Decatur Democrat, Volume 58, Number 14, Decatur, Adams County, 3 April 1913 — Page 7

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Another stop In the fight to aid the j housewife has been taken by the state ' inspector of weights and measures, H.'i K. Barnard. Thia time It Is the Iceman who is the target for the assault. ' No more may ice be doled out to the housewife or placed in refrigerators t by the "chunk." The practice of di-’ i vidlng a block of Ice into several different pieces and then selling it by the piece must cease, according to a ' letter just tent out by the state io-j spector to all the city and county inspectors in Indiana. "The weights and measures law as amended at the last session of the legislature, among other things, pro-1 vldes that all commodities shall be sold by standard weight of measure,” j the letter says. “This provision makes . illegal the former practice of selfing j by basket, box or lump, and is especoally applicable to the regulation of the sale of ice. Under the provisions of the law, Ice can be sold legally) only by weight or measure, and you ’ are hereby instructed to require that I all ice be weighed when delivered, I and the price determined on the basis of that weight “Your attention is further called to the fact that the law as amended ( makes it a misdemeanor not only to sell or offer for sale less than the*" quantity represented, but in addition penalizes the servant or agent w-ho delivers less than the quantity he represents. In other words the dealer in ice shall require payment not for the ice which leaves his plant, but the actual delivery made to the consumer." The state inspector who has sent out a notice to all deputy inspectors, ordering them to pay special attention to the weight of all butter being sold in their particular districts. Breaking up the practice of butxer dealers charging for the weight of wooden dishes or paper cartons containing the . butter is desired. Recent reports to the state department showed frequent sales of fourteen-ounce-to-the-pound i butter, Mr. Barnard said.

i A large baud of enthusiactic Women's Christian Temperance Union members and their friends met with Mrs. Robert Case Tuesday afternoon, who was assisted in entertaining by Mrs. Adel Neptune. Mrs. John Niblick, president of the order, presided, and Mrs. Henry Krick conducted the devotionals. A very interesting lesson was carried out, and Mesdames : Eley and Runyon and others contributed to this with readings and talks. I Mrs. L. W. Love, wife of the United Brethren minister, gave a very earnest prayer in behalf of the work. — After the choir rehearsal at the Presbyterian church last evening. Director Dr. Fred I. Patterson showed his appreciation of the excellent work done by the choir members in the rendition of the recent Easter cantata, by entertaining the choir body at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Patterson. A general informal social mingling was in evidence, the singing of the cantata choruses and then came delicious refreshments as a treat from Dr. Patterson, prepared and served by his mother The chorral body includes Mr. and E. D. Engeier, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Lee, Mrs. A. M. Anker, the Misses Bess Schrock, Stella Perkins, Messrs. Lawrence Biggs, W. P. Schrock, F. H. Hubbard and Wesley Hoffman, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Patterson, Marie and Bruce Patterson. Other guests were Rev. and Mrs. W. H. Gleiser, Edna Hoffman and Lizzie Peterson.

"British Politics" were discussed by the Tri Kappas at the home of Miss Frances Dugan Tuesday evening. New officers were elected: President, Mrs. Avon Burke; vice president, Mrs. Oscar Hoffman; corresponding secretary, Miss Jean Butler; recording secretary, Fannie Frisinger; treasurer, Jean Lutz. Miss Ekina Hoffman was named delegate and Mrs. Avon Burk, alternate to the convention at Lagrange in June. Miss Naomi Dugan, who returns from her school work at Ferry Hall, Lake Forest, Ilk, and Miss Frances Cole, will be initiated. Miss Margaret Smith was given a very pleasant surprise by sixteen friends in celebration of her sixteenth birthday anniversary. ’ Cards were played and refreshments served and a very good time had. Prizes at cards were won by Frances Deininger and Norbert Holthouse. I On account of the illness of R. L. jSemans, the Shakespeare club met i Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. C. A. Dugan, who also gave an excellent pamper on "Literary Holland; Past and, Present.” The study was further car-! jried out with quotations, readings by! Mrs. John Tyndall and Mrs. John Niblick, and sub-topics. Among business matters that came up for consideration was a discussion of the plans for the closing evening. The closing social this year will be quite j an elaborate one, as it will celebrate the thirtieth anniversary of the organization of the club.

