Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 13, Number 59, Decatur, Adams County, 10 March 1915 — Page 6
pat I 1 ■'-■-I j“3OE2OE2a fl '"I EJI O THE DAILY MARKET REPORTS O »i 1 E3025053 IT. £T Corrected Every Afternoon p (La ■■ ■—»£=xoesO£xi "-am s—l
EAST BUFFALO. £“Ft Buffalo, K. Y., Mnr. IC—(Special to Doily Democrat)- Roilpts.*!,-C-3; chii merits, 760; c.fficla! to Nv ■ Yer!; yesterday, 760; licgo closing eteady. i! o, $7.C0©?7.60; medium, mixed end Yorkers, $7,900 3T.55: 1 if”. JT.GOff47-80: roughs, rtaga, »4.50(?58.50; sheep, 2,009; stonily; top lambs, $10.35; cattle, 50; steady. C. T. BURK. New corn Clover seed s>■' A latke seed 17.25 Wheat $134 Hye 90c Barley 60. 7 linothy H<-<m $3 00 tn $2.26 Oats s"c NIBLICK & CO. Eggs 15c Butter 18c@2>c FULLL.SKAa.PBEggs ~ 1-7 Butter 17c@27c 6E.HLINGS. Indian Runner duck* Sc| Chickens lie Fowls '. I’.c, Ducks lit' Geese lie Young turkeys lie Old Toni turkeys lie I Old Hen turkeys He )id Rocaters 5. Butter, packing stock 18c I Eggs luc <tx>v* price* p*:* tut fvulttj tree rrom feed
1)0 you WANT TO FILE IMULL. L.M4gm An Affidavit of Mortgage Indebtedness? Now is the time. I have the necessarv blanks and can d > this for you any time during the time allowed by law. March and April. Don’t delay. Do it now and have it out of the way. RUTH BALTZELL, Notary AT COUNTY AUDITORS OFFICE • The Moses Greenhouse Co. Can supply you with fresh cut Roses, Carnations, Potted Plants, Ferns, etc. Special orders filled on short notice. We have also added landscape gardening, ornamental trees, shrubs and roses. FRUIT TREES Apples, each at 15c to 35c—per ten $1.30 to $3.00 Pears each at 25c to 60c—per ten s’.o9 to $5.00 Peaches each 15c to 25c—per ten...-- SI.OO to S2.C? ' Cherries each 40c to 50c—per ten $3.50 co $4.06 Plums each 40c to 75c—per ten --..53.00 to $6.00 j NOTICE THESE PRICES Hardy Roses, including Crimson Rambler and others each . . . . . . 4(k Shrubs California Private for hedge, bright green per ten . 80c to $1.25 Ibo, stands more cold, per teji . . . SI.OO to $1.50 Maple trees from nursery -h 50c Peonies 35c to 75c. Hydrangeas 20c to bOc. Lilacs purple or white 50c Clematis 50c We don’t canvass, hence our low prices. Call and look over catalogues. Special attention given orders for flowers fur funerals. MOSES GREENHOUSE CO.
