Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 11, Number 135, Decatur, Adams County, 6 June 1913 — Page 3
I -W ® I X JSI I B You can t put in a good days work if your B feet hurt. Buy a pair of Hospitals and get busy, ■ | ■ Plain toe and $1.50 I L Fancy ones $1.75 I Charlie Voglewede I
t !' • WEATHER FORECAST:: J : Thunder showers tonight or Saturday. ooler. Mrs. William Martin, Seventh street. , is numbered among the ill. Miss Minnie Orvis went to Fort Wayne yesterday afternoon. The Misses Stella Chronister and , Maebl Harb went to La Porte this , morning. County Commissioner James Hen- , dricka of Monroe was a business vis- i itor here yesterday. , Tony Holthouse left this morning I for Indianapolis where he will look ; after some business matters. Glen Staker, a former Decatur high 1 school boy, returned last evening to I his home at Bluffton after a visit here. 1 Rev. S. H. Baumgartner of Indianapolis will preach this evening at 7:30 ! at the Evangelical church, after which the quarterly conference will be held. A cordial invitation to the public to attend. 1
J THE H ° ME ° F ' I I Quality Groceries I DECORATE t A Your shelves with GOOD GOODS They will keep In your pantry as well as on our shelves. Don’t you find a supply good to drop in on ? Let us put a few cans of these on your shelf. California yellow peaches per can 20c “ lemon cling peaches can “ Apricots per can doc Fancy Apricots per can BlacKjßaspberries per can ’ ’ 5? Fancy sweet potatoes 2 cans 25c Extra fancy cut wax beans can “ “ green beanscan Standard Green beans can lUC Hower and Hower North of G. R. & I. Depot. phone 1( - •
F '“' S ftSnt YEßS ® FKEN THEJBOWERS REALTY CO. REAL3ESTATE, &BONDS, loans, abstracts. J j The Schirmever JAbstract Company complete Ab- i |* stract Records, Twenty years bxpene | Farms, ZCity Property, 5 per cent I MONEY
Guy Kidd made a business visit to Bluffton this morning. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schinnerer of Willshire wer e in the city Thursday on 'business. Miss Minnie Orvis went to Fort Wayne yesterday afternoon for a visit with friends. Theodore Reick of Chicago was in the city yesterday on business and visiting with friends. C. S. Mumma returned last evening from Spencerville, Ohio, where he attended the Auglaize United Brethren conference. Mrs. R. K. Allison of Indianapolis', arrived yesterday afternoon to visit for several days with Mrs. P. B. Thomas and relatives. Miss Francis Dugan left this morning for Poughkeepsie, N. Y , where she will attend the commencement exer- ( Icises of Vassar college and from the place she was graduated from last spring. Mesdames J. H. Heller and C. V Dugan and Heller will join them this where they will be entertained by a number of Bluffton ladies. Messrs Dugan and Heller wll join them this evening.
John Stoneburner made a business trip to Fort Wayne this morning. Charles Steele returned this morning prom a business trip to Anderson in the Interest of the Steele Harness & 'Hardware Company. | Th e stockholders of the Fort Wayne Springfield railway company will . meet in this city tomorrow to hold their annual election. Mrs. J. C. Patterson went to Winchester this morning to visit for several days with her mother, Mrs. S. O. Irvin and other relatives E. X. Ehlnger left yesterday morning for St. Louis, Mo., and then on to Jonesboro, Ark., where he Will look aftfr business matters of importance. A drive into the country finds the dust lying several inches deep. The slightest stir sends clouds of it into the air in breath-taking swirls. The St. Vincent de Paul society will entertain at another one of their delightful 500 parties next Wednesday afternoon at the rl.of I hall. Mrs. O. M. Snellon and grandson, Robert Jack, Mrs. W. E. Spitler and daughter, Glee, of Willshire, dhio, changed cars here this morning on their way to Fort Wayne. Mrs. Helen Olivia Barnard of Garn.d Rapids, Michigan; Fanchon, Jessie and Harold Magley wer e guests of the C. C. Wilder family at supper at Monmouth last evening. Miss Dorothy Dugan left this morning for Chicago where she will attend the Commencement exercises of Ferry Hall college at that place. Her sister, Miss “Billy" Dugan is a student at Ferry Hall. They will arrive home the first of next week. Mrs. Philip Ardner and babe of Toledo and Miss Irene Gerard who has been going to school at Toledo arrived in this city last evening and will spend a week with Miss Irene's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Gerard. Irene will finish her school work some time in August. Ward Sunier and family of Fort Wayne, arrived in the city today for a few days’ visit with relatives. Mr. ■Sunier is convalscing from a very series attack of pneumonia . His mother, Mrs. Albert Sunier, who was very ill with the same sickness a few weeks ago is much improved.—Bluffton News.
