Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 14, Number 90, Decatur, Adams County, 14 April 1916 — Page 3

Ifimaai ?swss» heb mb j LOOK PROSPEROUS | I Wear A Diamond-Carry ‘ Good Watch-lt Adds Prestige. 3 I Let Us Explain How Easy It Is To Acquire I One By Taking Advantage Os Our— - [ NEW—SELLING— ■PLAN ft: I JOIN OUR SAVINGS AND INVESTMENT CLUB |g I NOW—WHILE YOU CAN STILL BUY AT THE OLD PRICE. NEW PRICES J'H | WILL BE IN EFFECT SOON, AT AN ADVANCE OF 10 TO 20 PER CENT g | SEE OUR WINDOW IT TELLS THE STORY. ft K yLfe? Qg -nwir--- 111 w— ws—w—— i>i-ii I I PUMPHREY’S | | IF IT’S NEW, WE HAVE IT. S | ARTISTIC ENGRAVING. EXPERT REPAIRING, g

— - —— \ Now is the time to re finish \ your old floors ■ \ If your floors arc beginning to look dull and worn, a -< HI \ S ” r ""

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Democrat Want Ads Always Bring Results. ~ t| _ .juuiT.i- j ■ lim j-

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will give them new life and beauty. Vemicol is attractive, non-fading and easy to apply. Does not show heel marks and can be washed with soap and water. Come in and we will show you how Vemicol makes old floors look like new. HOLTHOUSE i DRUG COMPANY

J LIVE STOCK I and General Auctioneering I thank you for your past favors. I am still on the job. Telephone at my expense. J. N. Burkhead Monroe, Ind. - - 1 1 FOR SALE. Corner lot known as the Kennedy j property, located corner First and I Rugg streets, Decatur, Ind., size 82x ■ 132, plenty of room for two houses, three and one half squares from the _ court house, price *1,250, sewer and street improvements paid. i 41tf. ED S. MOSES, Executor. u — I . democrat Want Ads Pay.

Wednesday, April 19th. One Day Only ON THE FIRING LINE—WITH IE oEffl» aMMaaaHBBinMmwMWBK.-■ rjnn^r trn.»>. umu'-'i «d u^mn.» nfc-iMoiniMi■ ■»■■■ ■< a> i ■■ hi—— l <it>—rni»■■—r*«•••- H PRESENTED BY DAILY DEMOCRAT Eight Thousand Feet of War Pictures Taken By the War Film Syndicate. Pronounced By Experts to Be the Greatest War Pictures Ever Taken. SEE THE ARMIES FIGHT AND THE COUNTRITS WHERE THEY’RE FIGHTING. FIRST SHOW SIARIS AT 10:00 O’CLOCK A. M. PRICES 10 AND 25 CENTS NOTE: These pictures were shown for Seven Solid Weeks in the Fine | Arts and LaSalle Theatres, Chicago i at prices from 50c to $1.50. . |

LIS FEN:Rook your Sale with an Auctioneer. Who is able to make your sale a success. Telephone No. 8-L R. N. RUNYON Decatur, Ind. FARMERS ATTENTION Bring your disc harrow to sharpen. On tho Peter S. Steffen farm, 7 miles west of Monroe. Work guaranteed. Craigville phone No. 11 or 3. 67t3 EMIL STEFFEN.

I DREADED LARGE WINE BILL Pretty Dancer Attempts to Evade Consequences as Result of “Swallowing Bean’’ at Fete. That owning the management of the little Cheater In Montmartre had Invited players, authors and some privileged friends of the house to come and share a. cake and "draw tho bean,” ! as the French say, for it was the day of the Fete des flols and that la the way to celebrate it. It was agreed on this occasion, however, that whoever drew tho bean, and by that favor be- ; came king or queen, must pay for the I wine for all tho company. Tho cake was distributed. Sudden- ! ly a pretty young dancer got between her teeth an object as to the identity 3f which she could entertain no doubt at all; at tho same moment she had a vision of the lot of money her brief hours of royalty were going to cost her—and heroically she swallowed the beau. Unfortunately this little byplay did not quite escape notice. It was observed, or rather divinedr by the young woman’s right-hand neighbor, a youthful scribbling person, who had enjoyed some small success as a sketch writer, to use the language rather of Broadway than of Montmartre. He did not tell on tho young woman exactly. He waited till tho sake was all eaten and no bean had been forthcoming, and all the company were looking at each other with unconcealed surprise not unmingled with suspicion. • Good heavens,” he cried then, “I do hope nobody has swallowed the thing. A dry, uncooked bean is one of the most violent and deadly poisons!” “Mercy,” burst out the dancer, “I’m done for!” And she turned as pale as a ghost and almost toppled from her chair, while the rest of the company shook with laughter. This unfeeling conduct was near putting a finishing touch to the simple-minded young thing, but the author of the trick hastened to comfort and reassure her —and to square himself completely aslumed the obligation of the wine bill oesides. PLAN TO SAVE YOUR MONEY Best Way to Place It in a Depository and Then Forgot It—Large Sum» Spent Foolishly. ‘ Well, Mr. Man, how much did you spend foolishly last night? Have you stopped to think how much you must have in the bank to ’ Barn that sum in a year? You blew in five dollars? Do you realize that at the best interest you can get in bank or in building and ■ loan that this represents tho year’s warnings on $100? This is not a now thought, but perhaps you have never considered your expenditures In this way. Ten to one you have often wished for a thousand dollars. If you had It what would you do with it? “Put it out at interest.” But what would it be worth to you as an earning force if you spent the whole amount of Interest in the rounds of one or two nights? If you are not buying a home you should bo laying aside a certain part of your salary each week. Leave it in a depository; forget that you have it. When you begin to draw interest on interest, you are on the right track ;oward a snug little nest egg. Had Nothing to Sell Her. In a certain English provincial town there lives an old maid who has the reputation of being about the fastest talker on record, added to which her tongue has more than- the average amount of venom. One day recently, aowever, she met her match. A peddler called on pie lady, and had the impudence to ring tho front-doorbell. A moment later the door was opened, and when the lady saw who it was she at once gave him a piece of her mind, finally concluding with: "And now then you can be off. There’s nothing you can sell me that Will be of any use to me!” The peddler, who was evidently no aovice at getting his own back, turned on his heel, sweetly saying as did so: “No, mum. seeing as ’ow I’m only jellin’ mouse-traps an’ not muzzles, I don’t seo as ’ow there is!” Questions and Answers. A Cherryvale historian has gone back through the files and produced this story: A woman with a rapid-fire interrogatory apparatus approached a news butcher on a Frisco train out of Cherryvale during the high water a few days ago and asked excitedly: “Say, when is the train due at the next stop? How Is it running? Howdeep is the water on the track? How do you sell your bananas?” The vender of fruit and literature, who was something of a poet, answered: "Nine o’clock. On time. Knee deep. Three for a dime.”—Kansas City Star. In Boudoir Dress. It is related that a scene showing the Interior of a racing stable was thrown on the screen at a certain theater. Each horse was covered with a bright colored blanket. Little two-year-old Nan, who had never seen a stable before, exclaimed to her mother: “Oh, mamma, see the horsies with their kimonos on!"

