Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 14, Number 38, Decatur, Adams County, 14 February 1916 — Page 6

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EAST BUFFALO East Buffalo. N. Y„ Feb. 14 —(Special to Dally Democrat) -Receipts, 9,600; shipments, 3,420 today; receipts, 4.800; shipments none yesterday; official to New York Saturday, 2,090; hogs closing stelftly. Mediums heavies, yorkers, $8.70© $8.75; pigs, [email protected]; roughs, S7.so(fi $7.60; stags. [email protected]; cat-1 tie, 3,750; 10c@20c lower; prime steers. [email protected]; butchers, $7.00@ $8.25; heifers. [email protected]; fat cows, [email protected]; sheep, 9,000;; higher; top lambs, $12.00; yearlings, $10.50@ $10.75; wethers, [email protected]; ewes, [email protected] G. T. B'JhR, Wheat $1.25 Oats 38c Oats, No. 3, white 40c Corn 80c ' Rye 85c, Barley 55c 1 Clover seed SIO.OO H Alsike seed $8.25 ! Timothy seed $3.00 NIBLICK & CO. < Eggs 18c ( Butter 18c@25c < FULLENKAMP’S. I Eggs 18c ■! Butter 27c BERLING'S. Indian Runner dtKks 8e Chickens 11c Fowls 10c Ducks . 9c I Geese 8c I voung turkeys 14* I

DECATUR’S CHIROPRACTOR PIONEER Office Over Vance & Hite’s n 11¥ . n 1:30 to 5:00 nOUIS 6:30 to 8:00 PHONE 650. 0.1. Burgener, D. C. No Drugs No Surgery No Osteopathy B. 0. HENRICKS D. C. VOIR CHIROPRACTOR Above Voglewede’s Shoe Store. Phone 660 Office Hours Ito 5 7to 8 LADY ATTENDANT Decatur, Ind. Dr. C V. Connell VETERINARIAN Office 102 1 nOn€ Residrpce 143 + PLENTY OF MONEY * * to loan on * IMPROVED FARMS * * at 5 Per Cent * Abstracts made on short * j * Notice. * * SCHURGER’S * * Abstract Office. * + + + + + + + + + ■»• + + + <• Dr. L. K. Magley VETERINARIAN Corner Third and Monroe Streets. Phones DECATUR. IND.

among the ruins of an ancient land, W j a. temple •vVill be unearthed sacred to Success, and' oVer the altar, hcvJn into IWing rock, these lines-’’ “l exist only inSJKan —I am XutnanWdl. All vJho doubt themscWcs destroy me; they vOho balicVe, achieve? Siumar. built the panauta&inaL £Mntitan HH hartu&ttd thefalh of it to a XbantL Account? i —r ri ' i — G Single . 01bG6am$eouiituMh »

Old Tom turkeys 10c Old Hen turkeys 10c Old Roosters |....... le Butter, imcklng stock 18c Eggs *. 20c Above prices are tor poultry free 'rom feed FORNAX MILLING CO. Wheat $1.26 I Oats 40c Corn 90c KALVER’S MARKETS. Wool 11«©M< ieef hide* lie ’alf fellow 5c Sheep pelts 25c @sl.oo LOCAL PRODUCE MARKET. Chickens 11c Indian Runner Unco 8c Fowls 10c Ducks 9c Geese 8c Yonng turkeys l*c Old Tom Turkeys lie Old Hen Turkeys He Old Roosters 5c Eggs 20c Butter 18c, Above prices are for poultry free i from feed. DECATUR CREAMERY CO. Butterfat, delivered 36%C|] Butterfat, in country ►29%c , Butter, wholesale 32%c 1

