Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 11, Number 91, Decatur, Adams County, 16 April 1913 — Page 3
Ever See A Fellow Plowing ■"■and every other round he hops up on the fence. Maybe you think he wants to let the horses rest or maybe you think 7 aS ? he Spring fever ! No » no aint at, his feet hurt, he is not wearing Barkers Best work shoes or he wouldent have any foot troubles. Mens $3.00 and $3.50 Charlie Voglewede THE SHOE SELLER
I WEATHER FORECAST I • ‘ M—SIIISI'IMS I n I H Fair tonight and Thursday. ■■w- ; Wilber Poole blew in for a visit with his friends. , Miss Stella Klopfenstein of Preble was a shopper here yesterday. Attorney Lee Hartzell of Ft. Wayne ■was here yesterday on business In court. Mrs. L. L. Syphers returned to Fort Wayne yesterday after a visit here with relatives. She was accompanied by her niece, Miss Cecil Eady. What’s become o’ the ole time felled who couldn’t name th’ vice president? Spring acts jist like a feller tha t back from a vavcation an’ can’t settle down. —Abe Martin. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bouse of Grand Rapids, Mich., are here, being called by the death of Mrs. Bouse's father, T. W. Watts. Mrs. Bouse had returned home only Sunday morning after a ten days’ visit here, her father's death occurring less than twenty-four hours later.
RHI ™ E HOME 0F «1 Js| I Quaiity Groceries gMI NO USE lOt il To Beat Around the ggLM Bush, THE HABIT of using good goods is a good habit Some Have It--Others are getting It What do you find in this list to your taste Santa Clara prunes lb 10, 12 1-2, 15c Extra fancy evaporated peaches lb. . . . 12 1-2, 15c Bright evaporated apricots lb . . 18c Fency Carolina rice 10c. Japan rice 7 l-2c Salt nsh lb 10c Jells, jams, syrups, sorgum, honey We pay cash or trade for produce Eggs 15. Butter 20 to 27c Hower and Hower. North of G. R. & I. Depot. ’Phone 108 F.M.SCHIRMEYER FRENCH QUINN f President Secretary Treas. I THEjJBOWERS REALTY CO. | REAL|ESTATE, BONDS, LOANS, 1 ABSTRACTS.* g The Schirmeverj;Abstract Company complete Ab- E stract Records, Twenty years Experience J ' Farms,;City Property, 5 per cent | MONEY I
Pat Kinney made a business trip to Geneva this morning. W. I. Rainier of Chicago is in the city visiting with Dr. C. T. Rainier. Walter Thornhill, trustee of Wabash ( township, was a business caller in this city today. Mr. and Mrs. L. P. Myers went to . Hoagland this morning where they .will make their future home. George Kinzle went to Fort Wayne this morning to attend the Masonic doing which are going on there. i Mrs. Margaret Meibers, Mrs. Dr. C. |S. Clark, Miss Rose Tonnelier and Jack Meibers went to Rome City this morning, where they will spend a few days visiting at this resort. j Aria Steele, who was taken ill I Saturday evening with diphtheria, is [ much better today. No more antitoxine has been given him as he is well on the road to recovery.—Bluffton News. 'x Dr. L. H. Cook performed an operation on Mrs. J. D. Wisehaupt of Decatur this morning at his office. The operation was made necessary by the ' decay of the frontal bone in the forehead. After the operation the woman was taken to the home of Foster Harbaugh on West South street.— Bluffton Banner.
Mrs. Henry Thomas made a trip north on the Interurban today. Mrs. D. E. Scott went to Fort Wayne today. John B. Jones made a business trip to Fort Wayne today. Mrs. F. F. Mills and Mrs. Walter Kauffman went to Fort Wayne for the day. Mrs. C. L. Meibers and Mrs. Anna Droppieman went'to Fort Wayne for the day. ‘ Cards received here announce that the state fair will be held at Indianapolis, September Bth to 12th, inclusive, Charles Downing is the secretary nnd his office is 14 Capitol building. Henry Koenemann, who has been confined to his bed thirteen days with inflammatory rehumatism, shows little change. He tried to sit up awhile yesterday but was '-jrced to return to his bed again. These bright spring days ought to make a fellow ginger up. There is much to do and thetime is short. If every citizen gets busy, it will help him, his neighbor and everybody in the community. D. E. Studabaker writes us from Coronado, Fla., where he and his sister, Miss Hattie, have spent the winter, stating that they will leave in a few days for Decatur, where they expect to enjoy the summer months with old friends.
