Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 7, Number 120, Decatur, Adams County, 20 May 1909 — Page 3
DrPRICES Cr^ m Baking Powder Made from cream of tartar derived solely from grapes, the most delicious and healthful of all fruit acids.
*«***t*t****«444 J WEATHER FORECAST * +++**+++*++++++4 Generally fair north and centra!; showers south portion tonight and Friday. Miss Gusta Cramer is very sick. J. A. Schanepp, of Hoagland, was in the city last evening on business. THE FAIR Decatur’s New General Store Introducing a better grade of goods at prices ranging from 5c up. Call and inspect our Notion Department You also can find here the only line of Popular Music in the city, which usually is sold for 25c. Our price 20c. We make a specialty of Musical Instruments-supplies Visit our store and be convinced as to our prices. The Fair is on Monroe street, just west of Old Adams County Bank. ft Disputes as to paid bills, overpayments, etc., are absolutely eliminated with a checking account —the receipted legal voucher you hold in the returned paid check protects you perfectly. This is just one of the many reasons why you should have a checking account with us. OLD Adams Co. Bank
JUST ARRIVED
New Shipment of Strictly Tailored Wash Suits. In the new shades, including white, blue, tan, fancy stripes, all the new patterns--] ust the thing for summer. At the marvelously low prices of from $7.00 to $3.00 If you are getting ready for summer you need one of these suits. They are the popular dress for ladies, and we have them in styles and at the prices that will please you.
Fullenkamp’s
Mrs. Rachel Lowther, 71, is dead at Angola. I Frank Kern went to Bluffton today i on business. Elijah Nidlinger is attending to business matters at Fort Wayne this week. The residence of Mrs. Carrie Barnett, at Zanesville, was badly damaged by fire. Barney Kalver made a business trip to Fort Wayne last evening returning home this morning. William Sunderman, prominent farmer, died Tuesday at his home three miles west of Huntington. The Fline & Walling Manufacturing company is erecting a 350-foot tower at Detroit for the Radio Wireless Telephone company.
Quite a crowd of men are planning a trip to Rome City Saturday, where they will Indulge in a little touch of f early fishing for bass. The five-year-old daughter of Mr. r and Mrs. Theodore Eberley, of Watera 100, was struck and painfully injured by an interurban car Tuesday morning. All members of the M. E. choir are 3 requested to meet tomorrow night at which time the special music to be s rendered next Sunday night will be practiced. H. W. Hiatt, of Lagro, was fined $1 and costs for drawing a razor on Conductor John Ream, of the Wabash and is boarding out the sentence in the Peru jail. Mischievous students at Huntington tolled the bell of Central college at midnight Monday night as a protest against action of the U. B. conference with reference to college affairs. Attorney K. O. Johnson, of Kendallville, came to the city today in an auto. He was accompanied by several friends. While here Mr. Johnson was looking after business in- ’ terest. i Mrs. Fred Neaderhouser and children and her brother, John Lehman, 1 of Brene, were in the city today for a short time one their way to Syraj cuse, where they will visit relatives. —Bluffton Banner. A jury at Angola has returned a verdict for SI,OOO damages against the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern railroad for the death of James W. ’ Anderson, who was struck by an en- ' gine at Waterloo in March. 1907.
Mrs. Adam Koeisig went to Piqua ( this morning on bus.aess. | Miss Fannie McConnel went to Monmouth this afternoon. Misses Bertha and Ada Deininger went to Fort Wayne this afternoon. | John M. Kehr, an old resident of Syracuse, is dead at the age of 71 years. j Mrs. Harriet Brayman went to Van . Buren today in the interest of the Maccabee lodge. Miss Ruby Artman has returned from Rochester, where she visited with her brother James. Clarence Baughman returned from Bluffton, where he spent yesterday transacting business. Isaac Hilty, of Geneva, has become insane from his experiences in the San Francisco earthquake. The Western Motor works, of Logansport, will remove to Marion and establish a big plant in that city. Fred Koenig of south of the city was a business caller in the city to day and has returned to his home. Dan Tyndall will begin his duties as assistant bookkeeper at the Krick & Tyndall tile plant after school Is over. Mrs. Ned Steele returned from Marion today, where she has been for some time visiting friends and relatives. Miss Isabel Holden, who has been visiting friends in the south part of the county, returned to her home at Ironton, Ohio, today. Henry Losche left today for several places in Ohio where he will visit for some time as the guest of his parents, friends and other relatives. Representative Cyrus Cline and his secretary, A. C. Wood, of Angola, were admited Monday to practice in the supreme court of the United States. It is said the Garrett Press will issue a morning edition to be known as the Auburn Daily Tribune for circulation in the latter city. O. H. Downey will be the editor.
