Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 13, Number 302, Decatur, Adams County, 17 December 1915 — Page 3

PUBLIC SALE. flic undersigned will sell nt publisulfrjgt my residence on the Cliarlen Shaft furrb four an(l ol,ollll| f miles south of Monroeville, one :ill <| ji&lfßiilos south of East Liberty, and e |gk|niilcs northeast of I llr . | ni | in ißlon township, Ad: in <• rimy. 01l December 22, 1915. the foliov ng property, to-wit: Four Head of Horae*, consisting of (mo brown mare,- 8 years old. weighing 1701)libs; sorrel mare, 7 years old. wqß*"" 1500 lbs.; black mare, 7 ysa yf: old. case in foal by rreidline's jack, weighing 1400; coach horse, 8 yearn old, weighing non n> s . p ive Head >f Mules, consisting of one span j-jujr olds, weighing 2100 lbs.; one span oming 2 year olds. match team, weighing 1500 tbs.; one yearling mule colt. | Thirteen Head of Cattle, con- | BBlg of Durham cow, 5 years old, fresh the 15th of March; 1! cow, will lie fresh February cow, will be fresh Mar. 11; J-year-old Jersey cow, fresh Feb. 16; 6 head of 2-yearold heifers, bred; 2-yeetr old Holstein bull, 2 spring clave ; 9 head of ewes. Thirty Head of Bogs, consisting of 1 sow, with 6 pig* ( l>y her side; 2 Duroc sows, bred; 21 Bend of fall shoats; 75 head of chickens. Farming Implements: Geirjess hay loader, McCormick mower, ■ ft. cut; hay tedder, Oliver rid plow, good as new; Osborn disc, walking cultivator, spring tooth harrow, spike tooth harrow, truje wagon, 2 spring wagons, one light and one heavy; set of bobs, platfortn hay ladders, with bed attached; hailess, set of buggy harness, light cook stove, stock rack, 2 sets of work set of double harness, one horse corn drill, forks, shovels and other arti cles. All these articles will sell re gardless of the bid, as I am leaving theKarm and cannot use them. The ladß* of the East Liberty U. B. church wil| serve dinner on the ground. Te rns —Nine months. 1 per cent off forßash. JOHN J. BARKLEY, Jr., 3. R. Rose, Auct. John A. Barkley, Clerk. t-s dSTJIAN OINTMENT Will Hire Blind, Hired: rud It< hinp* I'l u*nMjjMnrbs the tumor-*, ailavs itcb’ng at oner acts &* a pouliiee, gives i relief. For sale by all •sail ai.d 81.0 C '‘.MS MFC CO. . p. .. us .. a . e | c -d, o« 3 i, S "“lnterprise drug store. t DECATUR, IND. ■■■■ — ■»! -wctwwctc*—»« B. C. HENRICKS D. C. . YOl'R CHIROPRACTOR ». Above Voglev ede’s Shoe Store. Phone 660 Office Hours Ito 5 7to 8 I LADY ATTENDANT Decatur, Ind. STOP LOOK LISTEN Book your Sale with N. RUNYON Anohnnnor ■ HUUUVUVVI* He knows the value oi your property and will gel the high dollar for you. Telephone No, 8 L Decatur, Ind. Dr. L. K. Maglej VETERINARIAN Coiner Third and Monroe Streets. Phones R office M ii DECATUR. IND. BBB»" LIVE STOCK and General Auctioneering I thank you for your past favors I am still on the job. Telephone at my expense. J. N. Burkhead Monroe, Ind.

