Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 12, Number 285, Decatur, Adams County, 4 December 1914 — Page 6
s • e=| o THE DAILY MARKET REPORTS o Ca o Ca II Corrected Every Afternoon li tta y-' ■■■■——■* c=xorioc3E====3 idl;
EAST BUFFALO. East Buffalo, N. ¥.. Dec. 4 (Spe< iul to Dully Democrat)- Rocuiptl <.,20; shipments, 380; official to New York yesterday, none; hogs closing lirui; lower; all weights, s7.2s<iis7.l'.'>: lougiiM, sti.2s4i $6.50; stags, s.‘>.oo«, 15.50; sheep, 1,600; lower; top lambs. $0.40; cattle. 25c lower; advices are that all clean counties in Indiana and Michigan open Monday, December i. lor interstate shipments. G. T .BURK. New corn 75c Clover seed $7.50 Aisiko seed $7.00 Wheat $1.07 Rye 95c Barley 50c TH not by Seed .'...52.00 to $2.25 Oats 44c NIBLICK 4 CO. Eggs 32c Batter 18c@27c FULLENKAMPS. Eggs ...» 32c Butter 18c@2'c BEHLINGS. Indian Runner Duck* 8c Spring chickens 11c Fowls 9c Ducks 9c Geese 8c Young turkeys 12c Tom turkeys 12c Old hen turkeys 12c Old Roosters 5c Butter 18c Eggs 26c abovs prices pain tor poultry free from feed.
STAR GROCERY j New English Walnuts 25c New Dates 10c New Figs 10c Cranberries, qt 10c Buckwheat Flour 10c Dill Pickles, doz 15c Granulated Sugar 25 Ibb. Sack J 1.60 Cane Syrup 15c Horse Radish 10c | Maple Syrup 25c Pumpkin, can 10c New Crop Soup Beans, 1b...6c Sweet Potatoes, lb 3c Pure Buckwheat Flour, 10 lb. sack 45c Will Johns, * :[s sjs * # * * * * * & ; 1- * MONEY TO LOAN : « ON ❖ * FARMS * * JOHN SCHURGER * « ABSTRACTOR * * sjs * * * * * * * * * 515
—— — — ’ □XStake the road to the fop! *Oho read to the boHcrn of the slope leads also to the top. sou catt I XI KO," take the downgrade vHthout effort, but you'll haVc id v£ork ? ' •k back to the kO*l.” ' ® Q J&ankz Account in this started vPith a dollar, puts jjou on the road to the top. It "Z---makes the ascent easy and the is Which end of the road are you 01b
KALVER MARKETS. Wool SlcO2sc| Beef hides 11c! i Calf 13c j Tallow 6c Sheep pelts 26c0$ 1.00 —— LOCAL PRODUCE MARKET. ! Spring chickens lie Indiana Runued aucks tic ! Fowls 9c Ducks Sc I Geese 8c Young turkeys ...13c Tom turkeys 12c Old hen turkeys... 12c Old Roosters 5c Butter 18c Eggs 26c Above prices paid for poultry free from feed. r-w ■■ i DECATUR CREAMERY CO. Butter Fat, No. 133 c Butter Fat, No. 2 30c Wholesale 33c Retail 36c COAL PRICES. Stove $7.56 Egg 7.50 Chestnut, hard $7.75 Poca, egg and lump $5.00 W. Ash $ 4.50 V. Splint $4.25 H. Valley $4,25 R. Lion $4.50 Cannell $6.00 J. Hill $5.00 'Kentucky s4.u(l Lurig $4.50
I Y < I The Persona] Thought —the spirit of the giving, determines the value of the gift. What, then, could be more fitting than your portrait for the Christmas remembrance —to carry your simple message of friendship. A dozen portaraits solve, at once, a dozen perplexing gift problems. This year we are giving a large Photo Calendar size Bx2o, with each dozen of our better portraits. MAKE AN APPOINTMENT TODAY Moser & Williams Photographers DECATUR, IND. FOP. SALE. The Peter C. Steiner 80-acre farm, *6 mile west and % mile south of Linn Grove, in Hartford township, Adams county. Also 20 acres of timber land, belonging to the same party, 1% mile south of Linn Grove. For information see John Neuhouser, Berne, Ind., or John P. Steiner, IL R. No. 6, Biuffton, Ind. 27-4-11-18-25-1
I NOTItE 'I Having made a change in the management of the old firm, we desire all parties being Indebted to us to please cull and settle all accounts by the 10th | of December. Meyer, Scherer & Beavers ■ 111 .1 — I- r —. . , —.. ■ ■ NOTICE. [ Ihi mt: nt to an order of tlie Adams I 1 Circuit Court. I will offer I'er sale ; t, public sale, on ti e 15th Day cf December, 1914, lat 10 o’clock a. m., at Uic oast do. i j of the court houste in Decatur, Indian, all the notes and book accounts du ' to the late firm of Laman ft Lee. All of tha same not paid by that time will be sold to the highest bid der. A list may be seen at Lee Hard ware