Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 10, Number 217, Decatur, Adams County, 10 September 1912 — Page 4
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FAST BUFFALO. East Buffalo, N. Y„ Sept, li)—|Spec-’ ial to Daily Democrat)—Receipts, 4,- ( 000; shipments, 950; official to New > York yesterday, 3,800; hogs closing ■ steady at decline. Heavy, [email protected]; mixed and me-' diums, [email protected]; Yorkers. $9.40@ $9.45; pigs and lights, [email protected]; roughs, [email protected]; stags, $6.50@ $7.50; sheep, 2000; steady; top lambs, ' $8.10; cattle, 250; Steady. j 8. -UrtK. No. 2 Red wheat 98c ; No. 2 White wheat 96c ' Yellow corn $1.06 : While corn and mixed $1.03 1 No. 3 oats -’Sc ’ Sample stained oats 25c ■ Rye 63c 1 Feeding barley 45c Alsike seed $10.25 No. 1 clover hay $13.00 Timothy hay $ll.OO Mixed clover hay .$9.50 No. 1 oats straw $4.00 • Rye stro* . $ 5 ')0 ; Clover seed $9.00 Timothy seed 75c to SI.OO DELIVERED COAL PRICES. ■l> A )“» - Anthracite Chestnut $7.85 Anthracite Stove and Egg .... $”.60 Pocahontas 4.50 Pomeray 4.00 Kentucky Splint 4.00 W. Va. Splint 4.00 Hocking 3.75 ( Jackson Hill 5.00 : Massillon 4.75 ] Price at blns ar car, 25c less; 20c |' per hour extra for tabo r in bins: car- <
Old Adams County Rank Decatur, Indiana. Capital $120,000 > T J } Surplus . $30,000 — * * j G. S. Niblick, President . ~ . ; ~ jwV — — M ' Kir9ch and John Niblick //(\ v Vice Presidents E. X. Ehinger, Cashier, Doad Farm loans a Specialty Renert —Resolve Co lections Made He Who Would Ride aS. ON THE CREST Every AccomodaOF THE WAVE, tionconsistent SHOULD EARLY COMMENCE with Safe HIS DOLLARS Method! Extended TO SAVE! T-vur i Patrons ——- i— We Pay 4 Per Cent Interest on 1 Year Time Deposits
VANTEJD —Farmer to Keep steer on the sh* '’all, 495. 2 >7tf FOR HEN7 —Good house in city; a so i'arin. See Will Colchiu : ’ luterur ban Candy Kitchen. It !
DUR NEW FALL WAISTS We have today received the most beautiful Fall waists in silks, and messalines, all shades navy,grey,brown,black etc. Now is your time to buy. ♦ FULLENKAMPS
rjing cost, ooc per con cLLraj carrying coal up one flight of stairs, SI.OO per ton extra; carrying coal up two j flights of stairs, SI.SC extra. I LOCAL PRODUCE MARKET i 'Spring chickens 13c@15c Ducks 8c Fowls 9c@loc , Geese 8c Eggs 19c Butter 17c Turkeys ...Sc Old roosters ' 6c KALVEk mARKET* Beef nMec 9c Calf ia latlow 6c Sheep pelt* » 26cO$l;00 Wool 20c @ 24c FULLENKAMP’S. Butter 18c@25c Lard 8c Eggs 20c NIP -ILK & CO. Eggs .20c Butter .16i@20c M. BEPtt-iNG. Spring chickens 13c@15c Ducks 8c Fowls 9c@loc Geese 8c Eggs 19c Butter 17c Turkeys 8c Old roosters 5c
WANTED —..adv agents to sell toilet goods. F<”. particulars call 718 N. FOR SALE —Colt, three years old; broke double. See Frank Hoffman ! at Steele’s park. 205t3
FROM THE FOLKS AWAY .continued from Page 1) quid, plaintive, dulcet sweetness of music as the hearing, yet in memory, sweeps over as it listens, way back home. In memory we still hear the singing of the whipporwill, the robin ' and the lark as they flit from tree to 1 tree, while the sunlight glistened o t ‘ : the dew and the very air we breathed ’ was full of life and gladness. 1 Why not have a home coming? Why not get together and tell our exper-1 ience and renew our acquaintance? I am one who will be delighted to at-, tend such a meeting I think all who . are away will gladly return if possi- , ble. They can hardly be restrained from coming back. It is said by some chance or mis- . take one lone man from Allen county , once got into Heaven and he was much . impressed with the beauty and grand . tier of the place, but many things were quite strange to him. As he was strolling down one of the streets pav-' ed with gold he saw a great crowd of i , men approaching led by St. Peter. To ' each of the persons approaching was attached a ball and chain. He wondered at