Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 9, Number 224, Decatur, Adams County, 25 September 1911 — Page 3

I BUSINESS and Professional men come to this store for their shoes because we sell the kind of shoes they are satisfied to wear. When you see our shoes, when you compare our values, the fine work ‘ with the shoes usually sold at the prices i Iwe ask you’ll understand why these men i come here for their shoes. Charlie Voglewede The Shoe Seller

——— —i _,.j*o4o#C*o#o4o • o#o#o#o4o4l ; WEATHER FORECASTS j i O . *w *o+o+G ♦ o*o*n»o^o#o*o« Showers tonight or Tuesday; cool er in southern portion. Mrs. Henry Zuber of Fort Way.n* was visiting here Saturday. Dr. J. C. Grandstaff of Preble was here Saturday on business. Hen Dever made a business trip to Greenville, Ohio, for Smith & Bell. Isaac Archer has accepted a position as baker at Parnin's restaurant — Bluffton News. Mrs. Harve Kessler and grandson jf j Monroe were business visitors here Saturday. John Schng left on the morning j train south after an over-Sunday visit here with his family. Mrs. David Valenti left Saturday j afternoon for Kendallville, where she will visit w'th relatives John Kiracofe spent Sunday with! his parents, Mr. and .Mrs. N. L Kira- j cofe, at Wren, Ohio.

Old Adams County Bank Decatur. Indiana. > * t ■ C. S. Niblick, Premdewt A 03- M. Kirsch and Join Niblick Vice Presidents E X. Ehinger, Cashier. ” Farm Joans Resolve lections ,at> “ - Made Don’t Hesitate atl^or1 ’---i able Rates. With A Small Amount — To Open With Us A BANK ACCOUNT! tionconTALL OAKS With Safe ; From Little Acorns Grow Methddf 1 GREAT GRAIN CROPS Extended From The Seed You Sow! Ritnm*s ? 1 | We Pay dlPer’Cent Interest ongl Year Time Deposits | mmomoMomomomoomomomomomomomom 1 J. s. Bowers, Pres.' F. M. Schirmeyer, Vice Pres, g ■ 0 H a o 2 » g ■ 2 Tho Rnwprs Realty Company has some excel- £ : «s.'rKp%”S l ■ pan/has^lenty^of 6 fWe^ P& centVonefto | 0 P an y na f ,P x r o f the Schirmeyer Abstract ■ m reasonable terms. Let xne Twpntv ° O Company prepare your abstract of title. Twenty , g years experience, complete records. O J 0 © ■ ® ■ O « The Bowers Realty Go. * J French Quinn, Seety. 0 5.0.0.0.0ft0i0.-0-OftO-0.0-tWI

T. VV. Best is home from a business | trip to Monroe. j John C. Moran is home from a busi-1 ness trip to Monroe. T. W. Best was among the business ! i callers at Monroe this morning. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Patterson were] j guests of friends in Toledo, Ohio, Sun- j day. Mrs. Helen Blossom of Fort Wayne is the guest of friends in the city tor a few days. Joe Miller of Fort Wayne was among the business callers it) our city this morning. Dote B. Erwin, who was at Berne this morning attending to business ai fairs, has returned home. Miss Velma Daniels returned to Geneva to resume her school work after spanding Sunday here with her moth-1 er. Rev. Imler returned this morning front South Whitley, where he conducted his first services in his new i pastorate Sunday, Miss Bess Tonneli-er, who spent Suni day here with her parents, Mr. and ! Mrs. Joseph Tonueller, left this morning for Geneva to resume her work at the Geneva mitten factory.

