Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 9, Number 253, Decatur, Adams County, 28 October 1911 — Page 3

B I Nice High Top Boots I I For Girls I i I We got in a shipment of the latest patern high i|j top tan shoes for girls to day. We have all sizes Sb from little girls 6toß to ladies sizes. Better 9 < B come to night, they’re going fast. Bp I $1.50 to $2.50 I B 9 g Charlie Voglewede I THE SHOE SELLER

J»C* -. ♦ □*o4o*o*o< WEATHER FORECAST ? i s Generally fair tonight and Sunday Barrels for sale at Curley s. J. R. Porter went to Geneva ’his afternoon on business. Mrs. Charles Murray was a Fort Wayne business visitor today. Mrs. Mary Christen went to Mon mouth to visit with relatives. .|4>e Tonnelier was at Geneva toda' looking after business which required his attention for some time. Mrs. J. W. Vail has returned home from Cardwell, Mo., where she has been with her husband for some weeks, and will remain here for a short while. Next week will be a busy one in so- , ciety circles .especially the forepart of the wook, when a number of Hallowe'en parties and masquerades. as have been scheduled, will take place

i'ju.h.ii ,■ ■R MKHM MIHMMIiI I rHE HOME 0F GroceriesJ IT TICKLES US « deliver At I 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 EggE 25 Butter 18 to 22c Hower and Hower, North of G. R. & I- Depot ,phone 108QQH O g O B O M O BOSOOHOffIOBOBOBOBOBOB ! J. S. Bowers, Pres. F- «• Sehirmeyer, Vice Pres, g 1 5 1 2 3 The Bowers Realty Company has some excel- g O lent bargains in city property and Adams county ■ ■ farms The company would be pleased to have || O yotTcall at its office and see its offerings. The com- q ■ plenty of five per cent money to loan on ■ 2 Enable lemts. Let toe Schwmever Abstract g 5 Company prepare your abstract of title. Twenty H 2 years experience, complete records. O • O ■ ■ ■ o ~ The Bowers Realty Co. ■ S French Quinn, Secty. O <■ -ftiOSia

Barrels for sale at Curley’s. D. B. Erwin was a Fort Wayne bus- i Iness visitor today, Tom Gallogly made a business trip . to Fort Wayne today, E. W. Johnson returned this morn ing to his home after a short business ; stay here. Miss Grace Coffelt left on the 8 o'clock car for Root township, where : she will visit with her mother, Mrs. ■ J. C. Grim. Miss Dorcas Kuntz of Geneva, who j was here this morning to take her ' regular musical instruction, returned j i at noon to her home. The Misses Pascaline Smith and : Mamie Mettler of Fort Wayne will spend Sunday with the former's grand- ■ mother, Mrs. Veronica Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Shackley and daughters. Fern and Georgia, Ipft this morning for Fort Wayne, where they will visit with his mother, Mrs. How1 ard Shackley, Henry Heckman of Fort Wayne, a student at the Concordia college, aitrived in the city for an over Sunday visit here with his parents. Mr. ano Mrs. Charles Heckman.

