Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 10, Number 226, Decatur, Adams County, 20 September 1912 — Page 3

| Every Woman Admires | S The beautiful combination of a new fall creation ■ B in velvet button boot with a dull mat kid r top. See the styles in our window p I $3.50 I I Charlie Voglewede | | THE SHOE SEEl_l_EF=t » On The West Side Os The Street fe

j WEATHER FORECAST fr Xi ..♦+JU+++*++M4i»+++++V R Showers tonight or Saturday: slightly warmer east portion tonight; ; cooler Saturday. * G. S. Dutcher went to Ft. Wayne this forning. M'ss Naomi Niblick went to Fort 1 Wayne this morning. Mr. and Mrs. William Holstein and! children went to Fort Wayne today.! Mr. Stark of the Rex theater made a business trip to Fo r Wayne this morning. Joseph L. Smith, the brick mason, | went to Hesse Cassel this morning to look after some work. C. C. Meade, special representative for the Ford Motor Car company, ofi Detroit, Mich., was in the city over' night on business for his company, i He called on the local representative, [ John H. Stewart. About fifty local Knights of Pytii-j ins took advantage of the special interurban car and rates to Fort Wayne Thursday for the K. of P. Home ded-' ication.

(C THE HOME OF j *? ua *' t y Groteri«J JM* 1 ' : 3 fgM Mad? Known 1o Us asMg . Man in person Cg®/ iSgj OR BY: PHONE 61 j|™y JHIL Your Wants IN THE GROCERY LINE AND WE WILL DO THE REST Which Means—The Best! Indiana watermellons this week at a bargain. Extra fancy honey-home-lb. cakes 18c. Virginia sweet potatoes 3c lb. Oranges, bananas, apples, celery, pumpkins. Everything you need for canning or jell mak- a ing. Our pickling vinegar pleases others and you will want it too. 20c gal. W’e pay cash or trade for produce I Eggs 23. Butter 19 to 25c Hower and Hower. North of G. R. & I. Depot. 'Ehone 108.

I JNO. S. BOWERS F M. SCHIRMEYER I j President .-Pres t & Treas. FRENCH QUINN gl Secretary g I THE BOWERS REALTY CO. | REAL ESTATE, BONDS, LOANS, I ABSTRACTS. The Schirmeyer Abstract Company complete Ab- S stract Records, Twenty years Experience 1 Farms, City Property, 5 per cent H MONEY P

Ansel Bremerkamp was a Fort Wayne business visitor today. G. C. Steele was attending to business matters in For' Wayne today. Miss Mary Kirschner was a Fort Wayne business visitor this morning. Vane Weaver is spending the day in Fort Wayne, looking up friends, and attending to some business matters. ! Lee and Lew Yager went to MonI roe on business this morning. Dee Lewton made a. business trip 1 to Portland this morning. Rev, T. L. Jones of the Baptist ' church will return today from Muncie, where he has been attending the Baptist association meet. 1 The Ernst Schlickman family, who i have been spending several years in Denver, Colo., will return here to make their home this winter. Rev. B. F. Brandt and wife passed ' through the city this morning en- | route to their home at Fort Wayne ' from Willshire, Ohio, where they visI ( ited. Miss Ruby Sheets, who has been 1 spending several years in Colorado, 1 has returned here and will spend the ■ winter with her mother, Mrs. Nancy 1 Sheets, and family.

