Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 14, Number 249, Decatur, Adams County, 19 October 1916 — Page 6

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EAST BUFFALO. !■!.■ -t Buffalo, N~y7 Oct. Hi (Spec-! lai !« Daily l’< m >< nit I-Receipts. L--6uo; r.liipmentu, .'>”<>: official to Ne ■ York yesterday. 1.340; hogs closing I steady. Mediums and heavy. $10.60@51(>.65: ■ yorkers. sl(i.4(lifi $10.60; pigs. $9.50:1 roughs. $9.50; stags, $7.50{i>58.50; cattle, 2: 5; slow; sheep. 600; steady; top lamb:'., $10.65. G. T. BURK. Wheat $1.47 Oats 43c Corn $1.15 Rye sl.lO Barley 75c Rod clover seed ....$<0:) Alsik'e seed t $8.25 Timothy seed $1.75. NIBLICK & co. E.sxs 30c ' Butter 20c025c; I FULLENKAMPg. V ,A I Butter 20c@>25c : BOWERS GRAIN CO. Woo) 3Jc j BERLING'B. Chickens 15 c

DECATUR’S CHIROPRACTOR PIONEER Office Over Vance & Hite’s Hmirc 1:30 to 5:00 nOUIS 6:30 to 8:00 PHONE 650. 0. L Burgener, D. C. No Drugs No Surgery No Osteopathy Dr. C V. JI VETERINARY SURGEON Phone P.'.sidence 143 i iSUR GRO<: . < * n h Marco Fancy Blend Coffee..39c I y Marco Dried Beef 15c t U Marco Peanut Butter 15c a n Marco Pork and Beans 10c f 1 f? Marco Red Kidney Beans...loc r IT I Marco Rolled White Oats.. 10c ‘ Marco Proxlde Toilet Soap 10c * j Marco Horse Radish Mustard / I Marco Corn Flakes 10c fi Marco Pure Fruit Jelly ~..10c ; ! ! i u Marco Spaphetti 10c ■ Marco Pearl Tapioca 10c ? H Maroa French Olive 011 ....85c 11 Marco V/hlte Table Syrup ..15c * Marco Mustard Sardines ...10c k.hnc t-’.pric.uii n»*i Jvi» O. ( F, • t 1 ■rks -yjwtrnsu ■■■ f '

„„ 'ill I I 6 ** 1 * I, I WHO D 0 YOU KNOW ■* p’mzE at nur ,m If ' Vou are nnt ac<iua * nt ‘ '''Ti " * A ''x C<l any one lO!in “ t< ’ <l With this 'j ' *'‘A institution, come in and introduce jg-' • \ ' organiz:,!,.., //I j , wl, R’h stands for the utmost in courf pi toßy an( ' l !ersonu ' service. The adIff vantages are manifold to depositors - V a sate, coir ■•rvativo banking j \ connection. OlbflkmsCoußtufeh -Qccafur-Sftb-

I Fowls 15c I lim its 10c A:» ? 8c : Yotms turkeys 15c Old 'foui turkeys 13c .Old lien turkeys 13c I Old roosters 7c I Eggs 30c i Abors inns arv swt gentry t.*» from fwd FORNAX milling CO. ■ Wheat ." ....'. sl.<o i (lorn $1.20 flats 42c I Rye SI.OO MARTIN KLEPPER CREAMERY COMPANY. Butter fat d<’liv< red 35%c Hutter fat in country, 32Vic! Rutter fat at station 32'7c| KALVER’S MARKET* i Woo! J7c ; Beef hides . 14c Calf hides 16c Tallow S< i Sheep pelts [email protected] THE HOOSIER PACKING CO j Heavy and medium $9.00 . Pigs and lights $8.50 ' Roughs SB.OO : Heifers and light steers $6.00 to $6.50 I Stags $7,001 Prime steers $6.50 to $7.00 Cows $5.00 to $5.50 | Calvos $9.50 I

Il’s Time To Book Year ’ Fall Sale Wilk J. N. BURKHEAD General and live stock Auctioneer. Years of experience and a general acquaintance in Adams county gives him the advantage and enables hhn to get the high dollar for you. Book now for j your fall or winter sale. 'Address ,1. N. Burkhead. Aonroe, Ind., or telephone ii>->. Monroe line. B. C. HENRICXS 0. C ; YOt'R CHIROI-RACIOR Above Morris 5 & 10c Store. Phone 660 | Residence 510 Cleveland Street. Office Hours Ito 5 7to 81 LADY ATTENDANT Decatur, Ind. | MPOSSIBLE I TO SAVE THESE DAYS . As It.njr as you spend it as fast as you make it, it IS impossi-1 h!e. Make a new start TODAY—let this bank save it for ! you—each week or month— j and vou will always have it when you want it. ;■ NATIONAL BANk| i DECATUR, INDIANA Metcberi! Federal Reserve Association. at' -? .gsr-ta

