Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 14, Number 63, Decatur, Adams County, 14 March 1916 — Page 6

p, BBSsnaocsozaK’ £•£.* o THE DAILY MARKET RtPO.'!TS ? |L a J_M nflßflm l=3=3 ust-'

EAST BUFFALO Kant Buffalo, N. y7 Mar. 14—(Special to Dally Democrat) —Receipts, 2.400; shipments, 570; official to New York yesterday, 2,850; hogs closing slow. Mediums, heavies and yorkers, $10.30; pigs, $9.00 @59.25; roughs. $9.25®»9.85; stags, $6.00«? $7.25; cattle, 150; strong; sheep, 2,-0-ift; steady; top lambs. $11.50. b. r. flints Wheat * lO2 Oats '® c Oats, No. 3, white ! ‘ c

Corn * • " Rye 83c Barley 5Sc Clover Seed Alsike seed * B '" s Timothy seed $3.00 NIBLICK 4 CO. Eggs 16c butter 18c@26c FULLENKAMP’S. Eggs ISc Butter 27c BERLING’S. itirtlan Runner ducas *e Chickens Fowls Ducks * c Geese ®*'j Young turkeys **•

DECATUR’S CHIROPRACTOR PIONEER Office Over Vance & Hite's Unnvt. 1:30 to 5:00 nours 6:30 to 8:C0 PHONE 650. 0. L. Burgener, D. C. No Drugs No Surgery No Osteopathy PILES! PILLS WILLIAMS' WVIAS P7.L£ OINTMFJ-ri VCIil enr* an.l Itcring . It abfc.vr im th' tumors, i*n t ivch f.tr or, - acts £».» a poultice, gave? n -••ant relief. For sale by all druggu&fc* tdiui 56- and il-t* WIUWMS MFS.Cn.. ow. ENTERPRISE DRL'G STORE B. C. HENRICKS D. C. YOIR CHIROPRACTOR Above Voglewcde’s Shoe Store. Phone 660 Office Hours Ito 5 7to 8 LADY ATTENDANT Decatur, Ind. LIVE STOCK and Genera! Auctioneering I thank you for your past favors I am still on the job Telephone at my expense. J. N. Burkhead Monroe, lnd. Dr. L V. Connell VETERINARIAN I>U r» Office 102 i *■ ■EG . Residence . 143

Bsiss 1 :: 'z^fmk&^^o 4 d ijt?u for the c^iicncc —\\s H ' ton v!ho are earning less than a tr ovfn homes and hade mo- a mli i7£»t&£. Ificir pcnnicj,their their toUacj ufcre £adsb sus- - B f ni it tdorlh mule? p| |j cat ui'M- fastesEa

Old Tom turkeys 10c Old Hon turkeys l«r Old Rooster* • •$* >'„tt er Decking stock ...Idc Eggs 15c Above price* sen -,t>» gunltry free from food 4 FORNAX MILLING CO. Wlieat sl-02 Corn Oats : " c Rye 75c KALVEH’b MARKETS. Wool lUtf.t’ .tsef bides 11* I*lf

allow ....6c . iheep pelts . 26C0J1.90 1 LOCAL PRODUCE MARKET. I Chickens He -nrit&A Runner Duett* j Fowls Htc . Ducks . Geese * 5c | Young tnrkeys l*o Old Tom Turkeys Hoj Old Hen Turkeys He Old Roosters *« Eggs l r >c Butrer 18c Above prices are lor poo'try fire*-! from feed. DECATUR CREAMERY CO. Butterfat, delivered 36c | Butterfat, in country 33c Butter, wholesale 36c

LISTEN:Book your Sale with an Auctioneer. Who is able o make your | sale a success. Telephone No, 8 L j R. N. RUNYON; Decatur, ind. COOD RAISIN DREAD. We have it—Good Basin Bread j that you and all the. folks in the fam- j ; ily will enjoy. Try it today.—Joseph,! Martin & Lang’s restaurant and ; case. 52t6 j : * '■-tt i bests; r tt" ■ ’ < It's a •’ I mis take • fer yourg peop’o to be deterred ; 1 from parting to save because | their start must necessarily; be smali. No star! is too small, providing it i BUT a start. One dollar deposited in this < bank with a FIXED determination on the part es the depositor to add to it as quickly as possible L far better than or.e hundred dollars, with no definite plan or desire for its increase. The saving habit is a valuable asset for anyone to acquire. And this bank is ready to assist! ANY ONE to acquire it. ■ FIRST NATIONAL BANK DLOATUR, INDIANA Jem here Feeler*! Reserve Association. * *_! j