A very good attendance of the St. Vincent de Paul society was manifest at the meeting at the Clem Voglewede home Wednesday afternoon. The first hours were devoted to charitable work, sewing, etc., and care for the needy of the city. A pastry sale was also held and the demand was greater than the large supply. Then all care was thrown aside for the social side of life. A very Interesting progressive game was played. At each table were letters with the face side down. These were drawn and read aloud and the first lady to respond with the name (beginning with that letter), of a city, river, boys’ or girls' name, etc., according to the table at which she played, was given a blank. At the close of the progression, Mrs. C. V. Connell was found to have the greatest number of blanks and was given a cake from the pastry sale as a prise. Refreshments of cake and coffee, the society's prescribed luncheon, were served. , Joining with the Orient club in spending Wednesday afternoon delightfully with Mrs. John Stewart on Mercer avenue, were Mesdames John S. Peterson, Fred Heuer, Fred Sellemeyer, Wesley Hoffman, C. D. Lewton and Charles Hower. After a cozy time chatting over their sewing, a two-course luncheon was in order. Mrs. Hugh Hite has invited the club to meet with her in two weeks. COURT HOUSE NEWS.

Jacob Miller vs. William T. Miller | et al. Rule against all defendants to' answer cross-complaint of Evaline Monks in five days. Stuart Brown vs. Rudolph Bauman et al. Cause reset for April 2. ! The current report of Charles W. Yager, guardian of Jacob Milton Yaeger, was allowed. Grover Cleveland Runkel, farmer, born February 9, 1885, son Runkel, of Wabash township, was granted license to wed Luella Yancy, born November 29, 1891, daughter of Job Yaney, of Jefferson township. The young couple drove from the south part of the counfy to this city this morning and were married at' 11:30 o’clock in the little east room of the county clerk’s office by Judge Merryman. They were not inconvenienced on the trip by any high waters.

i The Bernard damage trial against '- Contractors Myers and the City of Decatur will last the remainder of the week, if not longer. Ono side has not e yet concluded its evidence. 1 In his will, witnessed by *H. F. Calc low and J. F. Fruchte, executed May e 15, 1812, and probated today, Herman • Yake asks that a tombstone be erecty ed at his grave. His wife, Wilhelmina 1 Yake, is to get all property for life. .- At her death Louis Yake is to get - SSOO, and Henry Ya|je, S4OO. All the i rest is to be equally divided among their eight other children: Lena Hes- ;- sert, Minnie Hessert, Alvina Kain, s Gustav, William, Louis and Henry s Yake and Anna Worthman. He asks 1 Gustav to be appointed executor. ; ——oRockford Gave Warning. Mayor Teeple took precautions for the safety of the people this morning. A call to the mayor at Rockford, 0., at 11 o’clock this morning brought word that Rockford, Ohio, was giving warning to the people in the country of the possible dangefr from the reservoir break, but Rockford, Itself, had ■ little fear. s Telephone Girls Busy. r The great demand for news from . the outside world has swamped the - telephone office. All girls were press- • ed into duty today, on both local and • long distance wires. The night force , which worked last night was called i back and tired and worn trying to , bear with the girls and do not be im- ■ patient or abusive if you do not get ,'an answer at once to your rings. Re- : ! member that hundreds of calls are in i and it is Impossible to answer all at once. Yesterday and today has been a record breaking day for the tele- . phone office. Locatad at Greenville, Ohio. ■Walter Johnson, a traveling salesman of this city, whose absence has )been the occasion of uneasiness to . his family here, has been located at Greenville, Ohio, where he is held up by the floods, but is safe. Got a Newspaper. Miss Anna Winnes was the proud possessor of a Chicago Record-Herald | this morning, one of the first outside newspapers received here in several .days. It was given out by an Erie Iconductor to Operator Cole Wednesday. It is of Wednesday’s date, but has very little news in it of the floods of Ohio and Indiana. Mails StiU Short. The only in going and out-going mail received for several days is over 'the Erie from the west. Another mail came in yesterday from Chicago and another is promised for today. The mail, however, is very small. A

