Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 11, Number 297, Decatur, Adams County, 17 December 1913 — Page 6
LAST CHRISTMAS-WHAT ABOUT IT? Lots of people came here just before last Christmas and opened First National Time Accounts for Presents. You have NEVER regretted those gifts have you? And this Christmas? Why not just add the money to the', accounts —the accounts you gave last year. Let us write them a letter, to reach them Christmas morning, telling them ahout your gift. Won’t they be pleased when they receive our letter tolling them what you have given? FIRST NATIONAL BANK Decatur, Indiana. j—* o THE DAILY MARKET REPORTS J yir- -rrmEJflEiu iiy 4T Corrected Every Afternoon j 3 fei i aoraoa e--: 1 adJ
EAST BUFFALO East Buffalo, N. Y., Dec. 15—(Special to Daily Democrat)--Receipts. 19.yoO: shipments. 5,320 today; receipts, 4.500; shipments. 900 yesterday; official to New York Saturday, 3,040; hogs closing steady. .Medium and heavy, $7,864? $7.95; Yorkers and pigs, S7.9OSi $8.00; pigs ?S.OOfisS.os; roughs, $7.15«> $7.35; stags, $6.50 ((i $7.00; sheep, t’7,000; low or; chice lambs. $7.75tn57.90; yearHngs. $6.00® $6.75: wethers, $5.00® $5.00 <<i $5.25; ewes. $4.50® $4.75; cattle, $6.75; market 15c® 25c lower; prime heavy steers, $9.50® $8.75; butchers, grades. $6.50® $8.00; far cows. $5.25«t $6.75; heifers. $6.00® $6.50: feeders, $6.50® $7.25; winners. $3.50® 3.85. G. 1. BURK. New corn, yellow, per 100 lb 75c Plover seed $8.25 Alsike seed SIO.OO Wheat 93c Corn sl.Ol Rye 56c Barley 55c ®6oc Timothy *eed „ $2.00 Oats 37-t COAL PRICES. Stove and Egg. hard SB.OO Chestnut, hard $8.50 Pea, hard $7.00 Poca, Egg and Lump $5.00 W. Ash $4.50 V. Splint $4.50 H. Valley $4.25 R. Lion $4.50 Cannell $6.00 J. Hill $5.00 Kentucky » $4.50 Lurig $4.50 NIBLICK & CO. Eggs 30c Butter l«;i?2se
|THE OLD SETTUB WILL CLLti rfKffcP BLACK RAUWATEr. w ,TF Ofi MUDDY HYDRANT WATER bT * hitarbwl. Will not fiaritn tbt b'ater, bat puri&uit. A DLAvnCbi Ifc I>M*.HclrrrrM.cuttrr. B•inu/ -« ♦ For •*!• by Grotor*. A»U for it, or writ* the old settler co., findlat, o. Democrat Want Ads Pav Democrat Want Ads Pav E3MHUK9MWM■■MHMH■■HMM■■■■■■MR Old Adams County Bank Indiana T - Capital fIX,OOO Surplus . 1.30,000 C S. Niblick, President ~~ M. Kirsch and John Niblick Vice Presidents E. X. Ehingen Cashier, *“ /I M* n oa j Farm loans At ! Kcao a Specialty Resnlve Collections Made PENNIES MAKE DOLLARS » * — able Rates. DOLLARS — Start Bank Accounts Ac^a . BANK ACCOUNTS tionConsistant Bog(t With Safe Confidence and Credit Banking a TViaan Methods And These Extended B GET SUCCESS IN LIFE! To our _ Patrons » We Pa. 4 Per ent interest on 1 Year I ime Deposits. I
FULLENKAMPS. Eggs 30c Rutter 18c(8>27c .Butter 25c®27<: BERLINGB. Heavy chicks 9c Light chicks 8c Heavy fowls Sc Light fowls Sc Heavy dueks 10c Light ducks 8c . Geese 9c Younk turkeys 14c Tom turkeys iq< . Old hen turkeys . .12, Old Roosters 5. Above prices paid for poultry ti 1 from feed. KALVER MARKETJ, Wool 15c@20< Beef hides 19c Calf 12c , Tallow 5< Sheep pelts 25c@$l O' Muskrats sc@4s< Skunk [email protected] Coon [email protected] 1 Possum ...10c@70c Mink [email protected] Corn 99e LOCAL PRODUCE MARKET. Heavy chicks 9c Light chicks 8c Heavy fowls 9c ! Light fowls 8c Heavy ducks 1«. Light ducks 8c Geese 9" Younk turkeys 14c Tom turkeys 10c Old hen turkeys 12c Old Roosters 5c Above prices paid for poultry free i from feed. DECATUR CREAMERY CO. Butter fat, per lb 34c ■ Creamery huttet 32c
