Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 10, Number 300, Decatur, Adams County, 17 December 1912 — Page 8
r=i ■ 1 ir-mr-tnr—ll i ir-r o THE DAILY MARKET REPORTS c Corrected Every Afternoon ~ Iks ■ ■ t=3OE3OE=I»" ■ I=o
. EAST BUFFALO. • * •- * East Buffalo, N. Y., Dec. I?—(Special to Daily Democrat) —Receipts, G,400; shipment*, 1,330; official to New York yesterday, 5,890; hogs closing steady. Yorkers, medium and heavy, $7.40® $7.45; mixed light Yorkers and pigs, $7.50® $7.60; roughs, $6.50® >6.70; stags, $5.50® $6.25; sheep, 10,000; market, 25c lower; lambs lower; tops, $8.35; cattle, 100; slow. Ik. •- rVSK New ear corn 57c No. 2 Red wheat 97c No. 2 White wheat 94c Standard oats 30c ; Sample stained oats 27c | Rye 56c I Feeding barley .r» 450 Alsike seed SIO.OO No. 1 clover hay $ll.OO Timothy hay $12.50 Mixed clover hay ,$9 oO®sll.oo Rye straw , Oats straw $6.00 Whteat straw $6.00 • Clover seed $8.75 Timothy seed $1.25 COAL MARKET. ! Jackson Wash Nut $5.50 1 Virginia Splint >5.00 < Kentucky Cabin $5 00 I White Ash $5.00 ! Hocking Valley $4.75 1 Lusig Wash Nut $5.00 ( «- - - L — 'J LUJ —
•r- • — ... . V I djg»«±* Li ;n fpjf * TA-CLAUS ~ , veSf nor w i|[ Never sha u t his hair until fellow ever t > elected presms candidate l want to buy ident But if you farm-just city property or a v before see the Snow Ages*. buying. . _ v for We make no we advertising prope rll e* have on the market. Phone 23(M>r “3’14 I DECATUR, INDIANA ’ ThT Salem Evangelical church will. Mrva lunch at the publW 00 “"I Ed F Mo»e« farm on Wednesday Naal l>*ad*. »b° baa b ** B vd at the ausar for about three I, mun thn. left thia afternoon for home at Findlay. OMo J -- -f fr J I -•! /f II iswto * Pr-ria Exp • Wli ' For Sale By Ben Knapke Joe J. Tonnellier
TO AND| FROM ST. LOUIS VIA “CLOVER LEAF ROUTE" Our “Commercial Travelers” are splendidly equipp’d trains. Electric Lights. Observation Drawing room Sleepers Reclining ch dr cars (seats free.) Modern coaches full vestibtiled throughout First class case service meals a la carte--price, reasonable. Train 5 leaves Decatur at ‘J:S2 p.m. daily arriving St Louw at 8:45 next morning in am- * pi»- time tor business or for connecting trains. See H.J. Thompson Agent for Tickets and Information The Toledo St. Louis & Western R. R. “CLOVER LEAF ROUTE” .
