Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 14, Number 50, Decatur, Adams County, 28 February 1916 — Page 2
.. —7Z" I [] 1 I <■' f Z . . —~ •- 1 ! k "HEART SONGS'" COUPON <1 — P«as £N\E,D BY -- ffl J l ' THIS PAPER TO YOU I K ' TU.UJ HOW TO GET IT ALMOST FREE Clip out and present five coupons like the above, bearing consecutive dates, together with our special price of 98c. Book on display at office of THE DAILY DEMOCRAT 5 co a u «T s 98c Secure this $3.00 Volume I The Genuine Cardinal, Seal Grain, Flexible Binding, Red F ’ Round j Corners, with 16 full-page portraits of the world's most famous singers, and complete dictionary of musical terms. Out-of-town readers will add 10c extra for postage and packing “UF ART "The song book with a soul! 400 of 1 1 kJV'J’IVSJ lhe song treasureß of the world in one volume of 5' 0 pages. Chosen by 20,000 music leavers. Four years to complete the book. Every song a gem of melody. PUBLIC SALE
I will offer for sale at my farm. 3 miles south east of Decatur, or 3 miles west of Pleasant Mills, on the old Dailey farm. March 3. 1916, at 10:30 a. *m„ the following property: Horses: Work team. 9 and 10 yeai olds; driving mare, 10 years old; hackney mare colt. Cattle: Red cow, doming fresh March 22; red cow, comffcg fresh April 5; red cow. coming fresh April 1; Durham calf. 9 months old. These are all good Durham cows and hard to beat. Hogs: Two brood sows, will farrow sth and 23rd of March.' Chickens: 150 head of White Leghorns and Rocks, and 4 turkey hens and 1 tom. Bronze. Farming Implements: Osborne hay loader, used last year, good as new; wood hay tedder, used last year, like new; Mil-
V L. FOBBING J. J. Baumgartner, Auct. Lunch on grounds. mch3 FREE SAMPLES OF ERREIP Pronounced Air-Rip) AT 7HE HOLTH USE DRUGSTORE If you suffor from Asthma, Bronchitis, Catarrh, Cough, CatarrhalHaadachc, Sore Throat, ltdhing Piles, Rheumatism, Sciatic, or Lumbago, be sure to get a free sample at the above-mentioned stere. RESCUE MEDICINE COMPANY, Fort Wayne, Ind. A sample is far more convincing than hours of argument. rawarnf aEagsaßMaiL none. IF YOU ARE FIGURING ON -AUTOMOBILE PAINTING- | See us-Mthe only shop equipped to handle auto- : mobile paint jobs. Finished from top to bottom, g inside out, everything complete. ‘All we ask is a chance to show you our work. s WORK GUARANTEED. PRICES RIGHT. | | I The Decatur Carriage Works I W. D. PORTER, Prop. I Cor. Ist and Monroe Sts. ’Phone 123 | When you brush your teeth, does it feel as though you were brushing against the quick? ' * D° the sometimes bleed? This is because pyorrhea has caused the gums to pull away yearly. from your teeth, leaving the unenamelled surfaces unprotected.
Your dentist will tell you, if you 1 ask him, that you have gum reccstion; and that gum recession is caused by pyorrhea. Unchecked, pyorrhea will warp and shrink and deform the gums. 11 will break down the bony structure into which the teeth are set —and yiu will eventually lose them. "To save your teeth you will have to begin to fight this dread disease at once. A specific for pyorrhea has been discovered recently by dental science, and is now offered for daily treatment in Senreco Tooth Paste. Senreco combats the germ of the disease.** Its regular use insures your k *
> i waukee drill, Osborn mower and 2 ; ; sets of knives, hay rake, spike and I , j spring tooth harrow, 2 corn plows ' t ! single shovel plows, good wagon and : buggy, DeLaval separator, single and ! , i double harness, 2 ladders, 12 and 14 I : ft.; hay knife, forks, shovels, augers, i imud boat, grind stone; canvas stack I J cover, 16x30. Household Goods: I , i Brown leather davenport, kitchen cab * , ; inet, trimmed oak brown leather dav-1 . : enport, kitchen cabinet. Seven tons ! I' of hay in mow; 200 bushels of corn, 250 • [ bushels of oats. ?j Terms; —$5.00 and under, cash:l ' over $5.00 a credit of 9 months, with : r | ' '' bankable note, with approved secur- j . ity; 2 per cent oft for cash. No goods ' • removed until settled for.
