Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 15, Number 84, Decatur, Adams County, 9 April 1917 — Page 3
r“■■ - ■ . . HYLO BootTop\ /WB 17 \ / rF! 4i i '<** /poc7 ”°l\'\/ Vlife i, 1 S ?C\ — y ./ W§gK uMtghtlij Buckle new Tweedie Boot Tops transform any shoe or slipper into the latest style colored tops. They fit so Bnugly that you cannot distinguish but what they are stitched onto the shoe. Several colors to select from at $2,00, $2.50 and $3.00. Ghartie VogleWede
■mm&j .J.KXXXXX-. ®ffi3Bffissaos: x | WEATHER FORECAST | * li Q Fair tonight and Tuesday, with moderate temperaturd. Heavy frosts tonight in central portion. Miss Emma Weidler spent Saturday afternoon in Fort Wayne. Misses Rose and Lilly Kauffman tv, • turned on the 1:05 train to Bertie, Saturday. Mrs. George Doctor and Mrs. J. F. Crist, of Monroe were shoppers here , Saturday. Mrs. Della Crist and children of Ft. Wayne, went to Monroe Saturday ti l- . ernoon to visit with relatives. Mrs. H. M. Baker and suit. Harv y Marion went to Geneva, to visit with her mother, Mrs May Ketchum over Easter. Mr. and Mrs. A. ('. Burger and three children, of Fort Wayne, were guests of her mother, .Mrs. Anna Hackman . over Easter. Berneta Reynolds, busness college student, returned to Fort Wayne this morning. Sl* spent Sunday here with her parents. Misses Freida Wemhoft. Betty Boyers, Anne Rackstraw, Virginia Crav ens and Belle Batchelor spent Saturday in Fort Wayne. Mrs. Earl McConnehey and children left Saturday afternoon on the 1:05 train for Monroe to visit with her mother, Mrs, Jtrtius Johnloz and family. | Rev. Mavity, former pastor of the Decatur Christian church, now located at Noblesville, will preach the baccalaurate sermon for the Colfax high I*llool seniors this spring.
Th&Home of Quality Groceries In spite of the high market, we offer you spreads at t ter old price, and the former large package: Pure Extracted Honey in glass 10c and 2oc Fancy Comb "Honey | L. & S. Bulk Pure Aiffilebutter 12'Ac Pure Applebutter in glass jars, 1 lb. 15 oz. net 25c Pure Applebutter in glass jars, 1 ib 3 oz. net 15c High grade Jelly Compound. 11 oz. net, in glass .. 10c I Pure Fruit Jelly in glass, oz. net 10c Currant. Apple. Grape Quince, Raspberry, Blackberry PURE FRUIT PRESERVES,' IN GLASS Plum, Raspberry, Blackberry, Strawberry: 29 oz. net, in glass jars 25c 20 oz. net, in glass jars 15c We pay cash or trade for produce, Eggi 30c Butter 25c to 32c M. E. HOWER North of G. R. & I. Depot ’Phone 108 ■u.n iwiiiiiji mi ii—in i i imii ■mu ii hi* mu i■w—ti rrwimriwifniniuTmiiai — I Listen, Mister, LISTEN I Nobody believes in claims. You want proofs ■ ■ —so we simply say—Try the I "WHITE STAG"I I EXTRA MILD CIGAR | “They’re as good as good tobacco can make ■ ■ jteni. • S * 1/ II
I Burt Christen, of Toledo, 0., spent Easter here witli his parents, Mr and Mrs. John Christen. Miss Amelia Spangler returned this morning to Fprt* Wayne. She visited here with her relatives. Fred Hartzog and daughter Leah, passed through the city today from Willshire, 0., to Fort Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Durbin retut n--1 ed this morning to Fort Wayne after a visit here with his relatives. Levi Barkley went to Ft. Wayne this morning to visit with his sister, Mrs. Neal Wilson, who is ill. Charles Myers of Niles, Michigan, visiter here .with his father, John D. Myers, who is ill of blood poison. Mr. and Mrs. John Mosure went to Bluffton today where Mr. Mosure, who is administrator of the Samuel Yargcr estate, will close the same. Mrs. Anne Johnstone, who visited here her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Clint Johnstone and children at the Peter Forbing home, over Easter, left this morning for her home at Sidney, O. She was accompanied to Ft. Wayne by Mrs. Clint Johnstone. Miss .Maude Magley, who with M ! ss Dora Fairchild, is employed in the circulation department of the Ft. Wayne Joudnal Gazette, making the trips together over northeastern Indiana, spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Magley £tt Monmouth. Muss Lydia Kirsch, student at Heidelberg, Tifton, 0., returned today after spending Easter here with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Peter Kirsch. She was accompanied by Miss Esther Weiler, a senior in the college, whose home is in Ft. Wayne. Miss Weiler w,as | Miss Kirsch’s guest a few days.
