Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 13, Number 231, Decatur, Adams County, 28 September 1915 — Page 6

rßSsaaomocac=ara o THE DAILY MARKET REPORTS o A— —!!■ i.'

EAST BUFFALO. Bast Buffalo. N. V.. Sept. (Special to Dally Democrat) —Receipts, 1,920; shipments, 1,140; official to New York yesterday. 4,760; hogs closing firm. Medium and heavy, $9.00059.16; yorkers and mixed, $9.10059.2fi; piss. $9.00©59.25; roughs, $6.75057.50; stags, 66.00096.00; sheep, 1,200; steady; top lambs, $9..10; cattle, 200; slo tv. G. T. at/Ptfx. Wheat 05c Oats 27c Corn 96c Rye 75c Barley 45c Clover Seed $8.50 Alslke Seed $7.50 Timothy Seed $3.00 NIBLICK A CO, Eggs 24c Butter 16c@18c FULLIiNrxAMPt. Eggs 24c Butter 20c BERLINGB. Indian Runner ducas Sc Chickens 13c Fowls 70c

CANE MILL OPENED. I have opened my cane mill four miles north of Decatur and am now ready to make your molasses. If you want some good molasses, have me to make it for you. 227t3 R. K. FLEMING. NOTICE. Starting Tuesday, September 28, Robinson's confectionery shop will serve hot lunch. Special 15c and 25c lunch served from 11 to 1 and from 5 to 7. Home-made pa&'ries and cookies, and cooking. Special atten-

FAIR WEEK SPECIAL RUBBER TIRES PUT ON YOUR BUGGY DURING FAIR WEEK AT $10.25 a Set Size % DECATUR CADRIADE WORKS Corner Ist and Monroe Sts.

I "dnybody can yet a steady livitiy ! ♦♦• — out of steady effort* *** •" | Some men are’lucky'. ‘ljou can he ’lucky "——hare money, position and contentment if youll put me same effort, energy atii> persistence then do in their work. Xncky'mcn fcatfe money in the hmk. So am you. Start now. “ Che soma clock that ticks off hscnhi-frur hours for one man can’t cheat j :. his neighbor. uhe same lows of riant mb wrong, the same privilege to do anS " ■•; : . dare, arc open to both? —— Herbert Kaufman. i- — ~ «. * ~ — — •;,; :,•: |l|l|o]sCldamstety3aKk mD! *©ccatur-3n&-

FAIR WEEK | ALL THIS WEEK SSAeal ADMISSION I GUY lln a Repertoire of High Class Commedies and Dramas. Plays Change Nightly. FRF 730 10 r * 1 “THE YANKEE DOODLE BOY -- TO-NIGHT r„ c» se o,r,„ weathe, ‘,he ani At Old Location | All New Plays and Vaudeville. GU) l™HouM the 20r. I

Ducks „ Sc Geese 6c Young turkeys ...14c Old Tom turkeys 10c Old Hen turkeys 10c Old Roosters 6c Butter, packing stock 16c Eggs 21c Above prices are tor poultry tree from feed. KALVER'B MARKET*. Wool 21c 026 c Beef bides ...11c Calf 13c Tallow ....6c Sheep pelts [email protected] LOCAL PRODUCE MARKET Chickens 13c Indian Runner Duciu Sc Fowls 10c Ducks 10c Geese Sc Young turkeys 14c Old Tom Turkeys 11c j Old Hen Turkeys lie Old Roosters scj Eggs 21c Butter ISc] Above prices are Tor poultry free from feed. DECATUR CREAMERY CO. Butter fat delivered 27c J Butter fat in country 24c J Butter, wholesale 27c !

tion to dinner parties and luncheons. 229t3 j RED MEN. All Red Men are requested to be at their hall at 7:30 o’clock on next Thursday evening. September 30. Business of importance. Social ses- j sion to follow. Plenty of corn and venison. 230t3 COMMITTEE. O FOR SALE —Good horse, buggy and harness for sale, or will trade on * good Ford touring car. —H. O. Davis, j Pleasant Mills. 230t3 I —