; TILOSILO Has features of strength . and convenience not found in any other Hollow Tile Silo and costs less. j Don’t purchase your Silo until you learn of the superior features of the TiloSilo. Manufactured by the TiloSi’io Co., Berne, Ind. ELI MYERS, Local Agent. ” LIVE STOCK and General Auctioneering I thank you for your past favors !, 1 am still on the job. Telephone at my expense. J. N. Burkhead il Monroe, Ind. - - - -—- DR. FRUTH Specialist, in Chronic, ft Nervous and Special Lp, Diseases, Treated by r' New, Modern and Scicntific Methods. For more complete information* see ad appearing in this paper, March 2nd and 4th. Dr. Fruth will be at Decatur, Hotel Murray, one day only, TUESDAY, MARCH 7TH, and will return evi ery 28 days thereafter. Consultation, ; examination and Professional Advice | FREE. » FORT WAYNE AND SPRINGFIELD TRACTION — ’ Leave Decatur. A. M.—5:50, 8:30, 11:30. r P. M.—2:30, 5:45, 9:30. Leave Fort Wayne. A. M.—7:00, 10:00. P. M.—1:00, 4:00, 7:30, 11:00. Freight car leaves Decatur at 7:55 a. m., and leaves Fort T.ayne at 1J m., arriving in Decatur at 1:30 p. m, 1 HOMER RUHL, Agent. 6 DEMOCRAT WANT ADS _ PAY RIG

I L.’-rr-i ■..■-TryaLwr I PROGRESSIVE BUSINESS MEN , appreciate the necessity of a dependable financial connection. It is as important and at time& far more important, than an." other branch or department of a business. Not a fair weather bank, but one that can be relied upon always: that is the Institution that merits the confidence and patronage of the business men of Decatur. • The First National Bank gives special attention to commercial accounts. We will be glad to discuss the particular banking requirements of your business. FIRST NATIONAL BANK DECATUR. INDIANA dembera Federal Reserve Association. HERE is > reiueuy that win cure mon ail .kin enA scalp troubles. Eczema, Barbe.* Itch, Itch, Cuti and Sores. Why waste time and money when B. B. Ointment is an ointment of real merit? Ask your druggist If not handled send 50 cents to the B B. Ointment Co., 217 Monroe Pecatuf. Indiana. LISTEN:Book your Sale with an Auctioneer. Who is able to make your sale a success. Telephone No. B*L R. N. RUNYON Decatur, Ind. . — i AR GROCERY || r. ! Marco Blend Coffee 30c fc I |i Bursley's Baking Beans ~..20c * II Santa Clara Prunes, 2 lbs. ..15c » [ Baking Molasses, qt. can ...10c Dill Pickles, doz. .., 10c ?! Sweet Pickles, doz ~..10c ■> * Winter Wheat Flour, small 3 A sack 80c ’ Winter Wheat Flour, large 7 sack, $1.60 J ’ Bird Seed 10c Creamery Butter, lb 34c Soap, 6 bars ....25c , i i i I Xfreen Onions, bunch 5c y i 4 Celery, large bunch 10c j g Radishes, 2 bunches 5c | a i S Campbell’s Soups 10c i Pettijohn's Breakfast Food. 15c ill Johns, ’I