t GREENHOUSE SPECIALTIES. ” Roses, Carnations, Catla Lillies, j Swan; nia and Sweet Elyria ns. potted » plants In bloom: Tulips, Hyacinths, iCinerarlee, Cyclemcu aipl Begonias, We are In u position to furnish anything you nmy want not carried In „ stock on very short notice. Mr. Elzey. . our new man, with his twete years’ . .pi lone* as a grower, makes liitn 3 very proficient In floral culture, as “ well as all kinds of funeral work. Wo " invite tho public to call. Visitors are always welcome. MOSER GREENHOUSE CO. 'Phone 476. Residence, 195. i 07t6 • MUST SELL AT ONCE. : 1 have been authorized to sell the ! Jacob Blew property on North Third 1 : treet. It must bo sold ut once and ! ’! is a bargain lor the person who wants '| a good residence. It is located on 1 North Third street, lias six rooms, ■ .rood cellar, electric lights, and water, j 'A bargain if taken right away. I I See me at once. , !R6t6 BEN SCHRANK. | FURNISHED HOUSE WANTED—A high class family would like to rent a furnished home in Decatur. Must ; have modern conveniences. Send all j j word to tliis office. 35tf. DR. FRUTH Specialist, in Chronic, B Nervous and Special Y_. Av* Diseases, Treated by j . New, Modern and Scientitle Methods. For rrore complete TL?' 1 ! 4 1, ! -- information see ad ap penrinq in this paper, March 31st and April Ist. Dr. Fruth will be at Decatur, Hotel 4ur r ay, one day only, TUESDAY, APRIL 4TH, and will return every 28 days thereafter. Consultation, examination and Professional Advice -REE. j ; ;i. L K. Magicy VF/f RINA RIAN Corner • ird arid Muruov j Streets. Dl -, v -. Res M. 11 : '■ ■- :, T . .RP >FOA! * r H. IN!*. • M. J. Scl r UNDFRTAKING AND, EMBALMING { Fine Funeral Furnishings DECATUR, - IND. ! Telephone: Office 90; Home, ISS G'iAtliiiiiA . &££! r. STAR GROCtKYji tz&arm\ ,111 ■mi —n n win nwe? j t ; Shredded Cod Fish 10c Norman Fresh Mackerel.. ,20c | Imported Sardines in Olive >, j Oil 10c | | . - f' I Herring Roe loc . , Yacht Club Salad Dressing.. 10c * Extra Fancy Red Salmon...2oc s Santa Clara Caked Beans, without pork 15c | Frosh Candled Eggs, d0i....13c f Marco extra fancy Spaghetti 10c ’ l Marco Horse Radish and Mustard 10c < i Dill Pickles, doz ICc v i Campbell’s Soups 10c £ V Mustard Sardines 5c V r Fresh Fruit Preserves, qt. i ft I can 25c 1 ! | t ! wii* Johns, sk* I «I ! *