I!THE UNEXPECTED 5 5 1 The wage earner's Savings Account 2 has been described as the best evi- : dence cf advancement. For sal- : aried people, business people, pro- ' fessional pepie or the affluent, 3 a Savings Account accumulates a 3 surplus for protection in unexpect- * ed emergency. Tnis Institution offers the induce ments of Absolute Security and in- * tercst compounded. ! l i, FIRST NATIONAL BANK i DECATUR. INDIANA Members Federal Reserve Association { I at aggy'wm Bwesawn i w I * NOTICE I ! Notice is hereby given that the an--1 nnal business meeting of the German Fire Insurance company of French township, Adams county, Indiana will be hel<i at tiieir usual place of meeting in the election school house in French j township, Adams county; on Saturday j October ind, 1915 at 10 o’clock a. m. sharp. | Lunch will be Served on the ground. ; 226 e-o-d sts. A. J. SMITH.Pres. ! 0 PIANO TUNING AND REPAIRING. D. A. Gilliom (Professional) rebuilier and repairer of pianos and sewing machines, and piano tuner. Dealer in both branches. Write, or phone 8, Line P, city. lllm-w-f ts |STAR GROCERY i ’i‘ wsmamaaawmmmmmammm Cane Sugar Sack $1.50 I " 1 i I. ’. Flour, Small Sack 73c ? l | ' Fleur, Large Sack $1.45 i - • Pink Salmon ,10c ! Perfection Crackers lb OSc I Rice Shelled Pop Corn ....10c J Marco Fancy Coffee 30c Campbells Soups 10c ! ? i Heinz Celery Soup 20c j * V; Heinz Green Pea Seup ...,20c t |> Hem: Spaghetti 15c Sweet Pickles doz 10c y | ,*j Dill Pickles doz 10c | •j Potato Bread 10c * 1 I !-iSr c P7 , or>f’ a tor JOIT<V p») n ■ brsetst: tna.:: FCT’arfvi

i HELP WANTED i i WANTlilb—Hip class man to sell trees, shrubs, roacs, vines, berry bushes, bullis. etc. Good wages. Permanent. Exclusive territory. -Brown Brothers, Nurseries, Rochester, Now . York. 230t2 vvaiv'l'ED —'tenant tor partly furnish ed house, five or six rooms, from , Sept. 15th to March Ist., Everything lurnlshed hut linens, silver and bedding. Reference required, inquire oi Heller, Sutton & Heller. ?14tf WANTED .Men, wno can furnish rig to canvass in the country and small towns; S2O per week and expenses guaranteed. If you want a ! good job that will pay you well, write for particulars.—Bestever Mfg. Co.. | East St. Louis, 111. 22Gt4 WANTED—-Steady young main with some experience in firing, to help operate steam shovel near South Whitley.— Robert Haugk. 227t3 J ROOMERS'WANTED—inq Uire of Mrs. II). 1). Heller, Fifth street. Heat, light and bath. 203tf. I STENOGRAPHER WANTED—Voung I man preferred. Reply in own hand ' writing. Address "G. G.” Care Demo- | ,-rat. stating age, experience and sai--1 ary desired. 226tf. Futt SALE —An eight room brick house. Electric lights, water am gas. On eof the most desirable home. •n the city. Beautifully located. Sei ond door north of the K. of P. home. Phono 231, or call at 120 North Third street. 176tf FOR SALE —Plenty of gooa Grapes. Only sixty cents a bushc-l. See A. D. Suttles, at Old Adams County bank. 228t3 FORESALE OR RENT—Park hotel. D. W. Myers, ’phone 752. 229tf LOST —Gold bracelet, valued as a gift. Binder please return to Miss Edna Haugk, West Monroe street, or leave at this office. 229t3 FOUND —Pair of scissors, on Monroe street. Owner may have same by calling at this office and paying sot this ad. 27t3 I HOUSE FORRENT—Or> Marshall S' good condition. Injuire of Hellei Sutton & Heller. 167tt FOR RENT —Park hotel, inquire of D. W. Myers, Wichester St. 21fic FOR SALE —Nicely located resident property in west part of the city, ts SIMEON J. HAIN LOST—New automobile outer casing and inner tire from rear of ma chine. Was lost east of Stop 20. Re ward for return.—Ed C. Bleeke. R F. D., No. 8, Decatur. 231 N NOTICK OF OF PFHSONAI. rUOI’F.RTY, State of Indiana. Adams County, ss: In the matter of the estate of Dwight Wilder, deceased. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned, administratrix .of the es tate of Dwight Wilder, deceased, tvii offer for sale at public auction at th* late residence of said decedent, three miles north of the City of Decatur . Indiana, nr one mile northeast of the town of Monmouth on the old AVilde i farnt, In float Township, Adams Cquh . ty, in tlie State of Indiana, on Wednesday, October ti, 191.1, | beginning at 10 o'clock a. m. on sail , day. the personal property of said et tate. consisting of the following: One bay mare. 4 years old; 1 roai mare. 3 yelrs old; 1 gray mare, ) spring rolt, 4 good milch ttows, 1 two year-old heifer, 1 yearling heifer, i one-year-old steers, 1 yearling Hoi stein bull, 2 spring calves, 9 head o' good sheep. 2 brood -sows. 9 head 03 shoats. 24 head of spring l>igs. i farn wagon. 1 hay rack. 1 doutde wagor box. 1 binder. 1 Hock Island hay loader, 1 hay tedder. 1 Milwaukee mower. 1 grain drill, 1 disc harrow, 1 breaking riding plow, 1 breaking walking plow 1 walking corn plow, 1 riding cori plow. 1 spring tooth harrow, 1 spikt tooth harrow. 1 hay rake. 1 set dunq boards. 1 set of double work harness 111 acres of good standing corn, and numerous other articles wot herein mentioned. Terms of Sale. All sums of ss.Oft and undbr, cash tr hand; over 5.00 a credit of nine months i will be given, the purchaser executing j iiis note therefor with approved si curity to the satisfaction of the undersigned administratrix. No discount will be given for ca3h on account of this being an administratrix sale; no discount can be allowed. No property shall be removed from the premises until the -purchaser has complied with the terms of Urn sale CORA WILDER, Administratrix of the estate of Dw gilt Wilder, deceased. ; Noah Frauhiger, Auct. T. Durkin. Clerk. Ladles’ Aid society of Concord will ; sene dinner. 22-29 DEMOCRAT WANT ADS j PAY BIG PiLfcSi PiLESt A lUJA.Vw" JNCIAN FILE OINTMENT Will cure Blind. Bleed:e* and Itching 11 es. It absorbs the tumors, eilays Itching at once sots is a jHjultice, gives instant relief. sale by all druggists, mail GCc and 11.00 ' MFG. CO.. Proos.r Cleveland, Ohio ENTERPRISE DRUG STORE. DECATUR, IND.

