Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 13, Number 231, Decatur, Adams County, 28 September 1915 — Page 5

Make This Store Your Headquarters During The Big Fair. Leave Your Packages Here And Let 'Us Help You Any Way ' We Can. CHARLIE VOGLEWEDE. AT THE SIGN OF THE BIG SHOE rnmmmmmmrnmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmrnmmm m\i mmmiiib i ■ ■ ■ — mnmmmmmummmmtmmm m%mm, -<« ,

| WEATHER FORECAST | Partly cloudy tonight and Wednesday. 4—- — -- ■ ; .. ■ E. M. Ray of Berne was a business visitor here yesterday. Mrs. E. L. Carroll and Mrs. Dan Vail si>ent the day in Fort Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Bhroyer of Bellefontaiue, Ohio, are here visiting with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Zuber returned to Fort Wayne yesterday afternoon after a visit here. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bell motored here from Bluffton last evening for a visit with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Vail will leave Saturday for New York City for a visit of a week or ten days. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Lankenau and son, Henry George, returned to Fort Wayne yesterday afternoon after a visit here. Miss Grace Paulding, who visited here, was accompanied home by Miss Celia Hoffman, whose guest she was here. A number of chiropractors from this part of the country have been hfere yesterday an dtoday to attend the case of Dr. Burgener. Steam from a cookin’ dinner is good fer th’ complexion. Some folks have away o’ doin’ nothin’ that kin hardly be distinguished from work.—Abe Martin. Miss Gladys Seiman of the Humphrey jewelry store, is at Idianapolis and will return Thursday. Miss Mildred Humphrey is assisting at the jewelry store.

I he Home Os Quality Groceries! CANNING I NEAR THE ENDING Michigan Peaches, Saturday, bushel $1.25 1 Fine Canning Tomatoes, bushel 45 | Red and Green Mangoes, 2 dozen 15 I Pickling Vinegar, gallon 20 | You will want a pound of our “Best and l Cheapest” Coffee 28 * We pay cash or trade for produce, Eggs 24c Butter IBc to 23c M. £. HOWER v orth of (i. k. &I. Depot Phone 108 IF. M/SCHIEMEYER FRENCH QUINN 1 President Secretary Treas. gg THE BOWERS REALTY CO. I REAL ESTATE, BONDS, LOANS, | ABSTRACTS 1 The Schhireyer Abstract Compmy complete Ab- gti 5;: stract Re cords, Twenty years’ Experience Farms, City Property, 5 per cent. H MONEY

C. C. Schag of Berne as here today on business. Mrs. John Hex left for Bluffton this morning for a visit with relatives. Editor Rohrer of the Berne Witness was here on business yesterday. Mrs. Louisa Harbauer of Toledo, Ohio, spent Sunday with her brother, John Russell, and fanjiiy. Mrs. John Brothers and daughter, Lois, went to Monmouth to visit with her sister Mrs. Late Swygart. Mr. Van Brunt of the law firm of Gunther, Clark and Van Brunt of Frankfort was here on business. Mrs. B. E. Weaver and 'daughter, Norma, returned to Fort Wayne yesterday afternoon after a visit here. Mr. Gott, of Crawfordsvilie, state secretary of the board of medical registration, returned home last evening. Miss Celia Hoffman, who fractured the bones of her right arm while riding her bicycle, is able to be out again. Ernest Thieme, son of A. F. Tliieme of L'rfTon township, who was operated u]x>n a week ago Wednesday at their home, is able to be up and is getting along remarkably well. The nurse was in attendance only a week. Mr. and Mrs. M. P. Hendricks of Berne, left Monday morning for their home, after a couple of days visit with her brother, B. P. Harris and wife, East Main street, an dwitli a nephew Homer Harris ar.J family, west Main street.—Portland Sun. The big fair really opens tomorrow. Get there early and you will be glad of it. The stock parade at noon will be wortli your t\me if you like good horses. The big atraction, Captain Gertson, in his biplafie, will prove the greatest thriller ever witnessed.