Mrs. Charles Burr of Monmouth was a shopper here Saturday. Mrs. L. N. (irandstaff of Monmouth was a shopper here Saturday. Samuel Heim of east of the city was a business visitor here Saturday. Mrs. George Schleferstetn and babe of Monmouth were shoppers here Saturday. Mrs. Ben Wagner and daughter, Jessie, of Root township were shoppers here Saturday. Miss Blanotae Payton returned to Fort Wayne after an over-Sunday visit with Miss Margaret Gallogly. Claude Coffee has returned to his studies at the Fort Wayne business college nfter his summer vacation. Grover Miller of Fort Wayne, formerly of this city, has returned to his home after a several days’ visit with friends. Jack Grady, the watchman at the Monroe street crossing of the G. R. i I. railroad, went to Fort Wayne Saturday afternoon. Mont Fee, who spent Sunday here with bis family, left, today on his regular trip to be absent for the remainder of the week. The Gay, Zwick * Myers ambulance j was called out Saturday noon to transfer a body from the Clover Leaf to ! the G. R & I. railroad. Fred Bell of Hillsdale, Mich., returnj ed there Friday morning, after a visit with Mr. and Mrs. George Morris in j this city.—Bluffton News. Mrs. Lizzie Moore returned Saturday | afternoon to Fort Wayne. She came ! to attend the funeral of little Rufus Allen. Mrs. Moore is an aunt of Mrs Allen. Mrs. Loyal Woods and daughter. Laure Martha, went to Fort Wayne for a week’s visit with Mrs. A. O. Bookman. They were accompanied by Mr. Woods, who has returned^here. F. A. Peoples of the firm of Peoples & Gerke, was kicked on the leg by a colt which he was leading at the fair grounds Friday, and though he will not acknowledge tt. the kick was a very painful one for him. ! Mr. and Mrs. John D. Hrle return led today from Hanford City, where they spent Sunday and attended the dedicatory exercises which were conducted at the Grace Methodist Episcopal church, with the Rev. Earl B. Parker delivering the -dedicatory address. Miss Lucile GBits, who left here the first of last week for Bloomington ro enter the Indiana university, writes that she is now nicely located, and has been spending the week arranging | the schedule for her lessons. She likes the surroundings and the unlverI slty very much. Rev. Eugene F. Abbott of the First Presbyterian church at Cape Girardeau, Mo., has resigned, giving as one reason that his salary of $2,000 a year was excessive, considering the amount appropriated for charitable and other church work. He has accepted a call to a church where his salary will be SI,BOO.

[UNIVERSAL DAY] SATURDAY, SERX. 30. J j ( : i,.r- IJI . [ 'lll ware w jth every Range and Base Burner Con- fl SOLID OAK tracted For This Date Only. II —oOXaJOlli' ""IOC ! lOi——JOiL»—■ jI I SCHAUB, GOTTEMOLLER & COMPANY f ii ii — .11 ir n.. ■ —>■—■—i ,c=^

Fred Hoffman made a business trip to Winchester today. William Drake has gone to Bryant to take medical treatments. SlmtStn Moore and Andrew Artmau made a business ttlp to Vetidocla this morning. John Steigmeyer, from Union town 1 ship, was a business caller here this 1 morning. Dayton Crist and family spent Sunday visiting with his father, Elias 1 Crist, of this city. Jacob Dobson of Frankfort returned ( 1 to his home after a week’s visit with . Martin Miller and family. William Scblnnerer stopped off litre a short while today on his way to Fort, 1 Wayne from Wlllshlre, Ohio. Herbert. Lankenau returned to Fott Wayne this forning after a visit here over Sunday with htR mother. P. K. Kinney was looking after ' some real estate business at Geneva, returning home on the afternoon train. Oscar Colchin returned this morn-: ing to Fort Wayne to resume his! school work after an over-Sunday stay ( ’ here with his parents, j The P. W. Smith force of men left this morning for Berne, where they will operate his saw mill at that place for a number of weeks. John Bolinger a»d his force of masons left for Monmouth this morning, j where they will work on the school i house being erected there. Miss Frances Daman, who has been : ill a short time, has recovered and j will be able to leave Tuesday for j Glendale. Ohio, where she will enter! the academy to take a music course. J Mr. and Mrs. Ollie Linn of Toronto. I Canada, are visiting with his mother, j Mrs. Mary Breiner, and other rela . tives. This is their first visit here , since their marriage four years ago. j Mrs. Linn was Miss Clara Nichols before her marriage. The demand for nUarriage licenses in New York City Saturday, the Jew- i ish New Year, by young Hebrew couples who wished to mate on the first day of the Hebrew new year almost swamped the license bureau. At noon 130 licenses had been issued, an average of forty-three and one-third an hour, and as fully 100 couples were waiting to be served, the bureau was kept open after hours. Before Saturday the best record of the bureau was forty licenses an hour. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hower and Mr. and Mrs. John Stewart and son, Meredith, enjoyed a trip to Huntington Sunday in the Hower automobile. It had been planned to spend the day at the G. S. Fahl home, but at 6 o’clock : Sunday morning a telephone message came to Mr. Stewart .that one of the - Fahl daughters had taken seriously ill during Saturday night with appendi- 1 citis, and that an operation would be i performed at 9 o'clock, and for the , party not to come. The trip was made, t however, and the day was spent with 1 ' the parents of Mrs. Stewart. t

