Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 9, Number 252, Decatur, Adams County, 27 October 1911 — Page 3

A Bunt At The I Right Time I ...sometimes wins the game. Another I lot of shoes fo;' 5 oung men made of Tan ■ Russia Gall on the popular Bunt last came in today. I’his leather has a hard finished surface and takes a shine like || glass. Drop in tomorrow and see them Young Mens $4.00 I Charlie Voglewede I the: shoe seller |

I » . 4<J<O<G4O<O<O < o<o<o<o4o< ; WEATHER FORECAST !■ i 4 . « 4G4U < o<o4o<o<o<o<o< Fair and somewhat cooler tonight; Saturday fair. Barrels for sale at Curley s. Dr. J. N, Grandstaff of .Monmouth was a business caller here this morning. J. N. Fristoe returned yesterday afternoon to Warsaw after a short visit here with friends. Will Chronister returned this after noon from Monroe, where he was attending to some business during H.e day. Miss Rosa Martin of Fort Wayne, who spent yesterday here with friends, returned this morning to resume her work. E. X. Ehinger is home from Indianapolis, where he was attending the bankers' state convention for a day or so. On the way home he made a stop at Bluffton for a short visit with his daughter, Mrs. Will Berling.

I Quality Groceries I IT TiCKLES US To Deliver At Your Homes Our Palatable Table Goods Because We Know They’ll Tickle Your Palates! Did you ever consider the fact that there are times to lay in a supply and save money? Now is the time, let us show you. We pay cash or trade for produce Eggs 25 Butter 18 to 22c I Hower and Hower. North of G. R. & I. Depot ’Phone 108. flol O ■ O ■ o ■ o BOaODBOBOIOBOBOBOIOB !J s. Bowers. Pres. F. M. Schirmeyer, Vice Pres, £ O 2 5 5/ ■ » o w ■ * The Bowers Realty Company has some excel- g H lent bargains in city property and Adams county ■ ■ farm-s The company would be pleased to have 2 al ite office and see its offerings The> com- ? £ pany has plenty of five per cent money to loan on ■ 2 reasonable terJns. Let the Schwmover Abstract ■ J Company prepare your abstract of title. Twenty years experience, complete records, O S | 2 The Bowers Realty Go. ■ 1 French Quinn, Secty. O ©■OBOBOffIOIoaoBiWMIOBOBOBCBoJo

I Barrels for sale at Curley’s. Mrs. George Schieferstein of Mon j mouth was a shopper here yesterday. Miss Lulu Brokaw went to Garrett i : yesterday alternoon to visit with her sister, Mrs. L. G. Cole. George Maddy of Jonesboro, Ark., and Dr. Connell of this city spent Thursday at Chicago on business. Raymond Coffee is off duty at the Blackburn drug store on accouifi of illness. His place is being filled by Page Burrell. Mrs. O. N. Snellon of Willshire, 0., was here this morning on business and making a short visit with friends between trains. Mrs. Anna Reinking of South Bend, who has been making a visit with relatives at Chicago arrived in the city last evening and will make a several weeks' stay with her son, Paul. Word from Mr. and Mrs. Martin Weiland, Mrs. Weiland formerly being Miss Celia Mayer, who were wedded last Sunday at Spencerville, Ohio, is that they are now visiting at Bucyus, Ohio. They report a pleasant trip but stated nothing of their return home.