HELP WANTED ' L— —... —•— I PIANO TUNING Our piano tuner,l II cry Sawyer, Ft. Wnym is here ah: ut very we, k or ten days and i will take care of your piano, or play-j rr pi.ino in an expert way. Strictly high class work, guaranteed. Leave orders at Gay. Zwiok & Myers. 47t12. WANTED Girl telephone operators. Inquire at once. Managers office. > | Mr. Krimnivl, the piano tuner, of Fort Wayne, is here for a few days, lart'es wishing piano tuned can 1 'ive word at the Murray hotel, 1 ’r.hcr.c No. 57. 248t2 FOR SALE Ytn installing a furnace. and have no use for my hard coal burner, used only short time. It goes ■heap, and fine soft coal parlor stove at your own price. One horse, "Old Hi Lory" wagon, and set heavy sin- 1 gle harness. See them any afternoon this week. Also house for rent, most|iy modern Jas. N. Fristoe, 402 Mer- | eer avenue. * 24713 •if ft SALE Fox terrier pups. Inquire of F. J. .Schmitt. 24713 I LOST A wateii fob, charm with initials E. F. K. Finder please return to ties office. 247t3 W7\NTED~ GM false teeth. Don’t matter if broken. I pay SI.OO to I ss.do per set. Mail to L. Mazer, 2007 iS. Fifth St.. Philadelphia, Pa.; will send < ash by return mail. 237t12 ' FOR SALE OR RENT Seven Room House on High St., Lights, Wn‘er and Gas. inquire at 333 4th St., or Phono 286. 242. tr I ’OR $40.00 steel range, 8 holo, reservoir attached, an cxcelj lent baker, sl2.— —Menig’s Cigar

' store. . 248t6 | I FOR Pure Ere 3 Longficld strain R. C. Rhode Island Red j tn ! .v Is. $1.50 and $2.00 each. Prices ■ o<l un’il December 1. J. P. Smith., Preble, Ind. 145 6t e.o.d.' HOUSE TO RENT tin First street, remodeled, papered and painted, snquire of Fred Frnchte. 245t6 FOR SALE. Small Missouri farm. $lO cash and $5 monthly; no interest or taxes; highly productive land; I close to 3 bi? markets; write for : photograpl'.r, and full information. Mnneor A-183. N. Y. Life Bldg., Kan-' .-a: City. Mo. 245-2 mo. : LOST> Small gold wrist watch. Was I lost Sunday. Please return to Mrs. I O. L. Vance and receive reward. 24Gt3 i WANTED Corn buskers. Apply at <,nce at Belleview farm. —L. C. Gunder. 24613, i V ACANT LOTS'‘fo^SALKi"~A 'large | lot on Cleveland St., across frim I Church' of God. also one in the 80.1-men men addition. Will he sold cheap. | I Inqu’re of C. A. Burge. 248t4 Wanted, a few bushels of j Yams for seed. Call Ful!enkamp’s._ 249(3 i THE LADIES’ Heme Journal, The Satuni iy Evening Post and The I Country Gentleman wish to secure | the spare time of a man or woman to j act : local re; rest ntative in Decatur. ! ind., and vicinity, lot,king after the >!< wals of their many subscribers , a th;,; sceii n. : nd intro in ing these : üblicati:t,’’ to n w readerr. PnyI punt will be made in salary and ; commission. Previous experience is desirable but not essential. For deI tai’s address with reference. Box 654 ITh Curtin Publishing Company. In- ' del endence Square, Philadelphia. 1-2 LOST OR STOLEN 'Die novel, “My Lady cf tli Chininey Corner.” The >terson having same please return io . r he Ccunty Clerk's office, 249tf WANTJED — Burial dress desk-, er and forelady. State | experience and trive references. Addres'--. “S. M. C." care Democrat ofiice. _ 24913 MANGOLD & BAKER Corner Munroe and 7th Sts. 1 PHONE 215. PRICES FOR THIS WEEK ONLY. Fancy Rice, 3 lb: box 23c : Fancy Sweet Peas, 2 cans 25c Fancy Sugar Corn, 2 cans 25c New Navy Beans, 2 tbs 25c Dry Lima Beans, a lb 10c C oking Apples, pk 25c Pink Salmon, a can 12c and 15c Crisco. a can 30c Hawaiian Pine Apples, can 10, 15, 20c Asparagus, a can 25c’ Oleomargarine, Mcxlcy’s a tb.. . .24c Cranberries, a qt 10c; 3 for 25c Oranges, Bananas, Sweet Potatoes, Lerr.or.s and Tomatoes. Wc pay cash or t-ade for Produce: , I Efiga, 32; Butter 20-28 c Give l!« That Order. Arthur , ft Fred ; Mangold Baker ,

