Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 11, Number 64, Decatur, Adams County, 15 March 1913 — Page 3
I EASTER FOOT TOGS I || I lere in all the new I I shapes and leathers B for your Inspection. | 1 I Charlie Voglewede i THE SHOE SELLER I
x-.-Jiu.wy' - . -l .. . .. i gg ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»•• n : WEATHER FORECAST I Snow ,and decidely colder tonight. Sunday continued cooler. Mrs, Lase Swygart went to Middle- [ town this morning, Julius iiaugk made a business trip I to Fort Wayne this morning. Albert Acker went to Fort Waynej this morning on some business. I Harry Kelly returned to Monroeville. | He visited here with the Ed Whitright family. ■ J. L. Wolfe and L. Wolfe of Schumm. 1 Ohio, changed cars here today on their 1 way to Fort Wayne. Mrs. Dr. C. V. Connell and Mrs. Fred Martin went to Fort Wayne this morning to spend Sunday with relatives and friends. Mrs. Henry Ounsett and daughters, Ida and Lydia, went to Fort Wayne to call on Mrs. John Barnett at the Lutheran hospital. Mrs. Barnett is get- j ting along well.
I "\j f THE HOME OF "1 I Klj \ oali,y Groceries I ; * " *_jm c- - ' I— ll ihiiik— l" The Last Call For BREAKFAST ,/fl Os Buckwheat Cakes itniliiii^ ■ t And Maple Syrup Pure Buckwheat flour 10 lb. sack4oc Prepared buckwheat skloc Prepared pancake skloc Bottle syrup, Maple flavor2sc White karo syrup . 15, 25, 45c Red karo syrup 10, 20, 35c See Our Display of Seeds and Sets. We pay cash or trade for produce Eggs 14. Butter 20 to 27c Hower and Hower. North of G. R. & I. Depot. ’Phone 108. flass®' ■.«bb* '■ I F.M. SCHIRMEYER FRENCH QUINN President Secretary Treas. I THE BOWERS REALTY CO. | II REAL ESTATE, BONDS, LOANS. f g ABSTRACTS. S| ja The Schirmever^’Abstract Company complete Ab- m 1 stract Records, T wenty years Experience | B Farms, City Property, 5 per cent g g MONEY E
' Alexander Parks returned to Fort Wayne this morning after a visit at | Wren, Ohio. Mrs. Bernardine Heidemann went to Fort Wayne this morning to spend Sunday with relatives and friends. Mrs. B. F. Kizer and son, B. F., Jr., of Union township went to Monmouth this morning to visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Wolford. Mrs. Callie Small returned to Fort j Wayne this morning after a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Wililiams, in Blue Creek township, ‘ Mrs. C. E. Chatlaift hiM children, Mary and Charles, jt, left this morn'ing for Mansfield, Ohio, for a visit. E. W. Dailey went to Fort Wayne this morning. Will Ramey and sons, Joe and Ralph, went to Fort Wayne to call on their mother-in-law and grandmother, Mrs. John Barnett, at the Lutheran hospital. Mr. Ramey will also attend to business matters while there. Mrs. Arthur Suttles and children and the Misses Mary and Josephine Suttles and Master Arthur Daniel went to Fort Wayne this morning, where they will spend Sunday with Miss Margaret i Vesey. Mr. Suttles will join them this [ evening. >
Dwight Lachot went to Berne this morning to spend the day. Dan Baumgartner returned to his home at Linn Grove this morning. M. Andrews, truant officer, went to Fort Wayne this morning on business. Mr. and Mrs. John Niblick left this morning for Indianapolis, where they will visit for a few days with friends. Mr. and Mrs. John Schug and children. George and Mary Catherine, went to Berne this morning to spend Sunday with relatives. Jacob Kauffman returned to his i home at Berne this morning after finishing a week of hard study here in the high school. Pan W. Beery and family have moved Info their home ou Monroe street, I which they lately purchased from Cbalmer Schafer. I W. H. Fledderjohann of the interur|ban company has returned from Lima and Sidney, Ohio, where he transacted business. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Standiford returned to Fort Wayne yesterday afternoon after attending the funeral of their mother, Mrs. George Standiford, at Wren, Ohio. Some folks jist read th’ headlines . an' others know what, they're talkin’ t about. Ther’s jist enough whiskers in th new cabinet t' break th’ monotony. —Abe Martin. > ( Mrs. C. W. Haggard and two children of Geneva returned home Friday afjer a couple of days’ visit at the ’ home of her uncle, J. L. Gross, and 1 family.