A FEELING OF SECURItY Yon naturally feel secure when you , know that the medicine you arc about >to take is absoutely pure and com ‘ lains no harmful or Injurious drugs, Such medicine is Dr. Kilmer's Swamp Root, the great Kidney, Liver,and Bladder Remedy. The same standard of purity, strength and excellence is maintained in every bottle of Swamp-Root. Swamp-Root is scientifically compounded from vegitable herbs. It is not a stimulant and taken in teaspoonful doses. It is not recomended for everything. According to verified testimony it is nature's great helper in relieving , and overcoming kidney, liver and I bladder troubles. 1 A sworn statement of purity is with every bottle of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. ’lf you need a meuieine you should ' have tlie best. If you are already convinced that Swamp-Root Is what you need, you 1 will find it on sale at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, fifty cents and I one-dollar. Sample Size Bottle of Swamp’Root. Enclose ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & , Co.. Binghamton. N.Y. for a sample . size bottle by parcels post—it should . convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable informa- . tion, telling all ahout the kidneys. . When writing be sure to mention . Decatur Daily Democrat. , o STOMACH UPSET? . Mi-o na Will Prevent Further Trouble —lt Quickly and Surely Ends Indigestion and Stomach Distress. Most folks forget that the kidneys, 4 ke the bowles, get sluggish and clogged and ned a flushing ocasionally, “Ise we have backache and dull mis cry in the kidney region, severe headaches, rheumatism, torpid liver, acid D .. R w AV r V Osteopath Graduate and Post Gradrate •f The American Sen o of Tg eop4th. OfLe Over Rowers Reihy Co D ’futur Ind R'lo-’e 314 NOTICE Have your pianos tuned, also piano nd sewing machines repaired and re ' tiilt by your home man. Excellent •<ults and treatment. I also sell a eh class line of pianos and sewing lachines as a side line. Give me a • rial. \ A GILLIOM iff? W Monroe St. Decatur tnc 'Phone 682 Dr. C V. Connell VETERINARIAN Pit AKIO Office 143 1 ilUllc Residence lOi STAR GROCERY Fancv table Peaches 20c Cdifomia •law i t di < s»■! 5 Blacnbeiriesin y. up 15c Raspberries in syrup 15c t Calif rnia apricots . 15c I California cherries 20c i New fork Plums Ifir Green Su iug beans 10c Golden wax beans . 15c I Red sweet beets . . 15c I Spinach 15c •
stomach .sleeplessness and all sorts of bladder disorders. u You simply must keep your kidneys t. active and clean, and the moment you i- feel an nrhe or pain in tne kidney region get about four ounces of Jad Salts i- from The Holthouso Drug Co., take 1 a tablcspoonful in a glass of water befor breakfast -for a few days and ’, ' our kidneys will tlren act flue. This 1 famous salts is made from the aetji of 'rapes and lemon juice, combined .- with llthia, and is harmless to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them J to normal activity. It also neutralize the acids in the urine and so it no ;. longer irritates, thus ending bladder t disorders. ? Jod Salts is harmless; inexpensive; I makes a delightful effervescent lithiawater drink which everybody should ’ take now and then to keep their kid--5 neys clean, thus avoiding serious comi plications. I. A well known local druggist says he : sells lots of Jad Salts to folks who t believein overcoming kidney trouble II while It is only trouble. * I o I SALTS FINE FOR ACHING KIDNEYS We Eat Too Much