Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 14, Number 70, Decatur, Adams County, 22 March 1916 — Page 2
■MMMMWMWMMMMMMMMMMMMMWM*® M-=RHSUMATIsm O ''wl/liuiitu<\,.m >X | WjBJ o<> es Pain Interfere? J There is a remedy Sloan’s 5 eßJw*’ Liniment «r 5 X m M S ✓ Reßd thi * unsolicited grateful - ™ S testimony—-»-'X Not long ago my left knee beM s' ' came lame and sore. It pained uillKlK ’■ i X n, e many restless nights. So se- M 9 Mrious did it become that 1 was forced to consider giving up my I jjteC I X work when I chanced to think of B M Sloan’s Liniment. Let me say—less than one bottle fixed me up. R KRIS PAIN k X Chas. C. Campbell, Florence, Tex. 9 —-S.Yg.-~ I W( *
fmaiausaMiimaffiawiftsmsiaaMai ms shrinking? )anger ahead! Go now to a mirror and examine your mouth? Do your gums look “rinsed out,” shrunken? Do you sec a jagged appearance in the gum-line? If so, see your dentist He will tell you that you have pyorrhea, and that to save your - yr -. : :y. teeth you will have to fight this dread disease Vso . ■< at once<
From pyorrhea come by far the greater part of all tocth troubles. Unless treated and checked, it will result not only in the shrinking and malformation of your gums and of the bony structure into which your teeth ’are set, but in the loss of the teeth themselves. 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 teeth against the attack or further progress of pyorrhea.
THE OLD OAKEN DUCKET. A Famous Song and Its Composer. Samuel Woodworth, the son of a modest Massachusetts farmer, was born in Scituate, that state, January, 19, 1785. While the family were poor and had no luxuries, their lot was no worse than that of the ordinary New England family, and they lived in comporative comfort. While his life was a succession of ambitions, attempts and failures, his fame rests secure on his faithful portrayal of the old fashioned well aud weather-beaten well-sweep, universally to be found on the farms of that day. While living in New York City, on Duane street, he came home one July day, nearly overcome with the heat, and with nothing to drink but the tepid water of the city—ice being unknown in those days in the summer months—he exclaimed to his wife: "What would I not give this moment for a long draught from the old oaken bucket hanginng in my father’s well!” "Samuel!” replied his wife “wouldn’t that be a good subject for
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“But Sinrece dees mere. It cleanses the teeth delightfully. It gives them a whiteness distinctive of Senreco alone. Its flavor is entirely pleasing, and it leaves in the mouth a wonderful sense of cooLness and wholesomeness. Start the Senreco treatment before pyorrhea grips you for good. Details in folder with every tube. A two-ounce tube L I for 25c is sufficient for 6 weeks* *■ I daily treatment. Get Senreco yjfr! of your druggist today; or send -fy'/' 4c in stamps or coin for sample “"f—y tube and folder. Address The \ Sentanel Remedies Company 503 Union Central Building, Cincinnati, Ohio. ——
a poem?” Forthwith he sat down—the thronging recollections of his ‘ childhood crowded thick upon him — t and that charming idyll of tme bui colic New England sprang into sheath- ,' less life and fame. The music is said • to have been adapted from an an , cient Scottish melody by Frederick , Smith. Woodworth died in 1852. , This song, like so many of the heart lyrics of an elder day, is found t in the famous song collection called s “Heart Songs”—which this paper is . offering nearly free of cost to its read I ers. We recommend them to look for t the Heart Songs coupon, to be found elsewhere in this paper today—and ’ learn the terms upon which this re , markable book can be had. FOR SALE. One set of heavy harness, 1 set oi > farm harness, 1 set of buggy harness. > all new, hand made. Harness oil - right, as long as it lasts. Stop at - ,506 So. 13th St., and get the price. 12-f-s-4wkß W. H. AMRINE. LVOCRAT WANT ADh
POETRY IN THE TRENCHES War Seems to Have Stimulated the Muse of the Men Who Are Doing the Fighting. * _____ After all the unpleasant talk about night clubs It is refreshing to know that the sign of the Flambeau and Stare In Devonshire street, Bloomsbury, is favored by soldiers who have run home from the trenches for a few hours. For that is the poetry book shop—and poetry now is supposed to be mere dunnage. But that Is by no means the case. There is a demand for neat little books to fit the tunic pocket. It cannot be said any poet is in more demand than another. What is wanted is a portable volume of the authentic, voice, explains Mr. Harold Munroe. To see several soldiers in their Sam Brownes, standing in a dim light before the crowded shelves in the shop where not a single popular novel can be found, even by accident, choosing their wartime poetry, is proof enough that this is no ordinary war.