w , ———— Mrs Earl la trick. James Sprague returned today, from Delphos, Ohio L. W. Frank went to New Huven on 1 business today. , F. S> Armantrout, of Geneva, was a business visitor here. Miss Hazel Schultz spent Easter with relatives at Roanoke. Mr. and Mrs. J. 1). Nldlinger spent Uie afternoon in Fort Wayne. Dr. J. S. Boyers made a short pro fessional business visit in Ft. Wayne today. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Craig and children returned to Fort Wayne after a visit here Henry Foreman, of Mercer avenue, is able to sit up again, following an < t tack of grip. Ralph Lhanion returned to Indianapolis after a visit here with his mother, Mrs. Jacob Buhler. Miss Agnes Miller was the guest of her brother, Leo Miller and family at Huntington over Easter. Will Colchin and children went to Fort Wayne today,to call on his wife. She is getting along nicely. Ed Baker is recovering from an op i <>ration for hemorrrhoids and is able to be up and about the house. Kenneth, aged eight, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Runyon of east of the city, is ill of catarrhal pneumonia. Mrs. Lawrence Schlegel and Mrs. Randall Sprague have recovered from severe attacks of pneumonia. Frank Kleinhenz of Fort Wayne si>ent Easter here with his mother. Mrs. Mary Kleinhenz, and family. The Rock Island Arsenal needs 0 large number of employees.,For information see bulletin at the postotilCe. Mrs. Lydia Wegmiller and son. Melvin, of Geneva, were guests of her brother, John Myers and family Saturday. , Charles Barnhart, of Attica, joim-d his wife and children for an Easter visit here with her parents, Mr. ami Mrs. D. V Steele. Mrs. A. L. Brentlinger is assisting at the Morris store in the absence of Mr. Page, manager, who is at Bluffton until this evening. August Hartman of Preble township will be seen driving a brand new Ford touring car this summer, delivery of the new machine having been made this morning by the KalverNoble Garage Company. Henry Meyers, and daughter, Lavina, of Berne, are guests today of his brother, John D. Myers who is ill of Jjlood poisoning. Mr. Myers rested better last night than he has at any time since his illness. Mrs. M. Schafer and Mrs. John Coffee and their niece, Mrs. William Braun, of Swift Current, Canada, spent the afternoon in Fort Wayne. Mrs. Braun will return to her home tn Canada Wednesday. She has been here since the holidays. •Funeral services for Mrs. Harry Houts will be held from the home on sou|h Third street at nine o'clock tomorrow, morning, at which hour the funeral cortege will leave for Saint Marys, Ohio, where the body will lie in state at the home of a relative un- ,. til two o’clock, when burial will b - held in the Elm Grove cemetery at Saint Marys. Burial will be upon hoc mothers lot there. - The last story Jack London ever wrote has been secured for Cosmopolitan. It is a story with a gripping interest throughout. ‘ Michael, Brother of Jerry’ is the name of this corking dog-hero story. Unlike most of Jack Ixmdon’s stories which have their settings in the bleak north country, "Michael, Brother of Jerry" is set in the South Sea IslesI—place 1 —place of cruel adventure. You’ll be interested in Mi* hacl’s wonderful adventures and he will find a place in your heart. _ _ n - WEST, WARD PATRONS The patrons of the west, ward school building are to meet this evening at 7:45 o’clock at the west ward school. NOTICE, MILK DEALERS. ——e I Notice is hereby given to any and all persons, firms or corporations, engaged in the sale of milk for use within the city limits of the City of Decatur, Indiana, that, under a city ordinance you must take out a license so to do. This license shall be procured by calling on the secretary of the city board of health, and making applica* i tion therefor. The ordinance provides for a line for not complying therewith and said ordinance will be enforced strictly. Give this matter i vour prompt attention. CITY BOARD OF HEALTH. Dr. H. F. Costello. Sec'y.