I Miss Tena Rademaker spent the day in Fort Wayne. ; 1 Mrs. Dale Moses went to Monmouth ■ ! ; thin morning. Mrs. D. N. Beery and daughter, Hrs. £ J. O. Sellemeyer spent the day in Fort i 1 Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Ward of Bluffton will spend Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. t L. H. Purdy and family. i < Mr. and Mrs. Albert Weinman arriv- p j ed from Fort Wayne and are guests of iG. M. Syphers and family. < Sheriff Durkin was at Portland this s ■ morning, where business required his ' i attention for a short while. A. J. Smith is home from a several 1 | days' business trip north in the in-! s j t erest of the Smith & Bell Lumber P ! company. : ! Miss Loraine Miller of Geneva, who j has been making a visit here with her * sister, Mrs. Guy Shoemaker, has re- , ’ turned home. 1 J. L. Longsworth left this morning , ' for his home in New Philadelphia. 0., | after a visit with Mac Ripley and fam- 1 ily near this city. ‘ All kinds of home-made edibles can j, Ibe purchased at the Everett & Hite : j bazaar Saturday at the Christian Ladaies’ Aid pastry sale. Attorney C. J. Lutz and J. C. Moran ( were at Winchester this morning, where they were looking after some business which required their atteti1 tion for a short while. Attend the pastry sale Saturday at the Everett & Hite bazaar, conducted by the Christian Ladies' Aid society. They will sell home-made bread, cake, pies, salads, baked beans, noodles, cottage cheese, etc. Attend the Christian Ladies' Aid pas- j try sale to be held Saturday in the 1 Everett & Hite bazaar. They will have on sale home-made bread, pies, cake and bakad beans, salads, cottage cheese, etc. Patronize them for the best in edibles. When you are shut in by the cozy [ fire these long evenings, have a box of fresh chocolates for company, if you are alone. If callers drop in you'll enjoy having these delicious sweets to pass around. Be sure they are stamped He-Mi-La, the assurance of purity. | E. X.' Ehinger of Decatur, who has been attending the state bankers meeting at Indianapolis, stopped off j in this city this morning for a. short visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Berling. Mrs. Berling is a daughter of Mr. Ehinger.—Bluffton News A series of evangelistic services and i Bible study will be held at the Pleasant Dale church (Brethren) beginning' October 29t6. The instructor will be Elder J. Edson Fiery of Onekama. Mich. The studies will include the fundamental doctrine of the Bible. Be sure and bring your Bible, and be present at each session Time of each session will bo announced later The five qualities necessary to a sue- j cessful comedy are: Abundant comedy I which the patrons expect, catchy music of the kind that stamps itself in the memory and tingles pleasantly in the ear the next day: spectacular cos tumes that set off the comliuess of the girl contingent to the best advantage; feminine beauty among both principals and subordinates alike, and the novel musical numbers and specialties which the latter-day audience looks for in the up-to-date productions, are all embraced in the presentation , of "The Cow Boy Girl,” billed to ap- i pear at opera house on Friday, Octo her 27th. Miss Walburga Eyanson of this city, : who has been in ill health for some ' months, with no apparent cause, gain- j i ed great relief Tuesday morning when she picked open a small pimple on her side, after feeling a hard substance ’ and removed therefrom, with the aid I of a small pair of tweezers a piece of steel needle probably three-quarters of lan inch in length. Miss Eyanson is unable to state how the needle ever entered her body, but thinks that it might have been swallowed in some ■ food that she ate. It caused her great I pain while traveling over her body and ; the removal resulted in untold relief j An X-Ray was taken of her side recently to locate any substance, but it failed to reveal anything.—Columbia City Commercial-Mail. Edith Beeler, aged ten, daughter Mr. and Mrs. Manus E Beeler, living | just east of Fairview, east of this city, received a very painful injury Wednesday afternoon near her home and in consequence will be disabled for several weeks. Just how she came to fall is not known, but it is thought that she stepped into a small hole in the ground, and she was tripped and thrown heavily onto her right side. Her right arm was caught under her in such fashion that the elbow was dislocated and a bone was broken in the joint. The bone was shoved out into the flesh, and. added another severe complication to the injuries. They were given prompt medical attention, and it is hoped that the injuries will heal without leaving a stiff joint.—Bluffton News.

Mis Bertha Heller went to Fort | Wayne at noon today and will return 1] on an evening car. s Mr. and Mrs. Ward Cline and grand I son, Elias Lichtensteiger, went to Ft. : I Wayne this afternoon for a visit with I Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Bagter. ' I The snow clouds in sight today Are i I reminders that the season of chilly ■ r days and colder nights is approaching, i I It’s time to see the coal man. . F. M. Schirmeycr loft yesterday lor j I Cardwell, Mo., where he will look after 11 some business in connection with the ; I closing of the Allison estate. j Morning comet parties are now a I popular thing. If you haven't taken a I squint at this one. you should set I 1 the alarm and get your overcoat and I house slippers handy. The farmer who hasn’t signed a1 1 contract to raise beets for the next J two years is not treating himself or ; I his neighbor or his community just | a right. It’s not too late yet. f H. H. Wefel is advertising a com I bination sale of farm implements and . I of his stock of goods in his Preble 11 store, to be held at Preble, Saturday -1 afternoon and evening, November 4th. i | Farmers interested in the sugar beet ■ I question should visit the field about , I Monroe or Geneva these days. From | I three to five cars are being shipped out| I each day and there is almost a contin- I ual stream of wagons going and com- I ing. The crop in Adams county this i I year is a good one. The Women’s Relief Corp is mak- ’ ing preparation to serve luncheon on Hallowe'en at their club rooms and : ask all to come and patronize them I and enjoy an evening of pleasure. You ! can have your choice of either coffee j ' and doughnuts or pumpkin pie and j | cider. No charge for admission will: be charged, but ten cents will be 1 charged for the lunch Everybody come. Mrs. Martin Stair arrived home , Sunday from Bremen. Ind., where she 1 spent a week with her daughter, Mrs. Harry Studabaker, and helped take j care of the latter’c little son, who is sick. She was accompanied also from Fort Wayne to Bremen by another daughter. Mrs. Ward Sunier, who I lives in Fort Wayne.—Bluffton News, tlrs. Stair was formerly Mrs Pete • Ashbaucher. i Decatur has practically succeeded j in securing the required 5,000 acres for | beet sugar, this being one of the conditions upon which the Holland St. Louis Sugar company will build a million dollar plant at Decatur Whe.t about the farmers around Berne, especially east and south of Berne, be I stirring themselves in this matter'.' The sugar beet is especially adapted to ! the muck-prairie ground and is a pay ing product.—Berne Witness. Herman Colchin, proprietor of one of the local cigar factories, has rented , the building formerly occupied by John Herman, situated just south of the Atz & Steele harness shop, and will move his factory there. For some time he | has seen the necessity of increasing ( his plant and this morning he began to fix up the new room. It will be much larger than his present quarters and the force will be increased accordingly. The cigars manufactured by Mr. Colchin are finding a ready sale and ho is forced into enlarging | the plant. The front of the new lota- ■ tion win be arranged for a retail sales- j room and the back for the manufactory. The new quarters will be ready about the last of next week and will I be occupied at onc«i.

