Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 14, Number 3, Decatur, Adams County, 4 January 1916 — Page 3

Hhp " |' From My Narrow Little Window I I THE HOOSIER OBSERVER

■Take the pale pink and blue tissue leper display wadding cut of some of aShe thin shirt waists for sale and ■here isn’t much left. Some people ■re like thin shirt waists. • * • • I When you hear a man say a girl ■should have gotten a better man for ■a husband than she did, it is ten to one ■ that he means it should have been Khimself. • • • • I When a person "talks through his ■ nt” is he out of his head? Asks fi/ncle Hezekiah * • • • | Politeness is something, but push is ■more —at a bargain sale, observed one ■woman. • • • • I When a fellow carries a little watch ■it is ten to one that he and his "girl" ■have fallen out and she has given B him back his present. ■ When a plan fails, we think the Other fellow is to blame; when it goes through, we think it is due to our own good management. When you want to scold somebody, don't. Sit down and write out your little grievances. The next morning get up and read them and you will wonder how you could hav been mean enough to think up such awful things. **» • • With the high cost of living and the close gnawing of the bones, hash will go town in the memory of posterity as onejof the dear, delightful luxuries indulged in by our forefathers. The jokusmith will have to sharpen a new hoarding house point. • * * * Ole Miss Lickticut, who has soured on the world, says she now knows why they are always spoken of as “poor widows.” There are usually no other kind. Unless they have been married long enough to learn good, common sense from their first marriage, the rich widows and their first husband's life insurance money become somebody else’s wives. Don’t you all know' some one about your own age you will hold a secret,' grudge against all your life just because they were held up to you as models when you were little. p You can’t get mad at persons who Jurii up their noses at you—it makes ’ -I VV A-.IN 1 ADb PAY BIG

—x.-z— ... ;—x—fai—■' | ZWIT 70 GET THIT\ I f 3225 ALUMINUM A I GRIDDLE I H VAT ASAVING OF sl±o I

Sr Get 50 rente worth of Karo from your grocer, and tend ’S? * Mp the label* to ua together with 85 cent* and we’n send rota O ■H thia $2.25 Solid Aluminum Griddle by prepaid parcel poet. M / HERE is a clean cash saving of 11.40—and thousands of K house wiles have already taken advantage of. this remark- ■ ■ able chance to get an aluminum griddle for less than the , ■Bg wholesale price. . W B This Aluminum Griddle needs no grossing. It doesn’t chip or ■ I, ■ERd mst. It heats uar/ormly over entire baking surface — doesn't sos jf ajHEil burn the cakes in one spot and leave them underdone in another. S S HS It doesn’t smoke up the kitchen—and the cakes are more digest- ■ ■ Sa ibi e than when fried in grease. i ■ Sg At great expense we are seeking to place a Karo Aluminum ■ K Wig* Griddle in the homes of all Karo users, so that Karo—the famous ■ SB'I spread for griddle cakes and waffles—may be served on the most ISt XS deliciously baked cakes that can be made, I jjgsj, You know Karo, of course. Nearly everybody d 055—65,000,000 | (M cans sold last year alone. And you doubtless know the wonder- A a»d fol cleanliness and durability of Aluminum ware. ■JK& •Bf If you are a Karo user already then you know all about thia M&S wonderful syrup—you know how fine it is as a spread for bread; fll - •W how delicious it is with griddle cakes,waffles, hot biscuits and g ■Ski corn bread. . " ■ 'K gh—T. H® Get 50 cents worth of Karo from your grocer at once, and g gSM send the labels and 85 cents (P. O. money order or stamps) g I Jr-***? 3/1 to us and get one of these Aluminum Griddles by prepaid g gSS|| parcel post. Remember that our supply is going fast —so get your g SkS Igfl Karo today. We will also send you fees one g of the famous Corn Products Cook Books. \g g3®g Corn Products Refining Company ■L 1 P.O. Box 161 Hew York Dep*. PX f tffiiHßHKS'wiO mil

