Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 12, Number 172, Decatur, Adams County, 23 July 1914 — Page 6
S THE DAILY MARKET REPORTS J> q Corrected Every Afternoon I^l' E530E30E3 r'~—'*"! E=J
EAST BUFFALO. East Buffalo, N. Y„ July 23—(Special to Daily Democrat) 2400 380380; official to New York yesterday $9.50; hogs closin'; steady heavy 59.40@ $9.50 Mixed Medium and yorkers [email protected] Houghs [email protected]; stags $6.00 <?/$7.00 Sheep SIO.OO steady top lambs; cattle $11.25. slow. 9. T. uuHR. Com 94c Clover Seed $7.00 Oats 31c Aliske seed $7.50 New Red Wheat, No. 2 73c Rya 47c Barley 45c@50c Oats 32e NIBLICK 4 Ce. Eggs 18c Butter 13 to 22 FULLENKAMPB, Eggs 118 c Butter 14 @25 BERLINGS. Indian Runner Ducks Sc Spring Chickens 16c Chicks 20c Eowls 12c Ducks 9c Geese 8c Young turkeys 13c Tom turkeys 12c Old hen turkeys . 13c lid Roosters 5c •utter 15c Eggs 17c
ATTENTION FARMERS Our price for Butter Fat for the week ending with July 27th. is EXTRA 28c No. l-27c, No. 2-25 c To Wholesale . 28c To Retail . . . 31e liring t *» Your Cream ' weight* and fests guaranteed ADAMS COTY CREAMERY COMPANY 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
Old Adams County Bank Decatur, Indiana. I LK.| UfL]zrx 1 Capital $120,000 ■> -I [ | t/ j g Surplus .$30,000 r 8. Niblick, President M. Kirsch and John Niblick aft - 1 Vice Presidents V,' ~ E ' X ’ Eb ' Dger ’ Cashier. F Pa. n j Farm loans -[LSaI a Specialty aeflect — &WA V™ Resolve Collections Made “FAINT HEART B Ne’er Won Fair Lady.” able^ ateß, PROCRASTINATION Every Never Started Accomodation ConA BANK ACCOUNT With Safe Or Won Comfort Banking And Freedom From Worry Methods Extended IN OLD AGE! To oar Patrons We Lay 4 Per cent. Interest on 1 Year Time Deposits
I Above prices paid for poultry free from feed. KALVER MARKETS. . | Wool 21c@25c Beef hides 11c Calf 13c Tallow 5c Sheep pelts [email protected] LOCAL PRODUCE .MARKET. Spring Chickens 16c Indiana Runned ducks 8c Chicks 20c Fowls 12c Ducks .....9c G Geese Sc Young turkeys , 13c Tom turkeys 12c Old hen turkeys 13c Old Roostets 5c Butter 15c Eggs 17c Above prices para for poultry free from feed. c DECATUR CREAMERY CO. (Price for week ending July 13, 1914.) Butter Fat 26c C - Creamery Butter 28c COAL PRICES. Stove $7.85 . Egg s7.fo , i Chestnut, hard $7.85 .■Pea, hard .....$6.85 . I Poca, Egg and Lump $4.75 jIW. Ash $4.50 V. Splint $4.25 . H. Valley $4.00 ijR, Lion $4.25 . Cannell $6.00 J. Hill $4.75 Kentucky $4.50 Lung $4.50
STAR GROCERY Grape Nuts 15c Corn Flakes 10c Pink Salmon ~.loc Red Salmon 15c Potato Bread 10c Fresh Mackerai 20c Sweet Potatoes 10c Sweet Pickles, dor 10c Prepared Mustard - 5c Maple Flake 10c Marco Macaroni 10c Peanut Butter 10c Salted Crackers, lb 10c Marco Fancy Coffee 30c Oil Sardines 5c Potato Chips 10c Will Johns, HOUSE FOR RENT —5 room dwelling in south part of city. Inquire at the Kirsch- Sellemeyer & Co., lumber yard. 165t3 FOR SALE —The Ell Sprunger SO acre farm 3 miles from Decatus will be sold at a sacrifice. Terms reasonable. See owner or Erwin & Michaud, Decatur, Ind. ts.