X 'Woman’# c* Problem How to Feel Well During Middle Life Told by Three Women Who Learned from Experience. The Change of Life is a most critical' periot? of’fc woman’s existence, and neglect of health at this time invites disease and pain. Women everywhere should remember that there is no other remedy known to medicine that will so successfully carry women through this trying period as Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, made from native roots and herbs. Read these letters: —

Philadelphia, Pa.—“l started the Change of Life five years ag•>. I always had a headache and backache with liearing down pains and I would have heat flashes very bad at times with dizzy spells and nervous feelings. After taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound I feel like a new person and am in better health and no more troubled with the aches and pains I had before I took your wonderful remedy. I recommend it to my friends fori cannot praise it enough.”—Mrs. Margaret Grassman, 75!) N. Ringgold St., Philadelphia, Pa. Beverly, Mass. —“I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s

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Vegetable Compound, for nervousness and dyspepsia, when I was going through the Change of Life. I found it very helpful and I have always spoken of it to other women who suffer as I did and

have had them try it and they also have received IT good results from it,” —Mrs. George A. Dunbar, I 17 Roundy St., Beverly, Mass. Erie, Pa.—“l was in poor health when the | Change of Life started with me and I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, or I think I j should not have got over it as easy as I did. Even I now if I do not feel good I take the Compound ; and. it restores me in a short time. I will praise | your remedies to every woman for it may help I them as it has me.” — Mrs. E. Kissling, 931 East 24th St., Erie, Pa.

No other medicine has been so successful in relieving woman 3 suffering as has Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Women may receive free and helpful advice by writing the Lydia. E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Such letters are received and answered by women only and held in strict confidence.

See ynur dentist twice yearly. Use ScnrcM twice daily.

From pyorrhea come by far the greater part of all tooth troubles. Unless treated and checked, it will 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 1 progress of pyorrhea. (

__ — — ! Painting Costs Less Now To postpone needed painting means big repair bills as exposed wood soon rots. Once decay does set in, there is the carpenter as well as the painter to pay. Why not paint now and save the carpenter’s bili? We can supply < the necessary materials. Dutch Boy vV Eckstein White Lead t and pure linseed oil, tinted to suit or used J . ~ywhite, is the paint to use. It anchors into wood poros, dries hard, is elastic enough to \ shirk and stretch without breaking. xjE ■i-i-: Celling good paint and helpinc cur cub- y i V iners tclve paint problems is our busi- / ness Come in it y< n want an estimate / ' JBrP »V*< x] or advice on painting. f ''Jrfg JU) KJ i WOS holthouse M drug A-b/-rij ?.L.. iti- '■ COMPANY /TTn.' ' 1 . -v.. : j:.I •••».*.,.. Y'jF' I I— X; —.. X......1J

Tooth Loose? IWatdi out for Pyonta I When you find a tooth that gives back and A 4 forth, even just a little, see your dentist at y- once. He will find conditions which you might overlook. He will find a gum recession, even though slight, where the gums have pulled away from the teeth. And he will tell you that you have the dread disease pyorrhea.

“But Senreco do:smore. It cleanses the teeth delightfully. It gives them a whiteness distinctive of Senrcco 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 for 25c is sufficient for 6 weeks’ daily treatment. Get Senreco of your druggist today; or send 4c in stamps or coin for sample tube and folder. Address The Sentanel Remedies Company 503 Union Central Building, Cincinnati, Ohio. -nDnstms

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