Daily Democrat, Volume 4, Number 156, Decatur, Adams County, 14 June 1906 — Page 2
The Daily Democrat. Brerv Evening. Except Sunday by LEW G. ELLINGHAM. 9ab»<*rl|»t !<>■ Rate*. •y carrier per week ■y carrier, per year .. . *35" •y mail, per month Ry mail, per year ■ag - copies Advertising rates made known on application. ■■tered in the postoffice at Decatur, bedlaas second-class mail matter J H. HELLER- Manager. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Tranafers «rs Real Estate Rey«rfed hy The Oevamr Abstract A Loan Cs. Henrv K. Schuster to John B. Schuster. NW A, sec 22 French twp * - Geo. E Mitch to Rufus Meshberger 40 acres sec 10 Hartford twp. 3.000 Jeremiah LSctly to John T. Merryman pt oulot 2, Berne. ... 1.400 Joseph Gleuding to A. M. Dailey pt see 34 Hartford twp 500 Henry Mangold to Noah D Schwartz 40 acres sec 8 Monroe twp 3,000 Joseph A. Schwartz to Christian J. scwartz. 30 acres Monroe twp. . 1.025 David Schwartz to Joseph D. Winteregg, acres Monroe twp.. 8.200 J. D. Winteregg to Joseph A Schwartz acres Monroe twp 6.200 John W Collins to Eli Hoagland SE \a see 14 French Sarah E Leßrun to Simeon J Hain pt outiOt 39 Decatur »0« and LEHNE. the jeweler, will eaii. get it. repair it, and deliver it. -$6.50 from Decatur to Niagara Falls and return. Tickets on sale, August 25th. Return limit 30 days. Lax-ets —A Candy Bowel Laxative. If you have Constipation. If you have a eoated tongue. If you are dizzy, bilious, sallow. If you have Headaches I Sour Stomach, etc., risk 5 eent* on I Lax-ets. See for yourself. Sold by | W. H. Nachtr.eb
I fM it ißi a V w Onr Oxfords are Coolers. Coolers to the reet, the Mind and the Purse. The ne .v s-yles are read}’, and there never was a better time to choose. You may be able to pull through the summer without a Hat or pair of Trousers, but Oxfords you must have. Patent Colt or Kid. Vici,i Gun Metal Leathers. There’s no slip/ng or gaping about our Ox'ords. They fl: as you want your 1 Oxfords to fi’. Winncs Shoe Store ti t z'zz ms.
I Summertime Places Over in the southern end of Michigan and adjoining it in northern Indi- ! ana is the ideal vacation land —a country of email, beautiful lakes, clear running streams and shady woodlands. Here are delightful places for fishing, boating, bathing and kindred pleasures, while the very atmosphere is expressive of a simple, restful, summer life in one of the most charming sections of the United States. Would you like to spend a few days in this region? You will be sure I to have a goixl time and at a very modest cost. Board and rooms in farm homes and smaller hotels at rates of from $5 to per week; also many furnished cottages for rent at rea-.onable rates. For reaching these resort places The Lake Shore ' & Michigan Southern Ry. trains will afford you quick service at a low cost. From June Ito Sept. 30 your local agent will sell you excursion tickets to any of these resort places over the railway leading from your place in connection with the Lake Shore, at low rates, good until Oct. 31 for return. “ Quiet Summer Retreats ” containing a large list of boarding places with rates, proprietors’ names and addresses, location features, camp sites, furnished cottages, etc., will assist you in selecting a place and will be j •eat free on addressing A. J. SMITH, G. P. A., Cleveland, Ohio. 8/’
