Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 16, Number 145, Decatur, Adams County, 19 June 1918 — Page 5
RF -W- VvV W 1 W V WSF WVV WW A 1, I r t■——in i 4 f 4 . IUNDREDS WHO NEVER BEFORE THOUGHT 4 | f 4 ► lEY COULD AFFORD THE BEST SHOES ARE < I )W FINDING THAT THEY CANNOT AFFORD 4 ► I WEAR ANYTHING ELSE. IT COSTS MUCH 4 » SS PER YEAR TO WEAR GOOD SHOES 4 I LAN ANY OTHERS. AND THEY LOOK BET- 4 ► R ALL THE TIME. 4 » —4 t < ► —■■ ■ 4 ► 4 Charlie Voglewede < ► SELLS ’EM IN DECATUR 4 j ►
p«3sut:::r.'.n: IHTHER FORECAST | :a::::: tn:tn: tn: tn:t 8 F,|onight and Thursday, not mueUnge in temjierature. Mik. M. Anker visited >n Fort Way ©day. Miielen Sheets was a Fort Wayitjsitor today. MrJ. C. Pumphrey and Mrs. Herbrroughs spent the afternoon in FdFayne. ' Loiad Esther Hammond spent the dfith their sister. Mrs. Curtis Fritsi- at Monmouth. Mr.-ecelia Hall spent the day with granddaughter. Mrs. Milton Fuhrt north of the city. Mrsile Mickley and son. Gerald Williaof Huntington, are here visiting grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Willi. Blackburn. Miskth Ayres left yesterday afternoon* her home at Collierstown. Va.. a a visit here with her uncle. Alfreifrres and family. Mrsarence Baughman is at Harn inond 1 Chicago this week. At Hamill she is visiting with h?r jmoUk It s. Geo. Wertzbe.rgvr. Mr. Mrs. A. J. Porter. Mr. and Mrs. « Porter motored to Van Wert, to attend the funeral of their her-in law and uncle, Philip Fra A lo farm labor in Indiana will have tv done this year by hands who aither green or rusty. A patient i >yer and a willing worker will gdong all right together in the end
Thflome of Quality Groceries EASAEALS FOR HOT WEATHERTIT’S WHAT YOU WANT—LET US SUGGEST Puffed teat. pkglsc Life of Wheat, pkglsc Puffed e, pkglsc Mother’s Wheat Hearts ...15c Jersey n Flakes. . 12c & 18c Scotch Barley 15c Post Tues, pkg 20c pearl Tapioca 12 i/ 2 & i sc Kcllog'sunibles. pkg. ...10c Mataronj and Spaghetli> W ashinn Corn Crisps .. Oc ].-, c Square 1 Dessert, 2 pkgs. ->c pßg i Oc Jell-O, ; flavor ’< ( ))(irec Jb . 16c; 3 | bs . 4 5c I' c, . ery^ Scas ° ning ••• }? Ripe Olives 15c Onion SSeasonmg 1 Rolled C, pkgl2c & 35c Grape Nuts I n Wav cash or trade for produce. Eggs, 29c; Butter, 25-30 c. M. E. HOWER North G. K. & I. Depot. ’Phone 108 Ij ’» BIG GUN among Cigars that is making 1 1 ffi a “HI with the SMOKER | 1 I THE 1 1 |"’/HITE STAG"! | CIGARS | De PORTED Java W rapper Connecticut kj I BindcSccd and Havana Filler, Hand Made, a | » real S'KE SENSE SATISFIER. iK p ■ nV
Mrs. Burt Mangold and Mrs. Edna Carsoq spent the day in Ft. Wayne. Mrs. Ed Ahr attended the funeral of her uncle. G. W. Munima. at Monroeville this afternoon. Harvey Smith spent the afternoon in Fort Wayne on business, for the local telephone company. W. A. Kuebler has returned from St. Lous. Mo., where he has been buying goods for the Boston store. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Ruhl ami daughters, Sylvia and Mildred, attend ed the funeral of their uncle, Charles I). Ruhl, at Hoagland, this afternoon. Miss Nell Brown and Glendorris and Marvin Johnson called on their mother and sister. Mrs. Oliver Johnson at the hospital in Fort Wayne today. I Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey Bartlett ’ and child retijrned yesterday af'.er- • noon to Fort Wayne after a visit lire with the Bartlett and Hindenlang . families. ■ The program of the food ndininis- ■ t ration is to put less into the garbage rail and take more out. If you waste i your garbage you may find it impost sible to look a hog in the face. 1 1 ; Miss Ida. Stauffer returned from S', laxiis. Mo.. where she attended --to,ll business. She stopped here for a nlshort time and was accompanied ta f her home in Berne by her little nidke, t. Gladys Cook. Mr. ami Mrs. W. A. Kuebler have [] received letters from their daughter. g Marcella, written enroute to Los Angeles, Cal. She is enjoying the moun i- tains and other beautiful features of ,j the scenery through which they arc passing.