B’TnaSGMTtostortl SOWING MONEY” I " n &GRIT to deny yourself of certain II s and luxuries but you put off V V gpraspthe scheme of growth — that A as a bud and that the ripened fruit U lever be yours if you kill the nee by the early frost of negiectf hl J/etteer KAurttAH. W :atur-sni>-S
KALVER MARKETS. Wool ...... w «.„..Xle92tc Beef hide* He Calf »e Fallow frr Sheep pelts 25c© 11.00 LOCAL PRODUCE MARKET. Chickens 11. Indi, it Runner ducks Sc Fowls 11, Ducks lit Cccse h, 7 r ing turkeys 14< i. Id Tom turkeys Hi old H ft turk ys Hi Old Roosters f< E r« 15c Butter 18< Above prices paid for poultry tre. 'ri>Ui feed. DECATUR CREAMERY CO. Butt rs.-t. d l;vcr> <1 30c I " rfat. in country 27c ■ I ?r, wholesale 30c I I "t retail 33c I COAL PRICES. Stove 17.501 <■-- 7.50 ’hebinut, hard $7.75 ; i o. a, egg and lump $5.00 W. Ash $4.50 V Splint »4.2 t j .1. Valley ...$4.25 i fl. Lion |4.50 Cannell $6 0> J. Hill ss.o< Kentucky 14 ? j Lurir $«o-
PUBLIC SALE. — | As lam going to break up house- ) keeping en ii< count of the death of * my wife, 1 will offer at public auction ' my household goods at my residence en North Fifth street, on Saturday, j March 13, 1915, beginning at 12:30 L o'clock, the following property: Iron | I bedstead, wooden bedstead, 6 dining I! room cl’.airs, dining room table, bufl|fet, small stand. 2 rockers, library la-j I bib, davenport, dresser, kitchen table, j e Garland range, kitchen cabinet, lino- ; I cum. 7 rugs, a few pictures, a Wilson I .he ter, fruit jars, lawn mow<r, and . a number of other articles. , Terms: —Cash. CHARLES W. KRAFT, j John Spuhler. Auct. Geo. MeManama, Clerk. 58tii PUBLIC SALE. The undersigned will give a publ'c sale of his farm stock and machinery at his residence, three-quarters of r. mile east of Salem, on Friday, March! '.2. Four horses, cattle, hogs, machin:y and gra.n. Usual terms. 5512 J. C. HARVEY. SAVE YOUR POULTRY. Llppim-otCs Ono Might Roup. Gapes ' White Diarrhoea Cure. it has no qua!. For sale by The Holthouse Drug Co.. Pexall Drug Store, Enter rl.'o Drug Co. SSt3O Don’t worry about your 1 Easter suit. Order one of our $16.50 made to measure! suits and get suit satisfac-j Hion.™Elwood Tailoring Co. Rear of People's Loan & Trust Co. r '’ !J * i Slow and Steady wins Suppose your savings account with us when started shows only a dal lar to your credit. Suppose you make a practice of ad ding to it a dollar every week— EVERY week. Suppose that you continue this for three or four years— See what a nice ,tidy sum of rr.cnaj will be yours at the end of that I time, counting the interest which; your money earns. And the chances are that the schilling which you give yourself in order to deposit a dollar EVERY week during that time will be worth more to you in the futuie than the money saved. Suppose then you begin this week with a dollar. FIRST NATIONAL BANK DECATUR, INDIANA Members Federal Reserve Association, i Ttie METROPOLITAN LIFE • INSURANCE CO. For High Class Insurance. and LOWEST RATES , Annual Dividends on all Contracts. | J. M. KELLY. A;c;t. I I
LOOK ON THE BRIGHT SIDE — Afflictions and Complaints About Which So Many Wcrry Really Don’t Amount to So Much. I We are full of afflictions and com'j plaints. Our salary is too low, our ' rent too high. Somebody of less merit ; gets a better job Our children are disobedient and extravagant The street cars are slow and crowded. The wheat crop has failed. Cholera gets the hogs Every now and then, however, we get the real measure of these tribulations This neighbor is not worrying much about salary or rent, because the I doctors have told him he must soon i die. That neighbor finds no fault in | his child, because It Iles dead. The poor ventilation of our house seems quite tolerable in contrast with that other house where snow beats through the cracks and there is neither fuel nor food. Before such comparisons we are dumb and contented for a day or a week So in our national life; how manifold and poignant are the causes of complaint—until we look across at those places in Europe where death, wounds and beggary are the common lot! Then—well, we shall complain as - often and as bitterly as ever; but we shall Whistle 'Hail Columbia!” under our breath while doiug