KALVcR MARKETS. Beef hides iQc Tallow Sheep pelts [email protected] Muskrats sc®4sc Skunk 25c©53.50 Coon [email protected] Possum 10c@70c Mink [email protected] FULLErvKAMP*g. Hggs 250 Rutter 20c ©2sc lard ' 8c NIFUC* <* CO. ! Hggs 25c ! Hutter 18c@25c — *“ LOCAL FROCUCE MARKET Spring chicks 10c Ducks 10c Fowls 16c Geese 8e Hggs 27c Rutter 18c Turkeys lie Old roosters , .5e n. BERLtNte Spring chicks 9c Ducks 10e Fowls »c Geese 9c Ergs 27c Rutter 19c Turkeys 15c Old roosters 9c
Lav* Books For Sale 75 volumes Miscellaneous for 950.00 Allens Studio, North side of Court house square Decatur, • - . Indiana W? HAVE IT' Two car loads Chestnut coal. Call as soon as possible if you want anv of it. Decatur Lumber Co. THE Pi OPHf.T Os THE 1 HOUR DAVIS WALL. CLAIRVOYANT I I • ( Why b« or uabappy when Uofreuor Wall’s advice IrMHtht and .xkoa? Your life u> him' Is like an open bock. Before you ut-!' ,«r a *ord he zlli enter into your life J and reveal bidden thorMn. '.hlnga that 1 have long eacaped your ni- tnory while ' ' you sit dumbfounded at h'.» *vonderful 1 ' revelations. If you are unhappy and .Ind that everything you undertake goes wrong' there must be sons* reason, ca|l and see Mr. Wall, he overcome* surb trouble. It •* net only what he tolls ,00. It it what M can do for »9u. Are, you In doubt* If so call on him %t| once. He gives advice on all matter* > r-nalnitig to love, courtship, marH- * tan. divorce, law calls, deeds, wilt*. itents, mortgage", buried • .•ensures, ( etc lady In attendance Located at 322 ataolson BL. Corner 4th Bt. Hour* 19 •- m. to •P- m. ixvw ftflk s«*•
* SAFE REMEDY ENDS CATARRH MISERIES. J Gives Instant Relief, Cures and Prem 1 vents Catarrh and Cold in the ’ Head. k The quickest, best and safest way A Ito cure catarrh or a cold in the head Ils by using a remedy that will "touch the spot" and do its work quickly withlout leaving any bad effects. Ely’s Cream Halm, which is applied to the ( nostrils or rubbed on the throat or )c chest gets right at the root of the trou!c ble and instantly relieves even the ic worst case of catarrh or cold. A few '0 minutes after applied you can feet a >c ( loosening up in the head, the pain and •0 soreness are gone, the sense of taste, 5 smell and hearing come back, and you c feel like a different person. 0 Ely’c Cream Balm cleanses, heals and the inflamed membranes, takes away that stuffed up feeling and dull pain in the head, reo lleves the throat soreness and stops c the nasty discharge which is the c cause of the disgusting hawking, spitting, blowing of the nose, and foul breath. Hay fever victims who are made miserable by fits of sneezing, c coughing and wheezing get instant c and permanent relief by the use of this simple remedy. Don’t suffer another minute. Ely's Cream Balm will relieve you immedi--8 ately, and a 50c bottle will more Than . ; likely work a complete cure. All . * druggists sell it. The Holthouse Drug ' ! CO. t-t-S ! (Advertisement) PUBLIC SALE, k The undersigned will offer for sale at his residence, 44$ miles south of : Peterson, on the I. lx Babcock farm, ! on Friday, December 27th, beginning promptly at 10 o’clock a. m, the fol 1 lowing property, to-wit: Five Head of Horses, including 1 bay horse, 4 yrs. old; 1 bay mare, 3 yrs. old; 1 black ' horse, 12 yrs. old; 1 colt, coming 3 1 yrs old; 1 spring colL Six Head of Cattle, 1 red cow, 3 yrs. old, will be fresh in spring; 2 three-year-old cows, will be fresh in March. These cows are extra good ones. One heifer calf, coming 2 years old and 1 bull calf, 1 year old. Forty Head of Hogs, consisting of five brood sows, all will farrow about March 1; 35 fall pigs. In good shape for winter. Farming Implements: Grain drill, good as new; mower, good as new; h«v loader, corn cultivator, wagon, grain and beet bed, good as new, corn In crib, 4 doz. chickens, and other articles to* numerous to mention. Dinner will be served on grounds by Zion [Adies' Aid society. Terms—All sums of $5 00 and under, cash in hand Over $5.00 a credit of 9 months will be given, purchaser giving note with approved security. 4 per cent off for cash. No property j removed until settled for M E. BABCOCK. J. N Burkhead. Jeff Leichty, Aucta. , M S, Leichty. Clerk. * — ' ' - ’ ■■ PIANO AND OTHER ARTICLES FOR SALE. Oak case piano 13 fine condition, dining room table and sideboard, i rtigg, book case. sofa, and some other I articles of furniture. Customers may call any day this week at 310 N. 4th 8L 275t$ DAN ERWIN. (Advertlabmeat) || I I ■mi I ■» MOTHER GRAY’S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN. Relieve feverisbnesa. bad stomach, teething, disorders, move and regulate ' the bowels and are a pleasant remedy for worms t’sed by mothe-a tor 22 years. They never fail At all druggists, 25c. , Sample frdl. Addres* A. i B. Olmstead. Ix-Roy. N. Y. —— =— ■sssrr-jsae jg» • e~ feO dramas. Tonight our program will consist of two nice drumas and a farce com- ] rdy which will no doubt be pleae'M I 'u> rot many patrons who like good dramas The farce comedy lea Biograph and you can bank on It’s being • o nhe very beat. 5 -THE ADOPTED SON* Selle Dre I ma. . -THE BANK CASHIER,* Lubin Ora ma. I ’GETTING RID OF TROUBLE’ and -HE MUST HAVE A WIFE." Biograph Split Reed. The CRYSTAL Theater.
