Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 11, Number 53, Decatur, Adams County, 3 March 1913 — Page 3

I CONFIRMATION SHOES I I Sft I I Z a n)°< ° Ught t 0 the I I Ski’w tlsf ?f tlon in the faces | I a f nfe of e t g h rlswl l en theyget I i a '! an . these shoes: shows H |we ve just what they wanted. hj ■ Bring Your Girl Here | I Charlie Voglewede i | ~the: Shoe seller |

WEATHER FORECAST I t I Cloudy weather with probably snow cr rain tonight or Tuesday. Colder Tuesday. Tony Holthouse left this morning for Redkey on business. John F. Lac hot started on his weekly business trip this morning going south. A. P. Beatty returned to Indianapolis this morning after spending Sunday in the city. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Noack and children went to Fort Wayne Saturday afternoon to spend Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. William Badders returned to Fort Wayne Saturday afternoon after a visit here with relatives. Mrs. Clinton Grim received word Saturday morning from her niece, Mrs. Charles Ault, of Ossian, saying that her daughter was getting along nicely, and that Mrs. Neta Leberd was very sick at -her father’s home at Ossian. Mrs. Leberd is also a niece of Mrs. Grim.

Ih A A]l rHEH?MEOS ' I « ! a m ■SsHI&STL C'nd AJunv Good Peonle -IL j buy mBmH —’ Good’Groceries'Here (Ifflp yiiff64 do you? Prepared mustard, tumbler 5c “ “ fruit jar 10c “ “ milk jar 10c Standard catsup bottle .... 10c Heinz Catsup bottle .... 15c Horse radish 10c Spanish Piementoes can 10c Cake coloring bottle 10c Extract Vanda bottle 10-15-25 c “ Lemon “ ....••••• 10-15-25 c “ Orange, Pineapple, Strawberry .... 10c • We pav cash or trade for produce Eggs 15. Butter 20 to 27c Hower and Hower» North of G. R. & I. Depot. ’Phone 108. I F.M. SCHIRMEYER FEEN S e to TtUe I President secretary irea. . ■ I THE [BOWERS REALTY CO. I ,| REAL ESTATE, BONDS, LOANS, ■ abstracts. |s ■ The Schirmever Abstract Company complete^Ab-■ 1 stract Records, Twenty years Experience _ I I Farms Ciiy Property, 5 per cent | I MONEY gj

John Tyndall made a business trip i to Fort Wayno this morning. i Miss Zoe Miller of Fort Wayne was , an over-Sunday guest of Miss Madge 1 Hite. George E. Steele- and H. M. Besser, made a business trip to Fort Wayne ■ this morning. ! Mrs. Bernard Myers arrived home Saturday afternoon from Ft. Wayne, where she spent several days with her daughter, Mrs. Clem Hake. Mrs. Nick Schafer and brother, Timothy Zeser, went to Fort Wayne Saturday afternoon for a week’s visit ’ with their sister, Mrs. Ed Engelking. Mr. and Mrs. C. K. Lhamon of Ft. , Wayne arrived Saturday afternoon for a visit over Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. David Gessinger. Because he was tored of kissing her every time he left home, Lesheo Vlgaro, of Trenton, N. J., shot and killed his nineteen-year-old wife, and fatally wounded himself. They had been married a month. r John Coffee left Saturday afternoon ; for Saginaw-, Mich., where he will 1 make an extended stay, on business. . The Christmas-tide will nearly have i rolled around again ere his return, he informed a reporter.

C, O. Mothers spent Sunday In Fdrt Wayne with friends. Miss Lucile White was in the city today visiting with friends. William (Richards made a business trip to Fort Wayne this noon. Mrs. Henry Hite and daughter, Madge, were Fort Wayne visitors this afternoon. Miss Frances Coffee began work this morning at the Delninger millinery store. Walter Deitsch of Celina, Ohio, spent Sunday here, the guest of Miss Lydia Miller. B. F. Leightner returned to Fort Wayne this noon after a visit in Willshire, Ohio. Miss Agnes Steigmeyer of Fort Wayne was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Miller over Sunday. Mrs. Dick Hill and daughter, Mabel, went to Monmouth to visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Watts. Stewart Niblick, a student at Valparaiso, is at home for a vacation visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Niblick. Charles and Joseph Bender of Fort Wayne spent Sunday with the Fred and John Steigmeyer families over Sunday. Miss May Rumple has taken a position as clerk at the Morris five and ten cent store, beginning duty this morning. R. Miller, who has been the chef at the Artman & Hess case, has gone to Fort Wayne, where he has accepted a position. G. W. Gentis left this morning for Van Wert, Ohio, and other places, where he will look after business for a few- days.

