Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 10, Number 87, Decatur, Adams County, 10 April 1912 — Page 3

I A Fellow Following A Plow I ...all day wants an easy shoe on his feet. R The Loose ground makes it hard walking and we’ve got the shoe that will give you M comfort and not tire your feet. Barkers Best made with Hand Stitched soles are sure- jjjL ]y the most comfortable made. Drop in and see them the next time you’re in town. No trouble to show you, just ask us. ||| gljl I Charlie Voglewede I THE SHOE SELLER On The West Side Os The Street

o <ATO PEGASI i o « 'SV- ■ Fair tonlghtAr Thursday; wanner nortj^or*' h Tlit. jfljF wihlr." 11V:!' < Mrs. ReiiiKiiiß of rrtsble left last | evening for Fort Wayne. Fred Hohman ”. «s numuered among the business callers at Winchester today. Mrs. R. A. Davies spent yesterday afternoon with Mrs. Zeigler at Monmouth. Mrs. H. G. Sehittn transferred here | last evening enroute to Fort Wayne t from Schumm. A. J. Rigdon and daughter, Ida, of I Milford Center, Ohio, arrived for a * I visit with William Singleton and fam-' ; ily - The next att. action at the, Bosse ' opera house, Saturday. April 13th, will i be the newest comedy success, "Casey |. Jones.” It is a riean, up-to-date play | in three acts, with clever people and I extremely entertaining specialties. |

- -- -w—— - — «. » E»»iiH3K4fiK®saa«aOHHO«™ i THE HOME OF I Quality Groceries I ,’sV|/ YOU ’cS'J J Will Always FIND * _ Us Busy BUT NEVER TOO BUSY To Give Your Especial Wants our Special ATTENTION WE VALUE YOUR TRADE — —— Have you been thinking of seed potatoes. We have the genuine varieties at the right price. Early Rose SI.BO bu. Early Bliss $2.00 bu. Early Ohio $2.15 A complete stock of Garden and Flower seeds We pay cash or trade for produce Eggs 18c Butter 18 to 24 Hower and Hower. North of G. R. & I. Depot. ’Phone 108. HOSIO &O ®i 010 .‘£>lolo SOIOttOfIOButE J J. S. Bowers, Pres. F. M. Schirmeyer, Vice Pres. 2 ■ C O 8 £ 11 w ® The Bowers Realty Company has some excel- 0 J lent bargains in city property ana Acams county ® • farms. The company would be pleased up have in you call at its office and see its offerings, -he com- q 5 pany has plenty of five per eent, money to loan on n d reasonable terins. Let the Schirmeyer Abstract § q Company prepare your abstract ot title, .twenty m years experience, complete records. o O © * o 2 The Bowers Realty Go. g S French Quinn, Secty. O OBOBOBOBOIOIOWOiIO# OHO®C

Surveyor Erir'. trade a business trip to Geneva today. Mrs II Gamp went to Fort Wayne yesterday afternoon. W. A. Kueble- end C. A. Dugan left today for West Baden, where they will take a rest for the next ten days. Mrs. Homer Krick returned last evening to Fort Wayne after viOing D. at Preoie. You've heard the Lug. See t b ’ J play, “Casey .Tones,’’ which comes to the Bosse opera Louse on Saturday, April 13th. Rev D. O. 1 *se is expected home today from Day ton, Ohio, wfiere he attended the Evangelical conference last week. Mrs. Charles Griebel and daughter, Bessie, returned last evening to Fort Wayne after visiting with relatives at I Willshire, Ohio. Mis. .1. B. Kiracofe went to Wren. Ohio, yesterday to visit with relatives. Shafer Peterson was a Fort Wayne business visitor yesterday. Mrs. B. A. Haefling went to Fort Wayne yesterday aiternoon for a visit with relatives and friends. She may j return byway of Bluffton.

