider it 1 the quintessence of laziness." ■ Sweet Bondage. Gabe —I see that congress is going I to free the poor serfs who are held 1 in bondage by the baseball trust. Steve —Well, I wish some one would i sentence me to five years’ servitude in one of the major leagues. Proper Precaution. “Where are you going in such a . hurry?” i “My daughter has been chosen to , act as queen of the May. and I’m on • my way to buy her some woolen un- ( derclothing and a blanket." | HIS ALL. 1
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| Rambling Waggles—l was robbed last night and I lost fifty-three articles of furniture. Everything I had in de world. Policeman —Fifty-three articles. Rambling Waggles—Sure; a deck of cards and a cork screw. One so Thousands. ' There dwelt a farmer, old and gray, Beside the Mississippi A levee crumbled —and today i His farm would float a ship. How Sad! j "Mrs. Flitters doesn’t go about as much as she used to.” “No. Family cares are keepsng her at home.” “She hasn’t any children?” "No, but Fido is In failing health." I A Natural Student. “Hello, Bobby! I hear that the stork has brought you a new baby brother.” i “Git out! De nearest thing to a stork in des diggin's Is a sandhill crane.” —Judge. Weary in Well Doing. “You can’t sit up with my daughter after 11 o’clock.” “Would you mind telling her that, sir? I have been trying to get home early for six months.’’ —Life. Those Girls. Bella —He Bald he would kiss me or die in the attempt. Della—Well? Bella —He has no life insurance, and I pitied his poor old mother. Bess’s Plan. I Bess —How do you eliminate ths scent of onions? Tess—Oh, the remedy’s simple. 1 lead a story that takes my breath away. Vice Versa. "Does the hero marry the heroine at the end of all of their troubles?" "No; at the beginning.".—Judge.
YOUR GRAY HAIRS QUICKLY VANISH. A Harmless Remedy, Made from Garden Sage, Restores Color to Gray Hair. A feeling of sadnesc accompanies the discovery or the first gray hairs which unfortunately are looked upon as heralds of advancing age. Gray hair, however handsome It may be, makes a person look old. We add know the advantages of being young. Aside from the good impression a youthful appearance makes on others, simply knowing that you are “looking fit” gives one courage to undertake and accomplish things. So why suffer the handicap of looking old on account of gray hairs, when a simple remedy will give your hair youthful and color and beauty in a few days’ time. Most people know that common garden sage acts as a color restorer and scalp tonic as well. Our grandmothers used a “Sage Tea" for keeping their hair dark, soft and luxuriant. In Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy we have an ideal preparation of sage, combined with sulphur and other valuable remedies for dandruff, itching scalp and thin, weak hair that is split at the ends or constantly coming out. A few applications ot this valuable remedy will bring back the color, and in a short time it will remove every trace of dandruff and greatly improve the growth and appearance of the hair. Get a fifty-cent bottle from your druggist today and noticethe difference in your hair after a few days’ treatment. All druggists sell it, under guarantee that the money will i be refunded if the remedy is not ex- ' actly at represented. m-w-f I FOR SALE —Bed ana wedding, side board, couch, plate rail. Call at Kuebler home. 152tf
j * -W* Gold Medal S s’arls position 9W. C For Sale By Ben Knapke Joe J. Tonneliier For Sale Or Trade My home|at No. 610 Monroe Street. Will sell outright or will trade for city or farm property. Chalmer Schafer Bicycle Repairing Electric Wiring Bicycle and Electric Sundries Mezda and Gem bulbs Gocarts Retired EDW. E. PARENT 131 S. 2nd. St, t)pen Evenings ♦ ♦*►♦♦♦ * ~ ■» * * ♦ * • NO PUBLICITY - ♦ « * "We will furnish you with ♦ * money quickly," $lO, sls, $20.. ♦ * $25, or a larger deal on Furniture ♦ * Pianos, Horses, Wagons, Fix- * * tures, etc., without removal. We « * offer unequaled rates, best * * terms, quickest service and ab- * solute privacy. * * If you need money, fill out * and mail us this blank and our * agent will call on you. ♦ - Name ♦ Address; St. and No ♦ * Amount Wanted ♦ Our agent !? iu Decatur every ♦ Tuesday. * * Reliable Private * * H. Wsynt Losn compan* • * Established 1896. Room 2. Sec- # * ond Floor, 706 Calhonn Street. * Home 'Phone, 833. * Fort Wayne, Ind ♦
