Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 12, Number 255, Decatur, Adams County, 29 October 1914 — Page 5
[YOUR WIFE WON’T KICK I sfi? avl M R h °^ r MS I r a r iiffv “ciin S “ W”* l,aVe them “ I ind^d y ßuSer%“ ee!S ’ T ° e Caps I TOP NOTCH FLEECED LINED I CURE COLD CLAMY FEET I • * I ■ WI CHARLIE VOGLEWEDE
B WEATHER FORECAST 1 ■nfflmmmnwssßMw:!;.' !!■ Partly cloudy tonight. Friday fair.! U — I. Joe Free was a Fort Wayne visitor Boday. ■ Attorney J. C. Sutton was at Ixiganson business. ■ Wash Kern went to Fort Wayne i i> m> rning on business. ■Miss Laurine Keller was a Fort Wayne visitor today. ■■Miss Mayme Teeple went to Fort W ayne to take her music lesson today. ■ Mrs. Vern McGonagle and daughter. IkJM ' Frank Carroll, spent tiie day in Fort Wayne. &;■ Mrs. Emerson Beavers and daugh Hspent the day in Fort Wayne. ||l Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Tricker and Bons, Richard and Kenneth, went t i Wayne to visit with Mr. and Mr Blurry Murray. I Mrs. J. C. Sutton and children are ■spending the children’s school . < a ■Hon with Mrs. Sutton's parents. M K:id Mrs. Alexander White at Ossian. ■ Ther’s very little In this world for ■folks who have neither money or a ■taste fer scenery. Ther’s alius room Bfer another restaurant.—Abe Martin.; j| Mrs. Sarah King and granddaugh- 1 ■ter, Marion Balch, returned to Terre ■Haute after a three weeks' visit here ■with the former's daughter, Mrs. Fred ■Patterson. 1 I Earl Hoagland of the Mills grocery 1 ■ was able to be down town yesterday ■ afternoon with the aid of a cane. He < ■is convalescing from an operation lor 1 lappendicitis.
(he Home Os Quality Groceries' ■BMHHaEHßvaßmsasw. HAVE YOU Laid In Your Supply For The Winter? For a few days we offer a special price on apples. _ Good farm Baldwins light color 3 bu $2.25. Good Baldwins high color 3 bu. ■ . • • $2.40, Extra Fancy high color large Baldwins 3 bu. . $2.75. Extra Fancy Pippins large, late 3 bu. - . $2.75. Extra quality White Potatoes in lots of 5 bushels or more 53c. Fancy Solid Kraut Cabbage 100 ib. • ■ SI.OO We pay cash or trade for produce, Eggs 21c . Butter Lsc to 25c HOWER & HOWER North of G. K. &I. Depot Phone 108 | IF. M. SCHIRMEYER FRENCH QUINN President Secretary Treas. H THE BOWERS REALTY CO. I REAL; ESTATE, BONDS, LOANS, ABSTRACTS. The Schinneyer Abstract Company complete Ab- m stract Records, Twenty years’ Experience |! Farms, City Property, 5 per cent. § MONEY
11 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rinehart have [ returned from Boulder, Col. ■ j William Hart and Miss Phoabe Hart [ went to Fort Wayne this morning. | Prof. C. E Spaulding is attending ithe teachers’ convention in Indianapolis. , t A detective from Ft. Wayne spent Monday in Ossian investigating the supposed robbery at the Charles Glass |home, which resulted in Mr. Glass and his wife being almost killed by artificial gas. The Misses Cravens, Batchelor, Schrock, Berry and Wemhoff, of the high school faculty, are in Indianapolis attending the teachers' convention. [They left yesterday. The men teachJers, Messrs. Wortlimann, Barnhart, .Charman, Hilderbrand and Mann left last night. John Walters , of Crawfordsville, Indiana, a representative of an Eastern horse exporting concern, has begun a search throughout Indiana for horses to be sent to France, for use in the cavalry. Mr. Walters said the j French government is willing to pay j from $75 to $125. each for the ani- 1 male. He says the French govern- : I meat expects to get at least 100,000 horses from the United States. Three thousand Valparaiso university students went on a rampage and paraded the down town streets, beating tin pans, shouting and singing college songs. Half a dozen of the ■ leaders were thrown into jail and a riot was only averted by Mayor Sisson who addressed the crowd and guaranteed the release of the prisoners if the students would return peacefully to College Hill. The students dispersed and after the release of the men arrested there were no further outbreaks.
