Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 12, Number 153, Decatur, Adams County, 29 June 1914 — Page 3
Ijfli "MR* * •JB ~*‘:K I * Ml Shoes Already Rubber Heeled «• e OOD shoes at popular prices made with O’Sullivan’s Heels right on them. O’Sullivan’s jf/ 1 wear twice .$. as long leather and give foot comfort the minute you put them on. CHARLIE VOGLEWEDE
WEATHER FORECAST § Thunder showers. Cooler tonight I : i Sunday. . C. H Hayslip is home from his week . ly business trip John Izohe and son. Albert, went I to Port Wayne this morning. Rob Galbreath returned to Fort Wayne this morning utter attend 1 ! " to business here. FJg Mrs. Orval Hurrutl returned this morning from Linn Grove where she visited with her parents. Lee Reed returned this moaning from Portland where he visited over last evening with his family. Mrs Harrv Meshberger and Miss Flo IJierle arrived in the city for an over Kuad y visit with Dr. and Mrs S. P. Hoffman. .Mrs diver Walter living four miles . east of tlie city, who has been quite ! *S-s with stomach trouble is r» ported i a .bolitg better today. Mrs Lcr< • Lak- and children All< e.l Ernest Carroll, accompanied by i Mrs. Loriml.i .McClur- left this more ?Uig fuCCut.U. whete they w .11 visit' with Mr- Lake's parents. Mb. p. V Connell and daughter *. I * Marie and Lois and sun Frederick j Vrat to !V»n,e city luu morning whew , |Ksy w|l spend several weeks . ujuj MHk the pleasures of an outing. Bh>- Mias** Til!!- .nd 1.. ' V’.-iln Went to Rome City this morning so- ' a fevr.' week* outing at ti.-ir cot . tpff* The t urnmer liedule on til- ’* k 1 railroad will !>• • ome
n i win ■ The Home Os Quality Groceries For Picnics And Sunday Dinners Look Over Our List Os Good Things Olives, plain . . 10, 25c Sardines .... 5,10 c Olives, pitted . .10, 25c Salmon .. . . 10, 15c Peanut butter . . 10, 25c Baked beans 5, 10, 15c ■fables, bottle .. . 10c Dried Heef . . 15, 25c s Pickles, bulk, sweet, sour fancy Preserves . 25c “ “ sweet mix Pimmentos . . • • 10c Oranges, doz. .. . 30c Bananas, fancy 15, 20c B|W .. — I We pay cash or trade for produce, Eggs 16c I Butter 12c to 22c I HOWER & HOWER 1., Noi tli of G.R. &I. Depot Phone 108 HMMLwr- 1 — ■ " - - assay, , Aaatow WfijPWWWBP fl RM.SCHIRMEYER FRENCH QUINN g g President Secretary Treas. g I IB THE BOWERS REALTY CO. g I REAL ESTATE. BONDS, LOANS, g g ABSTRACTS. g gßhu Sri ir?ey< r Abstract Company complete Ab- g ■J struct Records, Twenty years’ Experience g R Emms, City Property, 5 per cent. g 9 MONEY g
i William Klodeway of I’reble was a : business visitor in the city yesterday. Mr. aud Mrs. Wilbur Poole left this i morning for Rome City for a short visit!. I Miss Effie Hftlnes left this morning j for Warren where she will spend a l week with her parents. Mrs. E. 8. Ziuu returned to MonroeI ville this morning after a visit here with her son, Harry Clem. Mrs. S. M. Schafer returned to this city last niglit from a three weeks visit with relatives in Warren. Many from this city and along the interurban line will go to St. Johns tomorrow to attend the annual picnic. Mrs. Edwin Stevens and sons. Ad rh.ii and Bruce, returned to Ft. Wayne this morning. They visited here with relatives. Mrs. E. A. Miller of Detroit, Mich., who visited here with Mr. and Mrs John Chronister, went to Fort Wayne this morning. Miss Lois Peterson went to Rome I City this morning where she will visii i aitii her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. j J. D. Hale. Judge 11. E. Smith went to Fort I Wayne this morning where he will I finish up a case in which he is serving I as special judge. Mrs George Weaver und children. , Olive and Owen, left this morning for i Rich Valley to visit with her father, : the Rev. E. A. Goodwin and family. , John Edwards, the pioneer painter and paper hanger of Decatur, who has I be< n out ot the city for the past two weeks, has returned and will cbm- : mvuee a two weeks’ engagement at the Hotel Murray where he may be interviewed on work after this date. —