teeth against the attack or further progress of pyorrhea. Tut Senreco dues more. It cleanses the teeth delightfully. It gives them a whiteness distinctive of Scnreco alone. Its flavor is entirely and it leaves in the mouth a wonderful sense of coolness and wholesomeness. Start the Scnreco treatment gsp before pyorrhea grips you for good. Details in folder with ■— every tube. A two-ounce tube- p bj for 25c is Sufficient for 6 weeks’ daily treatment. Get Scnreco V of your druggist today; or send Zll 4c in sta.., ps or coin for sample /| tube and folder. Address Tlie S j Sentanel Remedies Company oomel 503 Union Central Building, '““”71 Cincinnati. Ohio. M
Thjst wanted to thaw out Captain of American Vessel Acted as Host to Half Dozen Undersea German* in Distress. So eold did the crew of a German submarine become while sailing beneath lea floes In the Baltic s a that they rose to the surface, halted the American steamer Moreni, bound from Copenhagen to Philadelphia, and asked permission to spend the afternoon aboard In order to thaw out. Captain Wheeler, master of the Moroni, told of the incident just before his vessel I left Philadelphia. About the middle of December, when the steamer was battling against furious gales in the Baltic, the chief olticer noticed that they were being signaled by a submarine. The U-boat came alongside and eight mon came aboard the Moreni. Captain Wheelci supposed they wanted to examine the ship’s papers, but they told him all they desired was a few hours' releast from their frigid quarters on the un j dersea vessel. Although heavily clad in fur gar meats, the Germans were blue from the cold. They said their craft ha.l been under the ice nearly two days unable to rise because of the drifting floes, and that it had become almost impossible to live in the submarine The plates that formed the sides ot the boat, they said, were only half an inch thick and the heating apparatus was inadequate. The steward of the Moreni glad ■ dened the visitors with coffee and oth ! * er hot drinks. They remained aboard ' until nearly dark. Then, after being I assured by Captain Wheeler that none ■ but Americans were on the Moren: ; they went back into the submarine : and soon disappeared under the ice. Scottish Ghost Story. The young Grenadier guardsman : Sir George Houstoun-Boswall, who is reported “missing, believed killed,” is a wealthy Berwickshire landownet and a scion of an ancient Scottish ■ family. A weird ghost story is asso : ciated with Allanbank, the residence inherited by him from his ancestors the extipct Stuart baronets. Allan ! bank remained empty fur a number of years because it was haunted by an apparition known as “Pearlin Jean,"’ so called because she was a novice in a continental convent when the first baronet, Sir Robert Stuart fell in love with her. Sir Robert de sorted her, and the girl flung herself under the wheels of his carriage, and was killed. When the faithless lover returned to Allanbank he was horrified by visions of the girl. Seven ministers were called in to lay 'Pearlin Jean,” but her spirit would not rest. Teaching Cops Politeness. Commissioner Wood has a plan to remove the sulphur from the atmosphere. says the New York Times. He has just organized a squad of uniformed professors of ethical culture, with traffic policemen. The commissioner has discovered that the cops in their controversies with chauffeurs often go a bit beyond the bounds of parlor conversation. Instead of the policeman saying “ ” to the chauffeur, and the chauffeur replying in like manner, it is planned to have the policemen say softly: “Pardon me, If you will please turn that automobile of yours around and go west through that other street, it will relieve me of considerable worry.” And the chauffeur is expected to reply: "All right, dear sir. You are absolutely correct. I shall do as you suggest.” To make it easier for them, the professors are conducting some of their classes in garages and stables. Geese Could Not Skate. A flock of more than fifty wild geese mistook glare ice in Kabekona bay, Leech Lake, Minn., for placid water, and after alighting on the smooth surface were unable to take flight and I were held prisoners. The ice was so; slippery it prevented the geese from ; “taking a running start” in order to fly. The geese, falling about on their backs, attracted four hunters, whe were unable to reach the geese on account of the dangerous thinness of the ice. Finally a wooden platform was built and pushed over the ice into the flock. The birds then flopped aboard the plattorm, made a run of It ,and soon were flying away. Cold-Blooded Criticism. ’ “It’s impossible to tell the truth all the time.” "So it seems. What prompted that remark?” i "I've just been listening to a man discussing the merits of his new motorcar. The gloss of the tonneau, the upholstery, the dazzling rei flection from, the brass and nickel parts and the swiftly spinning wheels iof a new car never fail to bewitch the i senses of its owner and warp his I judgment of a machine that is at best but a striking example of man’s inability to make anything that is perfect.” Such Insolence! “Let me pay the fare, dear,” said the woman in blue. "No, no, dear. I’ll pay it;’ said the woman in black. “But, I insist." ' “Ok, no. I have a dime somewhere In my purse if I can only find-It" “So have I. Wait a moment while I took. ’ “Ladies,” said a large, gruff man. Til pay your carfare. The argument is getting on my nerves.” And they both glared at the brute n unspeakable amazement.