Meat Which Clog:;! Kidneys, Then the Back Hurts. | Distress after eating, belshing of • gas and undigested food, that lump of lead feeling in the stomach, headache, i biliousness and lack of energy, are warning signals of an out-of-order stomach. Now —at once—ls the time to stop this distress. Mi-o-na Stomach Tablets is thereini ?dy. They are absolutely harmless. Get a fifty cent box today. Their use urely and quickly stops stomach disress and improves and strengthens he digestive system so that, what you . eat is converted into nutrition and the entire system is properly nourished. Money bock if not benefited by The • Holthouse Drug Company. 101 RANCH AT LYRIC TODAY. Miller Bros.’ famous “101 Ranch"; ’■eal wild west circus will be the et 'raction at the Lyric theater for to day. This is not the picture shown here last week of the ranch. The picture for today is three reels of th? ' ’raveling organisation of this title and is said to be the greatest motion I picture ever produced. It is very in teresting from start to finish. It show ■ thearrlval of the first train in th' morning and the unloading of the four sections, the parade with 't« eowb"v| bands Indians of all tribes, Mexican cowgirls, skilled ronera. In fact ever” thing to make u- the greatest vol'’ west performance ever attempted ' ’ ' earth. It shows the buTdinv o' *l- - city with its eating, coo’ - " the stock tents, the Indian village'‘ and the summer homes of these -trange and savage tribes. The en '♦'re terformance will be produced from start to finish. Robbing of th ■ '■ overlend mail, the pony express, th” ; shooting-up of the gold hunters on tlm plains in the fall of '49, and the spring of 'SO will be proffu-M with h-'rr 1 ’ Ing effect The rerdy butchers, the'r lemonade noo-or’’ crackerinc-' and chewing gum will furnish the eo<dy for the production. There will be three reels of the wild west pictures and two extra added reels making five in all. The prices will be five cen’a for children and ten cents for adults. This wonderful picture should not be I misses as it is a positive wonder. j , °ort Wayne & Sprinpfielri Ry Company TIME TABLE Northtouna Cars leave Decatur at 6:60, 8:$0, U:3O. 2:30. 5:30, *:M; arrive at Fort tf’ayne at 6:53, 9:40. 12:40, 8:40. 6:40 and 10:40 Southbound. Lave Fort Wayne at 7:00. 10:00. i 00. 4 00, 7:00, 11:00; arrive in De •wtur at 8-10 1110- mo- 510; « tn 12-in f'm<r •-< tfnn. «re made *♦ For i a »vp. with th. Fi \Vsrm 4 North - u Indian* T'b' tloh Co The Toledo a Ch lease Intorurban Railway Com puny. The Ohio Electric, and Indian* Union Traction Company; also wltn | the Pennsylvania. . Wabash. Nickle I Hate, L, 8. A M. 8.. C H & D. and I G R A I railroads. Freight Service. Freight servicv consists of one iisln Mach way dally Leaving Decatur at 8:00 a. m., and returning, leav <irt Wayne at U;00 m Tbls •<ie» shippers to lelepbone order* k and receive shipment* promptly. W- H. FLEDDERJOHANN, I General Managar, • . Oecatur.lnd. ■ FOR SALE-Favorite hard coal burnI er. In good condition. Inquire of | Henry- Schulte al clothing store. 293t3( —— ■ - n n pills • * irt \ ni». a nr«,ugi»i f.tf i 12* Jf ir; L% fc f ■ > I ”» || SmnBYimVGGISrSLVERYWMtRf