John Weber. Sr., of Fort Wayne la said to be quite 111. Miss Shaffncr went to Fort Wayne for the afternoon. David Burkholder of Bluffton, Ohio, was here today on business. Miss Bertha Kohne went to Fort Wayne yesterday afternoon. Joint Bolinger wiio lias been ill of Bright’s disease is gradually gaining, i Miss Florine Edwards of the Smith A Beil office will enjoy a vacation uext week. I Lawrence Murray went to Fort Wayne this aftemon for a visit with ' friends. Mrs. W. O. Bigham lias returned from a visit In Delphos and Rockford, Ohio. Miss Effie Haines has gone to her home at Warren, ind. to spend the week with her parents. A double rainbow appeared in the esteru sky last evening during a break in the rain storm. Mr. and Mrs. 8. A. Roop and Mr. and Mrs. J W Roop went to Fort Wayne , today for a visit with relatives. ’ Hurlinghaui” lias arrived at The Myers Daily Co. It is the new nifty Lion Collar style for summer wear. Walter Huuffman, saleman for the 1 Schafer Saddlery Company, lias returned from his weekly business trip. Miss Fannie Hosslnger who has been visiting at Ohio. City, changed cars here enroute to her home at Green Center. Helen Aughenbaugh, daughter of ( Mr. and Mrs. Ed Aughenbaugh fell from her bed and fractured her should er Made. Tony Gluting will arrive from Attica this evening to visit until Sun . day evening with his sister, Miss Marie Gluting. Mr. and Mrs. Clarance Gomftwaite and daughter. Dorothy, went to Fort Wayne this afternoon lor a visit over Sunday with friends Dan W. Lesli, a well-known farmer, ot Bluffton, is in quite a serious condition from over-heating followed by i over-indulgence in iced tea. Miss Mary Erwin will return to Muncie tomorrow to resume her school work in the Muncie Normal Institute after a few days visit in the city with hei parents. Miss Annie Jacobs is expected to arrive today from Minister, Ohio, for a visit witli her uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs Brunnegraff She is enroute to St. Louis. Mo., for a visit. The Misses Gertrude Ray and Goldie Fisher were at Bluffton Thursday attending the Firemens Convention und also visited with Mrs. Neil McDowell formerly Miss Zi lpha Brandyberry. Some fellers are held up on th’ R-ad home an' some are held up aftrt* they git there. Who remembers when th' ole ice cream parlor wux th' tteppin' stone C tli' altar? —Abe Martin. A young fellow who has just passed his twenty-first birthday asked for a marriage license Thursday and felt an elated tiiat he turned back the change to the clerk. It was his happy day. Miss luex Pyle of Geneva who is tlie guest of Miss Gladys Heiman was an out of town guest of the Good Times club, an auxiliary of the Rebekah:, when they met lust evening for sew lag, conversation und refreshments al the I O. O. F. liall Mrs. Charles Burdg went to Marion to visit with the Will Burdg family and thence will go to Frankfort to be the guest of Mrs. Harry luiler. Mr. Burdg will join her at Murlon tumor row for two a days' visit but Mrs. I'urdv will Im- gone longer .Mr. and Mrs. Peter Kirsch and daughter. Lydhi. and Miss Neola Moyer who motored to Bluffton, visited for a while with Mrs. Martin Stair and daughter, Mabel Asliliau- her Miss Aslibuuiiier who lias been ill lor some time is much belter and feels highly encouraged His throat cut from ear to ear. the windpipe and large neck vein severed. Barney Beruing. Go. married, residing two miles east of Minister, lb-*-d two hours, Wednesduj evening as ter being thrown from his rig onto u barbed wire fence. Si Marys and Min star physicians strove vainly to sum- 1 tain Ids lite which rapidly ebbed after his awful injury Petroleum, found only In the stale where Trenton Mmretoiie exists. Ruin i-d Its Inception during Hie g|u< Ini jn-r lod from myriads of small sulUMth-.i such as polyp*. trlholltes and fishes| being held prisoners In the rock tn I stead of decaying they underwent a process of slow destructive di*Silhi Hon. forming peirotcitui und natural gas. The discovery of these usiuial resuui'f *"* existing In Indians was re Hpoui-lblr for a In"." 1 ' period which brmtglil mutiy new- industries |«> the state As usually It- the ease with utt *-xpci tert iilcnty. there was a pcodgafe waste and nature's nlorlng ri-aervuir# has practpally been eabstuUKi.
