Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 9, Number 205, Decatur, Adams County, 30 August 1911 — Page 3

High Top Jockey Boots For Girls — are going to be big sellers again this fall. You remember how good ours wore last year, well we’ve got the same kind again made with good plump uppers and solid soles, no cut off tips, made by Kreider and you know his shoes are good. 51.50 to 3.00 Charlie Voglewede The Shoe Seller

t, »o*o*o*o*o ♦ o*o*o«o«o*. o 1 • HEATHER FORECASTS ■. o * »O»O*C»O • 0*0«040*0«0»v4 Fair tonight and Thursday; slightly j rising temperature. I" * ■ > ■ ■■ 11. P. K. Kinney left yesterday for Fort Wayne. Marion Archbold left this afternoon lor Fort Wayne on a visit. Miss Mamie. Kitson left yesterday; for Fort Wayne for a week’s vacation visit. Jonas Neuenschwander, ex-treasurer of Adams county, was here yesterday on business. H. Fred Bohnke of Fort Wayne, for • merly marshal of the city, visited here yesterday. Mesdamea French Quinn and Chas Meyers left yesterday noon lor Fort Wayne for a visit. John Mentzer of Jonestown, Ind., was in the city Sunday as the guest of Juhii V. riiiuvu Miss Mamie Teeple went to Fort Wayne this morning to take her regular music lesson.

I Quality Groceries J Lh asaoBOiMHMaMHiMiJ An Unappeased Appetite Is A Terrible Affliction! RELIEF Must Come Quickly OKGreat Suffering Will Ensue! We Sell The The Only Sure RemedyQUALITY GROCERIES! DON’T “Send A Boy To The Mill” You pay our store a visit and find your tune well spent. A look at our line of goods will be to your advantage. We can show you the place to leave your grocery orders. We pay cash or trade for produce Eggs 15 Butter 1i to 22c Hower and Hower, North of G. R. & I. Depot- ’ Phone SOU O ■ O ■ O ■ O BOBODBOBOBOBOBOBOBOB ? J. S. Bowers, Pres. F. M. Schirmeyer, Vice Pres. a » *s o 2 « * 2 a The Bowers Realty Company has O lent bargains m city propertv and * ™ t have O ? farms. The company would pleased to nave , gjj you call at its office and see its offe g • O “ pany has plenty of five per^ent money to loan» g * reasonable terms. Let the bcnir y t O 0 Company prepare your abstract of • ie g years experience, complete recoids. o a o r 0 ■ The Bowers Realty Co. £ ; French Quinn, Secty. g O $ jMOlc BOHO

Fred Mutschler made a business trip to Fort Wayne this morning. R. O. Elston of Willshire, Ohio, was a business visitor here yesterday. Mrs. Charles Hendricks and daughter. Ardella, are attending the Portland fair this week. Mrs. John Steele left today for Monroe to visit with her sisters, Mrs. Johnson and Mrs. Parrish. Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Gulick and daughter. Mary, of Pleasant Mills were business visitors here yesterday. Mrs. Shafer Peterson left this morning for Fort Wayne for a visit with her daughter. Mrs. Guy Majors. Mrs. John Sebnitz and children, Hazel and Merrill, left yesterday for Roanoke, where they will visit with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Magly and son. Donald. left today for their home at Marion, Ohio, after a visit here witn relatives. Mrs. Wesley Dull and son, Eugene, passed through the city yesterday noon on their way to their home at Grover Hill. Ohio, after a two weeks' visit with the Bunner and Dailey fam ilies at Bobo.

