Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 13, Number 294, Decatur, Adams County, 8 December 1915 — Page 6

I. I pi'«—' -Ti-tnr-Tnfir— ■- r~ o THE DAILY MARKET REPORTS o jl-,, —,, —TT-J|

EAST BU FFALQ ’ East Buffalo, N. Y„ Dec. B—(Special to Daily Democrat)—Receipts, 7,200; shipments, 1,520; official to New York yesterday. 2,470; hogs dosing steady. Meuidm and heavy, [email protected]; yorkers and mixed. [email protected]; yorkers, $6.55(fi>56.60; pigs, $6.00; roughs, [email protected]; stags, [email protected]; cattle. 250; slow; sheep, 2,000; strong; top lambs, $9.65. G. T. BURK. Wheat $1.13 Oats No. 4 34c Oats. No. 3, White 37c No grade oats 20c@30c Corn 85c Rye 75c Barley 45c Clover Seed SIO.OO Alisike Seed SB.OO Timothy Seed $3.00 NIBLICK &. CO. Eggs 30c Butter 18c@25c FULLEN KAMP’S. Eggs 30c Butter 27c BERLING’S. Indian Runner duck* 8c Chickens 11c Fowls 10c

FOR CHRISTMAS YOUR FHOTOGRAFH You’ll soon be thinking of away to please Father and Mother and ( Friends at Christmas time. Think of Photographs. Your Pho to as you are today, will please them all. Reduced Prices Continued Until Dec. 15th. MAKE AN APPOINTMENT TODAY, ; ERWIN STUDIO i < Expert Kodak Finishing Over Callow & Rice. . B '■ - K® . • ' ■ ;CIAb m * aot' 1 ) r-xi'ttntl T.;.> *-•••» • y •• vitsetnes-X containing -’.y 4 T,: across it <-tu3 presenl to FROST fhr " ' , t fora this week V' ’J-'. • carnat supply yew. send **' fed 5 ti« name to us diract. v - f ‘„J T-X_' T .adkjw This offer good December 4th to and including December 11th. |giuuHiHuiDiiiiimiiiK>uiiiiiuiiicibH:iiiiiitt3iuiiiiiiiiiiDiiiniii'.,’:’niiH::n:iiici:iiH l inn@uiiuiiuimi'>u!>iniini!in>!H!!!d!!ii!!!!i!:irQ : i = Pyorrhea—the disease j nearly everybody has | = ■ No matter how sound your public in the convenient form of | I teeth may seem to be, no matter Senreco Tooth Paste. (how you may scoff at the idea of Senreco contains the best cor- | ' your having this disease, it is a rective and preventive for pyor- I „ positive fact that the germ which rhea known to dental science. = s causes it is working now in your Used daily it will successfully pro- I i = teeth. tect your teeth from this disease. | 1 fl The appalling discovery of this Senreco also contains the best @ fact—that the germ which causes harmless agent for keeping the | | pyorrhea is one which inhabits teeth clean and white. It has a | every human mouth —was made refreshing flavor and leaves a g | over a year ago. Since then dent- wholesomely clean, cool and pleas- i i g ists have been urging everyone to ant taste in the mouth. fl 1 take special precautions in their Start the Senreco treatment § ■ daily toilet to prevent this disease tonight—full details in the folder | from developing in its acute wrapped around every tube. | ; form of bleeding gums, ten- Symptoms described. A | demess in chewing and loose 25c two oz. tube is sufficient s t ce th. ”■ V*- 'ft ‘ or SIX or Cl ght weeks of the ITo meet the need for such UM P yorrhea treatment. Get a daily treatment and to en- v/ * \ enreco at j our ruggists a. i V/1 today, or send 4c m stamps able everyone to take the \ U or coin for sam le tube necessary precautions \ -4 folder. Address against this disease, a prom- tanel Remedies Co., 505 inent dentist has put his Union Central Bldg., Cin-. own prescription before the cinnati, Ohio. muioimiiiiiifitg f

li kc Hie Pyramids! , M// 4 S?* P v l 'ratn4s of vterc not built iti a .'WWW- he - migntoJ,Mutton Vcre accumulated dollar ,ar » cac h one bearing, its mark of .self .sacrifice 6 denial. lhi| tjoiir ftekotcnc—a dollar in Qtir latite to-day and AluA r Ai 'i 1 /■ ' '■' J'IIK 101dfl6amsCouitft$aRk ■ 111 * -Slceatur-Snb-

