Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 12, Number 137, Decatur, Adams County, 10 June 1914 — Page 5

s SPECIAL BARGAINS I I I Hili —inn jl During the three days of this sale we are going to fi h offer you anyjsuit or coat that sold at sls to $25 for n h $9.95. Be sure that you get our prices on Rugs, Car- 0 b pets and Linoleums before buying. p I y iiiii==iiiii I ! M. Fullenkamp’s | | ::4::4::4::4::4::4::4::4::4::4::4::::4::4::4::4::4i:<::4::*:4::4t:4::4s:4::4::4::4::4::4::<::4::4::4::4::4::4::4::»::4::4: I THREE DAYS OF PROFIT SHARING ! ♦ y To The People of Decatur and Vicinity at II « I Runyon, Engeler Co. | ♦ SPECIAL BARGAINS THROUGHOUT OUR ENTIRE STOCK. COME IN! IT 0 ♦ WILL PAY YOU TO INVESTIGATE THESE BARGAINS 5 z « ♦ ♦ ♦ One Lot Spring Coats One House Dresses *j ♦ Ladies Suits $15.00 $12.00 to $15.00 val-Lot Skirts $4.00 to $1.25 to $2.00 vaL « S to $22.00 value at ue at • $5.00 value at ue at $4.95 $7.50 $1.48 98c ♦ S I Special on Ratine Ray Cloth 25 and 30c Value at 19c | I Rice Cloth $1.25 Value at 79c | ♦ * :: ♦ n484«4::4n4K4n4«*«4::4«»»8»K484::4K4«4ri4«4n4n4t:»t:4R4K4R4«434:i<«45»54n4n4R4U4R4ri4«4:: s ‘ 5 I Teeple, Brandyberry & Peterson J « Offer the following special bargains in suits and felt hats " during the three days of the big sale. These are new and p VT* •• up-to-date and you can buy them at heavy reductions at ♦ g a time when you need them. 5 S V»l! •11 Wo ft r- » MEN’S SUITS. BOYS’ SUITS. J /\'K V . $3.00 Suits fl° at $2-00 U SIO.OO Suit* go at $ 6.75 350 Buitg go at 2 . 35 OF 12.50 Suits go at ...... 8.50 4.00 Buits go at / 265 “tT 15.00 Suits go at 10.00 5.00 Suits go at 3.35 » i , 'V. * ♦ 16.50 Suits go at 11.00 7.50 Suits go at 5.00 £ ♦ 20.00 Suits go fit 14.50 8.50 Suits go at 1 5.65 kaßlHwl ♦ ♦ 25.00 Suits go at 17.50 10.00 Suits go at 6.65 ♦ Anv b’ue serge suit in the store at 20 per cent off Ayl wll ♦ Any S 3, felt hat will be sold at $2.25 i I “ “ “ “ “ “ “ L4 ° We invite comparison of prices and goods. Make our * ♦ store your headquarters cw I ¥ vft - -■ RIUKAtV? « ♦ SreS s Teeple, Brandyberry & Peterson | i I :: ♦ v::4::*:;4::4::5::4::>::4::h:4::4Rm:4::4::4::4::4::4::4L4::::4::4:24:s4::4::4::4::4::4:: ::4::4::»:i4:s»::4Ue::i::er. | SPECIALJ2O \ REDUCTION SALE | « fiODI IwR-ISRP Greatest bargains you have ever seen dur- :•• r - k • :j : in £ the thre e days, June 10, 11 and 12.' £ IjSllßlH et^ Price toe £ Three Sale Days ♦ W e W ’U Deliver all Goods to your M home FREE i . ♦ 1 w **l cos * y° u n °thing to come in and look jj k ' W them oVer during the three days Special Sale. ♦ uuv\v—rt xc=9] « 'Uienny-,^ l - *l.ll _.jy ■* ’ .wm ♦ *: | Yager Bros. And Reinking | ♦ Opposite Court Hcu'e. ~'f itr, Indiana « ♦ L :

SALTS FINE FOR ACHINGKIDNEYS We eat tee much meat, which clogs Kidneys, then Back hurts and Bladder bothers you. Most folks forget that tho kidneys, like the bowels, get sluggish and clogged and need a flushing occasionally, else wo have backache and dull misery in tho kidney region, severe headaches, rheumatic twinges, torpid liver, acid stomach, sleeplessness and all soits of bladder disorders. You simply must keep your kidneys active anti clean, and the moment you feel an ache or pain in the kidney region, get ala>ut four, ounces of Jad Salts from any good drug store here, take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. Thu famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and is harmless to flush clog."' l kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity. It also neutralize) the acid:) in the urine so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts is harmless; inexpensive; makes a delightful effervescent lithia- ■ water drink which even-body should take ’ now and then to keep their kidneys clean, thus avoiding serious complications. A well-known local druggist says hoscils lots of Jad Salts to folks who believe • in overcoming kidney trouble while it is ■ only trouble. I mni m i M HAIR DARK " Look young! Nobody can tell if you • use Grrndn-other’s simple recipe ; of Sage Tea and Sulphur. ► Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea j and Sulphur, properly compounded, ; brings bad; tho natural color and lustre ► to tie I*air when faded, streaked or gray; : al-o ends dandruff, itching scalp and t stops falling hair. Years ago the only ► way to get this mixture was to make it ! at "home, which is mussy amt trouble- • some. Nowadays, by asking at any drug t store for “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur • Hair Remedy,’’ you will g- : i large bet--5 tie of this famous old recipe far about ► 50 cents. f Don’t stay gray! Try it! No „ie • can possibly'tell that you darkened your ► hair, ao it does it so naturally and • evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft ; brush with it and draw this through y.