4 HELP WANTED 1 WANTED—To rent a modern house with one to five acres or more of land in I connection. Also a barn. House with cellar and from 6 to 8 rooms.—Thos. Dowling, ’phone 11-B. . 27tf ’iFSR SALE OR TRADE—Seven room house on Mercer avenue; H has water, lights and gas. Inquire • 333 No. Fourth St., 'phone 286. 22tf SALES MA N WasTT ED^ForTine - line of underwear, hosiery and sweaters. Sales direct .to wearer. Applicant i should be twenty-live years old or I over, of neat appearance and able to handle a high grade proposition. Big money to right party. Inquire of Mr. Langley at Murray hotel. It LOST—WiII party who exchanged overcoats at the Methodist church Sunday morning, having grey wool gloves, please exchange again at’ 234. North Filth street —W. J. Meyers. 3813 For ND — a small black purse, containing some change and a ring. The owner may have same by describmg property. Inquire of Miss Bessie Wil ' der, Phone 1-M. 37t3 FA RM~ "FO R SALE—Eighty acres, near Freidheim, good Improve ments, can give possession th’s spring if deal is made by March 1. For full particulars, write or see Wm. Dalman, Ossian R. R. No. 3, Pote telephone. 32t6 FOUND—A key. Apply at Old Adams County bank. 34t3 FOR SALE —A five years old Belgium mare. Sound and will work any | place. Colt by side. And child can drive her —Dan Haley 333 Mercer I Ave. 31t3 j LOST —A pair of linemans plyers between Charles Magley home and Decatur. Finder please return to Earl Smith at Citizens Telephone Co’s, office. 32t3 FOR SALE —Full blooded Bourbon Red turkey?, and fullblooded Indian Runner ducks. Inquire Mrs. H. A. | Kintz, Decatur, Ind., R. R. 7, Box I 94. 36t3 j WANTED—GirI for general house I work. Apply to Mrs. E. Woods.' 'phone 255. West Monroe St. 35t3 ■ WANTED —Hang your paper, 15c bolt. Clean paper 75c a room, tall phone 14-R. —Jim Coverdale. 35‘.6 FOR SALE—Ditching machine. Address Box, 51, Ossian, Ind., R. R. | No. 2. 35tG FOR SALE —House at 315 North 10th I St., in good condition. Furnace, ■ drove well, barn, tarvia street and ce-I I ment sidewalks. Apply at the I house. 25t18 I ! FOR SALE —One Acetylene lighting plant, in good condition. Will sell cheap.—Jim A. Hendricks, Monroe Ind. 2Otv ; FURNISHED HOUSE WANTED—A high class family would like to rent a furnished home In Decatur. Must have modern conveniences. Send all Word to this office. 35tf FOR RENT —Nicely furnished rooms.' Steam heated. —Mrs. Lase Ellis,; ’.’phone 407. 34tf FOR SALE—Shetliritf pony, buggy and harness. —John Kirchner, Preb- ' le, Ind. 33t6 FOR RENT--Four — furnished rooms for light housekeeping, 336 Line street. 'Phone No. 521, 607 Monroe street. — I B. W. Sholty. 291-e-o-d-ts FOR SALE OR RENT—A dwelling m 1 good location. Inquire at James T. Merryman’s office. I. 0. O. F. Block n> i phone 42 or 286. 310tf: LOST —Between Bellview farm and I Dent school, a green silk waist, partly made up. Please leave at this office. 33t3 WANTED—Salesmen, in any territory to sell direct to consumer, the McCrHlns remedies, which have been in use since JB4O, and our many other dependable products such as medi cines. toilet articles, spices, extracts, I ointments, stock and poultry remedies. etc. An opportunity to make from $5 to $lO per day. No experience necessary. We start you in a permanent, profitable business of your own. If you are ambitious, energetic and desiring to make big money by working for it and can furnish a horse or automobile and two responsible signers on your contract, write us at once for particulars, while your choice of territory is available. —McCrilius Medical Co., Winchester, Indiana. 37t6 . PUBLIC SALE. As I sold my farm I will hold a public sale at my residence, two miles west of Decatur on the DecaturBluffton pike on what is known as the old Peter Wet sei farm on Thursday, Mar. 2nd. Look in paper later for big sale notice. 38t6 JOS.WETSEL. o — Democrat Want Ads Pay. /

