Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 11, Number 33, Decatur, Adams County, 7 February 1913 — Page 3
I The Last Day I I IlTu’w-Tbw T? lSt , dav ? f oursa 'e- Economic- M ■ wMk{lwtt?. J? I '? reincrowdß th e last two i< | wc hS x^± l ?^ 1 ; d t th,ngs ¥ t w ! k I / I . Charlie Voglewede fel | THE shoe
i WEATHER FORECAST: L ♦ Fair tonight and Saturday; not much change in temperature. John Elzey of Monroe was here yesterday on business. John Elzey of Monroe was here yesterday on business. E. T. Hacker of Berne was here' yesterday on business. D. F. Leonard was a Fort Wayne business visitor yesterday. County Surveyor Phil Macklin went to Geneva this morning to look after business. Mrs. Dan Vail and daughter, Mary Louise, spent yesterday afternoon in Fort Wayne. Clyde Hendricks returned to his home at Monroe this morning to spend the week-end. James Woods and a woman whom he is introducing as his cousin, of Philadelphia, are visiting here. Mrs. C. W. Bauserman went to Fort Wayne yesterday noon to visit with her daughter. Mrs. Frank Brown.
1 8 ™ home of I t- ! Quality Groceries 2 -M Quality Groceries * Await You Here The Kind That Make hunger Disappear Here The Pure Food Laws Obtain, And Those With Appetites On The Wane, Get Them Quickly Back Again! Pure Buckwheat flcur 10 lb bag 40c Self-raising Buckwheat flour, bag .../... 10c Pancake “ “ 10c Large bag meal salt 65c Bag fine Dairy “ » ♦ 20c We nay cash or trade for produce Eggs 20. Butte 20 to 27c Hower and Hower* North of G. R. & I. Depot. ’Phone; 108. F.M. SCHIRMEYER FRENCH QUINN | President Secretary Treas. | THE BOWERS REALTY CO. I REAL ESTATE, BONDS, LOANS, y ABSTRACTS. | The Schirmever Abstract Company complete Ab- I stract Records, Twenty years Experience Farms, City Property, 5 per cent MONEY ■
Abe Boch was a Fort Wayne business visitor today. Dan Beery made a business trip to Berne this morning. John Gillig made a business trip to Geneva this morning. George Gottschalk of Bluffton was here on business yesterday. ' Jake Kautrman returned to his home at Monroe this morning. Mr. and Mrs. John Niblick have returned from Chicago, where they attended the automobile show. George Weber went to Fort Wayne | this morning to take treatment from a specialist for ear trouble, which has destroyed his hearing. Deputy Secretary of State H. L. Conter of Indianapolis is in the city .to look after business and visit with friends for a few days. Miss Kate Touhey, of the office of the state board of accounts, Indianapolis, was here yesterday attending the funeral of her brother, Michael ! Touhey. M. Flox of South Bend, who has been at Columbia City, attending to business relating to one of his string of stores, was here and spent the night with his son-in-law, I. Bernstein, and wife. Mr. Flox returned to Columbia City this morning.