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them look so ridiculous, you can't help laughing. * • • * Some girls have to be carried about on chocolate chips. * • « • Isn’t it an Interesting game to propose something just to see how many excuses some people can make to get out of doing it? • * • » Many a girl idealizes a man until he takes up with some other girl and then she wonders how she ever could have admired a man with such poor taste. • • • • I wound the clock and set the hands the other night and got up in the morning to find it Just where I had left it the night before. I had forgotten to set the pendulum swinging. Some people are like that. • • • • If woman did get the ballot, would she ever be old enough to vote, anyhow? » • • • Some people are so stingy that they feel they are short-weighted if the sides of the tin cans bulge in. • • • • Women are such contradictory creatures. They can never get through praising each other's cook- . ing when they visit one another; but let them try to live in the same house and work together, and they would have a fight inside an hour, as to which is the right way to do a thing. Ole Miss Liekticutt says the more she observes the more she is against these late marriages. A man at sixtyfive is too old to quit drinking out of a saucer and wearing wrist-bands! • • • • There is nothing in life like getting a drawing card and holding on to it, I thought when the little girl who was told to hurry home or she’d miss the party, responded; “O, no, I'm to take the ice cream home. They’ll wait till I come.” • • • • The more I hear some people complain, the less I think it was a mistake of the reporter when he wrote that Mrs. Blank “enjoyed poor health.” • * * Also, , I think some, reporters write truly when they say that i‘the romance “ended in the weeding of Ahe couple.” I | DEMOCRAT WAN? AD3 PAY BIG

HE TESTIFIES N. J. Troyer of Near Greentown, Tells* of Experiences With Tanlac. GAINED QUICK AID Highly Recommends the Master Medicine to AU Other People. Greentown, Ind., Jan. 4—N. J. Troyer, a farmer, who lives near Greentown, Ind., is one of the hundreds of firm friends of Tanlac in this vicinity who are praising the master med-, icine fqr good they have derived from its use. Mr. Troyer recently said: “I have suffered from catarrh of the stomach tor a long time. I was badly constipated and had a poor appetite, I could eajt only a very little and even after I partook of a small quantity of food, I usually experienced severe pains in my stomach. “Tanlac had done such good work in the case of so many others that 1 thought it surely-would help me. 1 have just finished by first bottle of the medicine and am greatly relieved. I eat as heartily now, as I did year* ago, and I have not experienced a single pain after partaking of food. “Tanlac has. done a great deal for me. I recommend it to others suffen lug as I was because I know of the great help I Was given.” Tanlac, the master medicine, M especially beneficial for stomach, kidney and liver troubles, rheumatism, catarrhal ’ complaints, nervodhaevs, sleeplessness,, loss of appetite, and the like. Tanlac is now sold exclusively in ’ Decatur at Smith, Yager > FsiJCs drag 1 store. —Adv. 1 P ■■ i SWAMP ROOT EAVES KIDNEY fiUFPRRtRS. You naturally' feel secure when you know that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder t remedy, is absolutely pure and contains no harmful or producing drugs. The same standard of purity, j strength and excellence, prescrlbwa by [ Dr. Kilmer many years ago, Us main- , tained in every bottle of Swamp-Root. } Swamp-Root is scientifically com- } pounded from vegetable herbs. It ito j not a stimulant and Is taken in teaspoonful doses. It Is not recommended for everythiiig. According to Verb . fled testimony it is nature’s great helper in relieving and overconrisg kids ney, liver and bladder troubles- •> If you suffer, don't delay another day. Go to your nearest druggist now 3 and get a bottle. Ail drug store* irtll Jit |n two'slseS—fifty tents in d obe del- ■ lax. *'. ' however, if yon, with flrst to try this great : prep>r|tjon send .ten seats to! Dr. KUiper. 4-Vt>.7 Binghamton, N.I Y., for a simple bottlfe. When writing be sure ppi mention the DecaI tur Daily Demucrit . »- - • • ’?>'■' , : |M II 'r oi-j— * ’ ANNoUnUmEnV. * Bart Boice of Wabash township authorizes us to announce bis name as a candidate far commissioner of the Third district of Adams county, aubject to the flecliion of the primary election to be held March 7, 1916. 9t6 ;— : > FOR BALB-—A brood sow, with Six pigs by side. Inquire of Julius Haugk. SlltS MANGOLD & BAKER Comer Monroe and 7th Sts. PHONE 215. Snider's New Process Ternate Soup, 10c; 8 for ...., ..28« Beech Nut Brand Pork and Beans 10c; 3 for 25c Bare Poet Boy Sugar Corn, 10c-; 3 for .; 25c Hurrah Fancy Peas, 10c; 8 f0r....25e Perfect Red Klndney Beans, 10b; 8 for 250 Hominy, 10c; 8 for ............,25* Catsup, all brands, 10c; 8 for Ripe Olives, 10s; .8 for .25c All Brandl Evaporated Milk, 10e; 8 for 25c; 5c oane, 5 for 25c Salmon, 10o; 8 for .25* Tuna Pish 15< asd 20c Special! 80c Selden Sun Coffee at SS« ■t „ , Kiln Dried Sweet Potatoes, ......8c Bananas, Lettuce, Oranges sad Oysters. , We pay Cash for Produce. Eggs, 30c; Butter, 20 to 217 c. Ove Us That Order. Mangold g Baker

