Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 22, Number 1, Decatur, Adams County, 1 January 1924 — Page 6
■ BOY • STOUTS (Cvnducua t>» National Council ot th. Bo> Seoul, ot America I SCOUTS AND •‘GOOD TURNS' The "dully good turn," wblii every buy scout when lie joins tht ranks of the movement pledges him self to perform, bus two impresslv. Illustrations in the following in stances: While returning home from sclmoti fer lunch, Scout Mux Puds of Jer sey City. N. J.. noted un American ting attached to u rulnsouked, sagging halyard, lying on the pavements of a Wide boulevard. Glancing up the lud saw that u whole row of Bugs which had been strung across the street for u recent purude hud become loosened. “One end of the line to which the flags were attached was high In a tree," says a New York daily, "lh* other end was tied to un electric light pole on the opposite side of the street. Up the tne went Max. Untying the knot, he wound the rope around Ida fingers preparatory to taking up the slack. “Along the boulevard at that moment came an automobile,” continue* the story. "Just us Mux lifted th* rope a bit to tighten it, the car struck It. The next Instant bls flngctv torn from his bund and himself torn from bls perch In the tree, Mux lay on the ground In un agony of pain. Twa passing motorcycle policemen saw the accident. One dashed after the cur. The other summoned an ambulance nnd rushed Mux to the hospital, where ids dangling fingers were amputated Just above the knuckles. “ ‘When folks ask you how you lost ’em, buddy, what are you going to sayY asked a sick world war veteran In the next cot. "•Say 1 had ’em Jerked off by a rope,' answered Max. “ ‘Buddy, listen,' pleaded the veteran, ‘don’t do that. You've got somethin' better'n u medal —tell 'em you lost 'em savin' the American flag.'" In the second Instance, sixteen yearold Eagle Scout Carlton Price of Syracuse, N. Y.. through quick and Intelligent application of scout training in first aid. saved a baby from bleeding to death from a severed artery, in the desperate moment of crisis, while parent* and friends In a panic stood helpless watching the child's life ebbing away, the boy calmly putting Into practice his knowledge, pressed back the openings ot the wound, held them In place with a allver knife, and performed expertly with soft old linen the required bandaging. "The three year old baby, playing in the fields near bls father's home, eight miles from Port Byron, N. Y„ ran Into the reaper and his right foot wh almost severed at the ankle," states the Syracuse Journal. "Th* father, Lynn Van Gilder, unaware tlie child was In the field, saw him too late as his little pink dress flashed alongside the razorlike blades. "Eagle Scout Carlton Price is working for the summer ■« the Van Gilder farm. Hearing the father'* cry he hastened over and helped to carry the baby to the farmhouse. In tlie midst of panic he was the calm, cool person who took charge of things. "When the doctor came he marveled a boy could do such an expert Job of bandaging and left everything as It was until the child was brought to the Good Shepherd hospital where the foot was operated upon." FROM GOVERNOR MOORE—"If there Is anything I can do to help the great boy scout movement you may command me," states Gov. Charles (1 .Moore of Idaho, In a communication to James E. West, chief scout executive. "If every boy la the country were a member of the boy scout organisation ■>ur problems of radicalism would h* forgotten after one generation. Tha hoy scout is a better boy at home, at school and on the street. He la the lietter citizen In the making." The governor Is an honorary member. •COUT TROOP "MELTING POT" In boy arout Troop 40 of g Rn Kr||> . i-lwn are boys represctiung Mexico. Assyria, Greece, Lithuania. Ituaat*. Germany, Italy. Holland. Frame. Eiu' land, HcoGaud and America. The beys were either born io one of the 13 coun tries or their parents are natives of «e of them. United Hutes t onunla doner of Natural last lon Haymond F. Grist "ays: "Boy *routa form nnd maintain the all-American ‘melting put* among the youth of our country." •COUTH TO AID AIRMEN • Boy scout "good turns" are now to include the aerial world A special course of Instruction for the scouts teaching them how to be of service m case of airplane acrldenta and how to give aaalatance to pilots, la now under consideration. The national council. Hoy Scouts of America, has accepted In principle cooperative plana suggnated by the National Aeronautic association, the post office and War and Navy departments regarding the e*tabllalunent of airplane landing OsliU. -
