Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 11, Number 65, Decatur, Adams County, 17 March 1913 — Page 3
I YOU WILL BE JUDGED H H To a great extent by • |Q the footcoverings you ‘u m’l wear on Easter mornII !? g n Whether it be I. Dulls, Patents, White or Brown buck in boots M or low cuts you will H hnd your style here in : our Easter Showing. = ■ ■ I I Charlie Voglewede | I THE SHOE SELLER | I ■ ■ 1U J. . I ■aafgMggMWMaMßen»BMM> Fred Hoffman went to Lynn this Joseph Beery went to Fort Wayne morning on business. Saturday afternoon for a visit. Miss Alice Burns returned to Fort; Mrs. Ous Werling and children reWayne Saturday after a visit with her turned Saturday afternoon to New Hamece, Mrs. Mabel Hanley, and her sis-. ven after a visit with her mother, Mrs. ter-in-law, Dr. Elizabeth Burns. Carl Koenemann. FINCH QUINN Secretary Treas. jp; ALTY CO. I S, LOANS. pany complete Ab- S irs Experience 5 per cent r-'
HE ... " ' ■ """ ' " ' ■ " ■ " _ ~ —■ B E JCastersComini » | iSoort? I ifigES Only A Short Time Until ®|W I |Oa EASTER ' I S 0 n Easter Sunday you want to look fresh with your new Easter &&&? |gg H r■A*- or Suit. We are prepared to fill your wants with fine selections \ t k g of this Springs latest Parisian styles 7Awh ® H New Spring Silks and Dress Goods Aj\ l[g KN (ra ' ’ NTnAir Qiiifd We have just received complete new line silks in Crepe Metor Crepe DeBH In this line we have them priced at $12.50, $15.00, $-0,00 to 00 colors Foulards. Special This Week. 30 inch figured silk poplin 50c, 30 inch Ojl 1 gSa Tan Blue and Black. , , , Borcode Seco silk 29c 25 pcs. silk worth 50 to 75c yd this week 25c 1 ! t &%5 lan, biue showing a n this week, new numbers e V ery day , jh j §g| I NIBLICK AND COMPANY |® J / ■ ! •■'. ft'- A"’ ™
< WEATHER FORECAST ! » ♦ Probably unsettled tonight and Tuesday. Warmer. Jacob Atz made a business trip to Berne this morning. J. H. Oentis went to Geneva this morning on business. Abe Boch made a business trip to Fort Wayne this morning. Fiank Smith of Scranton, Pa., arrived for a visit, at the T. C. Corbett home. r B. W. Johnson left on bis weekly business trip this morning, going south, Leon Crawford spent Sunday in the city as the guest of his mother and other relatives. Miss Betty Bell of Fort Wayne visited with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse J. Helm. W. A. Rundell of the Ward Fence company left this morning on a business trip to Indianapolis. James and Lloyd Smith of Fort Wayne visited over Sunday with their uncle, Ross Mallonee, and family. Mrs. Adam Deam and daughTer, Mabel, spajit Sunday in Fort Wayne with their son and brother, Alfred Deam. John Wemhoff returned to kis work 'at Fort Wayne after spending Sunday in the city with his mother and other relatives. Miss Eva Peoples and her nephew, Dallas Brown, -went to Fort Wayne Saturday to spend the day with Mrs. W. E. Patterson. The Misses Agnes Krick, Etta Brandyberry, Leah Apt, Lena Sutton, Fannie Frisinger were among the Saturday afternoon visitors in Ft. Wayne. Mrs. F. E. France and Mrs. J. W. Place saw E. H. Sothern and Julia Marlowe in “The Taming of the Shrew” at Fort Wayne Saturday evening. -V Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Suttles and children, Mary, Josephine and Arthur Daniel, returned from Fort Wayne, where they spent Sunday with Miss Margaret Vesey. Mrs. H. M. Brothers of Minneapolis is here for a two weeks’ visit with her father-in-law, Clark Brothers, and family. Accompanied by Mrs. Mabel Hanley she went to Wren, Ohio, for an over-Sunday visit.