Ducks 9c Geese 8c Young turkeys Uc Old Tom turkeys 10c ' Old Hen turkeys 10c ' Old Roosters 5c Butter, packing stock 18c Eggs 25c Above prices are tor poultry tree ’ from feed. KALVER’S MARKETS. Wool 21c<2». Beef hides ~..11' , Calf . .!$• ' I allow 6< Sheep pelts 25c0|1.6< LOCAL PRODUCE MARKET. { Chickens * 11c Indian Runner Duck* 8' Fowls 10c Ducks 9c Geese 8< Yourig turkeys 14< Old Tom Turkeys IL Old Hen Turkeys 11< Old Roosters 5< Eggs 25< Butter 18c Above prices are for poultry free | 'rom feed. DECATUR CREAMERY CO. Butter fat, delivered 34c Butter fat. In country 31c Butter, wholesale -..34c

DEPOSITORS GIVEN EVERY BUSINESS HELP This Institution is more than a repository for money—it is a business Institution to aid its customers. Individuals, firms and corporations are shown every consideration consistent with sound banking. Money is received on deposit and interest paid; assistance in legitimate business expansion is extended; advice about investments is freely given. Our facilities coupled with uniform courtesy are at the service of patrons for all banking business. FIRST NATIONAL BANK DECATUR. INDIANA Members Federal Reserve Association

B. C. HENRICKS D. C. YOl’R CHIROPRACTOR Above Voglewede’s Shoe Store. Phone 660 Office Hours Ito 5 7to 8 LADY ATTENDANT Decatur, Ind. + + 4 , d , + + + 4 , + , ! ,, t ,^, + ‘4 + PLENTY OF MONEY * * lo loan on * * IMPROVED FARMS * * at 5 Per Cent * Abstracts made on short * * Notice. 4 * SCHURGER’S < * Abstract Office. 4 +++ + + < FOR SALE—Blacksmith and repai shop at invoice price.—J. B. Miller Monroe, Ind. 280t12’ STO G ROCErFI I i Extra Fancy Cluster | Raisins, tb 15c ' j New English Walnuts, 1b....22c ’ New Citron, lb 25c . j New Mince Meat 10c - Seedless Raisins, tb 15c | New English Currants, tb..lsc ‘ J New California Figs, tb....10c , i Dromedary Dates 10c ’ | Crushed Pineapples, can... 15c I ■ Strawberries In Syrup 15c ; « Yacht Club Salad Dressing 10c ; i J ' j Calarab Candied Figs 30c | Maraschino Style Cherries 16c j Spanish Pimentos 10c *’ Nabisco Sugar Wafer 10c Rice Shelled Pop Corn 10c t Will Johns, J S33.r.iKa il.-.

GREAT MEN AS PEDESTRIANS ■ Writer* and Other* of World-Wide Fame Who Were Fond of Long Jaunts on Foot. "There have been some famous pedestrians, with the emphasis on the I word famous. Charles Dickens was a " great walker. ‘Twelve, fifteen, even twenty miles a day were none too much for Dickens . . . swinging his blackthorn stick, his little figure i sprang over the ground, and It took I a practiced pair of legs to keep alongI side of his voice.’ He once did 'a special feat of turning out of bed at two, after a hard day, pedestrian and ■ otherwise, and walking thirty miles ■ into the country before breakfast.’ Sir Walter Scott ’walked twenty or thirty miles without fatigue, notwithstanding his limp.’ Browning, when past seventy, could take long walks without fatigue, and Wordsworth at sixty did twenty miles a day. De Quincey considered fourteen miles a day necessary to his health, and Lamb, notwithstanding his ’almost immaterial legs,’ ‘could walk during all the day.’ Brahms was a tireless pedestrian, and Beethoven always took his daily walk or ‘run - of five or more miles in all manner of weathers, while Turner traveled twenty miles a day, sketching as he walked. Herbert Spencer, at thirteen, in a fit of homesickness, walked forty-eight I miles one day and forty-seven the next; but was probably injured in so doing. Tolstoi, at fifty-eight, walked 130 miles in three days. Great men are usually of powerful physique, and I many of us would suffer if we emu-1 lated their walking habits, but they j have not all been so vigorous. Im-, manuel Kant walked for at least an hour every day, but doubtless Bacon or Locke, Chopin or Weber, Spinoza or Calvin, who were none of them in good health, would have found a walk I of a mile or two quite sufficient or even too much.” —St. Nicholas. WAGE WAR ON THE LOCUST Russian Authorities Take Energetic Measures to Stamp Out Pests That Do Much Harm. A remarkably successful campaign J has recently been conducted by the i Russian government against locusts in Turkestan, where formerly the in- j habitants, for religious reasons, did hardly anything to check the ravages of these insects. Turkestan supplies almost half the cotton used in Russian mills, and : raises other valuable crops. As recently as 1901, locusts caused an annual loss of over $2,000,000 in this region, and only primitive methods of I dealing with them were in vogue. • The loss has now been reduced to practically nothing. The methods employed by the Russians include: Preparation in summer and autumn of forecast maps, showing the position, age and density of the egg centers of each district; treatment of the infested areas with paris green, or, better, molassed sodium arsenite, as soon as the larvae appear; scorching by knapsack machine of larvae in places not accessible to sprayers, devoid of vegetation, or far from water courses of I sufficient capacity to keep the spray- ; ers going; capture of larvae in pits or ditches. Hoop Petticoats. During the reign of Charles I the hoop petticoat was worn only by wives of the lower gentry and by the wives of the citizens. In the latter part of the reign of Queen Anne it rose again; this time in another form —that of an enormous hoop. This i grew to such immense proportions that during the time of George I and 11, eight yards was considered the i proper width. These hoops had outstanding steel i or whalebone foundations at the bottom of the skirt. In Elizabeth’s time . this whalebone had been used at the , top, near the waist, enlarging the i hips for several feet. Addison expressed himself about the subject as , follows, through his Sir Roger de ; Coverley: "My great-great-grandmother has 1 on a new fashioned petticoat, except that hers is gathered at the waist. My grandmother appears as if she stood in a large drum, whereas the ladies now walk as if they were in a go-cart." , Eating to Grow, A certain Columbus newspaper man Is proud of the precocity of his five-1 year-old niece. As typical of her men-i tai agility, he tells the following: “We were visiting recently at my i brother’s home. When dinner was called the child politely but firmly I announced that she had no Idea of dining and would remain away from the table. I “ ‘Why, Mildred, you must eat three full meals a day if you are ever to grow up and be a lady,’ remarked my wife, who happens to be a woman of substantial proportions. "Carefully surveying her gratuitous adviser, the little miss said: ‘Auntie, do you eat four meals a day?”’— Columbus Dispatch. Stopping Him. “I shall never ask you to promise! to come home early again,” she said sorrowfully when he let himself in at 2 a. ui. “Why not, my dear?” he inquired quietly. “It’s bad enough to be married to a nighthawk and a loafer without making a liar of you, too,” she replied, and he had no comeback.