Shipshewana experienced a severe windstorm Tuesday afternoon, in which trees and fences were leveled, and the fronts of the buildings occupied by the Shipshewana Sun and J. J. Kaufman were blown in. William Redfield, 54 years of age, who lived alone In his home at Ellis, Steuben county, was found dead by a neighbor who called to see him Tuesday morning. It is believed he was stricken by heart disease and fell lifeless to the floor. Only one more day of school and then the children will begin on the long vacation. The teachers, or at least the most of them, will not loaf during the summer, as they will attend summer schools and colleges at various places the better to fit them for the work next year. One of the fastest ball games which has so far been played this season will be played on Friday, May 28, at Steeles park. The junior Stars, a fast country team, that lost only one game last season, is to be the attraction, and a good game is looked forward [to. Both teams are greatly strengthened this season.
Mrs. Emma Hilty went to Geneva today. R. K. Allison returned to his home at Fort Wayne this afternoon. A. G. Bennett, who left Wabash two years ago, Is dead at DeLand, Fla. High winds have extensively damaged the onion fields near Kendallville. Miss Kate Mangold returned from Fort Wayne where she visited with friends. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Hurst are the proud parents of a baby boy born last evening. Charles H. Hoyt a government good roads lecturer, will speak at Warsaw May 28. Miss Kate Mangold is at Fort Wayne today called there by the illness of her sister, at that place. Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Gulick were in the city last evening and have returned to their home. Adams county cattle breeders are arranging for the organization of a cattle breeders' association. Ed Berling arrived in the city this morning from Fort Wayne and visited with his mother for a short while. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Walters went to Monmouth this morning to spend the day with C. D. Kunkle and family. Joseph. Runyan, pumpman for the Grand Rapids railroad at Rome City, died suddenly Tuesday morning from apoplexy. Some boy stole Dick Heller’s dog, Tippecanoe, and if Dick catches him he says there is going to be something awful happen. John Revett, an Englishman, who recently landed in this country, suffering from epilepsy, has been taken into custody at Butler and will be deported.
Miss Marcella Kuebler is visiting her .mother, Mrs. W. A. Kuebler at St. Joseph hospital today. Mrs. Kuebler is getting along nicely, and will soon be recovered. Misses Zoa and Alta Dibble went to Toledo today on their way to'Detroit, where they will visit their brother Harry, who is attending the medical college at that place. An order has been issued in Elkhart that hereafter all launches that are operated on the St. Joseph river must be licensed and that they must display the proper signal lights. Mrs. Isaac Wagner went to Bluffton today on her way to Muncie. Her granddaughter, Opal Wagner, is very sick, and Mrs. Wagner will stay with her till she is recovered. There will be no meeting of the churches Sunday in the evening on account of the baccalaureate sermon at the Methodist church. All congregations are invited to attend this sermon in a union meeting. The moving of the house from the K. of P. lot this morning stopped traffic along Second street for an hour or two, while they were crossing the interurban tracks and dodging electric and telephone wires. Some one who attended the entertainment given at the Woodman hall last night exchanged hats w’ith Ed Lyons, and Mr. Lyons would be pleased to exchange back with the party who took the wrong one by mistake. But a short time before he died at Bluffton Tuesday afternoon, William H. Starr, a veteran of the civil war, made the request that there be no minister called to officiate at his funeral, and that only the service of the G. A. R. be used. While working about her home Monday evening, Mrs. Louisa Moun, of Warren, suffered a severe stroke of paralysis, and fell to the floor unconscious, How long she had laid there is not known, but she was found late in the afternoon still unconscious and in a serious condition. Cashier William M. Smith, of the Ossian bank, has agreed to pay the remainder of his SSOO subscribed to the M, E. church at Markle while he resided there, and the suit filed against him by the church officials has been dismissed. The settlement was in the nature of a compromise, each side paying its own costs. Mr. Ed Berling of this city left this morning for Chicago, where he will stay for a day or so. From there he will go to Fondulac. Wis., where he will visit with his sister Agnes, who is in the convent there preparing to become a nun. He will remain there over Sunday, and from there he will go to Minneapolis, where he will spend a few days as the guest of friends. * t Word was received from the Palmer penmanship company by the i Sisters of St. Agnes that the examI ination tried by Elmo Smith was peri feet, and would in a few days send .him a diploma and gold medal as a I reward for his labor. Bernadine Hei- ' man also received a medal a few j weeks ago. The Palmer method was introduced into St. Joseph school J about five or six years ago and since I that time great progress has been ' made.