Mrs. Alice Griffin, who has been visiting in the city for the past week with Dr. and Mrs. C. T. Rainier, left this morning for her home at Grand Rapids, Mich. Mrs. Griffin spent the winter in the south with friends and relatives and stopped off here on her way back home. A card from Frank Schultz, a patient at St. Joseph hospital, says he is getting along fine. He also says Dr. McOscar removed a needle from his side, which had been left there after it was broken by a specialist who was treating him on February 18, 1912, and which caused him much pain. Mrs. Jennie Fuhrman of Marion, 0., is the guest of friends here for a few days. She and Mr. Fuhrman hace just returned from a several weeks' trip to Cuba and Florida, during which time she had a number of exciting experiences. And she can come as near telling them as any one who was ever there. William Morris and Festus Rhoten left Monday for Greensburg, Ind., where they will conduct an invoice of the new store which the Morris company bought last week in that city. It is the purpose of the company to put on a sale to reduce the present stock in the established store which was purchased, and a complete line of five and ten cent stock will be installed. It is the purpose of the company to take out a partition and increase the length of the room from 100 to 130 feet, and in addition they will have a thirty-foot room in the rear as a stock room. J. A. Morris stated this morning that his son, William, will have charge of the Greensburg store.—Bluffton News.
“The Shepherd of the Hills,” Harold Bell Wright’s novel, which has been accorded the largest sale in the history of publishing in America, has been made into a play by Mr. Wright with the assistance of Elsbury W. Reynolds. It will be seen for the first time in this city at the Bosse opera house, Friday, April 18. It tells a beautiful story of the Ozark mountains, a story that holds the auditor by its thrills from the beginning to the end. It is unique in characterdrawing, giving to the stage a somewhat new atmosphere. The beauty of the Ozark mountain region lends itself to some very effective stage pictures, and Gaskill and MacVitty, the producers, are said to have given the play an exceptionally beautiful mounting. WHO IS MRS .MOYER? Who is the Mrs. Andy Moyer, from this city who has entered the Fort Wayne hospital, assording to the Fort Wayne News for an operation on the heart? Decatur relatives of the Mrs. Andy Moyer, who recently moved from this city to Fort Wayne, and who was formerly Miss May Meyers, ask that we make the statement that the lady at the hospital Is not this Mrs. Moyer. Decatur people met members of her family in Fort Wayne last Saturday and all were quite well at that time. Nor is the lady Mrs. Albert Moyer of this city, as it was thought at first the name might have been confounded with that of “Andy” Moyer. o ; , DAILY CENSUS REPORT. The home of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Koos, east of the city, was gladdened by the birth of a fine boy this morning. This is their first born. Mrs. Koos was formerly Miss Gladys Steele, and is a daughter of Jesse Steele. WANTED —Linn (basswood), cottonwood, willow and poplar bolts, four Inches in diameter or larger; standing timber or cut and ricked, anywhere. —Johnson-Smith Excelsior Co., Indianapolis, Ind. ' ■ ■ 11111