DRINK HOT TEA FOR A BAD COLD j Get a small package of Hamburg Breast 'lea, or as the German folks call it, "Hamburger Brust Thee,” at any pharmacy. Take a tablespoonful of the tea, put a cup of boiling water upon it, pour through a sieve and drink a teacup full at any time during the day or before retiring. It is the most effective way to break a cold and cure grip, as it opens the pores of the skin, relieving congestion. Also loosens the bowels, thus driving a cold from the system. 'I ry it tiie next time you suffer from a cold or the grip. It is inexpensive and entirely vegetable, therefore safe and harmless. B BffICMD ■ HIBMJGBI OUT Rub Pain and Stifihess away with a small bottle of old honest St. Jacobs Oil When your back is sore and lame or lumbago, sciatica or rheumatism has you stiffened up, don't suffer I Get a 25 cent bottle of old, honest “St. Jacobs Oil” at any drug store, pour a little in your hand and rub it right into tiie pain or ache, and by the time you count fifty, the soreness and lameness is gone. Don't stay crippled! This soothing, penetrating oil needs to be used oniy once. It takes the ache and pain right out of your back and ends the misery. It is magical, yet absolutely harmless and doesn’t burn the skin. Nothing else stops lumbago, sciatica and lame back misery so promptly! T FLUSH KIDNEYS Eat less meat if you feel Backachy or Bladder troubles you—Salts is fine for Kidneys. Meat forms uric acid which excites and overworks the kidneys in their efforts to filter it from the system. Regular eaters of meat must flush the kidneys occasionally. You must relieve them like you relieve your bowels; removing all the acids, waste and poison, else you feel a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment; the channels often get irritated, obliging you to get up two or three times during the night. To neutralize these irritating acids and flush off the body’s urinous waste get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will the* act fine and bladder disorders disappear. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate slug gish kidneys and stop bladder irritation Jad Salts is inexpensive; harmless anmakes a delightful effervescent lithia water drink which millions of men ar. women take now and then, thus nvoidii serious kidney and bladder disnar.-. it DARK HAih MO LOOK W Don’t stay gray! Nobody can tel when you darken gray, faded hair with Sage Tea and Sulphur. Grandmother kept her hair beautiful! darkened, glossy and abundant with r brew of Sage Tea and Sulphur. When rver her hair fell out or took on this dull, faded or streaked appearance, thi •imple mixture was applied with won lerful effect. By ashing at any dru store for “Wyeth’s Gage and Knlpht: Hair Remedy,” you will "it Jar, bottle of this old-time r-’cfj.:dv ‘ use, for about 50 rente., 'th.’ :: ' mixture can be depended nr-". i.-> natural color and beauty *. 1 '><• * is splendid for daadruu, dry, and falling hair. A well-known downtown dm, everybody uses Wyeth’s Saga phur, because it darkens so n.itur.i avenly that nobody can toil it hns i? applied—it’s so easy to use, too. V simply dampen a comb or s-dt b.' mil draw it through your hair, taki e strand at a time. By morning t! nv hair disappears; after another appl: lion or two, it is restored to its nature n and looks glossy, soft and. noun at. NOTICE. All parties knowing themselves to be indebted for ditch assessments on the Holthouse ditch, the Strait branch, the Ayres ditch in Washington township. will save the 8 per cent delinquency if you will please call at the trustee’s office at Decatur, Ind., and settle on or before Jan. 1, 1916. 300t3 ED L. AUGENBAUGH. - o for surveyor. In reply to the inquiries of my friends I take this method of announcing my name as a Democratic Candidate for the office of County Surveyor of Adams County, subject to the decision of the Primary Election to be held in March 1916. 29 9t6 ORVAL HARRUFF. - o — democrat Want Ads Pay.

PARISIANS GO TO FORESTS ;Great Numbers of Seaside Retort* Have Been Taken Over by th* Military Authorities. In consequence of the requisition of many seaside hotels for hospitals in 'connection with other military ospedients a great many Parisians who generally go to the seashore have taken villas in the forest regions around 1 Paris. Accommodations are now at a! premium in the favorite resorts ofl the forests of St. Germain and Fontainebleau. Chantilly is too near the scene of operations, but Enghien isj crowded, as well as Montmorency, BtJ Cloud and the popular places of the! Meudon Woods. Nearly all the less fashionable suburbs of Paris have benefited. The latest military regulations allow np new residence permits within ten miles of the coast from Le Treport, near Dieppe, to the northern frontier, excepting by authorization of the military authorities; this exception is reserved to French citizens or subjects of countries allied with France who own property they propose to Inhabit, or whose lease of It antedated August 2,1914. Exceptional considerations of health may be taken by the military authorities as justification for residence In the region of Berck Plage, between Le Treport and Etables. All habitations north of Le Treport known to have belonged In time of peace to the subjects of countries now enemies of France cannot be inhabited under any circumstance*. These