F. M. Cottrell, the Berne lawyer, was here today on business. Harvey S. Ineichen, secretary of the Geneva Farmers’ Institute association, attended the institute here this morning. Mrs. C. Boese and Miss Marie Heckman have returned from Fort Wayne, where they spent several days attending the millinery openings. Dr. and Mrs. S. P. Moffman were int Linn Grove attending the funeral of their cousin, Clinton Steiner, and j visiting at Dr. Hoffman's parental I home. F. V. Mills has received word that his son, Frank, who had been sick a j little more than a week, was able to I return Tuesday to his work In tho telephone office at Minneapolis. He had an attack of the grip. Juanita Boch, Lillian Rice, Mary Erwin, Reba Quinn, Ruth Bowers and others of the high school girls will see the basket ball game at Fort Wayne this evening, between the Decatur and Fort Wayne girls’ teams. The local Methodist congregation will hold its last quarterly conference of the year next. Monday evening. Rev. J. A. Beatty of Fort Wayne, the district superintendent, will preside. The conference year will not close until April first. The Misses Emma Weidler, Huldah Mutschler, Effie Miller. Lydia Miller and Ethel Fuhrman will go to Fort Wayne Sunday, where they will call on Miss Agnes Sellemeyer ,at the Lutheran hospital. They will take flowers to cheer her. Mrs. E. K. Lyons has returned from a several days’ stay in Fort Wayne with friends. She accompanied her brother, Arthur Cutting, and wife, of Milwaukee to that city. They stopped off here over one night and returned to Fort Wayne, leaving there for New York City. A very satisfactory method of settling a love dispute occurred in Budapest (Hungary) the other day. Two girls, who had decided to fight a duel over a young man with whom they were both in love, settled the matter by becoming engaged to the two men who volunteered to act as their seconds. \ FOR SALE FOR A SHORT TIME My house and lot on 7th street; also an ideal 15 acres of poultry and trucking farm, 1 square from brick street; all necessary buildings; or a 13-acre trucking garden just outside of corporation, 2 squares from brick I street. Inquire of JOHN SCHEIMANN, 215 So. 7th St.,; ’phone 413. niOTTCB. Money to lean at 5 and 6 per cent interest. No coarsission. 288tf ERWIN’S OFFICE. ( Ad vcTtissmeut) MAKS US_AN OFFER On an 8-room nouse “ lots, city water, cistern, ernaaen park, good barn, on No. 11th St. See us quick if you want this property. HARVEY & LEONARD. (Advertisement) Now is the time to pay gas bills and accounts to save the penalty. Office hours, 1:30 to 5:30; 6:30 to 8:00 p. m.— [lndiana Lighting Company.
R. L STARKWEATHER, M.D.,0.0. OSTEOPATHIC. PH YSICI ZX IM LaGrippe, Pneumonia, Whooping Cougn, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, etc., and all season diseases cured. Many times after others fail. Try me as it may save your life. Examination Free Office over Bowers P.ealty Co. Phone 314. Decatur, Ind. <■<»>Wm.r-MIMI <iMwar:«*L*rar j—n "iiw ■ tib. mwmum E. L. CARROLL ... _ Darings Tankage M j. lessens the cost of producing pork. B r mixing a small amount of this B x* k. w l ' v ’th grain feeds—you will H ISffi aJSgHE.„ _ vJ&Ji* have a perfectly balanced ration M S*?. £ • ? s Positively unsurpassed in B ww building up the bone and frame- tig ¥Mr WyJ work of the hog. J f - jlfeßa Feed it to yowr sows, shoats,’young mb MmF P’& s an d watch your profits jump. ■ Our FREE booklet "Hog Cents” li M' te " s * ,ow t 0 ' ncrease hog profits. BS MeHH WjftMßk' ( Come to our store and get / . your c °py at once - / Tri l|g||S| ovi Use Blalchfords CALF MEAL and raise your calves without milk, oil cake or cotton seed meal. $35. a ton