The Jubilee Year (Continued from Page 1) during the preceding part of the evening. She spoke of their stability, and the fact that when they settle a point “it remains put" without worry and flurry. In response to the toast, "Our Husbands,” J. N. Fristoe had a part of te program, “Our Wives.” He spent fifteen minutes thanking the committee for placing him on the program and then gave a vivid description of “the limpid lightning, limping across Lake Willard at Steele’s park and leaning up against one of the ice houses of the Toledo Brewing Co.” He described a trip to Linn Grove and kept the guests in an uproar for many minutes, and the beauty of his monologue was that it could be used just as well in a tariff discussion as in a toast to “Our Wives.” It was in the nature of reminiscences and as much of the “reminiscing” included persons present, the speech made them all feel very much “at home.” Miss Nellie Blackburn’s toast, “Our Guests,” was short, but to the point, and echoed the club’s welcome in general. Miss Bess Congleton gave the response in which she spoke of this club and its work, and of clubs in general. She mentioned the great clu< idea and how they are developing from the self-culture alone, into the community-culture Club, and the great good they are doing in the helping of mankind in general. The dinner was yery nicely served by the Misses Reba Quinn, Lillian Rice, Florence Myers, Winifred Burk and Mary Moses, the menu being as follows: Fruit Salad Wafers Creamed Chicken in Pastry Cups Meat Ixtaf Escalloped Potatoes Deviled Eggs Vegetable Salad Rolls Butter Jellies Preserves Coffee Ice Cream Cake The ice cream and cake prettily carried out the club colors of pink and white. An informal mingling of ten minutes preceded a very good program in which Miss Rose Smith gave two fine piano solos, and Dr. and Mrs. P. B. Thomas gave a vocal duet, responding to an encore with a humorous song. And then a very delightful surprise came. Mrs. Jennie Furman of Marion, an honorary member of the club, who had arrived, unannounced to the greater number of the club members, descended the stairway in the costume of her old role, “Josiah Allen’s wife,’’ and took the guests with her on a pleasant trip to Cuba. Mrs. Furman had just returned from a trip to Havanna and gave many interesting and amusing experiences in that j country of the south. The story was ■ told in her characteristic way and was quite the hit of the evening. The club has the following membership:
1 Active Members —Mesdames Jane A. 1 Crabbs, Helen Blossom, Adaline Blackburn, Mary Congleton, Kannie I Fristoe, Nanniie Miller, Nettle : Schrock, Fannie Peterson, Sadie Gillig. Flora Trout, Sadie Schafer, Ida • Beavers, Kathryn Coverdale, Sarah • Fristoe, Nannie Miller, Nettie I I berg, Maggie Moses, Anna Vance, Or- • pha Erwin, Garnet Sutton, Mary Eley, Miss Nellie Blackburn. • Inactive Members—Mrs. W. J. Mv- ■ ers, Mrs. Catherine Allison, Mrs. Cora ■ Falk. ’ | Honorary Members — Mesdames 1 , Elizabeth Allen, Elsie Bollman, Jen- ■ nie Fuhrman, Carrie Burns, Ella Er- ‘ win, Agnes Smith. Miss Sarah Segur. POLICE COURT. John Long and Charles White, two Hungarians, employed on the Erie double track, were arrested Tuesday : i night by Officer Melchi. They were given trial this morning before 'Squire Stone and were found guilty on the charge of public intoxication and fined $1 and costs, amounting to $9.80. As is usual in such cases they were ! “broke,” therefore they will be the guests of Sheriff Durkin for ten days. -— — - REV. GOOD ESCAPES FLOODS. The Rev. S. Good, pastor of the '] Beery church, west of the city, who Is a resident of Dayton, Ohio, escaped i death from the floods, but had a most harrowing experience, which he related when he came Sunday to conduct | his regular services west of the city. For several days and nights, with a I number of other perscrs. he existed ■ in the attic of a home, the floor of • which was made of only a few loose • boards, the water having driven them i up to the topmost story. DUCKS FOR SALE. Indian Runner drakes for sale; 75c • apiece. Call ’phone 58. 64tf FORD FOR SALE OR TRADE—At Watson's garage.—C. A. Biirdg, De catur, Ind. 59t
