Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 11, Number 147, Decatur, Adams County, 20 June 1913 — Page 5
RUFF NEK new Ruff Nek shape is fl taking with the boys who want I snap and ginger in their shoes. ■ Tan Ruff Neks 84.09 ■ ■ Charlie Voglewede
I WEATHER FORECAST Ijsttmaau:::*.’::’.. .. storms tonight <ihj' |- Milton Miller was at It-.. ('KWviness ■J. 11*. jLMteh >■ • of i’ot ■ w j I on business yesterday. • ■ f Mrs. Jame? Vtman an I e.n. !.••>. to to felatlves, t Charles Colter went to Wim h->• . i ; >nsinesß matters. ft The D. M. •■> m afternoon for Rome City who" will spend the summer at tlw: ... ■ ? Rill In. went to I..rm Ur. . Hpis moraine to attend the funer;.! ‘services for Noel Gentis ami It. Nussbaum, which were held tie .e t day. Eyiit nieeiiiiL of the fsfeich was to have been held Thur-- ' Stay night at the Smith A- : 11 ml !. M been postponed until l . r! Ing at 7:3d o'clock.
- -r.ye • -_• I M 1 THE HOME 0F I Q \ | Quality Groceries | Twenty-One <£?jl good I BX APPETIZING MEALS I Wt each week 'I ;' Consisting of Quality Groceries-Our Kind I Would Make A Weak Man Strong ® TRY THEM A WEEK! 110 c F ackages. Lorn flakes, puffed wheat/ rolled ■ B oats, maple flakes, post tavern. 25c Packages. Shredded whole wheat, jersey BEB - corn flakes. 115 c Packages. Grape nuts, puikd rice, wheatena, ■B' cream of wheat. 15 and 10c Packages. Egg noodles spaghetti, maciI ron i. I Scratch feed, chick feed in bulk or pkg, Oyster shells. —— i ini«» | We pay cash or trade for produce. Eggs 16c I Hower and Hower, of G. R. & I. Depot. ’Phene 108 -t ? ■.•ai.’x.-’sav-awwasa gfL . r —~ ’ "‘yjF ' ’/ I Bf.M. SCHIRMEYER FRENCH QUINN I B President Secretary Treas. K B|THE BOWERS REALTY CO. I I REAL ESTATE. BONDS, LOANS, | ABSTRACTS. SRhe Schirmevor Ab. iraei Company complete Ab- B I stract Records, 1 wenty years Experience J Farms,SCity Property, 5 per cent SB. MONEY 1
Clem Steigmeyer went to Ft. Wayne , this morning. Bert Green went to Fort Wayne this morning. Scott Hughes arrived from Fort Wayne this morning on business. Mrs. (. If. Colter and daughter, Leah, went to Fort Wayne this morning. Miss Nellie Groves of Bluffton has arrived for a visit over Sunday with Miss Agnes Meibers. Dr. D. D. Clark has returned from Chicago, where he was attending to business matters for several days. Mrs. I). M. Hensley and children left this afternoon for Rome City to spend the summer at their cottage. Barney Meibers left this morning for Rente City, where he will spend a week or more at the Meibers cot- [ tage. Mrs. C. 1,. Meibers will go to Rome i City tomorrow to spend several weeks ‘at their cottage. She will be there I during the entire month of July. Miss Bess Jeffrey, in training at the Lutheran hospital for a nurse. Is at ! home lor a two weeks’ vacation, She is spending a part of the time visiting ■ in Ohio.