it. —Saturday Evening Post. MORAL TRAINING THE BEST Attempt to Cure Waywardness by Surgery Alleged to Be a Failure. Few sensible persons will be surprised to learn that a recent surgical i operation performed In the hope of making a decent man out of a criminal has resulted in failure, says the Philadelphia inquirer. It is always possible that the weakness or the dull- ! ness of a boy or girl may be due to I some curable physical or mental ail- | ment, but to presume that mere wayI wardness can be reformed by use of the surgeon s knife is to presume too much on the credulity of human na ture. | The truth of the matter is that these stray lambs need moral training in their youth and their failure to get it is a handicap that is only too apt to remain with them through life. Nothing is more discouraging than the yellow streak that appears in some persons, and nothing seems more difficult to eradicate. Their cases should have the attention of the experts, but we feel sure that they stand in need of the punishment that fits the crime rather than sentimental experiments on the part of philanthropists jvho mean well, but who only encourage crime by their foolish toleration of wrongdoing. Finding Noise That Least Annoys. The question of different kinds of , noises from a practical point of view, and with special reference to altomobile horns, was considered by Professor Marage at a recent meeting of : the Academic des Sciences He inves j tigated the subject by executing pieces of music upon ancient and modern instruments, before a number of persons chosen from all professions. The general result was that high pitched sounds produced a more disa greeable impression than those of low pitch, and since it appears that the grave sounds are more agreeable to the ear he recommends that such sounds be used for signals as much as possible. In fact, the use of the siren has been prohibited in many European towns. He thinks that automobiles should have two kinds of signals, one a grave sound for city use which does ■ not annoy the passers, and a loud ■ and shrill sound for use in the coun- ; try, which sound will carry to a long distance. Differing Forms of Speech. 1 The common objects and phenomena ' of nature are often differently named in English and American. Such Americanisms as creek and run for small i streams are practically unknown in j England, and the English moor is a i stranger in the United States. The I Englishman is naturally but little fa- i miliar with bayou, gulch, gully, canyon, 1 bitte, divide and bluff. He knows the r meaning of sound (e. g. Long Island 1 sound), but always uses channel in place of it. < In the same way the American j knows the meaning of the English bog, < but almost always uses swamp or ( marsh (often elided to ma’sh). Foot- i hill is an Americanism, so is cold i snap, so also are prairie, backwoods, ! flats and neck (in the sense of peninsula). The Englishman seldom, if ever, i describes a severe storm as a hurricane, a cyclone, tornado or blizzard. He does not say that the temperature is 29 degrees or that the thermometer or the mercury is at 29 degrees, but , that there are three degrees of frost c He calls ice water iced water. I Intelligence of the Beaver. ( The life history of the beaver dis- , closes a succession of episodes in ‘ each of which a reasoning faculty is J employed. Unlike other animals, the beaver’s Intelligence consists not only , in doing the same things over and over again, but in the ability to deal ' ' understandlngly with novel situations. ' Certain of Its actions probably arise 1 from the same Instinct that governs I the rest of the lower animals, but the orderly sequence in which they are , performed leads many to believe that .. the beaver shares with man a claim to J reasoning faculties _ . ' ] ■■ . -
