Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 8, Number 209, Decatur, Adams County, 5 September 1910 — Page 3
For Young Men For the young man who demands the natty things in his footwear our line for fall will certainly please. We’ve the newest Hi-to lasts in all the leathers with heavy soles and fancy stitched edges, spike heels and all that. We will put our time against yours any time and show you through these shoes. Charlie Voglewede The Shoe Seller
»o*o*o*o*o*o*o ♦ o*o*o*o*o* | WEATHER FORECAST I *o*o*o*o*o ♦ o<o*o*o*o*o»ot Generally fair, except thunder storms in north portion tonight or Tuesday. - _ d ■ - ■ — «- ■UX-1 - Mrs. A. W. Moore returned to Fort Wayne Saturday after visiting here. Miss Lollie Meibers is visiting with friends in Fort Wayne several days. The Misses Ida and Minnie Bogner went to Fort Wayne to spend Sunday. Henry Swartz went to Fort Wayne Saturday evening on the 4 o’clock car. Homer Knodle, who is working at Fort Wayne, spent Sunday here with friends. Leo Yager was home from Toledo to spend Sunday with his sister and brothers. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Lachot and son, Dewey, spent Sunday with relatives in Bluffton. Miss Rose Klein'uenz was clerking at the Steele & Weaver racket store Saturday. To Substantial Success fl Is a savings account in this institution. fl If you will steer your course through life with a savings account as a pilot you are certain to reach the harbor of old age comfort and contentment. fl You should take the pilot aboard today at 3 pr ct interest. THE OLD Adams Coun iy Bank
808 O ■ O ■ O ■ O 10800808080808080808 o J. s. Bowers, Pres. F. M. Schirmeyer, Vice Pres. ■ ■ O ■ ■ The Bowers Realty company begs to call your o g attention to the fact of its having cheap. money to ■ i loan on approved security on most favorab O ■ also to tender its service in negotiating new loans ■ £ or renewals of old loans or assisting in funding and o 8 Placing in one loan scattered indebtedness for a ■ S borrower. <2 The company also wants to state O > that it handles all kinds of real estate, f *™ s J ■ for sale in every township m the county, has dwel- g O lings and business rooms and vacant lots in Deca ■ ■ turgßeroe and Monroe. The Company is well O [ equipped to handle these matters> and requite that ■ B any one interested call and discuss them wit . O G ■ ■ 2 The Bowers Realty Co. ■ French Quinn, Secty. g BOROBOBOBOBOBOOBOBOBOBOBOBOB
John Holthouse was a business caller at Bluffton Saturday. J. W. Tyndall was a business caller at LaOtto Saturday. Miss Nora Weber went to Waterloo Saturday afternoon to visit with Miss Hoffelder. Miss Blanch Ervin went to For* Wayne Saturday afternoon for a visit with friends. Miss Kate Ginley went to Fort Wayne Saturday afternoon for a visit with friends. Miss Vivian Closs has entered the Fort Wayne Business college for a commercial course. Ray Teeple, day operator at the Frie tower, has been on the sick list for the past few days. Mrs. Laura Wisehaupt and Mrs. Lavina Acker were guests of Irvin Acker and family Saturday. The Misses Emma and Bertha Bieberlch went to Fort Wayne Saturday fcr a visit with friends. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Lachot left Saturday for Bluffton to spend Sunday with the former's sister, Mrs. S. H. King. Mrs. P. K. Kinney and children returned from Fort Wayne, where they have been visiting with relatives a fewdays. P. K. Kinney came home Saturday evening from Geneva, where he was looking after some real estate business. Ethel A. Vernon, general representative of Dr. J. B. Lynas & Son of Logansport, was a business visitor here Saturday. Carl Hannah of Fort Wayne was visiting with friends in this city Saturday evening, returning home on the evening train. Miss Bertha Schultz returned home yesterday from Fort Wayne, where she has been visiting with relatives and friends. Miss Bertha Cunningham arrived Saturday from Anderson for a week's visit with the Misses Ode and Letta Fullenkamp. John Davis, Matt Thomas, Albert Spuller and Jacob Longenbarger have returned from a few days’ visit in Michigan. Chauncey Lautzenheiser of Berne was a business visitor here Saturday. Mr. Lautzenheiser is deputy prosecuting attorney. Martin Marhenke of Monmouth went to Fort Wayne Saturday afternoon to call on his mother at the Lutheran hospital. Edward Opliger of Linn .Grove, who was the guest of his brother, L. E. Opuger, during the institute, left yesterday for his home.