PAPER TELLS OF DISASTROUS FIRE Shelby, Ohio, Daily Globe, Gives Account Os Hotel Fire There A copy of the Shelby, Ohio, Dully, globe, containing un account of the IlHastrous Are which damaged the Shelby Hotel, which is conducted by ( Mr. and Mrs. F. (1. Allweln, former ( Decatur people, on Christmas morn-| ' ng. was received hen-. The paper says in part: Claude Holmes, 27. was burned to death In his room on the third flour I of the Shelby Hotel at 3 o'clock I Christmas n.iornlng. The fire, which • damaged the third floor, is supposed 1 to have started when Holmes went ' to bed smoking a clgaret. About 1 1 o'clock he was last seen standing in ’ front of the office of the hotel and remarked he believed he would retire. That was the last seen of him' , until 4:30. when his charred body| t was found in a corner of his room . where ho had staggered from his bod ( i and fallen across a chair. Bis body 1 was burned to a crisp and about the | ' only moans of identifirtition was a ring. | Other occupants of the third floor 1 were awakened by the explosion of a ' box of cartridges which stood on a i stand in Holmes' room. Their rooms i and the halls were filled with smoke i and they made their escape by win- ' dows and fire escapes, many of them ' clad only in their night clothes and some barely having time to slip an overcoat over their underclothes. Officer Henry Brakes, who was on the east side beat, was passing the hotel at 3 o'clock Christmas morning , when he fancied he heard groans or ( an infant crying on the second or, third floor. Looking up. he saw clouds of. smoke rolling out of the front third floor windows. Ritnning l to the police telephone at the corner, he sent in a fire alarm and returned to the hotel. He entered by the side door on South Broadway and reached' the landing on the second floor where he was stopped by the smoke which filled the corridors and halls. There he met David Cuppelt and his son. Ralph. who were th- first oc-, (cupanta of the third floor to discover ( the fire. Cuppett said he was awakened shortly after 3 o'clock by hear- ( i tug some one faintly calling for help. iin muffled tones. He called his son and they located the cries as coming 1 from the room occupied by Holmes. ’ Rapping at the door, they asked what 1 was going on. but received no reply, and at that time they saw no indication of fire. Failing to receive any ' response, they returned to their I rooms and a few minutes later heard 'the explosion of five or six catridges. Again they went to Holmes' room and this time broke open the door but the suffocating smoke rolled out into the corridor in such volumes they were unable to enter and were forced back farther and farther from , the room. Cuppett and his son then aroused i the other sleepers on the third floor and the roomers on the second floor. I i By this time the Are had gained con- ’ 1 aiderable headway and. owing to the ■ I terrible smoke, the guests were glad ' Ito escape from their rooms without any thought of saving their clothes, trunks or furniture. Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Allweln and family, who own and conduct the Shelby Hot*!, were not at home 1 - when the fire occurred. They had ! gone to Decatur. Ind. to spend ’ Christmas with Mrs. Allweln'* par--1 |ems Mr. Allweln was reached there ,by telegraph yesterday morning and returned to Shelby about noon. , While the damage has not been i estimated officially, it la believed II will easily coat SS.OW) to put the building in condition and replace the ■ iurnltnre and equipment. The hotel was locked up yesterday to await the 'arrival of the Insurance adjusters, after which. Mr. Allweln statea. the ! work of rebuilding and remodeling will go forward rapidly. Mr. Allweln and family has barely ' arrived at Decatur to spend Christi mas when he received the telegram notifying him nf the fire. Hl* broth ’ rr In law rushed h'm twenty-two mile* by automobile to Fort Wayne. ■ Where he arrived Just In time to catch , a train which was a few minute* late. — O' mtUNtlt UTTI.K t.1H1.-s < ot <lll H'ANEV AND TAB COM- , |SH Nt. I. (In. Ml Hill. ait! Un I an i awful reuah. I <nt a bolt. «f Eot.KY’s I llltlSTT AND TAIt coMPOttNli Jnd 1 •J'*. *»• greatly r»li»VMi,“ writes Clyde It Hrnaon. Mstlhrnok. Virginia Th. beat I remedy for coughs. row*. boarsen... , r*iirvr«* pt>»hibtly ntvl rlT»’« llveiv FOI.RY‘R IIONkY AN|| TAIt <‘oM. | MWIRII (hr#* *«*n*rt« - - —O’— Clinton—Liquor was found nt only one place out of twenty-flve raided by member* of the Horse Thief De- , |tecllvr association here.