Why are there no meat markets at the North Pole? war % V r Because they never had a cook there. LADIES We Have Just Been Think' j ing What A Hungry World ’T Would Be ; If All The Meat Shops . jj Were Transported x i Far Beyond The Northern Sea! What Would You Do For Dinner TOMORROW DYONIS SCHMITT ’|j,

BUSM EaSl CL_ZjB II _ [T DON’T IV’IT ? .r' P-1 Fl To yolir Wrap and Furs, come g I /lin now anf l see a ne vvra P s aiia lIJ rM\ urs^at compete j ® Fh and up-to-date in every : iiu' way - A full line of i sizes in the latest col- . : ors and styles. A big ; J ■ 1 3 X- line of bran new furs. ' . A 1 H The prices are right W . < B and the workmanship j j i : B L i is the best. Come in | L and see them. No tS’iS trouble to show goods. I H n x 0 THE BOSTON STORE | B DECATUR, - - - - - - - - - INDIANA | rwEa MME

NOW is the time to buy your coal. We wish to thank the public for their liberal patronage and still invite you tp come. Phone 639 Emerson Bennett.

* fp. fp * :in a pinch: > ♦ You can borrow any amount from us from $5 up. on your | * household goods, pianos, teams, * wagons, etc., without removal, * and on short notice. » ♦ You can have from one to . twelve months’ time in which to pay it back. OUR contracts are simple and all transactions 9 are clean-cut and private. * ♦ 84 cents per week for fifty ♦ * weeks pays a |35.00 loan. All ♦ * ameunts in proportion. ♦ ; * If you need money, fill out , the following blank, cut it out * * and mail it to us. * Our agent is in Decatur every ♦ * Tuesday. * * ♦ * Name ♦ j* Address, St. and No * . Amount Wanted * Reliable Private « ’ H. Wayne Loan Company: * Established 1890. Room 2. Sec * * ond Floor, 706 Calhoun Street. , Home ’Phone, 833. « * Fort Wayne. Ind ♦ o♦♦ ♦ ♦ MBBHBBDHEHSttffiBB “SHUR ON” Eye-glass mountings adjusted by us add the final touch of refinement to your ■ personal appearance. They are the most comfortable. If you have never worn glasses, see us. If you suffer from the unsightliness and discomfort of ordinary glasses, see us. If you would see better see us. No Charge for Examination •P” Hotel Corner for-t Two InterurbrovOtMicrw

|| If You* Want Anything In My p Line, Come And See Me || O I sell the famous B°rghoff Beer, real GerSt man brew, the best made, at $2.00 per case, j injpints or quarts. Its the best for every purf pose. ’ All kinds of whiskeys-Kentucky Bourbons, g » O ard sour mash ’ Pennsylvania rye, Maryland ►s' rye and all the others, from $1.50 to $6.00 per w * W per gal. Wines and cordials of every kind at d prices to suit. Comer Second and Madison Sis. ® — | , J CURLEY RADEMACHER S ’ This Cut The Most ; Represents Nearly Per- ; Tne s ec t Range ■ Known To ’ The Art I Sir>4' The Material, the ■ * Workmanship, I r i Economy of | J fuel -inproduc- 1 . ROUND ng finest cook- I ing and baking I ■ OAK results—aresim- 1 HI uot approach -I vz rl ELF ed by any other I range made in I STEELE RANGE America. I — ■uni mm ini nmi hi— urn J LAMAN & LEE |