Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 12, Number 151, Decatur, Adams County, 26 June 1914 — Page 4
f=3[ IKEZSZSI mOE3Of=SI ■ Sthe daily market reports 8 ft Corrected Every Afternoon i maided a* n u
EAST BUFFALO. East Buffalo, N. Y.. June 24—(Special to Daily Democrat) —1280. 380 380 Official to N. Y. yesterday sls 20; hogs Closing steady medium and heavy and yorkers $8.6041 $8.65; pigs $8.50; rough $7.104/$7.30; stags $6.004/$6.50 sheep $6.00: steady top lambs $10.00; cattle 50 steady. G. T. BURK. Corn ®3e Alsike seed $9.25 Wheat S1 Rye r ' s ' Barley 45c ©bC-c Oats 36c NIBLICK 4 Co. Eggs Butter 13 to 22 FULLENKAMPB. Eggs 16e Butter 14022 BERLINGS. Indian Runner Duck* 8c Chicks 10c Fowls 10c Ducks Geese • - Young turkeys 13c Tom turkeys 12c Old hen turkeys 13c Old roosters <•' Butter 13c Eggs l®c Above prices paid for poultry free from feed.
Special Vacation Tours CLOVER-LEAF-ROUTE TO Detroit, Cleveland, Cedar Point. Put-in-Bay and Niagara Falls Tickets on sale every Saturday during the summer at greatly reduced fares. RETURN LIMIT 12 DAYS See H. J. Thompson Agt. for Particulars 8125 DECATUR to TOLEDO VIA CLOVER LEAF ROUTE Every Sunday See J. H. THOMPSON, Agent Decatur for Information ATTENTION FARMERS Our price for Butter Fat for the week ending with June Bth. is EXTRA 29c No. l-28c, No. 2-26 c To Wholesale . 27c To Ratail... 29c Bring Us Your Cream correct weights and tests guaranteed ADAMS COUNTY CREAMERY COMPANY For The Firemans Convention Which Is Held In Bluffton June 25th 1914 • Clover Leaf is running special leaving Decatur at 6:30 A.M. Train No. 4 which leaves Bluffton 6:33 P.M. will be held at Bluffton until the day pn gram is completed J. H. Thompson AGENT $5.00 ~~ •<>.()() ST. LOUIS AND RETURN VIA CLOVER LEAF ROUTE Saturday. June 13 andJ27 ? 1914. See H. J. Thompson, Agt for information
KALVER MARKETS. Wool ,21c©25c Beef hides lie Calf 13c Tallow 5c Sheep pelts 25c©51.00 LOCAL PRODUCE MARKET. Indiana Runned ducks 8c Chicks 10c Fowls 10c Ducks 10c Geese 8c Young turkeys > 13c Tom turkeys ....l!c Old hen turkeys .....13c Old Roosters 6c Butter 13c Eggs ..16c Above prices paid for poultry free from feed. DECATUR CREAMERY CO. (Price for week ending June 8. 1914.) Butter Fat 26c Creamery Butter 28c COAL PRICES. Stove $7.85 Egg $7.1'0 Chestnut, hard |7.85 Pea, hard 86.85 Poca, Egg and Lump 84.75 W. Ash 34.50 V. Splint 84.25 H. Valley 84.00 R. Lion 84.25 Cannell 36 00 J. Hill 84.75 , Kentucky 84.50 Lurig $4 50
SALTS FINE FOR Ws •»'. too such meat, which clogs Kidnsya, then Back hurts and Bladder bothers you. i‘ . folks forget that the kidneys, like u.-> bowels, get sluggish and clogged and need a (h-shing occasionally, else we have backache and dull misery in the kidney region, se'vi'e headaches, rheumatic twinges, torpid li.-er, acid stomach, sleeplessness and all sort! of bladder disorders. You simply must keep your kidneys active and clean, and the moment you feel an ache or pain in the kidney region, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any good drug store here, take a tableepoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidueys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of crapes and lemon juice, combined with iithia, and is harmless to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity. It also neutralizes the acids in the urine no it no longer irritates, thus ending Hatlder disorders. Jad Salts is harmless; inexpensive; makes a delightful effervescent lithicwater drink which everybody should take now and then to keep their kidneys clean, thus avoiding serious complications. A well known local druggist says be sella lots of Jad Balts to folks who believe in overcoming kidney trouble while