I See Mrs. Beardsley’s hats before, ■ purchasing elsewhere. Hats at puces ■to suit everyone. Shaping old bats and making over a specialty. Hatai made to order. Up stairs, opposite | . eourt house on Second street. 130-ts., In beauty town there dwelt a lass. • i Her face was fair to see. ! i The secret of her beauty lay. i In Rocky Mountain Tea. Smith. ! Yager & Falk. The disgusting discharges from the nose and throat, and the foul eatarrh- : al breath are quickly dispensed with by using Dr Shoop's Catarrh Cure. , Such soothing antiseptic agents as Oil Eucalyptus. Thymol, Wild Indigo, ete., have been incorporated into a , snow white cream making a catarrhal balm unexcelled. Sold by W. H. Nachtrieb. AUTOMOBILE FOR SALE! i for gaje— a first-class automobile ' in good condition, used only a short time, will be sold at a saerfiee. En- ' quire at this office. l >4-tt. REAL ESTATE. I. L. Babeock has some bargains in real estate. List your property with him. His office is with H. Harruff. ■ rooms 1 and 2, Studabaker Block. I who loans money, writes all kinds of ! insurance and does notary work. ts. HIGH SCHOOL EXCURSION. The pdnt high sexcursion to I Sugar Island Park, ever the Clover I Leaf and White ' ar «-amer line. I pron.;—s to be well patronized by I I Decatur people. The rate from here I |is $1.75 for the round. trip. tram to ■ ( I leave here at 5:02 a. m. Returning, the I boat will .eave Detroit at 4:30 and Sugar Island at 5:30. An orchestra I will accompany the excursion and the trip will be a dandy outing. CURED TO STAY CURED How a Decatur Citizen Found Complete Fredecm from Kidney Troubles. Be ore7 to aCM* cured- ■ r.er kiape/s. x amt - 1 For sale a. dea.-rs Price >■ j New Dork, zole ag*-nu for tke United States ‘ I , Remember the natt-e-Doas 's-aad take | no other. I $37Xi to Chicago Saturday and Sun- I ' day, June 16 and 17, over Chicago & , ’ Erie. 155-3 t. I , “Watkins Lax-Tore” cures eonsti- | ' pation, indigestion, stomach And liver . troubles. 147-1 wk. FOR SALE—One Sunhope buggy. ’ | almost as good as new. Will sei! at' 1 ■ a bargain for cash. W. H. DANIEL. I | west Monroe street. 153-6 d. ' i WANTED —Ten men to work at onee. also teams. Apply at power ■ 1 (house, Fort Wayne Springfield T.aetiop Company. . Cherries! Cherries 1 ! CHERRIES!! |at the farm. 8 cents per fjuart. Cai! “ I ’phone S on line J. GEO. THICKI ER. 154-3 d. '
"* ASSUMING A VIRTUE. Wk.t Can Be Done hy Right Thtokfa* «n<i Self Control. Zopyrus. the physiognomist, said, "Socrates' features showed that he was stupid. brutal, sensual and addicted to drunkenness.” Socrates upheld the analysis by saying. “By nature I am addicted to all these sins, and they were only restrained and vanquished ' by the continual practice of virtue.*’ Emerson says in effect, "The virtue you would like to hare, assume it as already yours, appropriate it. enter into the part and live the character just as the great actor is absorbed in the character of the pan he plays." No matter how great your weakness or bow much you may regret it, assume steadily and persistently its opposite until you acquire the habit of bolding that thought or of living the thing not in its weakness, but in its wholeness, in its entirety. Hold the ideal of an efficient faculty or quality, not of a marred or deficient one. The way to reach or to attain to anything is to bend oneself toward it with all one's might, and we approximate it just in proportion to the intensity and the persistency of our effort to attain it. If you are inclined to be very excitable and nervous, if you “fly all to pieces” over the least annoyance, do not waste your time regretting this weakness and telling everybody that you cannot help it. Just assume the calm, deliberate, quiet, balanced composure which characterizes your idea! person in that respect. Persuade yourself that you are not nervous or excitable, that you can control yourself, that you are well balanced, that you do not fly off on a tangent at every little annoyance. You will be amazed to see bow the perpetual holding of this serene, calm, quiet attitude will help you to become like your thought.