UEC ITT'R PART DEMOCRAT TI T>U xV : '- 1 ' iiY 1
Agriculture Is Improving , (Dy Henry C .Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture). I The industry, courage and faith evli den< ed by tlie farmers of the Nation during tlie past three years are slowly bringing their reward. Improvement in agricultural conditions continues —not as readily ns desired or , needed, nor as rapidly as deserved, but nevertheless it continues. I lie promise of the year has been fulfulled. I So we come to the end of tlie third I year of post war depression with a I feeling of greater confidence born' of better limes already realized and with Justified hope of still further improvement in 1924. In general, the crops of 1923 were good. Some sections in the cottpn 1 belt and in the wheat licit suffered from ravages of weather and Insect pests, but the aggregate crop production was equal to the average of the five preceding years. Considering money return we find < that the values of most crops are greater than In 1922. The total value ' lof all crops is 12 per cent greater. The values of wheat, rye clover seed, (cranberry, peach and pear crops are (below 1922; in the case of wheat 11 per cent below. The values of all other important crops are greater. It is difficult to measure the productive value of livestock during the year, dependent as it is upon corps marketed m that form. In general, it has been a properous year for sheep growers, fairly good for dairymen. less satisfactory for producers of hogs, and discouraging for growers of range cattle. Cattle feeders, however, have done very well on the whole. There are discouraging conditions still to be overcome. There is the burden of debt. There are heavy tax*es to be not. Jhe cost of production land of what the farmers buy remains 'high. Farmers in the spring wheat ■ territory especially are in sore straits 'from conditions largely beyond their control. Experience gained during these 'years of depression, however, together with progress already made, warrant a hopeful attitude for the' coming year. Gradually crop acreage is being better adjusted. The de-1 mestic market continues strong. The , .children keep coming, and that ( means a steady increasing number of ( months to be fed. Those whowtay Iby the farm and do goisl farming I can look forward to better times as a reward for their years of toil and .hardship. Those whose btisinesses depend dlrei tly upon farm purchases can find decided encouragement in the growing gross income oj the farm : er, for he will buy as his income ex-1 panda. The year 1924 comes with the promise of continued improvement in the material prosperity of the farm er. and the fafmer continues to be the material and spiritual backbone of the Nation. QUART OF WATER CLEANS KIDNEYS I ——— I Take a Little Salta if Vour Back Hurt*, or Bladder I* Troubling You No man or woman can make a mia--1 take by flushing the kidneys occasiont ally. Bays a well known authority. I Eating too much rich food creates . acid*, which excite th" kidney*. They I become overworked from the attain, get aluggUh and fail to Alter the; • Poison* from the blood. 