I bank, statement. C. S. NIBLICK, President. M. KIRSCH, JOHN NIHLIL-L vice > presidents. E. X. EHINGER. Cashier. Report of the condition of the Old Adams County Bank, a state bank at ' Detadur, in the state of Indiana, at the , close of its business on February 4 . 1913: * ’ RESOURCES Loans and discounts J 946.554.80 t [Overdrafts 3,769.77 I [Other bonds and securities 9,074.30 [| Banking house 7.367A7 [ Furniture and fixtures.... 3,700.00 Other real estate 721.05 Due from banks and trust "i companies 125,808.83 ’ Cash on hand 29,118.58 1 Cash items 2X61,64 ( Current expenses 6,720.41 i Taxes paid 2,462.40 'lnterest paid 10,802X5 Total Resourcessl,l4B,66l 53 LIABILITIES. [Capital stock—paid in $120,000.00 Surplus 30,000.00 ! Undivided profits 6,325.00 Exchange, discounts and inI terest 27,053.25 .Profit and loss 834.71 Dividends unpaid 14.00 Demand deposits $307,463.78 Demand certificates 598,922103 906,385.81 Due to banks and trust companies 58,048.76 Total Liabilities ....$1,148,661.53 State of Indiana, county of Adams.ss: I, E. X. Ehinger, cashier of the Old Adams County Bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement la true. E. X. EHINGER, Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 6th day of February, 1913 HENRY B. HELLER, Notary Public. My commission expires January 5. 11915. IN ONE MINUTE CLOGGED NOSTRILS OPEN—COLDS AND CATARRH VANISH. . Stops Nasty Discharge, Clears Stuffed Head, Heals Inflamed Air Passages and You Breathe Freely. Try “Ely Cream Balm.’’ Get a small bottle anyway, just to try it. Apply a little in the nostrils and instantly your clogged nose and stoppedup air passages of the head will open; you will breathe freely; dullness and headache disappear. By morning, the catarrh, cold-in-the-head lor catarrhal sore throat will be gone. End such misery now! Get the small bottle of “Ely’s Cream Balm” at any drug sto”e. This sweet, fragrant balm dissolves by the heat of the nostrils; penetrates and heals the inflamed, swollen membrane which lines the nose, head and throat, clears the air passages, stops nasty discharges and a feeling of cleansing, soothing relief comes immediately. Don’t lay awake tonight struggling for breath, with head stuffed; nostrils closed, hawking and blowing. CatalTh or a cold, with its running nose, foul mucous dropping into the throat, and raw dryness is distressing but truly needless. Put your faith—just once—in Ely’s Cream Balm" and your cold or ca[tarrh wil surely disappear. The Holthouse Drug Co. t-ts — —O- — LOST—A gold fob somewhere in this city. Finder please return to this office and receive reward. 33t3
PUBLIC SALE. The undersigned will offer at public sale on the farm of William Llnnemeier, 5 miles northwest of Decatur, and 2 miles northeast of Preble, on Tuesday, Feb. 18, 1913, beginning at 10 o’clock a. m., tho following.property: Three Head of Horses: Bay horse, 6 years old[ weighing about 1,750 lbs.; bay horse, 4 years, old, weighing 1600 lbs.; grey horse, 2 yrs’ old. Twelve Head of Cattle: Seven [milch cow’s, 3 two-year-old heifers, 2 [yearling calves. Hogs and Chickens: | Two brood sows, will farrow about middle of March; about 75 chickens. Farming Implements: Buckeye binder, q homes hay tedder, Osborn mower, Rock Island hay loader, riding cultivator, 2 walking cultivators, double shovel plow, Cassidy riding breaking [plow, Oliver breaking plow, Black [Hawk corn planter, Columbia disc grain drill, disc harrow, spring-ttoth | harrow and spike tooth harrow, platform scales, fanning mill, Studebaker farm wagon, handy farm truck wagon, low steel wheel wagon, Great Western manure spreader, road wagon, 2 sets farm harness, set buggy harness, bob-sled, about 12 tons hay, about 30 bu. seed oats, some seed corn, land roller, some sugar beet tools, tank heater, grindstone and other articles too numerous to mention. All sums of $5 and under cash in hand; over $5 a credit of 9 months will be given, purchaser giving approved security. 4 per cent off for cash. WM. LINNEMEIER. John Spuhler, Auct. Fred Jaebker, Clerk. METZ “22” ROADSTER. Four-cylinder, water-cooled, 22horse power motor, with self-contained oiling system, torpedo semi-enclosed body, center control, standard equipment throughout, including Bosh magneto, extension top and slip cover, windshield, gas lamps and gas generator, dash lamps, tail light, horn and tools. Complete for $495.00. The best car for the least money, guarantied to climb any hill as fast as any other stock car made. Speed, five to fifty miles per hour on the high gear. This car can be seen at my factory, North Third street. PETER KIRSCH, AGENT. o TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN. We have made an effort to settle all accounts owing by the late Charles Rumschlag. If any person has an account against him, they will confer a favor by at once sending a statement of same to the undersigned. JOSEPH RUMSCHLAG, 31t3* R. R. No. 10, Decatur. | FOR SALE—Ground bones for chickens.