Mrs. Glen Glancy of Monroe was , here this morning, doing some shop ■ Ping. Waiter Deitsch and Ado Crone ci Celina, Ohio, will spend Sunday here ! with friends. Miss Vet a Goeke will arrive this ev ‘ ening to visit over Sunday with Miss Vera Ehinger. Miss Mabel May will make a week's visit with her sister, Mrs. D. L. Barkley, near Hoagland. John Schug arrived home from his ! regular trip and will spend Sunday heye with his family. Mrs. F. G. Schinnerer of Willshire. Onio, transferred, here this morning enroute to Fort Wayne. Joel Lynn was assisting at the Win : nes shoe store today, helping, to care for the rush of the day. The Misses Gertrude Butler and Josephine Lang were extra clerks a the Steele & Weaver racket store today. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Gay went to 1 Angola today to visit with their daughI ter. Ruth, a student at the Tri-State normal. Appropriate religious services will ibe held tomorrow in all the city’s . churches, to which the public is cordially invited. Mrs. Ed Luttman or Magley has rei turned to her home, she being hero | today looking after some business affairs for a short while Miss Mary CIoSs and her cousin, Mrs. William Skillman, of Cincinnati,' Ohio, will go to Fort Wayne to spend ! Sunday with relatives, | Jacob Atz of the firm of Atz & Steele, returned last night from a trip j to Cincinnati, where he was transact I ing business for the firm. I A. P. Beatty was at Indianapolis to day attending the state meeting of | the boards of guardians and charities, I he being the probation officer for the 1 county. . Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Lower, who have been making a month’s visit with his 1 brother, William Lower, and wife, at i Whiting, ’ Kans., and with other relai ' fives in the west, are expected home ■ , the first of the week. I Ben Fosty of Toledo, Ohio, and Mrs. ; Anna Golden and children of Fort • Wayne, will spend Sunday with their - ■ grandfather and father, Thomas Mo I ran. and daughter, and the F K. KinI i ney and J. C. Molau families. Mrs. Charles Niblick, Mrs. John Ev ' erett and Mrs. Henry Krick, members I , of the boards of charity and guar dians, left this morning for Indianapolis to attend T he state meetings, commencing there this morning and continuing until next Tuesday. Taste different, look different, attractive and uniform, He-Mi-La chocolates have selected coatings that distinguish them from ordinary ones. Wlien you buy chocolates be sure they bear the mark of the purity I brand. He-Mi La, on every piece. Chalmer Schafer, Walter Kauffman and Henry Gentis, who have been at Cincinnati for the past week, ,in charge of the Schafer display of sad dlery goods, which are being shown at the Tri-State Vehicle and Implement convention, will return home this evening. Howard J. Wisehaupt, who has been located in Washington, D. C., for the past few months, where he has been canvassing for a publishing company, has been changed to Richmond, Va., where he will be located for the next tew months. He is having great success in this line of work and will probi ably continue with the company Possessing in generous measure all I the elements which go toward a deI lightful interest-bolding and mirthprovoking entertainment, it has long ' since ceased to astonish playwrights, play producers and theater-goers that “Brewster’s Millions ' Is the most enormously successful play of the century. Would you like to know how to spend 11,000.000 in a year? Send in I your mail order for seats now for j "Brewster’s Millions,” and watch I Monty Brewster do it. and get more than two hundred great, big hearty laughs while doing it at the Majestic theater, Sunday, Monday, Tuesday and , Wednesday, with matinees on Sunday and Wednesday. Robert Burnett, aged nine, of Hammond, who is recovering from a thirtyfoot fall from the top of a barn in an ' airship he manufactured himself out i of his mother's washing machine, bed i cheats auu pieve. vs sidewalk, got tip a minsfj-el show and blackened his face wlfh patent shoe polish instead of burnt cork. The black will not come off and the “lotion” made the boy ill. Mr. and Mrs. B. P. Harris of East Main street were in Decatur Friday, attending the funeral services of her aunt, Mrs. E. A. Numbers, aged eightyfour years, whose death occurred in Austin, Texas The remains were brought to the former home in Decatur, the services taking place Friday morning at 10 o’clock from the home of a friend, John Niblick.—Portland Sun.

Jesse Hurst went to Fort Wayne I £ this afternoon. p Miss Minnie Bogner went to Fort i I Wayne for a visit Mrs. D. L. Barkley of near Hoag I > land was a shopper here today. ' Milton Miller, who was recently ad-; I mitted to the bar, has qualified as . j notary. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Fisher will spend I !? Sunday in Fort Wayne with the Frank ’ Trimm family. Dee Jones has gone to Bryant for | a several days’ visit with his brother, : ‘ Collins Jones. Hunter Myers a:rived home today I I from his regular trip and will spend j , Sunday with bis family here. George Wemhoff of the Weinhotf i. i Monumental Works, was a business ■ J , caller at Geneva this afternoon. Henry Thomas, the cigar manufacturer, returned this afternoon from iPortland, where he was on business this morning. A load of fourteen horses was shipped over the interurban to Ft. Wayne this morning for the Decatur Horse | Sale company. Mrs. O. Sheets of Wren, Ohio and Mrs. C. Morehead of Willshire, Ohio, changed cars here this afternoon on j I their way to Fort Wayne. James Kirkendall, the medicine I man, w-ho is visiting in the locality of 1 Monroe was here today, looking offer 1 1 business affairs. He expects to re- ' turn to Bowerstown, Ohio, soon foi ‘ the winter. ' Christ Weldy, who has been on the ' sick list for a number of weeks past, and who has been bedfast for three > weeks, is again able to be on the street for a short while, and is impre i ing steadily. k ‘ t Miss Anna Forbing, who has been ; here for some time visiting with h , \ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Forbing, > left at noon today for Muncie to visit ; with her sister. Mrs. George I’lmt-i for a short time. - i S! Mr. and Mrs. J. R Bennett passed : t i through the city this afternoon on their way to their home at Bluffton. ... from a visit in Paterson and Ridgeville, N. J.; New York City and other i cities of the east. t The Rebekah lodge has issued an-1 r nouncement to all its members to: >- the roll call meeting to be held Tues i day evening, November 7th, at which j tim» each is requested to be preseui or send a verse or quotation to be I read in response to the roll call of ' s i names, HERE’S YOUR CHANCE. Haul in the cripple, lead in the lamv to Heller & McGill, the practical bor. ■ shiers and farriers. Located at First and Madison streets We have purchased the Jacob Buhler shop. Please ’ give us a trial on the faults and di- ’ seases of your horse’s feet, and let l “ ( us show you what we can d r . We ' have pleased others; we can please you. General repairing and wood n work. Please give us a trial. t tr tu-thu . . HELLER & McGILL.. , I i WANTED Men to learn the barber , ! trade We want plain people for a . ■ plain business. We teach bj our own t> I method that saves years of apprentice 1 I ship. Tools given. Apply by mail j Moler Barber College, Chicago, 111. LOST—Plush lap robe, black on one " side and red on other: also horse’s , head on one side. Finder return to j ’ Tom Rayl. Monroe, Ind., or Thomas ; ’ Dirkin, sheriff. 2531 "I i t