this spectacle and when St. Peter approached he said, “Why are these people burdened thus?" St. Peter replied, “These people are all from Adams county, Indiana, and if we did not hold them some way they would go back." We are glad to come back to the old county with its sun-kissed fields and rolling prairies, where the spring blushes with rosy beauty, the orchards blossom in great bouquets and . are then fruited with sun-kissed fruit; with her blue sky, her pellucid and historic St. Mary's river, her balmy air and perfoumed freshness; when .we can again witness an autumn sunset, with the golden sunlight gilding the tree tops and throwing qver and about the variegated foliage its soft and mellow radiance. Yours very truly, J. FRED FRANCE. A general list to whom invitations were sent Thursday, August 29th, and Friday, August 30, 1912: Mr. and Mrs Sam Dettinger. Roland, N. D. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Brock, R. R. 11, Marion, Ind. Dan Lininger, 126 S. High St., Hartfor City, Ind. . Elmer Flinn, Finton, Ind. L. N. Urick, 1314 Perry Ave., Grand Rauids, Mich. Clark Urick, 472 Meade St., Janesville, O. Joseph Jaque, St. Louis, Mo. Susie Connett, 740 Adams St., Gary, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Parker, Monroeville, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Forest Steele, Fort Wayne, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Ernst Steele, Laporte, Ind, Mr, and Mrs. I. Imler, South Whit-j ley, Ind. G. M. Coffman, care People's hank, Rockyford, Colo. Mr. and Mrs. Roland Spangler, Walkerton, Ind. Mrs. Lizzie Cowan, St. Paris, O. Enos W. Erick, Spencerville, Ind. Henry Weimer and family, Willshire, O. Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Price, Crown Point, Ind. Mrs. Ellen Touhey, 421 W. sth St., Winchester, Ind. D. C. Niblock, 1443 Otto Blvd., Chicago Heights, 111. Mrs. Rachel Zimmerman, 1315 Adams St., Toledo, Ohio. Professor Sniff, Angola, Ind. Roy Patterson. 115 Wells St., Fort Wayne, Ind. Harry Bowsman, 730 Coleriek St., Fort Wayne, Ind. Mrs Toe Karns. Irvington, Ind. Mrs. Charles Rollins, Box 35, Garrett, Ind. Mrs. Ellen Patterson, Box 35, Garrett, Ind. John W’eber, 226 W. Main St., Fort Wayne, Ind. Noah Weber, 226 W Main St., Ft. Wayne, Ind. Lena Weber, 226 W. Main St., Ft. Wayne, Ind. Geo. W Gates, Berne, Ind Emma Weber, 226 W Main St., Ft. Wayn. Ind. Rosa Weber, 226 W. Main St., Ft 1 ■Wayn, Ind. Adelaide Weber, 226 W. Main St., Ft. Wayne, Ind. Peter Keiper, Lima, Ohio. Geo. Gilpen. Kalispell, Mont. Wm. Gilpen, Battle Creek, Mich. P. F. Gilpen, Colon, Mich. Job Gilpen, Allegan, Mich. Elijah -Gilpen, Howard City, Mich. M. V. Mumma, Gideon, Mo. Ray Allen, Hartford City, Ind. Mr and Mrs. A. A. Gilson, care Ex1 aminer, Los Angeles, Cal. Miss Jennie Hawes, St. Thomas, Ont., Canada. Harry Grove, Amarillo, Tex. Wm. Zwick. Staplehurst, Neb. Lewis Zwick, Staplehurst, Neb. Charles Zwick, Sfaplehurst, Neb. Wm. Mailand, Staplehurst, Neb. August Schroeder. Staplehurst,
Neb. Gid Longenberner, Newton Fails, ’ 0., Turnbull Co. Mr. and Mrs. C. L, Oliver, R. R. 6, Bluffton. Ind. Mrs. Jennie Gessinger Coon, R. R. 1, Tustin, Mich. Mrs. Ann McCullough, R. R. I, Jleasant Mills, Ind. Mrs. Eliza Braun, Ohio City, O. R. H. Miller, Oakland, Cal. ( Ernest L. Wisner, Branch, Mich. I Geo. Q. Tyndall, Branch, Mich. | Mr. and Mrs. Chancey Oliver, Vera Cruz ,Ind. Mr. and Mrs. James K. Maitz, Berne, Ind. I Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Harris, Vanda- . lia, Ind. Prof. Wm. H. Oliver. Monroe, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Sells, Monroe, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Martz, Monroe, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Newton Abels, R. R. 1, Carrs, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. James Tyndall, Pilot, Knob, Mo. L. Ed Wert'.:bc _ ger, care Herman . hotel, McKeesport, Pa. Miss