it is only trouble. FH HLBKK GRAF HAIR NOW Well-known local druggist says everybody is using dd-tune recipe of Sage Tea and Sulphur. Hair that loses its oolor and lustre, or when it fades, turns gray, dull and lifeless, is enused by a lack of sulphur in the hair. Our grandmother made up a mixture of S>>gv Tea crui Sulphur to keep her locks dark >um tseiutifvl, and thousands of a-omen and men who value ths* even color, that beautiful dark shade of hair which is so attractive, use only thia old time recipe Nowaday* we get this fiins.ua mixture by asking at any drug store for a 60 cent l«<tle of "Wyeth's bap* and Sulphur Hsir Remedy,” which itarksM the hair so naturally w» evenly, that m-bedy ein p>Mil>ly tell it has been applied. Hr sides it takes off d.inJrilff, stop* scalp itching ma! falling hair. You just <lanq>-n a »r»-nge or soft brush with it and draw thia tlivnugb your hair, taking one small strard st n time. Hv morn in? the gr"y hair dianMicars: but what delights 'he li'ltea with Wyeth's 'wge and Sulphur i< that, hesidm leowtifaily darkenin'- the hair after a frff apj-.lirb-tions. it <!»>> brings baud: the gios* and lustre and gtvse it an appearance of i bunds ana o— — ■■ '■• FOR KENT—A five room house on 10th street. Good well and a grape bar ber m connecttou. Inquire of Mrs Phillips. Phone 5 on O line. 148*3 It you want to uuy a good cow you will have the opportunity next Saturday afternoon at the G. R. A 1. stock yards when 67 head will be sold at auction. 148*3
WHAT JOHN 010. Joseph Wanamaker is one of the greatest merchants our country has produced. His father was a briekmaksr and John's flrat job was turning brick tn his father’s yard. He earned hia first money as a messenger boy In a publishing house. Later he became an errand boy in a clothing store. In IMI he eetabhehed the clothing firm of Wanameker A Brown. Their first day’s receipts were •24.47. They epent *24.00 in advertising end caved the remnlnlng •7c. Wonderful capacity for work—shrewdness which came from care•ul observation of men end things ■careful saving has mads John Wanamaker one of our great men. Hardly a day passee without there coming to our attention a story of oueceeo-of a man or woman who from humble beginnings, by energy, thrift and saving rises In ths world to do great things. Save money—eave it for what It will do for you to do for others. You can start at the bottom of the ladder. You can reach the top. But you have got to start. You have got to go slowly. You can’t jump into fortune. No one does. You have got to grow into It. Open your account now at the First National Bank. FIRST NATIONAL BANK A Safe Place for Savings Decatur, Indiaaa OHiMHHMmiESSiiiiSi * • * •
TO MAKE PERFECT GRAVY Mixture of the Ingredients, and Proper Thickening, Are Really the Only Two Secrets. When making giuvles of alther milk or water always have the liquid boiling hot before adding the thickening Make the thickening, using about one tahlespoonful of flour for one pint of gravy, by placing the flour tn a cup. adding cold water, a little in a cup, and stirring with a fork until smooth and of the consistency of thick cream. Then comes the secret of smooth gravy. When ready to add the thickening to the liquid dip two or three spoonfuls of the boiling liquid Into the thickening, stir together and turn slowly Into the hot liquid, stirring eot> stantly until it bolls up well, when it will be done. By dipping the hot liquid Into the thickening it brings the temperature somewhere near that of the liquid, consequently, when stirred In It does not retard the boiling at allThis same method holds good In re gard to custards, sauces, salad dress Ings, or anything cooked in a like manner. Another