M's. John Jones and daughters, Martha and Esther, returned to Fort Wayne this noon after a visit with her parents. Ray Howard, who has been visiting his sister, Mrs. C. E. Bell, left this morning for Fort Wayne, thence to jhis home at Lafontaine. Mary, two-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. Archer, North Walnut | street, who has been ill with bronchopneumonia, is better. Mr. and Mrs. Will Berling and son. I William Edward, of Bluffton spent I Sunday here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. X. Ehinger. Mr. and Mrs. William Cambell of Salem went to Fort Wayne to attend the district Methodist conference and also to visit with their sonfi Erman I Cambell. Mrs. Annis Merica of Decatur arrived in the city this morning and will make and extended visit with her son, Homer Merica, and family.— Bluffton News. Homer Lower is carrying the index : finger of his left hand in a sling. This ; was occasioned by the spraining of the finger in a fall on the hay baler on which he is working. Miss Jessie Philips returned to Ft. ■ Wayne this morning, where she is a student in the business college. She spent Sunday here with her mother, .Mrs. Mahlon Harmon. Leon Crawford has returned to Ft. i Wayne to resume his work at the Fort Wayne Business college, after being confined to his bed with the scarlet fever for about three weeks. Fred Reppert, the auctioneer, left this morning on a two weeks’ trip, going from here to Chicago, then to Kansas City, and then to Fort Worth, Texas, where he will cry a Btnnber of sales. Postmaster Lower reports letters remaining uncalled for at the Decatur postoffice for Bernice Haynes, David Campbell, Homer Clay, C. C. Bule, Harry Greene, P. C. Hughes. George Linn, Joel Johnson, Mrs. Omer Miller, Sam Robinson, Thomas Mfg. Co., Geo. Sugue. A number of friends and relatives gathered at the home of William Selby and family in Vera Cruz Friday evening at a farewell to the Selby family. Mr. Selby has sold his meat market to John Sherry and is preparing to move soon from Vera Cruz, although his new location has not yet been selected. —Bluffton Banner. oNOTICE. All Knights of Maccabees who wish to go to Wren Tuesday night for the dedication, are requested to meet at the Holthouse livery barn at 5:00 o'clock Tuesday evening and the party will start from there. DEAL BOLSED. The business deal between Charles Beineke and Fred Baker, whereby Mr. Baker came into possession of Mr. Beineke's Interest in the Beineke & Girod restaurant was closed today. Fred started in on his new duties this morning and asks all his friends to come in and see him. —O-- ' ■ — FOR SALE—Extra good settings of Rhode Island Red eggs. Three pens mated.—Geo. Burkett, R. R. No. 11. 53t3

