Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 8, Number 275, Decatur, Adams County, 21 November 1910 — Page 3
You’ll Look A Long While —before you’ll find shoes to equal our $3. grade for young men. We are showing Goodyear welted shoes in Gun Metal and Veluer Cald leathers, Hi-To and conservative last, Button and Blucher styles. These shoes have solid insoles, counters and outsoles and you’ll like the styles. Let me show you. Men’s $3.00 Charlie Voglewede The Shoe Seller
J BVe Mean l!fou I Have YOU a savings Account? IT What do YOU do with surplus earnings? Bpend them? I [ The better way is to save Bhem for theres no telling j what thefuture has in store Bor you-distress or an opBurtunity. In either case B ready supply of money B i'l be decidedly welcome. | We pay 3 per ct. interest Bn deposits. • THE OLD kdams Ccuntj Bank
i/The Theory That 1 ft “Talk is Cheap” 1 [ Does not take into consideration the ■ i fact that it has cost a good many jobs. I But we are still “on the job talking r about the good qualities of the rr H i L j STAG” Ciger, there is nothing cheap I about it but the price sc. A MILD, 1 ? COOL, EVEN BURNING, FRAGRANT [ and easy smoker. EVERY PUPF 4 PLEASES THE PALATE. L| |V\ For Sale by All Dealers. 3 Jy Sob o ® o a o s o aoßODSonosoaoßoaoHoa | J. S. Bowers, Pres. F. M. Sehirmeyer, Vice Pres, a G 8S B ° ? zr ° F The Bowers Realty company have to offer sev- B O eral forty acre pieces o y f land well proved near £ g Decatur at terms and prices that wiU ■ g & you. The company also has mw a 100 acre tarm, o O a96 acre farm, a 75 acre farm, a 53 acre Q B that are very attractive. , . * 5 Der cen £ g 0 '*"*'* The company also has plenty or P -e S money. H O 8 | B o £ The Bowers Realty Co. iff M French Quinn, Secty. O
«G*o*O*O*O*O*O ♦ o*o*o*o*o* ; WEATHER FORECAST I *o*o*o ♦ o*o*o*o*o*o*o* Generally fair tonight and Tuesday; slightly cooler tonight; warmer Tuesday. Mac McKinney of Wren was in the city over Sunday. Oscar Hoffman returned to his work at Newcastle this moping. Mrs.. Sarah Mercer of William visited over Sunday with John Houk and family. Miss Nellie Snellon of Willshire, Ohio, visited here Saturday with friends. Mr. and Mrs. David Archer of Pleasant Milla were shoppers here Saturday afternoon. John A. Barkley of Union township was a business visitor here Saturday afternoon. Noah Frauhiger, the Preble auctioneer, was a business caller here Saturday afternoon. Bud Brokaw returned to his work at Fort Wayne after spending Sunday here with bis family. John Zehr and daughter, Miss Catherine, and Miss Mary Weller of Geneva were in the city as the guests of Jacob Eady and A. Stuckey families ! over Sunday.
John Davis was working at Monroe today. R. B. Gregory left today for Redkey, where he is working. Mrs. Allie Foughty made a business trip to Fort Wayne this morning. Charles Pennington made a business trip to Fort Wayne this morning. Dan Beery and Abe Boch were business callers at Kendallville today. William Van Camp returned to Geneva this morning, where be is working. Attorney Jacob Butcher of Geneva was a business caller in the city today. But two more days until Thanksgiving day. In the meantime we have much to be thankful for. Dallas Butler left this mcfrning for Kendallvile, where he is engaged in doing some cement work.