PUBLIC SALE. The undersigned will offer for sale at hlu residence, a half mile south and a quarter mile east of Monroe, on Thursday, December 16, 1915, beginning ut 1 o'clock p. in., the following property, to-wit: Two head of horses, consisting of one gray mare, 3 years old, weighing about 1,000 lbs.; one bay inare, 12 years old, weighing about 1,000 lbs. Cattle: One Short Horn Durham cow, coming 6 years old, will be fresh April 4. Eleven Head of Hogs: One sow and seven pigs, big bone Poland China; 3 big bone Po land China; male hog. weighing about 80 lbs. Farming Implements: Dane hay loader, good as new; Ideal mower, good ns new; John Deere or Stag riding plow, new; John Deere walking plow, Osborn lever spring tooth har row, wooden spring tooth harrow, Milwaukee binder No. 10, in good shape; Avery corn plow, Jonn Deere check row corn planter, iron double shovel, iron single shovel, 3*4 inch Turnbull wagon, 3 in. wagon, good set hay ladders, good gravel bed, set of bob sleds, set double light farm harness. new; set double heavy breeching harness, good as new; 85 ft. log chains, swamp hooks, pulley and crow bar; some corn in crib, 450 shocks of corn fodder, and other articles too nu- ■ merous to mention. Terms: —$5.00 and under, cash; over $5 a credit of 9 months will be given, purchaser giving his note with ap- ! proved security, bearing 8 per cent after maturity; 4 per cent off I for cash. No good removed until set- ' tied for. JAMES UHRICK. Jeff Leichty, Auct. Jerry Martz, Clerk. PUBLIC~BALE. The undersigned will sell at public auction at his residence in Monroe township, Adams county, Ind., 2% miles south and 2 miles east of Monroe, 3*4 miles north and 3 miles east of Berne, Friday Dec. 17, 1915, beginning at 10 o’clock a. m., the following property, to-wit: Four Head of Horses: One bay mare, 12 years old, ' weight 1200 lbs.; black horse, 4 years {old, weight 1400 lbs.; bay driving j horse, 6 years old; light bay driving horse, 2 years old. Four Head of Hogs: One sow, weight about 300 lbs.; 3 shoats, weighing 150 lbs. each. Farming Implements: One I hay loader, mowing machine, John Deere breaking plow, walking breaking I plow, Hoosier drill, check row corn i planter, riding corn plow, double shoviel plow, spring tooth harrow, sevenI tooth corn cultivator, 4-in. tire truck E ' wagon, 3 In. tire double bed wagon, ( I set hay ladders, fanning mill, scoop , board, oil tank and other articles too numerous to mention. Terms:—ss.oo and under, cash; over $5.00 a credit of 9 months will be given, purchaser giving his note with approved security, bearing 8 per cent • interest after maturity; 4 per cent off for cash. No good removed until setI tied for. A. B. DAUGHERTY, j Jeff Liechty, Auct. — o 1915 CHRISTMAS 1916 i About December 15 your check for Christmas Savings will be mailed to you with accumulated 4 per cent interest. Please look at your card and make sure that you have paid for 50 weeks by Monday, December 13. j New club for 1916 will open on Monday, the 27th of December. Get ready. THE PEOPLES LOAN & TRUST COMPANY. o NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP BUSINESS Notice is hereby given that th firm 'or partnership heretofore existing be- , tween John A. Harvey and Delmer F. Leonard, known as the Harvey, Leonard & Co., is by mutual consent hereby dissolved. Delmer F. Leonard has purchased the interest of John A. Harvey and is now the sole owner of all the assets of said business, retaining the office heretofore occupied by said ‘ I firm over the People’s Loan & Trust i company, Decatur, Ind. Mr. Harvey I has purchased a farm in Mercer I county, Ohio, and will look after it and ! also engage in a general real estate business with headquarters at Celina and Rockford, Ohio, and will deal in I both Indiana and Ohio real estate. Dated, this 6th day of December, 1915. JOHN A. HARVEY. 293t3 DELMER F. LEONARD. PIANO TUNING AND REPAIRING. D. A. Gilliom (Professional) rebuilder and repairer of pianos and sewing machines, and piano tuner. Dealer in both branches. Write or phone 8, Line P, city. Office at home. Resi- ! dence, south end city limits, at G. R. & I. railroad crossing. At home on Saturdays. 293-m-w-s-ts o. . ..... NOTICE. No hunting or trespassing will be allowed on my farm. CLINT CLOUD. o DEMOCRAT WANT ADS PAY BIG.

