Decatur Democrat, Volume 57, Number 39, Decatur, Adams County, 26 September 1912 — Page 5
* Hbe • HH! you get a good idea of the character of a | store by its merchandise, its appointments for your comfort, its service. We try to give $ the best in all of them. Our object is to § make your trading here pleasant and profita- g Ible to you; that when you get something that I you don’t want here, you can have your money R back. Drop in and see the new fall styles. fj R ■ Charlie Voglewede I THE SHOE SELLER On The West Side Os The Street R
i WEATHER FORECAST I Showers and thunderstorms this afternoon; cloudy and much colder' tonight; Thursday fair and cold, east portion. J. H. Heller was a Fort Wayne visi or yesterday afternoon. X. W. Fishnaugh of Indianapolis ■» the ; ;est of Miss June Knoff. ihomas Teeple made a business trip to Fort Wayne yesterday afternoon. I Mrs. Louisa Crance returned to Ft.j Wayne after a visit with her daughter, Mrs. Barto. i Miss Lillian Harris went to Fort Wijne yesterday afternoon for a vjs-! r with relatives. Mrs Charles Buhr returned yester-' day afternoon to Fort Wayne a >sit with her sister, Mrs. Alva Sullins. > William Sellemeyer, Rev L. C. Hegar: and .»iiliam Reppert left last eveaing for Franklin, Win., where they ( sill attend the German Reformed Synod.
Br THE HOME OF I I Quality Groceriesj A Sure Thing WHILE PERHAPS None of us Just Live To Eat I ITS’ A SURE THING I We ALL MUST EAT TO LIVE I Eat Our Quality Groceries and Live Longer H Leave it to us if you have a good appetite and we I will do the rest. If you do not know what you want ■by all means leave it to us and our suggestions will ■ set you right. We always have plenty of good country ■ butter and country lard. Do not forget ou pickling ■ vinegar sells at 20c gallon. I B We pay cash or trade for produce ■ Eggs 24. Butter 19 to 25c I Hower and Hower. ■ *' o th of G. R. & I. Depot. ’ phone 108, h- ■ JNO. S. BOWERS F.M.SCHIRMEYER L ■ President V.-Pres’t & Treas. | ■ FRENCH QUINN 1 K Secretary S I the bowers realty CO. I ■I REALESTATE, BONDS, LOANS. t H ABSTRACTS. B ■ T ne Schirmeyer Abstract Company complete Ab-K ■I stract Records, T wenty years Experience g H Farms, City Property, 5 per cent g II MONEY S
Oscar Hoffman went to Winchester I this morning on uusiness. < lark Lutz made a business trip to Richmond this morning M. J. Welker c.d family have gone I to Magley for a several weeks' visit. John Moran made a professional business trip to Indianapolis this I morning. Mrs Dwight Wilder and son. Ralph, left yesterday afternoon for Findley, I Ohio, to visit with her sister-in-law, i Mrs r> t Dietelbach. I James Stoops, who has been visiting with relatives in this city, left for his home at Sharon. Pa., before going | to Petersburg. W J. Hell of Craigvßla was here yesterday on business. He was accomI panied by the Wells county surveyor 1 and by Pat Addington a contractor. , Frank .Mann left yesterday for In- ' dianapolis where he will complete his ' course in the state medical college having a nine months course remaining before him. Brother Robert Gase of the Convent at Glandorf, Ohio, is here for a visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Gase. The visit tame as a surprise to the relatives here as they did not | expect hint to come at this time.
