Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 14, Number 306, Decatur, Adams County, 27 December 1916 — Page 4
STAR GROCERY f 4rMumamnnnmtiu:mHwnnwmni j Santa Clara Prunes, tb 10c > Dried Peaches, fb 10c : California Figs 10c ? Maple Byrup 25c j: California Table Peaches.. .15c H I Mince Meat, Quart Can...,25c ; Candled Cherries 10c | Pink Salmon, 2 cans 25c ; Pumpkin, fancy 10c !• n | Pearl Tapioca, tb 10c t 8 ? u California White Cherries .25c ; n Red Kidney Beans, lb 15c t h Dill Pickles, doz 15c ’. K Self-Rising Buckwheat 10c • H Rice Pancake Flour 10c 1 j* New Corn Meal 10c j I i * § H Campbell’s Soups 10c .» (WILL JOHNS Kd; B. C. HENRICKS D. C. i i YOUR CHIROPRACTOR Above Morris 5 & 10c Store. Phone 660 ( Residence 510 Cleveland Street Office Hours Ito 5 7to 8 ' i LADY ATTENDANT Decatur, Ind * 1 1 J. ■ M. J. Scherer UNDERTAKING AND EMBALMING Fine Funeral Furnishings DECATUR, - IND. Telephone: Office 00; Homo, IM a
Dr. L. K. Magley VETERINARIAN Corner Third and Monroe Streets. PHONE 186 DECATUR, IND. NOTICE. In calling to settle for work done in the past, you will find the undersigned at Ollie Heller's shop on So. First street. 299t12 J. A. BLEW. ♦ DR. C. R. WEAVER ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Osteooath ♦ ♦ Licensed by the Indiana ♦ ♦ State Board of Medical ♦ ♦ Registration and Examina- ♦ ♦ tion. Office over People’s ♦ ♦ Loan & Trust Co. ♦ ♦ 314 ‘ 4 * farm’ LOANS * * $100,000.00 of 5 per ♦ + cent * * MONEY TO LOAN ♦ * at ♦ * Schurger & Parrish ♦ * Abstract & Atty. Office * * ( No red tape needed) * +***♦****♦♦♦** ++++**«***•♦*« + NOTARIES PUBLIC ♦ + DAILY DEMOCRAT OFFICE ♦ * License Applications. Affi- ♦ * davits, Certifications, etc. ♦ *++++++ + + + + + + +
DECATUR’S CHIROPRACTOR PIONEER Office Over Vance & Hite’s 1:30 to 5:00 HOUTS 6:30 to 8:00 PHONE 650. 0. L Burgener, D. C. No Drugs No Surgery No Osteopathy
DAfti MaRK’Fi REPORT. Corrected Every Dav. EAST BUFFALO. Earn Buffalo. N. Y.. Dec 27—(Rpec ini i<> Daily Democrat)"- Receipts. 9.GOo; shipments. 3.420; official to Now York yesterday. 3,230; hogs closing slow. Medium and heavy. |10.86<T , |10.95; yorkers. $19.760110.80; lights and pigs, $9.6O0$1O.OO; roughs, $9.50 @ $9.00; stags, $7.50©58.25; cattle. 400; slow; sheep, 2,400; slow; top lambs mostly $13.50; two loads fancy; $13.76. GRAIN MARKEY. Wheat. $1.60; oats. 47c; corn, $1.18; rye, $1.10; barley. 75c; clover seed, $9.00; alsike seed, $8.25; timothy seed. $1.75. COUNTRY PRODUCE. Eggs, 34c; butter. 20c(jj)25c. POULTRY MARKET. Chickens, 14c; fowls. 14c; ducks 12c; geese, 8c; young turkeys, 16c; old Tom turkeys, 13c; old hen turkeys, 13c; old roosters, 7c; eggs, 32c; Ind. Runner ducks, 11c. Above prices are for poultry free from fe.-d, CREAMERY PRICES. Butterfat, delivered, 39%c; butterfat, at station, 37%c; butterfat, in country, :>6%c. WOOL AND HIDES. Wool, 37c; beef hides, 16c; calf hides, 18c; tallow, 6c; sheep pelts, [email protected]. LOCAL STOCK MARKET. Heavy and medium, $9.00; pigs and lights, $8.50; roughs, $8.00; heifers and light steers, $6.00{j56.50; stags, $7.00; prime steers, $6.50©57.00; cows, [email protected]; calves, $9.60.