But the poets themselves show that. Not a few of those whose volumes appear on the shelves are in the army or navy, and some already have died on service. War seems to be even a cause of poetry, for there is a colored broadside, Ballad of the Gloster and the Goeben," by Maurice Hewlett, "Singsongs of the War,” by the same author, "The King’s Highway” (another broad sheet), by Henry Newbolt, "Antwerp,” by Ford Madox Hueffer, one of the finest tributes to Belgium yet written, "Soliloquies of a Subaltern” (war poems written in the trenches), and "Battle Songs for the Irish,” in fact poetry does not seem to be at all hit by the war, but rather to be "doing its bit.”—London Daily Mail. LAND IS TO BE RECLAIMED System of Irrigation Will Restore Fertility to the Valley of the Euphrates. For several years before the war oegan the Turkish government was building irrigation dams across the Euphrates, reopening the old Babylonian canals which had long been filled with sand, and building new (Anais to reclaim -the country. When the war broke out work upon this great irrigation project ceased. After the war it will doubtless be resumed, and one may easily imagine the changes which will then take place. All of that wonderfully fertile valley will be reclaimed. The wide plains, where now the herds of the Bedouin find scant pasturage, will be dotted with date groves and grain fields, and millions of people will find homes where now but few can gain a livelihoo4 Again Bagdad, the city of the caliphs, will be as glorious as when the famous Haroun-al-Raschid used to wander in disguise about the streets, and when Sinbad the Sailor made it his home. The buried cities will be uncovered, revealing the treasures long hidden among the ruins. The history of modern Egypt will be repeated in Babylonia. The desert and the swamps will again become a veritable Garden of Eden as in the ancient days.—Christian Herald. Heroism at Home. The foreign war absorbs public attention —absorbs it so fully that brave deeds of personal heroism here at home pass by aigl get almost no notice at all. However, once in a while something turns up so heroic that there is no ignoring it. Read the following from the Palm Beach special dispatch in Monday’s New York papers: “Mr. was sitting down to a dinner, of which he was host, at the Beach club last night, when he got a telegram, announcing his father’s death. He arose without a word, sent back an explanation he was ill, and the dinner continued.” Wasn’t that splendid? Just suppose the reporter had missed it and that such display of nerve, of courtesy, of inheritance, had missed the public eye, or gven that the guests had b«en told to disperse and buy their own dinners. Perish the base thought.— Hartford Courant. Team Went On With Driver Dead. The story of how a couple of horsos, drawing a load of timber, traveled from Blackfriars Wharf to Mile End with the dead driver sitting in his seat holding the reins, was tohd at the Poplar (Eng.) coroner’s court recently, when an inquest was held on the driver. The dead man's companion said that deceased was all right when they left the wharf. Witness was in front with another pair-horse van, and the horses which were in charge of the deceased followed through the city without mishap. The medical evidence showed that deceased’s heart was of the remarkable weight of 36 ounces, and in it there vas a rupture one and a half inches tg. "Death from natural causes” was the verdict returned. Breaks Cork Leg, He Sues. The fracture of an artificial leg is made the basis for a J2OO claim, ot which notice was filed with the city council by Frank L. Davison, who says his manufactured limb was broken when he fell on an icy sidewalk in East Seventh street near John street.—St. Paul Dispatch. Many Japanese Toys. The Japanese are now manufacturing yearly about 150,000,000 worth ol toys of which 40 per cent are for ex portation.
nuintfeotßtion of conviction. NineteenTUP net of purchase is and | ia ye been endorsed and purchased by Sixteen Buick Valv<-in-head B uuk models, thouu„. knowing ml U>» usu “ ds cou ''” ~f r= —e. ,1 ~.S j jga rxr sands of which are in usi iou.i». IL <7 n/ fl L/ ht,n ’ ale the most sollgllt cars in Am /ZT/V) fill hnw this year with any new or untried models. Buidi Con "” ny “ " < U m-l -d e.UWWKU J “ " ,W *" r" « C* U. /T rrjJ for in the Nineteen-Sixtcen models, Bunk b ( / i-ioYod cars . , .. ■ complete expression, construction and motor principles then m LONG before the end of the Nine- i,sure of their ground, R'lick engineer: teen-Slxteen season Buick pjir- Never wiverint! never deviating, absolllti . • chasers will possess upwards of ‘ 1 ‘ ~i n the Nine teen-Sixteen Buick Si' 66,000 Nineteen Sixteen Valve-in-Head , ,i„vnloned the Valvc-iIl-Head motor until lou.n Sixes. Meritorious performances of have developed tlie Naive , nviv all ease of control not approachpast Buicks will have sold many of { a slnool hiiess, a quickness oi g< t avwiy. them. Buick power and Buick beauty ? (,u a ll *’ I will have sold the others. But the , . under S2.