Miss Ceiia Andrews went to Fort Wayue today noon to take her pip* organ lesson. Johnny Stults is working (luring the entire fair week as an extra clerk at the F. V. Mills grocery. William Scherer, one of the best known citizens of Monroe was a business caller in flits city this morning. Harry Harlan of Indianapolis was lure this morning looking after business f;r the l/esh paper company. Miss Nota Stickler is assisting tu waiting table the busy fair week, at tile Hurting & Wilson restaurant. '■ Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ashbaucher have returned from Bluffton. where they visited relatives over Sunday and attended the big street fair. I lie street car strike at Fort Wayne is causing considerable inconvenience for the travelers and you can hear all kinds of opinions expressed. David Schwartz of near Berne has published a pamphlet entitled "The fallen tabernacle of David is raised again in the present dispensation.” It soils for ten cents. » The baby rack on Madison street doesn’t seem to ire doing any great rush of business. Tho fair grounds would probably be more profitable and more satisfactory all around. Six automobiles will go to Hluifton Friday morning to meet the governor’s party which will arrive lore about eleven o’clock. They will be joined at the city limits by fifty more cars and escorted to the hotel. Tlie White Stag Cigar company will circulate cards at the fair grounds on Thursday and Friday showing the I henominal growth of that concern during the past five years anj asking your assistance in their race for a million this year. Miss Ruth Parrish of Decatur arrived here this morning. She will teach I)ist. No. 2 in Wabash township this coming term. The school opened this morning, while the other schools in the township opened a week ago. The delay was made 041 account of diphtheria.—Berne Witness. W. A. Kunkel, district chairman is in Oklahoma on business. His secretary has written Judge Smith that if Mr. Kunkel returns home in time he will certainly he glad to join the governor's party to this city, he and Mrs. Kunkel being among the invited guests. Jim A Hendricks, county road sunerintendent is at Indianapolis to .attend tlie annual convention of the county commissioners of Indiana, goo,} reads being one of the big subjects to be discussed. Jim is also a member of the reception committee for the EIYvocd barbecue tomorrow. The weather man predicts lig it -rost in northeastern Indiana for tonight and the air feels like it might come true. At that we have come to that time of year when it need not surprise any body, in fact tile weather lias been most fortunate for the corn ' crop in tliis section and no one will object very seriously. Mrs. James Murphy went to Fort Wayne yesterday afternoon to visit with her father. Henry Lang, who is quite ill at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Kindly. He had made his home with the Murphys, but while visiting in Fort Wayne some time ago was stricken with paralysis and ha 3 boon unable to be brought here. He remains about the same. The beet harvest has started and indications are that it will he a good one the tests being made show good resnlts. The big factory will probably open next week for a hundred day campaign. The big force of men are reporting now and every thing will be in readiness. The company jvliieh is securing a moving picture at tlie fair grounds this w-eek is also arranging to take a picture of the Decatur sugar factory, only one in Indiana and will do it as soon as the plant gets to running nicely. Two large auto excursions, one from Marion and one from Tipton will be here during the season. in the October American Magazine Olive Higgins Prouty begins a new serial novel cailod “The Fifth Wheel.’ It is the story of the social and business adventures of Ruth Vars, a New England girl. 111 the first installment of this story Ruth Vars defines as follows the ambitions of tlie average New England girl: "I am a New England girl, not the timid, resigned tpye. but the kind who goes away to a fashionable boarding school when she is sixteen, has an elaborate coming-out party two years later, and then proves herself either a success or failure, according to the number of invitations she receives and the frequency with which her nances are cut at the balls. She is supposed to feel grateful for the sacrifices that arc mado tor her dehut, and tlie best way to shew it is by becoming engaged when the time right *o a man one rung'higher up (than she. ’