Bruoe Patterson from a week-end visit with friends in Warsaw. Mrs. John Stewart will postpone the Orient club entertainment until next week, on account of lllnc'ss. A marriage license was issued at Ft. Wayne to Virgil 'O. Barkley and Estella G. Cully, well known here. Moss Agnes Starost of Fort Wayne spent Sunday in the city with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Starost. The Misses Bessie and Minnie Weber spent Sunday in Fort Wayne with their sister, Mrs. Charles Houser. The Baptist Ladies aid society will l be enteretined Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. W. R. Dorwin by Mrs. George Glass. Postmaster Ixiwer reports letters remaining uncalled for at the Decatur postofflee for F. S. Armintinr, Edward Brannah, M. E. Burkhart, John Gerber, J. W. Miller, Scott Young The’Young People s Christian Endeavor society of the United Brethren church will give an Easter ten cent social Friday evening at the home of Mrs. Pansy Potter. An Easter program, and contests will be given. Everybody is invited. C. A. Brode arrived from Milwaukee and is visiting with Edwin Fledderjohann. Mr. Brode is employed by the Westinghouse company, and is undecided as to whether he will return to Milwaukee, as he has the choice of working there, at St. Louis, or Cincinnati, Ohio. He does not find Milwaukee to his liking. Elmer Sark, who has been in Hamilton and Toronto, Canada, for several months, in the real estate business with D. M. Reid and -others, arrived here unexpectedly last evening. After spending Sunday here the guest of Miss Margaret Gallogly, he left this morning for his home at Bluffton. He will be here a week and will then return to Canada to resume his work. He was employed here for some time by Surveyor C. C. Ernst and is well known to Decatur people. Friends here have received word of the birth of a baby boy to Mr. and Mrs. Argo Brushwiller at Sterling, Colorado. Argo is a former Decatur boy, but went west several years ago with his father, who is now residing with his family at Boulder. Argo married a Colorado young woman and he now lives at Sterling, Colorado, where he is manager of the gentlemen’s furn’shing department in a large department store. Friends here have received word that his wife is very ill and probably cannot recover.
GRAY HAIR TURf$ ITS NATURAL COLOR AFTER APPLYING SAGE TEA. I ——— • , Mixed With Sulphur It Darkens Beautifully and Takes Off Dandruff. Almost every one knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, propprly compounded, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streaked 'or gray; also euros dandruff, itching 'scalp and stops falling hair. Years ago only way to get this mixture was ( to make it at home, which is mussy and troublesome. I Nowadays skilled chemists do this better than ourselves. By asking at any drug store for the ready-to-use product—called “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy”—you will get a large bottle for about 50 cents. Some druggists make their own, but it’s usually too sticky, so Insist upon getting | "Wyeth’s,” which can be depended upon to restore natural colar and .beauty to the hair and is the best rem'edy for dandruff, dry, feverish, itchy scalp and to stop falling hair. Folks like “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur" because no one can possibly tell . that you darkened your hair, as it does it so naturally and evenly, says a wellknown down-town druggist. You i dampen a sponge or sofe brush and dra wit through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. This requires ' but a few moments, by morning the .gray hair disappears and after another application or two is restored to its ’ natural color and looks even more beaujtiful and glossy than ever. The Holt- ■ house Drug Co. m-w-f I (Advertisement) i — - —, I FOR SALE. ’ An American Cream separator, sec--1 ond hand, in good condition, for sale. ! | Decatur, No. sth St. —C. Cook. 65t3 o POISONOUS GAS IN STOMACH. > 1 Nothing Like “Mi-o-na" Stomach Tablets to Instantly Banish Misery. f i Gas forms in your stomach because , food you eat ferments and turns sour. •' Allow this fermation toTAOINRD > Allow this fermentation to go on and 5 these gases become poisonous and the - poison gets into the blood. »j MI-O-NA Stomach Tablets stop the ■ fermentation almost instantly, turn the ■ poisonqus gases into liquid, and elim- - inates it through the natural channels. If you have stomach trouble such as 1 gas, sournessfTieaviness, flatulency, or shortness of breath, Ml-O-na will give
B/xWfe' | THE home of I Eif-A Wk \ 1 Quality Groceries I Th e ast Call For BREAKFAST fl y j■ Os [Buckwheat Cakes And Maple Syrup Pure Buckwheat flour 10 lb> sack 40c Prepared buckwheat sk 10c Prepared pancake sk ioc Bottle syrup, Maple flavor 25c White karo syrup 15, 25, 45c Red karo syrup 10, 20, 35c See Our Display of Seeds and Sets. W e pay cash or trade for produce Eggs 14. Butter 20 to 27c Hower and Hower North of G. R. & I. Depot. ’Phone 108.
gratifying relief in five minutes. They are sold on money back plan for acute or chronic indigestion, nervousness, headaches, etc. At Holthouse Drug Co., Decatur, and druggists America over, 50 cents. Postal will bring trial treatment. 17-21-24 (Advertisement) DEMOCRAT WANT ADS PAY BIG.
“Not like any other Cigar you ever SMOKED” THF WHITE STAG Extra /V ’ Hd TRY IT!
The Little Helping Hand is anticipating a pleasing and profitable meeting this evening with Miss Helen Waiters. — o ■ WANTED TO BUY—A lot in Decatur, half-sized preferred. Must be located inside railroads. Inquire A. H. Seliemeyer. «5t3