* ___ Mean Trick on Clergyman. I An Episcopal clergyman, rector of h fashionable church In one of Bostons most exclusive suburbs, cou d not be bothered with the innumerab e telephone calls that fall to one In his profession, so he had his name hit out of the telephone book. A prominent merchant of the same name, living in the same suburb, was continually annoyed by requests to officiate at funerals and baptisms. He went to the rector, told his troubles m a kindly way. and asked the parson to have his name put in the directory. Hut without success. The merchant then de- ■ termined to complain to the telephone ■ company. As he was writing the let- > ter one Saturday evening, the telephone rang and the timid voice of a | young man asked if the Rev. Mr. j Blank would marry him at once. A nappy thought came to the merchant: | “No. I m too damn busy writing my sermon,’ he replied. Paste for Wail Paper. It is not especially difficult to paper the walls of a room, if you go about It systematically If you decide to repaper a room have a big table or some boards spread on horses in the ’ room and remove all the furniture. 1 Have a comfortable, safe ladder. Then make a big bucketful of paste, and buy suitable brushes and a pair 'of long, strong scissors. Work with a ruler and a pencil and measure even- bit of wall carefully before you begin papering. Make the paste by mixing flour and powdered alum, a tablespoonful of alum to a quart of flour, with cold water to make a dough without lumps. Then pour on boiling water, stirring rapidly, and cook thoroughly. Then add cold water to bring to- the right consistency. The alum keeps the paste from souring, and the mixing first with cold water keeps it from lumping, as does : also the careful stirring and cooking. Nobel Prizes. The five annual Nobel prizes are awarded: One to the person who in the domain of physics has made the most important discovery or invention, one to the person who has made the most important chemical discovery I or invention, one to the person who has made the most important discovery in the domain of medicine or physiology, one to the person who in literature has provided the most excellent work of an idealistic tendency, and one to the person who has worked most or best for the fraternization of nations and the abolition or reduction of standing armies and In the calling and propagating of peace congresses. They were founded by the famous Swedish scientist, Alfred B. Nobel, the inventor oi dynamite, who died in 1896. • Took Easily to Strong Drink. It was some time about the middle of the seventeenth century that the practice of adding hops t> malt liquor was introduced into England and numerous petitions were sent to the king and to the protector of the commonwealth that this “wicked weed” would spoil the drink and endanger the lives of the people. Historians with a taste for statistics have found that in 1555 there were 26 breweries in the city of London and that their output was 650,000 barrels per annum. It would be interesting to get at the per capita consumption of beer among the English and the Germans in these times which appear to the people of the present as having been very harddrinking times. The Telephone. g The accredited Inventor of the tel pHbne Is Alexander Graham Bell. It 4s inevitable that in practically every great scientific invention various persons have had various kinds of “first ideas,” some of them never carried out I at all, others contributory to the working out of the invention in some way or another. Science follows the invariable custom, however, of crediting and accepting as the inventor the man ’ who has really succeeded in making the invention practicable and bringing It to an actual achievement. It is of course impossible to tell how manymen may have had ideas more or less similar to Bell’s or to those of any men who have succeeded in great inventions. She Spoke the Truth. Two ladles, whose husbands are members of the faculty of Oberlin college, went to call on the new professor’s wife. They were shown into a room where the small daughter of the house was playing. While waiting the appearance of their hostess one of the ladies remarked to her friend, at the same time nodding toward the little girl, “Not very p-r-e-t-t-y, is she?” spelling the word so that the child • should not understand. Instantly, before there was time for the friend to reply, came the answer from the little , girl: "No, not very p-r-e-t-t-y, but awfully s-m-a-r-t.” . The Critic’s Office. A Mend who Is preparing a paper ■ on criticism asked us our notion of a' critic, and the best we could do off- _ hand was to bring to mind the young hero who, finding a break in a dike : thrust his arm into the hole and held ‘ he d evaßt ating flood until help ‘^ v ed- The flood is mediocrity, and riticism should be a dike holding it back, instead of being, as it is in this country, a sluiceway. Given a won » w °ul ( i be the duty of the critic to ee’p an eye on it. and to plug a Jt. ever he spotted it-Chicago Tribune'

i Rex Theatre" universal program ToNiGHT “THE LIONS WARD” in three reels featuring Betty Shade and the 101 Bison Trained Animals. i TOMORROW I Ben Wilson an 1 Dorothy Philips 1 R in “JUROR No. 7” “Their Quiet Honeymoon” Nestor comedy. Rex Theatre IF YOU ARE FIGURING ON I -AUTOMOBILE PAINTINGS ee l 3S —the only shop equipped to handle auto- | mobile paint jobs. Finished from top to bottom, I inside out, everything complete. A’l we ask is a chance to show, you our work. I WORK GUARANTEED. PRICES RIGHT. The Decatur Carriage Works W. D. PORTER, Prop. Cor. Ist and Monroe Sts. ’Phone 123 Maxwell TKe'WoTicter Car” I JfczlSrx ft w J- - fl M P & J Quiet Clutch—Runs in Oil | , J,” e Hutch of the new Maxwell operates in a °i Ol ,‘ .Th’ s ma kes it remarkably smooth “ vei y et y in engagement, and eliminates 80 I - cent, of noise when the gears are shifted. tkH e tif nei i S °f highest-priced cars agree tnat the clutch should run m oil. clutch and transmission mechanism is fully enclosed. Y e ar e waking to take you for a test nGe !„ t he car that has broken 1 k C* records, and is breaking all low “After-Cost” records. ■ f | I- Demountable | f | F'OB DETROIT C g 'i is a ' g I • j u °TOR SALES corp Ft. WAYNE, IND- I I '"lulißss DTTillhil K c n