gravy secret: When the milk supply is low. instead of helping out with water use potato water, drained from the potatoes. You will find ft a much better substitute. BAu Around <HOUSE When cleaning knives damp them before rubbing on the boards: this will produce a better polish and they will clean much quicker To Impart a delicate odor to lines saturate a piece of cotton or blotting paper with oil of lavender and place it among the various articles. A little bag of sulphur suspended In a bird cage la not only healthy for the bird, blit keeps away the parasites with which some birds are Infested. If wood worms are in old furniture rub constantly with turpentine. The polish made of turpentine and bees wax Is to be preferred to any other for this cure. When boiling a haddock fasten the head to the talk add only sufficient >Ster to cover, and boll slowly till cooked. Haddock is hard aim! indigestible If boiled fast. Old nail boles in wood may be filled up by mixing sawdust with glue till Il is the consistency of stiff paste Pres* this compound into the holes and it will become as hard as tha wood itself When Jars and jugs have been put away and smell musty, rinse them wtth lime water This ia particularly good fur all vewaels used for milk, as there Is no likelihood nf their not being properly cleaned Princess Soup One quart of milk, two large onions, three eggs, two tablespoonfuls of butter, two tablespoonfuls of flour, one taaspoonfn! of salt and a half tea spoonful of pepper, two tablespoonfuls of gratad.che«-s« Put milk on to boll; fry the butter and onions together for eight minutes, then add the dry flour aud cook two minutes longer, being careful not to bum. Rtlr into the milk and cook ten minutes Rub through a strainer and return to the Are. Now ' add the cheese Beat the eggs with a speck of pepper and salt. Season the soup with tbe salt and pepper | Hold the colander ovqr tbu soup and I pour the eggs through and set back for three minutes where It will not boll. Then serve. The cheese may be omitted if thia is not liked. Belled Fish With White Sauce. Lay a plate on a large napkin and place the flsh on this; tie tbe napkin corner* together and set the whole In a deep ssacepan. fill with boiling wa ter seasoned highly wtth salt pepper, vinegar and a few cloves. Roll very . gently rill done, then lift the fish out i by the napkin comers again, untie | and slip tbe fish from the plate to a , hot platter Boiled fish should be served wtth a hot creamed sauce, ehopped hard boiled eggs and a little parsley, or with the same sauce mixed with oya. ters. shrimps or lobster Easy Wsy te Stretch Small Curtains. The many small curtains of scrim or muslin which belong st transom windows, French doors, natbruom windows. et«. are often very hard to make even after they are Ironed In the usual way An easy and success ful way to do up such small curtain* is to Iron tbe headings only: then .while the curtain la quite damp etrwteh It on the top and lower rods where It belongs Thia stretching of It While wet, will draw the curtain Into the right else and shape, and with out uneven edges When Yau Can Fruit. Ona tableepoonful of glycerin to each pound of fruit in preset » pre vesta the formation of a sugary cry* taJ coating on top. In stewing fruit fresh «w evaporated. two tablespoon fule of glycerin to each pound of fruit and a pinch of salt end less sugar la a greet Improvement Te •train Oatmeal. Instead of rubbing the baby's oat meal through a stove In order to Strain > It. I purchased an ordinary flour sifter and by simply turning the handle tbe oatmeal la easily passed through i aud tb« result la a light, foamy sub Maura which is ter more palatable for tha tabs.
