Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 13, Number 244, Decatur, Adams County, 12 October 1915 — Page 6

MIWIVMk.'r'MMMWMa *■- ■■ .»o~»l > > ■■■*!■!■ nunMM fps CT.XTI XS| I . o THE DAILY MARKET REPORTS o l±3 KSOESOE3 r£f

EAST BUFFALO. East Buffalo. N. Y„ Oct. 12- (Special to Daily Drtnocrc Iteeeipts, 2.400; ship...-.its, 760; on: ail to New York yesterday. 4.750; hops closing ; toady. 'fixed nie-ium and heavy, J 0.1041 ~>■•<>; •yorkers. $9.00®59.16; pigs and lights, $8.75r * .90; roughs. >8.00; • . •:': .46.75; t li< 2.001>; r.irong; top lambs, $9.30;' cattle, 175; steady. • G. T. SVRrt. Wheat 99c Oats - Sc Corn hlc Rye ....’ 75c Barley 45e clover Seed Alsike Seed fi.:>o Timothy Seed NtBLICK * CO. Eggs • - :w Gutter FL’LLt 1 .„„ 3 25c Butter SKRLIHGB Indian Runner du< > s *' Chickens I,e 10c fowls ••■••••• ‘' ' ; 'mr. Farmer If you intend to make a sale see me at once for a date, or cal! Phone <&£:« JEFF LIECHTY I Live Stock and General Auet. Monroe, hid. .j,--, —-W— ■ '■ I If———» ■? 10 CORD'S _ * * of good dry ar-R cook wood. * Cell * * BENNETT S COAL * Phone IPO. * * a a .;. 4. + .y -i «. -i-■MW-MW.- • . MM.’-' WW -- - WWMSS«».«»» I”'ll Mice's i h tt!Kt3EMHBEEr’ ’£ KSXs! » gj Buckwheat Flour 10c ! Graham Flour 10c 7 Marco Maple Syrup 25c Campbell’s Soups 10c 3 Marrowfat Beans, Tt> 10c &\ j Small Sack Fleur 73c | 1 Large Sack Flour $1.45 ? ‘ !’ 25 th. Cane Sugar $1.40 Perfection Crackers, tb. ... Sc . * H ! | New Mince Meat, Qt. Can..2sc S> 1! Dromedary Dates 10c p | New California Peaches, Tb. 10c Milk, 6 small cans 25c !Milk, 3 large cans 25c ’G ' Deviled Ham 10c Ij j i Bird Seed 10c L I h * • «m3Mßfflerat.rts-rsw sawi r—- !.; will Johns. T

I _JII JWu. costt We aw&W twfeim. Ite .>>„ . J ? 3 O *7l ■/e’d - ?• of a wc’ <1 if we pormiltedj < . Jtinprovcd.viniried.unlcsied men to leap in and ; s•s ; ’ ’i ' 1P^ C pleasestheir vanity. —Ourßattleships would I ,' rust in the docks. there would be no stokers,- every sailor 1 1, ,' • I "‘ J - • - world be strutting-'about the docks in the cocked ha! of a ■ rear admiral.” K - LK ' ufHW - • "You can have money in the Bank '' l! 7ss'.- ’ j ; '?7 - • if you. work for it and SAVE. |« OlWamstatyJaKh I——» -Stoafur-W I—

