Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 14, Number 85, Decatur, Adams County, 8 April 1916 — Page 3

I 1 'X\\ 1 class » f —bottom price I 111 11 This car X the result of a definite purpose to supply a v\'xX I l/l \ I definite need with definite finality. \x\ V\ h| I | It is built for the man whose purse cannot afford a big, \v\ xX II LI expensive car — \\ xxx II || n| I Tor the man whose pride cannot afford an unsightly, little, v\ x\x ' X||l Ili I uncomfortable car — \X\ xxX il I I ill And it is a very definite success. \\\ x\ 11 II ill 111 Beauty’is not necessarily a matter of size. \\\\ \\ 11 II 111 I | Neither does size altogether control comfort. \ \\\ II HI 111 ||i But skill, experience and facilities are required to build a A V 111 111 ill H email, beautiful, comfortable, economical car. A\ X 1 1 yI lit l\| In a word, it required Overland organization. VX VX II 111 I I lit And here is the small, light car—complete to the last detail. || HI l\j 111 its performance is on a par with its beauty, comfort and \ II 111 II I I completeness. \x \X V II 11 111 And its price—s6ls—is far below any former price for any x\\ \,\ 111 11 ll\ 11 completely equipped automobile —regardless of appearance or . \\\ vX II 111 ill I'' comfort considerations. xx \ \ X 111 VI ill 111 A glance at the car impresses you immediately with its \\ I Vll ill ill ill beauty and finish. \\X ill 111 111 ill A® y° u ' r over I 111 111 111 II its absolute completeness. . \\X ' I II 111 111 111 But you must ride in it to appreciate its comfort. xw l\ 111 111 You must drive it to get the thrill its performance will \\ \ X \ II ill 111 111 give you. \\X \\X ul 111 ill \\\ 111 You can own one of these cars. X>X xyx Ml \ \ 111 l\\ \\ \ But act promptly—for no car was ever in such demand. X\ 111 \l\ 'll ill \l\ In spite ot rccord productions and advancing prices, there \xXk Vi \\\ \l I ll' 'l' * s a s^orta S e cars. \aX x\ i 111 ' VI \l \ The demand naturally centers on top class at bottom \ X I\U '\\ 111 \l\ I \ price—this small light car. XX XXX\ II I\\ l\\ 111 \W \\\ And no other car at anywhere near its price can compare XX- \ X II ill 111 \\\ V \ \\\ with this one for beaut > r ’ performance, comfort, complete- X\ XX A\ ’ll v\ ill 'W \'\ ness and economy. \x \\\ 111 111 111 ll \\ \V Get in touch with us today—now. \vx W|\\ W HOLTHOUSE S GARAGE W \ 111 \l\ \V W \\ W The Willys-Overland Company, Toledo, Ohio x \xx\ \ 111 \\\ W\ \\\ n\ \\\ "iwihr. tz" X\ xXX wWvk w w 'll 111 \W \W \\ W vX 1 Roadster $595 \ \\l v\ w A 111 x L .. .- . -wn»-|——— ~ th “ n.Mnn»»iM— ■ i ii M ■■!■! >■ ■! i am r n n wm - -u—■!' i biibi nr»— w

Democrat Want Ads B rmg w £suit 3 NOW IT THE TIME AND OUR STORE IS THE PLACE TO BUY WALL PAPER. Our new line is the finest ever shown in the city. It includes everything in wall paper from the cheapest to the best Patterns suitable for any kind of room. NO WAR PRICES We Also Sell Kyanize The best finish ever made for floors, furniture, linoleum or any inside woodwork, made in clear and seven colors. Will not chip, crack or spot. Hoosier Paint for all purposes, 100 per cent pure. Wall Paper Cleaner, Alabastine, Brushes, etc. CALLOW & KOHNE The Drug Store on the East side of the street.