7 CHRISTIAN EPIC IN STONE j Strrasburg Cathedral, Just Behind j Battle Lino. One of the Glories of Gcthic Architecture. j Just b) V of the line of battle iff Alsace, v.uhin the zone whet" thor- ( oughgoiua iic ' — "“on Is threatened, another of the man eloi , most worthwhile works of our civilization stands ' exposed to the varying chances of battle. This Is the beautiful cathedral of ! Strassburg, an architectural glory , which makes mock of modern satisfaction at the expense of earlier centuries. 1 ! The enormous old minster, famed ! wherever joy in the Ideal Is felt, one of the choicest Gothic visions ever I dreamed by a master mason, Is a memory of ages when art was more a passion and religion and less a means for preference and daily bread. Strassburg cathedral is a Christian epic in stone. Flxquisite in proportion and detail, it rises, a great pile, out of the surrounding city. Its spire vies with the loftiest daring of the New York makers of skyscrapers against a dark background of mountains, ■whoa* heights, with the cathedral spire, watch over Upper Alsace. The spire of the minster is a masterpiece, excelled by no nother steeple and equaled by but few. It ends more than 500 feet above the town, and it is a wonder-compelling structure oi delicate open stonework, rich in an endless complexity of forms. After finishing the one spire, builders never attempted to construct the proposed companion to it. Strassburg differs from other German cathedrals in that it possesses a , greater width in proportion to its height. It is one of the most harmo- j nious of Europe's sacred structures. The doors are very beautiful and the rose window, more than forty feet in | diameter, is an artistic achievement that wins the admiration of every vis itor. The building- was begun in 1176 and | was completed In its present form in j 1439. More or less extensive restora-' tions have been necessary, and their j lamentable results give grounds forj the most discouraging reflections upon the prediction that Reims cathedral can he restored. EXECUTED COMRADE'S WISH Civil War Veteran Delivered Message After a Search Extending Over Fifty-Two Years. A belated message, fifty-two years old. reached the relatives of the late ( James ltiggin, in Laurel, last week, when according to a promise made od the battlefield, William Thurston, a . Civil war veteran of Philadelphia, visited the relatives of Riggin in Laurel and told of Riggia’s death in the battle of Gettysburg, and his last message • to them. Thurstcn and Riggin became good friends during the war and, as com-j rndes, promised each other that should one be killed in baitle the survivor | would search out the family of the i other and tell them of bis death Rig-' gin v as killed at Gettysburg, fighting by Thurtton’s side. After the war Thurston sought dill- 1 gently, but icund no trace of Riggin s relatives until u short time ago when, accidentally, he iound that Mrs. F. B. Sirman of Laurel is a niece of the' dead man. The visit followed. — Laurel (Del.) Dispatch to Philadelphia Record. Coal Tar Once Thought Waste. About a century ago coal tar was considered almost a waste product, and no one had thought It worth while to experiment with it. At that time gas was being introduced as a new light and Frederick Accum, who wrote one of the first books on gas lighting, suggested the boiling of the tar in a j still and the condensation and collec- j tion of the volatile products. The experiment was made and the process yielded two oils. One was heavy and ! the other light. It was soon found that j the heavy could be satisfactorily used i as a preservative for wood that had to 1 be fixed underground or submerged in • water and was used extensively in preserving piers and wharfs. Stage Humor Has Changed. Stage humor today isn’t quite as outlandish as it used to bo fifteen or twenty years ago. Charles H. Hoyt once wanted a certain type of come- ’■ dian and, hearing of a team called 1 Coyne and McGee playing in an up- j stairs theater on Third avenue, went ‘ to see them. The Coyne was Joe 1 1 Coyne, now a great favorite both here and in London. McGee began telling ' Coyne about a chance he had to make a lot of money. “All I need is a stake," j said McGee. “That's easy,”' replied Coyne. With that he took a piece of beef from his pocket, stuck it on'his | cane and broiled it over the gas footj lights.—New York Letter to the Pittsj burgh Dispatch. |