DlliltS St: jOee-o 8c ■ Young turkeys 14c Old T' tn turkeys \ 10c ,v Old Hen turkeys .....10c odd Roosters 5o ’.utter, packing stock 13c I Eggs ■ 21c Above prices are tor poultry tree . ! from feed. KALVERS MARKETS. 1 Wool 21c®25e ’ Beef hides ..11c I Calf 13c "illow 6c ~ Sheep pelts 25c@|1.00 local produce market Chi. hens 13c ' Indian Runner DticYs Sc ’.Fowls 10c I Duel;.* 10c les se Sc turkeys 14c ■'.ltd Tom Turkeys .lie : Old Hen Turkeys 11c Old Roosters 5c 1 Eggs 21c Butter 18c Ahovo prices are tor poultry free ~ rom feed. ECATUR CREAMERY CO. I Butter ft't delivered ..' 20c : Be.: o;■ fat in country 26c • i Butter wholesale 20c 1 ■!■■ ■»-»»»— -ii'.wo- _ “»•■» —■» ■»—»■«— ~ PUBLIC SALE. We, the .undersigned, will sell a' public auction at the Horman Yake farm, known as tho old Fred Shradct farm, in Kirkland township, 1 mile south and 1’, 2 mile west of Peterson or 1 mile north and V/ 3 mile east < ('i-rryviile, and 2 miles and mile e?st of Magley, on Thursday, O. I tol’or 14. beginning at 10:30 o'clocl | a. m., the following property, to-wit: head of horses: Black match (team, 5 and 6 years old, weight about I I.T •> E>. ca.'h; one 2-;.-car-old draft bay p' '■ w. : ;’.i alioi’t 12t a ’'’a Fourteen head of cattle, consisting of 1 full Iblei : d biaclt Jo. ; 7 years old, i : < ”.l biKier cow. 1 r< d brindle Jersey 10 y 'at.i old, gi-.cs 6 gal. ir.iik per Id,ay when in gi d t!.—v; 1 to.;n lieifI. with <aif by ride; 4 head of . st(<-rs, weight ab.>:it !""l lbs. eaeh; 2 • black. Polander heifers, weight about >9OO ibs. each; 2 yearling heifers, ' ig.M-d oner; a pair of twin calves. Fifty ii".:., ot 'll ~". eon.Bsting of 7 breed sows, ,3 with pigs by side, average i from 6 to 11; 2 sows, will farrow iroon; 2 open sows, 1 Duroc male BRIGHTER BUSINESS » is brighter,” sa., the Government Re--1 ports, “it.a.: at anj r time since the war began. l\pl the smailest indications of brighter business are the increasing demands to ? of IE; . fa: 1 growing National Bank. • Business men recognize the value of our Service and more and more of them are taking advantage of the opportunities it offers. j first national bank 1 DECATUR, INDIANA hembt-M Federal Reserve Association. ‘