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BROKEN DOWN IN HEALTH ' Woman Tells How $5 Worth of Pinkham's Compound Made Her Well. Limn, Ohio. — “ I was all broken down in health from a displacement. Ona of my
lady friends came to see me and she advised me to commence taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and to use Lydia E. Pinkham’s Sanative Wash. I began taking your remedies and took J 5.00 worth and in two months was a well woman
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after three doctars said I never would stand up straigW again. I was a midwife for seven years and I recommended the Vegetalfie Compound to every woman to take before birth and after- I wards, and they all got along so nicely that it surely is a godsend to suffering women. If women wish to write to me I will be delighted to answer them. ” —Mrs.Jennie Moyer, 342 E.North St, Lima, Ohio. i Women who suffer from displacements, weakness, irregularities, nervousness. backache, or bearing-down pains, need the tonic properties of the roots and herbs contained in Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta.de Compound. RELIEF! NO BLISTER! It Soothes and Relieves Like a Mustard Plaster Without the Burn or Sting Musterole is a clean, white ointment, made with the oil of mustard. It docs all the work of the old-fashioned mu tant plaster—docs it better and does in t i»lis- ; ter. You do not have to bother with a ’ cloth. You simply rub it on—and usually I the pain is gone! Many doctors and nurses use Mustcrole and recommend it to their patients. They will gladly4ell you what relief tt gives from sore throat, bronchitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, congestion. 1 pleurisy’, rheumatism, lumbago, pains and aches of the back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds of the chest (it often pre1 vents pneumonia}. _ i _ I TJIT. 7’7- __ u * 15 H1 jll ■■ I■il H J ■ ® ■ -o HAVE COLORINYOUB CHEEKS Be Bettei Looking—Take Oliv< Tablets If your sk<n is yellow—complexion pallid—longue coated—appetite poor—you have a bad taste in your mouth—a lazy, no-good feeling—you should take Olive Tablets Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets—a sub- • stitutc for calomel—were prepared by Dr. Edwards after 17 years of study ’ with his patients. ■ Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets arc a • purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil. You will know them by their olive color. ' To have a ciear pink skin, bright eyes, no pimples, a feeling of buoyancy like childhood days you must get at the cause. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets act on the liver and bowels like calomel —yet have no dangerous after effects. They start the bile and overcome constipation. That’s why millions of boxes arc sold annually at 10c and 25c per ■ box. All druggists. Take one or two nightly and note the pleasing results. , Expensive Ambition. Novelist Philip Curtiss says that at , heart all women are cave women. Bui that wouldn't be so bad if they didn’t want to drive up to the cave in a limousine.—Grund Rapids Press. VO'I’H II OF I’l III.It > tl.i;. ‘"Notice m hereby given that the Itfrie Railroad Company f ill sell for transportation, demurrage and storage charges pursuant I" law. by public auction. at the freight house of the llrio Kailroad Kompany. Magivy. Indiana, on May Twenty-ninth, 1017. at one-thirty (1:30) p. m., the following described property, to-wit: One carload crushed stone shipped by Hric Company, from Huntington. Indiana, to Wheat and Sisi May Ivy-, Ind. This (•rushed stone is now on the promises of the Crtv Railroad Company, Mag ley, Ind., and mav be inspected by interested parlies uppn making application to Air. I. I’’. I‘'uh.fy, Agent of said Krie Railroad Company, at Magivy. Ind., an\ day prior to sub 1 . Terms: (’ash. Property to be« removed by the purchaser within lour dava after sale. Property not so removed will be resold for account ami risk of purchaser without further notice, 11. C. BARLOW. l-’felght Claim Adjuster for Erie Railroad Company. I Hated. New York City. March 1 1917 2623 -may 7-.’ 1-28