>ur ► hair, taking one small st,rand at a time; • by- morning the gray hair disappears, and • after another application or two, your ’ hajr becomes beautifully dark, thick and ■ giosey. 1 e: , — IN MEMORIAM. < Again the Great Spirit has spoken j and the whirlwind is still • Sister Ella .weaver has gone.fron j us, but the memory of her will live ► in our hearts forever. Her manner of F going and coming amongst us was ► ! her constant d sin- was to help and as - fist in every way .lie great can e i which w( represent. I He It Resolved, in her death the J order has lost an honest and faithful > worker. But we as members of Ma f jella Council. Improved Order of Red J Ji n, bow In humble submission to th' 1 s will of the Great Spirit. ' Resolved. —That we extend to the • bi re. v‘ d family cur heartfelt sympa 1 th and a. k the Great Spirit to keep 5 and safely guide them. > Further Resolved. —That our charter • > he draped in mourning for thirty days. ; A copy of these resolutions be printed ♦ in the city pa<> rs. a’l <> a < -py ent : to the family. JESSIE F. BUHDG, i FLORA KINZLE. REBECCA EADY. > o . 1 LEAVE FOP C/ .’.’«DA. The Adams C< unty Real Estate and Loan Agency, representing the Maub itoba * Western Colonization Co., » ■* jt have re< elved word thut on next bat- ‘ urday. June 13th7 a special rate of • $24.50 round trip front Decatur to Wln- ! r.lpeg. Canada, will be offend to all > prospectiv.'-dand buyers. This special I rate is a great inducement for the [ people who are thinking of taking up ! land and is a great saving in car far l '. I All who desire to go may get further | information by calling nt the Filsinger ■ ofliie or calling phone 135. 1 :Gt2 ; , ...o ; LOST—On North Sacond stret. pair! ■ of nose glas <s. with brown rim. Re j ! turn to this office. 128t3 ; Jther ages in proportion. AGKNTI GET OUR PROPOSITION. J SAFELY BUY YOUR i LIFE INSWCE i with total dlsabtP.y fea-.'ies. Rate equitable per SI,OOO. Age 20. . .$ll,OO Age 35. . . $ s g.4u ; Banker’s Reserve Life Association ! 608 Merchants Bank bdlg., JndUnapo- , Ils, Indiana.

HUSTL’ARD SENT NEWLY WEDS ' : ■ Highly Decorated Remembrance I* p Inscribed With Advloe From Sender. -j ss t * Ilbnver. —A wooden postcard nearly f j two feet long and more than half 1 foot wide and highly decorated with L instructions to newly married couples O was handed to E. C. Bennett, clerk at t j the Kalserhoff hotel, by the letter car- tj rler when making his usual mall de- rj livery. It was addressed to Mr. and Mrs. }j Roy D. Lee of Pueblo, who were here >j on their honeymoon. The couple had u departed, however, before the card ar- Jj rived. Clerk Bennett tried to put it m ;j the mail box and it wouldn't go. Then ” ho hung it up over his desk. That fj caused so many people to make use- |jj less remarks that he shoved it under ti the counter. j’ Then some one told him he was In- ti terfering with the United States mails, g so he took it out again and handed it tl to the telephone operator, who wrote I; another address on it and forwarded f'J it after the happy couple. One motto said: "May all the ft troubles be little ones." Another said: 11 'Be good to one another.” Another :: card asked the clerk. In the event he could not deliver the postcard, to re- U turn to the couple addressed at Rose- J; lawn cemetery, Pueblo, Colo., as that rwould undoubtedly be their stopping U place in the end. The card had thirty-four stamps on it and numerous pictures of hearts, «■ cupids and other designs which con- .1 veyed the. impression that the parties addressed were in a blissful state of !1 mind. t- »- MASTER JAILED. DOG STRIKES > —L_ I Searching for His Owner, Hector Dis- ;. appears and Police Are Asked ; to Look for Him. Minneapolis. —This is ,a story of a 1‘ dog that went on a hunger strike. It k is also a story of a man the dog adopt- <■ ed. showing his