t r — 1 — • ■ - 1 « J T;uo See*f t of ICcoping Youli'l'ul Looking e “““ •* - — 1 jtVh* R>,au ' 8»«k or.) "The nal rerref •f ! rin-j j-o’ing-loak-ns and boautßuV’ *».«* well-known V tflriilßt, "Is tu keep ii,c liver anti bowit »lu normally active. lVl!l,'.nn lie -a* re-lulsltf-.s, poisonous wjsu- products r - I- i«a;n in m- ayatei-.t, ,1.011113 tho blood IS<l lodeii'Jt In vi.KHp o-|,.tn», tissues. Junta. Uni btccmfu dabby, obi so, nervous, m iitnll:' alUKgiaiv, uuil-syed, wrm--8 kina nr.d sallow of loco, "Hut to gi-t liver ,ud bowels working as they ought, without producing evil ift«r-«iftcta, has boon tin- problem. Forumstely, there Is a pr-ription of unit, rationed merit, wind! ~,ny now be had 11 In convenient taMet n -m. its value is due largely to (in injtrOuient derived from r the humble Muv apple, or Its root, which has been called 'vegetable calomel’ because of Its effectiveness—though of courae it la not to ue classed with the **in calomel oi mtret-.; a; origin. There Is ri) habit-forming c-rm:.i o ,n m in 'seiuanol’ tablet*—that's th. name—anil their y use la not fuhov. 11l by weakness or exhaustion. On the contra.' y, these hann- •- Itso vegetable tablets tend to Impart tone and elasticity to the relaxed intestinal wall, demand tablets, which may be procured from any druggist—a dime's e worth will do—wll! pinve a revelation to any constipated, liver-troubled person." 1 ~ ; Chief Cause of Pimples, s Blolchcs, Sallow Skin » I (Messenger of Health.) . Unsightly eruptions, pimp'es, hells, I blotches, sallow or r.iu'’dy skin, usually are due to a aluggisa bwr. a omaUpatea bowoi —and a poilute-1 blood stream as a consequence, llow foolish in such ansi's t to resort to outward appHealions, which . ran never have natural, permanent re--1 suits. If more people cn.j knew it, there i 1 very simple remedy, to be found In any 111 uj* store, which is aa effective as It s is hrimlesa and quick acting It Is an old tormdla, long recognised by the medical profession, which has been put in tablet form, and at such small cost no one need 1 new bo deprived of its wonderful benefits. * "Sentanel tablets”—that’s the name—- . are entirely vegetable and there’s nc habit-forming Ingredient. You need only I get about a dime’s worth, and swallow one nt bedtime to realize there’s nothing I else quite so good for the purpose. The action in the morning is so easy, so soothing, and Instead of a weakening afterI effect, you feel truly refreshed and invlg--1 Drated. Sentanel tablets are not Oniy the finest remedy known for constipation 1 and torpid liver, but offer the sanest, , most sensible treatment for complexion difficulties of the character mentioned : 1 Great Demand for New I Constipation Remedy I They say that the advent of the “senta--1 nel tablet” as a vegetable substitute for calomel has resulted In an extraordinary > demand for this remarkable product, ft , seams to have made a hit particularly 1 with those afflicted with chronic cor.sti . pation, who were quick to recogniza its advantages over calomel and the usual . laxatives. Sintanel tablets, aside from their efficacy, doubtless owe their success largely tc a tendency to aid in bringing about natural functioning—lnstead of encouraging the "cathartic habit.” Also, instead of injuring the membraneous lining of the organs Involved, they exert a healing Influence. Instead of weakening, they add lone to the intestinal wall And they work so easily and gently, they are of ■ course preferred on this account to the violently acting purgatives. Their lnexpcnslveness is another reason for the popularity of Eentanel tablets. On? need procure only a dime's worth, and *ta!i€ one tablet upon retiring, to be convinced that tho ideal remedy for constipation, torpid liver, and .heir many evil consequences, has finally been louad. —Drug- , gists lie view BLACKSMITH SHOP TO CLOSE. My blacksmith shop will bo closet during tho afternoons of Wed’.ies.ay, Thursday and Friday on account of the Adams county fair. 230t2 MARRY FIKE. o PUBLIC SALE OCT. 13TH. The undersigned will hold a public sale at his residence on the Ernst Schlickman farm eight and one half miles South-west of Decatur and one and one half miles west of Curryville on Wednesday, October 13th. Trie sale lias been postponed from October 7th. . S. I). HEjJsCHEN.