store. W. H. LEE, Surviving partner of Lainan & Lee 25-30-4 NOTICE. Hawkins Rheumatic Liniment is th>< best medicine on the marked for rheumatic pains, lumbago, sciinlca, head ache, asthma, hay fever, relieves pain instantly. Price, 50c. Prepared and sold by A. Hawkins | R. R. No. 10, Decatur, Ind. For sale by Williams & Sons, and L. G. Williams, whore I make my : home. 284tG i Fresh candled eggs at Bsrling's Packing House, 25c per dozen. WANTED —Men to represent, us in ev ery county. One of the best paying propositions on the market. A sure money getter. Address the Republic Stock Food and Medical Co., Deca tur, Ind. 267tf FOR SALE—Gas range, good as new; will sell cheap. Inquire of Ei’ Green. 2750
I'nLA , -u. sis I ! ’ll / jck T” 1 'j ' }1531 ©A. B. K. Co., 1914 I THERE’S one thing we want to emphasizeverystrongly about any Kirschbaum Clothes you buy from vs. ! I They won’t pucker aloi'£ the lapels and ccat fronts. The fabric cannot shrink. ! Every yard of woolen entering these stylish clothes was shrunk by the original London told-water process. i Promise yourself to see these clothes tomorrow. I I i i: fYTHF Q*15?20 I I Cl U 11 ILO ’IP tgyail SEE THE GUARANTEE ANO IjESSy >• PRICE TICKET ON THE SLEEVE . i Teeple, Brandyberry & Peterson.
She' whacked consumption. Red Cross Seals Are a Powerful Weapon. She wits richly gowned and bedecked with furs and Jewels, lie was a shabby, wizen faced sort of man. Huth of j them came up to the Red Cross Seal > booth nt tlie sniqe time. "My wile Is dying witli consumption.” he said In u» husky voice, *‘au’ we ain't got much money, because I'm out of work, but slio did want me to buy five of them seals. She says If she inn take it , wliuek lit consumption afore she (lies , she'll rest easier, uu’ I gu.'-> she will.' lie willed Ids eyes witli Ills knuekirs mid reached for tile p;-«•!<:• tai- of seals will 'll the pretty attendant hud put up I for liliu. •'Where do you live';" said the richly dressed woman, who had lieeu :.n Interested listener to the shabby mail'brief story. Hi 1 gave an nililrc in one of tlie poorest tenement hoi neigh borlioods. "I wits going to buy a few souls for my little girl." said the woman, "but - your wife's desire to get n whack at consumption has shown me what I should do. Please give me SSO worth, miss. Tell yotl'r wife she whacked con sumption harder than she expected.” YOUR TUBERCULOSIS BILL. How Much Do You Lose if You Do Not Buy Red Cross Seals? Suppose you were a father of a fam ! Uy of three children earning s3»a day and you were taken siek with tuficrcui losis. What would it cost you to get . I well, and what would it have cost you i to have done your share to prevent this disease from striking you? Here j are a few leading items of expense: Six months' treatment in sanitarium $250 00 Care, family of four, at $8 per week for six months 192 00 Loss of wages for six months at $3 per day 432 00 Total $B7l uv Now. what would have been your share in the prevention of tuberculo sis? "An ounce of prevention" in the proper cure of the body SOO 0 A study of soma literature on the prevention of tuberculosis, which can be secured free of charge ... 00 00 The stopping of all bodily excesses 00 IO A timely examination by a doctor .. 3v. The purchase of 100 Red Cross Seats as your share In the general preventive campaign against tuberculosis 1 O'’ . —..., ! Total H 00 How much do you lose? _ RED CROSS SEALS DECREASE TUBERCULOSIS RATE. “Would to God your work had started fifty years ago,” was the comment of I an Arizona consumptive in writing the i other day to Dr. Hoyt E. Dearholt, ex ' ecutive secretary of tin* Wisconsin Anti-tuberculosis association. Part of the letter follows: "Fine work, old chap! That decrease ' j in tlie dentil rate seems a remarkable j gain to me. 1 had not expected results as soon ns that. 1 have always laughed i nt the authorities who claimed that in ten years a case of tuberculosis would be as rare as one of smallpox is today. The