AT THE CHURCHES REFORMED CHURCH. 9:30 —Sunday School. Lesson: Review. 10:30—German Service. Text: Eccl. 3:1- . Acceptable Worship. 7:3o—English Service. Text: Matthew 2v:24. Mistaken Magnitudes. A cordial welcome awaits you to our services. oFIRST METHODIST CHURCH. 9:15 a. m. —Sunday school. 10:30 a. m.—Morning worship Sermon by the Pastor. Theme: "A Basket of Summer Fruit." 2:00 p. tu.—Junior League. 6:30 —Epwortli League. 7:30 p. m.—Evening Worship. Sermon by the Pastor. Mrs. Arthur Ford will sing at the morning service. o , EVANGELICAL CHURCH. Sunday School al 9:30. S. E. Framer, Supt. Preaching at 10:30 aud 7:30. The Maccobee's Memorial service will be held at the morning service. Y. P. A. at 6:45. At tills service Prof C. E. Spaulding will speak on "Civic R- torm. Prayer and song service Wednesday evening followed by the Normal Class. The Maccabees will attend the morning service in a Ikmlv. Special singing during the day. A cordial invitation to tlie public to attend these services. J. H. RILLING. Pastor. p PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. 9:15 a. m.—Sunday School. 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m.—Public Worship. Tlteines for the day; "Wiuuipg Success." "Leaping oh." 6:30 p. m. Christian Endeavor 7:30 p. in.—Evening worship. (in Sunday evening July Gib, under tlie direition of Dr. F. I. Patterson, a class of lw»nty voices, assisted in solo work by ML>s Katliiyn Egiy of Berne, will give Charles Davis' Cantala "The New Jerusalem.'' A cordial welcome to the public. < ....— ST. MARY'S CHURCH. 7:00 Low Mass. 9:oo—High Mass. Benediction immediately after Hlgli Mass. J. A. SEIMETZ. Pastor. o- . BAPTIST CHURCH. 9:30- Sunday School. Morning Worship at 10:30. Subject; "The Eternal and His Habitation." Evening service at 7:30. Subject: "The Soul Its Metmi&B and Value." A welcome awaits all. It. N. BALL. Pastor. o JUNE MARRIAGE RECORD June Is closing with the biggest ma riuge license record of any month since .wk Bleek*' lias lieen in offiie I p until 2:30 o'rltK-k this uttCiiioon. then- hud been tw, nty-srven licenses issued this month. This makes an average of one license it day. Besides this, several parties were married In other counties and states and returned here to live. GIRLS AVERT FIRE. Heeauso Dotis Erwin, Ruth Baumgartner and little Miss Harrod naw lAe blase in th*- roof if the Peter Kirsch plunlng mill In tin-* und Informed Mr. Kirai h nt onee, a dint rotis fire wus Mr. Kir.tcb grabbed his firextinguisher and went to investlgul Th* Un- exlinguisli- Prov/d very es fectlve and the ||n- Mas Siam pm out wit bom dumuge The plria are being praised today on tiut-tr prow ess. —q DEMOCRAT WANT ADA PAY *IG. ■ ■« wu... •*» SPECIAL TO WOMEN The mo'»t aconomlcal. ckai.ulug and germicidal ol all antlaepUcs la A soluble Antiaephu Powder |o be diasolved in wgter U needed As a medicinal actlaepHc For AmtHi*' In trnH|n.g catarrh, O' piocralipn of nose, throat, and fh»t < au.-cdl>y fmulnlna Ills it has mirqual. For tarn yourn t||c Lydia E pUklpun Medicine Co. ha ■ rncomiui idod Putllr--tn their private iuir.*Mp<w>|cm'« with snipeo. which |*rm»a Its rafter'otWy i Women who have been cured aay i It Is "tnrih eridht lu gold." At i drui'diat* t’h- large box. er by teal! The Pu’.ea Toilet Co., Boe'.on, Mesa
