Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 10, Number 294, Decatur, Adams County, 10 December 1912 — Page 7
Sr® 4® r S *^ eec * a Merr V Christmas = n Cjo| For the One Who Gets a H s |RB| KODAK I 11 Vest Pocket Kodak Picture* Decide that Chrktmac t . , m I r r,stmas Question of yours right «• U l " ere s S()me one you wish to please very ®"* St uitich- yet you don’t know just what to give. H ■ B |“l a L Koda t k makes '* easv - “ will be welcomed fi ‘ I HII alike by a boy or girl,'a man or woman of any II g®L J-hSFi a & e , for it enables every one to keep forever S I Pictures of all the pleasures of Christmas day and S H ah the day’s that follow. 2 11 No. 3a Ladle* Pocket Kodak . ' j ~ Picture, $ 2 0.00 As for the Prices You Can Get a 1! S Brownie for as little as SI.OO to $12.00 2 £ a • ■ **' z*MJ IM ! Kodaks from $6.00 to $20.00 S !'W»AI Post Card Size. U ** ' 'ft.*" —- «s*»» ii.™. .ZI THE tiOLTHOUSE DRUG CO. If Picture* 2' /4 x3?» $5.00 , == iiih == iihi
TELL SANTA TO F -» ' DROP A BOTTLE [7 ( f the famous whiskey dnws the chim- —'V'JP nsy. It will come in mighty hsndy to fl treat your friends or in esse of sudden U V £ jy illness For our whiskey is good for the . well ami the unwell. Those in good I/.’. 1 Ch health are kept so by its occasional use Q 1/7 'Z-S Those in ill health gain strength by re- —. x gularly partaking of it Don't forget to tell Santa. jW**" ‘ Berghoff Beer by the case. fj ' ( P< C 1 V’ ' Corner of Second and ■ I I Madison struts.
FOR SALE —Full-blooded Duroc male and sow pigs. Old enough for service. Come soon Inquire of J. W. Klopfenstein, Monroe, R JL No. 3. — Advt. 293t3
TO ANDTROM ST. LOUIS VIA “CLOVER LEAF ROUTE" Our “Commercial Travelers” are splendidly equipped trains. Electric Lights, Observation Drawing room Sleepers, Reclining chair cars (seats free.) Modern coaches full vestibuled throughout. First class case service meals ala carte-prices treasonable. Train 5 leaves Decatur at .):o2i p.m. dailv arriving St. Louis at 8:45 next morning in ample time for business or for connecting trains. .. . | See H.J. Thompson Agent for Tickets and Information. The Toledo St. Louis & Western R. R. “CLOVER LEAF ROUTE”
OUT SALE n the next 30 days. Hand painted china at 1-2 price, tut - ■ 1 glass at 1-4 off. I The room has been leased to Parent Bros, and we must | ud give possession on February, Ist. < • - | A GREAT OPPORTUNITY □ 0 For Christmas presents at less than manufacturers cost- L | Articles laid away. A small deposit Required. Q g Come Early And Avoid The Rush I moserchina STORE n \k ;“i _ ’ L__.
>f NOTICE. ■I A* Caroline Zirkle has left my home J without my consent I will uot be re- - sjKMisible for any bills she may make. 291t3 AARON ZIRKLE. 1 111 **" gi*
FARMS FUR SALE. 12d acres, level, fine, black ground, fine brick nouse, tine new earn on pike near the city. Price, $60.00 per acre. 160 acres, fine brick house and barn, $4,000 worth of timber, near the city, 60 acres, bottom black soiL Price, $70.00 per acre. 114 acres, five miles from city, on pike, fine new nouse and barn, some timber. Price, SIO,OOO. 160 acres, brick bouse and barn, good outbuildings, $2,000 worth of timber, nearly all level, near the city. Prise, ?7,000. Also many snsal! farms, 80 and 40 acres, fin*, unimproved. WM. F. POHLAR, , m-s Batesville, Ind. (Advertisement) NO HUNTING ALLOWED. Notic* is hereby given ’hat from this daM. November 20, 11*12. no hunting will be allowed on the farms of John Omior, located in Root and Washington townships. in Adams county. Indiana. Any person caught hunting In thss* wood* will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law, 277t12 JOHN OMLOR (Advertisement) SHOATS FOR SALE. 1 have for sale thirty head of fine, thrifty pig* Inquire of Charle* Rumseblag, 'phone 7-1 line. 282t3 (Advertisement) _______ -o-— FOUND —A pair of elbow kid glove* owner can have same by proving property and paying for add. Enquire | at this office.
