Decatur Democrat, Volume 58, Number 16, Decatur, Adams County, 17 April 1913 — Page 7
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Blds were opened at 10 o’clock this , morning at the office of Architect Os* • car Hoffman, for the new Bobo school 1 building in St. Mary's township, of | which O. J. Sutniin is trustee. The . I bids were made as follows: Bern Art Stone Co $12,625.00 j\Vm. Christen 12,975.00 j Linn & Patten 13,633,00 Fred Hoffman 13,9X9.00 Amos Crillig 13,992.001 Mann & Christen 13,995.00 1 W. O. Newlin 14,732.00 Owing to other details coming up the contract will not be let until late this afternoon. The school building will be one of the most modern and 1 j up-to-date school buildings in the ■ I county when completed, having the : boys' and girls’ play rooms, lavatory, and heating plant in the basement, ; while the upper floor will be divided I Into three large class rooms and also l a principal's office. Sanitary drinking fountains will also be placed in the building. —o Today's session of the board of county commissioners was one of the 1 busiest in many a term. Contracts 1 for six roads, four bridges, road sup-' plies and typewriters were awarded and bids opened for the new monument. Bids were offered for the road supplies by the Galion Iron Works on pipe, the Berne Supply Co., Erie Stone Co., A. & C. Stone Co., and contracts were entered into with each. MACADAM ROAD BIDS. J. J. Yoder Road. Jacob Musser $7,000.00 L. O. Bears 6,239.00 Warren Bros 6,500.00 1 E. H. Fhust 6,550.00' Merryman & Fugate 6,450.00' Clay Engle 6,601.00 Smith & Mathys 6,220.00 Contract awarded to Smith & 5 Mathys. Spring Hill. ' Merryman & Fugate $4,000.00 L. O. Bears 3,989.00 Eli Engle- 3,700.00 Warren Bros 3,890.00 E. H. Faust 3,626.00 ’ Erie Stone Co 4,299.00 Smith & Mathys 3,500.00 Contract awarded to E. H. Faust. Frank Coppess. L. O. Bears $2,377.00 Eli Engle 2,450.00 J. O. Hoagland 2,176.00 Warren Bros 2,475.00 . Merryman & Fugate 2,300.90 . Smith & Mathys 2,550.00 Contract awarded to Merryman & Fugate. Byron Whitredge. Erie Stone Co. $2,699.00 David Gerber 2,200.00 Clay Engle 2,722.00 E. H. Faust 2,800.00 ' Merryman & Fugate 2,938.00 i L. W. Frank 2,378.00 ' Smith & Mathys 2,685.00 Contract awarded to Eli Gerber. Gephart Road. j J. R. Tumbleson $1,374.00 L. W. Frank 1,239.00 ! Erie Stone Co 1,537.00 I Contract, awarded to Tumbleson. John Christen Road. Merryman & Fugate $3,698.00 J. O. Hoagland 3,481.50 Warren Bros 3,750.00 Julius Haugk 3590.00 Clay Engle 3,600.00 Contract awarded to Hoagland. BIDS ON BRIDGES. McKnight, Root Township. Burk Construction C 052,540.00 Berne Supply Co 2,448.00 Sam Butler 2,448.00 Chris Musser 2,450.00 J. D. Mosure, French. I Noah Bieberstlne $ 560.00 Berne Supply Co. 357.00 Hardison, Wabash. Burk Construction C 053,049.00 Berne Supply Co. (for abutments alone) 1,700.00 Ralston, Jefferson. Berne Supply Cos 472.00 Studler, Hartford. Noah Belberstine $ 337.00 Berne Supply Co 254.00 TYPEWRITERS. L. C. Smith Cos 92.50 I Remington Co 94.05 Contract awarded to Remington. BIDS ON MONUMENT. Although a half dozen firms planned to bld on the new soldiers’ monument there were but two filed when the j time came this morning, these being by the Terre Haute Stone company of j Terre Haute and the Wemhoff Monu-1 mental Company of this city. Each ■ filed several bids as follows: Terre Haute Stone Co. Gray Barre granite, with bronze tablets $9,585.00 j Dark Gray granite 9,120.001 Light Gray granite 8,710.00 Light Gray granite with Bedford platform and steps.... 8,450.00 Georgia Marble 8,340.00 ! Blue Bedford 6,825.00 ' Oglesby Georgia 8,150.00 Wemhoff Monumental Co. Bedford Blue stone $6230.00 With Bronze Tablets 6,411.00 With steps and platform as in t plans 6,186.00 The appropriation for the monument is SIO,OOO. Out of this must , come the expense of advertising and :