Mt. and Mrs. John Waring, Mrs. Martha Waring, H. C. Arnold and James McCormick of Bluffton motored to this city yesterday and spent the day with Mr. L. C. Waring. Mrs. John Waring was formerly Miss Mazie Arnold, frequently visited here before her marriage, forming a large circle of friends. The people west of town are having some trouble over a school house that is to be built at Linn Grove. They want to fix it so that they can make one school house do. The people living west of town, when the waters come up a little, would not be able to send their children to school at all. It is not know’n just at present what will be done about it as most of the farmers are against it. —Geneva Herald. Chief of Police Philip Baker, Wednesday afternoon received a telephone message from Zanesville asking that the local police apprehend and detain a band of gypsies thought to have been enroute to Huntington until an officer from that place was sent after them. However, apparently the local police chief received the word too late as four wagons driven by the wanderers passed through Huntington shortly after noon. The gypsies are wanted in Preble but the local chief did not learn upon what charge. They camped near Zanesville Tuesday night and upon breaking camp Wednesday morning headed for Huntington. Whether the band passing through here at noon was the ono wanted Is not known although in all probability it Is.—Bluffton Banner.
MRS. HOBROCK DEAD. i Me»sag e Received by Relatives in This City This Afternoon. A message was received in this city this afternoon by Miss Louise Hobrock, informing her of the death of, her cousin, Mrs. Herman Hobrock, of I Fort Wayne. Nothing definite con-| cernlng her demise was stated, only ' that she passed away at 9 o'clock ’ this morning. The funeral will be held j Monday afternoon. MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS. There will be a meeting of the stockholders of the Fort Wayne & Springfield Railroad company at the offices In Decatur, Indiana, on Saturday, June 7, 1913, at which time will occur the election of officers and other business of importance will be discussed. 131t4 Get a fine setting of late cabbage and tomato plants and Yam plants at Fullenkamps. j
THE REX THEATER A three reel Eclaire feature film entitled “The Superior Law” a show of renown wonder and full of interesting scenes, completes the bill for tonight at the Rex. It is something out of the ordinary. “The Superior Law” Eclaire feature 3 reels 5c to all REX THEATER STRAYED —From the farm of John Railing in Union township, last Friday, a white male pig weighing 75 or 80 po-nds. Finder please take up and n 'tify Mr. Railing, who will make settlement. 131tJ FOR SALE—Tomato and cabbage plants, 20c hundred.—Milt Leave’,l, 320 N. 4th St. ’Phone 232. 132t3 Deputy Auditor Paul Baumgartner has nearly completed the sheet showing the distribution of taxej. A remarkable car In Construction, Operation, Economy, at a remarkable price. SBSO — S9OO The Detroiter is the summing up of everything that has been proved bert»ln automobile building. There isn’t an experiment in the whole car—nothing but tried and tested features. Add to these a rare beauty of design and finish, and you know that the Detroiter is a car any man might be proud to drive. It acknowledges nothing finer on any thoroughfare. Come in and look this wonderful car over. G. H. BRIGHT, Decatur, - - Indiana Agent for Detroiter Sales Company, Indianapolis. Decatur Dry Cleaner and Pressers Clothing and Hats cleaned and pressed at the home of Wear-U-Well Store Shining parlors in connection Ist door east of Murry Open on Sundays STAR GROCERY* Dried beef 10c Corn extra standard 10c Early june peas . . 10c T Pink salmons 10c | Red “ ... 15c | Sweet potatoes . . ..10c I Hominy 10c I Saur Kraut . . . . 10c I Stringbeans . . . . 10c I Tomatoes 10c I Succatash 10c I Baked beans 10c i Campbells soups . . 10c E Oil sardines .... 5c g Mustard sardines . . 5c E I IWill Johns. p p z; B—- - F
j-iQWS "'COpyriqhTa p- » That Delicious Cake is not home made but is supplied b Martin’s Bakery. Our baking has a home character and quality about it which often misleads even goodcake makers. Our eggs, butter flour and other ingredients used are always good, wholesome and ficoh v.hiie ience has given us th t. deft skill which gives a taste and flavor to cakes, pies or pastry never acquired by or dinary bakers. Try our fresh bread and rolls for breakfast They are great.