HORSES THAT “DRINK” GRASS Product Peculiar to the Hawaiian Is lands Furnishes Both a Food and a Liquor. The proverbial horse which can be led to water, but which cannot be made to drink, exists in great numbers in the Hawaiian Islands. Among the cattle be has thousands of cousins of the same proclivities. It is a surprising statement to make, aud yet one that ts literally true and so commonplace that no one there thinks anything about it, and there are hundreds of horses and thousands ol cattle which never take a drink ot water throughout the whole course of their lives On all the islands the upper altitudes ot the mountains are given up to cattle ranges. The cattle run wild from the time they are born until they I are rounded up to be sent to the slaughter house. E»-e- ‘ - uring possibly two or three months of the rainy season, there are no streams or pools of water in auv part where tlie cattle range. But everywhere there grows a recumbent, jointed grass, known by the native name of maninia. This is both food and drink, says a recent traveler. Horses and cattle grazing on it neither require water nor will they drink It when offered Our first experience with this fact was on a trip to Haleakala. A party were mounted on horses which had ’ just been brought in from the range I The journey they made was 14 miles, in which distance they ascended 9.000 feet The party started in the afternoon, and at sunset baited for supper. They thought it strange that the horses should leave a feed of grain to nibble the scanty grass which grew near-by, but were willing to trust their instinct in the matter. However, before starting they in-1 slsted that they be given water. The native guide demurred to this, saying they didn't need it. but with the goodnatured complaisance of his race, yielded to requests, and led a detour of about a mile, which brought the party to a ranch house, where there was a well. Rut to the utter amazement of the travelers the horses would not drink. They took it as another case of instinct and assumed that the water. I for some reason, was not good, and so refrained from drinking it them-: selves. It wan not until the return, I the second day, to Kawaapae, that the travelers learned the secret of the [ wonderful maninia grass Repairing a Cut. The tirgt step in the repair of a cut in the shoe, regardless of the depth to' which it is cut. is to scrape around ! the cut with a rasp until there is clean rubber or fabric around the entire cut., The exposed surface should then be rubbed with a wire buffing brush. | which is generally furnished as par* I of the tool kit. Thie will give a good , surface for the cement to take hold After the roughening process is complete the surface should be given a coat of vulcanizing cement and then i left to dry. When thoroughly dry' 'he j fresh cement will have a glossy ap ' pearaiice. A piece of raw rubber which comes with the vulcanizer, or I which can be secured from any tire repair shop, is fitted into the cut. If it is a long cut that has taken off a i considerable area of rubber, a piece of. raw rubber is cut to the same shape I as the piece torn off. or if it is merely i a cut to be filled, a small piece of j the raw rubber Is inserted lu the cut, | In the case of a cut or tear of the | tread, the rubber h cut away from : the damaged portion iu a rectangular, shape and tbe new piece of rubber is cut approximately to size and then | rolled Into place with a small stitcher i roller, which marks the exact size, j The excess rubber ts then cut away.. Labeled the Children. The crowded water front of the old : Canton of a century ago. with Its | thronging sampahs alive from stem: to stern with swarming children, is vividly pictured in the "Memoirs ot William Hickey." in his account ot j the innumerable boats that covered the river for mile after mile. Mr Hickey dvecrlb<-« a novel method of protecting the children of the floating city from the dangers of the water. Each, child wore a large vegetable j eom.