Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 13, Number 61, Decatur, Adams County, 12 March 1915 — Page 6
rp r-~-—4 EXOESOE3 M o THE DAILY MARKET REPORTS o ■ EZXOESOE3 Corrected Every Afternoon * Q-r » -a E3OE=3OE=I
EAST BUFFALO. East Buffalo, N. Y„ Mar. 12 (Special to Daily Democrat)- Receipts. ’.- 2GO; shipments, 1,900; official to New York yesterday, $7.60; hops closing rtcuilj. Medium and heavy, $7.25«J57.4C: mixed and Yorkers, $7.50©57.55; pigs and lights, $7.2501 $7.40; roughs. $« 2) $0.30; stags, s4.r>O(flss.oo; sheep, 2.000; strong; top lambs, $10,85, cattle. 500; slow. J II O. T. BURK. New corn ;..90c Clover seed s>.o3 Jtlsike seed ..... $ c ’ 5 . Wheat $1.40 Rye 9')° Barley _ • Ihnothy H 0$ to IS.tft Oats NIBLICK A CO. Eggs I' l ' Rutter 18c/f2'< FULLLMKAMPB. Eggs I Butter 17e(h27«j BEHLINGS. Indian Runner ducvs Sc | • Chickens He Fowls I’c Ducks He Geese lie Young turkeys He Old Tom turkeys He Old Hen turkeys He )id Rooster* 5< Butter, packing stock ISc Eggs 15c abor* prices p<ua for poutuy tree from feed.
DO VOU WANT TO FILE An Affidavit of Mortgage Indebtedness? Now is the time. I have the necessarv blanks and can d > this for you any time daring the time allowed by law, March and April. Don’t delay. Dj it now and have it out of the way. RUTH BALTZELL. Notary AT COUNTY AUDITORS OFFI ’E “A MAN MUST St MAKE Si THEN MONEY MAKES THE MAN” Every one who has an earning power beyorld, bare necessities is or should be an investor. He should of all have a bank account and as fast as he accumu’ates a surplus he should invest it in good bonds or real estate both of which are thoroughly seasoned, time-tried and pan-ic-tested. We believe bonds oiler the best opportunity for investment for the greatest number of p ople. They are issued in denominations of SSO up to SI,OOO so are available to large or small investors, and mature serially so that a man can choose the ye'ir when his money will be paid back to him ■n our years experience in assisting our customers to invest their savings and surplus t > the best advantage we have found that no two investors needs aie the same. We have therefore evolved different plans to meet the demands of every class of investor. Oi eof our plans will fit your case exactly. In our thirteen years expe ience no investor has ever suffered loss of any security bought of us. WRITE TODAY FOR FREE INFORMATION CONCERNING METHODS OF SAVING AND INVESTING. HmmiKMsm Amuntn safe MILLER & COMPANY Inc. DICK MILLER, President. FLETCHER TRUST BLDG. . INDIANAPOLIS.
SOWING MONEY” ’ mwl ]/ Ol takesGßlT to deny yourself of certain /] V V / Vi pleasures and luxuries but you put off V STARTING. 7 \ | I M u \ottcant gpraspthe scheme of growth—that I Success begins as a bud and that the ripened fruit (I I uOCW fortune will never be yours if you kill the Op, * blossom of chance by the early frost of neglect.” ||l ? - JwwirAUFHM. CZXx W BP] •Jsecatur*3w* <
i KALVER MARKETS. Wool , #m«.ma.>ls*sM Beef bides , Calf 18c vl Tallow 6c ■ Sheep pelts Z6c<Ml.oo LOCAL PRODUCE MARKET. , ——. > Chickens 11c Indian Runner ducks Sc Fowls He * Ducks lie i Geese lie ' Young turkeys 14c Obi Tom turkeys lie 1 Old Hen turkeys 11c Old Roosters 5c Eggs ; 15c .Butter 18c Above prices paid for poultry fre. ■ urn feed DECATUR CREAMERY CO. Butterfat, delivered 30c Butterfat, in country 27c ■ Butter, wholesale 30c | Butter, retail 33c COAL PRICES. ! Stove $7.5< 1 ) Egg 7.60 ('bestnut, hard .$7.7f . Poca, egg and lump $5.00 I W. Ash $4.6t V. Splint $4.25 H. Valley $4.26 R. Lion $4.65 Car.nell s6.o< J. Hill s6.m Kentucky s4.jo Lurlg $4.5(
PUBLIC SALE. | As I tun going to break up housekl keeping on account of the death of i my wile, I will offer at public auction my household goods at my residence >ii North Fifth street, on Saturday, March 13, 1915, beginning at 12;.1O | o’clock, the following property: Iron bedstead, wooden bedstead, 6 dining room chairs, dining room table, busi set, small stand, 2 rockers, library tnbib, davenport, dresser, kitchen table, ( Garland range, kitchen cabinet. Uno- ! leuin, 3 rugs, a few pictures, a Wilson , beater, fruit jars, hiwn mower, and , a number of other articles. , Terms: —Cash. CHARLES W. KRAFT. John Spuhler, Auct. Geo. McManama, Clerk. sStl — - -O-- - PUBLIC SALE. The undersigned will give a publ’c ' sale of his farm stock and machinery j at his residence, three-quarters of a mile east of Salem, on Friday, March ■ 12. Four horses, cattle, hogs, machinery and grain. Usual terms. 