Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 9, Number 174, Decatur, Adams County, 25 July 1911 — Page 3

II 1 ( 1 LADIES Tan and Black Strap Slippers To Morrow 98c Charlie Voglewede The Shoe Seller ■WnBSSSSSXSISSSSnHMHMMUHMMMaai jMMM=!!e!-3E"L±jjjiL”.” ■ ■. ,_■'!-l_ ■ 1 _ _—.!_ IX J" "■ BEESgssgaar

* <*o*o*G*o*o>o ♦ OtOeOftOtOti ' WEATHER FORECAST I *'>*o>o*o*o ♦ Fair tonight and Wednesday; rising temperature Wednesday. Fred B. Tague of Fort Wayne was a business caller in the city today. Jacob Miller of Detroit. Mich., a former resident of this city, is visiting ( here with friends. Miss Fanny Baughman has returned j to her home at Fort Wayne after a ■ pleasant visit in the city with friends. ' Mrs Congleton returned to her ■ home at Decatur yesterday after visiting at George Gates, east of town. — Berne Witness. Ernst Bioemker, the aged Preble township resident, who was stricken with paralysis several weeks ago, remains about the same. Mrs. David Liby and her niece, Mr a Blanche McColilster, of Newton Falla, Ohio, Miss Leah Dibble and Lase Swaggare went to Fort Wayne this morning to spend the day.

Old Aldams County Bank Decatur, Indiana. S Capital $120,000 Surplus . $30,000 C. S. Niblick, President M. Kirsch and John Niblick Vice Presidents E. X. Ehinger, Cashier. Farm loans Head a Specialty Reflect Resolve Co^^ ns Little Drops Os Water a »- Little Grains Os Sand Eyery „ i m AccomodaDollars Saved io tionCon- _ . , sistent Your Bank Account with safe _ , Banking Mav Purchase Methods __, Extended ACRES OF LAND! We Pay 4 Per Cent Interest on 1 Year Time Deposits ■OIIOI O ■O ■ OfIOBOOHOHOfIOfIOfIOfIOfIOII # J S. Bowers, Pres. F. M. Schirmeyer, Vice Pres. B i ’ ■ a o ■ o ■ ThP Bowers Realty Company has some excel- O 8 Ipnt bargains in city property and Adams county Q ■ fomis The company would be pleased to have m O vou'call and see its offerings. The com- 5 ■ you c r Q _ n ip n t v o f five per cent money to loan on ■ O Fumble terms. Le? the Schirmeyer Abstract g ! Company prepare your abstract of title. wenty B 2 years experience, complete records. O O fl ■ ~ ° The Bowers Realty Go. ■ U French Quinn, Secty. g laoioioiotoaowoiorioic boho

Jacob Huser went to Fort Wayne j i this morning. Miss Ethel Barkley is off duty at the True &i Runyon store an account ■ of sickness. Cecil Cole returned last evening from a visit with relatives at Hillsdale and Pittsford, Mich. .Miss Frances Cole left this morn- i ing for a month's visit with relatives I ; in Hillsdale and Pittsford, Mich. I The C. B. L. ot 1. will hold its reg ' ular meeting this evening and ali , ■ members are requested to be present | ; Mrs. H. B. Brenbarger and children, i Russell, George and Evelyn, returnI ed yesterday to Gas City after a visit with her sister, Mrs. William Butler. Mr. and Mrs. Willis Magner and , daughter, Lola, have returned from a , trip to Niagara Falls, also stopping at Buffalo. Cleveland and other points of interest. ; B. B. Ointment Is one of our most I staple medicines. It gives entire sat ; isfaction in every case. After being once used it becomes a household remedy. The Holthouse Drug com pany. t&s-U-wks ■ i i s — ..j 1 111 " 1