—Success. CATCHING COLD. Snirsestions That May Keep One From the Doctor. A person in good health, with fair play, easily resists cold, but when the health flags a little and liberties are taken with the stomach or with the nervous system a chill is easily taken and, according to the weak spot of the individual, assumes the form of a cold or pneumonia, or it may be jaundice. Os all causes <>f cold probably fatigue is one of the most efficient A jaded man coming Lome at night from a long day s work, a growing youth losing two hours sleep, over evening parties two or three times a week or a young lady tea ,y "doing the season." young children overfed and with short allowance of sieep. are common instances of the victims of cold. Luxury is favorel ie to chill taking. Very hot rva.4. feather beds, soft eta.rs. create a sensitiveness that leads tc a-iir-ts. It is not after all. the cold t 4 * antecedent ■' . . ' n* that give the attacfc a etae r t doing harm. Some the worst eoMa feO'i«eß to rtrose who do tot ware their bouse or even their beds and tbose who are most invulner.- are often those who are most exposed to changes of temperature and wLz, by good sleep, cold bathing and r»g....- r... • ts ; —“erve the tone of their nervous system and circulation. Probably maty chills are contracted at night or at the fag end of the day. wten tired p>?ople get the equilibrium of their circulation disturbed by either overheated sitting rooms or underheated bedrooms and tieds. This is esp.ecially the case with elderly people. In such cases the mischief Is not always j done instantaneously or in c single night It often takes place insidiously, extending over days or even weeks.— London Lancet Fl<b»fn* the CarrenL Papua has swift streams well stock- i ed with fish. An explorer tells of Pa- 1 puan fresh water mullet which somet.tries weigh as much as fifteen pounds. I ■"These fish are wonderfully provided by nature with an appliance which , help* them to combat the extraordi- ! nary" currents. At one moment you j wil! see them being sWept down resist- | ie««ly, but suddenly they shoot off into 1 the quieter water and attach them- I selves to the rocks by a strong sucker ' near the mouth. There they hang just outside the current, their tails moving gently with it. and when they have recovered their strength they make another dash through the swifter waters.” Okarrranre nt the Snhbiath. There was the minister of Tweedsmuir who on a certain Sabbath found a salmon stranded, in shallow water and who, being unable conscientiously to take It out on stic-h a day. built a l.'-lge of s'oi.'-s around It and. returning on the morrow, claimed his prize. TL.-i-e w: - the oh! farmer ' .-U i con’d not go to the kirk because he bad neglected to aliave on the Saturday night, and be would not profane the day by the use of any edged tool.—Macmillan’s Magazine. A Trwe Pith Story. Here is a fish story told by a British nobleman: An Irishman had caught a big pike. Noting a lump in its stomach. he cut it open. "As I cut ft ojien there was a mighty rush and a Capping of wings, and away flew a wild duck, and when I looked inside there was a nest, with four eggs, and she ii*d been afther sitting on that nest.” Chorkin* Precoelty. “What is the result,” asked the teacher of the primary class In arithmetic, "when you put two and two together?” "A kith,” lisped the curly headed little girl in the front row.—Chicago Tribune. There are many diversities of vice, but It Is one never failing effect of It to live displeased and discontented.—Seneca.
Dressed Like a Winner! — .. 1 I x You don,t need t 0 be to J ; that a mau ’ s may | K ~ help him tO success or tn H failure: if they’re right toi if th£ yJ ' V wrong to the latter \l\| can t ’* P romise y°u snc.l promise| ''"t? thefclothes that will help! t 0 it-KThey’re JH. g. 4I c l° tbes: tbe y I *°okgood■ and they ’ re as I Tv *hey|look, they're all ww l I 7 ' ' Wm I an d no cotton 8 A bigline t 0 choose oTI 111 Bl\m\ from.ggLet us show you?' Copyright 1906 by Hart Schaffner W Marx Holthouse Schulte & Co. GOOD CLOTHES SELLERS.
NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. Not!' e is hereby given that sealed J I bids will be received at Hoffman’s office, < I till the h n ur of 2 o’clock p.m., .July 3th. IfMIH. ’ for the erection and completion of a , . two-roomed brick and stone school ' building for District No. 1. Preble town- i ship. Adams County, Indiana, according to plans and specifications prepared i Oscar Hoffman. Plans are now lon file at Trustee’s office and at Hoffmans office. ro< m 7, Studabaker build- | jng". Decatur. Indiana. The ric’ht is reserved to reject any and all bids. LOUIS KLEINE, l Township Trustee Preble township. Ad- ; ams Cour.ty, Indiana. ■ I Dated June 12. 1966. I Al’l’i.K ITION FOR I.IQI OR LICENSE -:-.y given to the citl- i tens of the Third ward, in the City of Decatur, Adams County, and State of ■ Ind.ana. that I. Henry Scherry, a male ■ inhabitant and resident of said ward. a person over the age of twenty-one years, and a person not in the habit I of becoming intoxicated, and a fit person to be intrusted with the sale of intoxicating liquors, will make application to the Board of Commissioners, of the County of Adams at their July- session. for the year 1906. for a license to sell spirituous, 'tnous and malt and • other intoxicating liquors in less quantities than a quart at a time, with I the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on the premises where sold. The place where I desire to sell said intoxicating liquors Is a one storv brick building fronting on Monroe street in said city being the ground floor, with front and rear openings and situated on the following described premises, to-wlt: Commencing 41 feet west from the-.south-east corner of inlot No. 120 in the City of Decatur, Adams County, 'lndiana, thence running north 132 feet, thence west 13 feet, thence south 132 | feet to the north line of Monro-, I thence east to the place of beglnni >g. ’ Said building Is situated on the south end of the above described real estate , and is 31 feet long by 12 feet 8 Inches | wide on the inside. I will at the : same time ask permission from said board of commissioners to keep and i maintain a lunch counter In aforesaid , ' room for the purpose of selling lunch. jl4-3t ’ HENRY SCHERRY, Applicant. RESOLUTIONS. No. 1. Resolved, That from and after this date that £.ll persons riding or driving faster '’■'’h I, catur Cemeter, --- , according to law. No. 2 Resolved, That from and after this date all automobiles are prohibited from going inside of the gate of said Decatur Cemetery grounds. (See notice at the gate. > If this resolution is net | strictly observed the person vioiat-nr the same will be fined according to law. I, | The above resolutions on motion I i were passed and adopted by the board of trustees of the Decatur Cemetery Association, June 12, 1906. J. H. STONE, 156-ltd. 16-3tsw. Secretary. A SALE OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS, j The undersigned will hold a sale of his personal property at one o’clock next Saturday afternoon in the Morrison building just south of the court house and will offer the following goods: Dining table, folding bed, bed room suit, chiffionier, bed stead, sofa, 2 bed springs, 2 mattresses, Morris chair, 3 rockers, 2 stands, 6 dining chairs, sewing machine, large mirror, ingrain carpets, piece of linoleum, 12 feet by 12 feet, hard coal burner, good as new; Wilson heater, cooking utensils of all kinds, set of dishes, stand lamp, carpet sweeper, kitchen cabinet, lawn mower, sewing table, baby cab, fruit jars, window shades, large window shade, washing machine, tub and wringer, and other articles not mentioned. Terms —CASH. 155-2 d GEO. W. M’COY.
Mrs. Beardsley will make a special sale on hats this month. Hats must go at almost any price. Children’s hats, embroidery hats, duck hats, all must go. Up stairs opposite court house. 154-lwk. $3.50 to Chicago Saturday and Sunday. June 16 and 17. over Chicago & Erie. 155-31. FOR SALE —A letter press, good as new. Inquire at this office.
WANTED 25 teams to haul steel and 10 men to work on power house at once. Ft. Wayne i Springfield Railway Company
1 FOR RENT —A four room how t on Eighth street. Inquire of David ■> Hunsicker. 1 , FOR RENT —A new eight-room house on north sth street, all moders conveniences. Inquire of JACOB ATZ. 147-ts. LOST—A five-dollar bill, some where between the Mitten factory and Eighth street. Finder please rettus 1 to Willie Hermann and receive reward. 15344 !