r the sculptor, Mr. Mulligan, who does the finishing Is to receive $3,500. This leaves but about $6,400 with which to build the monument. The commissioners will likely award the •contract tomorrow. Lawrence E. Archbold filed a petition for appointment as a student to Purdue and the board appointed said 'Archbold for a period of one year from June 1, 1913. County Superintendent Opllger was authorized to appoint an assistant in his office at a cost not to exceed that I . provided by law, and for a period of not more than 120 days. O- —- ", ■ — ■■ ■ ■ IThe Panama Morning Journal gives the following account of what F. M. Schlrmeyer considers his most de'lightful day of his recent Panama trip, the same being a boat excursion to Tahoga by twenty of the visiting shriners: “One of the most pleasant events of the season took place on Easter Sunday when a local resident of Ancon 1 and a member of the Shrine of San I Francisco chartered a boat and chaperoned the party to and from the island. Leaving Balboa at 9 o'clock, the party sailed around the Islands where the fortifications are being built and were greatly impressed with the wonderful natural facilities and the magnitude of the great work of construction. Thence direct to the : island, where the beauty of the surroundings of the Commission sanitarium and the historic interest of the native village were greatly enjoyed, while the splendid dinner arranged by the sanitarium hosts certainly ''reached the hearts of all through the • proper channel. The ancient church I was the central point of Interest : where for 400 years vespers have been sung. Shells of the ocean were gathered > from the shore and corals of beauty • from the bottom of the sea were pur--1 chased as souvenirs of the trip, and it ), Is whispered that some of the party > witnessed a very Interesting event, 1 but particulars are not available at 1' the present w-rtting, although some ' remarks were dropped In a low voice I that sound more like “chicken fight" ); than it did like “turkey trot.” > “The party returned to the Island > of Taboguila and thence by the leper > settlement, but made no landings. > Songs and stories were the order of ) the day when returning and on arriv- :' ing at Balboa unanimous expressions I were made that it was one of the ' most enjoyable Easter Sundays of I their lives. The visitors are leaving ) the isthmus today and are amazed I' with the magnitude of the great work ) here and expressed great admiration I I of the executive heads of the great ) departments who are constructing > the canal, as well as those who made it possible to build it. “The visiting members of the party 1 were: Messrs. Doud, Shell, E. Yar- • nelle, Vesey, Mossman, Miller and • Foster of Fort Wayne, Ind.; Judge iTuthill and R. S. Tuthlll, jr., A. Mar[shall and son of Chicago; R. Buck1 thorpe, Jacksonville, Ill.; H. Shai- ' mold, San Francisco; H. P. Anderson. L Tulsa, Okla.; W. Yarnelle, Wabash, > Ind.; F. Schirmeyer, Decatur, Ind.; 1 W. Wolfarth, Chicago; Judge Garlow, Columbus, Neb., and W. Goebel, of New York City. The last named started yesterday to walk to Colon in order I to gratify his desire to walk from ' ocean to ocean.” I - ■■ oI At the closing session of the North Indiana conference at Tipton Monday I evening, Bishop McDowell read the I assignments, a matter of great interest to the ministers and their charges. I Rev. R. L. Semans, who has served two years most faithfully, and with i great results to his charge in this city, both spiritually and materially, was ' assigned to the First church at Goshen. Rev. D. T. Stephenson was nam- ' ed to succeed him at the Decatur 1 church. Rev. Karl Thompson of the Decatur circuit and Rev. Hochstedler of the Bobo circuit, were returned. The Rev. Stephenson, the new Decatur pastor, comes here from