wk EVERY Clothcraft suit we sell whether at $lO or S2O is guaranteed both by the makers and by us to be all-wool and to give satisfaction in every detail of wear and service. Come in and look at our big line of Clothcraft Clothes at $lO-sl2 and sls HOLTHOUSF, SCHULTE, COMPANY. Good Clothes Sellers For Men & Beys AUTO FOR BIRTHDAY GIFT. Miss Jean Lutz, daughter of Attorney and Mrs. C. J. Lutz, was the recipient of a fine birthday gift from her parents, the same being a Ford automobile. The auto w r as delivered Tuesday afternoon, the local agent, John Stewart, with Guy Kidd and the Misses Jean Lutz and Rowena Shoaf, making the trip to the Grove garage at Bluffton to get the machine. Ralph Amrine also accompanied them to drive Mr. Stewart’s machine back to this city. TO MOVE TO FORT WAYNE. The Abe Boch family will move to Fort Wayne the latter part of the month, to make their home, having leased the Dan Erwin residence in Lakeside. Mr. Boch has been conducting a livery establishment in Fort Wayne for the past year and the removal to that city will be to locate near his business interests. Their home here will be leased. —o MRS. MEIHLS BETTER. Mrs. Philip Meihls, who is a patient in a Fort Wayne hospital, is reported as feeling better the past few days. There are hopes that she will improve sufficiently to be up and around, though she will probably never be fully well again. o 3,000 sidewalk brick for sale, $5.00 a thousand. Call W. P. Schrock. 91t3
| Good Taste as Well as Good Style Greets || II You Here in Every Garment -■ I - 11 Madam May we have your undivided attention > •• a moment? We want to speak to you about /vO \ • those Beautiful Spring Coats and Suits. V1 1 •5 We want to acquaint you with the splendid hline prepared this season, we want to call your '■ 'WA % •» particular notice to the remarkably low prices , at which these superbly tailored Coats and |k 5? ZZ Suits are marked. We realize you expect us ■< tfl / S to do better for you than other stores and we ■« $ I J? take pleasure in assuring you your expectat- | ' fl »■ ions shall be more than fulfilled. / """ = Come in and look our line 1! || over before buying S g I THE BOSTON STORE H || DECATUR INDIANA = =
i LOTS FOR SALE I : At a Bargain In Lynch Addition -Jj i DECATUR, INDIANA. | i | i Lot No. 901 $225.00 » Lot No. 902 $225.00 *♦ Lot No. 903 $150.00 S Lot No. 907 $175.00 ffi i Lot No. 915 $150.00 ye j Lot No. 916 $125.00 S Lot No. 917 $125.00 S Lot No. 927 SIOO.OO g ■ By making a small payment down you can secure ® • these lots by making monthly payments. Call in > and see us and get a good lot on easy terms. 56 ■ THE OLD ADAMS COUNTY BANK i i g iafiKfitStifitlKffitHitinfßtffitStifitifitifitifitifits
When you feel vous, tired, worried or despondent it is a sure sign you need MOTTS NERVERINE PILLS. They renew the normal vigor and make life worth living. Ba , ure and ask lor Mott’s Nerverine Pills WILLIAMS MFG.CO . CUy.lmuL Ohio For Sale BY ENTERPRISE DRUG CO. HERE is a remedy that will cure molt all akin and scalp trouble.. Eczema, Barber. Itch. Itch, Cut. 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 cento to the B. B. Ointment Co., 217 Monroe street. Decatur, Indiana. * Democrat Want Ads Pa'-.
CHAS. ZIMMERMAN BREEDER OF White Faced Black Spanish Chickens The World’s Renowned Layers Won First 5 Prizes at Adams County Poultry Show Jan. 1913, Eggs from these $1.50 per 15. Phone 4 D. R.D. 2 Decatur, Ind TRY THE “WHITE STAG" EXTRA MILD “The Sweetest Smoke Story Ever Told” 5c AT ALL DEALERS 5c
Dr. €. V. Connell VETERINARIAN Phone feFdeng 102 r* J McConnell, the Drug. Earache** D ? tro,t > M>ch..j hav(J (ound Kirchner's Green Mountain Oil the one safe and reliable remedy for earache. Nothing equal to it. Cure* in a few minute*.” Also for Croup and Swollen Gland*. 50c. FOR SALE BY CALLOW & RICE.