Miss lama Dellinger has taken i position at the Marlin restaurant. Mrs. Mary Brandyberry went to Monroe this afternoon on business.' Mrs. John Durbin and two children went to Berne this afternoon for a visit with the John Reinhard faintly. Mrs. Hattie Paulsen and Miss Marton laine left on the 1:05 train for! their home at Atlanta, after a visit with Mrs. V. C. Knepper. If June 28th comes around and you have not given a pledge to take some of the War Savings Stamps, you had better examine your birth certificate once more and make sure that you are an American. Mrs. W. J. Archbold who has been] nt the Lutheran hospital. Ft. Wayne,! since a week ago last Friday when she had a serious operation for gall ! stones, is getting along nicely, though her case has been very serious. When a party o' friends want t' remember father they give him a nice, easy chair, but they alius remember mother with a dish. What's become o' th’ woman who used t' say “Dear me suz?"—Abe Martin in Indianapolis News. Lest, you forget, put coal in the bin —if you know where to find the coni. When you see a war duty headed toward you. meet it half way and shake hands. The grouch his less market value at this moment than ever before in the history of the world. The marriage of Miss Edith May Kleinknight. of Tocsin, daughter of corge L. Kleinknight became the bride today of George Lester Blocker a driver for the Standard Oil Company at Fort Wayne, a son of Christopher Blocker, deceased. They were I married by Rev. Reemsnyder this . afternoon. —Bluffton News. If you are a farmer, you had better 1 consider 'the wisdom of storing your grain or stacking it. Elevator men ■ are urging farmers to hold back de- ■ liveries so that all the grain in the world will not be trying to get from the tail-end of the machine into the . elevator, all at one time. ' It is true that the wheat harvest : will bo more than abundant. If the •government decides that a surplus must be stored and asks you to con- , tinue mixing in a substitute with the , white flour, you won t weep all over the grocery store or ask foolish questions. will you We ought not. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Ahr and sons, , Lloyd and Fred, and Mrs Frank Cart; roll, returned last evening from Cinjclnnati. Ohio, to which place they moj tored Sunday. They also visitpd Fort Thomas. Ky.. while there and look ed for the hoys from here. They were ' out of camp, however, at the lime. • and they missed them. Mothers in England whose sons f are at the froirt offer brief prayers for their bovs when the noonday bells J "chime, according to a report fro n Denis A. McCarthy, of the Knights es Columbus War Activities Committee. ( “This seems almost a rvival of the /custom of reciting the Angelus, one jso popular’in those countries whei ■ •the influence of the church prevailed," said Mr. McCarthy. The threshermen of Indiana have pledged themselves to assist the government and Ihe farmers in a real clean-up of the small grain crops, with ’ out the usual waste. The State Coun- ; cil is trying to regulate the charges t for threshing. In several counties ' the machines want five cents for oats ' and ten cents for wheat. The council believes that these charges are , higli and that the threshermen ’ should voluntarily agree upon n schedule which will not. sting the farmers. More about tho threshing : program later on. A~~ A good friend stands by you when in need. Decatur people tell how Doan's Kidney Pills have stood the test. John Wagoner, retired farmer, of 309 N. First street. Decatur, endorsed ' Doan’s seven years ago and again confirms tho story. Could you ask lor more convincing testimony? “My back ached and my kidneys acted irregularly,’’ says Mr. Wagoner. “Al. night 1 was compelled to get up frequently on account of weak kidneys. which annoyed and distressed me. A box of Doan's Kidney Pills, procured from the Holt house Drug Co., put my kidneys in good shape." SEVEN YEARS LATER. Mr. Wagoner said: “Although I haven't needed Doan’s Kidney Pills for a long time, I surely haven't forgotten the good they did. I am glad to confirm my recommendation.” • , Price, <’>oc. at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan's Kidney Pills —the same that |Mr. Wagon* r had. Foster-Milburn Co.. Mfgrs., Buffalo. N. Y. —Advt. EON IS BORN A boy baby was born this morning to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wagoner of Sou Hi First street, tills being their second child. I—U —— Demt frat Wants Ads Pay*
