Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 13, Number 96, Decatur, Adams County, 22 April 1915 — Page 6
ra====iE=3OX=OEnE===iE=A o THE DAILY MARKET REPORTS o *J Corrected Every Afternoon lU 1 -a esoesQT-a tsrr~r rn.il
east buffalo. East Buffalo, N. Y., April 22-(Spec-ial to Daily Democrat)— Receipts, 1,600; shipments, 950; official to New York yesterday, 1,330; hogs closing steady; pigs weak; some unsold. Medium and heavy, $8.00(i $8.10; yorkers. $8.15® $8.20; pigs, sß.oo@ $8.10; roughs, $6.75f»56.80; stags, sf>.OOfti $0.00; sheep, 2.200; steady; top lambs, $10.00; cattle, 250; slow. G. T. BURR. New corn sl.Ol Clover seed S" 00 Alsike seed 86 75 Wheat Rye 95c Barley ® Oc Timothy seed [email protected] Oats 5 4c NIBLICK & CO. Eggs l9c Butter .•.••••••••••••••••••18c@27c FULLENKAMPS. Eggs l J c Butter 17c@27c BERLING3. Indian Runner ducxa 8c Chickens He Fowls l’-c Ducks He Geese He Young turkeys 14c Old Tom turkeys He Old Hen turkeys lie lid Roosters Sc Butter, packing stock 18c
AMSBAUGH & BRADLEY CHIROPRACTORS Over Charlie Voglewede Shoe Store Hours 1 to 5 & 7 to 8 p.m. Sundays by appointment. Lady Attendant.
$0 FRESXN-r. ilgf DEMOCRAT. APRIL2I ' : ‘ABRAHAM '’ITnCG ', EL without two certa:n ec e —’ • t c ••■.u • . • IU- Shakespeare; haroly a -w. w.--’. ' iOk THAT is NOT TAKEN FR i 1 i1 ■■ tfagggu.. ■■ — . Ths above Certificate v -it- £.*. • rs jnt ,-ut.vEntitles heard? to this ?3<GO Illustrated ► If presented at the ©trice of this to; ether with the stated rm'n-t that l J f ► cover* the necettary EXPENSE i‘err« of ti ts *reM dhlribuiion i:»- H.aug ► ckrk h.i <,<■>. t t c. c i! [«hh4hwswovXx>v- .. ► MAGNIFICENT (Hkc illustration in ann< ■incement> from <!;. to < ! id ’ nATniTrn ' J()UnJ “* Mi ‘ -I’ leather, with overlapping covers s| 'ILLUSTRATED and title stamped in gold, with numerous full-page plates JI l OS Edition tn color fr m the w rid 11 T♦{ ’55 ol the with six hundred superb pictures .gray i.\ . ilh: >RIRI F and making plain the verse in the Lg:.’ot i ' ..t> . XDIDL* knowledge and re earch. The text < nf ■■ m to ] [authorized edition, is self-proncuncing, with copious — . , marginal references, maps and helps ; printed on thin J Amount * ' I bible paper, flat opening at all pages; be autiful, read- i * £.‘-^°E>.! J £NSE e 11 able type. Six Consecutive Free Certificates and the Items I ’ S 1 ; The $3 the x s ac b^ok he ex?^ e t in Also an Edition for Catholics £ I I ILLUSTRATED the Vtyic° of'bfudinlT Thro igh an c\e - arrar ? • <•)-' BIBLE which is in silk doth; have U-en ;> fortunat; : • r ' ■ ‘ O "••*•*«* contain-all of the ilkis- Catholic B'.-it-, I >-h. .y V n. ■ <. < ' trations and maps. I 7 by Cardinal Gibbons and . vrch . ; ?vj I I Six Consecutive Free QI (■’ w Cardinal) I'.rley. as well as 1 y tl'e - - 1 • Certificate and the OIC EXr \ irbiiis Archbishops ut the country. The v' ? ( I Item* ill ok’ rat ions .sts ol the Cil’-page en- ' 1 ’ • out the Tissot and text pictures. It will be <’>• i’ uted in tie same bindings as the Pro- V ’ t _ estant books and at the same Amount Expense items, with the necessary Fr • Crr’ifb :e. ] ’ MAIL ORDERS —Any book by pa' l . I 150 miles; 10 cents 150 to 300 miles; f< r greater distances ask your postmaster , , amount to include for 3 pound*. XI MAIL ORDERS—Any book by parcel post, include EXTRA 7 cents within 150 miles; 10 cents 150 to 300 miles; for greater distances ask your postmaster amount to Include for 3 pounds.