decidedly congested condition pre- ; vails here at the local office. Several ; bags of mail for Marlon, Columbus, : Lima, Ohio, and points east have been < held here for several days. Saturday i newspapers from Huntington, coming : I here over the Erie to be sent over ; the Clover Iz>af to Warren, are still : here. Much local mail, such as news- < papers, etc., is being held. The same l rural carriers who went out yeeter- i I day, were out again today and found ■ traveling better, three being able to'i practically complete their routes. The Suman, Lutz and Leimenstoll flooded < roads cut off three carriers again today, while those over the north and east bridges did not go out at all. Great excitement prevailed when a wagon load of mail came in at 2 o’clock over the Erie from Chicago. There were no papers, however. They had no connecting malls from north jor south and would take none out for Indianapolis. Reeds Move Out. Mrs. D. M. Reed and son were among the numbers who were obliged to move from their home at Lakeside, Fort Wayne. Mr. Reed is now at Toronto, Canada, where he is en'gaged in real estate work. The oldest child, Margaret, has been visiting I since last Saturday with her grandmother, Mrs. M. Fullenkamp, in this city. Erie Is Repairing. J. A. Kerwin, of Huntington, supervisor of construction of the Erie double tracking, who is here to make the repairs on the washouts, of 600 or 890 ' I feet of track east of the bridge, was I among those most interested in the > possible flood from the reservoir. He was at a loss whether to proceed with the repairs until assured of no more > danger. Unless something unforeseen occurs, the repairs will be made sundown. The Pilliods Safe. y The family of Mrs. Mary Wemhoff w-as made happy this morning when a telegram was received from Mrs. ’> Edith Wemhoff Pilliod of Piqua, 0., h I announcing that she and her children s were safe from the floods there. She ’> asked that her husband, Charles PPf liod, who is at Xenia, Ohio, be noti--8 fled of their safety. Mr. Pilliod is I I connected with the Metropolitan In--8 surance company at Xenia, and was 0 i preparing to move to that city. Xenia B Is also in the flooded district. His • mother, Mrs. Mary Pilliod, who is a I sister of. Peter Mougey of this city, (also resides at Piqua. Bell Home a Refuge. f| The home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank " Bell on Broadway street, Ft. Wayne, B high and dry from the flood, has been t. thrown open to refugees from flooded Lakeside. Among the families hous'ed at the Bells are those of Cal Mil- ’ ler, Charles Loch and Homer Stewart, f | formerly of Decatur. T 1 Still Watching Bridges. i The interurban centers attention to x jthe bridges north of town. Crews ' ! work both day apd night keeping * away the debris. When the reservoir e j break scare came on, the men were ’ called in, but were sent out again ' i when the reservoir repair was reportled. Z Fred Reppert Got Home. Colonel Fred Reppert, the auctioneer, arrived here at 2 o’clock this afternoon after a tedious trip of two days. He was at Weavers’ Station r twenty miles from Dayton, when the . flood broke. Yesterday morning he’ , drove to Richmond, a distance of t twenty miles, came to Bryant this ; morning on a G. R. & I. train, rode r from there to Geneva and found the - roads impassable, so he walked to 1 Berne and came from there here in a buggy. He reports that the track has been reparred as far as Geneva i and the G. R. & I. will probably be > be running between here and Rich- - mond by tomorrow. At Weaver’s stal tion, where the train was held two > days and two nights, the bridges were I weakened. Ten minutes after his > train passed over a bridge on the - Pennsylvania, near Weaver’s Station, : a work train passed over the same ■ and went through the trestle. Engii neer, firemen and nineteen workmen : went down with the train and were i drowned. Printing Under Difficulties. Written or printed messages from the outside world are curios. The only ■ exchange received at this office since i the floods was yesterday s Hunting- > ton Herald. Huntington is flooded and the electric lights and power cut off. The Huntington Herald was therefore printed under difficulties The type was set by hand and the papers probably run on the job press But they got the news out on schedule time. Wildest Excitement. Never were the mothers of the city more excited, than when the nows o* the breaking of the reservoir came. Anxious for their children, they be sieged the schools with calls to send the children home,, and schools were dismissed for the day. In the mean I time, while the men were arguing and