[COTTON OR WOOL FROM WHICH DO YOU PREFER YOUR NEW SUIT TO BE MADE? W" W* ■ Z It is penny wise and a pound \ foolish to spend your ciothing ! .■ money on cheap shoddy cotton j V materials, for good clothes M '• J tW can’t be made from cotton fabVp ties. We h ave a handsome array of fabrics that we guarantee to be strictly all-wool. They are clever in cut and full Q ua lity from lining to but- / | A ton hole. They go at /' - i I sl2 ' so ' sls, $18,820 / 11 $22.50 and $25. /g|a | A big line of Boy’s Suits on W’ 7 display. Prices range from I I W $1.50 to $7.50 | f / Fine Summer Underwear I: f 7 I /f /copyright, including the B. V. D. Brand. | / 7 1909, by ’ Just received a new and snapF f fl. adler, py line of fancy vests. Take a P ee P in °ur display window an d see 11 16 kind of merchandise we are selling. We invite comparison of values and prices Teeple, Brandyberry & Peterson Cater to the Man Who Cares
Mrs. Samuel Amrine is visiting friends at Fort Recovery, Ohio. Chauncey Wilder returned to Monmouth on the one o’clock car. Mrs. Addie Shoemaker, of south of the city, went to Fort Wayne last evening. Miss Vida Stoneburner went to Fort Wayne to visit her sister, Mrs. Fred Rockeston. Miss Ada Hower returned to Craigville after a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Gettus Parmer near Van Wert. Our Business Is Bankings We have no other business. This is the reason why we serve our customers so well. You get real Bank service here—a service that is adapted to your needs. The officers of this bank with the ample'facilities for banking which are at their command, can serve your individual business interests better than you think and in more ways than you may imagine. We shall be glad to have you call for a personal talk with us. FIRST National Bank DECATUR, INDIANA
| 100 Years Hence | ?No More Drudgery—Just Live To J j Enjoy Yourselves. J Ella Wheeler Wilcox believes in a hundred years all drudgery will be done by machinery. We will fly through the air on the wings of the wind and have time to sec and enjoy all the wonders of the world and perhaps of the heavens which are now sealed books to the majority because of the eternal grind of every day life. Look back 100 years and the changes made seem just as great. What we wear, how we traved, how we communicate, what we eat, sensible clothes, vehicles speedy and comfortable, wireless telegraphs, telephones, fast trains and mail steamers, and healthful foods. Today instead of loading our stomachs with heavy, greasy breakfasts, that dull the brain and retard our morning’s | work, we eat delicious E-C Corn Flakes or Egg-O-See Wheat Flakes, | made by the famous Egg-O-See process that insures perfect digestion, high nu- i trition and greater strength. Always ready to serve, good for babes, I best for invalids —the sensible breakfast for the business man or the busy, ener- i 1 getic housewife. Remember it’s the Egg- ■ O-See process that makes the flakes so crip and delicious. Democrat Want Ads. Pay
(2 DAYS MORE I Must Get Out of Business AU Goods must be sold at a Great Sacrifice 1 S On all gallons or quart goods such as the fa- ■ mous Kenwood, Monticello Club, Solo Rye, Gins, ■ Wines and Cordials, all good for medical purI poses. ■ Get your supply no w before too late. I “CURLEY”
" X pays the user a profit I ■F fiLiriT because it is an invest- I A ment —not an expense. I . ■ The most profitable of all good paints is B / Lokfeßrotheis I I Mimwd I liquid Paint I || ready for the brush. It costs a trifle B Il| more per gallon but lasts longer than B I 1 ordinary paint and goes farther. We B j Bki^ e exc^usiv ® agents. For Sale Holthouse Drug Comp’y Democrat Want Ads. Pay