J. M. Rice left today noon for Ft. Wayne. Marsh Burdge was a Fort Wayne visitor Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. James Fristoe will spend Sunday in Spencerville, Ohio, attending a triple birthday dinner there. Mrs. Tom Haefling and son, George, will return tomorrow to Indianapolis after a visit here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H, Voglewede Mrs. Catherine Wilmington, a sister of Mrs. Ed Phillips, arrived in the city from Bluffton and Ossian, where she has been visiting, and will remain with Mrs. Phillips until after home-coming Rev. and Mrs. W. H. Shepherd, formerly of West Race street, left Thursday morning for Industry, where Rev. Shepherd has accepted a call as pastor of the United Brethren church.— Portland Commercial-Review. The John Mallott family of West Monroe street are packing their household goods preparatory to shipping them to Arkansas, where they will make their home. Frank Martz and family will occupy the Mallott house. George Brunn, formerly employed at the Hotel Murray in this city, writes us from his old home at Myrdal Station, Bergensbauen, Denmark. He sends best regards to hfs Decatur friends. Congressman John Adair will open his political campaign in this county with a speech at Pleasant Mills this evening. Quite a number of the loyal from this city will accompany him to that place. Tomorrow evening he speaks at Geneva. Samuel J. King, sheriff of Jay county, whose official records were examined recently by james P. Haefling, formerly of Decatur, and Samuel W. Crane, of Lafayette, field examiners of the state board of accounts, is given an absolutely clean bill in the report received Monday by Milton Millett, president of the Jay county board of commissioners.— Portland Sun. Gorge .Middleton, driver of the Berghoff Brewing company, is at Hope hospital with serious injuries sustained yesterday morning while driving under a low shed in the Hilker lumber yard. It is feared that his spine may have been injured. The roof of the shed cleared the wagon seat a few inches and Middleton attempted to lean back and drive through. Losing his balance he fell to the bottom of the wagon. — Ft. Wayne Journal-Gazette. Mrs. Jennie Fuhrman writes us from Idaho Springs, Colo., where she and Mr. Fuhrman are enjoying a delightful month. The card is written from Little Don’t Mine, 8,000 feet above sea level, where the snow was fourteen inches deep last Saturday. Last Friday they climbed three miles up the Rockies and picked red raspberries. Aunt Jennie says she has six pints of them canned to bring home, and if we come over she will make us a short-cake. We re cornin’. A large delegation of Knights of Pythias from Decatur came to Fort Wayne yesterday to attend the dedication of the new K. of P. home in this city. Amon/ those who were here were H. S. Michaud. Charles Yager, F. V. Mills, Dore B. Erwin, Daniel Erwin. Dr. J. M. Miller. Albert Sellemeyer, Fred Fruchte, Chester Johnson. A. H. Sellemeyer, D. H. Hunsicker, Milton Miller and C. I- Walters.—Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette.

6b. QUALITY HARNESS | wAwL Price aione means nothing. Yoil must consider both the quaiit / and the price of an article if you expect to make a good purchase. In the construction of our team and ! buggy Harness We put the Highest Grade Leather workmanship and finish. Each set is custom made and every part is inspected thoroughly before being offered for sale. With us it is not a question of how cheap but how good can we build every set of harness. We solicit your harness business on the point of quality; and will guarantee every part of every set of harness sold. 6b. -srerer ttOATErz’

C, C. Schug of Berne was a business visitor here today. Mrs. Sarah Mercer of Hoagland is visiting here with relatives. Alva Nichols and F. A. Peoples were Fort Wayne visitors yesterday. Miss Celia Smith went to Fort Wayne today for a visit with friends. Henry Krick and D. L. Leonard have returned from a Canadian trip. Mrs. William Heilman of Tiffin, 0., is visiting with her daughter, Mrs. Will Lehne. Virgil Krick left this morning for Columbus, Ohio, to attend the state university. George Krick accompanied him there. Miss Mary Bender of Pleasant Mills stopped off here enroute home from Huntington and is the guest of Miss! Bertha Drummond. Miss Peoples, who is teaching in lie south part of the county, will arrive home tomorrow to visit with her parents over Sunday. Miss Lulu Brokaw, who has been spending a three weeks’ vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Brokaw, will leave this evening on her return to Colorado Springs where she is employed. Mrs. Theodore Roth, who has been visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Helm, left this noon for Chicago, where she will make her future home. Mrs. Charles Murray left this noon for Fort Wayne where she will at-1 tend to business. Mrs. J. D. Hale, who is at Nappanee with her daughter, Mrs. Lucile Wilson, writes of her rapid recovery, and thfe rapid growth of the new babe, Jane, which arrived in the Wilson household September sth. The bab» is the thirteenth grandchild in the J. D. Htfle family, Mrs. Wilson having been Miss Lucile Hale, of this city before her marriage. Miss Eva Peoples, who has been at Wheatland, N. f*, visiting with her brother and sister, will return this evening and will spend the winter here with her sister, Mrs. S. E. Brown, and family. Her father, John Peoples, and sister, Miss Sue Peoples, will spend the winter in Dakota with their son and daughter, Sam and Miss Maggie Peoples.

