Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 9, Number 125, Decatur, Adams County, 27 May 1911 — Page 3
Gypsy One of the most comfortable, most dainty Oxfords that we have fitted in a long time is a new three button Gypsy pattern suede. This pattern allows extreme comfort because there is no seam in the inside ball and give the foot free action at that point The forepart is very short with a small wing tip. If you want to experience extreme comfort in a pair of Oxfords try a pair of these. Ladies $3.00 Charlie Voglewede The Shoe Seller
I WEATHER FORECAST I ? ~0.0.0.0.0.0,0. ( —: Fair and continued warm tonight and Sunday; increasing cloudiness Sunday; cooler Sunday night Mrs. Chalmer Schafer was a Fort Wayne visitor today. George W/»mhoff made a business trip to Fort Wayne today. Julius Haugk is at home from his quarry interests at Imboden, Ark. Miss Rose Egan left yesterday for Fort Wayne for a visit with relatives. William Scheier was attending to some business affairs at Monroe today. Raymond Bremerkamp was looking after business matters at Portland today. Dan Baumgartner has gone to Linn Grove to be the guest of his "mother over Sunday. John Schug made a business trip to Berne this morning, returning home on the afternoon train. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Burns left today for Indianapolis, where they will visit with relatives. While there they will meet Dr. and Mrs. Earl Coverdale and remain over Decoration day to take in the big automobile races. Miss Anna Adler of Linn Grove, who has been the guest of her sister, Mrs. Orval Harruff, returned this morning to her home. She was ac companied by her sister and Mr. Harruff, who will spend Sunday there.
s I I What’s the use of Grumping. < Try the Smile Producer | The WHITE STAG CIGAR I » It is a mild, cool, fragrant smoke g 3 Just what you’ve been looking for | I 5 cents at any Smoke Shop. | I I SOH 030 ISIOIO BOBODMOIOBOBOBOIOBOB • j s Bowers. Pres. F. M. Sehinneyer, Vice Pres. ■ 2 2 5 □ S g •a ■ 2 The Bowers Realty Company has some excel- g t> lent bargains in city property and Adams county ■ * farms The company would be pleased to have B £ vTu call at its office and see its offerings. The com- < * Lnv haA nlentv of five per cent money to loan on ■ 2 SS& Let P the Schirmeyer Abstract > 5 Company prepare your abstract of title. Twen y B g years experience, complete records. O O ® ■ • ■ O The Bowers Realty Go. ■ 5 French Quinn, Secty. O OBOBOBOiOIOBOBrfOBOOBOBaBOBO
Milton Girod returned from a business trip to Berne. Mrs. C. Rademaker was a Fort Wayne visitor yesterday. F. S. Armantrout of Geneva was a business visitor here yesterday. Editor Fred Roher of Berne was among the business callers in the elty today. z Mr. and Mrs. William Roop of St. Mary’s township were shoppers here yesterday. Agnes Voglewede and Mae Rademaker spent yesterday afternoon in Fort Wayne. Bernard Terveer and Norbert Holthouse were Fort Wayne visitors yesterday afternoon. Mrs. William McConnebey and Willie McConnehey went to Fart Wayne yesterday afternoon. A. J. Smith, who has been absent from the city for some time, looking after timber business, has returned home. Rev. Father Kohl of Columbia City arrived in the city yesterday noon to assist at services at the St. Mary's church. Mrs. Wflliam Draper and children went to Fort Wayne yesterday afternoon to visit with her sister, Mrs. Alfred Deam. Mr. and Mrs. George Purdy of Van Wert, Ohio, arrived today to spend Sunday with their cousin, L. H. Purdy, and family. Miss Huldah Loser returned yesterday to her home at Fort Wayne after visiting here with friends and attend-ll-rrg the commencement exercises.