I Charles Ernst spent the day at I Berne on business. John t'olchin is in Fort Wayne attending to business. M. L. Oliver of Monroe was a business visitor here today. Charles Christen made a business | trip to this morning. 1 E. X. Ettinger Is at Fort Wayne I looking after business matters. Miss Ixtulse Teeple was a Fort Wayne business visitor today. Philip Schug the Berne councilman was a business visitor here yesterday. The Misses Bertha Bieberich and Minnie Knipstein went to Fort Wayne today noon. - Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Fonner and Mr. | and Mrs F. A. Peoples motored to Berne today. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Sprang will re-1 turn today from their summer vaca-l | tion at Oden, Mich. Warren Hamrick, rural mail carrier, has retuned to his work after a fifteen days' vacation. Mrs. G. Kurt, Mrs. Ed Johnson and babe and Mrs. Dan Hill and son spent the day in Monmouth. Electa Glarteey went to Fort Wayne to take her weekly music lesson and spend the day with friends. Joe Breinerkamp is spending the day In Fort Wayne looking up friends and attending to some business matters. Bessie • nd Edna Stetson of Sturgis. Mich., left on the 8:30 car for Root township for a visit with the Adam Deam family. Mrs. Ed Burkbead has returned from a three weeks' visit in Illinois with her mother, who resides there. W O SMITH WINS Mr. and Mrs. Joe Kizer returned to Geneva after a visit with their uncle, Fred Bender, and family, at Pleasant Mills, the past week. Fred Schaub has returned from Unnion City, where he went to call on his new niece, the babe born to Mr. and .Mrs. Harry Horn. / T. H. Ernst is going about with a bandaged head the result of the required careful nursing of a large boil that has appeared on the back of his nec kand head. James Stoops of Oklahoma, who has been visiting with his sister, Mrs. Sarah Blackburn, lef this morning for Petersburg to be the guest of his son. Duke Stoops, and family. Mrs. O. P. Schug will go to Hartford Cit* the latter part of the week, to attend to the home-ccming celebration. Mr. Schug is there in charge 01 the new glove factory of which he is a director. Mr. and M s. J. H. Burroughs are moving from Bluffton to this city, into the flat in the Page Blackburn building. This is over the Enterprise Drug store of which Mr. Borroughs is manager. William Baughman of 1232 Chute street, bruised himself badly about the face and hands when he fell to the payment on Barr street. He was taken to the Hope hospital, where the cuts were bandanged.—Fort Wayne Sentinel. Perry Blackburn, who was operated upon several weeks ago for appendicitis at the hospital in Decatur, is improving nicely and expects to return this week to the home of his mother. Mrs. I. B. lenders, of North Meridian street. —Portland Sun. Mrs. Martin Laughlin and son, Emmett, of Decatur, her brother-in-law, Morgan Melvin, wife and two children, John and Ella, of York, who visited here over night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Ford, East Walnut street, returned to Decatur* Tuesday—Portland Sun. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Snellenberger returned yesterday afternoon to Elkhart. They visited here with their cousins, Ed and William Bleeke of Union township, and County Clerk Ferdinand Bleeke of this city. Mr. Snellenberger is an engineer on the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern railroad. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Sellemeyer and I Albert Sellemeyer and Miss Edna Hoffman went to Fort Wayne last evening, where they met Mr. and Mrs. , Charles Loch, and the party of six | then went to the Majestic theater and witnessed the play in which I rue Fristoe of this city has a part, “Who's Little Girl Are You?" Two Portland young people, Walter intel and Miss Clara Blowers, with Miss Martha Leasure and Clarence Davis, of Monroe, figured in a runaway between Decatur and Monroe. Sunday evening, but none of the party were injured. They had been to Decatur and were enroute back to Monroe when an automobile was met on the highway. The horse they were driving took fright at the machine and whirled around in the road tearing one of the front wheels off the vehicle. The occupants of the buggy jumped to safety and the young men caught the horse. The identity of those in charge of the automobile was not learned, but the number of the machine was K 1-19-111. —Portland Sun.
Soup Soup Soup 5c QUICK SHORT ORDERS Special 15c Lunch WHITE CAFE Ralph Miller, Prop. Madison St N. of Court House WANTED —Boarders and roomers at 411 N. 2nd St. 229t6‘ O J® “ \ A P 3. C C V TWO LOAVES OF BREAD can look exactly alike, but one can contain 50 per cent more food value than the other, mainly because the good one is made from flour carrying a large percentage of gluten, the main food constituent of the high grade wheat—for good bread can only be made from good flour. This is one reason why Martin's Bread is of a superior value Others are the skill and sanitary' care used in mixing the dough and baking. Jacob Martin