C. C. Schafer, M. Kirsch and J. H. Heller, made a business trip to Fort Wayne this afternoon. Look over our market basket, a new plan, with merit, appear•ng in todays issue. We believe you will like it. Miss Mallssa Langworthy returned to r ort Wayne this noon after a visit here with friends and attending the commencement of the St. Joseph high school. w ill Lehne, the jeweler, will return this afternoon from Tiffin, Ohio, where he attend to business of importance, and looked up old acquaintances. If you want anything the way to get it is to say so in our classified department. Every day we have evidence that it pays and you will be a booster for it if you use it. Carl Relnking, fiv e year old brother of Paul C. Reinkitig o f the Interurban office, accompanied him from South Bend and will visit here until Sunday, with his brother. Mr. and Mrs. David Flanders who are at their farm near Sanford, Mich., report ideal weather and fine crops’ Prospects for a big crop of huckleberries this season are good. Miss Georgia Sapp and Mr. F. A. Huguenard returned to Fort Wayne today noon. They attended the commencement exercises and were guests of the Petr Laurent family. A little boosting right now will help Decatur more than at any other time and its up to you to do it. Its the best town in the state and it will be better if we get up on our toes. A large number of Decatur people went to Linn Grove this morning to attend the double funeral for the Gentis and Nussbaum boys, who were drowned in the stone quarry there Tuesday evening. Iron Tail’s Love, a Sioux romance o’ th’ New Jersey marshes, did not materialize at the- Crystal Palac e last night, as th’ film is stranded in Morgantown. Ther hain't nothin’ as busy as an idle woman.—Abe Martin. “Are you related to Barney Sullivan?” Patrick Sullivan waft once asked. “Very distantly,” replied Patrick, “I was m e mother’s first child, and Barney was the sivinteenth.— July Roman's Home Companion. Get ready to enjoy yourselves next Thursday, when the firemens convention will be held here. There will; be much doing and its up to you to ave a good time. If you don’t do it, see a doctor, ther e is something radi- 1 cally wrong. George Wemhoff is sending out the official notices as secretary of the Indiana Monumental Dealers association, notifying them of the mid-sum-mer meeting to be held at Rome (Tty. The program is a good one and it will be a splendid session. Progress in the work of rebuilding Omaha is graphically shown by a number of "companion” views in the July Popular Mechanics Magizine. These views show the destruction wrought by the storm on March 23d, and the same points a few months later with wreckage cleared away and new buildings rising. Clem Steigmeyer went to Ft. Wayn e this morning where he will apply for a position. Clem is taking the journalistic course at the state university at Bloomington and is making good. He is one of the reporters on the daily paper printed by. the college and has the promise of becoming an expert journalist. Quite a little excitement has been caused in Dunkirk by a representative of the Standard Oil company leasing 1,000 acres of land just north -<rf town and up to the corporation line. A rig has been moved in on the Ed Hart farm and will be put up as soon as the builders arrive. Another well has been located and drilling will be started as soon as possible.— Bluffton News.
„ , —•<-- ■ ' I MISS DOROTHY LAVERN With Guy Stock Company Here All Next Week
Mfs. L. B. Moss of Preble was a business visitor In the city today, Mrs. E. Tullis and son of Preble were among the vity visitors today. Samuel LaGarde of near Kempton, Tipton county, was here on business. Mrs. Charles Thomas and son, Kenneth, left this afternoon for Winchester. Mrs. Thelma McCabe of KendaK ville returned to her home this afternoon. Lee Reed went to his home at Partland this afternoon for a few days’ visit. A new K. of C. sign has hung out of the window of their rooms in the Allison block. Eugene Runyon and wife atended the Nussbaum-Gentls funeral at Linn Grove this morning. Mrs. Sarah Kessler returned to her home at Monroe this afternoon after visiting in the city with friends. Mrs. Wade Andrews and niece, Flotence Andrews, of Monroe were in the city today visiting with friends. Mrs. Emery J. Wilson and daughter, Jane, of Cleveland, Ohio, hav e arrived to visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Myers. Mrs. Dr. C. V. Connell and daughters, Marie and Lois, have returned from Monroe, Mich., where they attended the commencement exercises of St. Mary’s college, Marie being a student In the college, and having completed her first year of study. Fire of unknown origin at Hartford City at 11 o'clock Wednesday night destroyed the Elton block and a livery barn comprising one-half a square of frame buildings in West Washington street, causing a loss estimated at SIO,OOO. The blaze started in the livery barn just east of the city building and the flames spread to all parts of the adjoining business rooms. In the Elton block were Cliff Bartlow's barber shop and G. L. Patterson's second hand store, both of which were practically wiped out by the flames. A "detective pay car special” caused consternation on the Erie railroad Wednesday morning. It was a "detective” pay car because the real purpose of the sudden and secret paying expedition was to apprehend the leaders in a systematic cheek fraud which is said to have been practiced for a period of several months by employees of the construction coin- | panies engaged in dougle track work on the railroad. —Bluffton Banner i Word was received here Saturday j from San Bispo, Cal., that Rev. Harve Hocker and wife were happy over the arrival of a pair of twin babies—a boy and a girl which were born at their j home last week. Mr. Hocker is a Monroe boy, being the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hocker, and is well known in this community. It is a tru e saying that ‘trouble never comes single." Mother and babes are reported as doing nicely, and no doubt Papa Hocker is stepping high in consequence.—Monroe Reporter. Many people tell you that you must be respectful to older people, quite leaving out of the question whether or not they’re worthy of respect, says the Woman’s Home Companion. I've known some of the most obstinate, bad-mannered, unkind, unjust old peopi ewhose faults were borne in silence because they were old. I've known a grandmother who would actually bribe her grandchildren to disobey their mother, her daughter-in law. I’ve known an old man who by his unceasing bullying and heckling actually broke down the health of his son who was carrying a heavy burden of care, but who might still be a well man if his father had not literally worried him into sickness. In both these cases I hold that the respect of the daughter-in-law and the son were misplaced, and that the old folk should not have been allowed to •üb.’/.'t their kin to such ill treatment. Juse being old is no guarantee of qualities worthy of respect.
| TAKE A DAY OFF | = Come in and help celebrate Decatur’s Biggest Day = J FIMEN’S COmM ! THURSDAY, JUNE 26th. See the Monster Parade See the Water Battle See the Hose Lay Contest See the Famous Tyrones S SPECIAL:-Exhibition run and hose laying contest X S Between Decatur and Bluffton * f BIG BAND CONCERTS f | EVERYTHING FREE | 111111 l IHIIII
5% Monev All you want. Abstracts made and Titles Guaranteed. Insurance Writers Office Rooms on first floor oppisite interurban Station Graham and Walters DR. C. R. WEAVER OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN Office above Bowers Realty Company. Plwne .314 KING WALTER AND FRED ORION Two high-class Belgian stallions, will stand for mares at my barn 5 miles northeast of Decatur. Ind., this season. King Walter is a blood bay, 5 years old, weights 2,000 lbs., has proved that he is an excellent breeder. Fred Orlon is a tine sorrel, white mane and tail, 3 years old, will weigh over a ton when matured. He is a fine specimen of the Belgian horse, has proved that he is a sure breeder. Terms:—Ten dollars to insure a; colt to stand and suck. Owners part-1 ing with mares will be held for insurance. We solicit your patronage. J. A. FLEMING & SON. 77-2t-w-10wks. Owners. — 5 Passenger Touring Car, 2 Passenger Roadster, With every feature of highgrade that has been pr<»v»-4 beet in automobile conatruction—feature! that make other tare poea<*Mlnic them fell nt an average <»f 53.5vv.80. The Detroiter coate but SBSO and S9OO Few cart are ao handsome—• hone are better built for economy and curability—lo to 25 mllea per gallon <»f fuel. Over 100 mllea to th*’ quart of lubricant. Amaain* economy that matchea the aiuaai lug low coal* I G. H. BRIGHT. Decatur, ■ . Indiana Agent for Detroiter Sales Company, > Indianapolis. I