Fre Bauman of Monroe township was a business visitor here today. * Floyd iSmith of Fort Wayne will spend Sunday here with his family. X. J. Smith and family have gone to Marion, Ind., to spend Sunday with friends Margaret Moran has returned from a several weeks' visit with relatives at Geneva. Irvin Acker went to Geneva yesterday afternoon to look after some business affairs. The Misses Rose and Bertha Bailey of Wren, Ohio, were In our city yesterday shopping. Mrs. Don Edwards and daughter, Isabelle, went to Fort Wayne today for a visit E. Woods has gone to Attica for a course of treatment at that famous watering place. Amos Steiner of Bluffton was In our city yesterday looking after some business affairs. V. A. Shumm, wife and child of Willshire, Ohio, changed cars here on their way to Fort Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. Adam Buettel and daughter, Adella, spent yesterday afternoon in Fort W’ayne. Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Lee and Miss Frances Laman spent yesterday afternoon in Fort Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. O. P. Edwards of Liepslc, Ohio, were here to attend the commencement exercises. Harve and Frank Liniger of Peterson changed cars here this morning on their way to Fort Wayne. Miss Irene Garard went to Fort Wayne yesterday afternoon for a visit with friends until Tuesday. Mont Fee returned home today from his regular trip and will remain over Sunday with his family here. Mrs. James Gibson left today for Huntertown to make a visit with the James Emerick family. Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Hoehammer left today for their home at Hedwlch, 111., after a visit here with friends. Mrs. Charles Moser and daughter, Dolores, and sister, Miss Ada Cowan, went to Fort Wayne for a visit. Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Baltzell were among the visitors at the Elks’ convention at Fort Wayne yesterday. Miss Martha Schinnerer of Willshire, Ohio, transferred here this morning on her way to Fort Wayne. | W. Butchner and children, Paula and Alma, of Schumm, Ohio, transferred here on their way to Fort Wayne. Irvin Acker, who for several days has been making a visit with his son, Sam, at Geneva, returned home today. The Samuel Butler home on West Monroe street, which was lately remodeled, is being handsomely painted. Mrs. Frank Winans and daughter, Miss Anna, left yesterday afternoon for Fort Wayne for a visit with friends. Mrs. J. C. Patterson and daughter, Marie, went to Winchester this afternoon for a visit over Decoration day with relatives. . Appropriate religious services will be held tomorrow in all of the city’s churches, to which the public ic cordially invited. Mr. and Mrs. D. V. Steele and daughter, Edna, will go to Fort Wayne tomorrow to visit with Mrs. Steele’s father, George Middleton. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Anker and daughter, Veronica, left this morning for Danville, 111., to make a several days’ visit with relatives. Father Kohl of Columbia City has returned to his home, he having been here to assist at first communion services at the St. Mary’s church this morning. Floyd Smith of Fort Wayne was , here today to witness the communion ! services at the St. Mary’s Catholic I church, this being the first communion of his daughter, Pascaline. Charles Colter returned from his regular trip to attend the commencement exercises; and yesterday morning left for the northern part of the state on other business. Mrs. R. R. Cooper, Miss Blanche Warden and Miss Mary McCune of Chicago, who have been representing an agency of that city, left yesterday afternoon for Fort Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Porter will leave Monday for Parker City, where they will spend the summer. They will do light housekeeping, their household goods having been shipped this week. Fred Longhenry of Columbus, Ohio, who has been visiting here with the M. P. Burdg and Harry Helm families, left this morning for Columbus. He was accompanied by his nephew, George Longhenry, who will spend the summer there. Mrs. John D. Hale and grandson, Robert Peterson, left this morning for Rome City, where they will spend Sunday. Today they put their cottage in shape to be used during the summer months, which will be in great demand for the next three or four months.
