Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 13, Number 303, Decatur, Adams County, 18 December 1915 — Page 6
rs rzojsom s=s o THE DAILY MARKET REPORTS o n n
fell ITZSIEJOE EAST BUFFALO. East Buffalo, N. Y., Dec. 18—(Special to Dally Democrat) —Receipts, 5,600; shipments. 2,280; official to New York yesterday, 3.990; hogs closing steady. Medium and heavy, $6.60®56.70; yorkers, $6.55® $6.65; lights and pigs, $6.30® $6.35; roughs, [email protected]; stags; $4.50®54.25; sheep, 1,800; steady; top lambs, 10.000; cattle, 250; steady. G. T. BURK. Wheat fl.lo Oats No. 4 34c Oats. No. 3. White 36c No grade oats 20c@30c Corn 75c Rye 75c Barley 45c Clover Seed SIO.OO Alisike Seed SB.OO Timothy Seed $3.00 NIBLICK & CO. Eggs 30c Butter 18c@25c FULLENKAMP’S. Eggs 30c Butter 27c BERLING’S. Indian Runner ducks .»,.8c Chickens 11c Fowls 10c
I NOW IS THE TIME to’think about about getting your Automobile overhauled for next seasons use. Let Us Give You Our Es’imate. Our Work Absolutely Guaranteed. I Kalver-Noble Garage Co. I | Madison St. PHONE 80. | FOR RENT—Four furnished rooms for WANTED —At once, a good girl to do light housekeeping, 336 Line street. general house work. No washing. 'Phone No. 521, 607 Monroe street. — Apply to Mrs. J. W. Tyndall, 415 MonB. W. Sholty. 291-e-o-d-ts roe street. 301t3 EhitiiiiiiiiiitimiiimiiitniiiiiiiiiiioiiiitiiiiiiitiiJJiiiiiiiiiuiDiimiiiiuinuiiiiiiiiuDiiiiimimttßiniiiiiiiiiiniimiinnininraiiiiHniiimiiiiing I The greatest enemy | of your teeth
■ ' I When scientists recently discovered the cause of that dread S disease, pyorrhea, they discovered the greatest enemy of your teeth. Why yours) Because the germ = that causes this disease inhabits | every human mouth! § Your dentist will tell you that | half of all the permanent teeth 1= lost are lost from this disease. This is because people have not realized before that everyone should g take precautions against this enemy. You can start now to ward off its constant attack and
Iwaiv* vi* uo vviioiaui. auiava escape the terrible results of this disease by using the proper corrective and preventive treatment in your daily toilet. To meet the need for this treatment and to enable everyone to take precautions against this disease, a prominent dentist has put his own prescription before gnMMMCIIIIIIIUUiaiIIHIIIIIIinUIIIIIUIIItQjHIIHhbII
£btft destroy In the effort to take cant of the tnattj) demands on the CtaUuMouue refrain from w'ithdrauSnq jjaurSank account. It Vux» taken time and ecottcnmj to build them up. <jbou ou’e .something to uoursclf this CAiUt mas——bear that tn mind. dcstrotj jjour ftabit "of 'Shrift. 4£aVe » uest-egg anyvOaij. Che Wishes of are 1 tfith jjern f»?r the oHerrW Christmas cfcr | A att<) a caning war of prosperity, health > m "aHtS Ja fe •S)ccafur<srib-
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Ducks ? 9c Geese 8c Young turkeys 14c Old Tom turkeys ...10c Old Hen turkeys 10c Old Roosters ~..50 Butter, packing stock 18c Eggs 25c Above prices are tor poultry free from feed. KALVER'S MARKETS. Wool >...U«eMe Beef hides Calf ... ». )K . x .Uc Tello* 6*' Sheep pelts 25c@$1.0u LOCAL PRODUCE MARKET. Chickens He Indian Runner cruets ~..........8c Fowls 10c Ducks Sc Geese 8c Young turkeys 14c Old Tom Turkeys 11c Old Hen Turkeys 11c Old Roosters , Sc Eggs 25c Butter 18c Above prices are for poultry free from feed DECATUR CKEAMERY CO. Butter fat, delivered 34c Butter fat, in country 31c Butter, wholesale 34c
the public in the convenient form of Senreco Tooth Paste. -si Senreco contains the best corrective and preventive for pyorrhea known to dental science. Used daily it will successfully pro- | tect your teeth from this disease. I Senreco also contains the best § harmless agent for keeping the | teeth clean and white. It has a f refreshing flavor and leaves a | wholesomely clean, cool and pleas-j | ant taste in the mouth. «. Start the Senreco treatment > tonight—full details in the folder s
CXSU lull UVVUIIJ 111 VSIV. a wrapped around every tube. | Symptoms described. A | 25c two oz. tube is sufficient 1 for six or eight weeks of the 1 pyorrhea treatment. Get | Senreco at your druggists B today, or send 4c in stamps f or coin for sample tube and | folder. Address The Sen- i tanel Remedies Co., 502 | 1 Union Central Bldg., Cin- i _ cinnati, Ohio.