the church at Goshen, to which the Rev. Semans will go the assignments bringing about simply an exchange of pasi tors between these two pastorates. Those who know the Rev. Stephenson speak highly of him and he will be [ cordially received. I There is, however, much regret over the leaving of the Rev. Semans, w-ho has been a devoted minister and worker for the cause, and the assignment to another place was made over the [recommendation of the local board, as lat its last quarterly meeting commended his w-ork and asked that he be returned to the Decatur church. Rev. Semans will not return until this afternoon from Indianapolis and could not be interviewed. It is understood, however .that he will have his first services at the Goshen church next Sunday, but arrangements for the removal of his family to the new home have not yet been made. J. A. Beatty was retained as superintendent of the Fort Wayne district, of which the appointments in full are here given:
Angola, H. S. Nickerson; Auburn, F. F. Thornburg; Bluffton, W. T. Arnold; Bluffton circuit, to be supplied; Bobo, J. Hochstedler; Coesce, F. P. • Johnson; Decatur, D. T. Stephenson; jDecatur circuit, R. K. Thompson; Ft. I Wayne, First church, D. H. Guild; Ft. Wayne, Simpson church, W. A. Griest; 1 Ft. Wayne, St. Paul’s church, F. 11. Cresneau; Ft, Wayne, Trinity-church, ' T. M. Hill; Ft. Wayne, Wayne Street [church, C. C. Travis; Ft. Wayne cir[cult, to be supplied; Fremont, Karl 11. Garrett, Charles Tinkham; Geneva, E. Dunbar; Geneva circuit, A. W. Hoover; Hamilton, J. B. Campbell; ' Harlan, F. V. Westhaver; Hoagland, If. L. Lengleck; Hundon and Ashley, O. O. Hickman; Huntertown, George ' Maupin; Monroe, J. Phillips; Monroe- , ville, O. M. Hollopeter; Montpelier, J. O. Bills; New Haven, A. R. Gilliam; ■ Orland, B. F. Hornaday; Ossian, L. 1 Delhi; Pennville, J. E. Coffin; Port- ' land, U. 8. A. Bridge; Portland circuit, J. C. Valentine; Spencerville, to be supplied; Woodbum, P. H. Walter; [ York, Homer E. Elliott. Rev. B. E. Parker, son-in-law of J. 1 D. Hale, was returned to the pastorate of the Richmond First church; C. B. ■ Sweeney goes to Modoc in that dis- • , trict, and E. A. Bunner, a former i Pleasant Mills man, lately located at I, Huntertown, goes to Spiceland, in the 1 Richmond district, of which W. B. I Freeman,is superintendent. -1 M. S. Marble is superintendent of ’ the Wabash district; Rev. G. B. Work ■: was returned to Warren. In the Lo- • gansport district B. S. Hollopeter is E superintendent. J. C. White was re- ■ turned to the Grace church, Kokomo, [and J. A. Sprague to the Main street f church there. B Somerville Light Is superintendent II of the Goshen district. I. R. Goodwin t has charges of the churches at Wol“[cottville and Rome City. The following Epworth League offld[cers for next year were announced to y | serve with the conference: President, ’• B. Earle Parker; flirst vice president, 'I [Silas Cates; second vice president, O. >’ [T. Martin; third vice president, W. W. L-Wiant; treasurer. Edward Wilson; t secretary, Miss Nellie Mason; junior e superintendent, Elsie Freeman. e Much interest centers in the Evangelical ministerial appointments as <1 read at the close of the conference r in Injlianapolis. Besides the Adams ’■ county appointments announced in f | this paper Monday, the following will '’■jbe of Interest to Decatur people: s i J. W. Metzner was named presiding e elder of the Elkhart district; Misha's [waka, D. D. Spangler; Peru, Rev. C. P. 8 .Maas. <l l J. J. Wise was named presiding eld1' er of the Indianapolis district; Huntn jington, A. B. Haist; Louisville, Ky., t First church, D. E. Zechiel, and TrinK ity church, D. O. Wise, returned. e I Fort Wayne District—S. H. Baumgartner, presiding elder; Avilla, F. S. S’l Erne; Berne, D. A. Kaley; Bippus, E. r 'iD. Haley: Celina circuit, W. S. Trad