PUBLIC SALfc. | Having sold an interest in our husIncs and taken another partner, it is I necessary that we give a ‘ I, ' aliup I sole We, have therefore deeided to hold a public sale at our residence, known as the McCarthy farm, jnsi north of Wren, Ohio, beginning at 12:20 sharp, on Saturday, October 9, 1915, at which time v.e will offer tho following: Horses: Six head or horses, consisting of general purpose , and draft horses. Twenty-six head of i cattle: Six head of fresh cows, 20 I head of feeding cattle, weighing from 000 to 800 pounds each. Thirty head sheep, consisting of 20 head of 6rood ewes and some light lambs for feeding purposes. One hundred head of hogs, consisting of 8° bead of ; shoats. weighing from 40 to 125 tbs. each; three sows with piss by side. Nine hundred shocks of corn in field. Tills corn is all cut up in good shape. Ten bushels of potatoes; 3 dozen chickens. One Ford five passenger car, 1514 model, in good condition. Farming Implements: One broad I tire wagon, hay rack, mowing machine, sulky breaking plow, good as new; cultivator, good as new; wooden frame harrow, set double work harness, set single harness, top buggy, hay tedder, gasoline engine, good | as new; double trees and numerous * other articles. Terms of Sale:— $5.00 anil under, jeash; over that amount a credit of one year will be given, purchaser giving note with approved security; note bearing 6 per cent interest from date; 1 3 per cent discount for cash. No I goods removed until settler for. F. M. GOSSARD A- COMPANY. I Auctioneers, Col. Hileman, Will shire. Ohio; Col. Noah Frauhiger, BlulTton, Ind. Public sale will be held rain or I shine. o BARGAIN FOF. YOU I am offering for sale a splendid home in Decatur, located at 72S High 'street, on a lot 70x140 with plenty cf fruit, garden space, good cistern, well and out buildings, a seven room | house with good cellar, a latlced porch, every -tiling convenient and in good condition. Will sell for $1,600 if taken I at once. If you want an ideal home in Decatur this is your chance to get a ; real bargain. See me at the property, ! E. Reynolds. 231tf. i o (Democrat Want Ads Pay. •l’4 i ! i 44 + 4 4 ,, ! , 4''1 , 4 , 44 + NOTICE TO PUBLIC. + |+- + j + Parlies who ordered enlarged + pictures through Charles Phil- f j . v lips, can get them by calling at * 1 + the residence of Mrs. E. A. Phil- + ; lips on North First St. 230t4 + Dr. C. V. Connell VETERINARIAN s'i, ya Office 102 I flic Residence 143 LIVE STOCK and General Auctioneering ! 1 thank you for your past favors. I am still on the job. Telephone at my expense. J. N. Burkhead Monroe, Ind. "red CHIEF ' eed Wheat ADAMS COUMY GROWN For Sale At The i Burk Elevator Co. i Phone No. 25

EAT “SNOW FIAKE BREAD” The Creamy and Wholesorre Loaf Baked By MARTIN & JOSEPH For Sale At All Groceries ' : , MEALS SERVED AT ALL HOURS Specie! Menu On Sundays GIVE US A VISIT THE EAGLE CAFE MIRTIN & JOSEPH, Props. LOOK HERE If you intend to m ike a sale this fall, and want sa'isfactory re u!ts, get a date with JEFF LIECHTY Live Stock and General Auct. Phone 16 or 43 Monroe, Ind. Speaks English & Gentian. Satisfaction Guaranteed. wi ■■ ———■—- —— Dr. L. K. Magley VETERINARIAN Corner Third and Monroe Streets. Phones DECATUR. IND. AUCTIONEER Harry Daniels, the live stock nnd farm sale auctioneer 10 years experience Phone at my expense E. W. FRANCE at Pkasant Mills, Ind. tr CHARLES W. YAGER Decatur, Ind, Df. C. 0. Pet? y VETERINARIAN PErATTOC Office 34 1 IlOiiLb Re idence 40 MONROE, IND. 150 CORI S DRY WOOD We have turn d our wood business over to * ' EMERSON BENNETT Call Phone 199 for quick delivery of good dry white ash cook stove wood. SMITH & ,i .l L. i* <- -F + + + + + + + + + 4- + + * 100 CORDS * * of good dry ash cook wood. * * Call * * BENNETT S COAL YARD * + ’Phone 199. *