"OUT OF THE SHOPS IN EIGHT HOURS" IS FORDES WILSON CRY Motor Maker and Philanthropist Pledges Warm Support In Campaign. INDORSES POLICY OF PEACE Former Republican Possibility Is Enthusiastic After Talk With Wilson and Tells Why Labor and Capital Should Support President. (New York World.) Henry Ford, now the strongest sort of a Wilson man, though a few months ago he was suggested for the Republican presidential candidacy; Thomas A. Edison, Secretary Jospphus Daniels of the navy and Chairman Vance McCormick of the Democratic national committee, had luncheon and a long talk at the Hotel Biltmore yesterday. They discussed the best means by which they could impress upon the public just what the President has done for the nation and wky he should be re-elected. During their talk all four offered suggestions. After it was over Mr. Ford talked very freely with a reporter for the World about what he individually intended doing to aid Mr. Wilson with the voters. “I’m going to spread the gospel of the eight-hour working day,” said the motor wizard from Detroit. “By public announcements and by public display of actual figures and statistics taken from the books of my own business, I’m going to prove that this econimic measure, which the President advocates, and has had made into law, will benefit not only the employes of this country, but the employers as well.” "Out of Shops in Eight Hours.” In a jocular manner the interviewer asked Mr. Ford to give him a slogan for his campaign, something along the line of the famous “Out of the trenches by Christmas” (which, by the way, Mr. Ford himself never uttered. It was made public by Lochner, his idealistic “Peace Secretary.”) “All right, then,” said the motor maker, laughing heartily, “suppose we say, ‘Out of the shops in eight hours!’ How will that sound? You might even say ‘Out of the shops in eight hours and benefit yourselves and your employers!’ For both will do better under that scheme. “About politics as a business,” Mr. Ford went on, “I know nothing at all. But about Woodrow Wilson I know a lot. I spent four hours with him the other day and found him the most human man, the most' sensible man, the most businesslike man, withal, I ever encountered. “President Wilson,” he continued, “has deeply at heart the welfare of the industrious people. In upholding the dignity of his office he may have appeared to some to be cold and aloof. But nothing is further from the truth. He’s the warmest-hearted man in the interest of those who work that I ever dreamed of. I cannot tell you how sincerely he feels for them and desires to improve their conditions. Eight-Hour Day Big Achievement. “If he were obliged to stop right where he is—with the eight-hour law he has caused to be enacted—l believe he would go down into history as the originator of a movement, and this is bound to come, which will within a brief time revolutionize the conditions of the workers.

“The keeping of American lives—out of war—and alive properly, with comfortable working hours and decent wages, is Woodrow Wilson’s passion. And I believe that the next four years of his administration will see some wonderful betterments worked out along those lines." Air. Ford branched into practical statements about the eight-hour day. He has employed it three years. Before that he had a nine-hour day. He has kept tally on results. He said: i “When you get down to eight hours you observe a wonderful increase of efficiency. When we put it into effect our product simply skyrocketed in output. The men are full of efficiency, life, ginger. They feel this w’ay: ‘Well, here’s eight hours of hustle. I’ll hustle, and earn my fair wage, and then I’ve got all the rest of the time to myself. I can improve myself. I’m not worn out, tied down, I’m a MAN.’ “I don’t know what the increased profits have been to our company. ’ But we’ve got so much money we doh’t know what to do with it. The eight-hour day has increased our earnings by millions and made our men better off. And it would do the same fsr other properly conducted businesses.” More Men Than Locomotives. “How about the railroads, Mr. Ford?” asked the interviewer. “They claim the eight-hour day would be impossible.’’ “They don’t run their locomotives eight hours at a stretch, do they?” he retaliated. “Why do they work

( 9ONG WITHOUT WORPS. IF I WUtt MCJIPENT IM V* (MMMBWMI n —'**' ” rw ’ 25? — ° L — “ KT; fill «IW KiUllll AIUM. w CM,IM h, “ their men more? Is it because there are more men than locomotives ? Or because men are easier to get?” At this point the motor maker handed out a free tip to the railroad operators. “Tell them to diminish the weight of their rolling stock. Use better, lighter steel. There’s plenty of it, and it costs only a trifle more than the bad, heavy stuff they now use. They can cut the weight of their cars in half, carry more freight and passengers, make more money, use less fuel, and avoid wear and tear on their roadbeds. Why, there is no greater waste in the United States today than the waste of weight in steel.” “But other manufacturers say,” the interviewer suggested, “that it’s all right for Ford to talk, but ‘we couldn’t make the eight-hour day and the $5 wage pay us.”