1 Rheumatlem, headaches, live trouble, nervousneas, dizziness, sleeplessness and urinary dlaordera often come from sluggish t kidney*. , The moment you feel a dull ache , In the kidney*, or your back hurt* i 2r.. ls ,h * u ’’loudy. offensive. full of sediment. Irregular of passage » or atteqded bv a sensation ot scald . IM, begin drinking a quart of water; •'J '! b L' Mbout four ounces Salt* from any pharmacy; I «I take a tableapoonfui lu a glass O s (water before breakfast, amt m a few rjday* your kidney* atav *ct fine. Thl* famous salts Is made from th* ~ r*P-s and lemon Juice, combined with llthla. and lias been used '■ F**” H»«h nnd stimulate lhe a kidneys; also to help neutralise the 'acid* in the system, so they no long i r •"•‘•‘•oh. thus often reliev- • Ing bladder weakness • Jad Halts I* Inexpensive; makes a delightful efferveserpt lllhla-water drink which everyonm should taka now and the* to help keep the kid nrys clean and active nd the blood pure, thereby often al . ting serious . kidney complications. I *|| means i hav your physician i in* v„ur < kidney* at least |wi<>* y i 4ople Growers Os Ch Crops To Mw l a y Indianapolis, Jan of ' canning crop* In I Saturday at Elwoodl I •.of taking Anal IsuMniued for the I ■ t :9 l
the canning crops growers for the cooperative marketing of their products. This meeting Is the outgrowth of that held at Indianapolis. Dee. 8. when a committee composed of! bawrence V. Ray and C. N. Knick, of Elwood, was appointed to go to < h ■ ~a g o to confer with Walton Detect and Aaron Sapiro on the form ot agreement. Tills agreement and contract has been drafted and will be laid before the general meeting of the canning crops growers at Elwood Saturday. AN OLD RECIPE TO DARKEN HAIR Sage Tea and Sulphur 1 urns Gray, Faded Hair Dark and Glossy Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compounded, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streaked or gray. Years ago the only way to get this inlture made to make It at home, which is mussy and troublesome. Now adays we simply ask at any drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound." You will get a large bottle of this old-time recipe improved by the addition of other ingredients, at very little cost. Everybody uses this preparation now, because no one can possibly tell that you darkened your hair, as It doe* It so naturally | and evenly. You dampen a sponge or. soft brush with it and draw this, through your hair, taking one small I strand at a time; by morning the gray 1 hair disappears, and after another ap-, plication or two, your hair beewnes I beautifully dark, thick and glossy and you look years younger. ■ —■ — ■ Purdue Invites Utilities To Hold Meeting There ■ (t’nlted Press Staff Correspondent) Lafayette. Ind., Jan. I—President E. C. Elliott, of Purdue University, I has invited the Indiana Public Utility association to bold its annual meeting on the campus of the university, It was announced here today. Charles L. Henry, president of the association, has accepted the invitation for the organization, and plans 'are being made for the sessions to be held January 15 tq 16. A Joint program is being arranged l>y the utility men and the Purdue (authorities. A committee of the utilI ity association, comprising Frank G. .Cuppy, of the Lafayette Telephone company. Frank C. Jordan of the Indianapolis Water company, and John Mellett, secretary of the association, is planning the program. p will include an afternoon meeting devoted to business and addresses ion various phases of the utility busi-i ness, und a banquet to be served on - I the campus by the home economic* department of the university. The program for Tuesday, the second day, will be in charge of Dean A Putter, of the college of engineering, and Professor Harding, of the