Dr. D. D. Clark left Saturday for Rochester, Minn., where he will tuke j up a ten days' course In surgery ui the Mayo Bros.' institution, one of the roremost surgical institutions In the! country. Miss Mayrae Terveer returned home j last evening from Toledo, Ohio, where i she spent the day with her sister, Mrs. Clem Uhl. She was accompanied | home by her sister, who will spend several days here. Clem Heidemnnn, who met with 1 I serious, as well as a painful accident I last week, by having his hand severed while operating the cutter at the Ge ! neva mitten factory, Is doing as well as could be expected. A large number of the Odd Fellows who were attending the meeting ,it Indianapolis, arrived home Saturday night, reporting that they enjoyed one of the best week's outings they have had in many years. Mrs. George Conrad and sister, Mrs. Edna Wertzberger, went to Fou Wayne this morning, being called there by the death of Mrs. Conrad's husband, which occurred this morning. They went to accompany the body home. Another letter has been received by Rev. C. W. Church from Rev. Ijoreu I M. Edwards, pastor of the Methodist church, who with his family, is makI ing a short tour of Europe. The lette>. 1 written from Zurich, Switzerland, tel!.j of a change of route decided upon b.v j the travelers, who on account of the j cholera in Italy, will not include that j country in their itinerary as at first j planned. — Portland, Commercial-Re-j v!sw. Fifteen years ago, Henry Kitts of! , Anderson, says the Mttncie Star, then 1 twenty-five years old, Jestingly told his mother that he would use a small j crevice in the wall of their home for a bank, in which to deposit odd pennies, nickels and dimes. The crevice was a hole in the plastering which opened to a nook between the studding. It was his intention to keep up the practice for ten years. At the end of ten years he decided to try it five years longer. A few days ago when he went, as usual, to put some moneyin the hole in the wall, he discovered that the nook was full and he could put in no more money. He then, with a chisel and a saw, removed the plas ter and lath from before his bank, and the pile of money roiled out on the floor. It took him two hours to count the odd change, which he found amounted to $1,099.54. Klus stated that he had no idea until counting his ! money as to bow much he had depos ited in the odd bank. He signified his intention of buying real estate with his savings. In the whole lot of change only four twenty-five cent pieces were found and nothing of a higher denomination. Mr. Klus, who conducts a green house along the Alexandria pike, just at the edge of town, brought his money to a local bank this afternoon, and it was all he could carry along.

||i If You Want Anything In My B || Line, Come And See Me p I sell the famous B°rghoff Beer, real Ger- jK S man brew, the best made, at $2.00 per case, JS in pints or quarts. Its the best for every pur- A i A pose. It Alljkinds of whiskeys-Kentucky Bourbons, ► and .sourlmash, Pennsylvania rye, Maryland rag ! rye and all the others, from $1.50 to $6.00 per | perjgal. Wines.and cordials of every kind at 'te 1 prices to suit. ; Corner, Second and Madison Sts. p J CURLEY RADEMACHER P • « •• - • ABSOLUTE SAFETY » <JWith capital'Jof $100,000,00, surplus of $20,000,00 total resources of $800,000,00, 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. fIW ith these safeguards, we believe we are justified in solicting your business. <l4per cent interest paid on money left certain'times, •JGoverment Depositary for local postal funds. First National Bank of Decatur, Indiana —