STRUCK BY AUTO. Congressman ( yrua Cline was slightly injured at the corner of Court and Main streets at 8 o’clock lust, evening when he was struck by an automobile driven by Curtis Grandataff, a Preble young man, who did not stop, and whose identity was learned only after he had been chased several blocks and overtaken by John Bowler, foreman of the News, who witnessed the accident, and commandeered a passing car. Mr. Cline was just stepping from the curb when the auto rounded the corner and bumped into him, throwing him prostrate on the sidewalk. His hat fell into the car and Grandstaft' picked it up and pitched into the street without even looking bat k to see if his victim had been hurt. Mr. crossing the corner when ho noticed the accident and he called for the driver to stop. This command was not heeded and Mr. Sesslee started In pursuit on foot. At the corner of-Clinton and Berry, where the auto turned south, he jumped into another car, the driver of which he does not know, and following the flee ing machine to Vrashington street, where it was overhauled. Grandstaff j and Albert Miller and Harold Cline of Decatur, who were with him, were tak- ‘ en to police headquarters by Mr. S*ssler and were held by Captain Kelly, until it was learned that Mr. Cline had not been seriously hurt and had continued on his way to Huffman's hall, where he delivered nis speech. The ■ young men were then given a lecture and let go.—Fort Wayne Journal-Ga-zette. o LECTURE ON CORN.
The lecture on corn and its grading, illustrated with charts, by Dr. Duveu. a government man, from Washington. D. C„ and Prof. G. I. Christie, Purdue university, was instructive, but the audience was a very small number of farmers. The excellence of the lecture deserved a larger attendance. FUNERAL SATURDAY. Word has been received from the son of the late Mrs. Edward A. Kirsch ' ner, who lives in Alabama, that he deft last evening for his journey here. , The funeral of Mrs. Kirschner has 'therefore been set for Saturday after noon. The procession will leave the house at 1 o’clock for the Preble Lutheran church where the services will be held. — o UNCLE HEZEKIAH OBSERVES. Th’ unkindest kut uv all ez t’ git bread puddin’ fer dinner dessert at a eatin house an’ go hum tn th’ evenin’ an’ find rice puddin’ fer supper dessert. <» UNCLE HEZEKIAH OBSERVES. A joke ez sumthin' un th’ uthur feller. UNCLE HEZEKIAH OBSERVES. “Ez a short winter's day an example uv ’burhin’ th’ candle at botii ends?’ sez Pill Hepburn ez he noted th’ rize in this month’s light bill. Ira Grants, republican candidate for recorder of Kosciusko county, is with out hands. He lives near Syracuse and is now aged 45 years. When he was 16 he suffered with rheumatism and was compelled to keep both hands in ice water for 26 days. Amputa tion followed. Although the hands were taken off at the wrists lie car write with a pen or pencil, dress him self and run an automobile. OSTEOPATHY FOR THE SEDENTARY WORKERS Osteopathy is a boon to the man ot sedentary habits and to the overwork ed business and professional man oi woman. The osteopathic physician is especially trained and fitted to fine and remove the little mechanical de rangements of the body-mechanic which interfere with the, normal blooo and nerve supply of the organs and tissues of the body. These derangements are the small beginnings of disease. The osteopathic physician offers to the busy man an opportunity to retain his fitness to increase his efficiency, add years t< his life and in his later days escape such foes as rheumatism, Bright’s di sease, arterib-seleroeis, nervous pros tration and prostatic troubles. For these conditions osteopathy is not only the surest preventative but the best means of cure. DR. C. R. WEAVER. ’Phone 314. o —— DEMOCRAT WANT ADS PAY BIGPILES! PILES! P!LESI WILLIAMS’ INDIAN PILE OINTMENT Will cure Blind, BfeVdrng and Itching Piles fl absot the tumors, aiiays itching lit once acts -tn poultice, gives instant relie.. For sale by all druggists, mail 50c and 81.U0 WILLIAMS MEG. CO.. Props.. Cleveland, OIY The Enterprise Drug Store.