i. HOPE FOR WOMEN OF FIFTY i Time When She Should Bo Phllo--1 aophlcal and Prepared for Wise Old Age. — There are people today asking with y all appearance of sincerity what a 1 woman of fifty or more can do. Their i confining work In the home, say these observers, is done. A common suggeuB tlon Is that they be utilized in politics. This suggestion has Its comical tide, Wise Tarbeli declares. A perr son who has nothing to do after fifty - years of life in a business as many s sided and demanding as that of a / woman can hardly be expected to be k worth much in a business as comt plicated and uncertain as politics and for which she had had no training. ’ The notion that the woman’s business 1 Is ended at fifty or sixty is fantastio In the extreme. It only ends there if i she has been blind to the meaning of her own experiences; If she has never , gone below the surface of her task—never seen In it anything but physical .duties; has sensed nope of its intimate relations to the community, nona of its obligations toward those who have left her, none of those toward the oncoming generations. If It ends there she has failed to realise, too, the tremendous Importance to all those who belong In her circle or who touch it of what she makes of herself, . or her personal achlevsmcnL | A woman of fifty or sixty who has I succeeded has come to a point of sound philosophy and serenity which Is of the utmost value In the mental and spiritual development of the group to which she belongs. Life at •very one of its seven stages has Its peculiar harrowing experiences—hope mingles with uncertainty in youth; fear and struggle characterize early manhood; dislllusionmenL the ques- ; tlon whether It is worth while, fill the years from forty to fifty, but resolute . grappling with each period brings qes J out almost inevitably Into a fine serene certainty which cannot but have Its effect'on those who are younger. Ripe old age—cheerful, useful, and understanding—la one of ths finest Influences hi the world. We hang Rembrandt’s or Whistler's picture of his mother on our walls that we may feel its quieting hand, the sense of peace and achievement which the picture carries. We have no better illustration of the meaning of old — American Magazine. TRIUMPH OF GERMAN CHEMIST Or. Von Bolton Has Succeeded In Making Diamonds From Illuminating Gas. Dr. W. Von Bolton has been trying to grow diamonds. At a recent congress of the German Bunsen society he described the deoompueltlon of Ulaminating gas under the action of sodium amalgam, which precipitated the carbon in the forjp of black coal and. ic seemed, of diamonds., but these were In too smell quantity to permit ot analysis Dr. Bolton determined to obtain a greater quantity by making diamonds grow on some mother substance The Scientific American says he Placed 6c grams of 14 per cent sodium amalgam In a long testing tuba, •nd costed the t pper layer with a diluted esters less solution, over which he spread amorphous diamond powder. The tube was kept at a temper aturs of 100 degrees centigrade in a water bath, after which a slow cur rent of moistened Illuminating gaa »es Introduced The amalgstn wee allowed to giro off its mercury vapor tor one month, when very Mttle black carbon had been seperatod. but on the layer covered with diamond powder many particles o t brilliancywere found. ' The contents of the tube wese boiled In a platinum cruclbls with a mixture of finortc and sulphuric adds. The microscope revealed that the amor- | phous powder had been converted Into brilliant crystals, true diamonds. »rOt toe small, however, to adow of anaiy sis. New Use of the Benans. There are now In Jmnaice six ffcr lories manufacturtwt banana flg». el<H<». meal and flour.