cey; Celina Mission, B. E. Koenig; e Chattanooga, J. L. Buyer, jr.; Decatur, '• J. H. Rilling; Defiance circuit, F. S. I Snyder; Defiance Mission, E. H. Baum- ■’ [gartner; Edgerton, J. F. Kroft; Fort ‘■.Wayne, Bethel, E. Q. Laudeman; Fort ’> Wayne, Crescent Avenue, C. Hirsch- ■ man; Greenville, E. R. Roop; Hunt'•[ington, C. H. Burgener; Kendallville, ls W. H. Freshley; Linn Grove, D. R. t- Heil; Markle, E. E. Miller; Phillipsr burg, D. P. Claypool; Portland, F. F. 11 McClure; Portland circuit, W. I. Weyant; Ridgeville, J. W. Carter; Scott, G. F. Zuber; Syracuse, W. H. Mygrant; Van Wert, F. J. Stedcke; Way terloo, A. Geist; Webster, A. D. e Kroft; Wolcottvvlile, J. Rees; Wabash '• circuit, J. M. Lantz. ’• The Rev. J. Newman, South Bend, ■' was appointed conference evangelist No meeting place was selected for ’> next year's conference, the matter be--3 ing left in the hands of the presiding ' elders and the bishops of the various ■ districts. r The Rev. E. Q. Laudeman of Wl--3 nona Lake, was assigned to the Bethr el Mission church at Fort Wayne to succeed the Rev. Clyde Boyer, who re- ' signed to return to the Erie mission 3 at Chicago. The statistical committee reported ( ■ the church has a membership in Tn-1 ’ diana of 12,835, with 1,192 conversions •! last year, an increase of 328 over the ; 1 1 previous fiscal year. The Sunday j ’ school has a total membership of 21,712, an Increase of 859 over the pre- ’ vious fiscal year. The committee rc-i ’ ported $171,621.27 had been raised dur-' • ing the fiscal year for all purposes and, ■ that $20,000 had been subscribed fori ’ missionary work. 1 Rev. J. H. Rilling returned home | ' last evening from Indianapolis, and 1 is cordially greeted by the members ■ • of his congregation and his other. ' friends, all of whom are heartily glad [ of his return. During the conference | ■ Sunday afternoon, over $2,000 was I raised for the missionary cause. | GIRL WANTED—For general housework. Only two in family.—J. H. Stone, 215 Second St. 86t3
Children Cry FOR FLETCHER’S CABT O R ( A
The fight between the anti-saloon forces and the applicants for liquor licenses in the second ward of the city of Decatur, was taken up In earnest. before the board of commissioners a*. 9:30 o'clock this morning, the session being held in the court room to accomodate the several hundred who wished to hear the proceedings. The remonstrance was filed last Friday and contained 183 names. The number necessary is 169, but the saloon mon claim that a sufficient number of the signers were not legal voters to make that number, and were represented in court by their attorneys. The commissioners formed themselves into a court and announced they were ready to hear the cause. About the attorneys tables were seated R. C. Minton, State attorney for the anti-saloon league of Indiana, L. C. Walters and Milton Miller for the ‘dry’ forces and A. P. Beatty and Schafer Peterson representing the applicants. County attorney C. J. Lutz was also present'to advise with the board. The crowd was composed of perhaps three hundred people, men and women each side being fairly well represented, though the “drys” seemed to have the larger attendance. In the crowd were fifty or more women. Attorneys for the applicants started the proceedings by a motion to strike out the remonstrance, on the grounds that it was filed only three days befoor the commissioners session opened instead of five as provided. The conflict came over a section of the acts of 1911 which provides that in cas&s where remonstrances are filed against , renewals that they must be filed five ; days. Speeches were made by Mr. Beatty and Mr. Peterson for the applit cants while Mr. Minton was heard i twice for the antis. The arguments - were concluded at 10:35 and after a conference of the board and county - attorney