I' \ JJoung man, dosou mean fobS p 3ake time—consider. gjou are the dcstyncr: you must rl‘>’ ? ■ select the pattern for your future. A. hasty start 'vJorft has- ',# J- ! ten success. Each time you change s<mr mind and shift your occupation you must rc-karti and re-earn. QlntiU p you elect a definite course you must accept guidance? j‘ . -v't?V ' s-- < •»EVety Sticccss/ul mans advice toX\ Z ‘i ' ; ; ♦♦day is y To Sai>e <! yourS>t^cmcy’. , One dollar u)ill start you. 2>rinq it to f . . \ Our 23auk today \y r oibfl6amsfeiuduJanh A \ _j
Eggs 19c Above prices are for poultry free . free feed. KALVER'S MARKETS. Wool 21c@25c Beef hides 11c • Calf 13c Tallow 5c Sheep pelts [email protected] ■ " LOCAL PRODLCE MARKET. Chickens w ...11c Indian Runner ducks 8c Fowls He Ducks 11c Geese 11c i Young turkeys 14c | Old Tom turkeys lie Old Hen turkeys 11c Old Roosters Ec Eggs 19c Butter 18c Above prices are for poultry free from feed. DECATUR CREAMERY CO. Butter fat, delivered 30c Butter fat, in country 27c Butter, wholesale 30%c Butter, retail „ 34c 1 *■ ' COAL PRICES. Stove $7.50 Egg 7.50 Chestnut, hard $7.75 Poca, egg and lump $5.00 W. Ash ...$< : V. Splint WJS H. Valley $4.25 R. Lion $4.60 Cannell $6.00 J. Hill $5.00 Kentucky $4 30 Lurlg s46o'
I COFFEY’S RED CROSS HEADACHE POWDERS Valuable In Headache. Neuralgia, Sciatica Rheumatism, all nervous aches pains and the disorders of menstruation accompanied by pain, j toe for 4 Powders 12 Powders 25c Druggist and Dealers or by The Col r * Chemical Co. COLUMBUS, O. | FOR SALE—Two autos. Inquire of J. G. Niblick at the Old Adams Co-1 unty Bank. 69t6. I
GET YOUR ICE We are now delivering ice to (any part of the city. When in need of it call phone 92 oi see Ed Whitright the driver. 11. L. CON FER Dr. L K. Magley VETERINARIAN Corner Third and Monroe Streets. Phones E “li DECATUR, IND. SiiiGGO Worker GEO. BAUMGARTNER BEIINi', IND. PHONE 220 Dr. L V. Connell VETERINARIAN Phnnn office 102 I 0006 Residence 43L Do You Employ More Than One Workman? If so under the new “workmen’s Compensation law. t ou MUST CARRY LIABILITY or furnish proper bond to the s: ate. You can save much worry and perhaps future trouble by placing your liability insurance before the new law goes into effect. We are prepared to give you information and to write your liability insurance in i strong company. Decatur Insurance Company GALLOGLY & JOHNSON
Your Money is get-Gi-able The balance to your credit here is always yours when you want it. You present your cheque and the amount it calls sos is paid you at once. In all respects our system stands for convenience, as well as safety. In all respects we treat the smo.ii depositor with the same consideration as the monied man. Let us take charge cf that little nest egg you are carrying around in your pocket. ’Tis safer. FIRST NATIONAL BANK DECATUR, INDIANA Members Federal Reserve Association.
