Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 8, Number 238, Decatur, Adams County, 8 October 1910 — Page 3

ASK any shoeman and he will tell you that the finest womens shoes are made in Rochester N. Y. Ask any woman and she will tell you that we sell the finest womens shoes. 1 Reeds For Women $3.00 T 1 $3.50 and $4.00 I I Charlie Voglewede The Shoe Seller I I

■■ ' *■ eo»o*e-' ♦ o*o*o*o*o* !WEAHicR FORECAST? 0 2 ♦ o*o*o»o*o*o*o* Fair tonight and Sunday; warmer tonight. Ed Parent was a business caller at Fori Wayne today. John Koenig of St. Mary’s, Ohio, was a business visitor here today. J. F. Snow made a business trip to Fort Wayne today. Albert Burke was a Fort Wayne business visitor today. William Sellemeyer of Magley was a business visitor in the city yesterday. Don Miller of Kokomo visited last evening in the city the guest of friends. Charles Christen was a business caller at Geneva, returning home this afternoon. Rev. and Mrs. G. Bauer of Union township were visitors in the city yesterday, shopping. Mrs. Charles Kistler of Chicago, Ohio, arrived for a few days’ visit with her grandfather, John Shosenburg. We Mean You Have YOU a savingsaccount? What do YOU do with your surplus earnings? Spend them? The better way is to save them for theres no telling what the future has in store for you-distress or an opportunity. In either case a ready supply of money will be decidedly welcome. We pay 3 per ct. interest on deposits. THE OLD Adams Bank

■oh o ■ o h o ■ O HOHO?30HOHOBOHOHOHOH o J. s. Bowers, Pres. F. M. Schirmeyer, Vice Pres. ■ ■ O ■ B The Bowers Realty company begs to call your o , attention to the fact of its having cheap money to ■ O loan on approved security on most favorable terms o ■ also to tender its service in negotiating new loans ■ £ or renewals of old loans or assisting in f unding and o O placing in one loan scattered indebtedness tor a ■ H borrower, q The company also wants to state O O that it handles all kinds of real estate, has farms ■ for sale in every township in the county, has dwel2 lings and business rooms and vacant lots m Deca- 0 ® tur, Berne and Monroe. The Company is well O ] equipped to handle these matters an d requests tha t ' any one interested call andjdiscuss them with us. O © ■ ■ B The Bowers Realty Co. .> French Quinn, Secty. £ ■ ■ OHOHOIOIOHOIOHOHOHOIOHOHOHOH

• John Schug returned home from a business trip to Richmond. Miss Iva Lett of near Bobo was a business visitor here yesterday. ' Mrs. John Bucher of Root township was a shopper in the city yesterday. Mrs. L. N. Grandstaff of Monmouth was a shopper here yesterday. Mrs. Charles Omler and daughter, Dolores, went to Fort Wayne this morning for a visit. Mrs. Elijah Mann and Mrs. John Amspaugh went to Fort Wayne this morning for the day. The Misses Mary and Cora Steele of Kirkland township were shopping in the.city yesterday. George Henneford left today for Indianapolis, where he will look after business for several days. Mrs. D. F. Quinn and daughter, Reba, went to Monmouth yesterday ! afternoon on the 4 o’clock car. Miss Rose Dunathan left yesterday afternoon for Huntington, where she will spend the week-end with friends. The Misses Antinetta and Genevieve Gast of Celina, Ohio, arrived in the city for an over-Sunday visit with relatives. Appropriate religious services will be held Sunday in all of the city's churches to which the public is cordially invited. Mrs. William Hege returned this morning to her home in South Bend after a visit with her sister. Mrs. L. W. Coppock. Albert Numbers went to Fort Wayne where be was looking after some business for a short while during the day. Mrs. E. D. Ward arrived rrorn Bluffton yesterday for a visit until Sunday evening with her sister, Mrs. L. H. Purdy, and family. Miss Fanny Brown, who has been teaching in Ohio, passed through the city this morning on her way to her home in Fort Wayne. John Bucher of Root township, who has been suffering from ptomaine poisoning since last Sunday, supposed to have been caused by eating bologna sausage, was able to sit up yesterday for the first since becoming sick. He is recovering gradually. GAS CONSUMERS Oct. 10th. is the last day to pay Gas Bills to obtain discount. PLEASE CALL AT OFFICE