COLD WE AT HER HINTS. Use denatured alcohol in your radiator. Hood and radiator covers for Ford cars. Priming plugs for sale at Kalver-No-ble Garage. wAf o NOTICE TO FARMERS. We will pay the highest cash price for beef hides at the packing house. 28211 HOOSIER PACKING CO. IN FULL SWAY. Evangelistic meetings are in full sway at Calvary Evangelical church east of Decatur. The evangelist. W. A. Vandersall. has been preaching strong sermons. He preaches the good old gospel, which makes men feel the need of a Savior. If you want to hear the truth, come and hear him. The subject for tonight is "New Ground Stumps and Snags.” Tomorrow evening he will preach from the subject “Untieing the Colt.” All the young people of this community, especially, are invited to attend this service. The meetings will continue throughout next week, every evening at 7:30. sun time. EDWIN HABEGGER, Pastor.
PLENTY Os 6 FEB CENT MONEY. Pariltd payments any time, without waiting tor interest pay day. l2otf ERWIN OFFICB. MISTAKE IN PACKAGE The lady who took the package by mistake at the Gass & Meibers store is requested to returned the same to that place. 304‘3 THE WATKINS MAN. Customers desiring Watkins remedies may obtain same by calling at Winnes shoe store. 301t* C. R. DUNN. You’ll miss the best time of your life if you are not in Decatur, on Auto Day. Saturday, December 30th. o HERE is a reiuedy that will cure most all skin ar4 Kslp troubles. Eczema, Barbers Itch, Itch, Cut! snd Sores. Why waste time and money when R B. Ointment ie ar. ointment ol real merit? Ask your druggist. If not handled eend 50 cents to the B B. Ointment Co.. ?i7 Monroe street Indian*
GET YOUR DeLAVAL NOW! if you are selling cream or making butter, and have no separator, or are using an inferior or half-worn-out machine, you are wasting every day you delay the purchase of a DeLaval. You can't afford to wait until next spring. It means too much loss. Let the DeLaval start saving cream for you right now, and it will pay for itself. JOHN SPUHLER, Agent See him right away and let him show you what the DeLaval will do for you. 803 N. sth st. Phone 531
r. M. GOSSARD Live Wire Public Sale Crier Seven years’ experience in buying live stock. ’Phone No. 28 for dates Tocsin, Indiana. Also writing Lincoln Life insurance. Dr. C. V. Connell VETERINARY SURGEON DL Office 102 rnone Residence 143
i I ' I ‘ You know turpentine. You know menthol. You know camphor. All old dependable remedies that you’ve always used. Now they’re combined in Turpo. A clean, smooth, inviting ointment that is effective in relieving coughs and colds, healing cuts and burns, and easing pain. Turpo « 25c, 50c. $1.60 a jar at your Druggist». TURPO FOR SALE BY SMITH, YAGER & FALK, 157 2nd. St. HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO., 167 2nd. St. TurpoS THE TUDPfNTINE OINTMENT BUlaTonT FOR RENT—A good house centrally located. Reasonable rent. Phone No. 229. 27 «f. MEN —Our illustrate,', cutalogue explains how we teach the barber trade quickly; mailed free. —Moler Barber College, Indianapolis, Indiana. 285t30 WANTED—To buy a4O acre tract of land, well improved and close to Decatur. If you have one let August Schlickman know, rooms 5 and 6 Peoples Loan & Trust Co., 293t6-e-o-d Silk Ribbon Flour stands for quality. Try it. 295tf FOR RENT —Ninety acre farm for cash. Inquire of Geo. I. Davis, Pleasant Mills, Ind. 290t2w-tf FOR SALE —-Small Missouri farm. $lO cash and $5 monthly: no interest or taxes; highly productive land; close to 3 big markets; write for photographs and full information. Munger A-IS 3, N. Y. Life Bldg.. Kansas City. Mo. 297-lmo WANTED —To buy a second hand Ford Runabout. Anyone having same Inquire of August Schlickman, rooms 5 and 6 Peoples Loan & Trust Co. 293t6-e-o-d OR EGO N~AND ~C A LIFO t i NIA R AI 17ROAD CO. GRANT LANDS—TitIe to same revested in United States byact of congress, dated June 9, 1906. Two million, three hundred thousand acres to be opened for settlement and sale. Power site,-timber and agricultural lands. Containing some of best lands left in United States. Large sectional map showing lands and description. Price one dollar.—Grant Lands Locating Co., P. O. Box 610, Portland, Oregon. 2973m0 FOR SALE —Duroc Bred Gilts and service boars. Prices very reasonable. Inquire of E. F. Miller. Phone either Preble or Decatur. 30rt6 Silk Ribbon Flour stands for quality. Try it. 29511’ FOR SALE CHEAP —14 ft. of counter show cases.—Callow & Kohne. :.‘!6 LOST —Muff, containing scarf and handkerchief, from buggy, at, or while returning from municipal Christmas tree to home in north part of city, by Mrs. Coat Cook. Returned byway of Adams and Third Sts. Finder please leave at this office. 05t3 Come in with the whole family and attend the big Auto Day an Saturday, December 30th.