I Mrs. A. Cramer and children are I visiting with friends at Monroe. I Mrs. Frank Boyers was at Portland I today attending the Jay county fair. I Mrs. Louis Gehrig left this morning I for Domestic, Ind., to be absent for some time, visiting with friends. Margaret Moran, daughter of .Attorney J. C. Moran, is visiting with relatives at Portland this week. Mrs. George Haas and babe of Spencerville, Ohio, transferred here yesterday noon enroute to Ft. Wayne. Otto Green of the Boston store left yesterday noon for Fort Wayne, where | he will make a several days’ visit. Mrs. Charles Southern arrived yes-; terday from Muncie to visit with Mrs. D. K. Shackley and other relatives. Cal Kunkel is securing fast speed i j horses for the Great Northern Indi- , ana fair at the Portland fair this week. I Mrs. M. E. Clark; who has been I spending the summer with her sister j on the farm, has returned to this city | I to her home. Chester Johnson and W. H. Fled- I i derjohann made a business trip to ■ Berne yesterday in the interest of the j traction company.

Mr. and Mrs. Philip Kable transferred here yesterday on their wav to their home at Fort Wayne from Chattanooga, Ohio. Tony Conter and Homer H. Knodle . attended the prodnction of "The Light Eternal" at the Majestic theater. Fort Wayne, last evening. Mrs. John H. Logan t and daughter I Jeanette, of St. Thomas, Ontario, have - returned home after a visit with her : daughter. Mrs. clem Knoff. Mrs. L. Bultemeier and daughter. , Clara, went to Fort Wayne today to ! attend the funeral of Mrs. Bultemeier's brother-in-law, Ixniis Schmoe. Mrs. Jesse Koos went to Fort Wayne yesterday noon. Father Benzinger of Hesse Cassel was a visitor here yesterday. Charles Colter and Joseph Shad. i have left for McMillen, Mich., wher« ! they will visit for several weeks. M Shady will remain longer than Mr. j Colter. | Miss Elizabeth Masbauni returned yesterday to Fort Wayne after a visit here with friends. She was accomi panied by the Misses Agnes Mille and Mary Eiting. Mrs. T. M. Gallogly and son. Dewey, left this morning for Portland, where they will visit with friends for several days, and also attend the fair bein’’ held there this week.

’ Mrs John Colchin, who was struck ; by a street car at Williams street six ■ weeks ago. has recovered sufficiently * to return to her home at Decatur.— Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette. The household goods of the Floyd ' Smith family left yesterday for the fit- ‘ ture home at Fort Wayne, Mrs. Smith ' accompanying them there. Mr. Smith i is employed in Fort .Wayne. Mrs. L. W. Coppock went to Fort , Wayne this morning to meet her daughters. Lucile and Myrtle, who are returning from Logansport, where they spent the summer with their grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Parker and son, Lowell Stuart, left this morning for their home at Cayuga after a visit here with Mrs. Parker's parents, Mr. I and Mrs. I). V. Steele, and with relai tives at Fort Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. Hen Rice and daughter, Esther, of Goodland, who have I been visiting with Mrs. Tullis and others at Preble, left this morning for Fort Wayne where they will visit with Mrs. Rice’s sister. The Rev. and Mrs. Bert B. Uhl and daughters. Mary Catherine and Jessie May, returned yesterday afternoon to ' their home at Mansfield, Ohio, after a ' four wdeks vacation spent at Rome I City and here the guests of Mrs. Uhl s j parents. Mr. and Mrs. John Christen. The Misses Mary and Edith Edge, j who have been visiting here with their I i grandfather. J. L. Edge, left last night j I for their home at Springfield, Mo. - They also visited with their aunt. Mrs. I M. V. B. Archbold, at Fort Wayne and ' with relatives in Ohio, making a six weeks' visit. Charles McDonald left Saturday for j Hammond', where he has a good posi tion in a printing office. His wife and son. Harry, left yesterday to join him there, in making that place their j home. While here they occupied the Sholty furnished rooms on Monroe street. The rooms have been taken by Mr. and Mrs. Tom Stoneburner, who moved there yesterday afternoon. Mrs. Nancy Edey of Troy, Mo., ninel ty-six years old, Monday became a . : bride for the sixth time, her newes; husband being Hee Indow, twenty-font I i years old. The bride’s fifth husband j died six weeks ago at the county poo.- j ‘ farm there. The pair left for a wedding trip to Hannibal and were given an ovation at the depot. Although | gray, Mrs. Indow does not look so. near the century mark. Indow wore ■ overalls and hickory shirt on his honeymoon. He declared he married , I his wife because he loved her.