Sample size itnintiimuinmmmc
11 HELP WANTED 1 FOR RENT—Eight room house at the 1 corner of Marshall and Fifth Sts. I See Heller, Sutton & Heller. 303t3 c FOIHIENT—A moderin house for rent, c Has everything except a furnace, c Good barn and garage in connection, c Inquire of Mrs. Al Burdge, phone No. c 208. 287tf. Q - ' ■ e FOR SALE—One thoroughbred Duroc c male hog. Inquire at old Robert B Niblick farm, south of Peterson.— John Pfister. 301t3 FORD FOR SALE—A brand new-five-passenger Ford touring car. Has b never been used. Inquire at the Holt--6 house Fireproof Garage, North First 5 street, Decatur, Ind. 281tf FOR RENT—At a low figure, my J house, furnished. Everything mod ern; electricity, gas, cold and hot city wateY, soft water, bath, furnace, coal > or wood range. Call 233 North Fifth . street. 284tf 3 FOR SALJi —Thirty-inch double wag- : on bed and one twelve-inch single 3 wagon bed. Also a number of feed 3 troughs. Inquire of Peter Kirsch, s 'phone 211. 296tf MARRY, IF LONELY—For results, ■» ' try me. Many wealthy, wish early ' marriage; very successful, confidential, strictly reliable; years of experi * ence; descriptions free. “The Successful Club,” Mrs. Purdie, Box 556, Oakland. Calif. 300t3 OBITUARY. ' Norris Wilford Miller, son of Wil- ' liam J. and Ella E. Miller, was born at Mt. Cory, Hancock county, Ohio, November 28, 1887. and departed this life November 3, 1915, at New Castle, Ind., aged 27 years, 11 months and 5 days. The body was brought to the parental home at Decatur, Ind., for burial. Funeral services were conducted by Rev. C. L. Culbertson of Rockford, Ohio, assisted by Rev. Ross of Spencerville, Ohio, at Pleasant Grove U. B. church. Interment was made in the Clarke Chapel cemetery. The deceased is survived by the father and mother, two sisters, Mrs. Marion Stults of Root township, and Gladys, at home; L. Curtis of Union township, and Wallace Ammi, at home. One brother. Homer Earl, preceded him in death. The deceased was converted under the ministry of Rev. A. P. Black and lived a faithful Christian until death. He was of a kind and loving disposition and made friends wherever he went. Three days previous to his death he wrote on the file leaf of his testament: “I have always tried to live right. I am going to die. Meet me in heaven. , Good-bye.” Although he was afflict- , ed from childhood, he always bore his affliction with a sweet, Christian spirit. o PUBLIC SALE. The undersigned will offer for sale at her residence, mile south and % mile east of Beery church, 114 miles east and 14 mile south of Peterson, and 3 miles southwest of Decatur, on Thursday, January 6, 1916, beginning at 10:30 o’clock a. m., the following property, to-wit: Five Head of Horses, consisting of one big sorrel team, 4 and 5 years old, good working horses; black colt, coming 2 years old; sorrel colt, coming 2 years old; roan mare colt, coming 2 years old. Six Head of Cattle, consisting of one red cow, coming fresh in March; spotted cow, coming fresh in April; red cow, coming fresh in April; heifer, 1 year old; steer, coming 2 years old; Durham bull, 1 year old. Twenty-one Head of Hogs, consisting of one brood sow, will farrow the latter part of March; 20 head of shoats, weighing from 40 to 50 Tbs. each. Farming Implements, consisting of bob sled, hog rack, set of dump boards, fanning mill, good as new; platform scales, good as new; spring tooth harrow, l-horse cultivator, 2 Jumper plows, double shovel plow, 2-sled corn cutter, extension ladder, hay knife, hay fork, 2 post augers, clover buncher, harness, set of buggy wheels, other articles too numerous to mention; 100 shocks of corn. Terms of Sale: —$5.00 and under, 1 cash; over $5.00 a credit of 9 months