—Portland Sun. — — GRANDMOTHER USED SAGE TEA TO DARKEN HER FADED OR ‘ ’ GRAY HAIR. Mixed With Sulphur it Makes Hair , Soft, Beautiful—Cures Dandruff. The use of Sage and Sulphur for re- ' storing faded, gray hair to its natural 'color dates back to grandmother's • time. She kept her hair beautifully • darkened, glossy and abundant with a brew of Sage Tea and Sulphur. When- } ever her hair fell out or took on that dull, faded or streaked appearance, 'this simple mixture was applied with 1 wonderful effect. i But thq brewing at home is mussy ’ and out of date. Nowadays skilled f chemists do this better than ourselves, t By asking r‘ any drug store for the 3 ready-to-usv product—called "Wyeth’s ■ Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy”—you ' ' will get a large bottle for about 50 cents. Some druggists make their own, which is usually too sticky, so insist upon getting Wleth’s, which can be depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair and is splendid for dandruff, dry, feverish, Itchy scalp and falling hair. I A well-known down-town druggist says his customers Insist on Wyeth's ' Sage and Sulphur, because, they say, it darkens so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied —it’s so easy to use, too. You , simply dampen a sponge or soft brush ■and draw it through your hair, taking one strang at a time. Do this at night and by morning the gray hair disappears; after another application or' two, it is restored to its natural color and looks glossy, soft and abundant. The Holthouse Drug Co. m-w s (Advertisement) Democrat Want Ads Pay. S’* ~ r I There’s away C to tell the genuine — i look in the hern, for the name “ Kayser.” there for your protection “ "Kayser" Gloves cost no more than the “ordinary Hl kind” and are worth double in quality, fit I an ‘l va i ue > a,, d every pair contains— A Guarantee that Guarantees a “new pair free” if the |u A'IWtHI **Ups” "car out before In ©iS® l ’ le B loves, Dun'* accept the "just ftg, as " kind. V '’JslSkl kook in the hem for the wBMmMi name “ Kayser,” the mark of the genuine. Short Silk Gloves SWFwSWS 60c., 76c., SI.OO. $1.25 ‘'Ji'* $1.50 Long Silk Gloves ■TtSfeu./’lTin 76c., SI.OO, $1.25 $1.50, $2.00 Julius Kayser & Co. g ySSf Makers J Ne<u> York “J I
Doo-cog (f Mow’d You Like Yi j To Get a Check I I A couple of weeks I I Before Christinas? » JDST IN TIME TO BUY YOUR PRESENTS I 0 That’s just what you will do, and you will hardly realize 0 T where it came from, if you join our f A CHRISTMAS SAVING CLUES i 0 Join now by making the first weekly payment. If you L i can’t come, send it by mail or get some one * B ■ to bring it for you I | STARTS MARCH 17TH, 1913 T J CLOSES APRIL 7TH, 1913 | I THE OLD ADAMS COUNTY BANK I U\ Resources Over 1 Million Dollars Fl Hiiii ||| ||—ll|i||lii|||i iiJUjflr
“Not like any other Cigar you ever SMOKED” THE WHITE STAG Extra /Wild TRY IT!
NOTICE. Any one wishing to have a mortgage exemption made out should come to the auditor’s office, where you can get all correct records and descriptions of your land or property. 53tf o FRAME TIMBER FOR SALE. We are tearing down the old bottling works building on North Second street. Will sell the frame skeleton as it now stands. Good heavy timber, building is 22x63, and 16 feet high. MRS. WM. MERSMAN, 60t3 No. Second St o—- i i WANTED. Unmarried man, by month or year, to do general farm work. ' Enquire of A. D. Suttles. 57tf
For A Monument Or Marker II ITO INSURE DELIVERY BEFORE DECORATION DAY LARGEST STOCK IN THE STATE WEMHOFF IVIONJVIVIENJTAL WORKS Decatur, Indiana. *
MORTGAGE EXEMPTIONS. County Assessor George Gentis calls attention to the following points to I those who file exemptions: Be sure to have book and page numbers on which the mortgage is recordered in the recorder's office; the correct description of land; the name and full address of the mortgagee; and the joint signatures of all parties joining in the mortgage; if one Is dead, so state In the exemption. If the conditions are not complied with, the exemption blank will be hrown away, or in case of the last mentioned, full credit will not be given. 55t6 MALE HELP WANTED — Railway mail clerks, carriers wanted, good pay, fine positions. Pay for your instruction after you receive position. Liberty Institute. Dept. 76, Rochester, N. Y. 16-22-29-5 I
SPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER FROM 11:30 UNTIL 2:00 O’CLOCK ONLY 35 CEINJTS AT ARTIVIAIXI & HESS CAFE Oyster Cocktail SOUP Cansumme De Lasse Dressed Celery Queen Olives Roast Ribs Al Pinne Beef Ar Jas Roast Young Chicken Oyster Dressing Cranberry Sauce Mashed Potatoes Sucatashe Peas and Cream English Plum Pudding with Brandy Sauce Ice Cream Lemon Meingue Pie American Cream and Swif Cheese Coffee Imperial Green Tea Milk ELE CARTE ORDERS Served At All Hours
FOR SALE—Rhode Island Red eggs. Well bred; fifty cents a setting. Inquire Frank H. Hackman, Decatur. Ind., South Line St. 63t6 FOR SALE —Good brood mare, 9 years old; in foal. Inquire of W. P. Merriman, 1 mile southwest of Salem ’n I Blue Creek township. 63t3
DUCKS FOR SALE. Indian Runner drakes for sale; 75c apiece. Call 'phone 58. 64tf FOUND—Bunch of keys. Owner can have same by calling telephone 6 on the J line ad paying for this ad. 64t3