- said James MoC. Harris of Beaten, who roc«tly return*! from Jniaaisa. “During the seaeous at which the fruit Is cheapo* all of these plants are run at their maximum oapaeity. The methods ot drying the fruit are different I* different plsi.lM. though all resort. I be lleva, to a hoc air process. It takes ' about 400 to 600 pounds of the fruit to manufacture 100 pounds es meal. "The banana fig la as palatable as i the natural fig and resembles It closely tn color. It has replaced the natural fls is many markets in which It baa been Introduced. The chips are •old primarily for brsakfast foods, beinx mad" Into-wporrMse Heversl sf the manufacturers, who desLln tbn European markets, ship the Alps tn their mills In those European elUea «nd have It ground into meal there, □rtst ntlHs. the sems kind used for -nanufarturlng meal from corn, are seed" Treat Father. i “WelL wb»* do you think of tblngsf" *| inquired father as the bus drove away '. Dwut th* outloa. t Tbla scenery ain't what I expect- • sd.“ com plaited mother i "I dost believe that mountain Is 1 Ulf as high as the booklet claimed,* , "That sun*rt ain’t up to the standtrd.’ *•• broth-r’s comment ’ -Go Slow, folks." counseled father If the mean end the beds come up a the booklet we won't kick."
f ESSSi f 7MJ • I CH =•;?STMAS SHOPPERS | ‘ 11 We Greet You Wita the Christmas Spirit- Overwhelming Evidence as to | 1 ra our leadership is shown on every Hand in Our Big Display of Holiday n - Novelties. Values are Here in Abundance at Popular I rices. a ' IB Phoenix Mufflers Aviation caps H > H Beautiful Scarfs Couch covers 1 ■f' j Fancy Linens Quilts ;!■ Handkerchiefs Comforters ' n ix. ‘ Blankets ■ m Purses, new novelties xz? , . < itrf't'iifb JFI Sweater U Neckwear, the newest SI Sweat ® r VeStS S , Gloves v Romper suite H Combs and Parretts Waists | Belts, Fans, Beads Peticoats Q ® Doilies and collar sets Kimonos H Pillow tops Umbrellas ■ ■ Aprons Silk Hose ■ ITHE BOSTON STORE |a DRY GOODS AND GROCERIES ; g -
I INVESTIGATE THESE BARGAINS. 75 acre* of very good land, fair Im- 1 provements. within 4 miles of good ; market; (Wits. $6000.00. , 80 acres, level, black land; no Improvernent. SIOO.OO per acve. 53 acres, 3V4 miles of market; 5- , room house, cellar, barn 31x50; nice ( grove and biHMings. Prien, SIOO.OO , per acre. 95 acres, four-fifths black tend. 7- ( room bouse, barn 40x70, well ditched, , 2Ab miles of market, * snap at $140.00 ; j ;>er acre. 80 acres good l-w»l land, 3 mites of market, 7-room honae, cellar, bam 40x®. Price, $125.0® 80 acres. mile* of Decatur; lbroom- house, cellar, bare 40x70, coeucribs- teg house. This term is an idnsl home, soil is practioily all blact. Price,. $175 00 per acre. 160 acres, close to market. 