'g: nuttr-anur. at: tnu.tnttn tn: :: trnnm > I 6 O U R T »' Mrs. Rosina Yoder, of Wabash township, aged forty-three, whose husband. Noah Ynder, was found dy- * 'I Ing about eight weeks ago from pois-' oning. and who died a few moments' after being found was adjudged Insane and was brought In yesterday afternoon to the insane ward of the local Jail for safe keeping. It is said, that in her unfortunate condition, sire has threatened to take, not only her own life, but that of her children and | [says she has rat poison in the house j for that purpose. The board holding ' the Inquest includes Drs. C. H. i Schenck. Amos Reusser and Justice of the Peace George 0. Staley. A couple applied here for a marriage license this morning, but were refused, when it was found that the bride lives at Fort Wayne, as the . law requires the license be issued in the county in Indiana in which the bride lives. According to the marrifce application the would-be groom was Henry F. Buffenbarger. yard I ! foreman of the American lee and | 1 Coal •company, born July 19. 1887, son J of John Buffenbarger, of this city. He ! I was divorced in 1910 from a former , i wife. The would-be bride was Emma C. Rusching. and was born December 4. 189 G. ; Walter E. Steele took out letters . of administration on tho estate of . David Steele, giving SSOO bond. Roy E. Munima qualified as executor of the will of Clara M. Jeffers, his J bond being S4OO. In her will, his mother-in-law requested that he serve as executor. Real estate transfers: Anthony i Hackman to Mary Hackman, quit . claim deed to sixty acres of Union J township. $1500; Charles Haviland to j I Jacob H. Zehr, et al., lot 294 Geneva.! , quit claim deed, $1; same, quit claim to lots 293-254 Geneva, $250. Ferdinand Yake et al to Jacob Barger, real t ’ (estate in French township, quit |claim deed, $1; David J. Teeple lo j Edward L. Coffee, lot 355 Decatur, ' si,fioo. e r Otto Bryan vs. Christian Marshall. •- complaint to quiet title, is a new suit filed in the circuit court by Attorney . C. L. Walters. COUNCIL INFAVOR i■t — ; (Continued from Page Oue> c , :<1217335~T~5t~L7 & W. R. IL Co.. 1, $310.23; G. R. * 1. R. R. Co. $260.38; O. Heller, $6.55; Decatur Light and . Power Plant. $3,410.00; Decatur Light s K- i’ower Plant. $2,450.00; C. C. Linn, s $23.40; Power Coal Co, $118.21; Ev- , ans Coal Co., $825.66; waterworks ,f pay roll. $123.3J; T. C. Keller A- Co.. , I $364. 28; Phil Gloeckner Coal Co.. J $209.50; Ft. Wayne Oil & Supply Co., $14.19: General Hocking Fuel Co., , *100.19; Wayne Belting A Supply C >. IJ $9.08; Adams Express Co.. $.99: Niblick A: Co.. $1.95. e WILL protect” WHEAT PRICE Indiana! oils, June 18- Provision , i will be maiic to protect the farm, r against a reduced price for his wheat when on June 24th freight rates are k to ba advanced, according to an announcement by the United States (food ailministrat.ion today. A telegram to that effect, just received byDr. Barnard, federal food administra•or for Indiana, from Herbert Hoover. federal food administrator, says; “The advance iu freight rates on th*' twenty-fourth of June will, in ju ■■ tic* to the farmers, necessitate an advance in the price of wheat at the I rim ipal Mississippi Valley ami east--1 eni terminal;, a few cents a Im; lie!. (The advance will bo worked out ,;o ( as to equajize. as far as may be | osI sible. the loss that the farmer would ( other vise incur through the increase in ra'os. Details of rule advance; II wilt .