GROCERY PRICES AT I FISHER & HARRIS iy I Are Less And The Quality Is First Grade. Only A Trhl Order Will Convince You. I

White Northern Wisconsin Sand Grown Potatoes, at bu 75c Cllmalene, the preparation for Toilet and Household use. softens the water, 10c packages 8c 2 for 15° Country Gentleman Corn, packed at Peru, Ind.; this corn is a regular 15c, 2 for 25c, at retail; our price of, can I® c 3 for 25c: or 95c dozen; is an extra value. Buy it by the case. We guarantee the quality. New Raisins, in bulk, extra large, at lb I ° c New Seeded Raisins, large packages 12c New Lima Beans at, lb 5 It). Box Argo Lump Starch 21c New Dates or Figs, pckg 9c 3 for 25c

PHONE 48. Your Orders will recieve Prompt and Satisfactory Attention. \ Carpet Sweepers And I Vacuum Cleaners I From $3.00 to $9.001 "Posh theßutton and Rest" Push Button Chairs I From SIO.OO to $28.00 I Rest © During The Holidays. From now on until January Ist, 1916 we will give you I a ten per cent discount on all articles bought of us f r I cash. ■ 111 '™ BEAVERS & ATZ. I -- - I Mickey Says: I f Michael O’Halloran Al S “Be Square” ■ Author of “Freckles,” “The Harvester,” “A Girl of the Limoorlost.” -J® Mak “Peaches, whom he found with a crippled back and cared I iHfa tor until she was if you would add something to the PLUS side of,life MV ‘ Sum and make it fresher, sweeter, and better worth living, read “Michael O’Halloran.” BK The Philadelphia Press Says—“ The story fairly radiates sunshine and exuberant faith in the in nate goodness of humanity.” Illustrated. Net $1.35 Leather, Net $2.00 At Your Book Store Doubleday, Page & Co. MWB—will | *ll I II ||| I I H II NUMBER YOUR HOUSE I I The Common Council in and for the City of Decatur has heretofore adopted an ordinance providing for the uniform numbering of houses. The number plates, including the screws tor placing same may be obtained from the city I treasurer for fifteen cents. All numbers shoul 1 be placed by property |H owners on or before the 15th of December, 1915. ■ or same will be placed by the city and charged against the property. H. M. DeVOSS, City Cleil- I

New Candied Lemon, Orangn nr I c Citron Peel, at B). 1 lb. Can of Rumford Baking i> ou .. f der for ? . f *4 lb. can Herschey Cocoa : “ 22c g/ Buckwheat Flour that Is | )UI „ a|)(| will please you, 5 II). bag m 10 lb. bag, 45c; In bulk. 41 c . . 6 lbs. for ” Holland Seed Cabbage, extra solid n> ! 1 ’4r H| Jello or Tryphose. Jelly Desert, anv Flavor, 3 pkgs for 2 , g : A largo shiptnent of Florida < )r . ' ? anges that are juicy and sweet at I : special low prices, dozen ! ’ 15c, 20c, 25c. 30c. 35c I 5 Chase & Sanborn Coffees will please : you, nothing so good in < often at ! ; the price, lb. 15c, 20c, 25c, 28 30c. 35c