bad work of centuries cannot be undone in ten years, and so 1 marvel at your wonderful progress. I trust the errors in statistics, if any. are all it your favor. You inspire me. Would to God your work had started fifty years ago. Probably then the disease would have missed me.” The letter contained a check for Red ! Cross Seals, from the sale of which the I entire support of the Wisconsin work is derived. Every seal you buy is a bul , let in the fight against tuberculosis. ~ ;ELLEN EXPLAINS RED CROSS' SEALS. Ellen, who is seven years old and i lives out in Kansas City, came home j from school tlie other day with a red. green and white “subscription card” ■ I the teacher had given her. Iler mother | had seen something about Red Cross Seals in the paper, but didn’t know , j just what it "was all about. “Oh,” said the seven-year-old proudi ly. "don’t you know? They use the i money to take care of sick folks—sick | folks that haven't got any money to i take care of 'eroselves. The money ! they get from the Santy Claus seals . goes to run a hospital for those folks. ! And they pay doctors and nurses to ' teach people how to get well and how I m t to get sick. Teacher told us all about it. See. this paper tells.” Then Ellen’s mother read the folder ' that small daughter had brought home, I tolling how often tuberculosis can be ! I ' prevented, and when she had finished [ i she signed the card for a liberal num- | ber of seals.
• | SOME RED CROSS SEAL $ f FIGURES. tj T Few people have any concep- £ X tion of the magnitude of the -j- --*. a Red Cross Christmas Seal Cam- j, X palgn. Here are a few figures -!• X that will show what a gigantic 4- movement this is. Already 115, v X 000.000 seals have been printed X T and practically that entire num- y X ber distributed to agents in nl- .- T most every state in the Union. T X Probably 15.000.000 more will J. •r be needed. Advertising circulars, T X posters, cards, etc., to the num- -I- -** ber of several million, have been T X distributed. It is c: tinmlcd that -JX the army of paid and volunteer • • workers engaged in selling seals y numbers well over 100.000. The , : , • • advertising and publicity donut- y ed to the campaign amounts to J. • • several hundred thousand dollars, y i
EASY TO Olffi MR GRAY HB Try this! Mix Sage Tea and Sulphur and brush it through your hair, taking one stiand at a time. W’.en you d irl.cn your hair with ■a red Sulphur, no one can UU, I.' i;ik" it's done no iiatnrnlh, so <-'<’■’' ' <ir".p thia mixture, though, rd I ■i i a.. ' Mid troublesome. For 50 cv .on can'!>!.. at .my uiug store the iv i :<>-uae calle'! “Wyeth's Sage y.:r j ■Sulpiaii ll.'iir Remedy.” You Jv-d i u unp ii a •■'onge or soft bruch >.vil h i' . :d 'dr uv (■ I-' through your htiir, tub’ . null Hr ml nt a'time. By r-< >.g nil gray hair diaapjionrs, and. nt..i • ..noil r r.npiiention or two. your i-. -i-.■on »*?> hi-nutif.illy darkened., gloa .-xiiriuit. You will aLo discover d..;: Irtiff is gone and hnir has stop|>ed fallmj;. i (bay, faded hair, though no diug. -ce, I ia a sign of old nge, and as wo all i '- . .ire a youthful and nttrnctiv' r- . •.nee. go! I ns)- at once vii:’ ivy o. • age and Sulphur and look years younger. o NO HEADACHE OR NEURALGIA PAIN Get a 10 cent package of Dr.' Jaanes’ Headache Powders and don’t suffer. When your head aehes you simply !, must have relief or you will go wild. It’s needless to suffer when you can take a remedy like Dr. James’ Headache Powders and relieve the pain and neuralgia at once. Send someone to the drug store now for a dime package of Dr. James’ Headache Powders. Don't suffer! In a few moments you will feci fine—headache gone—no more neuralgia pain. wifSi FOB SM. W Woman Fifty Years OldCoughed IV.ore or Less Since Childhood—Found No Relief Until She Get Vinol. Dayton, Ohio.