ALWAYS TIME FOR COURTESY ' Even In This Age of Rush and Hustle the Wise Person Will Nover Neglect It. “Life Is not eo short but thero 1* ; always time enough for courtesy.” , So says the wisest of American philosophers, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and ' all will agree with him. It Is said, however, that this most pleasing quality has deteriorated since the days of chivalry, and since the ; time has grown bo short for the ac- ! I complishmont of all that we have to > ;do In this busy, bustling world. Hut this should not be. Gracious courtesy i Is well worth the trouble which It en- ■ tails. It costs but so little to bestow, ! and yet means so much to the reclpt . ent Lord Lytton, the polished novelist and gentleman, tells u*: “What a rare gift Is that of manners! How difficult ’ to define—how much more difficult to I Impart!” The receipt is given by Emerson In these few words, "Good manner* are made up of petty sacrifices.” Not big sacrifices, but petty sacrifices. It Is the little things that tell, and the courteous man is careful to do little things to help his friend* . and please them. Where’er they be, al! hearts of gent!* strain Atilt eannot cbooee but eourteey pursue. For they from nature and habit gain | What they henceforth can never tnor« undo. These are th® words of the Italian bard, which tell at once of the used and the advantage of courtesy. But If we would fully appreciate ths thnrm of courtesy we should view II In contrast with that most abhorrent churlishness by which some portion of the humanity seem to like to be j distinguished. Let us be courteous ourselves and learn our manner* from 1 the unmanerly, as did Ixwtaa the fab tdtot. NATURE IS NEVER UNKINC Provide* Compensation In •erne Wa, for Thoee Who Buffer Frees Affliction. Wbon the third question put to th« girl who was tinting a customer’* hall a fashionable shade elicited ne r*»h the woman turned to the manager oi the beeuty shop and aald: “What li | the matter with that girt, anyhow? li she deaf?" 'Very nearly.” said the manager. “How decs she hold her plane?* said the woman. "It seem* to me that a person employed tn a plaoo llki this stands tn need of her flv« senses." "That is jnst what they do no> need." was the reply. "If one ser.s« Is lacking the other four make up foi the defle'ency and become more valu able because more acute. Tour hair dresser cannot hea>, but her sight li marvelous. Rhe can dot cot a gmj hair half a block away and her gift for shading and matching colon amounts to real genl no. Mo wemai with al! her faculties Is so oon*um mate an artist as she Is la tonchln* up a difficult heed of hair. Whoa yo* are ready for message I *hat! brln( you a blind girl All her art 1* een tered In her finger tips. Rhe can find and smooth away wrinkle* that lesi sensitive fingers would not discover Another deaf girt In the establishments particularly sensitive to scent* ant I* Invaluable In mixing and applyln* perfumes. The manager In a plaei of thia kind needs her flva sense* ant as many more as nature ean provide but for her assistants, elimination auf concentration are desirable." Musical Insects. A carefully trained mind and eat are Indispensable to enable one to de tect and to discriminate readily from the general Insect medley any panic u lar species of musician. A* with bird* and their songs, much of the eharm and pleasure to be got ten from Insect muale dopenda on th* emotional coloring associated with It 1 We are enraptured with the note* ol the j>eepee tn spring, or the earllot piping ot the frog*, not becauae the** •ounda in themselves ;«•»•*•* any In trtnslc sweetness, but because they recall endearing memoriae of many happy, hopeful springtimes. They ar* . always the harbinger* ot another ver . daut *e*son. Their plaintive note* add to our mind* an emotional warmth and sunshine. The yawaken for u* nn inner, subjective springtime. I in a similar way the cricket* and katydid* gladden and Inspire u* with their musle In proportion a* theli I note* have become associated In out mind* with th* emotional coloring ol ! oast memories.—Country Life tn 1 America. Car* of Your Umbrella. A soft silk wear* th* boat In nn tint brella. A stool frnm* I* lighter to carry and admits of a closer roil. When carrying your umbrella on th* strvot not In use. ko»p It furled; If hanging In your cloeol keep it* eas* on. tn fact. It present* a very beat | appearance It the case I* on when It Is carried. To furl, grasp the stick In th* right hand. «bake out the folds, wrap them closely around th* stick, beginning nt th* lower end, and smooth as they ar* wrapped around the stick, then fasten with th* ellk band on the silk cover. When coming In with a wet umbrella. wipe off th* handle and ter nils, and furl th* silk section*. If th* •Ilk gets a spot on It. remove It with a *llk cloth, warm water and soap Clean a gold or silver handle In warm soapsuds, mb up a wooden handi* with a very slightly oily cloth.