IF YOU UWE GRP HAIR your any is ddubied —
Young Looking People Are In Constant Demand Everywhere —_ Competition is keen. You can’t hold down the Big Jobs if you are suspected of being a “Back Number.” You can’t expect to be a successful wage-earner, man or woman, if you are old looking, but whether you work or not. you owe it today to yourself and family to keep looking young. Get a bottle of Hay’s Hair Health today. It solves the grey hair problem for every man and woman, young or old. It brings back the lull. rich, natural color of the hair —restores it
HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO. 1913 REAL-ESTATE ANNOUNCEMENT 200 and 110 acres in Adams county, well improved, will exchange for smaller farms. Long time on difference. 178 acres in St. Joe county, Michigan ,one mile of town. Will exchange for smaller farm or stock of merchandise. 4,5, i acre garden tracts, well improved, near Fort Wayne, easy terms; 3 cottages Rome City. 124, 100, 90, 80, 135 acre farms, well located in Elkhart county, Ind. Will exchange for city property or busness rentals. Improved and unimproved land in Canada, lying north from Detroit; will exchange for Adams county land and pay difference or sell on easy terms. 180 acres near Decatur .extra improvements. Will sell or exchange for 80 or 100 acres. Easy terms on difference. 1034 acre Tennessee timber tract, well located, good mill location, near market. 40 acres in Root township, large house and barn on pike. SI,OOO. 80 acres tn Root township. No buildings. S6O. 120 acres in Root township, large house and barn on pike. $75. 41 acres in St. Mary's township, good improvements, well located. SSOOO. 40 acres in Root township, small house, new barn. SISOO. ICO acres near Peterson; 2 sets of buildings. 120 acres in Blue Creek township: tine house and barn, good soil. $l2O. 32 acres in St. Mary’s township, house and barn. Can be had for $2500. 37 acres, good house and barn, 3 miles of Decatur. slls. 65 acres in St. Mary’s township. Fair house, small barn, 2 miles of Will- : shire. $95. 80 acres in St, Mary’s township, large house and barn, good soil. $l4O. 60 acres, good house, barn, orchard and poultry house, 2>/i miles from city. $l5O. 80 acres % mile of Steele, well improved, good soil, $125. Will exchange for smaller farm. 80 acres near Pleasant Mills. Good buildings. $135. 80 acres in Root township. New bank barn, 1-story house, other outbuildings, good location. SBSOO. 240 acres, 2% miles of Monroe, 2 sets of buildings. $l5O. 55 acres well improved, black land in Union township. $l4O. 130 acres in Nottingham township. Wells county, one of the best improved farms In northern Indiana, with finest grade of sail and well tiled. Terms and prices very tempting. 80 acres In Wabash township, well Improved, well located, good soil. 5-acrg tract near Preble on Decatur road, very line house and barn, plenty of fruit. CHEAP. 80 acre tract, H mile of Preble, good buildings, black soil, will sell or trade for largo stock farm. 60 acres, 4 miles south, black soil, nlco improvements. CITY RESIDENCEC FROM SI,OOO UP. 3 medium priced residences on 9tl St. WSW W3 residences on Madison St. from SIOOO up. Nlco residence on Elm street. Nico residence, 2 lots on N. 3rd St. $2300. 2 modern residences on Winchester street. ' 2 modern residences on N. sth St. ' . . ' 2 nice properties on Jefferson street, inside railroad. Nlc 0 location on 4th St., fair house. Nice bargain on Rugg St. r 2 one acre tracts on Mescer Ave. Good improvements. ID/j and 5-acre tract on West Monroe street. Nico buildings. Also vacant lots and small houses on easy payments. ERWIN REAL-ESTATE AGENCY. LNDIA™'
to its natural color immediately. Don't waste time with substitutes, there’s only one, Hay's Hair Health, used by thousands with absolute satisfaction for twenty years. Druggists have sold Hay's Hair Health so long to so many satisfied people everywhere who come back again for it and won’t use any other, that they are perfectly willing to guarantee it and give your money back if it’s not satisfactory after a fair trial. Free: Sign this adv. and take it to the follow ing druggists and get a 50c. bottle of Hay's Hair Health and a 25c. I cake of Harfina Soap, for 50c.: or SI.OO I bottle of Hay's Hair Health and two I 25c. cakes of HarUaa Soup Free, for sl.