PUBLIC SALE. The undersigned will sell at public sale, on the W. B. Weldy farm. 4 miles west of Decatur, ’i mile south of Peter sou, on Wednesday, November 1. 1 1914. Sale to commence at 10 o’clocjc la. m„ the following property: Seven [Head Horses: Bay mare, with foal, 10 [years old; bay mare, 6 years old; driving horse, lady broke; sorrel mare, 2 years old; yearling horse colt, spring [colt, gelding, 2 years old. Seven Head [Cattle; Two Guernsey milch cows, [one to be fresh about March 25, one about April 1; 2 heifers, one to be [ fresh about January 15, one to be fresh about June 10: yearling bull, 2 spring calves. 16 head of hogs, 3 brood sows, 113 shoats; 24 head sheep. Farmlug implements: Turnbull wagon, good |as new; storm buggy, good as new; McCormick binder, McCormick 7-ft. cut mower, good as new; Thomas hay loader, hay tedder, Columbia disc grain drill, Keystone disc harrow, John Deere corn planter, Diamond Jr., riding breaking plow, 2 cultivators, one a Zanesville; spike tooth harrow, spring tooth harrow, breaking iron beam plow, one-horse cultivator, riding attachment for harrow, land roller, hay rack, 2 sets work harness, one set good as new; 2 sets buggy harness, 1 set good as new; about 3 tons of timothy hay in mow; 14 acres corn in field; about half in shock; 1 American cream separator, churn, sid board, kitchen cabinet, beet lifter, and other articles too numerous to mention. W. B. WEEDY, W. A. GAULT, Proprietors. Noah Frauhiger, Auct. John Brown, Clerk.
Free During Our Big Range Exhibit y B One two qoart T~ ■— — X. Onesixand I Aluminum V / one-half quart U Pu |\; >. \ 4 - - ■ ’- / Jr v No. 8 Alnmiaom u ~ \ / ■ _fl S Texlettl.. ! Hue 65c. \ J A / price S3 ’ Wi I — .a. — h O F ’ . _ 25 v ' -—TV?/ Cf ~“**"■ Mi ' MJ 1 y On-uirt I «saF* J \ -err / /to lj :i. ft- & Y -w f \ I Ose soar-quart Alum in am K 1 __ 4i.Hr J*:®KT.iag Kettle. U 1 One four-pint Price JUS, I 1 Alomino-n I | Price s3.«<». ~ ~ C_ >—7 '* ? One eitht-qoatt '' A IzA'-’ • One two-quart A Kettle. yg, % ‘ Alumlnnm Y ' I Price 51.75. -JT- " Double Rlc. . . I F?. J®.- iHSf., .' , '' A .// \ J _i a^a^^^^gg^g^^g^^Bi^Hß^aMMMWMaMunaa—waa—BaavcnßMaMuaß—mn.i'.nM—<>.'aannaM>aMne>— . , ■ i— mm———eMm— This Set of High Grade Pure Aluminum Cooking Ware ntrnsoirmßENDnoii/iA sis * luvMeaHeKull&li Ml-wa>vs Preferable Efe-.u The Only Range With ■ h t 7 Patented Copper Bearing w. 1 1 Aluminum-Fused I, I I- tY Rust-Proof Flues IvUSL 110 Ji rrneb Aa 7 - Buv she Range and Get the Ware B free Js .... * -.■ TTJ-' ■ -K’—— THIS WEEK A ONLY NOVEMBER 2 to 7. INCLUSIVE (90.
A Style Review We will be glad to show you a wonderful selection of patterns for winter clothes—all the best Metropolitan sellers varying in style from conservative to the extreme of nobbiness. Your particular choice is sure to be here. All wool fully guaranteed suits and overcoats at sls. $16.50 $lB. S2O. $22.50 and $25. Other good suits and overcoats at SB. $lO and $12.50. All kinds of underwear, hosiery, shirts, hats and caps at popular prices. A very complete line of boys suits and overcoats at $3. $4. $5. $6.50. $7.50 $8.50 and $lO. In fact every department in our store is full and complete and wait your inspection. We can save you money. Come in. TEEPLE BRANDYBERRY & PETERSON CATER TO THE MAN WHO CARES ;