I will be given, purchaser giving a bankable note with approved security; 4 per cent off for cash. No goods removed until settled for. MRS. EMILE L. EGLY. J. J. Baumgartner. Auct. W. A. Lower, Clerk. Lunch on grounds. 1 302t8 • —■ —— . o— OUNCE OF PREVENTION WORTH POUNDS OF CURE. t************ ; * NOTICE TO * * CORRESPONDENTS. « * , * • ♦ You are Invited to write the * * Tuberculosis Editor of the Dally * * Democrat on any phase of the tu- * i * berculosis problem. Your name * * will not be used without your * * permission. Please make your * * questions short. If you desire a * ; * personal answer, be sure to en- * * close a stamped, addressed enve- * * lope. This service is absolutely * * free to readers of the Dally Demo- v * ocrat. * ,************* Would you chew gum that has beer. i chewed by others, perhaps complete strangers? Would you wear under- , clothing that has been worn for ' weeks by others, and handed you to wear without being washed? Would you swallow food that has been chew ed by another person? Would you use a toothbrush that has been used by some one else? If you are a smok er, would you pick up from the gut ter, a half-smoked cigar, and put it in your mouth? The answer is easy. Os course you wouldn’t. But man> of you are doing things equally as bad, equally as dirty, equally as dan gerous to your health. You are breathing air that has been rendered poisonous by having been recently ex pelled from your lungs or the lungs of others. You are careful, sometime fastid ious about the things you put In your stomach. You growl sometimes if the steak is underdone or if the buttei has a faint odor, or if the milk is a trifle blinky, or if the eggs are plainly aged. But in your workshop, or you: church, or the moving picture show o: theater you attend, or in your bed room, or the street car, you are feel ing your lungs to subject their delicate and extremely sensitive surfaces topoisonous, often disease laden air that has been used and re-used until it actually reeks with filth. Then is it any wonder that yon have headaches, that your lung tis sues break down, that you become listless, that you lose your “snap?’ Fresh air is cheap; few of us but can have plenty of it, it we want it. We need it every minute of every hour oi every day. Questions and Answers. What per cent of the Red Cross seal money remains in Indiana and is used in the war of tuberculosis? —H. E. K Ninety per cent. The other ten pe> cent is sent to the American Red Cross which supplies the seals and ad vertising matter. After paying for this expense, the Red Cross divides the remainder with the National As sociation for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis. Is any real progress being made in stamping out tuberculosis or consump tion in this state?—A. R. Yes —in 1904, when Indiana’s popu lation was about a quarter of a million less than it is today, there were 5,178 deaths from consumption in this state, compared with 4,077 deaths in 1914. Can one have tuberculosis of the liver or of the kidneys?—T. B. Yes —Tuberculosis can. and does affect nearly every part of the body. The most prevalent form, however, is , tuberculosis of the lungs. Do you think that tuberculosis ever will be driven out of this country and if so, how? —G. K. There certainly are many reasons to 1 hope that tuberculosis will eventually become as rare as small pox, yellow fever, and other once prevalent but preventable diseases. While it may be years before scientists will discover a specific cure for it, there , is no doubt that civilization rapidly i has become aroused to the need for ‘ stringent preventative measures against tuberculosis and neither is there any doubt that the propoganda that is being conducted by anti-tuber-culosis organizations throughout the country is resulting in many precautions against the spread of the disease. Sleeping