HORSES THAT WERE JUMPERS Some Really Remarkable Feats on I Record That Are Without Doubt • .\ Authentic. , j What distance and what height can a horse jump is a curious inquiry. If the reader will carefully measure out 89 feet, an Idea of the horse's capao ity in this direction will be gathered, remarks the London Times. Such a distance a steeplechase horse caned Old Chandler is reported to have covered at Warwick aome years ago, and there is more than one apparently authentic record of a horse clearing -seven feet in height ! The scene of one such exploit was at the Phoenix park and the horse was-ah anttaal descended from a fa mous winner named Potsoa, himsell called Turnip. The animal belonged to Sir EL Cfofton, and the duke ot ■Richmond, then lord lieutenant of Ire land, wagered £SOO thatt seven feet in height could not be cbeared A wall Os the requisite dimensions was built and Turnip was ridden at it. Ho did what was asked of him in perfect .style, but it happened that his grace not knowing that the feat was ready for performance, was not looking when the jump was made, but Turnip was therefore J ridden over it again not only successfully but easily. The wall of! Hyde park, opposite Grosvenor place, six and a half feet on the Inside, with a drop ot eight feet into the Toad beyond, has also been cleared. HARD TO DEFINE VULGARITY What One Generation Condemns An other May Have Considered distinctly Proper. —~ There Is nothing more difficult to define than vulgarity. It Is often mere jy something one dislikes In some body's manner of speech or behavior. Webster’s dictionary defines “vulgar' in the modern sense as “lacking cultivation or refinement; rustic, boorishi also, offensive to good taste or refined feelings; low, coarse, mean, base.” And “vulgarity" it defines as “gross pegs or clownishness ot manners or language; absence of refinement; coarseness." ' ite half of these definitions might safely be cast aside. It is absurd to define “vulgar” in the present sense as “rustic; low. . , , mean, base." ' When wo say that apyone la vulgar w>, mean chiefly that he is. In WebSier's words, “offensive to good taste,” imd that is about as near an explanation M we can go. As to what good taste Is, who can inform usT To say that it is the taste of the best people does not get us mgqh farther, for «s have then to dis- . cover who are the best people. And 1 is ■it the best people who have ever lived that we must follow, or the best people who are living now? The beat people nowadays would consider it vulgar to get drunk at table; but the (bem people of bygone times were ot g (fifferent opinion. , Aid to Weep. M There are two very simple.butef|fec6ve remedlhs'for iuat'klnd M,Bleep; ' jMqnegsftbat from, overwork? or i thg fWivery .warm. Put .them against aipbber bdg'flUed with hot waier. A '! ruJ4>er'bag;ls.'fetter, .thrtUianearthen battle, as" it ,vnll retain < the l heat tot besrp. , second msihod is muck fiUtoy Bimpftu | Discard ,the pillow, turn dvsrSJw ’ the stomacto wtih fisitotidlMped? qhdw the foreheM.td UK|tbe fiead s tride. This wiU-often SeMd ohs to sleep. 1 ' When you are tired and nervous a good rubbing all- over the body with the lotion here given will be very rest, fuL Lie quietly in bed after the rub- » for half an hour and you will then quite equal to taking up the dally tasks again. Here is the lotion: Di luted alcohol, six ounces; cologne wstep, six ounces; tannin, ten grains. Nothing Too Hot. Cbabert, the fire king, who was a popular favorite in London many years ago, claimed to be able to swallow SJESenic and other poisons with impunity. Visitors to his entertainment wore requested to come provided with phosphorus, prussic add, arsenic and oxalic acid, which be proceeded to consume before their eyes, taking an antidote afterward which was supposed to neutralize their effects. Then, to show that he was as im plgvious to heat as to poison, he would 1 fake a raw leg of iamb into an oven basted to 220 degrees and remain ini aide until the joint was cooked, when i ft was carved and handed around to tbs audience. The performance eon- , shaded by Cbabert rubbing a red-hot Shovel on his head and face and allowfpg anyone who wished to drop molten lining wax on his tongue and handa ... : — Prefesstonsl Pot Bolling, a historian or biologist •pends part of bls time in coaching ot extension lecturing in order that the rest pt it may be devoted to bis researches, these subsidiary functions must obviously be classified under the basiling of potbolllng. H« teaches in order that be may have time and money for study. The educational euibusiasL-on the other band, studies that he may teach; he regards teaching aa the one thing in the world Which it is a privilege to fee allowed to do, and therefore reJolces if he Is permitted to give his didactic Impulses full play without having to divert any of his energies Into some less fascinating pursuit ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■BaMtißSaßaHMai&toMMMaß