r— —■—- # 7 J Post Toasties For That Bedtime Snack A V —The kiddies need something that is dainty t and appetumv. don’t they? Andyou want to be Sire tfat they have a food that is . easily digested-one that will not disturb thek W / Poßt Toastic * are sur P nsingly good at me ‘ A They are made of the hearts of the finest /7- Indian com, perfectly cooked, delicately sweetened and salted, rolled into thin, nbbony f, I flakes and toasted to a cnsp, golden brown. /" L // _ /O They have that indescribable flavour—/M I £l/ gW ect and delicious, that so delights’the taste. lust pour from the package and add cream and sugar, or sprinkle over fresh benies or % fruit \ V W Easy to serve and mighty good, i, P y c< The Memory Lingers Ik \ A— sold by Grocers everywhere. 5 —- 11 — ■ „ —
— — — IN MEMORIAM. Hr Giveth His Beloved Sleep. Whereas, a grevious sorrow to ev- j ery member of Decatur Court 156. Tribe of Ben Hur in the passing fron, this life of our beloved sister. MrMary I sals-lie McCrory: Whereas, even in our grief we rea Use that in taking her to the Hom Iteyond, our Heavenly Father has lift ed from her the burden of pain and suffering which she has so heroically borne through the weary years, and ~'hsreas. she has now entered into "The best that Heaven itself <an give her. Rest."— Resolved, that knowing the great void which the passing of sueh a soul must leave in the hearts of those who knew and Iffved her so dearly as wife I and mother, we offer them deepest and i most heartfelt sympathy. Resolved, that In her memory, the STAR GROCERY Deviled Him 10c Deviled Tongue toe Potted Hsm Loaf iQc Dried Beef Up Smoked Ga r dine* Baked Beane Sweet Pickles, dor. .. ifc Olivas Plaine qt. can ....tic Clive* Stuffed qt can 30c Marco Pare Catsup ifc Pink Salmon ifc Red Salmon Purs Jelly toe Marco Gelatine ifc Graham sandwich, lb 20c Potato Chips 10c Msrco Chill exuee iOc Will Johns,
charter be draped in mourning for a period of thirty days Resolved further, that there resolu I tions tie spread upon the minutes and i published in the city papers, and a J copy sent to tbe family. Emma C. Burk. Mary E Art man. Martha E Hay. TO CLOSE JULY 4th. I , We the under-igned merchants cfs the City of Decatur. Ind., agree to I > close our r<wpe,tlve places of business! Saturday, July 4th, 1914. all day. Niblick k Company. I I The Kuebler Company. ' Holthouse. Schulte e < ompany. 1 i Charlie Voglewed. I Teeple, Brandyberry a- Peterson. * I 1 Vance k Hite j William* A Sons. J Peoples a Gerke. — i _ u II V "'I. ■■ U_l were—
’*** 3 ”•* * * "WO W&*>TBIKSKWI.‘IKKMKM^IST Old Adams County Bank Decatur, Indiana. gzr>j l Capitol fISb.MB QV »jrp<u.KT*>.'«J C, a Niblick. Preaxiefit M. Kimeh and John Niblick Vice Preaidrntß E. X Ehintfer, < aehier. SIZi Farm ,oanß iSUB Rf fltcl — RtSOIV! ‘.'FAINT HEART »- j N£gr Won Fair Lady.” PROCRASTINATION . Ever * Never Started Accomodaa lion CotA bank ACCOUNT w ß^ fe A ? r Won Comfort Banking And Freedom From Worry Methods I IN OLD AGE! W Patrons on 1 Year Time Deposits
■ ■■ H Elxey. i Wlnnes Slide Store. F. V. MIHs - Hower A Hower. S. K. Hite. Kruahwlller t Baker Wear-I'Well Shor Store. Myers. Dailey Company. •Carl C. I‘umpticry | Charles F. Steel,- & Co M. Fuilenkauip Bernstein. Gay. Zwlck A Myers Myer, Sherer A Beavers Yager Bros. A RetuiUng. Will Johns • Casa A Melbers These merchant* announce that they will keep their store* open Friday night the same as Saturday night, that shoppers may buy at their conven- | fence. I4»t* - - — — —— — WANTED- Experienced lady clerk. Apply at Bernstein's. 142t.1