- ! Why are there no meat markets at i the North Pole? ■ zd “ I Because they never had a cook j I there. LADIES We Have Just Been Thinking What A Hungry Wnrld ’T Would Be If All The Meat Shops Were Transported Far Beyond The Northern Sea! What Would You Do For Dinner TOMORROW DYONIS SCHMITT |

I What Is The Question, Gasoline Or Tire f U “T - ——— — | | Consumption? | rimMKaaoMMBHMMMMMMn• -'.V jrMf • Vh /TFfVuavvMuta 'j; j SB <. I A in I 1 I . j I JF/ v-- J J I ' I I I i Through These Columns We Hove Shown You U The Following 1 That the car that gives you 20 miles to the gallon of gasoline will have consumed 500 gallons in 10,000 miles. Wholesale SSO 00 H And that the car that gives you 15 miles per gallon will have consumed 666 gallons, going same distance. Wholesale 66 60 S Difference in favor of the Ford sl6 60 ® Also, that 10,000 miles the tires under the light weight FORD, with its 50 per cent safety factor, will cost $125 00 H And, that 10,000 miles the tires under a car with a 25 per cent safety factor, will cost you right at 300 00 H H A difference m favor of the FORD of 175 00 Also that 10,000 miles the tires under a car with no fasetv will cost yon 550 00 B In this case a difference in favor of the FORD of 425 00 F I What Is The Question, Gasoline cr Tire | Consumption? J A Five Passenger, Fully Equipped Tourirng Car $700.00 ; J A Three Passenger, Fully Equipped Commercial Car $600.00 1 A Six Passenger, Fully Equipped Town Car $9 I 5.00 p j A 600 Pound Model T Delivery Wagon s7l 5.00 ’ | S The Grove Garage Co. I 123 hi Main St. C] Auto Numbers in Our Painting Department. BLUFFTON. - INDIANA p’ I Li

TOR SALE —Favorite hard coal burner, i kitchen range, both good as new. Also 1 washing machine. Easy payments. Call 428 or leave word at this office. 234t3

COAL 'COAL COAL Did You Ever Buy Any OF Bennets? ITS HOT STUFF Phone 639.

nrw'w.i BBHMiI MswMß I-wmi aaiME I'-'., EX)!N’T WAIT I P. fl I I/f7fVjKwr To buy your Wrap and Furs, come ra 141 in now see a lane wa P s nnd S ■ Vj'lr furs that is complete z ./\ || ~ UP /l and up-to-date in every LJ IBJ way- A full line of fjll s’ 26B i n the latest col- A• Is w orsand styles. A big ' \Z\a.U! I B vaLILJ line of bran new furs, j P r ’ ces are njfht M 9 ® M and the workmanship Jr s ■ 1(11® »the best. Come in Jfl - I and see them. No |j u K trouble to show goods. [| fj I] t*j IMLluaiw' Ll g THE BOSTON STORE | DECATUR, - INDIANA I

As Winter Approaches PRICES ON COAL Are Sure To Advance Give Us Your Order Now And »Ve Can Save Vov Some Money THE DECATUR LUMBER CO.