STUDYING ORIGIN OF LIFE Scientists of Many Kinds Have Found •'"his Ono of "'ost Fascinating of Problems. The search for the elixir of youth passed away with the age of fable; the Bcareh for the secret of life goes on with eveiMncrcaslng persistence. The Harvard professor who has Just ’‘surprised” a Baltimor. audience with a theory on the subject, is only one of a host. For every biologist and physiologist today the problem looms large.Cbomif’s ere thinking of ft. Even the physicists have it on their mind. To all of them it looks simple, and yet is enormously complex Given such Eubstsmees as oxygen, hydrogen, n<tro- ( gen, phosphorus, sulphur and what not in the inanimate world, bow docs ft happen that when they come together j under organic conditions life should result? Do they "get busy” on their own initiative, or does a so-called “vi tat energy,” different from physical energy, intiervene to make them alive? ; Is it their partnership that gives rise to life, or do they already live, fl with a lower erder of vitality, in ad var.ee of the, combination? To questions like these several sorts of scientists are trying to give an swers. and they have more than one method. One is to see the thing out, the other is to reason it out. The etn plrlclsts bring their microscopes tr bear on the organic coll with keen attention to narts and workings. They Insist on studying t"o riddle where it show-s Itself; they believe that where o r canfc conditions prevail vital phe nomena must appear; many of them , even bold, with Fchaefer, that It will be possible to “cynthe■■fee” in the laboratory. The rationalists, on the other hand, despairing of aid from the microscope, are content to find out where life comes from. And even here two schools of thought have taken ♦he royal road. By the one it is main tained that life doos not start up sud dcnlv In the living body, but is more or less "latent” in all matter. That hypothesis' is implicit in the hylozoism of the ancient Greeks; it has been expanded in modern Germany by the Nagelis and the Haeckels; it shows itself once more in the view represented by Professor Henderson at Bal timore. Then there is the cosmic theory championed hv Arrhenius. In his cosmogony the vital germ which started organic evolution came to us from other worlds, or from the spaces betv-een. wafted thmoe to the earth by the impelling power of solar light. Modern Foology. In his presidential address before the American Association for the Advancement of Science, now printed in Science, Dr. Edmund D. Wilson of Columbia university discussed the mere pressing problems' of mc.dc.u zoology. In regard to Darwinism, he said: “Undeniably there is a large measure of truth in the contention that natural selection still belongs rather to the philosophy than to the, science of biology. In spite of many important experimental and critical studies on the subject Darwin's conception still remains today in the main what it was in his own time, a theory, a logical construction, based it is true on a multitude of facts, yet still awaiting adequate experimentall
test. Simple though the principle is. Its actual effect in nature is determined by conditions that are too intricate and operate through periods toe great to b d:; Seated in th" ex’, rim r.tal laboratory. Hence it is that even afjter more than fifty years of Darwinism the time has net yet come for a true estimate of Darwin’s proposed solution of the great problem.” An International Pig. The Anglo-American war of 1812-14, from the conclusion of which we date our centenary of peace, was due re inctely to one of the most trivial incidents that could be imagined. At the Rhode Island elections in 1811 —so the story goes—one constituency was lost to the Federalist party because a certain farmer arrived at the polling place too late to cast his vote. He had been delayed by the difficulty of releasing one of his pigs that had been caught in a fence. The result was that this constituency elected a pro-war candidate to the state legislature by a majority of one. The representative sent to the United senate by this legislature was i eted by a similar majority, and ultimately it was by a majority of one that congress declared war against (. "-eat Britain.