Shine In ( Evory Urop” G«t a can today from your hardware or era- lilh ' eery dealer. lAO STOMACH?" ONE DOSE OF MAYR’S Wonderful Remedy Should Convince You That Your Suffering Is Unnecessary. A million people, many right In your own locality, have taken Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy for Stomach, Liver and Intestinal Ailments, Dyspepsia, Pressure of Gas Around the Heart, Sour Stomach, Distress After Eating, Nervousness, Dizziness, Fainting Spells, Sick Headaches, Constipation, Torpid Liver, etc., and are praising it highly to other sufferers. Get a bottle of your druggist today. This highly successful Remedy has been taken by people in all walks of life, among them Members of Congress, Justice of the Supreme Court, Educators. Lawyers, Merchants, Bankers, Doctors, Druggists, Nurses, Manufacturers, Priests, Ministers. Farmers, with lasting benefit and it should be equally successfully in your case. Send for tree valuable booklet on Stomach Ailments to Geo. H. Mayr, Mfg. Chemist, 154-156 Whiting Street, Chicago, lIL —o ■' fee .S.SI.SII a 1 DRINK HOT TEA FOR A BAD COLD Get a small package of Hamburg Breast Tea, or as the German folks call it, “Hamburger Brust Thee,” at any pharmacy, Take a tablespoonful of the 1 tea, put a cup of boiling water upon 1 it, pour through a sieve and drink a I teacup full at any time during the • day or before retiring. It is the most I 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. — — Try it the next time you suffer from ! a cold or the grip. It is inexpensive ' and entirely vegetable, therefore safe and harmless. RUB BWI i’ LUMBAGOJGHT OUT ‘ Bub Pain and Stifihess away with a small bottle of old honest ! ’ St. Jacobs Oil I When your bock is sore and lame j or lumbagb, 1 sciatica of rheumatism has I you stiffened -up, don't suffer! Get a i 25 cent bottle of old, honest “St. Jacebs Oil”, at any . drug store, pour a little in your hand and rub it right 1 into the pain or ache, and by the time I you count fifty, the soreness and lame- • ness is gqno. Don’t stay crippled! Thia soothing, I penetrating oil needs to be used only , 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! 8 W **~rs B t -ff -R— I STOP CATARRH! OPEN NOSTRILS AND HEAD | Says Cresm Applied in Nostrils t Relieves Head-Colds at Once. > i If your nostrils are clogged and your i head is stuffed and you can’t breathe freely because of a cold or catarrh, just get a small bottle of Ely’s Cream Balm at any drug store. Apply a little of this fragrant, antiseptic cream into your nostrils and let it penetrate through every air passage of your head, soothing and healing the inflamed, swollen mucous membrane and you get instant relief. Ah! how good It feels. Your noatrils are open, your head is clear, no more hawking, snuffling, blowing; no more headache, dryness c- struggling for breath. Elv’s Cream Balm Is just what sufferers from head colds and catarrh need. It’s a deiigbL democrat’want ads PAY BIG FIRST CLASS Wood Work Done WAGONS & BUGGIES 0. HELLER Cor. Ist and Jefferson Sts. Side of Adams County Creamery.