A. W. Crone of Celina, Ohio, visited ! here with friends. Miss Amelia Weber is a guest at the ' James K. Niblick farm. I Walter Avery of Willshire, Ohio, I was here today on business. Miss Gertrude Barber returned to I ' Fort Wayne this morning after a visit 1 here. Carl Ernst has taken a position as ' gas fitter with the Indiana Lighting company. 1 i < Mrs. Fred Macke and son of Binning-1 I ham, Ala., are visiting with her mothi er, Mrs. R. K. Allison, and other rel ttives. Mrs. Mary Spade has returned from Elwood, where she visited since June . 1 with her son, Dayton Lewton, and I wife. Mrs. Elizabeth Clark returned this ' morning to her home at Van Wert, Ohio, after a visit with the D. D. Clark ! family. Drs. Clark, the new doctors who re cently located here, returned last evening from Fort Wayne after an absence of a week or so. Gregg and Glen Neptune were among those who attended the play » "The Light Eternal” at the Majestic l theater. Fort Wayne last evening Tite Misses Lydia Miller and Alice Knapp are visiting in Fort Wayne Miss Miller is taking a two weeks i vacation from duties at the Fullcn kamp store. Mrs Delia McFeeley and son, Don. of Fort Wayne, who have been h<•: < visiting with Mrs. Janies Bain and Mrs. Adolph Hoffman, have returne: 1 home. Miss Helen Niblick left this morn Ing for Fort Wayne to attend a lunch-; eon given at 1 o'clock by the Misses - Sallie and Margaret Vesey in compli ment to the Misses Palm of Austin Texas. I Mrs. M. P. Burdg will leave tomo 1 row for Cincinnati, Ohio, where sin goes to attend to business relating to her millinery establishment. She will be gone a week or ten days. Stella Bremerkamp spent the da; in Fort Wayne. i Miss Emma Werder and her guest Miss Lizzie Huber, of New Washing . ton. Ohio, and Miss Letta Wetter, le at noon today for Pleasant Mill where they will visit until tomorrow with W. H. Stultz and family. Mi: Huber will return home Sunday aft ■ a week’s visit here. ' .The funeral of Irvin Cloud, eighteei months-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Jes- { L. Cloud, of Kalamazoo, .Mich.. w. ; held this morning at the home of tin , grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. C. (' . Cloud, on West Monroe street, thRev. Semans, of the Methodist chun ; , officiating. Burial in Maplewood ce:i. etery. i Banker C. A. Dugan, who has bet i enjoying an outing for a week or si at Oden, Mich., where several oth< Decatur parties are located, retuine home Tuesday evening, feeling fine. , While gone he met L. G. Ellinghani . and family who are at Bay View for a ■ month’s stay. Mr. Ellingham will return Sunday, stopping off here for a few days.

Bargain Time Sale Going ®ut of business necessitates me disposing of my fixtures and having but two days ( to do so you can buy at your own price. The sale includes, floor case, wall case, | medium size fireproof safe, electric fan, and motor, two < I arge mirrors, a desk, ice boxes, water cooler and stand, hot water urn, 40 yds. linoleum, hot plate, gasoline stove, i counters, chairs tables, and other fixtures, also small kegsRemember time is short and everything must sell. JOHN HERMAN i North 2nd. st.