(Ob t-' i .. Ito fecaLy "W v •. Zh 4l|T : /-y ■ / < . . ■ Xl' rt 7W ' ■' . i 4 fl • -1! ’• / * '7 1 \ r 7 "fflj \>. V ■'! ■' JfU’MlI t i~4 ■ r mJ fu /// H ; b/ - I / • j iv ■ Wd ■M ■■ i ,/< / x i r\ < ' ij . I hT. |.. 1 Him ’■ zm Ti\ ; at\ r ~ -S AW Beautifn! afternoon coat | ‘Jr /\ t I Tr nn j_ of black chiffon broad-cloth I l/ \ \ 1 I Oxs.rH e foat nf rough I with Directoire collar of | a|/ \ \ | rever. J ' cle . «ilh w,de I black velvet. Effectively | ¥ \ A <-Xr ? 11 ' Pierre I jm trimmed in silk braid and II 1 1 \ ■ Is a teninc braid I buttons. » ' 6'A \\M I £l—l '1 ' W 7 ✓ , med in siik braid. An I J J / iX ‘ adaption of the in; g JB / J ported models lor V />=r Special Display of the Season’s Best Models in Coats and Suits Tomorrow mornii’?' as ®TO rve Fas H: ?r.,' broadcloth. All colors; keep their shape. All the very will open a speci three clays’ dl .- >?<■ ■', . d a wonderful variety latest innovations in trimming and Style Exhibit of unusual intern;-.. < i styles to choose from. the latest style features are incorSuits v. ill be shown in maraa.Ji Especially attractive are these porated m them. serges, whipcords, novelties r . chof garments —strictly man- Come in early and see them, diagonal twills. Separate coats in tailored, serviceable coats and tweeds, zibelines, chinchillas, fur suits that are tailored to fit and NIBLICK & COMPANY
YOUNG PILES PROOF HIGH ON PROOF. And the People of Decatur are Rapidly Becoming Deeply Interested. The convincing which Young is producing g'. the, Holthouse drug | store Is rapidly convincing n.„ny of our people that tne tiarshone root and herb medicine Is destined to do more real good for the sick of this world than any dUcoVery of recent time. Young Is certainly a pleasant gentleman to meet and he Is so sincere in what he that all who talk to him are soon convinced that he 13 honest and truthful in all he says and does. In a rscent Interview he said: "We have received so many testimonials from those whom our remedy has cured that we never give out a testimonial the second time for publication. In fact we have never been able to publish a fourth of the testlk tnonials which we have rec-.ired, unsolicited, from grateful people who wish the world to know what our rem--1 edy did for them. The following Is a fair sample of the hundreds of testimonials which people have sent us j from every direction, and I give this * particular one out for publication, be-1 cause 1 met the old gentleman before he took our medicine, and again after ft had done such wonderful good for him:’’ “To all whojn this may concern: Since the awful winter of 186263, during my service in the civil war, when I came so near dying typhoid fever, 1 have been afflicted with constipation and kidney troubles. 1 was so that my bowels would not move for five or six days and I would have to get up four and five times during the night on account of my kidneys. Naturally I had no appetite and my catarrh and rheumatism seem- . ed to grow worse and worse until my i case became alarming. I am eighty . years old and although I have used > the Harshone roots and herbs but a I few weeks my rheumatism is all gone, appetite is good, bowels are regular i and I do not have to get up of nights 1 any more. The great remedy has > done so much good that I am, not- ! withstanding my age, in better condition than 1 have been since the war in '63. Always glad to recommend Harshone, I am thankfully yours, Harmon Tussing, 714 Fountain St., Kenton, Ohio." Young said: "All of our
gTg - XTRAGOOp GET WHAT YOU PAY FOR Getting what you pay for in style, fit, qualitv and sat-isfaction-that’s a job that’s not always easy when you start out to buy Boys Clothes. Get your next Boy’s suit here. Learn what it means to patronize a store that sells satisfaction-You’ll discover I that there’s one store that considers you first, that gives all you pay for. Boys Suits $2.00 to $8.50 ftoltholise, Schulte £ Go. Good Clothes Sellers for Men and Boys.
testimonials are genuine and those [ who wish can write and be convinced 1 of their truthfulness. A one-dollar | case of Harshone roots and herbs can 1 be bought for fifty cents, the remain- j 1 der of this week in this drug store, be ! cause we wish to prove to the people * of Decatur by their own experience. ' that the roots and herbs in Harshone will soon clean the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels of waste material, i poisonous matter and deadly germs,' thus giving nature a chance to restore, i health, the logical scientific way of. i ridding the sj stem of disease." FOR RENT —Eight-room house on i ' Third street—Mrs. P. B. Thomas . : 229tf 1
ABOUT THE SICK. Mrs. Bernard Myers left today noon for Fort Wayne being called there by the illness of her grandson, Herman, seven months old son of Mr. and Mrs. Clem Hake. The babe has been weakly since birth. DIED FROM EXHAUSTION. The two weeks’ old son of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Bleeke of Union township was found dead in bed this morning from exhaustion, the babe having been weakly since birth. The babe weighted but two and a half pounds at birth, and was one of twin boys, the other of which died at birth.