HELP WANTED FOR RENT—Five room house on Oak St. Simeon J. Huin. 6016 LOST Ladies oversho, on route 3 while delivering mail. Kinder return to ibis office or Mrs. Win. Biggs.! this city 6113. FOR RENT-- Seven room cottage, on •Ugh St.,; close to Mercer avenue.j Water, lights and gns. Inquire 333 No. 4th St.; ’phone 2SG. 50tf j ; ’<lit RKN’t'—Four furnlfthed rooms for light housekeeptng. 336 Line street.' Phono No. 521, 607 Monroe street. — B. W. Sholty. 291-e-o-d-ts WANTED—ikig your pSihTT :> holt. Clean paper 75c a loom, cal) j jphone 14-U —Jim Coverdale. 4fitfi for SaQb 65 RENT—A *w«Ming ml good location. Inquire at James T Merryman's office. !. (). O. F. BWk er ; phone 12 or 256. 310tf FOR - SALE] TRADE OR~ RENT 1 — Three acres of land ill section 18, Union township; has house, barn and shed, water and fruit. Inquire of Henry Lee, 242 No. Seventh St. Glt3 FOR SALE—Good seven room- house in first class condition, excellent loi cation, good cellar. 226 Tenth street, i ncniire as to owner at this office. 63’6 FOR SALE —80 acres clay loam soil, good buildings, water, rlentv peaches, apples, stone road, Fremont 5 mites, ) 312,000, terms, possession at once, no trade, write L. W. Cronso, Fremont, Mich. 62t3 PUBLIC SALE. The undersigned will sell at his res- | denee, 4Vi miles southeast of Deca--1 tnr, or 1% miles east and Vi mile I north of St. Paul church or lVi miles . northwest of Pleasant Mills, on Wed- ! Ttesdav, March 22, commencing at 10 ! o’clock a. m„ the following property, [ to-wit: Two head of borces: Two ! rood brood mares, 1 Pereheron mare 5 years old, 1 Belgian mare. 7 years | old. Five Head of Cattle: Five milch | ows. including one black Polled An- ; - s cow, will be fresh Ist of June; i black cow, 4 years old, will be fresh ' by day of sale; red Polled Angus, 3 j years old, fresh latter part of May; ; '.liorthorn cow, 3 yrs. old. fresh about : .Tune Ist; Jersey cow, 2 years old. I alf by sid-'; yearling Holstein bull, a I mod one: 2 yearling heifers, Short;’'crr.s. Ten Head of Hogs; Ten head of shoats, weighing about 70 Tbs. eaih. Farming Implements: , heavy wagon, hay rack, and beet bed combined, McCormick mower, new; hay tedder. Case riding plow, new; tei Shunk walking plow, disc liar- - -i'w, sp-ing tooth harrow, spike tooth i harrow. Case riding cultivator, tubular roller, shovel plow, set dump ' boards, set beet tools, set double brass j harness, set heavy single harness, set j light single harness, hog rack, 3-horse i doubletree, 200-egg incubator, grind- : tone, 1%-horsS power gasoline eniue, with pump Jack and numerous (.other articles. Terms of Sale: —All sums of $5.00 ' ~nd under, cash in hand; over $5.00 i a credit of 9 months will be given, I purchaser giving his note with approved security; 4 per cent discount for cash. Nb property removed until settled for. JAMES D. HOFFMHAN. Harry Daniels, Auct. Lunch will be served on the grounds. MASONIC CALENDAR FOR WEEK ENDING MARCH 'l9 Monday, March 13, 7 ; 00 O’clock. Master Mason degree. Two candidates. Tuesday, March 14, 7:00 O'clock. Master Mason degree. DAVID E. SMITH, W. M. PUBLIC SALE OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS. I, the undersigned will offer at pub11c auction at his residence, 828 No. Fifth street, on Saturday, March 18, 1916, sale commencing at 1 o’clock p. ; in., the following household goods: Five stoves, 1 base burner, 2 soft coal burners, 2 cook stoves, chairs, tables, stands, beds and bedding and in fact every household article that I have in my house. Also a number of jack screws and a few bushels of potatoes. Come and attend this sale and get what you want and are in need of. Amounts of $5 or more, nine months credit with negotiable security. JOHN F. COLCKIN. 58t9 North Fifth St. ***** + *•»♦ + ♦*♦♦ * PLENTY OF MONEY 4 so loan on * *• IMPROVED FARMS 4 at 5 Per Cent *■ Abstracts made on short 4 Notice. 4 SCKLAiCEAAS ♦ Abstract Office. 4 * + + -** + + *44>* + *4

