Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 15, Number 55, Decatur, Adams County, 6 March 1917 — Page 3
I his beautiful pattern in . -_ujg=sws) ! all black Surpass Kid is sellins big at $6.50. ® Same style with white kid fi. tup and black vamps with W light sole at $7.50. H Same style with Plum ’3® Brown vamps and White XiWr > Kid tops at $9.00. These prices are from $1.50 to $2.00 under the SHE present market and are being rapidly sold t<> ladies / J icr who appreciate high art z CPr) shoemaking. BuiUAwh Ghadic VoglcvVede SELLS A LOT OF THEM.
| WEATHER FORECAST | | Cldudy tonight and Wednesday; miobably rain or snow tonight. I L. A. Springer went to Fort Wayne ahis niorhing. i Mrs. J. M. Frisinger is visiting relatives at Springfield, O. Mr. and Mrs. Will Smith went to Fort Wayne this morning. Mrs. C. J. Grimm of Monmouth was ki shopper here yesterday. I Donald Patterson of this office was Icon lined to his home yesterday on nccount of sickness. ! Esther and Mary Pennington went to Fort Wayne yesterday afternoon io visit with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Deitsch, of K'elina, 0., were guests of the Mart i-Miller family over Sunday. • Will Colehin called on his wife at khe St. Joseph hospital yesterday. She was resting fairly well. I Mrs. Julia Croyle returned to Fort [Wayne after a visit with her parents, [Mr. and Mrs. Ben Liniger. near PeterBon. Perry James, of St Jolnfs, wu - :. business visitor here yesterday, the remainder ui his family being ill of grip. Mrs. Howard Shackivy returned te Fort Wayne yesterday afternoon after a visit here with her daughter, Mrs. Simeon Bowers. A committee representing 'he llefonned church went to Fort Wayne yesterday to secure information concerning material for a new church here.
The Home of Quality Groceries r - - - < ..JMIJ.lIIllW"' • Pure Applebutter. L. @ S., in IS. lb stone jars, at... .sLß<> The pound " ‘ Pure Applebutter in glass jars . l&c, zuc. Pure Fruit Preserves, glass jars. Raspberry, Blackberrv and Strawberry • • • • • ■ • • Sweet Pickles, doz • • • 3 doz - Large Sour Pickles, doz “ Jumbo Heinz Dills, dozi/u’ r Our Potatoes are fancy, and free from trost; sold by weight only, peck Thev can’t keep still about it It’s Enterprise Flour, without the advance, sack., We pay cash or trade for produce, Eggi 25c Butter 25c to 32c M. E. HOWER MMH■■■■■■ ■■■ I "WHITE STAG"! | EXTRA MILD CIGAR I I Smoke me all you want 10. NO SHAKY NERVES. g SNO HEADACHES’ no HEAVY HAVANA | I HANG OVER. NOTHING BUT SMOKE EX- g I JOYMENT! * sw I TRY ME. 11 1. BE YOUR FRIEND FOR LIFE! g
> Mrs. Orval Lord and babe returned s yesterday noon to Fort Wayne. : Miss Mayme Deininger went to • Fort Wayne yesterday afternoon. Mrs. Robert McMahon left yesterday afternoon for Chicago for a visit. Mrs. Golk of Chicago, who is the guest of Mrs. Willey at Pleasant Mills, went to Fort Wayne yesterday. Mrs. A. A. Arnold and children of Fort Wayne were guests of the Harry > Fritzinger family over Sunday. Mrs. Blanche Young and son, Eddie, of Willshire, O„ changed .cars here yesterday enroute to Fort Wayne. Mrs. Tracy Nelson and son of Toi ledo, 0., who visited here, went to Fort Wayne yesterday afternoon Miss Bertha Wallert returned to i Fort Wayne. She was the guest <Z her uncle, George Weber and family Did you ever see a Chinese cook? If not, see Bill Linn in "The Coloners Maid” Thursday, March Bth, at 8 p. in.. Bosse opera house. Miss Ethel Davis left this morning for Valparaiso to attend school. She was accompanied to .Fort Wayne by Fanchon Daugherty and Edrye Davis. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Brown of Newark, N. J., and Mr. and Mrs. George Cowling of Toledo, ()., were here to • attend lhe funeral of the Ted Ramsey I baby. _ • Many Decatur people visited the ■ Clover Leaf wreck at Pleasant Mills - Sunday. It was a real one and the loss will run into the hundred thousands. Viennia and Bernice Burger, Nota ■ Strickler, Walter Wilkinson, Joe Johns and Ivan Baker attended the i play at the Palace theatre. Fort j Wayne, Sunday evening, l