-thlng like a gourd or pumpkin: fastened to Its bark. Tbe vegetable; was buoyant, of course, end. if the infant fell overboard, floated It until tbn child was picked up by its par en's or tb« occupants of any other sampan that bap|»*ned to bn near Tills vegetable life preserver had the name and station of the sampan to which It belonged cut In Chine**' < haracters upon It. and by that m?an* the rescuer* could «t once Identify the child: otherwise. In such a multitude* of boats great confusion would have arisen It •-arcely erer ttxpp<Mied that anyone waa drowned Pioneer In Medicine. Dr Thomas Jefferson Heard, who galnert distinction In the medical pre- | fn**lon by being one of th-- first to Introduce tbe u»*» cf quinine in tho treat | inent of fever* in the South, was born i l*o years ago in Morgan county. Georgia. In 1*37 be began the practise of mwiieftie In Texas He *** on* of the,organizer* and - .fin*' pr»»i dent of the Teiia* Medical association. ■ tnd for many year* was a member of I th* faculties of the Galvaaton Medical | school and the Fatveraiiy of Loui*l i ana «a» aa a*t*n*tv» contributor to tbt medical Journals- and *a» re- i sari ad as an eutharit: on Ua treat'
PROGRAM FOR ADAMS COUNTY YOUNG PEOPLES RALLY HELD AT BERNE Sunday, June Twenty-Eighth l ' Afternoon Session 2:30 P. M. l REFORMED CHURCH ,| £ > Song Service Led by Miss Helena Leichty. Scripture reading and Voluntary. a A- Ift Prayer Period. Special Music ..Evangelical Societies. Talk "The Young Man and Christen Endeavor” Howard Wishaupt, Decatur. ‘‘Help You" period Led by Miss Ina Maxwell, Ft. Wayne Ind. Solo Walter Stuckey Address A. B. Rutt, Head of Chicago Missions. Special Music Ladies Chorus Offering. Benediction Rev. D. A. Kaley SOCIAL HOUR AND PICNIC SUPPER AT LEHMANS GROVE. Evening Session 7:30 P. M. MENNONITE CHURCH Song Service Led By Eli Luginbill. Invocation Rev. H. H. Katteman. Solo Menno Stauffer. Address “The Preparation Hour” Rev. Elmer Ward Cole. i Special Music... Male Chorus. u ta a. » Offering w w Song Audience. Benediction Rev. S. F. Sprunger. Saturday Special On Saturday, June 28 and for this day only we will sell any sl.-50 Ide shirt for —9Bc — All other goods the same reduction as heretofore advertised. THIS CLOTHING STOCK MUST BE SOLD VANCE & HITE HOLDEN SALVAGE CO. In Charge. LOW RATE EXCURSION VIA CLOVER LEAF ROUTE | ...T0... BLUFFTON, MARION, KOKOMO & FRANKFORT Every Sunday . See J. H. THOMPSON, Agent Decatur for Information ■ ■■■■ ■ ■ ■ " Old Adams County Bank Decatur, Indiana. K”" Capital 110,000 Surplus /.f aiK C. 8. Nibliek, President fIS/Sj M. Kirsch and John Niblick feSyMEp Vice I'resident* Yfireß K. X. Ehingvr, Cashier, 5 Qppd Farm loans Rvlu a Specialty Reflect — Resolve Coiiwtions “FAINT HEART at”®Ne’er Won Fair Lady.” • PROCRASTINATION! 4 Every ' Never Started! Accom idation Con*?! A BANK ACCOUNT i with Sait J, Or Won Comfort Banking* i And Freedom From Worry Methods i |IN OLD AGE! J- ' Patrons” i ’’ ■ 'T I -' it-- -a u ...ir ■ - -ii a-- I II ...ijl tw m We Pay 4 Per cent Interest on 1 Year Time Deposits