I hog, year and half old; 42 head of | I shouts, weighing from 80 to 128 lbs., I: 20 acres of good corn in field. FarmTing imiiii-mesiias John Deere riding plow, hovel plow, beef lifter, horso | I corn cutter, set oj work harness, ' :,i> >ut S ton of timothy hay in mow, about 73 iiea.i of chickens. Peerless G I'niver.-td hard coal burner, No. 600, 5 > used one winter. : T> nt -of Sale: —All sums under 3 ! j’.i.o, . edi; sums over ?u.OO a credit I -of 6 months ‘without Interest, pur-| 5 chaser giving note with approved sc-1 urtty. property removed until 5 settled for; 4 per cent discount for ’ icar-h. Dinner served by tho Ladies of . tho Reformed church. GI’ST YAKE. Noah Frauhiger. Auct. . o ' BIDS ARE WANTED. 1 ; We will receive bids up to October ■ 12b<t for a switchboard operator at 1 Preble. We will furnish house but no fuel or gas. Contract must be tnado for not loss titan one year. The I ’ directors re erve the right to reject I any or ail bids. PREBLE TELEPHONE By J C. Grandstaff. Sec’y. 23713 o-o-d r o ATTENTION, YEOMEN! All Yeomen are urged to be at the Meibors hall on Monday evening. Occ.ber 11. to answer to roll call. A program will be given after the regular meeting. Refreshments later. 240t3 STRAY HOGS TAKEN UP Harvey Koos, residing on the Jacob (00.-t fa'rtn two miles east of the city ir.s taken up a bunch of stray ho"." ■ nt the ow::. r may get by paying for he. ' keep and this advertisement. t 3 True Secret of Keeping : ci-J i Looking ! (Tba Btaul.;, Seeker.) real . .< ■ . s ycur.g-look- : ; ..'I ' ’ ••If-,’.-' ■.s a well-known .. ->■ and bownoiinall.e ae-.-.c. ■■ .tliuut taeua re- ■■ u-i, i-.jii i-n. us was’.- I.reduce) re--1 in .tie .'vsom, ;■ g lue blood I l L<:i:u in va s .... v.,, s, tissues, I nis. uae becomes >! bby, .oese, nerv- ■ .>, a.c:i'si... uud-ejed, wrin;..'?d anti sallow 01 race. •v - . n . r , r.; : -is working as they eught, wttho-it producing evil 't>i. Forrmutely, the . is a [ 1 ip tion of un- , i.uestiun. J 'r.icr:;, v-l h :. ...ay now be had in convenient tablet >rtn. Its value is duo l.n-.ly to aa w <:t <: . :ved from the huinule toy . p .... or tt.i toot, which lias btc-11 called. ■:.■!> calomel’ be.JhfO of its e," cti o--.though of course It la not to le c.i.mted wttn the reai calorm 1 of mercurial origin. There la no hr bit-forming loiistituent In 'sentane'.' tatlcts—ti .t: 1 ?. the name—and their : use Is not f0i1..•.-••J by t.-eakuees or ex- ' haustior.. on the contrary, these harm- ' less vegst Nats tend to Impart tone.ro t tty to the relaxed intestinal wall. Sentanel tablets, which may I be procured from .my ui irugist—a dime’s ' worth will do—will prove a revelation to > any constipated, Uver-troubled person." I ” Chief Cause cf Pimples, Blotches, Sallow Skin (Messenger of Health.) Unsightly eruptions, pimples, bolls, blotches, sallow or muddy skin, usually ’ are due to a sluggish liv r, a constipated bowel—and a pciluted bleed stream as a consequence. How foal h in such cases ; co regori to outward applications, which ; can never have natural, permanent re- ' «ults. If more people only knew it, there js a very simple remedy, to be found In . : any drug store, wnica as effective as it is harmless and quick acting. It is an old lormula, .long recognized by the medical i profession, which has been put in tablet I form, and at such small cost no one need now be deprived of its wonderful bene- | Ills. “Sentanel tablet?”—that's the rame—- ' are entirely vegetable and there's no i habit-forming ingrc-dL-ut. You need only get about a dime’s worth, and swallow uno at bedtime to realise there’s nothing else r.ulte so good for the purpose. The action in the nicra.ng is so easy, so soothtng, and instead of a weakening aftereffect, you feel truly refreshed and Invigorated. Sentanel tablets are not only the finest remedy known for constipation end torpid liver, but offer the sanest, I most sensible treatment for complexion | difficulties ot the character mentioned. —-—. ——. ,■■■■-. 1 Great Demand for New Constipation Remedy They say that the advent of the “centanel tablet" as a vegetable substitute for calomel has resulted in an extraordinary demand for this remaikable product. It , seams to have made a hit particularly with those afflicted with chronic const! ■ pation, who were quick to recognise its advantages over calomel and the usual laxatives. Sentanel tablets, arlde from their efficacy, doubtless owe their success largely to a tendency to aid in bringing about natural functioning—instead ot encouraging the "cathartic habit.” Also, instead I of injuring the membraneous lining of i the organs involved, they exert a healing influence. Instead of weakening, they ' add tone to the intestinal wall. And tr.ey ; 1 work so easily and gently, they are 01 course' preferred on this account to the violently acting purgatives. Their Inexpensl ,-eness is another reason for the j:.,;;: ;: of sent ar. I tablfi-i. One -teed procure only a dime’s wertii, n,:u a 'tke one tablet unon retiring, to be co ir.c.id that the ideal re«m-ly fir cons ; 1 . torpid ■ liver, and .heir many evil >-<.nsequences, has fine ly been found.—.U.-Jg- - gists RcVlor