Kit Cowan, the hustling business man of Bobo, was here Saturday and gave this office a pleasant call. Will Berling of Bluffton, who spent Sunday here with friends, left last evening for his place of business. E. C. Schwartz of Chicago spent Sunday here the guest of Fred Linn and family and other relatives. John Scbug left this morning on his regular trip south, after making an over-Sunday stay here with his family. Mr .and Mrs. Frank Beckworth of Nottawa, Mich., were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Merry over Sunday. The Misses Grace Butler and Mabel Harb returned this morning from Berne, where they spent Sunday with Mrs. Harve Rice. Miss Helen Evans, who has been the guest of her parents over Sunday, left this morning for Berne to take up her school work. Mrs. W. H. Wagner and son, Stanford, of Monroe returned Saturday from a several days’ visit with relatives in Fort Wayne. Mrs. George Morris of Bluffton visited here with her sisters, Mesdames Charles Meyers and D. F. Quinn, and their father, R. D. Patterson. Mr. and Mrs. F. B. Porter of Parker City arrived this afternoon for a several days’ visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Porter and fam'Zfy. A baby daughter, born to Mr. and Mrs. Allie Cookson, is one of the new arrivals at Salem. The babe is a grandchild oT Mrs. R. A. Davis of this city. Fred Hoffman and son, Oscar, left this morning for Newcastle to resume their work o nthe school house at that place for which they have the contract. Mrs. Marie Shire of Lagrange, who has been visiting here for several day* with Mr. and Mrs. John Helm, and other relatives, left thia morning for her home. Albert Scheumann, who is taking a course in the Fort Wayne business college uring the week, served as usual as extra clerk at the traction office Saturday afternoon.
Howard Wisehaupt, who is teaching at Bern*, was not at homo to spend Sunday with his parents, but taught Saturday that he might come home Thanksgiving for the remainder of the week. Mr. and Mrs. George Bauserman, arrived here Saturday to attend the funeral of their granddaughter, Catherine, little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Barkley, which was held Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Elton Brown and children returned this morning to Hicksville, Ohio, after attending the funeral of the babe of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Barkley, which was held yesterday afternoon. The next number of the iyceum course under the auspices of the high school will be the lecture to be given November 29th by Robert Parker Miles, the well known author, lecturer and traveler, and promises to be one of the best of the series. Miss Blanche Dibble returned today from a week’s visit with her brother, Otis Dibble, and wife at Paulding, Ohio. Mrs. Otis Dibble accompanied her here and Mr. Dibble will join them Wednesday for an over-Thanks-giving visit with their parents, the F. W. Dibble and Will Butler families. The very latest up-to-the-second street fakir that has yet struck town held forth Saturday afternoon and eveving on the court house corner in a brand new red automobile instead of the regulation canvas-covered buggy, with horse to match. He sold a big bottle of some kind of dandelion compound with a few extra red hand bills thrown in—all for a dollar —and raked in many shekels. Dido will have the swellest stock to select from of any jewelry store in the city. Mark what I say! And at prices that will make you all think, for he wants to cut down stock to pay more attention to the repair work. —Didot, the Jeweler, on north side of court house. 273t3 ■ , - -It
TO LIVE IN MINNESOTA. On next Saturday morning the Misses Ruth and Lucile Buhler will leave for St. Cloud, Minn., with the expectation of making that place their home. They have a number of relatives there and will live with their uncles, George Hubbard and Guy Beatty, both school professors, and the Misses Buhler will become students In their schools. They go to the Minnesota city to make their home because of the death of their mother, which occurred a few weeks ago, and although the family circle will be broken to some extent, Mr. Buhler feels that the girls will have better educational, and other advantages than If they remained here. Mr. Buhler will remain here with the two smaller children and carry on his business as heretofore. B. & O. TRAINS COLLIDED. Wreck at Mt. Vernon This Mcrning— Wreckage Caught Fire and Burne a . (United Press Service.! Mt. Vernon, Ind., Nov. 20 —(Special to Daily Democrat) —Running fifty miles an hour, B. & O. Southwestern passenger train No. 7 crashed into the rear of freight train No. 51, at the eastern limits of this city this morning. Engineer Hatfield and Fireman Thompson were badly hurt when they jumped. Hatfield will die. The wreckage caught fire and the local fire deparement was called out to quench the flames. No passengers were injured. (> HAS SORE HAND. , Ben Beckmeyer, a prominent farmer living on Route 1 was in the citv this morning, having his left hand bandaged up, as a result of a large boll on the back of that member. He has noticed it coming for some time, and on last. Friday, while husking corn, ran a stubble into the sore, causing poison. He is having it treated daily and it will have to be handled very carefully until it heals. o John Weber and son, Leo, were Fort Wayne business visitors Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Hower of Anderson will visit here over Thanksgiving with relatives. Airs. Clem Lengerick and Neal Gase went to Wapakoneta. Ohio, today to attend the funeral of their cousin, Albert Neumeyer. Mrs. Alex Parks transferred here this morning on her way to her home at Fort Wayne from a visit in Willshire, Ohio. The funeral of Mary Catherine, eight-months-old babe of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Barkley, was held Sunday afternoon from the Evangelical chureh with interment in the Decatur ceme tery. — —— Womea desiring neauty get weader ful help from Bucklen’e Arnica Salve It banishes pimples, skin eruptions, sores and boils. It maksa tks skin soft and veivety. it glorifies ths face. Cures sore eyes, cold sores, cracked lips, chapped hands. Best for burns itcalds, fever sores, cuts, bruises and piles. 25 cents at all druggists. * — SAVED AN- IOWA MAN’S LIFE.