—“l want everybody to know*what Vinol has done for me. lam now fifty years old and ever since i was a young girl I have had a cough most of the time, and sick headaches which left me weak and with no desire foi food. “I took all kinds of medicines but nothing seemed to do me any good. Finally my druggist asked m_ to try Vinol, saying that if it did not help me he would refund my money. I felt so I much better after taking one bottle ' I bought more. Now my cough is entirely cured. I have no more sick headaches. I have a good appetite and 1 feel better than I ever did in my life, I and 1 cannot recommend Vinol too highly.’’-Mrs. J. C. Schneidee, Dayton, Ohio. Vinol is not a secret nostrum, s:mpiy a combination of the medicinal eb-ment-: found in ccd livers, together v> jth tonic iron, contains no oil and i > delicious tasting. We ask every man or worr.-.n in this vicinity suffering from ir.ic * coughs, colds oi bronchitis, i weak, run-down person to ti v ' SMITH, YAGER & FALK. I o PUBLIC SALE. As I have rented my farm I vzill of 1 ; fer for sale at my residence, 2 miles . ast and IVi miles south of Monroe, or ; 8 miles soutneast of Decatur, near s Pleasant Valley church, on Thursday, | December 10, 1914, beginning at 12:30 ; o’clock p. m., the following property, 'to-wit: Four head of horses, consistI ing of one bay team brood mares, i weighing about 1600 Ths. each, 8 and I 9 years old: they are well matched ahd are with seal, better horses never worked in harness; dapple dun driving | mare, with white inane and tail, coi.iJng 3 years old, broke; bay driving! mare, 11 years old, lady broke. Four I head of cattle, consisting of 4-ycar-old ' briudie cow, fresh 2nd day of April; 'gives good rich milk; full blooded ■ red bull cow, will be. fresh by day of j sale; red yearling heifer, out of last idescribed cow; Guernsey heifer, Comi ing 2 years old, will be fresh 15th day iof March. Farming implements, con- ' sisting of Milwaukee binder, walking ! cultivator, Quail hay tedder, good 11 ly rake, John Deere walking breaking : plow, Deering mowing machine, spring Booth harrow, Deering disc, top buggy, 'gravel bed, be~t fork, Turnbull wagon, 'triple bed; set double work harness, good as new; 4 new leather collars, •large and small; many other articles itoo numerous to mention. Poultry,, jconsisting of 26 head of Mammoth: ! Bronne turkeys, 10 gobblers and '6 iliens. My turkeys are of the Giant! (strain and are noted for their quick growth, hardiness .largo bone, full iresst sal beautiful plumage. Terms:-All sums under 5.5 00 cash in L. 'id: over $5.00 a credit of 12: ncntl:.: will be given, purchaser gia- ' ing note with approved security; 4 per I cent off for cash. No property remov-l jed until settled for. SARAH AYRES. ‘
JL^ estioh^B^ s “ $ r! fWSBA iIK iwfir ' iP I $ IK W® In 0-1 $ Wiv leave voiir books »ay abound when I V y , on can biy a section for 52. 25 | Yager Bros. & Reinking WRY BUY A FACTORY MADE HARNESS When you can buy a Custom made Harness at the same price Mv Harness are made of the best Oak Tanned Leather and they cost you no more than the Hemlock tanned stock. Buggies: I have them, the old reliable Zimmerman Storm buggy cant be beat for looks or wear. Blankets and Robes: I am going to close them out this Month, Regardless of cost. Repairing at very reasonable prices. Terms Cash c r credit on approved notes. A. W. TANVASS NORTH SECOND ST. THE YJk/LIITtr GT'Af' wni I t. O I AU EXTRA MILD CIGAR “Be Suoke That Made The Nickel Worth A Dime” ASK FOR IT EVERY WHERE MONEY TO LOAN” We have a good supply of money to loan at i- x•) r n: interest payable semi-annually, wi-n partial, or full payment privilege, on farms with perfect reord titles. SHAMP & KELLER ~ Office with Frisinger & Co, slotice To Consumers On and after Ja wary 1, 1915, all ■ ' counts due on Electric Lights and Later must be paid at the office of the City Treasurer by the 20th. of each ’Uoiith, Al 9 per cent penalty will be ■«! do;; to all accounts that have not be'ii p iid after th s date. Treasurers office op n from 9 A. M. until 4 P. M. I M. J. MY LOTT jpermt'ndent City Light & Power Plant.