Mrs. Eli Myer was a Fort Wayne’ visitor today notni. Dan Niblick went to Fort Wayne to attend a convention of retail merchants. James Sims returned to his home at Branch, Mich., alter a visit at Willshire, O. Carl Brandt returned to Sabin, Minn., after a visit at his former home at Willshire, O. George Inechen has returned to Ilin home in Wabash township after a business trip to Oklahoma. ’ Mrs. J. F. Kiefer of Willshire went, to Fort. Wayuo to visit with .ter daughter, Mrs. Joyce Johnston. Miss Bertha Drummond is spending the week with her sister, Mrs Harry Suman near Pleasant Mills. Apply for your automobile license at The Daily Democrat office. Don’t run your car without the 1917 numbers. The Evangelical church will have services Wednesday and Friday - evening of this week and the public is invited. Marcus Jahn is clerking at the F. V. Mills store in the absence of Earl Hoagland, who Is on his honeymoon vacation. Lawrence Schlegel wept to Fort Wayne this morning on account o*’ the death of his father-in-law, Benjamin Baxter. Mrs. Marie Rapp went to Fori Wayne this morning to attend the millinery opening at the Anthony hotel, for Mrs. Burdg’s establishment. Election day in Decatur was a quit t event, but. a busy one as the boys w< re < bustling from early morning and t!r> vote protpises to be an average one. Mrs. George Everett and Mrs. Hervey Steele went in the morning jitney car to the home of their father, V. D. Bell at Craigville. Mr. Bell is ill. The business men will have a picture show of their own at the library tonight at which ttnie a three reel I ' photoplay, “The Troubles of a Merchant," will be given. Frank Wenihoff writes us a card from San Francisco saying that he likes that city, is getting along tine. I gets lhe Democrat each day and gives it the onoe over and then some. “The Dazzling Daisy” (Eva Aughenbaugh). as cunning this year as she was last, only now she is the colonel’s maid in “The Colonel’s Maid,” presented by the senior class of 1). H. S. March Sth, at 8 p. m. Th' world may be giftin’ better, but jest th’ same we’ve all quit buyin’ good umbrellas. So far th' kaiser hain't promised t’ give New Albany, Indianny, back t' th' Indians.—Abe Martin. Mrs. John Baumgartner returned home' to Decatur last evening afi ?r visiting at the John Morris home a few days. She was accompanied by Miss Olive Powell, who will spend a few days ith her in Decatur.—Bluff: ton Banner. Two hot-tempered but kind-hearted southern colonels have come to town. Who are they? Why. Bob Col- [ ter and Dortha Shady in "The Colonel's Maid.’ Tickets on sale now by the seniors and reserved at Holthouse Drug Co.. Tuesday at 4 p. m. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Peterson a.id children, French and Margaret, loft Saturday for Linn Grove for a short visit.- Dick has accepted employment with the Kraft Five and Ten-Cent Store company of Chicago and will be assigned to a location within a few days. The sale is being held today at the Jesse Tricker farm east of the city. This is held preliminary to Mr. Tricker leaving for his work, as gardener superintendent for the Michigan City prison. He will have charge of the gardens in which produce is raised for the prisoners. I The Fort. Wayne Journal-Gaze! I c Sunday showed a .picture of the resi- ’ donee of Mr. and Mrs. Omar A. Kenyon, 206 Seminole Circle, Fort Wayne. Mr. Kenyon, who is a linotype operator for The Fort Wayne Printing company, is a son of (,'. M. Kenyon, former editor of the Decatur Journal. “Shucks” Schumacher writes us a. card from Llano, Texas, where he h is been with a machine gun squad fir seven or eight, months, asking that his paper be stopped as his company has been ordered home ami will leave there at once. They will be mustered out at Fort Harrison, Indianapolis. Postmaster J. W. Bosse reports letters ami cards remaining uncalled for at the Decatur postoffice as follows: Letters: ■ Mrs. Alfred Winters. Mrs. Emma Simmerman, Mrs. Glen Seips, Mrs. Katie Hoffman, Mr. George Steward, P. M.; Mr. Walter Preston. Ernest Runyon. Fred C. Garritson. Cards: Mr. Lase Fry. Mr. Fredrick Ermsiek, Mrs. R. Davis. Mrs. E. S. Dailey, Mr. George l Harmon. When calling for this mail | please say. “Advertised.”