DECATUR’S CHIROPRACTOR PIONEER Office Over Vance & Hite’s Hnnre L3O to 5:00 liOUrS 6:30 to 8:00 PHONE 650. 0. L Burgener, D. C. No Drugs No Surgery No Osteopathy • FOR SALE —A good second hand Remington No. 7 typewriter. For sale cheap, but must be sold this week. Inquire at the Vance & Hite clothing store. 68t3 ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦*♦♦♦♦♦♦ * PLENTY OF MONEY ♦ * to loan on * IMPROVED FARMS * * at 5 Per Cent * Abstracts made on short * * Notice. * * SCHURGER’S ♦ * Abstract Office. *

. KIbBI R II r M WHEN YOU NEED A O LAXATIVE HI Remember Sentanel & |g>j| Physic, Liver Toner, Blood Purifier 10c. All Druggists. Pga Sample Free. Write SKS The Sentanel Remedies .(Incorporated) EgS 506 Union Cent. Bldg.; Cincinnati, Ohio. Democrat Want Ads Pay.

REQUIRE REST FROM LABOR: Man Make Mistake When They Keep Their “Nose* Too Cloue to the Grindstone." “Keeping one’s nose close to the grindstone” Is a popular phrase which [ describes what a great many people ■ think is the most, efficient way of ao- | ! eomplishing any given task. Accord- ! Ing to this idea, tne most work ran be done in the qu'ekost time liv keening I everlastingly at it with just as few j interruptions as possible, j Science now believes that it’s alt a i mistake to keep one's nose tco close ■to the grindstone. Careful studies made in a large number of manufacturing establishments led to the conclui sion that the most work is done with I the least risk of accident only when a man gives his mind and body frequent opportunities for rest. Records kept in English factories where men are engaged in soldering tins show the amount of work done during each hour of the day to be as follows: In the morning—first hour, 114 tins; second hour, 167; third hour, 159; fourth hour, 157; fifth hour, 138. In the afternoon —first hour, 119; second hour, 165; third hour, 163; fourth hour, 155. These tables agree with those of other factories in giving a higher out- ■ put for the second hour than for the first, this being due to the facility which comes with practice. But the chief point which they drive home, when studied in connection with the number of accidents is that after the second hour of continuous effort, both morning and afternoon, there is a continuous and marked decrease in the output and a corresponding increase in the frequency of accidents. The factory owner who wants to get the most out of his employees will break up their work day by frequent periods of rest. In this Investigation it was Impossible to record the cumulative effects of fatigue from day to day, and from week to week, but there was evidence that the physiological products of fatigue cannot be got rid of in a working day. This means a growing predisposition to disease and to the form of mental excitement which results in social unrest. From Bad to Worse. Henry Guy Carleton, wit, journalist and playwright, stuttered and was not sensitive about it. When the Fifth avenue theater burned Mr. Carleton appeared in a newspaper office where he was then employed. The usual Saturday night confusion was greatly increased by the fire. The office was bedlam. Ballard Smith, managing editor of the paper, ' was bellowing his orders with all his wonderful vigor In the effort to get | to press on time. ‘‘M-m-mlster Smith,’’ began Mr. Carleton, ‘T’ve a g-g-great s-s-story about tho F-fifth Avenue theater f-f-flre." “Great heavens, man!" roared Smith. “Don’t stop to talk to me about it. Don’t you know this is Saturday night, and we go to press in fifteen minutes? Get to work and write it, and write as fast as you know how. I want copy, not conversation. Don't you know every minute is precious?" “Y-y-yes, sir,” said the other, with an insistent effort to hold tho editor s attention, “but I w-w-want to k-k-know if you w-w-would lend me your s-s-stenographer.”—Everybody's Magazine. Not Much as Boys. When parents get discouraged over the lack of study and the frequent eccentricities that their boys manifest, or even over their physical misfortunes or poverty, they ought to find hope and consolation in the thought that Isaac Watts was constantly scolded for his absolute indifference to books and boys’ sports; Charles Darwin showed such an eccentric tendency to absent-mindedness that on one of his lonely tramps he walked off an embankment and nearly lost his life; Ralph Waldo Emerson was a hopeless dreamer; the great Demos- " thenes was a fearful stammerer; Abraham Lincoln, Elihu Burritt, Charles Dickens and Andrew Carnegie were the poorest of poor children; Anthony Trollope, the writer, was hopelessly shy and the butt of his school; Audubon of bird fame was put down by all his elders as a fool; Caesar and Napoleon were epileptics; Oliver Goldsmith was a hopeless sloven, and Thoreau was adjudged by everyone to be a crank. The queer boy does not always grow to be a man of no worth. —Selected. Dostoevski’s Answer. In the doctrine that each is responsible for all, that suffering is a purl- 1 fying discipline, and may be vicarious as well as personal, and that through such a discipline man may find God, is the answer of Dcstoev-1 ski, the Russian novelist, to the rid- i die of the ages. The words he put into the lips of Father Zossima may be taken as summing up his message to mankind. “Brothers, have no fear of men’s sin. Love a man even in his sin, for that Is the semblance of divine love, I and is the highest on earth. I “Loving humility Is marvelously strong, the strongest of all things, and there is nothing else like it.” — To Break In New Pipes. 1 An electric carbonizer for inserting in the bowls of new briar pipes and so charring the inside that the smoker will ba saved the trouble of breaking . in his new pipe, is described by ths Scientific) Amerinam