! I ' ' ' BEYCND CONTROL OF MAN Absolutely Perfect Day Is Something That Depends on Too Many Factors. Thorn Is a pretty little sentimental so.tg which begins with the words: I ’’When you come to the end ot a ‘ perfect day.” It relates to true friend- ’ ship and to an unforgetable incident, and it suggests that perfect days are rate in human experience. Perhaps i they are. For perfect days depend upon many factors, and some of these are beyond the control of the individual. You cannot produce a perfect day nt will any more than you can , summon prefect weather to suit your convenience. The hasty conception of a perfect ■ day would be such a one as falls out I to be entirely to your liking in every I respect. That requires a combination of circumstances which is exceptional. | might set forth in the morning i with tho determination that, in re-. spcct to your own actions and affairs 1 ! and your power over them, the day > should be perfect, but in an hour or ; j two external influences might inter- j ! vene, and the whole thing go glimmer- j ing. If there be one element lacking, whether it bo an environment, in the ; attitude of others or in yotfrself, perfection is not secured and the day 1 takes its placo in the common category, inspiring neither song nor rhapsody, and occupying no permanent place in the storehouse of fond recollections. In fact, it is the very rarity of perfect days that makes the subject one ot comment, of story, of poetry, of cherished memories. BEYOND MEASURE OF YEARS — Geologic Time Cannot Be Computed ; by the Ordinary Methods of Science. Scientists hesitate to estimate geo-1 logic time in terms of years. Such es-1 timates have, however, been made. | and one published by Prof. Charles Schuchert in 1910 states that about 12,000,000 years have elapsed siiace the close of the Carboniferous age, an age, as the name suggests, in which great deposits of carbon, in coal, were being ferfned in many parts of the world. This age has been divided by geologists into the Mississippian, Pennsylvania and Permian epochs, of which the Mississippian is the oldest and the Permian the youngest, Pennsylvanian epoch alone is estimated by Schuchert to have covered 2,160.000 years, and animal life is supposed to have existed on the earth for *bver 14,000,000 years before that time. Geologic periods are recognized primarily by the animals and plants that lived in them, so that the study of fossils plays a very real and important part in the progress of geologic : knowledge. Rocks of Carbonifereus age, as shown in their fossils, have a > wide distribution In the United States, ’ and they are apt to abound in these remains of plant and animal life. The ■ fossil shells which are found in them. ; however, may vary greatly from point to point, because the animals they represent lived in different periods of geologic time or in different regions in the Carboniferous ocean. ■ Spectacles for Cows. The idea of cows wearing spectacles seems ridibulous. Nevertheless there art cows that do wear spectacles, and they may be seen on the plains or steppes of Russia, which are covered with snow more than six months of the year. The cows subsist on the tufts 1 of grass which crop above the snow, j and the rays of the sun on the snow are so dazzling as to cause blindness. It occurred to a kind-hearted man to protect the cows’ eyes in the same way as those of human beings, and he manufactured smokc-colored spectacles which could be worn by cattle. These spectacles proved a great success and are now worn by upward of 10,000 head of cattle. The animals no longer suffer from snow blindness, which once caused such untold suffering among them. Why Men Are'Bald. Men get bald more frequently than women, according to a scientist, because they wear hard, heavy hats, they cut their hair too short, and they ear more than women. The “doc’ says the scalp is like soil, and the hair like the vegetation that grows upon it. When tho scalp is neglected the tir docs not grow and its roots die, just as grass dies when the soil is poor. A heavy, hard hat constricts the blood vessels that nourish the scalp. Clipping the hair short leaves its tender mots at the mercy of the cold, heat and dust. The oil that exudes from around the roots ot the hairs and keeps them nourished is coagulated by the cold and chokes up the matrix in which the hair Is formed. When Glass Adheres. If sheets of plate slass be piled up horizontally to a considerable height without tho precaution of them by sheets of paper, the glass in ’ certain places adheres as tightly as if it ware cemented, so that it is necessary to remove it bit by bit. This is due solely to cohesion, which is the property of bodies to adhere as soon as their molecules are in contact. It is ' almost impossible to make surfaces so . mooth and, to exert pressure so great that the molecules of the two surfaces will actually be in intimate contact but in certain machines this does occasionally takb place with both steei and lead, effecting a sort of welding so perfect that even the microscope cannot detect the place of union.