MANGOLD & BAKER Corner Monroe and 7th Sts. PHONE 215. First Prize Buckwheat, 5 th. bag 35c (Red Beans, a can 10c Pork and Beans, a can 10c Hominy, 3 large cans 25c Sugar Corn, a can 10c Sweet Peas, a can 10c Cut Refugee Beans, a can 15c Cut Wax Beans, a can 15c Olives, plain or stuffed.. 10c, 15c, 25c Tomato Catsup, a bottle ...10c, 15c Black Cross Mustard, a jar ... .sc, 10c Oranges. Bananas, Lemons, Sweet Potatoes and Oysters. We pay Cash or Trade for Produce: Eggs, 37c; Butter, 25-32 c Arthur & Fred Mangold « Baker Give 0-5 That Order.
FOR PUBLIC SAFER NATION HAS BEEN AWAKENED TO GREAT NEED. I Prevention of Industrial Accidents and Casualties in Conflagrations Is the Object of Association of i National Scope. Is the bitterness of u dozen yonrj ago passing out of industry? Are employers becoming mon* humane? Is die public conscience awakening to the <ln of omission us well ns commission 1 Is the human element receiving recognition ns the most precious asset of our nation? "Our state pays the salaries of more than a hundred game and fish wardens to prt tect the beasts of tl.e fields ami the fowls of the air and the fishes of] of our streams. What does it eontrib- ! ute toward the protection of the workers in tile industries?” asked a labor organizer in a public meeting. Ask tlie question today and the an-1 swer will co.ne from the national gov- ' eminent ut Washington, from every' slate capital, from almost every city hall, from every church and school, i and, probably the truest barometer ot all, from thousands of our largest employers, ami from the best-posted in- ; dustrial leaders. Nor does the movement stop with the industrial accident. Twin cause ot sorrow and misery of industrial acei- i dent, fire takes toll in mine explosion and conflagration, but more often in tiie home. In Chicago last year 30C persons were seriously injured by buijns or scalds. One-half of this number died, a majority of whom were little children. An association of national scope has taken this matter in hand and is accomplishing wonderful ; results. Railroads and accidents were almost synonymous terms a dozen years ago. Last year the managers of 312 rail-, roads reported to the government that not one passenger lost his life through collision or wreck. Industrial corpo- ' rations reported a reduction from 37 , to 70 per cent in number of accidents and an even larger percentage in re- | duction of fatal accidents. Last year a dozen governors of 1 middle western states made proclamn-• tion of Fire Prevention day—usually setting tlie date on October 9—the an- ' ni-versary of the date of the famous O'Leary bovine incident at Chicago. Accident Prevention day was proclaimed in a hundred cities and in a thousand industries. This year two great agencies, the National Fire Protection association and the National Safety council, have joined forces, and Fire Prevention day will hereafter be known as Fire and Accident Prevention day, being inaugurated by na-, tional proclamation by President Wil- . son. More than a score of governors have indicated their intention of joining in ' the movement through proclamations. Hundreds of chambers of commerce will take part and two thousand industries will set aside some portion of their activity toward making the day a success.
The spirit of co-operation in accident and fire prevention now pervades every department of public and private activity. national government, .through the department of labor and the bureau of mines, is accomplishing a splendid work, and the hundreds of thousands of dollars expended in educational work is probably the best known and appreciated of all our governmental functions. Every state in the Union has made a start, and in a score or more the work is well under way. A hundred or more municipalities have well-developed departments iof public safety, while street traffic regulations, clean-up campaigns and similar public responsibilities are now cheerfully accepted by even the smaller cities and villages. The spirit of the up-to-date employer was summarized by a hard-headed Wisconsin business man a few days ago: “If the organization of our workmen into safety ( inspection committees had not prevented a single accident, the change in attitude which the safety work has brought about on the part of the officers toward the men, and the change of attitude of the workmen toword the company has more than repaid us for our efforts.” By carefully saf (.-guarding machinery, accidents were decreased one-third. “Who burns to death in the American home?” asks H. W. Forster, a prominent official of the National Fire Protection Association. “The husbands, fathers and big brothers? Not often. The wives and mothers and the children, especially the little children. In hundreds of homes all over our fair land each year there comes the crushing sorrow of a dead mother or child, burned to death, in almost every case, because of the criminal disregard which we as a nation have for the most elemental principles of safety from fire. Each year we lose through this agency almost 1,000 of our most precious assets —our children. “Fire causes 5,000 deaths, renders 20,000 people homeless, and causes a loss estimated at almost $300,000,(MX) a year. Industrial accidents take toll of 25,000 lives each year and cause 700,000 injuries, involving a loss of a month or more time from work.” Twothirds of all fires and a. like number of industrial accidents are preventable. “One day for humanity” is the motto of Fire and Accident Prevention day. Stop the fires and accidents in your homes us well as in the shops and the mines, or on the streets. “Be careful. Think safety.”
J'S | —the tooth paste that protects your teeth. Use gP lit twice daily. T | See your dentist twice yearly and keep your teeth in perfect condition Get a tube today, read the folder about the moat genet al disease in the world. Start the Senreco treatment tonight. 25c bt your druggists. For sample send 4c, stamps c.r coin, to The Sentanel Remedied Co.. Ciudufiati, Ohio. /X DENTISTS FORMULA
True Secret of Keeping Youthful Looking (The Beauty Seeker.) I “The real secret of keeping young-looking i and beautiful," says a well-known hygienist, *‘is to keep the liver and bowels normally active. Without these requisites, poisonous waste products remain in the system, polluting the blood and lodging in various organs, , tissues, joints. One becomes flabby, obese, nervous, mentally sluggish, dull-eyed, wrinkled sad sallow of face. “But to get liver and bowels working as they ought, without producing evil after-effects has been the problem. Fortunately, there is I n prescription of unquestioned merit, which may now be had in convenient tablet form. i Its value is due largely to an ingredient de- | rived from the humble May apple, or its rbot, | which has been called ‘vegetable calomel* be- , cause of its effectiveness —though, of course, it is not to be classed with the real calomel of , mercurial origin. There is no habit-forming constituent in ‘sentanel* tablets —that’s the name—and their use is not followed by weakness or exhaustion. On the contrary, these harmless vegetable tablets tend to impart tone and elasticity io the relaxed intestinal wall. Sentanel tablets, which may be procured from any druggist—a dime’s worth will do—will prove & revelation to any constipated, livertroubled person.**
SenTanellablets conquer constipation—liven up a lazy liver — 1 banish biliousness—lSeaS’ ' JUST GOT OVER A COLD? Look out for kidney trouble and backache. Colds overtax the kidneys and often leave them weak. For weak kidneys—well, read what a Decatur woman says: | Mrs. Frank Bogner, 1104 W. Monroe St., Decatur, says: "Whenever I caught cold, my kidneys became disordered. My back then became sore and stiff and sharp pains shot through it whenever I bent over or got up from a chair. At these times, a box of Doan’s Kidney Fills has never failed to drive away the trouble and put me in good health.” Price, 50c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills —the same that Mrs. Bogner had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y.—Advt. Package exchanged.—ls the party who picked up a package containing , a pair of white canvas shoes and left one containing a pair of lavender house slippers will report at the Callow & Kohne drug store, they may exchange tiie shoes for their own package. The canvas shoes belong to Ambrose Kohne. 306t3 —o Democrat Want Ads Pay.
