Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 14, Number 147, Decatur, Adams County, 21 June 1916 — Page 3

You may want a pair of nifty cross bar pumps like this design. We have this pattern in ■E white, and also in patent leather, with the new spool Wgbtet ***,heel. It will be a pleasure W 't •SrQr to s h° w you ‘ ur time * s yours. WE want to show you. Charlie Voglewede AT THE SIGN OF THE BIG SHOE

rtßWMMMiinuminmtacggtmncm: h | WEATHER FORECAST I Partly cloudy tonight and Thursday. Mrs. Otto Keller and son, Richard, went to Fort Wayne this morning. The Misses Ora and Frankie*Wel-er returned this morning to Indianapolis after a visit here with ther sister, Mrs. Wai Wemhoff. Today is the longest day of the year. Too bad, that the weather man choose to give us such a long day-ful of bad weather.

Mr. and Mrs. Amos Roop and sons, Lawrence and David, returned to Ft. Wayne after a several days' visit here with Mr Roop's sister,, Mrs Samuef Acker and family on North Second street. The White Stag cigar company today received an order for 1,000 extra mild to be shipped to E. G. Reynolds at Currie, Nevada This cigar is shipped to neatly every state in the union and always makes good and its made in Decatur. Mr. and Mrs. L. G. E’lingham, daughter. Miss Winifred and son Miller metered through here yesterday enroute from Winchester to Fort Wayne where they will devote several days this week in finding a house in which they hope to move at once. William Burke and his father-in-law, Finley Bryan, left this morning for Fort Wayne to call on Mr. Burk’s wife, at the St. Joseph hospital, c.t which place two weeks ago last Monday she was operated upon. She is • recovering nicely and will be able to come home next Sunday.

The Home Os Quality Groceries ? Bulte’s Best is a Bed Turkey Hard Wheat Flour, guaranteed to make six loaves more than the ordinary flour. > 241/j lb. Sack .- 90c WE SELL IT! YOU TRY IT! I Plenty of good Dairy Butter all the time. > New Potatoes, New Cabbage, Strawberries, Oranges. Lemons, Bananas. We pay cash or trade for produce, Eggs 19c Butter 17c to 23c M. E. HOWER North of G. R. & I. Denot ’Phone 108 i ■. I ITSOEZIE I | To Get Smoke Satisfaction From The I I WHITE STAG I EXTRA MILD I CIGAR, I 5c - Every Where 5c -1 '• I .

Billy Mcßride of Bluffton was here on business. The Misses Virgine and Estelle Smith visited in Fort Wayne this afternoon. Mrs. Andrew Wolpert and children went to Fort Wayne to visit with her sister, Mrs. Francis Miller. Mr. and Mrs. F- M. Schirmeyer and daughter, Mrs. Godfrey Bell, went t'o Fort Wayne for the afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Jehu Raudebush left this moaning for Howe and from there will go to Big Rapids, Mich. Mrs. William Casear and daughters, Irene and Harietta, left this morning for Fort Wayne for the day

Miss Martha Tucker left this morn ing for Marion where she will give , a reading for the Ben Hurs this even ■ ing. ♦ Miss Agnes Kohne returned from Fort Wayne where she visited with the Misses Helen Aurentz and "Babe” Keller. Mrs. Albert- Acker and children Robert and Mary, of Tiffin. Ohio, an the guests of the Samuel Acker family on North Second street. D. B- Erwin and children left this morning on an automobile trip to Napoleon, 0., where they will join Mrs Erwin who is visiting there. Billy, six year old son, of “Liss” Drummond, turned up missing yesterday afternoon, after practice at the church and he was found sever.) hours later fishing, with little John ny Scheimaun, at the Krick-Tyndal pond, but not before his parents anti the neighborhood spent many miser able hours of worry. Thd"l)oy had fdllen into the pond and was wet to his waist. ,t_ — ... ........... .

Don Smith returned to Fort Wayne yesterday afternoon. , Mrs. Burt Lord spent yesterday afternoon in Monmouth. Mrs. Edith Long went to Fort Wayne yesterday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Jease Brenemann went to Fort Wayne today noon. Father Benzinger of Hesse Cassel was a business visitor here yesterday. Attorney F. 3. Annantrout of Geneva as a business viator here yesterday. Mrs. Mary Kerr returned on the 1:05 train yesterday to Monroe after shopping here. Mrs. Grant Strickler and daughter, Wilma, of South of the city, were shoppers here yesterday. Miss Mae Carrier of this city will leave tomorrow morning for Fort Wayne where she will be employed in the future. Miss Mabel May went to Hoagland yesterday afternoon to visit with her sister, Mrs. Dayton Barkley. H. E. Williams of Washington township is the owner of a new Ford touring car, which Kalver Noble delivered to him yesterday morning. 3- E, Hite left on the 1:05 train yesterday afternoon for Portland to

attend a meeting of the stockholders of the W. H. Hood Wholesale company. Mrs. G. B. Robinson and daughter, Iris, returned to Winchester yesterday after a visit here with Mrs. Robinson's sister, Mrs. Dallas Hunsicker. and other relatives. Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Laughlin of Monroeville accompanied their guest, Mrs. Louis Dix, of Millersburg, Ohio, here yesterday, the last named leaving for Winchester for a visit. Florence. Mary and Elwin King arrived yesterday afternoon from Sturgis. Mich., to visit with their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. John Herl, of Wren, Ohio, who met them here. Monroe Blossom and Mrs. Bill