“I’ve 'already said,” replied the Detroit manufacturer, “that any business man who can’t make the eighthour day pay is not managing his business properly. “The great trouble with this country is that labor has never properly shared in the profits it has earned for capital,” Mr. Ford went on. Then he drew a beautiful picture of "real prosperity”—every workingman owning his machine, every one who wished living in the country, ten or twenty miles from his pk«.-e of employment. Give Producers Share of Comfort. “Make the lot of the industrious people more comfortable, and the whole nation will be better off,” he continued. “And that’s what Woodrow Wilson has in his heart—the peace and comfort of the industrious people. “I hope every workingman who knows me and my attitude toward workingmen will vote for the President’s return. And I hope the employers of the industrious will take my advice, too, for they will reap much greater profits. “Mr. Wilson has not sacrificed the slightest fraction of the national honor in keeping us out of. wat. You, I, all the rest of us, would fight if it were really necessary, but we’re not going to fight for Hearst’s ranch in Mexico, or for the gains which the interests might make if America were involved in the European slaughter* We shouldn’t be pushed into the car nage by ‘the unseen hands’ of Wall street. “I haven’t heard a single sound reason put forward why Mr. Hughes should be elected. And there is against hint the great big reason that Wall street and the interests are all for him. Remember how these same interests pushed McKinley? And who paid? We, the industrious people. We'll pay again, with lives and wealth, and comfort, if we are pushed into this war by these same ‘unseen hands.’ ” After the conference at the Biltmore Mr. Ford aad Mr. Edison walked to national Democratic headquarters, in the Forty-Sbcond Street building, so the Detroiter might see (for the first time) the workings of such an institution. “Politics must be a real business,” he «aid after leaving there, “but I don't know anything about it. I simply know common sense when I hear it—and Woodrow Wilson is full of that.”

NOT EASILY SCARED, i ■ =. y 'i “The Democrats are hoping to win a larger part of the labor vote this year than they can usually land. They , have a stronger case than is usual. This need not be denied,” says the Chicago Tribune. “A steady job at good pay is what the wage earner must have first. » » • There is now prosperity everywhere and work for everyone.” Then the editor launches into a two ’ column editorial holding up the Hughes scarecrow “after the war” and proclaiming a high tariff the only i thing. In 1912 and 1914 the Tribune ' wanted a tariff commission and : wanted to take tariff out of politics.

Rex Theatre HIGH CLASS CLEAN ffIOTOTLAB today ••the GIRL FROM HIS TOWN.” A four act M u . tual feature, starring beautiful, bewitching Margarita Fischer. Reproducing an entire stage p er . formance in full progress with Miss Fischer a ballet dancer and a chorus of beautiful girls i n magnificent costumes. tomorrow Bessie Barriscale in ‘‘BL LLETS AND BROWN EYES.” Triangle Kay-Bee production. A wonderful picture with a fascinating star. Charles Chaplin in the greatest comedy ever filmed, COMING “TILLIE’S PUNCTURED ROMANCE," in six hilarious parts. Rex Theatre THE CRYSTAL TONIGHT “JEALOUSY’ Love, Suspicion. Hatred. All are stirring motive features of a great Fox picture. William M. Fox presents Robert B. Mantell, with Genevieve Hamper in “Green-eyed Monster.” The story of a consuming love with a tragic finish. Here tonight. ; y 5 and 10 teats THE CRYSTAL TONIGHT Ik \ F7|j| jkji « These Cards art now in very general use f' I polite circles and of course are greatly "to Laj preferred over the time worn, £arisk styles of R’n Ls-n the past. W. < We are now displaying an. unusually attractive line,also a stylish display of* ONOCRAM STATIONLK. Y'xsiW -7A> a. lzi> or Gt/C THE DAILY DEMOCRAT Come in and look the line over. HAKCOUMA-CO. /Escape TOOTH --by keeping your teeth REALLY CLEAN. But, you say, I brush my teeth regularly, yet th*y decay," th L em ’ but do you REALLY CLEAN them? will bteiv finA bniShmK your . tecth > »hem closely. V ou of food > ?“? • ccumul “tion of tartar on the enamel and bits deposit hiding in the crevices. veTops SENRPrn .• . “ “ ere g*rm-laden tartar is present , CLEAN, it emhnd^ U^a * d*”’* l »P«ciaH«t, keeps the teeth REALLY in cleaning away fexid d’e^X 7 P Z ( ep * red • olub, « gf*nules unusually e»cd« destructive to th. ofp^„ h e ’ re ” ,r * “ 18 your »e«th r R d EALLY < CLE*AN B a'li a ' Ub * Senreco ~ k,, P ‘ d P'.'Brrhaa j _ tthd DTOteCt TOQTMIf SZSiSat St, feiS e "PREPAREDNESS” Vfl (Ast REALLY n FAN- 1