o o U_. < I \ ' ~ ("Wry' ONE THING WE PRIDE OUR SELVES ON Is the way our bread and pastry looks. It isn t enough for us that our products taste good they must also look so dainty they will tempt the languid appetite. No greasy, doughy, tasteless things can be found in this shop. Everything has a standard of quality of its own. Jacob Martin

Ip y/** ' Al A FINE COMEDY Tonight in our comedy entitled, “A Dream of a Motion Picture Director,’’ you will see a film hitherto never presented in Decatur. For clean fun and amusement you cannot beat this film if you try for years. The other two films of the bill are equally good and you will enjoy them. Our pictures are better because they are made so. No objectionable plays shown here. “Dream of a Motion Picture Director,” Lubin Comedy. “On Elmonte Ranch,” Essanay western. “The Junior Officer,” Selig drama. THIS IS RECIPROCITY of the right kind. Our Regular Customers are welcomed at both windows When You Sell four Crops deposit the returns with us. Pay All Your Bills With a Check. 'A'hen you need Money you will find us ready to loan. This is “ONLY BUSINESS” « - • FIRSTJMATIOjNAL BANK Os DECATUR

■■ — lA| P Its going to be the biggest week o 0 Adams county ever had and you v want to be dressed right for the ocH 1 1 nll r casion and have the boys looking fit ; Hi 3mF an d fi ne week. j Its our business to dress you up, and , "Wr r K we d° it if you give us a chance 1 Our 1912 Fall and Winter suits, ! overcoats, hats, caps, shirts and furWW nishings are up to the minute and JT 1 the PRICES ARE RIGHT. Lil We can give you the best values you O ever had for from SIO.OO up, in ready to wear good • or we can take your measure an( i P * ve y° u a hi?h ■ fp Ol c ’ ass t a^ore( i su it at from $15.00 up. . | Take a look at our line of new hats , P-'W I A a handsome velour for $3.00. Can 11 F| Fj ‘'ST you beat it- Other hats at other J P r i ces - * Anything you* want. Hl WO® STROUSE a 8RO& s|%&3j »*l»••*«•« ■ -r~ ■ — » y Everything For Men And Boys fwNCi, HITE & WASkLIN I *-ru ’.fl ll' ' IF-1.-.R ~_n

Mal/ J W /ll I 1/ ' w MU p&ay W /] V 1 I /l l/n I \ !' I I' ! » Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx INVITATION Come in any day and see what we have, whether you want to buy or not. You’re welcome. Beginning now we are able to offer you complete stocks.

Hart Schaffner and Marx fall suits and overcoats in all the latest styles. Come in and see them.

rtoltholise, SGhhltG 60. Good Clothes Sellers for Men and Boys. - - ---—— - —— — — — ——- - - -

FOR SALE—Packard organ. Inquire Mrs. H. F. Costello, Third street 220t6* FOR SALE OR TRADE—A full blooded Shropshire buck. Address I. Bender, R, R. 10, Decatur, or telephone 4 on the B line. 221t6

New Fall. Hats, Caps Suits, i Underwear. Sweater Coats j Beautiful Ties 25c up.

| FOR SALE—An oak dresser. Good as new. Inquire of Rose Christen, Ist street. 221 to FOR SALE—I2-foot extension dining room table, wlid oak; also a kitchlen range. Inquire oi' .1. G. Niblick, at ’ Old Adams County Bank. 22t6