—-Manchester Guardian. V/ar Rations. “It was shortage of supplier that caused the Germans to retreat from the Marne,” said Prof. Heinrich Siegel at the German-American chamber of commerce in New York. "1 know a story to confirm that —a story, confirming, too, the German light-heartedness under uifficulties. “An American correspondent said, in Paris, to a German infantryman, wounded at the Marne: “ ‘These new hairy rawhide knapsacks —do you Germans like them?’ “ ‘Do we like them?’ the wounded ; German infantryman answered. ‘Why. with pepper and salt and a dash of onion we just dote on them.’ ” —St. i Louis Globe-Democrat. Manny Thought. "Sir,” said the bright young man, ' T trust you will object to your daughter marrying me.” “Why?” queried the astonished parent. “Because,” explained the young student of feminine nature, “if you do, 1 think she will insist upon leading me to the altar. See?” I
SIOO SUITS gj"siWßMsaaßW wrs rrar?r?-^ ,< r$ t- •j - , Have you seen our big line of Men’s and Young Men s u $15.00 Suits—either readymade or made to your M n a- k.|| |i • sure? If you have not you have a look coming. Silk Shirts | : "" 11 Os course you know Shk 1 Shirts are the correct thing k for this season. $1.50 $4 00 Boy’s $3.50 Serge Suits We are Creating a great Sensation with our $3 50 Serges for Boy’s. Come-and see for yourself. VANCE & HITE DECATUR’S CLOTHIERS
For Wayne <k Springiiel’T Ry. Company. TIME TABLE. Northfcouro. Cars leave Decatur at 5:60, 8:30 2:30, 5:46, »:S0; arrive at l-'uu ■ v'/nyui I 9:4' .li' Ui, >’f; ■ ai?. W:vO Southfcounc. Leave fc t Wayne t>t 7:00, 10:(Ml, ItCv i i 00, 7:30. llu v, arrived in Decatur :t 8:10; 11:10; 2;lu; 5.10, S:fO, 12:10.! Connections are made at For* ' vVayne with the Ft. Wayne & Non. : rn Indiana Traction Co., The Toledo. % Chicago Interurban Railway Co - ;- | .•■nj, The Ohio Electric, and ! r 'i:r.i.b[ Onion Traction Company, ateet wvt. me Pennsylvania, Walmh S’lcafr P'ata, L. S. & M. S„ C. H • D “mV ). R. ft 1. railroads. Freight Service. Frtignt service consist- of .mt train each way daily: Leav: -g !)•; tur at 8:00 a. m. and return.t.g, »<■ vug Fort Wayne at 12:00 a. ; -i Tl.tiv uables shippers to tGleph-use >r<J«rm<i receive shipments promptly. W. H. FLEDDERJOHANN, • general Manager, • - Decatur, Inti.. o » Democrat Want Ads Pay.
v A 5 Ik V 0 g J rW9 9 9 i NEW RUGS 1 I AND i ILINOLEUMS B- - 5 * S We have just received a new line of Rugs S >n all sizes and prices. And a complete new ' line of Linoleums print and inlaid.' We can save you money on Rugs or Linoleums and • » give you the newest patterns. It will pay 5 you to see our new lines before you purchase. j THE BOSTON STORE I n ys***=“«*e j? ,l r i H 3 ft VNMMNMMtf Ab £ ... .tiatim
POTATOES FOR SALE. If you need any more cooking potatoes before the next crop comes in now is the time to buy them at from T-5 to 65c a bushel, before they go up Al o if you want to change your planting potatoes to a pure kind, you can get them at Hoagland, Ind., from 60c to 75c a bushel, as no doubt they will sell for ? 1.00 or more a bushel when planting time comes. So now is the time for you to buy ycur potatoes. Send fa your call ED KOENEMANN, » 52t30 Hoagland, Ind. o NOTICE TO PUBLIC. At the order cf the common council you cr: !;ar<my notified that all alleys, streets, sidewalks anl other highways abutting ycur property must bo cleaned, up net later than the eighth day o May, 1915. You are also ordered to take cr have taken away fn;:n yonr premise;; all garbages, csln.s, tin' c.ui;> ■i ether retuse. This must i — ticne y . -ay Bth. IS?. W t'iL’ONISTER, !istls Street Commissioner. o-. — EARLY CABBAGE plants for sale at Werder sisters. No. 52-1 Marshall St. ’Phene 347. 90t3
Special Price On Embroidery while they last 75c Values at 25c per yard. 35c Values at 19c per yard. ■lll 5 AND 10c STORE KAST SIDE STREET .'..’TO LIVL'aV-When In il automobile call ’phone ::: and for Warren Buc’xmastc-r. At nSchlickman Feed Barn. - ’ FOR SAUC—Shor. Horn bulls z‘‘ ' Durce bears.—Henry ]le< knicn. &• : catur. Ind.. It. R. No. 1. ThoM W