I A Guarantee I VfOU want just one thing in the clothes you I L buy; if you get that, it’s enough. You want | | to be satisfied with them. | | A “guarantee” doesn’t mean much unless it | I means that; and when we “guarantee” our I clothes, that’s what we mean. I I We use none but all-wool fabrics, the best of | | other materials; skilled craftmanship; we design I styles to express the good, new fashion-ideas; | | we make models to fit all sizes and shapes of | | men. And we guarantee satisfaction. I Every merchant who sells our clothes is au- || I thorized to make such a guarantee, and make I good on it; it covers everything about clothes that may satisfy I or dissatisfy; fabrics, fit, colors, tailoring, value for the price. ■ There are no reservations or exceptions. Look for the label Our label in the clothes is the signature to this guarantee: be sure to see it Indore you buy. If it isn’t there, the clothes are not ours. A small thing to look t or, a big thing to I find. Hart Schaffner & Marx I FOR S=»ALE BV | HOLTHOUSE, SCHULTE & CO. |
WOMAN OFFERS OTHERS ADVICE Friends Can (Jain Same Relief from Tanlac She Has, She Declares. South Bend, But., March 5. -Mrs. ('ora E. Cook, of 325 East Eox street, tills city, has gained bdhetits from Tanlac, the Master Medicine, and b »- Jieves tlfere are many others who can derive relief from their troubles through its use just as she did. “I really am glad thal there is such a medicine as Tanlac on the market and 1 know there are many others] who can profit by its use just as 1' have,” Mrs. Cook said on .January “For some time,” she continued, “my system generally has been all run down and I haven't felt a bit wed. Stomach trouble in the form of indigestion was my chief complaint. My appetite was very poor and the little food I did eat wuold cause gas to fol m in my stomach and make me feel bloated. My stomach was in a sicKened. soured condition most of the time and I was annoyed by belching almost, constantly. • “I’ve taken three bottles of Tanlac now and I certainly feel a 10l better. My appetite is ravenous now. I eat heartily anil my food digests without causing me any trouble. The sicketH'd, soured condition of my stomach has disappeared- I'm never bothered with bloating now and the belching is a thing of the path. “1 think Tanlac is an excellent medicine and I recomntwd it." Tanlac. the Master Medicine, is ospeciaJly beneficial for stomach, liver and kidney trouble, catarrhal complaints, nervousness, loss of appeti'e and the like, ami is fine for relieving the after effects of la grippe, imeumonia or a severe cold. Tanlac is now being specially introduced and explained in Decatur at the Smith-Yager & Falk Drug Store. - ] Advt. | Democrat Want Ads Pay
Stomac&jK m F jfetRRRBBnK TntasMunrwEH*/ I " fiT Stomach poisons breed millions of germs that eat into your vitals, causing Gas Pressure, Indigestion, t’on.-'i-pation, Torpid Liver, Auto intoxication. Yellow Jaundice, Gall Stones. App dieitis. Cancer and Ulcers of the Stomach ami Intestines, etc., etc. Thousands of sufferers have been restored by Mayr's VVonderftfl Remedy, among them Justice of the Supreme Court, Congressmen, Doctors, Lawyers. Bankers, Ministers, Nurses, Farmers, Me-1 | chanics —persons of every class | ' probably your own neighbors. Stomach troubles are due mostly to Catarrhal poison. Mayr's Wonderful Remedy removes that poison, thoroughly cleanses the system, drives out the disease, breeding germs, allays inflammation and ends suffering. Unlike any other remedy. No alcohol nothing lo injure you. One dose convinces. FREE book on Stomach Ailments. Write Geo. 11 Mayr, Mtg Chemist, Chicago, or obtain a bottle of Mayr's Wonderful Remedy from Holthouse Drug Co., or any reliable druggist, who Will return your money if it fails. Advt. WOMEN WHO FADE EARLY. How often we hear tin- expression, “How she has faded!" or "Hasn't, she grown old!" Her frieuds see 11. Her husband sees il. She realizes it herself with a pang. Often she knows the reason, some female derangement has fastened i tself upon her and makes it almost impossible for Iter lo drag around from day to day. Such ' women should remember there is one ' tried and I rue remedy for I heir eon- ■ dilion, and thal Lydia E Pinkham - ■ Vegetable- t'on.ni uml for more, limn forty yoars lias boon restoring woineii to health and happiness. Try it!- ’ Advt. ... ? ■ .. — ■■■—— John Rex has returned from Cincinnati, 0., where he took a consignment of stock for Butler & Ahr
I DIAMONDS I IN ARTISTIC MOUNTINGS | Our store presents a particularly interesting collec- ■ tion of Diamonds of tine color and quality. They may be gft seen mounted in nifty designs or if desired the loose M stones may he selected and mounted to suit the personal- R, ity of the recipient. ‘ I Diamond Lavallieres, Scarf Pins, ( nil Links, and K the new Diamond and Pearl Brooches. £ A choice selection of Pearl Necklaces at reasonable prices. PUMPHREY’S JEWELRY STORE THE HALLMARK STORE - rs -IxaHEril WT-WIT iTE-tixatnewW I ANDREWS SOUTH END GROCERY j I have purchased the South End grocery and | will endeavor at all times to maintain the high slan- I dard of quality and service of the former management. I solicit new trade and hope to be allowed to L care for all of the old customers. We have a com- | plete line of high grade groceries and are in a post- | tion to sell them as low as the lowest. Our canned | goods department is brim full of everything that j you may need at living prices. We will always pay ] the highest price for country produce, and shall be ' glad to meet the farmers al all times. | M. E. ANDREWS I ’Phone 204. Opposite Erie Depot. |