GREW UP WITH THE JOB. A Logical Explanation of How Fiv* Men Got Into a Little Wugon. Mrs. Timkins was telling her neighbors how she had been lietrayed. “Yon know." slio said, "we find that man up from Newark to look at the big dead tree Hint’s going to fall some day and cut through our house, start lug at the roof ami not making any stops till it reaches the cellar. “He estimated that it was about fifty feet to the tir-t branch, and he talked as though lie had ladders, derricks and hawsers enough to move the Washing ton monument. “Then he went away and wrote us u letter making a bld on the job. We accepted the bid. Then a month went by. “Yesterday he came In a little wagon about 2 by 4, scarcely more than a baby carriage. He had some ropes and four men Iteside himself, but no Isd ders. When lie found that none of bis four men would climb up to the first ! branch and fasten the rope he said lie •ouldn't take the tree down. “His ridiculous little wagon! I don't ! see how those five men ever got inty it. even themselves.” “Muybe they were boys when they started,” said Neighbor Jones.—New York Post. Hi* Token of Appreciation. When Blaine was a young lawyer >nd cases were few he was asked to I defend n poverty stricken tramp accused of stealing n wutch. He plead ed with all the ardor at his command, drawing so pathetic a picture with 1 such convincing energy that at the close of his argument the court was in tears and even the tramp wept. The j jury deliberated a f -w minutes ami re i turned the Ve/dlct “Not guilty." Thea I the tramp drew himself up. tears , streaming down his t :e looked ; at the future “plutm-l ki t " and said: “Sir, I have never hl' grand a plea. 1 have not cried b.-fore since I was a child. I have no money with which to reward you. but." drawing a package from the depths of hl.s rn-jued I clothes, “here's that watch. Take it < ' and welcome."—Chicago News. Why George Chopped That Tree. “What’s the idea, George?’ inquired j Mr. Washington. “Why do yon chop i i down this cherry tree? Have you any-1 ; thing against cherry trees?” “No. sit.” “May be you arc in favor of defores , tntion?" “No. sir.” “Ixdng this for a moving picture concern ?" “By mo means.” “Then why chop down a tree'" “1 just, thought of going on the stump." replied the future father of his country, and then Mr. Washington realized that George was a b«ru statesman.—Kansas City Journal. Amid Many Peril*. A maiden lady had to make a trip slone to New York city, and her friends advlstsl her to stay at a well known hotel for women while there. Speaking <>f her experience after- ' ward, she said: "They told me that I would lie so protected there. Protected! Why, 1 never feft so exposed in my life." “Exposed. Aunt Emma! Why. how so?" asked her nephew. “Well." she replied, sighing with relief that she was safe homo agbln. “there were all sorts of dangerous looking women sitting about and not a man to l>c found anywhere.”—Ban Fntnejsco Chronicle. Mistaken Supposition. “Miss Wilting is a great walker. I see her out every morning strolling through the park.” “Yes, she nays nhe'n keeping tn touch with nature.” “The last three mornings «he has I been walking with that ha no ' young man who works in the People's bank.” "A sympathetic purveyor of bucolic j harmony, no dnubt." “No, I think he's one of the tellers." I —Cleveland Plain Dealer. Sad Tai*. jfc’ ■lO’ ft 11 / A '1 i f CIJ I 1 ftgys-x I Telllt—Yr*. Blinkers got i.irried on bls pay envelope and his nen e. Asker—lndeed! Tellit—Yen. and bls wife took both Innlde of a mouth. — Chicago Dally News Not Worth Bothering About. : Clergyman (late come to parlsb)i Your neighbor Smith says my sermon* ire rubbish i Fanner—Ab, ye needn't mind him, ' air. He's merely n mouthpiece for •tiier folk*.—Glasgow Scotsman. Convincing. She—Do you love me for my»elf alone? i He—Yen. and when we are married I don't want any of the family thrown In."-Boston Transcript Some Relief. The Sympathiser— Did you get much relief from that new treatment? The Victim—ft relieved tne of about IBUo.—New York Globe