(MM). majority of these men will become cd m anv Cai limit r owners of Buick Sixes Primarily bo- „r„„i liri .,l in n variety of body styles. Roadsters, cause they are convinced that the u„:..b Vdve-in-Hcad Sixes are manufactured in a . J J fourteen years of steadfast progress niliCK i w | v ,taiim finish and unholsterv thov and unchanged faith iu the Vaivcdn- rmmps Inside Drive Sedans. In lx)<l) d<' Ig • I J J Head principle of motor car construe- louring Cars, CUj , ■ woll-nrnved Buick chassis tion has placed the Buick in a class >nn tn Hie hiuh mechanical standard of tlu Mt | . far ahead ot all competition. fully measure up to the mgn metiiu The lines of this latest Buick Model D-6-45 are so pleaskinc that they cannot help but satisfy the most exacting purchaser 1 ong. low-hung, following the best American and foreign style, the very appearance of this car is symbolic of .. power and speed. Combined with the recognized excellence of the Buick diassis a 5-passenger body of exceptional grace, the Buick . >- . Six Touring Car a wonderfill \alue. Wiakdtew. y / It is a big car. vet not bulky. It is roomy and comfort- - rawwa 1 beautiful to look al. elegantly i.mshed and tinely uplp.iModel D-6-45 with 34x4 in tires, Price, f. o. b., Flint, Michigan. THE Buick Six Roadster Model D-6-44 has caused a furore in motor circles wherever shown. Sturdy, yet light in weight. It wonderfully powerful, easy to V drive, quiik on the trigger, pleasing ■ in linc an “ color, it has quickly made JXfr, I a place for itself as the greatest road r otfi'ied. !• ‘ s d xibk and easily c ,ptroll I on crowded thorou-li-farts, perfect in quality, comPuce With 31xl in. wheel .. «rfi®*** ' $985, f. o. b., Flint, Michigan. LEE HARDWARE CO. Indiana.
KEEP LOOKING YOONG It’s Easy —ls You Know Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets The secret *f keeping young is to feel young—to do thia you must watch your liver and bowels—there's no need of having a sallow complexion—dark rings under your eyes—pimples—a billions look in your face—dull eyes with no sparkle. Your doctor will tell you ninety per cent of all sickness comes from inactive bowels and liver. Dr. Edwards, a well-known physician in Ohio, perfected a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil to act on the liver and bowels, which he gave to his patients for years. » Dr. Edwards* Olive Tablets, tho substitute for calomel, are gentle in their action, yet always effective. They bring about that exuberance of spirit, that natural buoyancy which should be enjoyed by everyone, by toning up the liver and clearing the system of impurities. You will know Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets by their olive eolor. 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. The Olive Tablet Company, Columbus, Oi MUST SELL AT ONCE. I have been authorized to sell th< Jacob Blew property on North Third street. It must be sold at once and s a bargain tor the person who wantt a good residence. It is located oi North Third street, has six rooms, Fred Orioa and McQuay Two sound, grade Belgian stallions, .!; stand for marcs at my barn, five i lea northeast of Decatur, Indiana, Sca«un. Fred Orion is a sorrel •.vith light mane and tail, eix years old, •Alight a ton. itlcwuay is a sorrel, with stripe, white mane and tail, will weigh a ton when matured. He is lour years cld. They are a fine pair of Belgian horses, have proven that they are excellent and sure breeders. Terms: Ten dollars to insure a colt to stand and suck. Owners parting with mares will be held for insurance. We solicit your patronage. J. A. FLEMING & SON Owners.
good cellar, electric lights, and water. A bargain if taken right away.
vasttionJlintsC kZ ■ WO fi-om ffa R RR 1 O K Style S'Rov? | The Smartest of Spring Styles for the Purse-Prudent Woman It’s net an easy matter to assemble season after season, an individual line of smart coats and suits, but being fortunate 'df IjjMJg enough to carry the Bischof line, we again cordially invite you to view cur lovely offerings—and have no hesitation in <-< saying that every style is one that will make instant appeal 'VW ply-R to the woman who values style-distinction. ' r Every coat and suit for Spring is refreshing in its originality K V ’•’ and the line is so varied, it permits of a wide selection —rvXlL The same style genius which has ever characterized Bischof f /I -lW Coats and Suits stands out effectively in the Spring models. I I - Every model is attractive. The fashionable Stylg Marts of /«Li -ILtaX the Country and the best Looms of the Land have been >F '' searched to produce smart styles for limited incomes / ! " Z /|j .' 7 /I/' The fabrics are entirely novel and embody that rare e/x / I /] J1 f Aik ' elusiveness desired by smart women. X / / /Ji J /[jPJVr V The stjles are extremely "chic” and clever— V ' HOIKS* Jb 1 The colors simply radiate Spring N. - RrAiis -J - j and ' The Prices are within reason. NIBLICK & i
. See me at once. .156t6 BEN SCHRANK.
DEMOCRAT WANT ADS PAY BIG