Odle Jackson, Boyerstown, Pa. Mr. and Mrs Harry Kaylor, 1052 Yale St., Akron, Ohio. « Mrs. Wesley Markley, Bluffton. Ind. Clem Martz, Branch, Mich. -Mrs. Ada Schank, Baker, Mont. Harry Ehshman, Granville, 111. Mrs. Sophia Mangold Taylor, 924 Broadway, Portland, Ore. Mr. and Mrs. Al Ayres, Paragould, Ark. Emil Bieberich, R. R. 3, Midland. Mich. - Ernest Beiberich, Freeland, Mich. R. R. 3. Mr. and Mrs. I. L. Harden. Hesperia, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. John Kiess, 429 Brackenridge St., Fort Wayne, Ind. Miss Hattie Burkhead, Mound City, Kans. Mr. and Mrs. Philip Auth, Henry, Washington, Co., Colo. Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Cook, Meikton. Colo. Clinton DeGraff, Archbold, Ohio. Miss Emma Gigax, Swanton, Ohio. Fred Roux, Bloomdale, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. John Smith, Market St., Bluffton, Ind. NOTICE. >' II Please be patient. Good things are hard to get. The train was late, and the sun was hot, and the Tip Top bread was late, but when you get it you have the best. Your humble servant. JAS. COVERDALE. O. PUBLIC SALE, -« jr The undersigned will offer at public auction at his residence, known as the Lewis Scherry farm, seven and onehalf miles southwest of Decatur, three miles south of Peterson and ten and one-half miles northeast of Bluffton on Wednesday,. Sept 18, 1912, beginning at 10 o'clock a. m„ to-wit: Horses —One roan horse, 9 years old, weight 1400 pounds; 1 sorrel mare, in foal, 10 years old, will 11 pounds; 1 spring colt, 2 good 1 year old last spring colts, 1 two-year-old colt; span mules. Eighteen Head Cattle —Twelve cows, giving milk; 8 head Jersey cows, ranging from 2 to 6 years, all good ones, all giving milk, 1 with calf by side, others have been fresh four weeks; 2 Durham cows, one coming fresh in October; 6 head young cattle. Twelve Head Hogs: One White sow, with litter of eight pigs by side; 1 Duroc sow, also with litter of eight pigs; 10 head of shoats, weighing from 100 to 160 pounds each. Farming Implements: 1 wagon, good as new, with bed: another good wagon, with bed; 2 spring-tooth harrows; 1 breaking plowy 1 set brass-trimmed harness, never been worn. Twelve tons of thimothy and four tons of clover hay; 500 bushels of oats in bin; 100 bushels of barley, and 15 acres of corn in field. 3% acres of sugar beets in good condition in field; 25 cords of stove wood and many other articles too numerous to mention. Sale will be in dry, whether it rains or shines. I The ladies of the German Reformed church will serve dinner. Terms—All sums of $5 and under cash on day of sale. On all sums over $5 a credit of 6 months will be given, purchaser giving his rote with good bankable security. If not paid when due, 8 per cent from date; 4 per cent off for cash. No property removed I until settled for. LEWIS YAKE. | Noah Frauhiger, Auct. 0 . THE OFFICIAL HOME-COMING SONG Don’t fail to secure one of our latest song hits, written ! especially for Home-coming ' week by Jane C. Strange, the best known musical writer of the day. The most popular, and only one for the big week. They are sellng like hot-cakes. —Yager Bros. & Reinking. 2nt ''
PUBLIC SALE Being desirous of cutting loose from theittention given the farm, the undersigned will sell at Public Sale at his residence in Tocsin, on THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 12TH. The Following Property To-Wit HORSES—S HEAD One brown mare, eight years old, weight 1550 lbs., in foal to Clarion; one bay mare five tears old, weight 1400, in foal to Cal Brice; one extra good coming two year colt sired bv Cal Brice, weight 1100. These horses are sound. One gray mare five years old weight 1550, a good worker, in foal to Governor Ossel; one spring colt. CATTLE 4 HEAD One brindle Jersey, seven years old, giving milk and to be fresh in spring; one grade Jersey, three years old, fresh and