which continued about five > minutes they promptly announced that the motion was overruled, thus giv- , ing the “drys" the first victory in the . cause. Attorneys for the saloon men . then presented a verified objection to ; twenty-one of the signers to the rer monstrance, the answer being a five page document filed in the name of C. Rademacker, whose application is - the first of the six on the record. Aft--3 er the usual preliminary statements 3 the answer or objection to the remon--3 strance of John D. Andrews et al as i the cause appears, states that the fol--1 lowing signed the remonstrance without having the legal right to do so and 5 for the causes given: Frank Johns .alleged did not live . in ward thirty days. Russell Haruff, alleged to be resi- - dent in Allen county. Charles Hill, alleged did not live in , ward thirty days. Mike Heinica, alleged to live in third ward. Lester Baughman, alleged to live in, . Third ward. Merl Laisure, alleged to reside in - Chicago. G. H. Myers, alleged to be resident , of Illinois. E. B. Kern, alleged not a legal voter -of ward. t Jake Grim, alleged did not live in t ward thirty days. Clinton Grim, alleged did not live in ■ ward thirty days. , D. A. Baumgartner, alleged to be vo- . ter of Hartford township. G. O. or George Sheler, alleged to be . resident of Michigan. Will A. Rundell, alleged not resl- , dent of this county. John Kratner, alleged did not live in - ward thirty days. L. W. Love, alleged to be resident of i Third ward. Elijah Walters, alleged to be resl- , dent of First ward. . Jonathan Sovine, alleged to be resl- ■ dent of First ward. William Jackson, alleged to be resi- ; dent of First ward. i L. D. Lake, alleged to be resident of Third ward. Jess H. Cole, alleged did not sign or . authorize signature. i Edwin Fledderjohann, alleged to be resident of Third ward. After the filing of this document, the attorneys for the antis, asked a short time to look over the objections, [which was granted and the cause was adjourned until 1 o'clock this afternoon. I At one time during the proceedings, while Attorney Peterson was speaking, several hisses were heard, but the 1 sheriff promptly rapped for order, and lit did not occur again. Had it been repeated, it is likely the court room . would have been cleared. Afternoon Session. j At 1:15 o’clock this afternoon the real battle began. The verified objecI tion filed by the applicants, which means the statement under oath that [ certain remonstrators had not the I right to sign, places the burden of ; proof on the remonstrators. Accordi ingly they read a list of thirty or forty | witnesses and those present were sworn. From the manner in which every inch is being contested, it seems possible that the case may continue several days. The first witness called was L. W. Love, United Brethren minister, who
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testified that he had lived in Second ward, Decatur, since September 15, last. George and John Hill were called to prove that their brother, Charles Hill, ' is a resident of the Second ward, Decatur. Objections to this manner of ! proof were made, but overruled. ■ George Hill swore that his brother l’v* ed a square south of Adams street, but was recalled later and said that he 1 had made a mis-statement. Rev. W. J. 1 Wyers and D. W. Myers testified that the residence of G. H. Myers is In 1 Second ward, Decatur, that he is livI ing in Bloomington, 111., but retained ’ his residence here when he left. Several tilts during the examinations re--1 suited and arguments were made by the attorneys on various points. The ’ validity of Rev. G. H. Myers was still being discussed at 2:30. Attorney Leonard of Fort Wayne ar- ' rived at 1:45 and is assisting the attorneys for the applicants.
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