"Casey Jones” is coming to town. I Will Colchin was a Ft. Wayne visi- - tor today. t William Glendening of Geneva was I a business visitor here today. Joe Colchin has returned to Fort , Wayne after visiting at his home. i Mrs. Laure Van Camp and daughter. I Edwina, spent the day in Ft. Wayne. ! Tim Corbett lias’had a new awning placed in front of his place of busii ness. Miss Bertha Dodane returned to Ft. Wayne after a vir.it with Julia Colchin and family. L. W. Coppock left last night for Gtand Rapids, Mich., after visiting over Easter with his family. Clayson Carroll and Miss May Rademaker attended the 1 lay at the Temple theatre, Ft. Wayne, last evening. “Casey Jones" is a deadly enemy of Mr. and Mrs Grouch. He will slip you the heartiest laugh of the season. A large number will go to Ft. Wayne this evening to attend the Moose show A special car v ill be run by the interurban at 6.3 n o'clock. The John Diller family, which Tuesday lost their home by fire, were today moving into one of the John Brock residences on Nuttman avenue. Mrs. George Burkett of this city, who was operated upon Monday at the Lutheran hospital, Fort Wayne, for gall stones and tumor, is reported as being better. Carpenters this morning fixed the Curley Radamacker awning, which on last Saturday was bad* bent when th.? stroA wind bleedfl against the glass sIly cRev. E. A. Goodwin and daughter, Olive, left on the ten o’clock car for the Charles Bailey home, where they attended the Lar.es’ Aid society of the Union Chapel church, which met their this afternoon TJie Christian church has taken no action yet on the selection of a minister. There are two in view—the - Rev. Myrick of Kansas, and Rev. Ernst Fitch of Angola, and it is thought the mat» r ■•. ill be taken up soon. Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Henry returned ■ last evening from Atlanta, Ga., where they have been with their son, Enos Henry, who has been very ill with ’ typhoid fever several weeks. He is ’ able to sit up but is still in a bad con dition. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Miller .eturned I yesterday afternoon to Sherwood, 0., | after a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Noll, at Pleasant Mills. Mr. and Mrs. Miller were married last Saturday at Defiance, Ohio, by the Rev. N. E. Vitz. The assessors being engaged this spring in making the city canvass state that they are doing jiicely and covering their territory in excellent shape. They have until May 15th to complete their work and hand in their report, and from the present way their work is being done, will accomplisn their task before the specified time. Mrs. John Colchin, ->f Nb’+h Fifth street, was down town louay for the first time since ten months ago, when she was injured in Fort Wayne while riding in an automobile which collided with a street car. Mrs. Colchin has been able to be abo it the house for some time, but the two times she spent in church last week and her rip down town today, are the first b. agdistance walks she has taken. Charles Railing, formerly" of this city, but now of Lima, Ohio, was in I the city Tuesday for a short while on business and visiting with relatives. Mr. Railing, since leaving here, has been following his former trade of painting, and recently secured a contract from the Erie railroad for the painting of thirty-three bridges along their road. He was at Ossian, where he will have an overstructure to repaint and then go east throughout the state of Ohio. Dr. Willard T. Graham, superintendent of the Methodist Episcopal hospital at Indiana] oils for the last three years, has tendered his resignation to the board of directors and will depart the first week in May to take a similar position at the .Methodist hospital at Des Moines. lowa. Dr. Graham says that his reason for leaving th<> Indianapolis hospital is that the Des Moines hospital is a larger institution and offers him an * tcrease in salaiy. Dy. Graham ki it native of Lebanon, Ohio. Before gi ir.g to Indianapolis he was svnerin °nden( of the Seney hospital in Brooklyn, N. Y. He is forty-seven years 1. Charles Warren Fairbanks, pref'o rd of the hoard of directors at the Methodist hospital, • said last evening that no successor to Dr. Graham had yet been chosen. —J— - -o ————— ELKS' INSTALLATION. The Elks will have the installation of its officers Friday evening of this week, and following the installation, there will be a banquet and smoker

I — Boys Xtra Good Clothes for t.—-— : Any and All Occasions W} ■ Every Xtra good suit has both the • style for dress up wear and the durab- \ ility for hard every day use. JSOL You may worry when the boy goes , Mm fishing, he might fall in, But don’t about him spoiling his clothes, they are made to stand more than the boy I® himself. XW /71 Ji Boys fancy knicker suits 8 to 17 yrs. two and three button double breasted * and norfolk models, in fancy gray.. brown and blue cassinceres and serges the best values you have ever seen, trousers lined throughout. Xtragood Suits priced $5. to $lO. Regular Boys Suits priced $1.50 to $4. n it j | WIL We’d like to show you these clothes RolthoU.se, Schulte Go. jf ij| Good Clothes Sellers for Men and Boys. t I ■ 1... A I —— II - . I »| I I ._!