• One half of one per cent, of Puck’s circulation is in barber shops — is that where YOU read it? 10 Cents— Everywhere « ARE YOU A WIDOW? A widow who was left by her husband without any money was obliged to start out to earn her own living. She had no trade and was scrubbing, housework and various odds and ends and was so industrious and hard wording that soon she had all she could possibly do. She made $1.50 a day and remembering how her husband had died and left her penniless she determined to save a little each week to provide against sickness and old age. After a while sne thought there would be a nice little business in a small hand laundry where particular people could have their laundrying done in a particular way. She had enough money in the bank . to start and equip herself properly and today is doing a very profitable business and is able to make more and save more than ever before. A few dollars tucked away regularly in a Savings Account at the First National Bank will enable you to take advantage of your opportunities when they come your way.. This strong National Bank has a Savings Department, where your money is subject to the same protection by the United States Government as given to commercial accounts. SI.OO starts you here. FIRST NATIONAL BANK A Safe Place for Savings Decatur, Indiana
NO COMMON SOUP FOR HER £mpr«M Wanted Local Color and Thought She Got It, but Attendant* Deceived Her. It is rather ticklish work contradicting such an authority as Francis Gribble, but one ventures to point out that in bls book, "The Life of the Emperor Francis Joseph,” he is not quite accurate in his story about the Empress Elizabeth of Austria and tbe onion soup. She did not eat it in a case. She had heard some of her entourage praising the onion soup they had eaten in a little eating house near the Central markets, and she turned to M. Paoli, ber official courier, with the remark that she must have some. "Nothing Is easier," said M. Paoli. “I will tell the people of tbe hotel to make you some.” "Never,” said the empress; “they will send me up a carefully prepared soup that won’t taste in tbe least like yours.” She insisted that some of the soup should be brought to her from the eating house; and, also, that it should be served in the identical crockery. She wanted all the local color, she said. Well, she had her soup and declared it excellent, but M. Paoli has confessed that, fearing lest the empress should be disappointed, he bad the soup prepared for her in the hotel and served it in a common plate and soup tureen hurriedly brought from tbe nearest china shop. The empress remarked that the crockery was "delightfully pictur esque.” “True,” said M. Paoli afterward: "we had chipped it a little with that object in view." '
RELIC OF NEW AMSTERDAM Laborers In New York Subway Come Across Interesting Ruins of Old Dutch Prison. Remains of a prison supposed to date back to the early Dutch period have been unearthed in New York. Midway between Dey and Cortlandt streets, under Church street, work men came across a solid stone wall. It began about eight feet below the surface of the street and ran dow i to the bottom of the excavation, whic' here Is thirty feet deep. It stood at right angles to the lin' 1 of the street, and was constructed with such solidity that the masonry was still In good repair. It was pierced by three small windows guarded by the type of gTillwork used in the seventeenth century for jails and to pry the Iron bars away re quired the use of considerable force The attention of an authority on the history of old New York was called to this relic. He examined it with care, and expressed the opinion that the wall once formed part of the ’ock-up of New Amsterdam, and tha* it had been used as late as the eiyh eenth century. Most of the wall where it crossed the line of the new subway, has now been pulled down, but the ends cf It remained and will again be buried beneath and oh either side of the railroad structure. Put Fowls Under Anesthetic. With a peculiar drug that makes a startled hen roost as quiet as a grave an organized band of chicken thieves has been reaping rich harvest In Meadow Glen, in the northwestern part of California. The drug has made it possible for the thieves to raid poultry sheds by the wholesale without fear of the victimized chick ens raising an alarm. Several hun dred chickens have been stolen in that section but no one has been able tc catch a glimpse of the thieves, whe are believed to be regular vendors at the markets early in the morning after remaining up over night to rot hen roosts and then dress the chick ens In a vacant house. Only the best poultry is selected and carried away in an unconscious condition, rendered senseless by the drug. Each morn ing following the eight or nine raids It has been noticed that the remaining fowls show symptoms of having been under the Influence of a powerful anesthetic. Crossing by Wire Rope. To cross the Athabasca river, in the Jasper National park, situated in the Rockies, in Alberta, Canada, one must use a wire rope, says the Wide World Magazine. The river is very wide and fast-flowing, and this crossing by 'wire is not without an element of flanger, seeing that on a recent occasion the center-pin of the pulley-wheel fell Out just as one man got to shore. Had the accident occurred a little earlier the voyager would have been precipitated Into the river and promptly swept away to hla death. As the stream Is too dangerous for boats, and too deep and rapid to ford, this wire rope affords practically the only means of getting from one side to the other. The crossing, however, Is sufficiently nerve trying to ordinary folk without the added excitement of faulty pulleys. Remarkable Aerial Line. Work has been begun on a remarkable steel ropeway, 37% miles long, which will serve as an extension of the railway from Ladorada to Mariquita, in Colombia, carrying the line over the Andes at an altitude of 11,000 feet. The steel rope Is to be supported on a series of steel towers from 40 to 125 feet in height and will consist of 12 sections, at each junction point of which a motor will be installed of sufficient power to work two sections. Power is to be furnished by water brought down from the Andea _ .