58t2 J. C. HARVEY. o SAVE YOUR POULTRY. Lippincott’s One Night Roup, Gapes, White Diarrhoea Cure. It has no equal.' For 'sale by The Holthouse Drug Co.. Rexall Drug Store, Enter- 1 I rise Drug Co. 58t30 Don’t worry about your i Easter suit. Order one oi our $16.50 made to measure suits and get suit satisfac-; tion.—Elwood Tailoring Co. Rear of People’s Loan &' Thist Co. ’ r " !1, g&mnMn Your savings are Safe Your cavings account is not affected by any of the depressions that sc often hazard the safety of other forms of investment. The crops may fail, real estate may depreciate in value, commercial activities may become stagnant, and the whole field of finance feel a stringency— But the man or woman whose earnings are placed in a bank such as THIS may view the situation with complacency, so far as the safety of his or her earnings are concerned. We solicit the accounts of all who desire an absolutely safe custodian of their mcney. A dollar or more starts an account. FIRST NATIONAL BANK DECVTUR, INDIANA Members Federal Reserve Association. Tl»e METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE CO. For High Class Insurance. and LOWEST RATES ; Annual Dividends on all Contracts. J. M. KELLY. Agcrt.
“— ONE CAUSE OF EYESTRAIN G'cssy Paper Exceedingly HarmfulCream and Pale Blue Tints Said to Be the Best. It Is said that the reflec’lon of Hffhl from glossy paper is particularly hare' on the eyes. Some persons have gone so far as to recommend that no calendered or coated paper be used in any schoolbooks, since glossy prfper re fleets light rays directly without dlf fusing them, to save the eyes. The public and the printers, on the other hand, have been demanding more high ' ly glazed paper on account of its rich ness and fitness for half-tone work. To prove their point, the antiglare socle ties have printed a number of parnph lets ou mat and even bond paper While the half-tone work is not sc good, beautiful results can be obtained with the offset process, and the higher coet of tfie paper is compeu | satod for by its lightness. From roughsurfaced paper the study has been car : ried to tinted paper Cream and pair 1 blue tints seem to involve less eye ! strain than whits paper, and if the ' tints are alternated throughout a book each page brings a restful cl mge tc the eyes. The thickness of the papei and the presence of too much woof pulp has been considered, along with the question of size and legibility of type. The whole discussion has been brought about by the Increase in eye trouble among schcol children. COMETS AND SOLAR SYSTEM New Suggestion Has Stirrrd Up Sci entists—Existence of Gaseous Masses Now Believed. It is suggested that some of th< striking changes manifested by cer tatn comets in executing tbe'r orhiti are due to the fact that thoj eucoun ' ter masses of gaa in Interplanetary space, and that they are not moving in a vacuum, says a writer in the Sci entitle American. If there are sucl gaseous masses, then in view of ths inclinations and extent of their orbits comets are peculiarly fitted to act as explorers, and there is every proba billty that they will sooner or later en counter such masses. The planets move in a narrow zene near the plans of the ecliptic, while’ the inclinatlot of the cometary orbits is sometimes considerable, varying for the periodic comets from three degrees to 162 de grees. As a consequence, comets at tain regions of the solar system, whers no other bodies pentrate Many phe nomena seem to receive a satisfactory explanation if the existence of gaseous masses scattered through the- solat system be admitted. These gaseous masses, probably of different chemical constitution, may be considered as the residue of the initial nebula, having es caped the phenomena of combustion which gave rise to the other members of the solar system. The Practice of Kicking. Kicking, like charity, should begin at home. It ought to be the duty of every body at home to object, persistently and effectively, to the specific overcroAvded street car. the badly paved road, ths encroaching doorstep, the neglected yard, the malodorous cesspool, the irresponsible motor car and the reckless railroad —especially if he have any personal part in the main tenance of similar abuses. If the ten dency of these evils were rightly apprehended, if a prrt only of the effort that is expended, presumably, in objecting to generalized, foreign and I futile subjects were bestowed on spe ciflc and tangible details, if we would forego the emotional pleasure of the impersonal “muckrake” to assail the evil at our very feet —especially if each one of us were careful to avoid offense in matters of the same kind — our country would surely be a much fairer one.