Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 21, Number 224, Decatur, Adams County, 21 September 1923 — Page 9
■ and Mrs. F. A. Peoples motorB . tl) Huntington this afternoon. ■ Mr looked after busEl ‘* ll ''" ! '’
g — ■■■■■>■.■■..■ i I jr^Aftei-a 1 } . A ■ "icthhig satisfies hkcX I ' IL \ ■ Efc J “A size to fit I After All - | y >ur face, I I £ • and suit your taste” I NOTHING 1; This .is the I t4' Londress Exira I Satisfies Like ■ .. ■ (Actual Size) I the I EE 2 for 15 WTO 11- ‘Buy A Pair Today- » Now - In Every Case In Town In Every Case A Winner. After all ' m I. 4* nothing satisfies B "*■ M I
I Announcing Autumns I I New Twill Cord Frocks I ® if*** I h If you are buying New Fall Dresses in either Wool p or Silk Canton Crepe our line will more than please you. I I Realizing the great demand we placed our order /M with standard manufacturers for all the newest in Fall /-11. FB ** and Winter styles. / j|r -1 * B I — I One lot of All Wool Poirot Twills, color. "1 bjl' Navy Blue. Extra Special tor <p I I t Another 10l of llij;li Grade Dresses, ail wool Poyet twills and Canton Crepes in Navy Blue "k | i '-.I • fli Black, very special <HV»VV ’J I■ r I . K <•— " " " ■ Elegant models all wool dresses in Poiret Twills'—Wool Canton Crepe—g Silk Canton Crepe I $19.75 - $22.50 - $25.00 - $35.00 I Dresses are here far the slender Miss of 15 and 17 and a fine assortment p for mature figures which require sizes up to 46-48-50 , 4 I I —■ I I Niblick & Company I I I L ? — -,- || —BMMMMMM mmmMmm 1 aim I ‘ TIM 1..« i!■ I HM< ■'" ■> ' i«l bom l I ■ ill* lIHBI -wfr ■’ ■ * '■ '' "■ Hl j |’■ I . ™ 1 p ~~
Mr. and Mrs. 11. C. Keller utteudi ed the Pease-Speheger wedding at ■‘ Bluffton yeateftiay afternoon. Robert Meyers, of Nqtre Dame will
arrive homo tomorrow to go to Minister. Ohio, to attend the funeral of his grandmother, Mrs. Christopher I Meyers, which will bo held Monday.
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1923.
| LOCAL NEWS!
s Charlep and Casper Lang are awiting word from the brother, Theodore latng, of Berkley, California, where the big fire occurred Sunday night. Mr. Lang is in the tailoring business there and his brothers in this city are a little worried for fear that his home might have been destroyed by the fire. They have written to , him and expect an answer with in the next few days. Mr. ami Mrs. O. F. Kintz have mov l ed to Toledo, where they will live with their daughters. Mr. Kintz was a former county and city sur- [ veyor and for ten years served as Justice of the Peace in Washington township. He resigned several | months ago on account of all health, i The Kintz home on Winchester street has ben rented. I Henry Hite and son, Hugh, returni ed from Detroit last evening. | Mrs. W. H. Meyers, of FL Wayne, ; io visiting friends here today. I I). Lafferty, of Huntington, was a i business visitor here this morning. . James F. Arnold made a business I trip to Ohio yesterday. The Psi lota Xi Sorority will hold . a pastry sale at Schmitt's Meat Market Saturday morning at 10 o’clock. !Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sautter have j returned from a wedding trip to ■ , Detroit. Frfnce Center went to Gary ter 11 spend the week end with his parlierits, Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Conter. 11 Mrs. Flomie Breiner, of south of tho • city, was a shopper in the city to-
day. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dibble, of lensing, Mich., Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Gilpen, of Hobart, and Mrs. Guy Richardson, of Hath, Michigan, have returned to their respective homes after a week’s visit with Mrs. Jennie Ranies and Mrs. Agnes Andrews. Miss Mayme Terveer has been confined to her home for the past several days on account of sickness. Henry Weighmann and son, Hubert, of Flat Rock, were business visitors in the city today. The collar that ties in the back instead of the front is favored this season. Sashes of white fur are seen on black satin frocks. Coats of quilted satin are banded with very fluffy fox furs. Three-piece suits of black moire are a novelty this season. They may be embroidered in bright colors or merely pepped, up with collars and cuffs of white satin or fur. Collars and cliffs of white broadbraided with black soutache braid are used successfully on black rep costumes. Our idee o' discouragin’ war would be fer th’ Red Cross t’ pass up all countries that would rather fight ' than eat. Poker is gittin’ to have a purty sharp competitor in golf. —Abe Martin. Indianapolis News Miss Reba Bowers, who is a student at the internation Business College at Fort Wayne, is spending the week -end with her parents, Mr. and .Mrs. S. J. Bowers, of west of this I city. Phillip Carper ,of Washington town ship, was a business visitor in Decatur today. Monica and Mildred Bueter and Mrs. J. H. Bueter, of Fort Wayne, were dinner guests of the Heideman family yesterday. They brought Mrs. Heidemann home from Fort Wayne. g.Ondlhas NEW SCHEDULE | Fall and Winter Time Table I Announced, Effective At Midnight Sunday. A new- fall and winter schedule on the Grand Rapids and Indiana railroad was announced today by the ['Pennsylvania Railroad company. The I new schedule will become effective | at midnight Sunday, September 23. Trains are added and schedules [changed during the summer months to take care of the heavy traffic. Trains Nos. 19 and 20, now operating <>n the Grand Rapids and Indiana line | will be taken off on September 23, [ but in order to accomodate the people still at the lakes in northern [ Michigan, special trains will be run on the present schedule of train No. 120 on September 25 and 28. | The changes in the time table, which will affect the trains which stop in Decatur, arc as follows. North Bound No. 3.—leave at 3:45 p.m. instead [of 3:35 p.m. No. 1. —leaves at 12 midnight instead of 12:45 a.m. South Bound No. 6 —leaves at 1:02 a.m. instead of midnight. All other trains will operate on the present schedule. o — Hemstitching and Picoting at 8 and 10 cents per yard at .Mrs. Hazel Aeschliman, 211 Jefferson st., over Laundry. . lx o Mrs. Christopher Meyer Mrs. Christopher Meyers died at at. her home in Minster, Ohio .yesterday morning- She was the mother of the late Chris and Henry Meyer of this city. Mrs. Meyer has two sous who are pyiests, and one daughter, Mrs. Schmeider, of Lima, Ohio. , Funeral services w ill be held in -Minster on Monday. Mrs. Chris Meyer and sous, Robert and ixiwis, and Mrs. Joseph Lose will lave here Sunday to attend the funeral. 0 Aley Boom Is Launched (United Press Service) Indianapolis, Sept. 21—(Special le Daily Democrat)— A boom for Dr. Robert J. Aley, president of Buller university, for the democratic gubernatorial nomination will be launched at a meeting at the Dennison Hotel here tonight. W. H. Eichhorn, of Bluffton, former judge of Wells aud Blackford circuit court, will preside at the meeting. Hemstitching and Picoting atS and 10 cents per yard at Mrs’. Hazel [ Aeschlimau, 211 Jefferson st., over Laundry. lx
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