regulations close many resorts on the channel coaat to the summer visitor. SOCIETY WOMEN STUDY ART Avowed Idea Is to Develop American Style In Dress and Home Furnishing*. Young women well known In society have entered art schools this autumn tor the purpose of studying Interior decoration and costume designing, says the New York Times. Some of them are to use their knowladge In the adornment of their own homes or In giving Individuality to their own wardrobe, while others Intend to embark on professional careers. Their attention has been drawn to this new phase of activity largely through the European war, for they see before tnem opportunities of devel-, oping American tastes and American ideals in both fashions and in the furnishing of their homes. Frank Alvah Parsons, the director of the New York School of Fine and Applied Art, said recently that in every direction this fall women of; well-known New York families were showing their Interest In practical] work along artistic lines to a degree! which he had never known. This In his opinion, due to the manyj changes which were developing from! the European conflict and the wish toj find a substitute for merely social acj tlvlties. Other schools where the practical; arts of decoration are taught are also, receiving students of social promii nence from foreigij countries as welL This is due to the fact that the opporj tunities for study In Paris and othep European art centers have been cut; off by the conditions which now prei vail on the continent. , L Canada’s Giant Tree*. The 225-foot Jong "spar” of Douglas fir, a gift from British Columbia, which is to be erected as a flagstaff In Kew Gardens, in England, Is typical of hundreds of similar pieces of timber which grow in the forests of western Canada. The Kew Gardena flagstaff, which was taken down owing to its insecure condition In December, 1913, and which was 160 feet in length, also came from British Columbia and carried the flag In Kew Gardens for over half a century. It was presented to the gardens by the late Mr. E. Stamp and was brought to England by a sailing ship, via Cape Horn, In 1861. When It was decided to take it down two years ago It occupied a big staff of workmen over a fortnight in rigging up the necessary derricks and gear for lowering It to the ground.—Pall Mall Gazette. Oil Well* Sunk In Bed of OceanMany persons would doubt the statement that It Is possible to pump oil from the earth beneath the water* of the ocean. That this is done, how ever, is proved. The well towers are located on rough frame piers over the ocean and as far as a hunfired feet from the surf. The oil Is pumped through the waters of the sea and is carried through pipes to the land,, where It Is emptied Into tanks. The pumps are worked by means of steam engines stationed on the piers. A few years ago there were many more of these wells, but some have been ex-| hausted and abandoned in recent 1 years —Popular Science Monthly and World’s Advance. Blow for Tuberculosis. Within ten years medical science will probably have succeeded in all but eliminating tuberculosis from vital statistics. This is the prediction of Dr. Jefferson D. Gibson, president of the American Association on Clinical Research, In an address in Philadelphia. He said that recent discoveries by which the presence of tuberculosis tendencies can be detected even before the germs appear to. the sputum, together with a later and higher development of the X-ray, will In a short time remove tuberculosis from the list of ordinarily fatal diseases.

HOW SUCCESS MAY BE WON Bugg**tlv* Article That May Appeal to Those Who at Present Occupy Subordinate Position*. In the Woman'* Home Companion appears a practically suggestive arI tide entitled “The Girl With Note- , book and Pencil,” by Anna Steese 1 Richardson. In her article, Mrs. Rich- ' j ardson shows how a stenographer can, ! by thinking and acting for her employer. advance herself in her busi- ! ness career. Following Is an extract , from the article: “I have known stenographers who ] felt that It was beneath their dignity to see to the dusting of their employer's desk; who felt that they did not need to pay any attention to his supplies of pins, rubber bands gnd letter clips; who did not notice whether his pencils were sharp or not, or whether his Ink wells were filled. It Should be a part of every secretary’s work to see that these things are attended to; that Ink wells, paste pots, pens, pencils, blotter* —In fact, every bit of the desk equipment—are In order for use, and that the desk and sill its fittings are absolutely dustless. “Two opportunities are open to the stenographer* One is a private secretaryship. The other la an independent business venture. Both are reached by the same methods—accuracy, efficiency and undivided interest. A good memory helps, but interest and that great gift of thinking for and with your employer counts the most Lastly and just as important M anything else, remember to keep absolute silence, both in the office and out of it, on all subjects relating to your employer’* business.'