TEN WERE KILLED! In a Dynamite Explosion in i a Stone Quarry Near Chicago Today. THE PROGRESSIVES I ' Could Not Find Enough of the National Committee to Start Session. I 1 — ; (United Press Service) Chicago, 111., Dec. 10—(Special to Daily Democrat) —It was reported that ten were dead following an explosion of dynamite in the storehouse of the O'Laughlin Stone quarry at Dellwood, a suburb, today. Windows were broitj en in several west side homes by the , ( force of the explosion. i Chicago, ill., Dec. 10—(Special to | Daily Democrat) —Colonel Roosevelt and nearly two hundred New York and I New England progressive leaders yes- | terday arrived in Chicago and found that not enough men of the progresI slve national committee were present to open the sessions which will be | held. It was late in the afternoon before enough came in to make a quorum. — Cincinnati, Ohio, Dec. 10 —(Special ’to iuiily Democrat) —Two men, holding gleaming revolvers at those in the store, entered Adolph Wievel’s jewelry store shortly after noon yesterday and escaped with over SIO,OOO worth of valuables. The men wore masks and entered the store suddenly, and confronted the occupants. New York City, Dec. 10 —(Special to Daily Democrat) —Positive denial that anything whatever had happened to the steamship Mauretania, a vessel of the Cunard line, was made at the local office today. None had any knowledge of whence the rumor started, that came from Paris, that the vessel was in trouble. Today's regular wireless showed that there was absolutely no basis for the rumor. o PANIC IN EMPRESS AVERTED BY A SINGER'S COOLNESS. There might have been a panic at the Empress last night. Hut there was not, and to the coolness of Will Oakland I* due the credit. Newspaper readers have heard of the bravery of singers and actors in the face of danger in a theater and how they saved the live* of thousands by continuing their song and act as if nothing was happening. With a succession of thuds and stamps as if a thorough stampede wes In progress under the stress of some terrible fear, every one in the orchestra stood up and half the audience in the lower part of the house made a wild rush for the door. Oakland'* only change was to sing louder and the orchestra took the cue at once and played stronger. Clear above the babel of cries of "sit down" rose the voice of .Mr. Oakland in “The Garland of Old Fashioned Roses.” With the ending of the nolo* in the gallery the crowd resumed their scat* ' and tbo*e who had run out returned, and then, appreciative of the work of' .Mr. Oakland, the applause was loud and long and sincere. Harry Pauli, a miner, had objected to going Into the upper tier of the * gallery, although the low.-r portion was filled. He struck Usher Curran •nd there ws* a rush for bim at once, i Curran’s friends did not want to *ee him beaten. Pauli ran down the stair* and ouL Later he wa* arretted. j Pauli was this morning found guilty I of creating a disturbance and let off I with a $lO fine by the poller judge , Manager W. J. Swarts of th* Kmpr®** | theater staled that the action of Pauli was unwarranted, and that It wns Just luck that a panic did not occur, durling which many would have been hurt, ' as the noise made by many people run j nlng down stair* after Pauli startled those on the main floor, and then someone yelled "tire," which added to the confusion. t*aull Informed the court that ho purchased a balcony ticket and was unable to get a seat Immediately (Advertisement) --I ■» "" NOTICE TO PUBLIC! The roads from the Hell farm, an<l from th* Rt**l<i school house, crossing the river bridge, will be closed Wednesday and Thursday of Ihla week, as stone will be placed upon the new bridge. j*7t» JUIJI’B TIAUGK. — O ...i-i.. NO HUNTING ALLOWED. Nolic* la hereby given that I will not allow hunting on my farm In Mun ro* township, Adam* couniy. s*4ts IRA WAGONER. (Advertisement)
On the Sfreet In the Sleet EjjaMcKS..!.. . 'u... JL p &£ When if* raining or when the streets are slushy don’t bother with mH rubbers—wear Dr. A. Reed Cushion Shoes, Then you can be sure yourlectwiilahv.iysbcdryandwarm. And you’ll enjoy walking, too. js3 For the soil cushion insole not only keeps away the moisture that Hl Mjfl soaks through the soles ol most shoes—but supports the arch of your M loot, and distributes your weight so evenly that walking is simply EH delightful. No iuoic tired aching feet. Let us show you the new styles, iJy Peoples & Gerke w «w**s*s«*«*b*bsm*'*«b»»**wwsw*wmmw'*s* »«sw .MarwoMw***** > Ok] Adams County Bank ’ j Decatur, Indiana. $— ——Capital SI2OIXIO rv 1 Surplus , S3O. W I c. 8. Niblick, President I M. Kirsch r.nd John Nibli-k W I Vice Presidents /’ W/K rw, S £• X. Ehinger. Cashier. I — i Farm loans i V fl a Specialty | 1 II <OT . J Resolve Col lections 5 —rajm mflifciMiMfsFy Made I A Little Rosin on | the Fingers Every ——— Accumodu3 Prevents The Dollars tion Cond Slipping Thru! a Placed to The Credit Os a Bank Account •j Th Methods Accumulate For You! Extended ■ Ln uUr | ' Patrons 0 We Pay 4 Per Cent Interest on 1 Year Time Deposits I WHY I not use perfection bread it is just ■ like mother used to bake. We re-1 ceive a fresh shipment of this ■ bread every day. I ■ Have lots of good country butter H |FULLENKAMPS I Whats In A Name White Stag is a curious name, but it really moans something. There is an old Indian legend relating how the “White Stag” brought good luck to the tribe and the “WHITE STAG” CIGAR certainly is a lucky thing for the tnlie of smokvrs in that it contains all the good ((ualities of the choicest tobacco with none of its aftermath. A mild mellow smoke with a richness and ripoMN thatapjx'als to any appetite. rSc* nt nit Denier*