8-room house, barn 46x80. Prlcw. $120.00 pew i acre. 60 a>ws. 3 miles of market, good* : level land. 7-room house, barn 36x48. i Price sl2si OS per acre. g 140 acses 3 miles of DeesKtir. R-room i house, csflsr. burn 40x60. Price, slls - per acre These are only a few or the fanns we have Sated. If you are oa the mar ket to bi*, come in and coaault us. HkRVEY A LEONARD Office Owe Vance, Hits & ■ackiin's. t Advertisement) —■o■ - " — pa ßare for BALE. IVS ncraa. level fine, black ground.! fin* brick, noane. nne new oars oo pike I near tbe elty. Prtca. $60.00 per acre 1(0 acres, fine vrtek bouse md barn, . 94.000 wesan ot timber, near tbe city, i J6O acres, botuam t'.ack solL Price, $79.00 per Acre 114 artas. Pre mites from city, ou pike, fine new some and lure, some timber. Prtew. $16,000. )«0 seres, bmk house and barn. ' good outtMjiktiaga. $2,000 worth of Um-1 bar. nearly all level, near the city. ’ Price, —.ore. Also Mxttv small farms. K and 4u acre*, flue unimproved. WM F PONI.AR. m-* Katesvtlie. Ind. (Advertisement) - ”—‘ DO NOT HAVE SORff FEET. An Alien’* Foot rese pewder In the .foulbath gives Instant relief to ckii blntes and all foot ache* Then for lusting comfort, shahs AI tens Foot > Hase, the antiseptic pwwder. in your sterna AR druggists, 25c. (Adverttaament) — - ——re— —— ► ' i 7X)BT Pn’r of grey gauntlets, with pctenl leather lope- Plemm return ‘ to Meredith Htewart ar call phene !«-< ' -Advt m<3 - ?» a-—■ - ——iThe Hower & Moses sale. four miles east of Decatur,! r Wednesday of this week, should interest you. The horses are especially good.— • | Advt. * WANTED—Four (4) Indian Runner Drakes. Well ’ marked.—Herman T. Miller, 1 R. R. 5, Decatur. Ind.—Advertisement. 2V9i6
NOTICE. Notice is hereky given that by virtue of an order of the Adams circuit court made and entered of record on December 7, 1912, all creditors of the Fort Wayne A Springfield Railway eomp*ny will be required to file with the undersigned receiver their verified claims on or before the 10th Day of January, 1913, and that unless the same are so filed they will not be considered. ?93tf FRKNCH Receiver. (Advert tsetse at >
= It Is Now Time For Xmas. Shopping I • We have a'large assortment of house X •J slippers for all the family, in all col- S» 2 ors and styles. Fancy leggings for 3 • children. Come in and let us show • you what a nice present we can sell you. PEOPLES & GERKE = iiiUMiniiiinS Do You Walk Likejhis The first it the way J most people walk — •■■■■ ■ I in common shoes- with the ’l’La wrt whole weight resting on lest I ill J than half the feet. It’s a sure ' "** * ’*• wav to have tired, ach.ng, ■LBdKSkJK / burning feet. The other it the way folks walk that wear the famous Dr. A. Reed ' W*£*> Cuthion Shoes- with the weight evenly dittributed over the whole foot. And it's the only way to walk and wm/JrUA. U you have never worn Dr. A. Reed Cushion Shoes -drop in tomorrow and look at them. Every one of our customers that has tried them is delighted- says ns like walking on air —and we'll guarantee that you'll say the same thing. 1 Them's every slsc and Style So choom from _ lOT V w-tYT’7, gvjr ' i " i,ni at rvaaooabla prices. kxdt for yuu umotruv. ' ' R«a cu.k”“ M Sha. Peoples & Gcrke
HO HUNTINO ALLOWED. Norte- is hereby given that from thia d«’<», November 20. 1912. ao hunting will be allowed on the farms of John Omlor, located in Root and Washington townships. tn Adams county, radians. Awy person eaugat hunting tn these woods win be prosecuted to the full evrtent of the !>w. 277t12 JOHN OMLOR (Advertlsetnoot) . ... i o i— John Gilßg Is exneetd horn.- this week from Washington, D C