Diet, Exercise or Death! An eminent medical authority writes that most of our city folks die of a thickening of the arteries or of kidney disease. The kidneys become clogged and do not filter the |x>isons from the blood, and one trouble follow,* another, high 1 blood pressure damages the heart, arteries and kidneys. Usually its danger signals arc backache, pain here or there, swollen feet or ankles, rheumatic twinges or spots appearing licforc the eyes. "The very best remedy is this: Eat meat but once a day or not at all. Plenty of outdoor exercise, and drink pure water frequently. Before meals talsc a little Anuric, the great uric acid neutralizer that is easily obtained at the drug store. When you have dizziness, chills or sweating, worry, or dragging pains in back, try this wonderful enemy to uric acid, which Dr. Pierce of Buffalo, N. Y., discovered and named Anuric. Anuric, more potent than lithia, dissolves uric acid as hot water docssugar.” YOUNG GIRLS JUST COMING INTO WOMANHOOD. Bunker Hill, lad.—“My mother gave
me Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription when I was a young girl developing. I think it laid the foundation for my present, healthy womanhood jtnd I w.ould never hesitate to recomc mend it. to young I girls at this very critical
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etagc of life.’’—Miss Dossie Webb. Jeffersonville, Jnd. —“I have been troubled with woman’s trouble for two years and after taking Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription I felt much better. I gladly recommend this medicine. I have told many of my friends about it and what it did for me.”—Mrs. Lt'iia JjyMMERVILLE, Route 1. Ail druggists. Liquid or tablets. “noticeZ Only one more day to secure the discount on your gas bill. Positively no discount after the 10th- Please take notice. No. Ind. Gas & Eec. Co.
I I I 'fW • | (Style (Show - 11 "~i The New Spring Suits • 1 “‘y ASI I ION'S new developments in |1 su ’ lls ’ s °f more than passing A# -*• interest. As exemplified in the I f products of Bischof’s art and skill now on t Y display, they have especial charm. special note arc the new silhouette fS-V with the skirt losing considerable of its i ' former flare and showing a tendency to ./ii M develop fullness about the knees, the \ rf'i v\ many novel arrangements of, pleats in Vi •‘HI uMJW the jackets; the tendency in many suits /// KII ~~ J\W emphasize the pockets; ami the. num- // I \\\ • berless variations of the belt or sash. , // ’ / y I \\ e Cordially invite you to inspect these li|l * / Aj charming models. ’ Prives sls, $lB, S2O, to $35 VN NIBLICK & CO. . ... - i a ■uni—liw* IWIMI H.W Him H"H HU ■<" "IIWMW im>w»wihiiw.—w.CßWS ’ «
Your Boy’s Wish to be WELL-DRESSED may be gratified by visiting our store and looking over our immense stock of BOYS’ CLOTHING and a glance at the following PRICES will show you how you may have YOUR BOY well dressed without tany great outlay on your part: $3.00, $4.00, $5.00, $6.50, $7.50, SB.OO, $9.00 and SIO.OO. HOLTHOUSE-SCHULTE & CO. Good Clothes Sellers for Men & Boys ROUGH'-JUMTS ■ W Unbeatable Exterminator kJ of Rats.Micc and Bugs Used the World Over - Used by U.S.Government Old Reliable Tha! Never Falla - !5 c. 25 c. At Druggists THE RECOGNIZED STANDARD-AVOID SUBSTITUTES