SALE. pena, Montmorency, Pi counties. I have a number of and have two bargains. 80 acres, with 70 acres cleared, and the balance pasture; 2 acres ot apple, pear, plum and cherry' trees, nearly all bearing; sand loam and clay loam, , with a heavy clay subsoil. A good drilled well; fences nearly all wire, , 4 miles to railroad stationAind a small , town. % mile to school, % mile to church. This place lies on a good i hard read, house 11x34, wing 16x27, in good condition, 7 rooms; barn 40x70, with cement floo:s: another barn j 26x60, chicken and tool sheds and other outbuildings; *4,800. 100 aces. GO ac-es cleared, balance pasture land, with about 20 acres or small timber, ash, elm, oak and bassI wood. Last year corn on this place • went 60 bu. to the acre; potatoes. 220; 1 hay. 2 tons to the acre. There are fifty ■ bearing apple, plum, and cherry trees; soil, clay and clay 'oam, with clay sub'l soil, good well, isO rods wire fencing, 9 miles from Alpena, % mile to ; school, 2% miles to German church, ■ Catholic and Methodist church neari by, 8-room house, cellar, barn 30x40, horse barn and cow bain. Price. , $2,800. I have a few city propertiss to sell ■ at a bargain, and farms from 20 to Try this test in a Wear-Ever” Aluminum Cooking Utensil /W-e.'e. S JEM 'N > \IS J zw W Place a cake of chocolate in a “Wear-Ever" laucepan without grating, without adding water melt over a low fire, with, at stirring Chocolate will not barn. BECAUSE Aluminum heat, quicker and retains heat longer than other materials of which cooking utensils are made. You can save at least fiu 1 minutes cooking each meal—9o hours oB your fuel bill for the year! "WEAR-EVER” Aluminum Cooking Utensils save food too, and expense for replacing utensils worn A ut or burnt out. They are practically everlasting. “ WEAR-EVER” ware cannot rust, is unaffected by fire, is strong, light to handle and most durable. With aluminum there is no danger of poisonous compounds forming with acid fruits or foods. Replace utensils that Wear Out with utensils that “Wear-Ever” Let us supply >o, w »’ WEAR-EVLtI 1 the one-quart saucepan advertised in the /x\’ 5? women’s publications <_ 1 — I——A and show you other T. A C U Cft utensils bearing the “Wear-Ever” trade- “* rk ‘ HADE MAUK 1 .. — JOHN BROCK

160 acres in Adams County. Come in j and let me tell you about them. D. F. LEONARD, Office over Vance, Hite & Macklin's ! store. Office ’phone, 667; GIRLS PLAY IN FT. WAYNE. Will Meet Smart Girl Basket Ball Friday I The high school girii. sket ball team will go to Fort Way ? Friday evening to play the girls oi the Smart high school. WANTED—I am in a yos'ti'o (c a boy 10 to 15 years old a a farm. Must not use toba ;o. —J. C. Harkless. ’Pao”e I. No 1. 86t3 Good Property For Sale Located on north rth St. A good home and ch- . : ct. to make some money. Phone C. D. KUNKLE

T NIBLICK & CO. Many 11 ills, and Trimming on Dresses J 5 This is a season of lace, tuck-, fichus and flounces for dresses. However, with the lines still re1 ( f 1 ’ n Die foundations, this additional trimming does not destroy the slender silhouette. How Bischof has used them il AVyvSM •. i Fichus, sonic draped ..ver just one shoulder giving the fashionI , .-..A, j nhlc c.e-.i'le trimmed effei ts an! others gracefully draped over 1., K-jU . Ay,\ both saoulocrs :. the entile trimming for the waist, are i ' _ S characteristic of many farcy Bischof drcssc.-. ' uc ’ ce< l flounces .jed in Vai lace, form the trimming for the > ' 'I skirts of lace and net dri -e- ind other sheer materials, while the ! T '■ kichu ; and > ‘ounces on toi and marquisette dre_- .es are embroidered fl/ ! |',W 7‘ r!-- 1 \ in beautiful Grecian effects. ‘ I hcll ' frin s e l |as been carried forward into the Spring Vjf . ? 4i i! -easen, and a fringe made of fine twisted cord is used quite liberally ' Xj. .1 vn linen, pi.pie and other Summer fabric dresses. ’ ,rs Bischof has studied fi.r years th. w little touches on dresses ,~t ' r that attract A omen a.. h. ;.. mis gr. at < :;. >- in ap; ' i (hem. He h.., acqm.xd-the .ibllim (o k,, u -1.,. ,■ ~ , t !t ~ . f the ’«■ .if M, elaborate i'arhian style-, and to -.do; •" to the . t teful /WW- wM requirements of the American woman. i r exquisite dress shown here is of embroider- 1 ret MB. r waistline are outlined with narrow black v<-!\ct ril.re i aw.— °Dier pretty washable frocks now on exhibit at t i:r ‘ tore T n Ireßa1 reBa s - th eyekt embroi.h red waist and tinned ‘ rn,r< ” htts, batiste dresses trinni.c-l in I. trimmed in striped lawus. and combii.atio;i-- 4 - .out nd’ ail-over embrddery. 4 4

f l A || jf J •WBrWMfck, ■ _ J[h 4 Shoe Styles for Quality is just as good as styles i are handsome. We can fit the foot of nine out of ten particular women who want the best and most stylish foot wear to be had. PEOPLES & GERKE New Location In Meibers Block First Door South of Schmitt Meat Market. h- ■ •• —l_Z=J