i i ELL Oj b'AO» GLOB * RUINS OF ROMAN PALACES MEMENTOES OF GREATNESS. I' , Pcslllpo, in the "Fairest Land of Europe," Has a History Which Makes It of Entrancing Interest to i the Tourist. i! - The city of Naples gives no idea I of the beauty of southern Italy. It sits I like a ragged vagrant by the roadside , in the fairest land of Europe. If you would see all of this beauty at a glance, visit the steep headline of Posilipo, which juts into the sea beyond the city. Here are combined the beauties of the modern Campania—the smooth roads winding upward past white villas, the blue sky, under which tho earth seems to glow, while the sea is tipped with silver —and the most I striking relics of the long-gone days | of the Roman, empire and the middle i ages, those periods so full of story and ' color, which have moved across Italy, - environed in her beautiful landscape and inspired by the romantic temperament of her people, like the acts of some mighty pageant. At Posilipo stood the villa of Virgil, greatest of the Latin poets, and here today is a vault where his remains are said to lie. It was at Po- i | silipo that Virgil wrote the Georgies, ! those beautt'ul Latin pastorals that j picture all the seasons of the year as ! the poet studied them from his counj try seat. Here after he had died came many another poet and sage to put flowers on his tomb. This famous sepulcher is a low I stone vault with three windows. There formerly stood within it a tall urn. which was said to contain the ashes of the poet, but this has disappeared and is said to have been removed by King Robert the Wise to his palace for safe- j keeping. At the very end of the headland I stands one of the most impressive ! relics of Roman luxury in all Italy. It I is the ruin of Pausilypum, the villa | built by Vcdius Pollio and bequeathed i by him to Augustus Caesar. "The End ' of Sorrow” is the meaning of its name, which has become that of the entire headland. » Here are remains of massive white marble walls and pillars and foundations, reaching far out into the water, and from these and from the numerous legends and stories that cling about them, one may reconstruct the beauty and splendor and license of the life ot decadent Rome. He may picture the' great villa, sitting on the point of the headland, backed by dark groves, with its white feet in the breaking sea. He may reconstruct in fancy the Odeon and the theater, where the lord and his guests were entertained; the fish pond into which Vedius caused a servant to be thrown and devoured for breaking a glass; the wide-flung galleries and porticoes, the elaborate marble baths. And this palace of a bygone age he may people with the nobles and philosophers, the poets and soldiers of Rome, in their flowing robes of white and purple, attended by the slaves of all their wars—beautiful women of Greece, black men from Africa, fair-haired savages from the British Isles and the wild Interior of Europe—the people ot all the races conquered by these most powerful and dominating men that the world has yet brought forth and who are now remembered by crumbling stones upon . a deserted beach. —Chicago Daily News. His Ferocious Pacifism. “I have before me,” said Professor Pate, “the statement of the antipreparedness literary bureau that Thomas Carlyle was a pacifist. Indeed, he was i At one time a worshiping American ventured to call on him. The genius had filled up on 17 cups of tea and was sitting humped over before the fireplace, wrapped in a shawl and an 8-inch grouch, and paid no atten--5 tion to the visitor. Finally the caller 1 uttered a timid ‘Ah-h'ml’ “'Silence, you blockhead!’ thundered Carlyle. “Bub-but,' stammered the intruder, ‘I —I am not saying anything.’ “ ‘Nd, put you are interrupting my silence. ’Get out!’ “That is the sort of pacifist Thomas Carlyle was.”—Kansas City Star. Ringing in the Ears. Swelling and congestion of the mucous membranes of the eustachian | tube—generally the result of neglected catarrhal “colds”—often produces ring- | ing in the ears. If not soon relieved it will bring on a disease of the inner ear and deafness. Br. W. C. . Braislin of Brooklyn told the American Otological society recently that he treats this by swabbing out the eu- ; stachian tube with a solution of 29 grains of nitrate of silver in an ounce I i of water, applying it on a pledget of- - cotton wouqd at the end of two strands of thin wire twisted as cue. Tough on Posterity. Crtticus—By the way, old chap, are you writing for money or for fame? j Scribbles —Neither. I’m writing for ! posterity. , > Criticus—Well, all I’ve got to say is that it’s a low-down trick to play on ’ posterity. i They Were in Luck. Mistress—Did you tell the ladies I was not at home, as I instructed you’ Servant —C! did, mum. Mistress—What did they say? Servant. —Wan av thim said ut's afthcr bein’ better f be born lu-ky than rich.