Ed Vancil has returned from a business trip to Fort Wayne. Mrs. Reuben Baxter of Monmouth shopped in the city yesterday. P. G. Williams was in charge of the Moser studio at Geneva today. Chauncey Lautzenbefser of Berne was a business visitor here today. John Hendricks of' Monroe was a business caller in the city today. Miss Lilah Lachot was acting as clerk at the Charles Voglewede shoe store today. Mont Fee has returned from his regular trip and will spend Sunday with his family. Ed Bailey arrived home from his regular trip and will spend Sunday with his family, P. E. Kinney and family of Celina, Ohio, will spend Sunday with his cousin, P. K. Kinney and family. Mrs. Julia Colchin and daughter. Rose, attended the funeral of Lloyd Davis in Root township this morning. Burt Hower left this morning for Muncie, where he will visit with his sisters, Mrs. Arthur Ford and Miss Vera Hower. Mrs. J. B. Stanley returned this morning to her home in Logansport after making a visit with her daughter, Mrs. L. W. Coppock. Sam Schindler, wife and daughter, Erna, accompanif ’ his brother, Henry Schindler, and family to their home in Berne, where they will visit over Sunday. Miss Edna Ehinger, who has beeff on the sick list for some time, is steadily improving, and is now thought to be on the way to perfect health. Mrs. J. R. Porter left today for Parker City to visit with her sons. She was accompanied by her little granddaughter. Leah Porter, who has been visiting here. Joe Gase and daughter, Miss Bertha, left yesterday afternoon on the 4 o’clock car tor Lester, Ohio, where they were called by the death of his brother, Anthony Gase. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Edge and son, Lee, and daughter, Helen, of Springfield, Mo,, arrived yesterday for a visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Edge, of North Fifth street. Mrs. John Fitzpatrick of Mannington, W. Va., who has been visiting at Montpelier, has arrived to join her mother-in-law, Mrs. Anna Fitzpatrick, of Cincinnati, Ohio, in a visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Gallogly. Mrs. Clem Keller and two children, who for some time have been visiting with friends in Kentucky, returned home Friday evening. Mr. Keller, who has also been there for several months, is expected home in the morning. Mrs. Mina Nickey of Buffalo, N. Y., who was called here by the serious illness of her sister. Mrs. Martha Dutcher, of Monmouth, was in the city this morning on business. She stated that Mrs. Dutcher has been lying at the point of death for several days, and that her death is expected hourly. Four fine Duroc hogs, sold at the Nidlinger sale Thursday, were shipped over the Fort Wayne & Springfield railway, two going to New Hampshire, Ohio; two Convoy, Ohio. The Wells-Fargo Express company also handled a fine lot, going to purchasers in Huntington and Butler. The retail merchants of the city are receiving invitations to be the guests at a theater party at the new Shubert Murat theater in Indianapolis Thursday night, October 20th. The invitation comes from the Indianapolis Trade Association and in addition to the theater party the retail merchants are invited to attend a smoker and vaudeville in the banquet hall of the Murat Temple, Wednesday night, October 19th, and to view an elaborate industrial parade Tuesday night, October 18th. The October Everybody's contains the first installment of a new serial story by Rex Beach, entitled ’’The Ne’er-Do-Well.” Five years ago the first novel of the young writer, ’’The Spoilers,” was published serially in Everybody’s with instant recognition. In the new story Mr. Beach is said to do for the Carribbean what “The Spoilers” did for Bering sea in depicting the life and activities of an American outpost. It is a plot-ro-mance of the Panama canal, full of dramatic movement and power. Grandma Bealer, who makes her home with her daughter, Mrs. John Fruchte, near Magley, is visiting with her son. John Bucher, in Root township for a few days, before going to Fort Wayne to be the guest of her daughter, Mrs. Chris Stecher, while the Fruchtes are moving to their new home in Fort Wayne. They expect to go in about two weeks. Mrs. Bealer, who is eighty-six years of age, is one of the oldest ladies of the county, but is in fairly good health. She was until a few years ago a resident of this city.