porches are no longer an oddity. Open bed room windows are coming to be the rule rather than the exception. Yes, the cry of “Keep your vitality up” is getting results. —o — MEETING OF BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS. Notice Is hereby given that the Board of Commissioners of Adams County, will l>e in session on Monday, December 27, 1915, for the purpose of allowing bills and tor the purpose of attending to all business necessary for closing up the year's work for the county. ■All parties holding claims against the county must file their claims on or before December 22. 1915. CHRISTIAN EICHER, DAVID J. DILLING, WILLIAM REPPERT, Board of Commissioners. Attest: T. H. Baltzell, Auditor. 18-20
STAR GROCERY Marco Spring Wheat Flour ..90c Lye, 3 cans for 25c Navy Beans, Tt>. 8c Kitchen Cleanser, 6 cans.. 25c Perfection Crackers, tb 8c Golden Rio Coffee, 1b 20c Arbuckles Coffee, tb 20c Santa Clara Prunes, 2 tbs 15c Sayman's Vegetable Soap, 3 for 20c ' Soap, all kinds, 6 for 25c Baking Molasses, qt. can ...10c Pure Buckwheat, 10 Ib. sack 45c Maple Syrup, large bottle 25c Red Kidney Beans, tb 10c Dried Peas, tb 6c Will Johns, MR, FARMER. Have you tried Rapid Medicated Compound, the the great worm destroyer and conditioner, for hogs, horses, cows and sheep? Sold on a guarantee to do all we claim. 25 lb. bags, $1.50. For sale by Smith, Yager, & Falk, druggists. 15 o MUST PAY DOG TAX Residents of St. Marys township are hereby notified tha dog tax must be paid at once. It not by December 25th, the same will be turned over to the prosecutor for colection according to law. Please take notice. 301t6 E. W. FRANCE, Trustee. PIANO TUNING. I am in Decatur about every week and if you wish strictly high grade piano tuning, voicing, etc., done leave word with Gay, Zwick & Myers. HARVEY SAWYER, 300t2 Ft. Wayne, Ind. o NOTICE. All those knowing themselves indebted to the H. H. Bremerkamp mill please call at the Fornax mill and set-, tie their account as soon as possible. 300t3 H. H. BREMERKAMP. + + ♦♦♦♦*♦♦♦ + ♦♦* * PLENTY OF MONEY * ♦ to loan on * ♦ IMPROVED FARMS * ♦ at 5 Per Cent * Abstracts made on short * ♦ Notice. * * SCHURGER’S * * Abstract Office. * Dr. C V. Connell VETERINARIAN Phnno office 102 I nOllc Residence 143 With The New Years greeting to old friends inclose Your Portrait. 5 x JO I rl mw \ 'ln \ rl!' \ r I It’s the ideal remembrance, , because it’s the next best thing to a visit , ERWINSTUDIO
I Rex Theater UNIVERSAL PROGRAM TONIGHT Three Reel Laemmle feature with Agnes Vernon and Ray Hanford. MONDAY ~~ 101 Bison feature “The Yellow Star” with Marie Walcamp and Frank Newburg. S~ftDMISSION sg~~ You are cordially invited to the Rex Theater -'wffr.? — U 11 111 CHRISTMAS CANDIES and NUTS at Special LOW PRICES. Candies, 4 lbs. for 25c and up Fine Box Candies 20c to SI.OO * New Mixed Nuts, lb 15c English Walnuts, lb 17c Trees, Holly, Mistletoe and Wreathes. Fifty boxes fine California Oranges. [Special Prices to Churches and Teachers. You will do well to get our Prices before Buying. HUNSKXER 4 MIIIER |
FOR SALE. Mammoth Bronze turkeys. Giant stand, noted for quick growth, hardiness, large bone and beautiful plumage; also 6 nice pigs. 3 months old. Uso tubular Sharpless separator, in ;ood condition. SARAH AYRES, lOOtfi R. R. 2, Monroe.
BOYS XMAS HEADQUARTERS | FOR Skudder Cars Flexible Sleds Skates Eveready Flashlights Hockey Sticks Rifles Shot Guns , i. '.i ■ Wagons Bicycles Watches 1 Etc. '< ’’ r HENRY KNAPP & SON.
KUll'UmMlWWllli IIJ -W". "™. 'll . ™ . »"■ — PROGRAM FOR 3ED MEN. The Red Men will entertain Thursday evening and every member ought to be on hands. A program will be given, including an address by Hon. John C. Moran and the program v. 11! be followed by a banquet. The event is sure to be an enjoyable one