* HEARTY EATERS ARE THESE Commlsssrlat Department of the British Army Will Hava to Move to Keep Up With Them. From close observation of the habits of the young Maori men in training In Auckland (New Zealand) for active service, it appears that the modern Maori has inherited, almost unimpaired, the genius for practical foraging which was one of the vital qualifications of his forefathers in the strenuous struggle for existence. They have ccoured the country in the neighborhood of the camp and won eels by the score from places where the white man never dreamed there was any edible wealth at all. The ability of the sturdy Maori recruits to assimilate comestibles is a constant source of wonder to his pale brethren. The camp rations are admittedly generous and sufficient in their way, but the canteen is a pleasure resort, and is patronized as such. Supper is an institution, not a meal. Here is one warrior's effort at 8:30 p. m.: Two bottles of raspberry, a tin of sardines and a big lobster. This is a typical instance, and yet everyone is up, merry and bright, for physical drill at halfpast six in the morning. Up to ths Scratch. One of the attractions at the lowa state fair last year was Beachey, the aviator, sometimes advertised as the “human bird." As he was preparing for one of his flights, a large colored woman in a stiffly starched white dress stood outside the race-track fence, about forty yards behind the aeroplane. When the propellers started, they created a small whirlwind, and sent back a cloud of dust and pein bles that blinded and pelted the nearest spectators. After the flight, the colored woman' atood looking at her soiled dress, with an expression of regret oddly' tinged with pride that she had been the recipient of such distinguished attention. ' “What you t’lnk of dat bird man, Sister Jones?” inquired an acquaintance, who had just edged her way through the crowd. Sister Jones looked up and smiled broadly. “Say, woman, flat Beachey am sure some bird! Why, dat man scratched up more dust dan fo'ty chickens in an ash pile!”—Youth's Companion. Band Carried In Motorcycle Parade. A brass band of 25 pieces recently participated in a night motorcycle parade held at Milwaukee. The bandsmen were seated in side cars, one to each car. The leader directed by waving a baton to the end of which was attached a small incandescent lamp. The problem of Illuminating the music held on the Instruments of the various players was solved in a sim- ! pie manner. A small-globed electric lamp, mounted in a reflector and connected with a storage battery carried under the seat, was provided in each aide car. I The lights were pinned to the caps, , or coats, worn by the members of the band, while the wires connecting with them extended over the men's shoulders, to that they were entirely out of the way and did not Interfere with the playing. Variation of Brightness. In the bulletin of the Astronomical society of Barcelona, Senor Vincente Ventosa y Martinez de Velasco has just published a somewhat belated account of an observation of an unpredicted occultation of the brighter component of Beta Scorpl, which he secured on February 27, 1876. The variation in the brightness of the stars as it left the limb of the planet leads Senor Ventosa to estimate the height ] j of the Jovian atmosphere at 1,500 to ' j 1.800 miles. . . I

HENSLEY'S 25th. 25th. ANNIVERSARY ANNIVERSARY Henslev’s 25th Anniversary. IN THE JEWELRY BUSINESS IN DECATUR To celebrate Our Anniversary, we extend you the privilege of selecting and we will lay Your Selection away without any Deposit. e h ave an enc^ess supply to select from at your own price. Watches from SI.OO up. Rings from 50c up, Gents watch Chains of all description, Cuff Links, Everything tor the Gents. Lavalliers, Bracelets, Diamonds, Rings, Bracelet Watches, Chains, Pins. Everything Ladies Use in the Jewelry Line. You know she has always wanteJ one. IE We have them from $5.00 up in Rings, Pins and LavallJIAMOND iers. You will be surprised to see our prices, get prices elsewhere and compare them to our prices. EVERYTHING ENGRAVED FREE. 25th. lIENSIEY THE MEIER _ 25th. — a”MERRY CHRISTMAS ■.. That is what Santa Claus says, and that is what we want everybody to have. Your Christmas will be merrier if your feet are well dressed, and well dressed means that the shoes shall be comfortable, shall lit, and be of the proper styles. Feet brought to our store always fitted with shoes that fit, that are comfortable, and that are in style, so go away well dressed. We have shoes for every member of the family—Father, Mother, Daughter, Son, and the little people. Let us help make their Christmas more merry with a pair of shoes—a present that will be useful, durable and bring long remembrance of the giver. We’ll put them aside for you if you desire. C. H. ELZEY, The Christmas Shoe Store. Furniture Is The Gilt of All Gilts. It’s a pleasure to receive gifts that are useful at Christmas time. Some very useful and suitable Christmas gifts are listed below. Look Them Over Carefully. BED ROOM SUITS, In Circcassian Walnut, Oak. Mahogany and Birds Eye Maple. All kinds of easy Rockers from $1.50 to S3OOO. Some for Children. Cedar Chests, beautifully finished. Foot stools for Father, Trays, Smokers of all kind, Wall pictures, Library tables, Ladies and Children desks and room screens. We will gladly show you any article that might interest you, without urging you to buy. Remember, we will allow you a 10 per cent discount on any purchase. If you wish, all goods will be laid aside for Christmas delivery. BEAVERS & ATZ Sou tin Second Street.