Campbell of Wilshire. Ohio, called on Barney Everett, who is quite ill at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Grant Strickler, south of the city. Some girls have a peaches-ar.’-cream complexion, an’ others seem t’ prefer th’ deeper Ben Davis shades. Constable Newt Plum has a brother who’s so poor he has three dogs.—Abe Martin. Mr. and Mrs. Gust Yager of Ossian and daughter. Mrs. Elton Crumm, of Fort Wayne, returned home yesterday afternoon after visiting here with Mrs. Yager’s sisters, Mrs. Otto Reppert, and Mrs. Martin Miller. George Masonne, for several years an employe of the city street cleaning department, has resigned his position to take up a job in a Fort i Wayne lumber yard. He is superceded in the local position by Lewis Weis, sr. The item in the Ft. Wayne JournalI Gazette this morning that the Community Supper was held last evening I was a couple of days premature as > this tig event is not to be held until Thursday evening. And by the way it is to be a great big picnic event, one that every body who attends will enjoy It will be held in the ware rooms at the sugar plant. Clarence Henry, familiarly known i throughout Fort Wayne, Allen county , and northern Indiana as County ' Agent Henry, will leave Fort Wayne [ September 1 to enter upon a more exi tensive field of work. He wrote an i acceptance yesterday afternoon of an I excellent offer with the agricultural extension department of Purdue uni- | versify. He will work directly un- : der G. I. Christie, head of the department, and will supervise the field work of the county agents throughout i Indiana. His new position will take him over the entire state. It will be his duty to direct and assist the county agents in their work, paving the way for the new men, assisting the old ones and personally helping with important features in the different counties, such as home tours, special demonstrations, etc. An im- ! portant port of the work will be the breaking in of new county agents. Volunteer firemen from this section of the state who will attend the eleventh annua! convention of the Northeastern Indiana Volunteer Firemen's association, at Berne, Thursday. June 29, have contracted for transportation service with the Grand Rapids and Indiana Railway company, who will provide a special four car train south to Berne from Fort Wayne leaving at S o’clock in the morning. The fire companies making the trip will be the General Electric and Electric Works band, the Bowsers, the Packards I ', ten members of the city fire department, and’companies from Butler, New Haven, And re tvs, Kendallville, Hartford City, Auburn and Columbia City. It is expected that tire Fort Wayne contingent will number several hundred. The firemen from the Wayne Knitting mills will make the journey to Berne in trucks and touring cars. The company will number twenty-six in command of Chief Baxter. —Fort Wayne Journal Gazette.

MRS. MAY’S LETTER to WOMEN 1 More Proof that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Relieves Suffering. Chicago, 111. —“I suffered from a bad case of female ills. Lydia E. Pinkham’s liifi'uiink u^im||| i|, | iVegetable ComiM P oun d was recommende( j an( ] | t IK) k R — jiWWI n * ,out f "* x bottles. 1 me U P ttll ■%. . ' fight. The common !"•>. '■ symptoms of such a ’ -X[ condition — pain U /' tot when walking, irri--1 tation, bearingdown J/} \ pains and backache, i & nervousness and dis|iS?. ’» ? * ur de r ed digestionsoon passed away. I look much better 1 now than I did before, and I recommend ■ the Compound every time for ftmale troubles, as it did for me all it is claimed to do. You have my permission to publish this letter.” Mrs. J. May, SMITS. Lincoln St, Chicago, 111. If you have any of the symptoms mentioned in Mrs. May’s letter, remember what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound did for her, and try it yourself. It is a good old-fashioned medicine, made from roots and herbs, and it has helped countless numbers of women. If you need special advice, write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential), Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence, ATTEND STATE S. S. MEET The Misses Matilda Sellemeyer and Letta Wetter left yesterday morning for Muncie to attend the state Sunday school convention. They represent the Zion Reformed S. S. of this city. o—■ ; Democrat Want Ads Pav.

11 m a II h the hidden [ I taste -de&B | II . W II ' ■ I None of the hidden cigarette enjoyment K f can get away from you — if your cigarette is | I S “Straight Cut”. The reason is that Straight Cut “draws” so 1 f freely and evenly that it gives to you, the smoker, g ALL the lively taste, and delightful aroma that some cigarettes cant deliver! It’s the difference between your getting ALL I1 I the taste or just part of it! ■ P The two little words “Straight Cut” are on | g J every package of Favorites —notice them, when you try your first package today! | FAVORITE II A Straight Cut Cigarette || | p tA© good out of good tobacco 11 II A II i | IO for 5* I -|| 20forlO« «- >-« il

• Middy Blouses | s We have just received a new s || line of Middy Blouses. || a Middy Blouses in Plain, Strip- S || ed and Trimmed. Silk Sweater || s Coats, Wash Skirts, and Sport 2 || Stripe wash goods. All prices, || s sizes and colors. s = THE BOSTON STORE = MB Dry Goods & Groceries.

CHOLERA CURED. at once. If you want to save your hogs and pigs write Box No. 345, Van Wert, Ohio. World Beater Pig and Hog Cholera Cure Remedy. 146t3 DEMOCRAT WANT A0.9 PAY SIC.

Did He Understand? "When I don’t want a man * intentions and he asks me where I live J say in the suburbs.” “Ha! Ha! Exeellent, but where do you really live, Mies Brown?” "In the suburbs, Mr. Short."

■ FOR RENT —A 7 room nouse on No. Second street. Stable in connection. Inquire of C. D. Teeple. 99tf LOST—A S2O and $5 bill. Finder, please return to this offee and receive reward. 133tf