HE DIDN’T THINK IT SUDDEN Little Point Upon Which George and Hie Prospective Father-ln Law Held Different Opinions. “Miss Crupplngton— Sybil—l love you," he said. "Oh, George," she sighed, "this is so sudden! Speak to father, will you, dear? He’ll be in soon." And ten minutes later the nervous young man was facing his adored one’s father. "I love your daughter, sir,” he commenced. “Rather sudden, ain’t it?" interrupted the old man, with a twinkle in his eye. "Love refuses to be checked by time, sir," declared the youth. "It was sudden, I admit.” Then the old man laughed. “Take her, boy; take her," he said. “You ain’t a bad sort of a chap at all, George; but you ain’t over swift, and that’s a fact. For six months you made sheep's eyes at the girl without speakin’; for another eight you sent ’er enough flowers to stock Covent Garden; and this last year you’ve been round ’ere every night squeezin’ 'ands, sighin' like a steam siren and slttin’ with the gas out. Sudden! Good ’eavens, George! You’ll be takln’ a ’earse 'orse for the Derby winner next!”—London Tit-Bits. ALL HIS ORGANS TRANSPOSED Autopsy on Laborer’s Body, at New York, Showed Really Remarkable State of Affairs. An autopsy performed recently upon the body of Michael Manning, a laborer thirty-two years old, who died of pneumonia in Bellevue hospital, disclosed what Dr. Cyrus W. Field of the hospital's pathological department -raid was an unusually complete xase of Bitustransversus, relates the New York Sun. The heart was on the right side instead of on the left, the spleen was also on the right side, the appendix •vas on the left side, the great stomach was out of place and the lungs lad two lobes each. More than one hundred doctors, pro'essors and medical students were present at the autopsy. So far as the loctors could judge. Manning had suf'ered no inconvenience through the ransposltlon of his organs Some of Napoleon’s Monuments. When Napoleon was at St. Helena i companion asked him one day about lls treasures. "They are enormous,” '.he emperor replied, “but in full view. Here they are: The splendid harbor !>f Antwerp, that of Flushing, the locks and dikes of Dunkirk, of I Havre, of Nice; the gigantic harbor i >f Cherbourg; the harbor works of , Venice; the great roads from Antwerp to Amsterdam, from Mainz to Metz, from Bordeaux to Bayonne: 'he passes of the Simplon, of Mont I ?enis, of Mont Genevre, of the CorI aiche, that give four openings through the Alps. The roads from the Pyrennes to the Alps, from Parma to Spezzia, from Savona to Piedmont; the bridges of Jena. Austerlitz, of Sevres; the canal from the Rhine to the Rhone; the canal that joins the Scheldt and the Somme ” And so he goes on, recounting the building of waterways and roads as bls lasting monuments. Waterways and roads wouldn’t be bad tor the present generation to leave to its successors. Left Record of Good Deeds. One of the nlnetenth century women who was considered a radical in her time was Amalie Bleveking, a native of Hamburg, born of a wealthy and cultured family. She taught just because she loved to teach, and wrote two books, called “Commentaries on the Bible,” which provoked great distrust of her in conservative circles. When an epidemic of cholera broke out in Hamburg she offered to serve in the pest hospital, and thereafter her life was identified with social work of various kinds. She had advanced Ideas about housing, about ameliorating the condition of the poor, and about hospital service, all of which were reflected in the philanthropic work that she carried on until her death in 1859. Last Time Witness Nodded. At a trial in court when the witness on the stand was being subjected to a merciless crosaexamination, in answering one question the witness nodded. Whereupon the court stenographer, who was crowding the limit to get it all and could not see the witness, at once demanded: "Answer that question,” to which the witness replied: “I did answer it; I nodded my head.” The stenographer, without a moment’s hesitation, came right back with, “Well, I heard it rattle, but could not tell whether It was up and down or from side to side.” Importance of Health. There is no more Important contributor to happiness than health. And strange as it may seem women are very careless In this regard—thoughtfill of everybody but themselves. The great majority of women have no routine. Their lives are a succession of variations which keep the nerves in a constant flutter. They will stick to the house for days and then rush around like mad things for other days. Once a woman gets started going nothing short of a collapse can stop her. She will average four hours of sleep for a couple of weeks and then stay in bed for several dava

I Fords or can’t as-Fords i I WHICH? I .. n — g $250.00 more as upkeep in 10,000 miles between | -i a r ord and other popular priced competitors means U Interest on $6250 deposited in bank at 4 per ct W iax on an assessment of nearly $16,000 at one- ■ p ana-one-halt per cent 04. . I Th J?AnP ounds l of butter a da y for 365 days, a ® f total of 1095 pounds at over 23 cents per pound | Vanadium Steel Ford Pleasure Cars Fully |l Jg Equipped $540 and $615 I - n I GROVE GARAGE Cn simon mo jre | _ unUiL urlnnUL uU. Branch Managers V x fl

ig ■ ■ W -Jf ■ ■I a t -i.c! J 0! K SPURLF.R I Live Stock and General Auctioneer Everything sold by him brings the highest possible price Years of expirience have taught him how. See him at once for dates as his calander is fast filling up. PHONE Residence 531 Decatur, - - - Indiana Aftft lin Fred Quallmann, Warren, I Kill II Mich., says: “After the U 11V VI doctor had given up the ______ case, my child was cured Hi nrn of Croup by KIRCHNER’S Rallnrll GREEN MOUNTAIN OIL WVII Given internally.” Sold by FOR SALE BY CALLOW & RICE. W.iHai flV'. • ■ Why'* Live Stock And General AUCTIONEER 9 years of experience means DOLLARS FOR YOU J. N. Burkhead Monroe, - - - Indiana Telephone at my expenses