faithfulness and set- ;; ting the whole police department on a [■ hunt tor the dog. Hector is the dog and Frank Trez- y v ick of St. Cloud, Minn., is the man. P The man took a drop too much and tj was snagged into the East Side police •; station. The dog accompanied him and b when his friend disappeared cellward y Hector set up a howl that kept the. po- y licemen awake Frank was fed in his ? cell and food was offered Hector in p Lieut. J. Quealey’s office, but Hector •, would not eat. He would only howl. ■■ When Frank was fined and it looked t as if he would have, to spend a few J days in the workhouse, arrangements t were made to hav» Hector cared for at j the pound, but Frank paid his fine and t asked for Hector. j The dog’s howling has ceased, but ; the policemen were surprised when f Hwy -discovered that Hector was not j in the room where he had been lock- j ed. He had wriggled between narrow • bars and had gone to look for Frank. • Now the police have been instruct- > ed to find Hector and restore Frank f to him. ! GREAT WAR CHIEF STARVING j — Dire Straits of Matabele Warrior in J England Through Inability to Work. , London. —I-oben Lobengula, eldest ! sen of Lobengula, the famous Mata- • bele warrior, is living in dire straits 1 of poverty in Phillips street. Whitlane, j Salford. He is afflicted with consump- 1 tion and is no longer able to work. ■ and his wife and children exist on ; charity. ■ At the end of the last Matabele war } in 1896, the tribe was sca(tered, and ■ Lobejigula came over to England wish : a Savage South Africa show. For ■ three years he toured this country, and then got an engagement in a Man- ’ Chester pantomime. In ISBI he mar- ; ried an Irish woman, and In the fol- 1 lowing year he went to work In a pit nr Pendleton. Since he settled r” .' Safford he has lived the life of a c 1 s. her. He was quick to pick up work j; in the mine, and became proficient in ;i his job. The Rev. S. D. Bees, vicar of the G parish in which Lobengula lives, says U the circumstances in which tho son of r: the African chief had been reduced ii suggested a very lamentable disregard :: of English tradition of generosity to L vanquished adversaries. HITS HIS FRIEND. NOT BEAR | Alabama Hunter Is Too Near-Sighted; U Mistakes Man Up a Tree for Bear. J. I n Birmingham. Ala.—Darius Reed. |p thirty years old. a prominent farmer <• living In Lamar courtv. lies tn a critical condition as the result of a ri I load of buckshot, received recently ,j; I several miles from Sulligent, at the » 1 hands of Amos Pennington, aged si\- » i ty-flve years, who mistook him for a *• | bear. Rood was out squirrel hunting 'j and had shot one. The squirrel lodged '• in a tree and Reed climbed up to get t 5 It. Pennington camo along with a double-barreled gun. h»fyd the noise In the tree and. his sight being defect: tice, imagined he saw a bear In the H |t' ee and opened tiro. Reed is being U given every attention, but can hardly J; survive. ti pj Remedy for High Cost of Living. t New York.—“ Fuel for tho liody ![' should not cons more than twenty i cents a day tor an ad.'lt." said Doctor ! D. G. Lusk, speaking on “The Fund.-.-mental Basis »t Nutrition." He rec- , ommended as a reuiedy fov the high |t cost ot living n thorough knowledge T of what food really ia.

" tt wtkii. ti- t'.’m :;*;*'*! ti *..;*! tut ** dmtt | Largest Offer of the Week | s 8 5 - 10c H 3 r> 3 n i Buys for you one 25c can i! ■ of Premier Violet Talcum J t: i Powder, and one 10c bar » i of “Oh-My” Floating Witch y i Hazel Toilet Soap. h 3 x n 3 :: 8. I J 0 We are Sole Agents for j B.P.S. PAINTS ! -m,,, ti :i ILtt—4 1 Smith, Yager & Falk y • ii FURNACES FURNACES I HOT AIR FURNACES II h y We are making a specialty of installing hot air heating plants in your homes. | WE HANDLE THE FAMOUS || GARLAND I] LINE OF HOT AIR FURNACES |j fj Come In And Look Our Line Over •3 • • WE FURNISH ESTIMATES h b ?3 :> OS=3O I! LEE HARDWARE CO. I a t? ."iwuuvlw U)«.VW)»»»W). WWW). )»V. tM.WV. V»). «• •• *•»«**» ■ S Ema s | 0 A r p E 3 n i r> 3 . n 1.-. at i tl 1 t» 5 no more ’ B I can family. P.G. Eels’ p 1 Naptha, Lantz Naptha, I vor y» Kliks Flake, oi 1 H ; Sweetheart Soap, 6 for r j 25 cts. Dutch Cleanser, * 5^ jbh 3 cans 25 cts. p I Williams & Sons U H Staple and Fancy Groceries ts ci u ..C2.:’d2 wC2. -i.’ii-'diiUw"urr •• ~cl:::: .