' WANTED —Men at once to learn barber trade. Jobs always waiting. > Bettor wageff than yon can earn without trade. Tools given. Few week-’ completes. Drop a card for particulars.—Molar Barber College, Indianapolis, Ind. 2941 Don't fail to call and make your selection of Xmas presents. Vvo have 1 tlie latest and best designs in LaVnlI Ilers, bar pins, broaches, rings, bracelets, gold headed umbrellas, etc., for i the ladies.— Hensley, Jeweler. 293t2 FO RSALE -Six-room cottage house on Tenth si root: good fruit: both i hard and sole water; dose to school. Will sell at a bargain if sold soon. Inquire of W. W. McQueen, 'phone No. 1 on T. Line. 294t4 When making your shopping tour, looking up some- ’ thing for the Christmas pres ent you must buy, do not pass us by. but come in, look over our store full of all kind k of new and up-to-date Furni | ture. Your troubles will be ended. Furniture is the king of Christmas presents.—Yager Bros. & Reinking. 292t3 “THE REX” THEATER ’ONIGtIT THE PROGRAM “Fighters of the Plain*," Bison two reel feature. “Their Parent*" A big Imp. comedy Success 5c REX 5c DO IT NOW ' WHAT? L Book Your Sale With JOHN SPUHLER The Veteran Auctioneer If you do you are sure to get the best results. Talks Swiss, and German. It is important that you bock early. . JOHN SPUHLER PHONE Residence 531 Pecatur. - - - Indiana 3-s (popular] s < (articles 9 300 rS^aS^ ,L LUSTPA * \™ Ns > Popular Mechanics Magazine *0 YOU CM UNMatTMto „„ jwass® line in *♦"thlT WHY. list*’' s jyrnv* row ra«« »Mm.« „
XMAS. MONEY Wo will loan you what money you need at 9 PIR CENT £ PER MONTH You can ret $35.(10 ca«h for 3 montbn at. a total cost of s4.so. Think of that ! ! ! Other amounts at same proportion. Small payments—easy to make. We loan on household goods, pianos, bofi.es, cattle, etc., without removal. We also loan on diamonds and fine jewelry a Uegal rates. AH security deposited with ns st..red in burglar-pinot vaults. If you need money use this blank and our Agent will call on you. Our agent will b* to iwitir ■•very Tue*day. Name Address t *»jni Ltm «""" j ursbllebed 1896 Room », 8«emo Floor, 706 Calhoun Street Home 'Phone, 831, Poh Wayne, Ind .. .jQDMMMMaaaBBi I e—■ IB l — I '■ Opera House MONOAV, OFC. 15 ENOCH & MARKWOOD'S Production of the Immortal Favorite Uncle Tom’s Cabin I Excellent Cast Superb Seem ry /9A PEOPLE ZU SCENES 4 ACTS 4 PREMIER CONCERT Concerts at Noon and 7 P. M. Prices 25-3 S and 5Cc Secure Seits Early Seat Sale at Hoithouee Druflf Co. CHIROPRACTOR Hfviirc 1:30 to 5;00 HOUTS 6:30 to 8:00 Officejm second floor, first door South of Democrat Consultation and Spinal Analysis free Lady Attendant] PHONE 650 0. L BURGENER DC. EMOCRAI WAN? ACM PAY Bi> HW Dill pickles dozen 15c Pure strawberry jam 15c I Pure apple jelly 10c M iple syrup 25 and 40c Ripe olives 35c Jello (all flavors) 10c Chila sauce 15c Dates pound 12c M;nce meat 10c . Florida oranges dozen 25c Spanish o* ions pound 07c Extra fancy bacon 22c Bread 5 and 10c Limberg ir cheese lb.. . 25c Cranbetries, qt I f Bulk Ocoanut Olive oil 2. r >c Apple butter 10c Celery . . ; luc Sweet P >tatoes ok -25 c Plenty of good country butter Wo C4gh fade for nroduce butter 18c to eggs 33 cents