Jacob Martin I Urn Style (Universal] Coffee Percolators Lose No Aroma in Steam Coffee boiled for any length of time in ordinary pot?, or sprayed with boiling water, is in ordinary percolators, loses its fine aroma in steam. While good coffee can be made in ordinary coffee pot by experts, experts are rare. The best coffee pot is the one 1 which automatically completes the process before the water boils, and the "Universal” is the only one that fills this requirement. This is the perfection of the drip firocess, circuating six to ten times as -jjegAs. much water as v\ wTiffwL—any other per- cr ig colator, con- 'vJB K sequently extracting a * greater amount of the aromatic feAS—» properties of Fo|S the coffee. Call at the store, seethe percolators and ask for booklet describing them. JOHN BROCK
J AY-E YE-S EE ly The J. I. Case f I CU TIVATOR janr* _j- as k een on the margnfcz/ Al <et ! *° , p n S that it has ill 1 Tg proven its superiority AC \ II over a E others. There / fy — I I \ iMlum - your r ind when you L. ffllM buy aJ * I* Case. This Cultivator is also X abreast the times. ‘ Made in 1 wo Styles \ / Crank Shift as picture here shown, and the Famous LEV2R.LESS CULTIVATOR Be sure and ask to see this Leverless Machine. We want to demonstrate it to you. Schaub-Dowling Co.
‘Studebaker wagons certainly last a long time” "I have had this wagon twenty-two years, and during that time it cost me only $6.00 for repairs, and that was for setting two tires. * and years of daily use in good and bad weather and over ail kinds of roads, I will put this wagon against any new wagon of ancuier make that you can buy today.” “Studebaker wagons are built of air-dried lumber and tested iron and steel. Even the paint and varnish qualities*'' tO & aboratory test to in ’ ur ® wearing c.refJlL°n W T?k n '’ ,d<: C ! * J ,U L b] r Cted w “ many testa or is more w»onn D ° nt li,ten , to ‘he dealer who wants to sell you a cheap wagon, represented to be ‘just as good’ as a Studebaker.” P WagOn * 1 truclc> . dump wagons and carts, delivery SX L b T'k •“"'J'*’ , de P°‘ *«B°n»-«nd harness of all kinds of the same high standard a. the Studebaker vehicles. See our Dealer or mite ui. STUDEBAKER South Bend, Ind.
BERGHOFF BEER f $2.00 per case of 3 doz. small or 2 doz. large. Delivered to any part of the city. The same whiskies and wines at the same old price and at the same old place. NUMBER 581 I. A. KALVFR.
JUINE2 SALE AT BURDG MILLINERY 5 DOORS SOUTH INTERURBAN STATION 75 Trimmed hats for women and misses that were $3.00 $3.50, $4 00 choice $2.00 80 Trimmed hats that were $4.50 $5.00 and $6.00 your choice $3.00