SURPRISE No. 2 I i vicinity who seemingly WILLNOTbe There are some people in Deratur Wd v w and see if we can do all wc claim, convinced. Now why don t you th(?m we are nQ gOQd . If we cannot just go out vou your trouble without If we were not sure we could 1.0 A r-- ' make t hj ß statement? aiking vou one question, would we do th.. ( . wi)l not talk about . p ack . NO! C une an t see us and we wi l taiK l Uis Hemorrhagica inAnd to the first 20 that come to our w-c re I March the 20th. 1915, we W| H gi'« <- f j wjl| I justments, and to all others aftvr . - I give one free adjustment, S > I We do not deal with Symptoms for many 4i-es have the same symptoms. I Take Demenita Paran tjc and ’ >() j t is hard to distinguish the Robertson puul and the Hit• b bonp wil | teU you what the difference. But we hy an exan nation - q r and Be F j^ t . organ is affeettd. WE DO NUT DIAGNOoE.-So Come ana ue rirai. AMSBAUGH & BRADLEY Chiropractors, over Charlie \oglewcdes Shoe Store. DECATUR, IND. I Hours Ito 5 & 7toBP. M. We have a Lady Helper to assist in taking care o ; the Ladies. Automobile Painting PRICES RIGHT AND PROMPT SERVICE. Come in and look at some of the jobs that are finished. DECATUR CARRIAGE WORKS W. D. PORTED, Prop. Corner Ist. & Monroe Sts. Phone 123
WHAT $lO 010 FOR THIS WOMAN The Price She Paid for Lydia E.Pinkham’sV egetable Coni' pound Which Brought Good Health. Danvihe, Va.—“ I have only spent ten dollars on your medicine and I feel so r ——- much better than I : di< i when the doctor was treating me. I —BE don’t suffer any ■ bearing down pains Th f . at all now end I sleep " $ - - we "- cannot say enough for Lydia E. il Pinkham’s VegetafIMC \./| I |i hie Compound and ® | | I Liver Pills as they J I I have done so much for me. lam enjoying good health now and owe it all to your remedies. I take pleasure in telling my friends and neighbors about them.”—Mrs. Mattie Haley, 501 Coiquhone Street, Danville, Va. No woman suffering from any form of female troubles should lose hope until she has given Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a fair trial. This famous remedy, the medicinal ingredients of which are derived from native r.iots and herbs, has for forty years proved to be a most valuable tonic and invigorator of the female organism. Women everywhere bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. If you have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound will help you,write to Lydia E.PinkhamMedicineCo. (confidential) Lynn, Mass., for advice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence. NOTICE TO LIGHT CONSUMERS City light and power bills are now due. Penalty if not paid on or before the 2cth. Payable at city treasurer’s office. Call ’phone 225 for any information regarding your bill. 53110 Why pay more when yon can get a guaranteed suit for $16.50 made to measure. —Elwcod Tailoring Co., rear -’f F-c rle’s I .can & Trust Co. 51tf> You can pay more, but ou \ ill never got more sat.sfactipn than we guarantee you at sl6.so.—Elwood Tailoring Co. Rear of People’s Loan & Trust Co. 56t6
THE DOLLAR DEPOSITOR Is Just as Welcome Here as the larger Ones. V/e Are “NO RESPECTOR OF PERSONS” Come in and let us fill out y )ur Mortgage Exemption. THE PEOPLES LOAN & TRUST CO. James Rupel Pres. M. Kirsch Cashier W. A. Lower Scc’y BANK OF SERVICE REDUCE Y JUR TAXES March and April are the months designated by aw in wh ch to fie your Affidavit of Mortgage indebtedness. During this time I w-ii he found at the G- unty rreasurei’s office. Let me - fill them out for you correctly. Mftßie PATTERSON Notary “A MAN MUST FIM MAKE MONEY ! THEN MONEY MAKES THE MAN” Every one who has an etrninr ncw,r hpvond hare ne»or shou d be an of ‘ he rerumulabs a he should invest it m co. d bonds or real estate Fc test! d Vbl WehLli 1 ' >r T h,y sea>oned , time-tried and panlinvestment for f’ n<!b orttr opportunity for dtennmVnar rea t e rk num^r °f P opifc- They i abb: o hrffe ? nS ° f up to $1 ’ 000 so sre avai! ‘ ! thv a nnn cir ohnn- I+n.vestor 1 + n . vestors > ar ‘d mature serially so •;widbaTtoldm^ iethsyMrwhen money will be vest thcir assistin & our customers to inihave found that no t vTFnvXs^J 681 advantage We i VVe have therefore e\o’v dH ? n ! ed , s ale the sam f* •niands of every class Cr(n k p ans "° meet ’’ eC m fit your case exacd - I n ' X f o,ie w »’ ians investor hasever suffered I™ lrteen Years expe ience no wpttp Torn iv / J ‘ OS3 ofan Ysecurity boughtof us. n°? FREE FORMATION CON. m 3OFSAV,NG AN D INVESTING : , ARE ARSC4 UTELY SAFE MILLER & COMPANY Inc. DICK MILL'AR P £ iden'. FLETCHER TRUST El DC ’ k ’ INDIANAPOLIS.