\ I J® Boston Mollarsl ALWAYS GI VE SATISFACTION i THEYARc PROPI-PLY DESIGNED I TO INSURE A PERFECT FIT. , | NOGALLED SHOULDERS IFYOUI6E I A BOSTON COLLAR AND ARE GUARANTEED i WHOPSBWimOREVALUABIt ! AND CAN DO MORE WORK IF YOU USETKEBOSTONG3LLAR I THE PRICE 15 REASONABLE FOR SALE Chas Steeie & Co. i ; j I + + + + + '!''r*4’< , + + * + * PLENTY OF MONEY <, * to loan on * IMPROVED FARMS 4 > at 5 Per Cent (♦ Abstracts made on short ♦ * Notice. * SCHURGER’S ♦ ! * Abstract Office. ♦ Dr. L K, Magley VETERINARIAN Corner Third and Me < rue Streets. Phones DECATUR. LND. LIVE STOCK and General Auctioneering I thank you for your pasi favors I am still on the job. Telephone at my expense. J. N. Burkhead Monroe, Ind. LISTEN:Book your Sale with an Auctioneer. Who is able to make your sale a success. Telephone No. 8 L R, N. RUNYONi Decatur, Ind. B. C. HENRICKS D. C. VOIR CHIROPRACTOR Above Voglewcde’s Shoe Store. Phone 660 Offic Hours Ito 5 7to 8 LADY ATTENDANT Decatur. Ind. DECATUR’S * CHIROPRACTOR j PIONEER . Office Over Vance Hitt's Lo 5:00 ILJUIS 6:3Oio8<0 PHONE 650. < 0. L Burgener, D. C. No Drugs No Surgery No Oste n&fhv
How Many Horse Hower Can M Buy for $675 ? .So lt ° ith . Ai » ■' 3od ilk 1881 -, \ eve >075 \ nci ant Mi ftei ut j ose Ft ,- o c idle horses, puls Ulis 3- ■ -«r to v urz ndt Al t ti '°Ul nh ens WJE TTOIT ery = '■ ■ . “T' -• elvi - - - - i i—■«■!—■ ■■■ ___ y< hen SPHCIAL EXCURSION EARLTO ™ Vin'er !ouris? Destine;ion; “* via j C OVER LEAF ROUTE A in tl ee Clever Leaf Ageno orv rite Chas. E. Rose,G.lßog< Toledo, for particulars. rout poin —- . . u - - _eipe G. S. BURKHEAD & S£ FKACTICAI HOKSESHOERS “ Special Attenti n Given to Lame, Interfering And Forging Horses. ed a •General Dla .smithing and Wood Work. Cor. Ist and Madison St. ter - m « spec ~ — ■■’draf oper P« ' ' alun •JSeWonder Car' I 70,01 chai 1 wy I effic ' i ■ whil fd /• alun Aa. wr s J J ” J 9 r < i B zx • ■ to 8 Quiet Clutch—Runs in Oil bath of n « eW Uxwell operates in a farm and velvetv ma * ies remarkably smooth New Per cent nf and eliminates 80 shou ° noise when the gears are shifted. clar< U that the dutcl cars agree B uu me dutch should run in oil. for ' anism is fJiv^, an d transmission raech- “ii y enclosed. part test to ta ke you for a wile all low •’F l ri e c£t r H that br °J“ U a " d aU lo^^V r Xd“ try” s thllt C F -° B DETROIT ehini — . | v ■■ echo % ~ria»rf4M - V i TCCOI on ti . . were / ' ' Tt iBSUSk I ,K)TOR SALKc C^Pt WAYNE . I M). orga:
