Decatur Democrat, Volume 45, Number 31, Decatur, Adams County, 10 October 1901 — Page 8
Li*a Grw’te. Afoczo Runyon tnade a busice&s. trip to Decatur Taeadaj. Rir pier's Specialty show exhibited in o«r town Tuesday e-.cciag. Jsrob Bie-der of Peasant Mills. Sondayed with Frank Haught Jn and wife. Betjamjar. Sal-.-s and wife of near Delaware, Ohio, are paring their people a visit. Joel VanC-u;p and wife—a boy. Tuesday of . .«t 4jy reigns supreme in the household. Steojan Silts wh..e boarding the train at Pcrtiacd for hyme oe Th irsday. was rv. - red of forty dollars by pick pockets. Mases and John Augsberger were at Buffalo attending the PanAmeriean Exposition. M s-e savs be saw the spi.w where President M: Kinley stood when shot. John and Ferdinand Tseoautre of Cber- a. lllumis. were entertained br old time frieods here and at Berne last week. Their fat be. was tmx; the first busies* men tn the early history of the town and was the founder of what was known as the mud comer. Tbev w.th their parects left here forty years ago. many and great changes met their new after kuore than two score years aceeaee. ! while now and then one was met who ■ had taken part with them in borish sports in times mxeaa-Seat. Thrjogh. the courtesy and company of Samuel Su&lson of and Lev. D. M .ler of thus place, the viators were drive®• to 8.-if: o :z a carr.age on the Sabbath and made pardmpaats of a good tme. the memory of wiuch will be as fasting as allotted tiaae MARKETS. ocoim? n e. u casaotx, gaadi emd. Wheat new..., j 55 Corn, per cwt. yeil-.w new ..... 75 Cons, per cwt. new, cuxei.... 73 (fats. new..... 32 Bye. 45 Barky 35 £ 45 Clover seed 4 *» & 4 50 T:»:tny Putauee. >ras new 1 10 Egg*. fresh 15 Butter 15 Gut-kens Qg Turkeys O Geese Qg Wool, onwtebed 13 to 16 Wool, washed 30 and 22 H 5 00 TOLXi» SilXirs OCT. 9, 1:30 P. M. Wheel, new Xa. •> rad -ash.. J 72j Sept wheel (sash corn No. 2 mxad. cash... 564 Sept com 56|*
.. BLANKETS 7 I Blankets Blankets 50 CTS. A PAIR. 75 CTS. A PAIR. _ .. _ 114 Extra large size. Extra 10 4 Cotto i Biarketa. good . . „ heavy weight, the regular dollar weight. Gray, White and Tan. ~ . blanket at other stores. Your on;y choice Gray or Tan 50 cts. pair 75 cts. pair ALL WOOL Ol I x Blankets Blankets •*'sell IKC lo SI.OO PER POUND. 53.00 A PAIR. Not half cotton, but what we Made of the dneat wool, all say. ALL wool, worth $3 50 to plaid or plain. Same blanket 54.00 a pair, comes in red. Black. you get at a woolen mill and the plaid and white same price. $3.00 PAIR s’.oo POUND I SPECIAL THIS WEEK: FLANNELETTE NIGHT GOWNS "7 K CTS. WORTH A DOLLAR I U EACH BOSTON ORE L O. O. F. Block. Kuebler & Moltz Co. IWaUITL UIIIHrn IM IISMB*LWMMW^n Hn ,« illHwr7W
CONFECTIONS FROM GRAIN’. — Wheat aad Malt C»ed la the Xi»»ractare e< CisSy. A plant in New Jersey. formerly need as a manila paper * essayed '3 tie nnkjoe indsstzy of making otnfectkns fruui ami malt, •bom the last materials in the world one wecto expect to find in candy. In the earlier stages of the prece ■< the grain is fanned. grevad and mixed ' la !*' .-r 7-r -»>rt:e®.k. TL nit :s »- ed to a cash. front wldch a thin simp i l« w'tseeted ‘.»y hydrasiie stresses azU J c-_ n’-_-,tt._> a great iron evaporator. \ Ttenee tze strep is carried tn tc i a vartintti pan. Here it is rig ..rotxsiy : stirred a-', fnrtt.tr erapttoxted. The 1 ’hi.■£• tsel r..txp is «ira-vn ..if into tzgt ; sto-lk w tin pans, where it is ot«.i~d I and kari-. zed. Plata or ttarcrvd with ■ peppenuiat. the mass is a rteb golden I brvr. a 1a color. Combined with eboeo- j late it Is dark as the famtii-xr caraziei la t:. . candy shops. Utt a a latch cf goods Is needed for • the nta.rt.rt. the stock tn the pans is bro'_t-a iato pieces an>i pct into a boiler ■ sumca ’ed by a steam jacket. It is I rtd&ted by beat to the consistency of • taffy at an oM Cashiewed candy pwfl. ' . . ~ -•..-. -Z < to- .-. kr.g strips that Le Lke golden snakes i on a bean! tab?-. ITbey are fed to a enttiag machine, a noisy little sK-nster with an tasatiabte tppetite for sweets. Yon coshi almost ; corer the tLiehrne with a hat. yet it ' ttxrcs oct exit cream! :-ts nearly as fast ; as a Xaxhn rttn hnris a storna of bxlI lets. The boys who carry the creasiI lets frets the rtachlne to the titles where they are wrapped have Lttle i tuae for taedltaticc.— HerI aid. I EDITOR STOREY’S NOTION. I ITtoeory •»« Which He Remitted a Fine aa4 Raxeed a Salary. “1 w.s sinshing cof.y on old ffteray's Ch: age Tunes tsany years sr " stod sue of the ztj-csts at a rewnioa dlzser. “We had a cocreagoodaat is az imnote* tow- who supply w-.-xa-i B»t strtedcJe his matter, bit as be geßera.iy sent g--:<d stn£ we let him run on. bin stuff to suit the exjgßKws of the ntgte. E-rt.dia. hia Kass assays suggested good headzne*. and that wu oce of Storey's hot-btes. "On cae occnsaoc the correapccdest I sect up abont 700 wnadb wtock went j into 10ft. w.th oothtaa ever. On tbe 10ft words 1 «cstmeted a bexdhue which waa right cp to the mark. The next •day I mu .Zetrotted to tefl the mas who made v« the checks for the cocatry e'Xresjw&ieuts to i—.<• K off the i romspondent's pay. -When be received his check, be write to Mr. Stceey saytag that under . ueduzt ry ctrce— cinvs be wisilh t kick abont the deduer.-on. tut ta tha part>; clar hstiace 1-1 betnnm the
‘ fool headline ever the item txa-le by a ‘ f>oi tetertraph editor bad infwrxated the saan whose came was rtsentxaxd ta the dispatch aad breixjbt oc a f.u_t he- ' tween Lha ahd tite eamapoodent. the rescit ■' wbi-ek wxs that the re.-rv-sp.to-iec: ns ftoed $5 ia tbe ev I court. • “Mr. Storey wan a very jant aran I when yon got at bim tbe rigkt way. ' H. iasCrtcted th.? 1-i.si.x.r '..- send the I cerrerspondent the az.-, cut f.t the hze . and raised ay sstary berasac th* toadt Itae I wrete bad cussed a raw. That .? . ■ ~z. .t - -'z-zn. z z-s a .. --- l._e urtt- : “—New Yu.-h 5..8. Cities UltiMt Slams. Ihrita 2 he cf th* Ucr.bte arw» . w_.... ; L«._i -s. z_to. j ether Eng^-s. ‘.--ns. £t..-.x in tiepc-.-r---•;st qnarttts the dweil.zjs are ; ■d. f the streets veil pared, eieaa and entnI paratoTeiy wile. It also Las &£• sicraa in the Etzl-.h sen..-..- cf the word. K. -tn. ta jitotx ard Serast>jg»< is Kans x to:h .oast an alneoce of aiisxm and panp .?. In i-Xtohd the iarpest .-htsrfrrtttr.xs tows whack is free treat ■ this r--proaeb is prebabiy HoMersi- -i. and after that would <>:-—■£ L.-un. srt tor. Spa and Ixsdoa Ly the Sea.—Pearson's IVetidy. Tfcere Tkey Were. “I aa here, remlemex." explained tbe pockp-.etet » ths feHcw prisoners, ne the remit sf a meexent of abstrarrx®.’ "And I am here.” Kiel the toeenffbry. ■because of an aafacvsnoite baba es mak z- light of th:ngs.” “And L’ so d the foeyrt “ oe acr.rtmt of a simple desert to make a anas# frt mysetf.'* "And L’ ad.‘rd the bnrgiar. notbta; bet taking advantage of an ■jpesh; whx* efferad is a Arps z-c---:i: -1 to r -to : ~ —' sas City Inidepezdesz 91«-e>iaa Reew.s 1.3 ail steex -hg apartzewt* where earpet a used, in the islerest of dei.th an anco vexed pa-axed asargsa sbk®jd eat_re<y stzrr:tr.d the r>:ct s: u t. prevent tbe xecuE.ua.thxi of dssa. .y ' eczta.h..hs dxnger:z» mjercbet eme eracta. If tms bccder is regu-iriy wasied w.th water evarata-ng a i sza'fectazt. it wOI a-sc aid y a ponlymg the tnem. • OrervUtrt. "I szp-pcke.' said th* lady who was rating the Meek'.zs. “that ynnr wife A sure that she Los the best basband that ever bred." “Yes.” answered Meefrtcc. with srme-th-rx Lk* a s_rt- "But at tie sazre tme I djet beheve she thinks mat 3* saying nt-.i fee sae." — Wumg-x Sca- — Tke Sevtlemwßt. fries-:'—l-d yeer fktber-ta-faw nr tie aaytMng m you when y:c tzimeC h:s dsngkxer? Bate*:®—Yea. tie rest .1 _» fan -j
TOOK - TER ALLY. Tkac w«» war nssg»*tm* w *' 4 to ■ •» “Baek few dhw ■■ n# -mt : ‘rtt-.-to.toto fal :.. ...: ' raid ahJ r_. ul mazre.-. v--te --... 2-iy tier are fre-irectly raismsder-sr.x-d/ toExrtod the cterk -f > »v---.-st:-." -.a a reporter "be wh«t day. “F-.h instance; the fomtila wiseffl a to.-i.Brer .- «.&'< :->.r- ’ - Lar. ?■:= anti mh it J-.ZZ : :: 'to.-'i. rz zg -ret e-» a stri" z- •■ . • •'•: " t«nk •»- :“I me for a raradeate of deposit ter a «n- --‘ , -it. of—. —e y w.—. -- —-e z3ih—ed nwr. I eotsted tbe az... .- —j tie am cst to be as stated and i.r.rr> '■ .; ■.: . ' - to- ■- : : ? - re : ;r- ■ yw left aaal ■U. tt took the stranger a-• tine w sgn bls nacae. but I { “ ■* 3»tothto_; to. * -i II -=1 totov. me ret- 1 I ttttate of deposit. About a week later tie same izix. wi-jse tare I tad fzr c " .. -. i: "■ - r.> : ■ rertifaritA He dashed off an ornate sspaitare. wd eb I peoeeeded to compare with tie first sikaatate. The two were » v.t dff-rez-.. xs t_- first cne was apparently the Libored effort of an cid min. - 'I cant pty yr® t-A nsxsey. sir,’ I aaH. “■Why rrtT asked tie astenlshei “■Frt-rtxse it acct the signature of the yr- to wham I issued the certificate cf deposit-' I tepCed. - Weil, said tbe stranger. *wben I wu here a week ago y«a t-dd me to wrre cy irae with my left txrei. tnd I dd M-. tut I can t write very well that way.’ “ 'Thea wfil y>: • obhge me by wrtt-‘-r year Ea_e with yosr left bond •Eum’ I asked is a 1-gkt dawn-d epon “ W—--aiy ‘ sad the Etoi:i. and aft* »neh Übw b“ j-c-.d- ••! a faes mile of hi- first sgmirt ind I apoiogmed and p*M kisa k» aaoc-.y.’—Waaiiiagton FLOWER AND TREE. Ftente -amsot live if deprived cf tbe«. ieavw. Tka pfcintx it the age of 7 years yield TM ponads of :ea ta the acre. The Ute pahs ragntess 1 hot. dry air. bet t-c is-mje ahoat the rxts and painty sf x ”~iims nev rt Eve asm* than 2&J year*. Ivy tae teen known to lire 450. dtescnx tax LfiDO and yew XSBD. ax aak tree of average «tae. with T« .0: lenv-ii. Lfu from the earth abewt LS v-v wit-r dartag the five tn.-c.-ia it a to leaf Jaoaum n az. Izdzas ah.-ttb. Its star ry wax white are tadenertbnbty sweet. A3 the fanning j<-2 and pammn and patio* and myntery of the raea seem to rtie sp. to yo« m ss brendfa There :s a reee tree with a trrnk 2 feet > »rt«rs t rereremfererrere ia a Venrara garedet x CafifartiX. It 3 a Lahas bens gre wmg a gisarter of a eearary zz.fi yielded over dfi. tift bteocm m t«. E.tst a&4 We»t. “There h aiways a s-orrety of peaase» is the west’ saya an «S:ia! of the Fto-jaheipit-a smit. “ltd a oeperatendanee rs them m the sort. Every wi_i» me tanks ;«st mere set trp a test and ery Car peumjea. but oar teak* iere ire ever gtei to rd tb-et»-sffras of ttem- rmp-.-aaxi in these -:toA It s ffffs-tdt to see why rxh a sente of tfiiags sftmdd be. Fs sure a penny M “nr. an dear to the easterner * zeart as m me vmnerner'x One wvjei m mm* titr-w a pexty away max v ttoifi me otter, yet here we always tan* to* mnny pesmsea. There they never ***». to aavs eaongx" DeatAWtf rUnrry JL-Etost ewy dyag perw.fi la Latte to te a-bxred by m* solemn axtirzfie cf the company and tte iwtra.aed or i.vtof t«resu «f >ar» aad essetxas te ax ikermtmxg ccnsrecwa aad nacc-o-seto;®* rasoady of Ta* vim wtek every dyrng penna is treated Laa ssdccbceiSy bees the T wy fitoess enjoyment cf u life to many a poor -fiespesed -fie ml and a s-xy of aid parmal payment fee xxea prtvatxa.—Wcrta d Xtetsacne. •aSortaa VMI the Hot. Betere m* tavesixa of wtg* d*e tat was rssrfy remrvsd except to salute «terx repe-taZv re.yx perwexge*. It was v;ra at tatee when Mfitea w pe? we* if rezi were pre-seat. Extepf wtea setaSßg reyiMy it wu »be rsmmax merely to raje tte toad to the hat somewtet after tte mat.ter of • mffb tary snftsre. Wtaa it became the s»de to wrar a peofratea of tatee talr toe u: vu *m aeeded u a prexeetion for tte iea.fi aad vaa earned c&fier tbs irm. A Tart Rreort. Tte tafant «f a tecmteld was in its ondte. Tte tend of the btrase was at teste, prevak aad faalt fizdiag. At u»g“.i i» teesase zmesdttaUe. “Yoe have 4m* mchteg bet aeake sustakre mangle." te grewted. Tos.' tte aaswsred meekly: "I be rax by ptrtmg tte wrong t*by tn bed.’ —Ctarttfft fi-.<snnl. W~by aoworkeewera Laee A»*etlte. Tte »®o who orders a dtamr has envn ct before k reaetes tte table. II ote reek* X te*. -ten ate tea eaten H twfi<n. u » nay »«nder ate tea no ap p®» fw a tterd enerae of tt’-Hsr pars Enaar. ■Qtek rrissurat has a ttaxdtag amoeg tte toteM raraseam te tte world. Botes < ttet omertai were worts bj ten aad -v.«*a iute X 5»» yrara bn far* tte tertft efCkrtat
R. B. Gregory & Co. | IF - I Fine Line of | Wall Paper, : Grills Mouldings, i Paints Varnishes, ii • I House, Sign an <i Carriage Painting. Capital City Paints, Guaranteed for ftve Years. | North of Court House. We Have the Finest LOT OF Wall Paper Ever shown at Berne, for the coming season. See it before you buy. Stengel & Craig, Druggists.
Eoers and Their Morals, In appearance the M<x>rs are a very fine race. For many generations their mothers have been chosen tor their beauty. An active life in the saddle has •developed them physically and a epie&iid appearance la the result In ad dittos, they have manners of un•qtaied suavity and polish, the result of early spent In the harem. ' They are so habituated to think well of themselves as followers of the true ; prophet that an uneasy conscience never troubles them. A man may be an utter scoundrel, cruel and hcentioea. and yet be regarded as a saint if be is descended from the prophet and conforms to the outward ceremonial of Islam. Ills brow is frank and unclouded. his smile is even benerelent, and yet it would be lapcwsfble to describe the details of his life. Such are the Moors—an Interesting tableau vtvant of many a chapter In the book of Judges, or Samuel ©r the Kings.—African Review. €•<*♦ DriaklsK Denooaeed. As early as 1'363 coffee was satirised in England, and on every hand the bitterest Invectives were applied to it by the pees. sad pulpit. In one instant* it preacher hurled anathemas at the heads of those who used as a beverage “a strop of soot and essence of old shneaP’ Probably he had good grounds for this statement, having sampled some tolled coffee. Another divine denominated it “a poison which God made bU?k<hat it might bear the devIl s coioer The women also took up the cudgels against It F.141a« Uses la Bollaad. Fol-iiug linen is an accomplishment In whieL tach one of the women In HoOaod la expected to be proficient before she becomes mispress of a borne. In Holland especially the folding of linen require. considerable skin and training. Much of their fabric Is of ' the finest texture and quality, and they fashion the various pieces lr ironing tato birds, r.almala. Cowers and all , manner of artistic shapes. Their linen , closets are often shown to visitors with the same pride that china closets are ' shown elsewhere. i _ lever WutU «• Be at Borne. “Oh, you men. yon men! When you . need to call on me before we were married. it was an yon could do to tear yourself from me at midnight Now you are never so happy as when you are , away from borne." ’ Mr. Griffin—But you seem to forget. , Fannie, toat I was away from home In , tLose courting days when It was so . Lard to tear myself aw»r - iimun A Mala prop. Miss Wtndstraw - What a wheexv. I ptnebed little thing that baby of Mrs. L Puffproud slato be sure! Mrs. __ Blazer (contemptuously!— Yes. " and to bear her talk you’d thing she had a progeny -Leslie's Weekly,
i ** ■— ’* —— - •*- V Pretty Fair Shots. In an English paper there appeared recently the veracious story of two brothers who lived in the Rocky moan tains. They had two rifles, one bullet and a keg cf powder. With this outfit they managed to kill on an average twenty-seven head of buffalo a day The way they managed wa- this: Broth- , er No. 1 would stand on cue side of * buffalo and sboot through it. the bullet going into the barrel of the rifle o( Brother No. 2. who stood on the other side. Then Brother No. 2 would fire through the next buffalo into the rifle of Brother Na. L and so on until the day’s sport was over. Some one who saw this story has written to say that he is acquainted with a man. a cousin, he thinks, of the two mentioned, who also lived tn the Rocky mountains at one time. He had one rifle, one bullet and a keg of pow der. yet he managed to kill thirty head of buffalo a day—buffaloes were plenty then—and the way be did It was this He was not cnly a champion shot but a champion runner, and when he fired through a buffalo be would run around and catch the bullet again to reload with, and so on until he exhausted Lis powder. How to Cateh the Polar Bear. 1 listened attentively the other night to a gentleman who gave me a P*** deal of valuable information concerning these interesting regions. He knew I was a tenderfoot and a newspaper reporter and felt at liberty, therefore, to talk freely, so I got a lot of yarns about polar bears and walruses and other creatures, large and small, which are not related In natural histories. I believe it was one of tne advisers of “Alice In Wonderland" who suggested that the best way to catch a rabbit is to get behind a stump and make a noise like a carrot, and I learned with great satisfaction that the easiest way to catch a polar bear Is to hide lietiind an Iceberg and make a noise like the aurora borealis. Polar bears are very tame and. like newspaper reporters an some other people, are gifted with inquiring minds. When a stranger come* out oo the Ice, they greet him cordially and show a justifiable curiosity as to his business and Intentions, wb • cause's them to fall an easy prey to t e parlor rug trust.—Norway Letter i Chicago Herald. Critical. She—You don’t love me as much M you did or you would have stayed w ger last night. He—Bbt you Insisted on my going“And If you had loved me you would not have gone."—Detroit Free Press. Greatness is to take the common things of life and walk truly among them.—Olive Schreiner. Kindness gives birth to kindness and love to love.—Mme. Necker.