The very grave seemed to yiwi before Robert Madsen, of West Burlington, lowa, when, after- aevaa weks in th« hospital, four of the beet physicians gave him up. Then was shown the marvelous curative power of months of frightful suffering from liver trouble and yellow jaundice, getting no help from other remedies or doctors, five bottels of this matchless medicine completely cured him. It’s positively guaranteed for Stomach, Liver and Kidney troubles and never disappoints.« Only 50 cents at all druggists. Croup is most prevalent during the dry cold weather of the early winter months. Parents of young children should be prepared for it. Al that is needed is a bottle of Chamberlin's Cough Remedy. Many mothers are never wiahout it in their homes and it has never disappointed them. Sold by all dealers. NOT SORRY FOR BLUNDER. “If my friends hadn’t blundered in thinking I was doomed victim of consumption, I might not be alive now,” writes D. T. Sanders, of Harrodsburg, Ky., “but for years they saw*every attempt to cure a lung-racking cough fail At last I tried Dr. King’s New Discovery. The effect was wonderful. It soon stopped the cough and I am now in better health than I have had for years This wonderful life-saver is an unrivaled remedy for caughs, colds, lagrippe, asthma, croup, hemorrhages, whooping cough or weak lungs. 50c and sl. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by all druggists. - . .. O Democrat Want Ads Pay.
is I V \I/ bJ wfe £ X, L-EkS-* OF If® jg®gP • Copyright Hart Schaffner & Man Here’s to you and your family and your friends; We hope you’ll all be together Thanksgiving day and be thankful that you are together; that you’ll be together in spirit if you are absent from each other in fact; that the feast will be good; and that you’ll all be happy. Speaking about clothes-nobody was, but we’re going to-Good clothes such as we sell are a cause for thanksgiving to the average man’ it’s one of the blessings of life which you enjoy, that you have in this town . s ore like this, selling such clothes as we sell, at such prices a3 we ask for them. They’re made for us and you by HART SCHAFFNER & MARX Suits and Overcoats for all tastes; ready-to-wear. SUITS $lB to $25. OVERCOATS sls to $25. We’ll supply you with all the other good things t© wear you may need, for dress or business use, shirts, neckwear, underwear, hosiery, gloves, waistcoats; all here. HOLTHOUSE, SCHULTE & COMPANY. GOOD CLOTHES SELLERS FOR MEN AND BOYS. Our store will be closed Thanksgiving Day.
Didot the jeweler, was obliged io withdraw his ads from this paper on account of the fact that he das overrushed with work, but now he again asks the public to remember him in your next job.—bidot, the Jeweler, north side of court house. 273t3 k Democrat Want Ads Pay.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK DECATIJRMNfJIANA Interest “person nufti* Paid on Certificatear'leftl2 ' Months. Tv .■■ 'ms ' hMiMfl vfrfrrr'i:. * '' Interest Paid on Months. I). BtWW/ A. Kuebler I < A «tV Sprang ' F C . M - ?iC * $ 1 oo 090 00
fOIEYSOEINOLAXATIVE JOIEYSKIDNEYBUS Too Stomach Trouble and Constipation Fob Backache Kiokcvsano Blaooch ( Turkey goes With | 11 Thanksgiving. | And you can’t do the TURKEY justice > unless you have a CARVER that will carve him properly. We have a nice s line of them in ■ Silver and Stag Handles I I and at prices that are right. SEE ■ ( THEM IN OUR WINDOW. Don’t for- 1 ■ get we are giving 10 per cent off on all ■ purchases for Christmas this month. ■ W Purchase now and get the cream of the stock. We are D conceited enough to say we have the most up-to-date K 3g stock that was ever shown in the city and we did not S forget quality when buying. ■MMbmi wMMMK'O a .r»i>«nni«Bii.jii Mawu&'USBMK ■ I W. L LEHNE, Jeweler. Decatur I