—Unpopular Review. Some New Ones. In a recent school examination the following answers were given to questions asked: How fast does the heart beat? Sixty i times a minute. What is the pulse? The pulse is some little piuscle that bumps up and down. What use is the pulse to physicians? The doctor feels.it to see if he is bet- ' ter next time. Name two breeds of dairy cattle and ; tell which is best milk producer. AnI swer: Bull and cow; the cow is best ' milk producer. Kame three countries In the Balkan peninsula and tell why they are of interest at present. Answer: Nicaragua, Yucatan and Turkey, and are of I interest because they are trying to drive the turkeys out of Europe. Never Got Through Beresford Book. During the Boxer rebellion in China one of the missionaries was reading Ixird Charles Beresford's book on “The Break-up of China” while the bullets of the Boxers were raining round. He had not gone very far into the volume when the pages wooed him to sleep. The book lay beside him on the pillow. Biff-ff-ff! camo a Mannlicher bullet through the window, In a. bee line for the man’s head, but Lord Charles' book lay in the bee line. The bullet stuck in the book, but (ailed to penetrate it. The missionary jumped up, gave shanks for his escape, packed up the book ready for the first parcel post, ind addressed to Lord Charles Beresford with a polite note. He said: “My Lord—l think it only right to send you this copy of your excellent book . . . is neither myself nor the Boxers’ bullets can get through it”
■ /i • / 1 / W f = I — —k "Mod I e 1 IJ \ N Niblick l(o. I Announce the first presents- JfaH tion of their spring coats and H suits from Bischof. V || M ■ — . - 1 I y 4 *—S 2 \J ■ t, L ? ? Automobile Painting H PRICES RICH? AND PROMPT SERVICE. ■ Come in and look at some of the jobs that are finished. 9 DECATUR CARRIAGE WORKS ■ W. D. PORTER, Prep. ■ Corner Ist. & Monroe Sts. Phone 123
WEAK, NERVOUS OHIO WOMAN Made Well By Delicious Vinol Bellefontaine, Ohio. —“ My blood was very poor —1 was in a weak, nervous, run-down condition. I tried different remedies without benefit and one day my druggist told me about Vinol. 1 i tried it and it built me up in every way ■ — blood, strength and nerves, and I tell • my friends it is the best medicine on earth.”—Mrs. Earl Brunson. ; Vino!, our delicious cod liver and iron tonic without oil, sharpens the appetite, aids digestion, enriches the blood and ; in this natural manner creates strength. FOR SALE. Single Combed Rhode Island Red eggs for hatching and they are good ones; 75 cents and a dollar a setting. GEORGE W. BURKETT, Decatur, Ind. ’Phone Gia, R. R. 11. 60t2 AMSBAUGH & BRADLEY CHIROPRACTORS Uv< r Charlie Vog'cwi Hi-* Sh >e Store Hours 1 to 5 & 7 to 8 p.m. Sundajs by appointnu nt. i lady Attendant. NOTICE TO LIGHT CONSUMERS City light and power bills are now due. Penalty if not paid on or before the 20th. Payable at city treasurer’s office. Call ’phone 225 for any information regarding your bill. B9tl ° —o 1 DEMOCRAT WANT ADS PAY BIG ■ II I ■ Ml IM> I !»u , . w ,
i|*i 1 I r I V — r P 'is'fflxJ I 1 ’ Z . ' I Ready for plo vine? Are you going to lose time and mom and dn Q ;.h I with that same o'd plow or are vou going to invent a lit tin n/ v a & P?? r 1? the n turn for your seasons work? Someday X vmt re \ in' o our store and let us show you the G YLE RI DING FI/ )W Th JI | Bt *!?? I has so many good points it would take all of the spa -e m ihi/r The of them. It will be rr.orey in your noeUt co seX o(k * W you buy or not. Your’s for bet er servi e. 01 lh ‘ se P‘»ws whether | LLIET/ H AXRjD\A//\ ■r'w I
THE DOLLAR DEPOSITOR Is Just as Welcome Here as the larger Oner. V/e Are “NO RESPECTOR OF PERSONS” ■ Come in and let us fill out your Mortgage Exemption. THE PEOPLES LOAN & TRUST CO. | James Rupel Pres. M. Kirsch Cashier W. A. Lower Sec’y BANK OF SERVICE ■ REDUCE YOUR TAXES I ekoee33So 13 March and April are the months designated by I law in wh ch to file your affidavit of Mortgage I Tndehtedn a s. During this time I will be found I at the (’• only Treasurer’s office. Let me fill | I them out for you correctly. la PATTERSON Notary || HOMtSEEKER EXCI RSI )N FARES TO I SOUTHWEST I ■ CLOVER LEAF ROUTE i First and Third Tuesdays of each month. ■ See IL J. THOMPSON, Agent. Decatur, | for information. I