electrical engineering school. This season will be devoted to a ' study of the way* In which Purdue I •an serve the utility industry scienItiflcally and a discussion of methods 'by which the utility heads can co- , operate more effectively with the uni- ' versify in handling engineering prob lems. The univeralty Is already active in j solving problem* that confront the gas, telephone, traction, electric and water Industrie*, holding short courer work, line tests, and other hransea every year for instruction in met ches ot utility work. o.Motorist*! Clean hand* without water—Spec-Dev. — —■ e METHODISTS GAIN Church Show* Net Gain of 465.000 New Member* During Current Quardrennlum I A net gain of 465.000 new members .'for‘the Methodist Episcopal church I during the current Quadrennlmn. 'i bringing the grand total membership f|l<* 4.774.62 V. including 397.615 non-re-sident members. I* reported by the j Methodist Year-Book for IBS*, n<»w ' ready for distribution by the Method--I,lst Book Concern According to tffe ’iß"vereml Oliver 8 Kaketed. D. D. • IMHor. New York. N. Y. there are , 34.6 M preachers In the denomination. Including traveling preachers an d j | lot al pastors. ,1 Iher,. are 35.443 Incal Methodist . 1 churches in operation. 36.665 Bunday llst hoola with 413.161 officers and |*a•there and 4.650.434 pupil* in all d*. r partmMt*. Metbndlat parsonage, .number 16.061 and the combined estimated vabttion of parsonage un d rhurche* Is W 76.425.933. Epworth > j Letiguq membership I* now 743.366, [ The average salary for preacher* f of the demonlnatioti II now 51.677 per t . annum, while that of three years ago. was 11.100. according to the Year Book g£h-' Methodist Episcopal ehureh gay., •b.oos.gas (or ministerial support m
This include the support or ; Xw. district superintendents, ht • h))ps and aged ministers. H e i " I sion fund is the largest H hat * Protestant Episcopal chit 1 ■ 'sl3 500.000. The Northern are'next with $9,000,000. - I 0 — noted maccabee D p. Markey, Supreme Commander ’ For 33 Years Has ReMMd Staling that in the recently completed re-organization of The Ma<<a hPPS on a one hundred per cent legal rPß erve basis he has realized his life long ambition and was ready to give place to a younge rman, Mr D I M* ir key for 33 years Supreme Commander of The Maccabees, well known international fraternal benefit society, has re-signed to take effect January 1. and will be succeerer by Mr. A W. Frye, formerly Supreme LieutenantCommander. The active head of The Maccabees for a longer period than any other chief exective in the history of the of fraternial insurance, Mr. Mackey is generally regarded as the dean of the fraternal world, and in his resignation the last and one of the greatest of the poineers in the fraternal field gives up the reins of leadership. lak ing office as Supreme Commander in 1891 when The Maccabees had 17.000 | members and assests ot $19,500, he .has seen the society grow |inder his 'direction to one of the largest and I strongest institutions of its kind in J the country. He was from the beginining a strong advocate of adequate (rates on a actuarial basis, and in its final adoption of these principles the entire fraternal benefit systtem bears the mold of his influence. 0 ♦ «♦♦**♦***«♦*♦• ♦ TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY ♦ ♦ From the Daily Democrat Al** ♦ ♦ 20 year* ago thia day ♦ Jan. 1. —David Gerber assumes office as county clerk and C. C. Cloud 1 as recorder.