J. P. Baker made a business trip to Fort Wayne Saturday. John Gross was a business visitor In Fort Wayne Saturday. Messrs. Elton Potter and John Ixiucks of Bluffton spent Sunday with John Harvey and family. J. S. McCrory and daughter, Martha, went to Van Wert Saturday afternoon to visit with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Peters and children of Magley went to Ft. Wayne Saturday for a visit with friends. Miss Wilma Smith went to Monmouth to spend Saturday afternoon with her cousin, Pauline Evans. Mrs. John Sanford and daughter, Elsie, and niece, CJleo Tru, went to Fort Wayne Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Henry Bowman, a prominent lady living north of this city, is said to be lying at the point of death. Miss Beatrice Coffelt of Root township was a shopper here Saturday, returning home on the 4 o’clock car. Nflson Bricker of Geneva, who attended the county institute here last week, left Saturday for his home. L. C. Waring of the Waring Glove company has returned from a several weeks’ outing at his cottage near Lake Manistique, Mich. Messrs. James and John Price and eon, William, of Clinton, motored to this county, where they are guests of John Harvey and family. Mrs. Jacob Baker and granddaughters, Susan and Leona Brandyberry, of a mile southeast of Monroe, were shoppers in the city Saturday. Mrs. Lizzie Shermann and Mr. and Mrs. John Harting of Cincinnati, Ohio, arrived yesterday for a week's visit with William Harting and family. Albert Scheumann was on duty at the interurban office Saturday afternoon after attending business college in Fort Wayne during the week. TKe Misses Agnes Kohne and Naomi Niblick will leave a week from next Monday to attend the Sacred Heart Academy near Fort Wayne. The Misses Josephine and Lettie Lang left Saturday byway of Fort Wayne for Cincinnati, where they will spend a week with friends. Mrs. George McKain and children of Granite City, 111., who have been visiting with friends ilbr several weeks, left Saturday for their home. Agnes and Frances Coffee, Genevieve Bremerkamp and Dessie Mann were clerks at the Clarence Baughman five and ten cent store Saturday.
Ben Garard returned from Portland, where he attended the fair and visited with his sister, Miss Lilly Garard, superintendent of the Jay county hospital. Walter Shafer and Everett Ihrie of Kendallville transferred here on their way home from Spencerville. Ohio, where they had been visiting with friends. Mr. and Mrs John Hessler and her mother, Mrs. Frank Parent, and Miss Mildred Coffee went to Fort Wayne Saturday afternoon for a visit with friends. , Charles German passed through the city Saturday noon enroute to Wren, Ohio, to spend Sunday at his home. While here he was the guest of J. B. Kiracofe. Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Brown of Ada, Ohio, who have been visiting relatives at Willshire, Ohio, transferred here Saturday afternoon on their way to Fort Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. John Voglewede left Saturday for Rome City, where they will make arrangements for the closing up of their cottage at that place for the season. Miss Rose Bell Ladene returned Saturday afternoon to Fort Wayne after working in the city the past week in the interest of the LaSalle University Extension Company of Chicago. Med Miller, the artist, is painting one of his artistic signs on the window of the Bowers Realty company. The sign will form a sort of lower curtain border, and will make a very handsome one when completed. John Glancey and children, Mrs. George Henneford and children and Mrs. John D. Meyers left Saturday for Linn Grove, where they were in attendance at the Meyers-Klofenstein reunion, which was held at that place. Charles Massony, clerk at the William Colchin candy kitchen, was lucky in the solving of the King piano puzzle, which has been in the Fort Wayne papers for some time. This morning he received a certificate for one hundred and twenty-five dollars, good in making a purchase of one of their famous pianos. , Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Baughman of the five and ten cent store have returned from Nappanee, where they have been assisting Edington Bros, in getting ready for the opening of their new store, which took place Saturday. They have a very nice store on one of the main street corners, which is considered the best location in town.