Miss Edith Gross went to Fort Wayne this afternoon for a visit with friends. Sheriff Thomas Durkin was at Geneva this afternon looking after some business affairs. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Kirchner of Preble went to Fort Wayne this afternoon for a visit with friends. William Schaffner of Willshire, returned to his home ofter being a visitor here this morning. Clem Uhl of Toledo will arrive in the city and spend Sunday as the guest of Miss Clara Terveer. Miss Rose Dunathan, principal of the Decatur high school, left today for her home in Van Wert, Ohio. The Kirsch, Sellemeyer & Sons and the Decatur Lumber company have agreed to close all day on May 30th. Mrs. N. J. Bauman and son, Lester, went to Portland this afternoon to spend Decoration Day with relatives. All the school children who are to bring flowers for Decoration Day services will please have them at the G. A. R. hall by 9 o'clock on Tuesday morning. Several candidates will be initiated into the Rebekahs next Tuesday night and other business of Importance, including election of officers, will come before the lodge. The Misses Agnes Meibers, Naomi Niblick, Margaret Clark and their guest, Miss Laura Lindemann, of Delphos, Ohio, attended the Eliks' mardi gras in Fort Wayne last evening. The Misses Esther and Elizabeth Gay returned this afernoon to their home at Marion, Ohio, after a visit with the J. L. Gay family, coming to attend the commencement exercvises. Charles Merryman will arrive tomorrow from Cardwell, Mo., to visit with his parents. Judge and Mrs. J. T. Merryman, until Monday, when he and his sister, Miss Frances Merryman, will leave for a trip through the west. Mrs. B. J. Terveer, who returned home from Fort Wayne, where she was with her daughter, Emma, at the hospital, will return this evening to allow Miss Clara, who has been there since her illness, to spend Sunday at home. Mrs. Jay Dorwin of Port Townsend, Wash., left for Bluffton, where she will be the guest of her brother, C. N. Coverdale, and family. EYom there I she will go to Marion to visit with her sister, Mrs. C. F. Alleger, and after two weeks will return here, where she will be at home to her friends, at the home of her mother, Mrs. H. L. Coverdale. Get out of tne rut. Do&’t use one kind of fertilizer for all kinds of crops—but systemize the work, using our oats fertilizer for oats, wheat fertilizer for wheat, lawn fertilizer for lawn, and corn fertilizer Tor corn. Each plant needs different kind of plant food and you cannot get it out of one kind of fertilizer for all plants. There is some waste somewhere. The brand I handle has oeen on the market since 1881 and is tried and proven. A fertilizer of different characteristics for the different plant necessities. Better come in and talk over the proposition.—H. H. Bremerkamp, 104tf -o KILLS A MURDERER A merciless murderer is appendicitis with many victims, but Dr. King’s New Life Pills kill ft by prevention. They gently stinulate stomach, liver said bowels, preventing that clogging that invites appendicitis, curing constipation, Headache, Biliousness, Chills. 25 cents at all druggists. o MIDNIGHT IN THE OZARKS.
And yet sleepless Hiram Scranton of Clay City, 111., coughed and coughed. He was in the mountains on the advice of five doctors, who said he bad consumption, but he found no help in the climate and started home. Hearing of Dr. King’s New Discovery, he began to use it. “I believe it saved my life,” he writes, “for it made a new man of me, so that I can now do good work again.” For all lung diseases, coughs, colds, lagrippe, asthma, croup, whooping cough, hay fever. hemorrhages, hoarseness or quinsy, it’s the best known remedy. Price 50c and SI.OO. Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by #ll druggists. Pine Apple’ Sale We will have a car load of Pine apples on hand next week and as we have bought them at a price so low we will Ibe able to dispose of them at a much lower price than you can buy them. The quality can’t be beat. Hunsicker Bros.
1 Things That 1 S Promote Comfort p II Summer Household goods || S such as screens ’ refrigerators, 2 i ce cream freezers, gas and § gasoline stoves, oil stovesand X ovens, etc, etc. If you wish to A w promote your comfort in warm S weather you must have such g things, they are necessities. B The Schafer Hardware Co. || supplies them as no others g I can. And the necessary tools B 0 I for the garden, too, whether SE S the demand is just for a few IS B implements or a complete out- £ WWMiWjk of the finest sort. || t SCHAFER HARDWARE CO. 8 We Save You Money.
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Hi ~ -- - Makesit • Easxto _ Get : Ki ' ifeagsJltr <¥ / \ « / B / I '■ f 1 4 I V / ’ NONE GENUINE WITHOUT THIS SIGNATURE 17 C/ •'j * • ■* I f s:- • ■ , .. ,
FARMERS fence anchors YWill Save One-Half Your Fence Posts Hold Your Fence Down in Crossing Depressions. Hold the Posts 00 that Frost Cannot Raise Them. Keep Hogs from Passing Under Fence. Protect Stock from Lightning. Are Simple, Cheap and Easy to Drive. Patenud # DIGrGrIXVO so J i. Fir Salt By Schaub,Gottcmoller & Co ' Decatur, lud. .Vflto flto——.to--- fl. ■—.■.ll — ~ ■ —- —-- ' “ »*♦♦♦♦«>♦< mi too* >*♦ ♦♦ »1 tn 1• > r»** f J. O. HALE SEEDS, COAL AND FEED! ;; Portland Cement, Gypsum Rock Wail ; Plaster, Lime and Sak ♦ ■; We make a specialty of furnishing Seed Goods good 1 ;; in quality and low in price. 1 ;; Call, Write or Phone No. 8. 201 S. 2nd. St. ' i>SI I !>>♦♦♦» ♦ ♦ SSI 18 8 8 8 8 #♦»»»♦»♦*»♦♦♦ •*♦ ♦ • • ******** Democrat Want Ads Pa - Demo rat Want Ads P.,v.