ABSOLUTE SAFETY | flWith capital of $100,000,00, surplus of $20,000,00 ' = total resources of $800,000,00, ample cash reserves, 4 conservative policy, this Bank offers its customers greatest possible safety. 1 <jln addition, semi-annual examinations of its assets | are made by a'National Bank examiner and five re- 3 ports of its condition are rendered annual! /io comp- a troller of currency. 3 <JWith these safeguards, we believe we are justified | in solicting your business. <J4per cent interest paid on money left certain times, <)Goverment Deposit ory forjocal postal funds. First National f Bank of Decatur, Indiana |

PUBLIC SALE. ■ I'W ——■ At theresidence of the undersigned, j two and one-half miles northwest of ! Decatur, on the farm known as the John Bogner farm, on Thursday, September 7, 1911, sale to commence promptly at 10 o'clock u. m. Fotn head of horses —One extra good 4-year-old sorrel gelding. 1 six-year-old horse. 1 brood mare, 1 coming two years old. extra good draft colt. Seven head of cows —Three good cows, will be fresh in January; 4 cows will be fresh in ■ March, all are giving milk at present time; 3 head two-year-old steers; .’! I yearling steers and 3 good calves. Hogs—Four Brood Sows. Two Chester White brood sows, due to farrow . in September: 2 brood sows, extra | good, due to luirow little later; I”, head of shouts;, weighing about I<to ' lbs. each: 9 small s’htnts. Farmin’ Implement .—One farm wagon, good as new: surrey, hay loader, McCormick binder, inowe., tedder, riding plow, breaking plow, 2 riding cultiva tors, walking cultivator, 2 spring tooth harrows, spike tooth harrow knife harrow, disc grain drill, hay ladder, set double harness. Hay in mow, about 8 tons; corn In field, about 40 acres: oats and barley in bin; 50 head > chickens and many other articles too ; numerous to mention. Terms —On all sums under $5, the cash must be paid; on all sums over $5 a credit of 9 months will Ire given, the purchaser giving a bankable note with approved freehold security. No goods removed until satisfactory set-| tlem'ent for same is made. Four per cent discount for cash. WILLIAM LAMMERT John Spuhler, auctioneer. , J. F. Fruchte, clerk. ——n WANTED—Two carpenters at once to work in Decatur. —Mann & Christen FOR SALE —Empty whiskey barrels, for cider, at Curley's

Correct Comfortable GLASSES are furnished by the Rogers system and we save you nor 5 than your fare to Fort Wayne and return on every pair. All lenses are ground in, In our own factory, which reduces the expense and you get them the same day. No charge for examination Glasses From SI.OO up. Hol.el Comer« FORT Wi-VNE. IHB. <- ——■■■■■■■■■■■ ■

\ 1 1 1 w// o 111 * * DON’T your Boy need a New School Suit? Most boys do and we are ready to show you the best line of Boys clothes in Decatur from. point of design, style, workmanship, service quality and price. All we ask of you is to give us a chance to show you these suits, they’ll prove our statements. Boy’s Suits $2.00 to $7.50 Ho Itiio use, Schulte 60. Good Clothes Sellers for Men and Boys. ♦ ANOTHER STRIKE The White Stag cigar strikes the smokW® , er’s fancy. This cigar is right. You will like it because it has a delicious . flavor, is rich and mellow-your taste will tell you that it combines just the things necessary to make a satisfactory smoke 5c at all dealers SCHOOL SUPPLIES FREE SODA Be prepared on opening day of school with the latest, 'newest, and best of school helps. Get them here. Commencing with Ang. 29th. and continuing for 8 days |we will present with every purchase of school supplies amounting to twenty-five cents (25c) a coupon which wil' entitle the holder to a free glass of soda. LACHOT & RICE

■— !L-~ y IfJYou Want Anything In My » Line, Come And See Me S B =g J sell the famous Beer, real Ger- & man brew, the best made, at $2.00 per case, 8 _„ in pints or quarts, the best for every pur- »<§ pose. All a kinds of whiskeys—Kentucky Bourbons, g and sourjmash, Pennsylvania rye, Maryland rye and all the others, from $1.50 to $6.00 per ® perfgal. Winesand cordials of every kind at gj prices to suit. || Corner’Second and Madison Sis. 8 | CURLEY RADEMACHER j|