■Maxwell < TKe"Wonder Car’’ j I . L) Quiet Clutch—Runs in Oil The clutch of the new Maxwell operates in a bath of oil. This makes it remarkably smooth and velvety in engagement, and eliminates 80 per cent, of noise when the gears are shifted. Designers of the highest-priced cars agree A that the clutch should run in oil. The Maxwell clutch and transmission mechanism is fully enclosed. We are. waiting to take you for a test ride in the car that has broken H p all low “First-Cost” records, and is breaking all low “After-Cost” records. |, ' | ■ "OneManMohairlop zT p F. 06 DETROIT Cla * a v J E -3 SCHUG-SMITLEY CO.. BERNE, IND. BERNE, Jefferson St. DECATUR, E. Monroe St. B ■1 J : G. S. BURKHEAD & SON PRACTICAL HOHSESHOFRS Special Attention Given to Lame, Interfering And Forging Horses. General Blacksmithing and Wood Work. Cor. Ist. and Madison St. The Old Clemens Stand. Dr C V Connell f iL£SI p,L£SI PSLESI ILUAMT INDIAN PILE OINTMENT ' I ,V|ll cn-e Blind, Bieedrcg and Itching Kies. r T —, __ _ . t lbs. rb;. the tumora, ailays Itching a-, once, VETERINARIAN 'T X . -. Affiea 109 '< U-LI i.MS MiG. CO.. Props., Cleveland, Ohio > horse K Sce 143 E "»T>%° R^ ST °" e - SPECIArDEMONSTRATION OF Luther Household Grinders Come in week of April 10 to 15th, inclusive, and see the workings of the handiest machine ever built for familv use- THE LUTHER HOUSEHOLD GRINDER —the little wonder that sharnens the dullest shears and

1, X ,'A '■A- ! 3?Sv i '

This great household grinder quickly clamps to any shelf, table or bench. Anybody can operate it without skill or practice. Special guides prevent mistakes. Accidents are impossible. It's dust-proof. Won’t draw temper. Il will put a keen edge on all your cutlery, sharpen planes, chisels, drills and many other small tools. A wonderful value at the price, 98c, which is only good during the demonstration.

V/e have other Luther Grinders, too—different styles for different usos, hand,~foot and power operated. j Ask about them. ,

LEE HARDWARE CO.

ii diiciipiiia iiiv uuntai niKitin ciuu knives in a very few seconds on its marvelous wheel of Dinio-Grit, the ARTIFICIAL DIAMOND sharpening substance Any Shears or KNIFE Sharpened FREE Bring in any knife or pair of shears - the duller the better any time week of April 10 io 15, inclusive, and we’ll sharpen it Free to show what the Luther Household Grinder will do.

IU » *v — - T ’TH • ' You’ll And our hardware stock up-to-date in every way. We carry ! goods with a quality reputation and sell at right prices.