Children Ory FOR FLETCHER’S CASTOR! A

figuring for the time the floods would reach here and the lossible height of the water should it come ,the women of the household were busy taking stores of supplies and valuables to te garrets and housetops. One wopan with her five little children, living near the river, who could not locate her husband In the city, was so frightened that she prepared dinner 'hastily that she might bring them to the court house as the highest point of safety. Vesey Packing House Burns. What the Vesey greenhouse at Ft. Wayne will not lose by water is lost by fire. Word ffeceived at the local telephone station Is that the greenhouse packing house and barn were morning. Twenty-three of their greenhouses were under water, but the packing house was above the floods. POLICE COURT. Anderson of the Erie has, in the most hospitable manner during the last few nights, opened the depot for the construction men and laborers on the railroad to spend the night therein. The men in the habit however, of getting a little to large a ‘‘load’’ on and, and last night when one of the men who goes by the name of Daoley came in, three or four of the others began picking on him and abusing him. Dailey wasn’t in a very good humor and in return he managed to Iput three of the men to "sleep.” He was just beginning on the fourth man when Officer Melchl put in an appearance and on the promise of the men to file an affidavit against Dailey, Melchi ecsorted him to jail. This morning, however, no one put in an appearance, and after a futile search for them, Dailey was given his liberty. o EIGHTH DISTRICT CARRIERS.

Os Rural Mail—Their Political Standing as Given by Mr. Cox. The following supplement of the result of an investigation into the politics or rural mail carriers in Indiana as filed by Louis Zoercher, secretary to William E. Cox, representative from the third district, shows the standing in the Eighth district as follows: Adams, 6 democrats, 20 republicans; Jay, 28 republicans; Randolph, 3 democrats, 38 republicans. PLEASING GERMAN SONG. Rev. Karl Thompson preached his last sermon of the conference year at Mt. Pleasant church last evening. A pleasing surprise to all at the close of the sermon, was the German song given by Samuel and John Fuhrman, Samuel and Ed Spangler and Miss Bertha Spangler. This was a song that the men sung in their boyhood days in Sunday school. Tbev were applauded until they were forced to respond with another song. DR. BEAVERS’ ADDRESS. Before the High School Friday Morning—A Practical Talk. Dr. Beavers gave a most practical address yesterday before the high school, it being one of the hygiene series. His subject was “Emergencies—Medical and Surgical” and he told of the many practical things to be applied as first aids to the sick and injured, knowledge which in more than one instance has saved those in distress, until a physician can make the trip to give the regular attention. ELKS’ CHARITY BALL. Fred Schaub received definite word this morning from the musicians, Franklin and Polly, pianist and trap drum player, of Marion, that they would be here Monday evening to play for the local Elks’ charity ball. The musicians are the best in the state. Tickets for the ball are $1 a couple. The proceeds will be used to help the poor. Rev. J. H. Rilling of the Evangelical church will preach his last sermons of the conference year tomorrow and will leave Monday for Indianapolis to attend the annual conference, beginning Tuesday and continuing over Sunday. Bishop Horn of Cleveland, Ohio, will preside. Rev. Kaley of Berne and Rev. Heil of Linn Grove will also go. Seventy-five or eighty ministers are included in this organization. Rev. R. L. Semans of the Methodist church also closes his year here tomorrow, and will go to Tipton for the annual North Indiana conference. He is a member of the board of examiners and will go Tuesday for preliminary work. The conference proper begins Wednesday and will lasts throughout Monday evening, the appointments probably being read Monday evening or Tuesday morning. Bishop McDowell of Chicago will be in charge. Several Tipton homes have been swept away by the floods,