AUTOMOBILE PRICES SOARING • * Prices on all materials that enter into an automobile’s construction have advanced from 20 to 50 per cent during the last few months. Most manufacturers have already advanced prices, or have announced their intention of doing so. • The !i?k d i M ?\° r C . om P an A as us uah are the first to lower pnces, and the last to raise, but the tremendous increase in prices trol ofmem S “ manufacture of cars * beyond the conPresent prices of Ford cars are still in effect but are not guaranteed against advance for a single day, nor will orders be accepted for future delivery at the present prices. If you intend to buy a FORT) in „ BUY IT NOW. m s P r,n £ by all means KALVER-NOBLE GARAGE CO.
j j | '"to DA Y ••THE SECRET OF TIIE SUBMARINE,” Chapter "last chapter. Who finds the secret? W hat becomes of Cleo? These and many other mysteries are solved in this last chapter. • THE SPARTAN SPLEEN.” an original farce comedy. “COMMUTATION CAL." comic cartoon. “SEE AMERICA FIRST," the battlefied of Gettysburg (the high water mark of the Civil War). tomorrow ’ Extraordinary attraction, MARVELOUS MA-I CISTE." the Giant of Cabiria. I’RE-INVENTORY SALE December 27, 28, 29, and 30,1916 Aristos Flour, 491 b Sack. .$2.701 Corn Meal. 3 10c sacks .25c Aristos Flour. 24'/» in. sack Indian Salt, 4-7 tb. sacks 28c 2ac $1.351 Overalls & Coata, per suit $1.60 Golden Dove Flour.’ 19 lb. Per garment . . .85c sack $2.401 Lined Blouses, each sl.lO Golden Dove Flour. 24'/ 2 lb. 'California Grapes, white, sai-k $1.20 per lb 20c; 2 lbs. 35c Good Rio Bulk Coffee. 2 lbs. 25c Linnemeier’s Leader (jelly) Fazenda Package Coffee. 2 Dessert. 3 boxes 2.>c Ib s 25c 25 lbs. Granulated Sugar..sl.B.> Corn Meal, 10 tb. sack 20c I Pink Salmon. 5 cans 50c Buy SIO.OO worth these four days and 1 will fill in your automobile license application FREE. Fancy Head Rice. 10c per 1 Beauty or Van Camp’s Milk, lb. kind, 4 lbs 25c 6 cans 25c Small Navy Beans (soup) Post Toasties, family size. 2 lbs. 25c 5 cans 25c Sweet Corn. 1 doz. cans..sl.2s Post Toasties, small size, June Peas, 1 doz. cans... .$1.25 .3 boxes 25c Damask Rose Peas. 1 doz. Rolled Oats, 3 10c tubes...2sc cans SI.OO Grape Nuts, 2 15c boxes. .. .25c Lye Hominy, No. 3 cans. Corn Starch. 4 boxes 25c 3 cans 25c French Cream Salad MusSwift’s Pride Soap. 6 cakes, tard, 3 bottles .25c 1 box Sunhrite 25c Hirsh’s Mustard Butter, Lautz’s Gloss Soap. 8 cakes 25c 4 cans 25c White Flake, American All kinds of Pancake Flour. Family, etc.. Soap, 6 3 sacks 25c cakes 25c High Grade Coffee, per tb. .25c Argo Starch. 6 boxes 25c . , .. . . , Butcher Pepper. Ground, lb. 25c And man > other bargains-In-Whole Pepper, lb 25c vestigaie. Your auto license application filled FREE with SIO.OO in trade in these four days. LAW. LINNEMEIER. Notary Public. It pays to lay in a supply at above prices. Try it! Thanking You for Your Favors and Patronage in the Past Year, and Wishing you a Happy and Prosperous “NEW YEAR” LAW LINNEMEIER, Preble, Ind. SILK RIBBON FLOUR NO BETTER MADE. IT STANDS FOR QUALITY. Manufactured By ,J. E. HEFFNER and V. L. FORBING, Ft. Recovery, 0. FOR SALE BY: Kuebler & Co., M. Fullenkamp, Niblick & Co. Mangold & Baker.