-robably not be known until Jttli<- 25th. at which date wo are assentl. ng a committee of traffic cv , ports to consider what actual ad ’ I .: vatic• in price is irncn ary in cotnt pens:'ion. It is our intention so far as tl ■■ peculiar character of th” rut* adva* -e enables ns to do so, to work out. a iilan that, will leave the farmer . in th” same intrinsic position that h: ; . was 1i before that, date." - " -ft ' 4 For Itching Torture 5 ■ . .... Jj There is one remedy that seldom fails , to stop itching torture and relieve skin irritation and that makes the skin soft, [ clear and healthy. ! Any druggist can supply you with | zemo, which generally overcomes all skin diseases. Acne, eczema, itch, pimples, rashes, blackheads, in most cases ; give way to zemo. Frequently, minor , blemishes disappear overnight. Itching usually stops instantly. Zemo is a safe, antiseptic liquid, clean, easy to use and . dependable. It costs only 35c; an extra large bottle, SI.OO. It will not stain, is ' j i not greasy or sticky and if positively f safe for tender, sensitive e-kias. r i I > The E. TV. R?.’C Co., Cleveland, O i
I - I Rjl “PROTECT YOU « I Mr. Automobile Owner! I Is your car protected from loss by Fire, Collision or Theft? t ** If not let me take care of the matter for you. Its cost is so small, compared to the loss you might sustain in case it caught S fire, collided with some object, or some unscrupulous party deliberately drove it away. No one can tell the sensation it causes H to have some one steal your car better than myself, and my car S was not protected against theft, so the loss is complete. Now, then. I want to help you from having the same experience as my- R self, and by me helping you, you will assist me to overcome the loss and to restore to my family the pleasures and conveniences we enjoyed with our Ford. I am the agent for Adams County for The Bulldog Auto Insurance Company, insuring against Fire, Collision, Theft and Indemnity. This is absolutely one of the best in the land, and also the cheapest, taking into consideration the damages paid in case of loss. Let me have your business. You need the protection, and I need the assistance you can give me. Call my home by telephone, No. 168, or see me at the office of The Daily Democrat. I will appreciate any business you can give me. Truly yours, | JOHN H. STEWART. I
NO ADVANCE IN PRICE MEURALGIA ANg For quick results rub the Forehead and Temples with XclUen >L,rtleßoay-Gwml mYour Home *\ . ' wdSWojaißS MEETING THURSDAY EVENING. The Washington Township Council ,of Defense will hold a meeting Thursday evening at eight, o-elock at the school house north of tlie river. Membc;s are requested to be present. The chairman of -tlie Washington Town ship Council of Defense, Fred W. Busche. reports that a splendid meeting was held at the Heinz school house last week. IS SLOWLY Charles Kitson, who is employed at. ih” Cowan Barber Shop, has been confined to his home with a sprained back but is somewhat improved today and will probably return to his work on Thursday.
iniwfiwimimmiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiißii imu i m iiiimwi iiimiiia Hall the Hun Provide the boys with the things they need to make short work of him. Guns, cothes, aircraft, food, munitions and (he ships to get over with. These arc the things the boys need, and they cost money —hunks of it. JUNE 28th I ‘I NATIONAL WAR SAVINGS DAY MAKE A PLEDGE TO BUY WAR SAVINGS STAMPS The more quickly our soldiers have all the things they need, the more quickly the ships will be bringing our boys back to us. I 1 i J NATIONAL WAR SAVINGS COMMITTEE This space contributed for the Winning of the War by I F. E. FRANCE I
Now Is A Good Time To Buy that summer suit, light weight underwear, panama hat, hosiery and neckwear. See them. Teeple, Brandyberry & Peterson CATER TO THE MAN WHO CARES