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but it is thought the disaster of the present week will not prevent the conference. Rev. Karl Thompson of the Decatur circuit will also go. r, —— , COURT HOUSE QUIET. Real estate transfers: E. A. Mereman et al, to Fred Reppert, lot 76, Decatur, $1500; Charles E. Sullivan et al. to Simon Smith, lot 127, Berne, S2OOO. Court was adjourned today noon, and the trial of the Bernard damage case will be resumed Monday morning. The evidence is nearly all in. The final report of Charles Sether, administrator of the Peter Sather estate, was approved and' the administrator discharged. Eli Meyer vs. George Gunsett, appearance by Parrish for Gunsett. Rule to answer.

fire You Happy? If you are it is safe to say that yon enjoy good health, as it is impassible to be happy unless you are well. Noted physicians will tell you that bad stomachs and torpid livers are the cause of 95 per cent of all diseases. For the past 42 years SEVEN BARKS has proved to be the unequalled remedy for al] STOMACH, LIVER and KIDNEY troubles, and the greatest tonic and blood purifier known. It makes your digestion what it should lie and keeps your entire system in good condition. Price of SEVEN BARKS is but 50 cents a bottle at all druggists. Money refunded if not satisfied. Address * LYMAN BROWN, 6S Murray SL, New York, N.Y. x- -a. b Good Things to Eat will hold no joys for you if yon have indigestion or any STOMACI. LIVER or KIDNEY trouble. You need not pay big doctor’s bills, but if you suffer from any of these aihnents just step into yonr nearest druggist and get a 50 cent bottle of SEVEN BARKS, tt>« great household remedy, the finest trnn- aud blood purifier known. If yoßreymern is run down and yon want tin regain yonr youthful energy. SEVEN BARKS will insnaplish it, make your food digest and give you new life. Money refunded if dissirtisflod. Try it and enjoy your meals. Address LYMAN BROWN, 6S Murray St., New York, N.Y, DR. COX’S Barbed Wire LINIMENT GUARANTEE.? to hats; without leav ing a blemish, or MONKY REFUNDED, f>Oo and SI.OO sizes for Ereeh wounds, old ores, sore backs and Moulders, burns ants. bruises. 26c size for Family Use. DR. COX'S PAINLESS BLISTER is painless and guar wired t« cure Spavin, Ringbone, Curt Sweeny, Splint, Puffs, or any enlarges ent of" bone o; muscle, or money refunded. Pnce 50c. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS uhkjASx. OVER 6S YF iRS Tuaoe Marks Designs rrvvvT ’ Copyrights 4c. Anvone Fending r sketch and <lencrlptlon may qnfckly ascertain our oplalnn free whether an Invention is probably patentable. Communion tiona strict ly cc uflden t tnl. HANDBOOK on Patent! sent free. Oldest aeeney for sec»irn>fr patents. Patents taken throeah Mama A Co. receive tpfcial ratice, wltteont cbar—, Ln the Scientific Haertcan. A handsomely Ulu-iWabed ▼•eft I y 1,« r e <>-. cig culution of aw? wtatflk Warrne. T« rr-- ’.■> F year; fa*- *r-r«t*Te.(X IkJM KrtmaAwMe* V fiv. WWwni tX J.