[ MERCHANDISE 1 I excitement dK» ________ = Our Big Clearance” Sale is still on and : will continue all during this month, II All new goods at Bargain Sale Prices. ; I Don’t forget the place and the good II Bargains we are giving you During , u This Big July Sale. Don’t Forget the Place, : 1 THE BOSTON STORE |
MEAT CAUSE OF KIDNEY TROUBLE Take a glass of Salts if your Back hurts or Bladder bothers—Meat forms uric acid. If you must have your meat every day, eat it, but flush your kidneys with salts occasionally, says a noted authority who tells us that meat forms urie acid which almost paralyzes the kidneys in their efforts to expel it from the blood. They become sluggish and weaken, then you suffer with a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore and irritated, obliging you to seek relief two or three time during the night. To neutralize these irritating acids, to cleanse the kidneys and flush off the body’s urinous waste get four ounces of Jail Salts from any pharmacy here; take, a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act flue. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine, so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot injure. and makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink. ft PREffll TURN » Hffl DARK Look young! Nobody can tell if you use Grandmother’s simple recipe of Sage Tea and Sulphur.
Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compounded, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streaked or gray, also ends dandruff, itching scalp and stops falling hair. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which, is mussy and troublesome. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair ‘Remedy,’ you will get a large bottle of this famous old recipe fcr about 50 cents. Don’t stay gray! Try it! No blie can possibly tell that you darkened vour hair, as it does it so naturally 'and evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair disappears, and after another application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, thick’and glossy. o— , FOR SALE. A farm of acres in Blackcreek township, Mercer county, on state line east of Berne with good 6 room house drove well with wind pump, barn 40X 75 granary 20X40 and other out buildings. Well ditched and fairly fenced For particulars call on or address W. L. Sipe, Willshire, Ohio. R. R. 1. 147t30 o — FOR SALE —1 large base burner, 1 steel r.-.nge, soft coal stove, refrigerator, violin, tent 24x14 ft. Other small articles. Phone 426. 166t6 FOR RENT—A 6 room house in the south part of city. Inquire of Sam Hite, Phone 204. 170t3 TO LET—Furnished rooms suitable for light housekeeping. Mrs. U. E. CRAMER, 242 No. 6th St. 169t3
TWO MORE WEEKS ■■■■■■■■■■■■■ To take advantage of this great price® reducing sale. The cream of our stock! is being; rapidly picked out and you will have to hurry to get your size. Watch Our Windows For Bargain Displays Ladies button oxfords in Gun Metal, Black, Gray and Brown Suedes, Tans and Patent Leather, f 3, $3.50 and $4.00 values go at $1.45 PEOPLES & GERKE I
New Potatoes pk 3j c New Cabbage pound 4c Celery ...,10c Sweet Mixed Pickles 10c Apples, pk 25c Perfection Bread 5 & iq c Graham Sandwich, pound .20c Bulk Peanut Butter pound 20c Cocoanut, bulk pound 25c Date nut butter 15c Tuna Fish 15 & 25c Campbell's soup iqSwitzer cheese 22c A package of Snow Boy washing powder with every 25c order of Naptha Soap. We Pay Cash or Trade For Produce. Butter to 25c lIIlliM
FILTERED GASOLS PER GALLON THE ARK GARAGE H. E. SIKES
"TIZ" GLADDENS I SORE, TIRED ffl “TIZ” mak-s sore, burning, tired f*> :■ fairly dance witli delight. Away go aches and pains, the corns, callousft blisters and bunions. “ TIZ ” dn« I out the acids ’ aHV poisons that ] w gw up vour feet •-I feNAyrjck — matter how lur. f \a long y° u I,l ' h°Ear ! al ' I ’ I walk, or hoy l jt ? , j TSp/Sf you remain " | your i«t, - brings restfu- ' W foot comfort J “TIZ” is ■ derful for find. 9 aching, swollen, smarting feet 1 ,’ ur 9 I just tingle for joy; shoes never uur: I seem tight. . _ I ! z Get a25 cent hex of “TIZ now r ; any druggist or department shire. 1 ' S foot torture forever —wear smaller »' keep your feet fresh, sweet and W?." a