Mrs. Daisy Ballenger and daughter, Dolores, spent the day in Bluffton with friends. E. Fritzinger of the Deoatur foun- I dry Is repairing the furnace at the North Ward school. Miss Rose Voglewede, in company with a Fort Wayne young lady, will leave Friday for Duluth. The Rev. William H. Gleiser, pas- ' tor of the Presbyterian church, has gone to Chicago on business. Mrs. C. Brandt and children returned yesterday afternoon to Fort Wayne after a visit with relatives In Preble. Miss Anna Ulery arrived this morning from Saginaw, Mich., for a visit with her cousin, Mrs. Oliver Schug. Mrs. V. Millet ord Mrs. C. H. Pelky returned this morning to their homes in Fort Wayne after a visit with Mrs. Frank. Mrs. Bernard Meyers left yester-| day afternoon for Fort Wayne where i she will visit with her daughter, Mrs. Clem Hake. D. O. Horton, former superintendent of the Geneva schools, now representing a furnace supply company, was here today on busines. Mrs. David Bixler of Berne, who has been the guest of her daughter, ■ Mrs. Emma Smith, for several days ' past, left this morning for her home. 1 Chester imler of Portland passed; through the city this morning on his: i way home from Fort Wayne, where he was looking after some business I affairs. Mrs. John Streicher and daughter. Mrs. Flory, returned thjp morning to I I Toledo. Ohio, after a visit with Mrs ! Catherine Close and daughter, Miss i ; Mary. Mrs. J. A. Hendricks of Mt. Pleas ■ ant, Mich., who has been the guest of I her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Smith. just south of the city, returned today I to her home. | William Sheler and son, George, left today on their five weeks' trip through the west, going byway of Ft. Wayne, and thence to Chicago and i westward. William J. J. Bell, son of Vince Bell : of Craigville has taken a position at ! the Krick & Tyndall factory where he ,is learning the management of the engine that is used in drawing the May. Mrs. Emerson Bennett of Decatur,; who visited with Mrs. R. H. Detrq of' West North street, went to Bryant Saturday for a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Manley.—Portland • Sun. , Mr. and Mrs. Ed Lehrman, who (spent Sunday at the Gustav Retaking home, have gone to Onion township, ' where they will spend the remainder j of the week with relatives. i Charles Meyer and Emerson Beav-1 i ers, furniture dealers, have gone to I i Chicago, where they will attend the furniture dealers’ convention, which is now in progress at that place. Mr. Kirkpatrick of Newark, N. J„ is i visiting with his son, Fred LaDelle. and family. Mr. Kirkpatrick accom panied the son here, Mr. LaDelle havi ing gone to Newark to attend the funeral of a sister. Misses Anna and Margaret Clark, Bertha Kinney and Ralph Atnrine re--1 turned to their homes at Decatur Sunday evening after spending a week at I | the Tri-lake resort, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Milo Harshbarger and (laugh- . ter. Miss Blanche. —Columbia City | j Mail. At present Father Wilken is engag- , I ed in making a canvass of the conn- ’ ! try people for the interior decorating : of the St. Mary’s church. Much of > the city soliciting has been done, and 1 much headway has been accom pllshed by Father Wilken in but a short time. Father John F. Kohl of the St. i Paul's church was taking a ride Sat- ' urday afternoon in the single cylinder ! Reo runabout of Father Smith, of the j Nix settlement church, and made a I very sudden stop at the corner of Line j and Walnut streets after striking the curbing with force enough to jar off the front and back wheels of the ma- | chine. The driver was delighted to | think he escaped injury, and that the j car was not totally demolished. FaI thel Kohl declares that he must have been going some —faster than he realized until he hit the curb. The Johnson & Brand garage is making the re- ■ pairs.—Columbia City Mail. The remains of William A. Follin. j ! who died at Fort Wayne last Thursday, were brought here for burial in | the Crawford cemetery east of Berne , last Saturday. Rev. D. A. Kaley of i the Evangelical church officiated. De-1 I ceased was sixty-slx years, five 1 months and six days old, and died of Bright’s disease, following an illness of one year. He had moved from Michigan to Fort Wayne a year ago. IHe was borne in Dark county, Ohio. He is survived by a widow and one son, William Follin, of Fort Wayne and one daughter, Mrs. Bart Boyce, of this county. A first wife and daughter preceded him in death—Berne Wit ness.