BEES HAVE HEATING fv’ElH'A Work of Intelligent ln*ect* Keep* | Temperature of Hives Comfortcble in Winter Weather. The boo upholds his reputation for : i Industry throughout the wlntoi month* 1 as well as during the summer. Being I susceptible to cold, the bee must turn ! to his colony for warmth. Communism, which in boos is so highly dove! ' oped In the storing of food and caring ] for the young, is also the basis for tho heating system. It was found by e\ j perlment that only the shell Is com 1 pact. This is formed by one to sevj eral layers of bees all solidly arranges j with their heads inward, their hairs interlacing. This arrangement is perfect for conservation of the heat witain. Except for an occasional shifting of position the bees forming the shell are quiet. But within the shell strange j things are going on. It is here that the heat Is generated. And the antics are not unlike our own when we are cold. The bees are packed loosely within the shell si. that there is plenty of space for many bees to be exercising at a time. Rapid fanning of the wings, shaking the body from side tt> side, rapid breathing, and other movements are all part of the scheme for raising the temperature. In one particular instance, when a bee had been rapidly fanning with his wings for seven and a half minutes, the thermometer nearest him rose half a degree Fahrenheit. FAIRIES IN CHILD'S ROOM Grownups Make a Mistake When They Laugh at the Little One's Imagination. It is certain, of course, that if any one of us, however dull, came into the child’s playroom and found standing there beside him a tall and shimmering figure of fairylike, miraculous beauty, decked in shining iris and frosty, glistening gold—it is quite certain we would step softly, with astonishment; would gaze mutely with amazement and watch with wonder, Laura Spencer Porter writes in the Mother's Magazine. Not one of us. 1 am very sure, would dismiss the whole happening as a piece of nonsense, or something merely amusing. Yet, how often, when we go into the child’s playroom a presence even more wonderful is there beside him, far more fairylike, far more amazing, far mora marvelous colored, far more richly endowed than any fairy whatsoever—the imagination, a presence which has been with man, granting his desires, since the world began, and whose power has never yet been, nor, I fancy, ever will be, computed. As beautiful and exquisite, yes, and in its beauty very nearly as solemn a thing as the world and the life of man afford; and behold, we pay it no reverence, give it littie consideration, or, we laugh at it, perhaps, as something trifling, and call it ’’child's play.” Bad Cooking and Divorce. Love and a well-filled stomach go well together, but hatred and treachery are born in an underdone steak, the Farm and Fireside remarks. Baa cooking is directly responsible for a large percentage of the divorce evil and much of the crime committed —in fact, it might well be classed as a crime in itself. Bank examining is all well enough for its purpose, but the examination of cooks and kitchens is far mere important. Cf what avail are our pure-food laws if all food may be ruined in the kitchen? A gcod cook is the greatest statesman in the country in the true sense of the term. i No one should bo permitted to cook in any rublic eating house who has not been examined, found competent and licensed: and bad, cooking—such as now exists in many public places—should be a misdemeanor punishable by law. Had a Good Reason. Sousa used to tell an amusing story of a German trombone player whom the composer-conductor knew in the j early days when he was leading the j United States Marine band In Wash- ! ington. The old trombone player was j named Backenblasser —a fact he could ! not help—and on one occasion Sousa i saw him standing outside the theater ; where he had been playing for sev- '; eral weeks. Backenblasser was swearing very unmusically for a man who knew all about harmony, and he shook his fist at the theater and even ’ administered ono or two kicks to the unresisting brick wall. "What’s the trouble, Backenblasser?” asked Sou--1 sa, stepping in surprise. “I will nefer . play in dare again!” shouted the Gerti man. "Why not?” "Nefer, I tell you, » nefer!” “But why not?” persisted e Sousa. "Because I has been dischargt.” t Destroying Microbes. i The odor of cloves has been known to destroy microbes in thirty-five minutes; tinnamon will kill seme species in twelve minutes, thyme in thirty-five . minutes. In forty-five minutes Common wild verbena is found effective, p while the odor of some geranium ) flowers has destroyed various forms of > microbes in fifty minutes. The essence of cinnamon is said to destroy the typhoid fever microbe in twelve 4 minutes, and is recorded as the most i effective of all odors as an antiseptic, ft is now believed that flowers which arc found in Egyptian mummies were r placed there more for their antiseptic properties an for merely ornamental or sentimental purposes )

I Rex Theatre lilfisALPilAl J- tonight j BILLIE RITCHIE in two real comedy I “BILLIES REFORMATION” 1 Laramie feature, ‘THE UNDERWOOD” with Rupert Jiuian. _ | tomorrow S HELEN HOLMES IN CHAPTER NINE OF i THE GIRL AND THE GAME ; King Baggot !n Three Reels, '‘THE LAW OF LIFE.” , | COMING I j “DAMAGED GOODS” Tws., March 28ih. IJ Rex 1 hestre \ nmhi mi mu .^■ : x

mi | mm OPENING 9W i R -to VI G 1 •»* ■ " •* ■■lsi V« U ; WEDNESDAY, MARCH 154 ' At Mrs. A. BOESE I 1 FINE WATCH i:CFA!KiHG I Did ii Ever Occur To You I I WATCHES jA j SIIVCHV/ARE J j CLOCKS I ,V I CUT GLASS ! wluit confusion wouH I'MS.t I JEWELRY { O I FANCY $ 1 !f All Watches and Clocks U IsAo" v * Y—-i wore to strike for short r I || C hours and refuse to work? j f] t\-i h ? .yit str~« i4*i |( . . s 1 : ton Will never nu-; u.e fi Esfe' }\ 1 water till tfce welt runs dry. jA* - - K v m nor your Watch till ih b "Jr"P »•**" (Mit n bu ( u ' A-- -V 3 VVztch *•’ B Kfi >;-j . : ‘l-' A' pair that you’ll never jj--- miss the money either. | PUMPII'RL ’i ii WELRY STOiti: I “If Its New, We Have It”. Base You Judgement on Efficiency—Not Price. j A Practical, Reliable, Simple, Common Sense separator, tnat appeals to dairyman, becau SL '' it Gets all the Cream. When you use an Anhe* oLa your enthusiasm doesn’t wane; it increases " ,|t: every turn of the crank. 1 ss'JsL\rjEs TTOZT