—Dyonis Schmitt. 26t12 FOR SALE—Cheap, four 6-ft. nickel show cases.—U. Deininger. 17tf FOR SALE —Brood sow, will have pigs in march. Inquire of Dyonis Schmitt. 30t6 FOR RENT—7-room house, 536 Nuttman Ave., electric lights, celler, remodeled throughout. Inquire at store or residence.--John Brock. 30t3* FOR RENT—rour furnished rooms for light housekeeping, 609 Monroe street; ’phone No. 52JL—Mrs. B. W. Sholty. 17-e-o-dtf
v JSHbm=ml FEATURE NIGHT. A Pathe, three-reel special is the show at the Crystal for feature night. This is ono of the Pathe best productions ,and Is ont that Is surely worth sooting. It consists of colored pictures, and Is entitled “Frenzied Finance.” The price of this feature show is only five cents. Don’t miss it. It is something new, and well worth tho money. “FRENZIED FINANCE,” Pathe. The CRYSTAL Theater. 5% . Money All you want. Abstracts made and Titles Guaranteed. Insurance Writers Office Rooms on first floor oppisite interurban Station Graham and Walters
FARMS FOR SALE NEAR ANGOLA, INDIANA J 270 acres, all productive land and well fenced. , lOne goed, two story, frame, 8 room, dwelling; 200 barrel water tank piped to bams; 2 good windmills; " 2 large hen houses; 2 large double corn cribs; 1 Horse barn, two stories, 20x30; 1 barn, 40x90; 1 barn, 30x75; 1 good granary; 1 two story cement floor hoghouse; whh'gSEj palnq State ° f repa,r> and painted 2 orchards, running water on farm; IT u tW p° and one > half miles from Peasant E a3 r mi l es from angola, Indiana(county seat of Steuben County;) 7 miles frem Hamilton, all these places are good railroad points. nf a ? le ? did farm and adopted for all kinds ot farm products, and stock raising. It can be purchased for $85.00 per acre, and on pt le , te ™ s ’ 11 ls a bargain; and the purchaser must act at once. 120 acre farm one mile from Angola, Indiana. Angola is the seat of the Tri State College. All good senool opportunities are first class. This farm has a new house built in 1912, slate roof, hard wood, oil hpish. One old house; good W’ell; two cisterns; w*ater P’Pf d aI l barns on the place. One bank barn; 40x 60 built in 1908; one barn 36x60 built in 1908; one old barn -4x36; one corn crib and wagon shed; one new granary, one lathed and plastered chicken house* one new silo built m 1912. There is a good orchard loi apples and has also 140 young peach trees besides other small fruit trees/ , The j e P ce „ ; , r . e i? good repair, and the farm is adapted to all kinds of farming, and is very productive. It can be bought at SIIO.OO per acre and on reasonable terms. This place is a fine bargain, and the purchaser must act at once. Write to, or call on BEST & YOTTER Angolalndiana
FOUND —Ladies' brown muff. Owner inquire at Hunsicker’s restaurant. 30t3 WANTER —At once, two girls to strip tobacco. Steady work.—“ The White Stag” Cigar factory. 22t2
| MENS’ MEETING SUNDAY AFTERNOON 2:30 o’clock, Feb. 9 1913 Hon. James T. Merryman Will Speak on the subject of Can A Man Save Himself There Will Be Plenty Os Good Music All men of the city and eomminity are cordially invited to attend the meeting :: in'EsaaEsssgi I JELLO and GELATINE | J America’s Most Famous Dessert b J Plymouth Rock pink gelatine 15c H B® “ “ white “ 15c j 3 “ “ plain “ 10c Knox acidulated Gelatine 15c Kj J* plain “ | 15c B Jell-O— Chocolate, Lemon, Orange, Strawberry, Raspberry [and Cherry Flavors ■ 3 lOc ■ |STAR GROCERY! PHONE 292 Gappy Johns Prop.
I LOST—Oblong gold class pin. Return to Ruby Parrish. 28r3 WANTED—Pop corn, shelled; white and old corn.—F. V. Mills. 30t4 FOR RENT—Farm. See L.C. Hughes. ’Phone 365. 31-3