Miss Veda Hensley spent the day in I Fort Wayne. i Bruce Patterson was a Fort Wayne 1 visitor Friday evening. i Kit Cowan of Bobo was a business caller In our city today. Miss Rose Kleinhenz was clerking at the Steele & Weaver store today. : The Misses Naomi Dugan and Lil- I Han Rice went to Fort Wayne for the i day. Mr. Moore, a well known contrac- < tor of Indianapolis, was a business j visitor here this morning. Tom Colchin will spend Sunday in 1 the city after being in Fort Wayne, ■ where he is taking a course in college. j Mrs. Isadore Kai ver and son, Rob- I ert, left today for Chicago, where they I will visit relatives and friends for a j few days. A number of ladies will go to Fort j Wayne tomorrow to spend the day ' with Mrs. Franks, who formerly re- j sided here. Fred Schaub will return home from ( Markle tomorrow. He has been looking after business interests there | since Friday. Albert Scheumann is clerking at the j interurban office after spending the j week at his studies at the Interna- i tional Business college, Fort Wayne. | Harold, eight-year-old son of Mr. j and Mrs. Reuben Gilpen, living east of ■ . fihe city, is very sick with typhoid fe- i ver. The lad has been ailing the past i s four or five days. Fred Miller will enter business col- j lege at Fort Wayne next Monday. : Florian Starost, who has been at- I tending college at Fort Wayne, is at ! home for an over-Sunday visit with , his parents. E. C. Arnold of Geneva, who is to , be the cashier for the new bank at that place, was in the city today attending to business pertaining to the opening of the institution, which will be in a few weeks. . The Ladies’ Aid society of the U. B. church conducted a successful pastry sale today. Pumpkin pies, warm ' from the oven, with their spicy fragrance, went “like hot cakes,” and sold as fast as they could be taken from the oven. The ladies wish in this way to express their thanks for the liberal patronage. o— — REV. SPETNAGEL DETAINED. Rev. R. Spetnagel, who has been at Chillicothe, Ohio, the past week at ’ the bedside of his father, Theodore I Spetnagel, who was obliged to submit | . to an operation, was expected home i 1 today, but a message Friday evening to Mrs. Spetnagel brought the tidings that he could not be here ' As no details were given, it is supt posed that the father ip not doing so ■ well as expected and this prevented ■ his return. —o I SERVE SUPPER THIS EVENING. I The ladies of section four of the German Reformed Aid society who gave the chicken dinner today noon in the building adjoining this office, had : unprecedented success, the ideal ( weather being a great drawing sea- ; ’ ture. They will also serve supper, and during the evening hot hamburger sandwiches and coffee. Hon J. W. Kern will be their guest at supper. 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 I

j This Store Stands Well jj I Prepared to Serve You | Golden Autumn never found us so well prepared to provide the require- ft ft ments of our customers, and never have stocks so splendidly complete, so di- ft 3 versified in character, so comprehensive been assembled here for your viewing ft a and selection. ft h .... We have canvassed the markets for the best in everything, and wit 8 QUALITY for our watchword we insisted on procuring the kind of merchan- ft ft dise we knew would be demanded by you, the kind of goods we will be proud ft ft to hear you say was bought here. ft The new Fall styles and colorings are herein profusion and we invite ft you to come and learn what wonders the fashion moulders have worked in all ft S kinds of garments and accessories for women, misses and children. | The Boston Store |

CEMENT Just Arrived—Two Car Loads of Atlas “World’s Best” When you buy Atlas you take no chances. •J Liechty Bros & Co. MONROE, IND.

’=JS- WJ——— a ———— — »•*■**■*■•O"""“■ *""* iij j)6BdWp Up ■ Yowfcfes 1 Scores of women will do it this I'l! winter, in some poor, old base burner; and they’ll get very little HHI warm th ou t it, too. Don’t you think it would be a good idea * to buy a First Class Favorite Base Bur--1 jOL ner > with Triple Exposed Flues, and save enough on your coal bills this winter to buy a new dress in the spring ? It is a positive fact — the_Favorite does burn =e====^= ==^=^ >^ less coal and throwiTout more neat tnan i any. other, base burner made. It took an organized body of stove ex- _ perts nearly fifty years to perfect it. Jfe_ There is no other Base Burner like it, because the features that make it such a wonderful and economical heater are patented. It is the most attractive and best made stove, too. \ In the Triple exposed Flues you will find one /\ hs ’® reason why it will save fully one half on your \ B coal bills. But there are many other \( @g| g. reasons—too many to mention here, m Come and see us, and we will show J ** p J you that there is no other base |l burner that will compare with If the Favorite. II Come In And Let Us Talk It Over || Schafer f+ardwafc Co. |y

F' O R SALE! 50 acre farm, located four miles from this city, good (five ’room house, a bam 36x60, and other outbuildiugs, well fenced and well tiled, on gravel road, soil is nearly all black sandy loam. This is an extra good farm and you can buy worth the money, fl We also handle North Dakota and Canada lands. Come up and see our list before you buy. (Office over Bums Hamess Store.) Decatur, Indiana. FRUCHTE & LITTERER s s ssssssssssss $ WE HAVE 100,000 $ $ Which we want to loan: before March Ist. If you 0 are thinking of loan be sure and see us. W SOur terms are right. x The Graham Insurance Company. z Q Offices in Morrison Block. sssss ssssssss