++++**4++**♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ to ♦ ♦ ' ADAMS COUNTY AGRICULTURAL NOTES. ‘ * ♦ Items of interest to Adams County farmer# will appear * ♦ every day in this Department. Contributions from « ♦ Adams County farmers gladly acceptable. * ♦ ♦« * ♦ * + + + + + + * to to to to ♦ to* ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ to to

W»W W w I have a Yellow Dent variety of seed corn that I origially bought from John Bogner. Have grown this same corn for three years. It matures from ninety to ninety-five days; has a small cob and deep graine. It has yielded eighty bushels of corn per acre. I will show ten ears at the corn show at Decatur January 20, 21 an<| 22. JAY CLIN®. I have grown the same corn, selecting my own seed for ten comwcutive years. It is a white cap corn and the best for yield I have ever seen. The cob is of medium size and the grain deep. The fodder is not rank and if frost does not come exceptionally soon have no trouble about my corn getting ripe. I will show ten ears at the Ad-

PUBLIC SALE, As I have rented my farm < vrtU offer at public auction at my residence 5 miles west and 1 mile north of Decatur or 1 milo north of Preble on Wednesday, January 12, 1916, beginning at 10:00 o’clock a. m. the following property, to-wif: 8 head of horses, one Sorrel horse, 6 yrs. old weight 1600 lbs; roan horse, 4 yrs. old weight 1600 lbs; black mare, 5 yrs. old; weight 1350 Ibe: 13 head of Short Horn Cattle, roan cow, 9 yrs, old. giving milk, red cow, 7 yrs. old, will be fresh in May; red cow, 6 yrs. old, been fresh two weeks; red cow, 6 yrs. old, giving milk, will be fresh in June; roan heifer, fresh la February; spotted heifer, bred; red heifer, bred; yearling steer, red heifer, 10 months old; two roan heifer calves, 8 months old; steer, 10 months old; roan male calf, 5 weeks old.: Hogs Berkshire and Poland China, three sows, bred to farrow April Ist; 22 shoats, 3 months old: Chickens:. 185 white Wyandotts, full blood: Farming Implements, one Wood mower, good as new; Black Hawk con planter, new Deere riding breaking plow, Gale walking breaking plow, good as new; Bryant plow, two walking cultivators, tVo single iron cultivators, 7shove) McCormick cultivator, two spring tooth harrows, spike tooth harrow, disc harrow, good as new; 800-lb platform scale, land roller, bob sled, carriage, Studebaker wagon, low wheel farm wagon, hay ladder, oat dump boards, hog rack, manure spread, two sets double work harness-, set buggy harness, two sets fly nstAj, five horse collars, ail t sizes, two. Jog chains, grab hook, corn’ stellar, bay carriers, two harpoons , ind/tny ropes; 4 slings and hay rakes,'dump scraper, forks and shbvelS, shaTOiMa cream separator No 4, churn, cobk stove, heating stove, > copper kettle, meat barrel, iron kettle, and other articles too numerous to mention. Terms of Sale: All Sums of 3.5.0fi and under caeh, ocer 85.00 a credit of 9 months will be given, purchaser giving note with approved security. No goods removed until settled for. WILLIAM M. MEYER. Noah Frauhlger, Auct. Fred Jaebker, Clerk. Lunch served on the ground. .— O ■ "■'■S PUBLIC SALE. The undersigned will offer for sale at her residence, % mile south and % mile east of Beery church. 1% miles east and mH® south of Peterson, and 3 miles southwest of Decatur, bn 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 ot one brood sow, will farrow the latter part of March; 20 head of shoats, weighing from 40 to 50 lbs. 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, 1-horse cultivator, 3 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; 101) shocks of com. Terms of Sale: —85.00 and under, cash; over $5.00 a credit of 9 months will be given, purchaser giving a bankable note with approved security; 4 per cent oft for cash. No goods removed until settled tor.