calf by side; one Durham heifer, three years old to he fresh in spring; one yellow Jersey, three years old, to be fresh soon. DUROC HOGS 137 HEAD 22 good brood sows, two to farrow before day of sale, and balance before November Ist., 114 spring shoats. These hogs arc all eligible to registration. Thirty or Forty No. 1 gilts for breeding purposes can be selected; one full blood Duroc male hog, TWENTY-FOUR HEAD SHEEP 22 good breeding ewes; two buck lambs. CHICKENS 5 dozen Rhode Island Red and Black Minorca chickens. FARMING IMPLEMENTS One eight-foot Deering binder, good as new; one good Dain hay loader one disc grain drill good as new; one James Oliver riding plow; one Osborn spring tooth harrow; one double cutaway disc; one steel roller; one Oliver riding com plow; one Oliver steel walking plow; one Mishawaukee new ground plow; one New Bremen new ground plow; two spike tooth harrows: one one-horse corn and bean drill; one brand new John Deer N 0.9 1-2 two-horse corn planter; one Hoosier two-horse corn planter; one float; one mud boat; two Turnbull wagans; three buggies; two double wagon beds; one set of tight bottom hay ladders, with corn bed combined, two double set of work harness; nine horse collars; most of them first class wool collars. Seven individual hog houses with floors and on runners; one stone and gravel bed; 7 gallons of apple butter; 15 gallon of lard; one corn dump end gate; one wster cream separator, several tons of baled oats and rye straw. GRAIN Fifty to 100 bushels of rye for seed; 32 acres of extra good Reid’s yellow Dent and Silver King corn in the field. Try and examine this corn before the day of sale and be convinced that there is none better in the country. Parties coming fiom north on 8:21 car and coming from south on 9:05 car will be met at Kingsland and will be conveyed to sale in automobile. Lunch will be served by the Tocsin Pythian Sisters. Please come whether you wish to buy or not. Sale starts promptly at 10 o’clock. TERMS—AII sums of $5.00 and under cash, sums over $5.00 a credit of twelve months will be given the purchaser giving an approved note. 5 per cent discount for cash, No property to be removed until settled for. DR. C. L BLUE Noah Frauhiger & Harry Bunn Auctioneers. Ervin Wasson and Frank Garton, Clerks.
FOR SALE — range, in good condition. See Chester Johnson, or phone 582. 205t3 FOR EXCHANGE —Farms for merchandise; any size farm to sell. Send description to G. A. Spriggs, Fairfield, Wayne Co., 111. -- NOTICE — — and after Monday, Sept. 9th., the price of shaving will be advanced to 15 cents and shops will open at 7:00 o’clock a. m. llarve Sprague Forest'Elzey R. Wertzberger AL. Rurdg Lester Baughman 1 i:k Miller Lose & Sci.rank L.L. Merryman EXCITING. Tonight we’ve an exciting film entitled “The Great Diamond Robbery,” and when you see it you may be sure that you have viewed t,he acme of the motion picture manufacturer's art. As an interest-bearing film this one has no equal and one naturally feels a personal interest in the unfolding of the plot. One incorporated himself in the play itself it is so interesting: “THE GREAT DIAMOND ROBBERY,” Vitagraph Drama. ‘‘INTO THE JUNGLE,” Kalem Drama. ' “THE LEADING LADY'S BABY,” Pathe Drama. FIVE CENTS. The CRYSTAL Theater.
q f MR. SMOKER- ‘ " £ Get a whiff from one of - ose Log Cabin cigars. It iXf I ma^e you smile an( i 4 hustle, five cents will invest’^ate e mer * ts i^*s cb gar. Ask your dealer the H. A. COLCHIN, For Sale At All Dealers BOSSE OPERA HOUSE TUESDAY, SEPT., 10th. ONE BIG NIGHT ONLY EIGHTH SUCCESSFUL YEAR “A Pair of Country Kids” By Harry Sheldon White A COMEDY DRAMA INjFOLR ACTS INTRODUCING TWO OF AMERICA’S FOREMOST COMEDY CHARACTERS “Hi and Trixie’ Have Made More People Laugh Than Any Other Stage Characters in Years Not A Dull Moment In The Play. Don’t Miss It SINGING AND DANCING SPECIALTIES PRICES 25, 35 and 50 Cents