MASONIC CALENDAR FOR WEEK ENDING OCTOBER IG. —___ Tuesday, October 12, 7:30 p. tn. J stated meeting. Business of impori tance, _____ o — . arvoc-ar WANT AGS PAY BIG. Or. C. V. Connell VETERINARIAN Phnnn OfHce 102 r none Residence 143 Dr. L. K. Magley VETERINARIAN Co'-ner Third and Monroe Streets. Phones R office m ’ls6 DECATUR, IND. LIVE STOCK and General Auctioneering I thank you for your ■ s» favors. I am still on the job. Telephone at my expense. J. N. Burkhead Monroe, Ind. AUCTIONEER i Harry Daniels, the live stock and farm sale auction cor 10 years experience Phone a 1 my expense E. W. FRANCE at Pleasant Mills, Ind. or CHARLES W. YAGER Decatur, Ind,

m JHL i pft" -p'-1/ 1 .W RM®'f® W uy.', t-.y'H- ■ - ■ . ... . . u •■■■?:... - ■ ’. “ A W '¥s»■ 41 w lllTJl llllfl /O JxjCJL m—m-—m—m—m—m—m—m ; .< >! isn’t that lovely!! Take the trail-of any real » ice smoker with a pipe between his teeth and snatch a mellow whin of fragrant “Tux.” Then you’ll right away hunt up the nearest tobacco shop and gladly intern a dime in exchange for a green tin of pure smoke-delight. “Tux” is going ahead of them all with a speed that makes it look like a race between a 60-horsc-power motor-car and a steam roller. It’s the fastest-growing brand of smoking tobacco in the world. ■ 'Wv F ’ii jfi 8 /f. -§ kJ /W && $ FA .< *■.#** “.-I tn fc« * ii •< Ki d? M . j 7Ae Tobacco ter Pip 9 and Cigarette ' ". £n c - ln £ possible to many men, and I tl! - original “Tuxedo Process” has — r- ' ' * ■ never been duplicated. It stands tomaking the natural leaf deliciously mild and . delightfully fragrant and tffcli! tor removing every trace of “bite ’’ ■’ DAVID J. PALMER a •■Under the gentle, cheerful YOU CAN BUY TUXEDO EVERYWHERE ||b* '■ *4 iufiucncfl of a mild, pleascnl Convenient, glassine wrapped, e« -aW •. 5.‘4... < tuhacco lilie Tuxedo, a men can moisture-proof pouch , ,-3c>/f better and rest better. I Famous green tin with gold f z\ tr«! i.’te Tuxedo very much.'' lettering, curved to fit pocket IvC z> f T'' l "“’’lido’-i, 10c and Bi>c V ; J " G ' a " Humidors, 50c , THE AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY .

GOOP NEWS ... your inspection. ’ \ stove and ranse department we are eroudof. These well known stoves and pr 1 wtn Rf-ind at the top tn the stove and' ranse' world. In material and fine workmanship they are unequal led. In cteaim and ornamentation they are rich in pla.n, beautiful nickel work. As to their working qualities, almost every one knows that the name Round Oak means service-satisfactory service - and many, many years of it. .. Round Oaks last, save, and do their work as you think it should be done. Wy have many new features not found in any other), and the best of all, the Round Oak folks make Xi goods only—no seconds. You are certain to have the best your money wilt buy if veu invest in a genuine Round Oak. Wont you obey that sensible impulse and inspect them ? Lee Hardware Company. I ?ll Sunday Excursions from DECATUR to TOL E O O via CLOVER LEAF ROUTE See H. J. Thompson, Agent, for particulars. FOR SALE Two Autos. Inquire of J. G. Niblick at the Old Adams County Bank.