Slight snow flurries were in order in Fort Wayne yesterday. , Mrs. Will Borling returned to her home at Bluffton after a short visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. X. Whinger. Mrs. Henry Thomas and daughter left at noon for Marion, Indiana, where she will visit relatives for a few days. Miss Hilda Volkintag of Fort Wayne changed cars here today noon on her way to Willshire. Ohio, where she visited with Miss Lydia Schinnerer. Iloy Steele went to Oxford, Ohio, where he will be employed as a mason on the new school house, which is under course of construction, and in charge of Fred Hoffman. Mr. and Mrs. Al Gerard of Monroe ville drove to this city and visited here a short while today, Mr. jGerard com-1 ing on business and Mrs. Gerard acI companying him for a pleasure ride. Miss Lucy Elliott left this after | noon for her home at Tipton, where ' she will visit with relatives for ten days before resuming her position > as head clerk in Governor Marshall's I office. Miss Mary Gage accompanied Miss Frances Burrell to her home at Ro Chester lor a visit. Miss Burrell vis- . ited h.re with he grandfather. Wil- ! Ham Blackburn, and wife and other > relatives. F. B. Tague of Fort Wayne was here on business. Mr. Tague, who was formerly engaged in the shoe business here, later went to Fort' Wayne where he opened a shoe store | 1 and is now closing out his business I there. He has not yet decided what ' he will engage in. Indianapolis is making great preparation for the ball game to be play?') next Saturday between the officials of the capitol, the earnings to go to- ! ward the fresh air fund. The coming ; game is creating much talk about Indianapolis and will no doubt receive ! i good support, for the fund which they ' anticipate raising is deserving of all the support they can obtain. j There is a report out to the effe>t I that the Knickerbocker Ice company, of Chicago, has bought a million tons i of ice i» northren Indiana and south ern Michigan since the beginning of the hot spell, and has so secured a comer on the local market. Ft. Wayne concerns, which depend on the natural product to supply their customers will accordingly be forced to buy in the open market in northern Michigan, and the increased transportation charges will probably necessitate a raise in the price of ice.—Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette.

i - —— —*— ——— ABSOLUTE SAFETY qWith capital of $100,000,00, surplus of $20,000,00 | total resources of SBOO, 000,00, ample cash reserves, conservative loaning policy, this Bank offers its customers greatest possible safety. (Jin addition, semi-annual examinations of its assets are made by a National Bank examiner and five reports of its condition are rendered annually to comptroller of currency. <J W ith these safeguards, we believe we are'justified in solicting your business. 4J4per cent interest paid on money left certain times. (JGoverment Depository for local postal funds. First National j Bank of Decatur, Indiana Smoke The wHntfcßW Nicotine Just What The Doctor Ordered

THE KEMP Century MANURE SPREADER IS a positive necessity to properly distribute the fertilizer over your fields, because the scientific features tend to produce a smooth-working, durable, dependable machine. <|The exclusive features of the KEMP is all steel wheels, an end gate to hold the load off the beaters, which in turn gives a free cylinder. The Result Is An Easy Start and no large pile of fertilizer where the machine starts to spread, which makes it a horse jny_other machine made. have several on display and you are requested to come in and examine tSTthisweek.HlO Ma dt dt .j# & LAMAN & LEE *£ **