Chauncey Lautzenheiser of Berne was a business visitor here today. Ben Fosty of Toledo, Ohio, visited yesterday with his uncle, P. K. Kinney and family, Tracy Nelson and Glen Falk made a trip to Van Wert, Ohio, yesterday on their motorcycles. Miss Mary Bogner resumed work at the Schlickman & Girod restaurant this morning after a vacation. Tom McKain left Saturday for his home at Granite City, 111., after a several weeks' visit here with friends. Miss Zelma Steele, cashier for the True & Runyon store, returned to her work this morning after a two weeks' vacation. Mrs. Charles Mathewson of Pleasant Mills, who has been quite sick with symptoms of typhoid fever, is getting better. Fern and Ray Ashton passed through the city on their way to Foit Wayne from a visit with friends in Elgin, Ohio. Miss Anna Parent left Saturday for Montreal, Canada, where she will visit relatives and attend the Suchrist congress in session there. Mrs. Margaret Fisher and children. Catherine, Alma and John Bowers, returned to Montpelier after a visit here with Mrs. Fisher’s daughter, Mrs. John L. McClure. Harry A. Hart of Montpelier is in the city and expects to remain during the Great Northern Indiana fair. He is visiting relatives and his many friends in this city. Mrs. Charles Barnhart of Attica, who is visiting with relatives here, went to Bluffton today to order some goods for their racket store through Morris & Company. Dr. D. D. Clark has returned much improved from Mt. Clemens, Mich., where he, with his daughter, Miss Anna, have been spending the past two weeks at the sanitarium. Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Heller returned last evening from Ray, Indiana, where they had been visiting several days, going there from Rome City, where they spent two weeks. Miss Lydia Dornsief, who has been visiting since July Ist with her parents, the Rev. and Mrs. Dornsief, of northeast of the city, will leave next Saturday for Cleveland, Ohio, where she will teach a primary class in a school there. Misses Madge and Mary Hite, Ethel Barkley, Oscar Hoffman, Ralleigh Parrish and Morton Willicuts of Greentown, Ohio, have returned from Rome City, where they enjoyed a week’s outing. They caught many fish and report a fine time. Earl Kidd of Cliffton Springs, N. ¥., visited with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Milton Kidd, returning Saturday to Cliffton Springs. He came here from Chicago, where he was the guest of his brother, Don Kidd, the marriage of the latter taking place last Wednesday. F. W. Buckner of Poneto, who has been attending the Portland fair, passed through here Saturday afternoon or his way to Fort Wayne. Mr. Buckner has a number of horses which he exhibits at fairs, among them being “Lone Pacer,” which is a highly trained horse, and gives a number of exhibitions alone. She will be placed on exhibition at the Decatur fair and is said to be quite a worthy exhibition.
SAFETY AND PAYMENT OF Four Per Cent Interest on certificates of deposit left one year make this BANK an excellent place for your savings and idle money THE First National BANK DECATUR INDIANA
I; Big School Day Sale! | I > / T r TTT7' old school bell has begun to ring and the boys and girls will I nlj soon be all back to the best place on earth. To make things Li x pleasant come to our store and get your school supplies. We have |i«• most anything needed in the line at the lowest prices in the city. I SPECIALISE. Lead Pencils worth 5 cents each go at J GENT 3 ! TABLETS J The big ones of all kinds. The ones that make the little fellow all swelli ed up at sc. Pencil boxes filled for sc. Pens, pen holders, ink, rules, crayons, slates, and in fact everything in the line. Don’t pay high prices for stuff when it can be bought for less money. RIB BO NS and Sweater Coats O'-'t 3! 4 ( & H S — liil la in I!i ■ Scarfs and a hundred other ar- IS £3 01 a S tides to make the school days UMBRELLAS pleasant. Rainy'weather is coming. We have a nice new line on sale at 50 and 98c. HOSIER V Handkerchiefs ft tWI The kind that wear. |OOO whitc and Fancy Hand- » B ttW at kerchiefs f g lo ° ls ‘ 25C 2forsc £ Remember the place and when in to the fair. Make our store your head- 43 quarters we will take care of your wraps etc. I The RACKET Store ! STEELE& WEAVER S Telephone Number 144
* < * The Most Complete « « Line of High Grade < » < I Smoking - Chewing I •TOBACCO; * Carried is the city at * * T.C. Corbett’s ! * Cigar Store * » * t*************>
I MAKE OUR STORE YOUR HEADi QUARTERS DURING THE FAIR J Ini hk ih m ■ We will appreciate your patronage and @ | will welcome you. We sell: Lj || Nt». ni nc [] 3 AllJKinds of Drugs, Fill Prescriptions, Handle a 0 n Complete Line of School Supplies, Big Line of h the Latest Postal Cards. Drug Novel- L ties of All Kinds Kept in Stock. u Im jb m m WE*WANT YOUR BUSINESS-CALL ON US. I U m in' a I LACHOT AND RICE. I
+ j HALE ♦ | SEEDS, COAL AND FEED | * Portland Cement, Gypsum Rock Wall t : Plaster, Lime and Salt ♦ • We make a specialty of furnishing Seed Goods good ♦ ; in quality and low in price. X i Call, Write or Phone No. 8. 201 S. 2nd. St. |