ams county corn show, January 20. 21 and 22. - WM. GHRISTIANER. For the past three years I have been growing a good variety of Yellow Dent corn. The ears are good shape, with deep grain and a small cob. For me it matures early and has a good amount of fodder. It seems to grow well on any- soil and .produces ears tluat are good in length and with weU developed grain. I am going to show ten ears of this com at the county corfi show, January 80, 21, 22. CHAS. A. COOK. t , Root Township. Items about seed com may be handed to the Root township committee: Calvin ’’Kunkie? John Mann, Charles Oetting, Jesse Schwartz, Philip Schiefersteln. —

.’ a c ' . ♦ • ; rr MRS. EMILE L. UGLY. J. J. Baumgartner, Auct 1 W. A. Lower, tlbrk. ’ Lunch on grounds. M2tß i — ; » i i_. i » ■ ,i. x 1 ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦tototototodtotototototototototo*** : Clear, Pesdiy S|un : ; :: Awaits Anyone Who :: Drinte Hot Water ;; < ► —- I. 11l ..I . ;; Bay* art taaMe bath, bsfera teeaftfast balpa a« teak aato tsai * ' i ’ j > ■ ( 1 ’ ’ Bparkuaa s&d viva Mass wry. ’ bright, alsrt—a gMd, elsar stda sad ) a natural, roar, healthy eamaiexlba. are assured only by pure blood. It •nly every man and woman could ba indueed to adopt the moraine Inelda i bath, what a gratifying chance would , take place. Instead of the thousands M , sickly, aaaemto-ioekliig mas, woman and girls, with peaty er muddy > complexions;' testeai st the multitudes of “nerve wrecks," “brain tags" and pessimists wo ' should see a virile, optimistic thread st rosy-cheeked people An Inside bath is had by drtekfisa i each morning, before braakfiurt. a glass of real hot water wtta a sum spoonful of limestone phosphate tn 11 to wash from the stomach, fiver, kfib > neys and tea yards of bowels the previous day's Indigestible waste, sour fermentaUo&s and topelsoua, tkne • cleansing, sweeten and fresh suing , the entire alimentary nsasl bodorb , putting more flood into the etemoch. < Those subject to sick headache, Mb- ’ loUtaetiL DAfty rhlbW—thim. > colds; sad p*rtl«algr>.lJMiee'wha Imee abte chaaas id W* - ' asok MASONIC CALENDAR' ROR WEEK ENDING JANUARY 1> Tuesday Evenlßfl. January d. Chapter N0.’112. Regular m«M|n*. Installation of officers and IL A. degree. Thuroday, JenUury •< Y F. to A.-M . No. Two candidates. ■ • - - ' <■< All meetings to be promptly at p. m. DAVID B SMITH, W, M . Friday Evenlea, fill O'Meotc. ‘ The Eastero ptar yiU fTt<*y evening at 7:15, protnpL Two eondh dates will receive th, woflk; aIM the Officers will be installed for the ensuing year. - AJI member* please take notice. -—.. . o—i. i . l i,»."iieH . ■ announcement. Kd L. Kinta’ of 'Desatv srthoriWM us to sanounao his aanos.H g candidate tor auditor of a«mm epenty, subject to the decision ot tfie pHrnarr election to be \elfl on March T. i9i6.‘* \ , ,: v ’ 1 W PLENTY OF MONEY; ’' . To loan on farms. W yaarT Hawwithout renewal, no oonupteeion. partial payments any time, z ’ EG7U ERMnW. CMNWCft , . NOTICE, *.» Get your harness ready for spriag work. Wo, save -yon money on repairing and oiling. 310tf. A. W. TANVAS. , W ■■■ soeSis ■■■dll IS |O l 'hi'H | S wyn I JWto ? FORNAX MILLING CO. Pays highest prices tor feed mIIHM wheat. Want good hand sorted new ear corn. Call and see them, ’fifiltf