TO AND FROM ST. LOUIS VIA “CLOVER LEAF ROUTE” Our ‘‘Commercial Travelers” are splendidly equipped trains. Electric Lights, Observation Drawing room Sleepers, Reclining chair cars (seats free.) Modern coaches full throughout. First class case service meals ala carte-prices reasonable. Train 5 leaves Decatur at 9’52 p.m. daily arriving St. Louis at 8:45 next morning in ample time for business or for connecting trains. See H.J. Thompson Agent for Tickets and Information The Toledo StJLouis & Western R. R. “CLOVER LEAF ROUTE”

FOR RENl—rear furnished rooms j for light housekeeping, 609 Monroe street; ’phone No. 521.—Mrs. B. W. Sholty. 17-e-o-dtf FAMILY WASHINGS —Wanted, byMrs. Mina Kurt, North Ninth St. 48-3 j Good country lard for sale. Call ’phone 5-C. —Ben Eiting. 46t6* FARM FOR RENT —2% miles northeast of the city. Inquire of James Bain. 52t3 FOR SALE—Wagner motorcycle, with tandem, cheap.—Geo. Reinking, R. R. No. 8, Box 24. 48t3 When you feel SSS,. vous, tired, worried or despondent it is a sure sign you need MOTT’S NERVERINE PILLS. Th ey renew the normal vigor and make life worth living. Be sure and ask for Mott’s Nerverine Pills g WILLIAMS MFG. CO., Props., Cleveland, Okie For Sale BY ENTERPRISE DRUG CO.

Toledo St. Louis & Western Railroad Excursions $2.00 To Toledo, Ohio and Return Sunday March 9 & 231913 Train leaves Decatur 4:48 a.m. Return Limit Date of Sale See Agent DECATUR For Information SPECIAL PRICE ON FENCE lhe Ward Pence Co., for thirty days will make exceptionally low prices on many [designs of j Lawn and farm fences. We have a good number of standard heights of Farm Fences in odd size rolls, also many beautiful designs of Lawn Fabrics, at bargain prices. Can also make you i Special low prices on Farmland Lawn Gates, we make the strongest combination Poultry and Stock Fence on the market. L <3*lll and see us I THE WARD FENCE CO. j DECATUR, IND.

* HERE is a remedy that will cure most all skin and > ' scalp troubles. Eczema, Barbers Itch, Itch, Cuts and Sores. Why waste time and money when B. B. Ointment is an ointment of real merit? Ask your druggist. If not handled send 50 cents to the B B. Ointment Co., 217 Monroe street, Decatur, Indiana. I —.T—■stt" Rapid Remedies j do their work because they are scientific 5 1 preparations — medicines put up by skilled veterinarians—from purest !n---i gredients. They cure where others fail. Anti-Steril—Makes barren mares and cows pro--1 due*. Obstinate cases yield readily. Don't lose another season. Gets a colt or calf every . ' time! Guaranteed or your money back. Try it! Rapid Poultry Remedies worth their weight in gold to every poultryman. Keep them fur , j handy use—ready when needed. Roue Remedy—Roup not incurable If you use this. I Removes the cause. Guaranteed. Louse Miller - Kills the lice and m tes; does not - simply drive them away. Guaranteed. * Oierrhoee Remedy-saves millions of chicks. Has . never been known to fail. Brings them safely - through danger period. Keeps them well. • GuaranUHth Good Dellers Sell Rapid Remedies | Mode Solely By k= Rapid Remedy Co» Berne, Ind. ‘ ' For Sale by SMITH, YAGER & FALK.