Bertha Kohne, who has been making a visit with her sister, Mrs. Chas, (’ole, at Richmond, will return home this afternoon. Mrs. Albert Parker and son, Lowell ■ Stewart, of Cayuga, who have been , visiting here with her parents, Mr. i i and Mrs. D. V. Steele, went to Fort i I Wayne today to visit two weeks with I I relatives Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Vance and daugh-; ter, Lee Anna, and Miss Della Selle ■ meyer have returned from Rome City I where they spent Sunday as the; guests of the D. M. Hensley and T. M. . Reed families. The babe of Mr. and Mrs. William Butler got a foreign substance in one 'of its eyes yesterday and suffered quite intensely until it was removed, the services of a doctor being necessary. Seventy-six years ago Atha G. Hudson. twenty-two years old, and his fiance, fifteen, of Humansville, Mo., ran away to a Baptist parsonage, near Nashville. Tenn., and were married. Recently Mr. Hudson, almost ninetyeight years old. and his wife, ninety, celebrated their birthday anniversary. A quaint contract was made by the Hudsons shortly after they were married. Its object was to prevent either becoming angry at the same time. Mr. Hudson says they never had a real quarrel. j

The Misses Bertha and Rosa Vo glewede returned home yesterday from Indianapolis, where they have i been visiting with their sister, Mrs. I Tom Haefling. They were accompan- ‘ ied by Kathleen, little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James P. Haefiing. who has | also been visitinr with them. On their I way home they stopped off at Rich- ■ mond and called upon Mrs. Charles i Cole. Mrs. Cole was formerly Miss I Ida Kohne.

| WHY PAY RETAIL PRICES I B for your whiskey and when you can buy at |g S wholesale prices, or just as cheap as the retail dealer p I Note The Following Prices | s’, I. X. L. Whiskey $1.50 per Gallon worth $2.50 Cabinet “ $2.00 “ “ “ $3.00 S OH Canterbury Rye $2.60 “ “ “ $4.00 ■ Briar Ridge (A Straight Kentucky’.whiskey syears oH)fs3.oo per gal. I< I<2 worth $5.00 Li M. H. G. (A straight Kentucky whiskey 9 years old) $3.75 per'gal. H worth $6.00 California Port’wine $1.25 per gallon worth $2.00 m Berliners Kimmel $2.00 per gallon " $3.00 I These goods are absolutely [the I | best in town for the leastJlmoney. | I My Beer Prices I Seipp’s Export Beer 50c doz. or $1.50 per case ofJ3 doz. | •• Extra Pale “ 60c “ “ $175 “ “ “3 •' Export Large -80 c “ “ $1.60 “ " 2 1“ Extra Pale large 90c ~ “ $1.75 “ “j| “ 2 These beers are guaranted by| the| Conrod Seipp I Brewing Co. under the puregFoodJandjDrugs’Act, I June 30, 1906, Serial No. 3750. I sell to private a g] trade only, because the private trade does not ex- B pect me to spend all my profits' right .back with B B them. I LA. KALVER I Wholesale Dealer Tel. 581 Monroe st. & G.R.&I.R.R. HI ir—li i L_LuZaC=E33t~)D OF 1 I Quaiity Groceries I——J WESELLrALL The Breakfast Foods, ALL THE Dinner And Supper FOODS Also All The Between Meal Foods, FRUITS, NUTS CONFECTIONS, Etc. ALL QUALITY GOODS ' 1 "' 1 Get a Jungle Land picture book with your Toasted Corn Flakes We pay cash or trade for produce I Eggs 15 Butter 15 to 22c I Hower and Hower. I North of G. R. &«I. Depot. ’Phone 108. I

B. B. Ointment cures eczema, pimples, scalp and skin trouble, itching • piles, prickly heat, sunburn, and affords you skin comfort during the hot weather. B. B. Ointment stops itch- . j ing at once and allays the irritation ■ ■ and promptly soothes and heals the skin. B. B. Ointment gives universal - satisfaction, and is recognized by the s leading druggists as the standard rem- ■ | edy for all skin and scalp troubles. Sold by all druggists. tfcs-6-wks.