I . See-The Great Adams County Fair-See | See Paul Rohrer lake His First Flight See The Motor-Dome And Ocean Wave See The Ferris Wheel and Merry-Go-Round See Governor Ralston and His Staff of Officers SetJ The Beil-Thayser Clowns and Knockabouts See The Worlds Greatest Automobile Racers See Captain Gertson Destroy The Fort See The Great Bunch of Race Horses See Them Break The Half Mile Records See The Big Parade of High Bred Horses See The Greatest Mid-Way ever Here I See The Biggest Shew For The Money See The 1915 Fair At Decatur I iQpnt 9f -i? 9S JL'lffh wrf (M loti 9nH ll 1 übpi. Ljy aQy Ltf 01 uylu. diill lihf. !5I H &BiU. jj

# SPECIAL j A Special price will = be given on all Suits, j| Coats and Sweaters 1 during Fair Week.*jj We have a beautiful line j§ of new Silk and Wool U a ,vw Sweaters, just the thing » j! A) for these evenings. » 1 THE BOSTONSTORE s VSSf Dry Goods & Groceries. <*» BliMH=±:UiHsr:: '.ill=iilii:rr‘:it||t{&

‘ NOTES OF THE BELL TRIAL. [(United Press Service) Indianapolis, hid., Sept. 28 —(Specj ia! to Daily Democrat)—Prosecutor I Rucker and Deputy Prosecutor Roach ; who are conducting the state’s conspiracy case against MtflW Bell, say ; they are being flooded with anonymous , letters calculated to cause a rupture 1 between them. These letters are us- ■ ually typewritten. While the jury hearing the Bell i trial was filing in, one of the jurors : motioned* to Judge Eichhorn: “Can't : you send the dead wagon around?” ' he asked. “This juror’s pipe died ! last Monday.” Stanley M. Timtieriake, the juror whose illness for a time threatened to cause a mistrial, has won the name of Beau Brummel among his eleven companions. He has wofn eight suits to date, and they are all nifty. Ar, one juror suggested, it would make most any man sick to keep up the details of such a wardrobe. “We’re about through with the dry stuff. Tomorrow we will begin with rotten stuff,” said Deputy Prosecutor Roach to a newspaper man, who was complaining that detailed evidence of false names 011 the primary lists made poor reading. Judge Eichhorn, who usually gqes home to Bluffton over Sunday, arrived in that city one Saturday afternoon early enough to sit on his own bench and fine a man $1 and thirty

days. • - The judge slipped away to Kokomo one Wednesday evening and put in his best licks trying to convince a 11 Howard county audience that Indiana needs a new constitution. * WE WANT —Ambitious branch managers and local agents for our worldwide General Agency Business. Experience unnecessary; no stock or merchandise to buy, operate from your own home in spare time. You should make from SSO to SIOO per week. Write today for free information.— B. F. Loos Co., 403 W. Walnut St., Des Moines, lowa. 175tu-fr-tf

A EL V ZE OF BEAUTY. * A survey of our show case will disto the most beautiful, brilbant and sparkling examples of the diamond cutter’s art. They arc cxclu- ;! sive in design, and there can be no argument as to the price. These t&m&.Wiff' facts cannot be refuted. PUMPHREY S JEWELRY STORE ‘‘lf its new, we have it” . Artistic Engi aving Expert Repairing

WE WANT 6,00 b MEN AND WOMEN —in the next thirty days. Live wire partners in every town and city, io help us handle our fast increasing real estate and general agency busiiness. We will share enormous profits with those who will join us now. You receive a life membership. Write today for free particulars.—B. F. Loos Co., Des Moines, lowa. 175t-m-tf ■ ' [] 3 PILLS > ' b iCUAM). A ■■ .. ■ , • ’ * j i'fll ' fill-! 1 hie V i l J HlA'wi.’x» A ,hc;v.. ! rnftAS - ■*’ A, n Aflki-hh .'it t. Always Reliable —r sc : ?? rr . vn fvhmlre