J Mr. and Mrs. I). M. Hensley enter-1 ' tain Young Matrons club and hus-; bands at New Years' party. ' PoetoMce moved into Fritzinger , building on Monroe street. j Have Miller, world famed roster- . tionist here to say good-bye to rela- [ tires before leaving on trip through Europe. The Valls are at Fort Wayne for a family vlait. David Hnnsicker and family return from visit at Belding. Mich. William Milter aaaumes office as county commissioner. Miss Goldie Gay entertains number i of her young friends at a watch party. Pioneers of Decatur i > * — I (Continued from Page One) • had pretty well corralled all the • available cash and its equivalent' - loose in the county. Says Rugg to Ntittmatt. "!«et s build a regular highway from the Ohio stale llne.i t smack dab across the county and on Into Fort Wayne and releive the atmosphere of some so thia sulphuric add " "!>ts build It of boards, like a bridge, and as It U only thirty miles frcm Willshire to Fort Wayne, we will only have to build one support at each <-nd arj we can charge enough toll to hold If up In the middle” i Nuttman fell for It and the lads al i Port Wayne got into the gahir. , r . . tually belelvlng Bsmud. and the i scheme was commenced to be dona Therefore the Fort Wayne and , Piqua Plank Hoad war born r Before we commence to tell about . jt. Will you forgive US If we take off » our hat and salute those promoters* To build wa. a , r -at undertaking , jt required nerve, push, money la- . hnr and quite a springllng of trees. I Be it remembered, there was a |- ready a highway, anch as It was. that t n,B Willshire wvai ward along , th. •devil's back bone” twisting BB d squirming Its tortuous way to Pleas „ ant Mills and then aini<ousiy on ttn . , tangur.tly until it reached Decatur and then on via Middletown until it J t-aehrd the vlltogo of Fort w . y J Thirteen months out of the, twelve no team, be they ox. horse w ass cruld be driven mt that road success.' hH y Without th. use of adjectives. , ! hl * ‘, hpn ‘ *« •» Ihe trail that • Ssmud hid in mind to improve » prndlgously, Thia la what he prop™ a H " hM «• gr»’h and bad hypnotised all and
O( sundry. , Operations commenced. Ma|b< about the year 1553. it was. but J" wav , t wa „ dry weather when they siarted. we presume they starte jn ,i ry weather so as to stlmulac & moral courage, as it were. ■ n ’ Now , there was certain hP^-" S peeifl<utions that must be some Os which were that nothing ■ but num ber one clear white out* plank should lie U*ed. without kno t;' knot hole, eight feet long. 'hre. n< in( , h ,. s thick and twelve incheaiinm 2h. b' laid side by snug yu and chumily. Stringers to be laid g “underneath and to be tour by ours-. of the same quality of oak. High | wav must be cleared of stumps and • d slig ht dump made. On the west aide , of th" plank road to construct a graded dirt road and on eac h side of high- . way ditches to be cut of a certain depthness. . 1 Then the fun commenced. Thirty two miles isn’t so very far In th*se , days of the flivver, but we have no'. been able to learn how many teato* of oxen it took to pull tlie stumps | and grade the right of way and scoop out lhe ditches and haul the plan*!*. We don’t know how many men worked or how long they worked or wheth er they belonged to the union. We know 'hat it took a little hunk of sawmills to saw the planks and tfce saws, they used, mind you. were the granddaddies of the circular sa*rs,| run by steam all right, but bad tho characteristics of the cross cut saw. worked up and down in true perflß icular fashion and made a saw kerf ‘ that to the uninitiated looked a* ft that was the main purpose of the effort rather than to saw out plaaK ' Then those planks and stringer* had to be delivered and laid and that ( ' took more oxen and by golly. It was a whale of a job. ) You can see. easily enough, how It * was done, and so after a while it -' *• all finished as fine as could be. ' We are not very good in tnathae * mattes but if those plank were a foot * j wide and there are so many feet in k a mile and there was thirtytwo mile* all together, there must have been ati . least a million planks. perhapM I “Clear white oak”—goodness me. OH
to have seen the marvelous tr--«d| that towered heavenward so n.aJegß tically. 1 We asked one of our lumber yarf boys what such a plank would cost nowadays, and he said at least fivd or six dollars. Can't you see Samuel was dealing in millions —board measure and dollars and cents? Without a doubt that was the longest bridge in the world. Part of the time, in wet weather, we suspect, it was a suspension bridge. The toll, we are to'd. did not fully support it. The thought, however had become a materialized actuality. Folks at Plenaant Milla could sit «n the front porch of the village grocery and chew gum and spit on the planks. Folks at Dejeatur could sit on the front porch of 1 1 erhaps a half dozen of such placet and do the same thing. The stream of planks unlulated | gracefully right down Main street of Decatur, tight past Mr. Rugg's court 'horse and Mr Nuttman'a bank and ceneial merchandise emporium and those gentlemen < ould see their handiwork any time they might care to wade out to do so. The highway, however, had some obstructions, namely: Toll gates. That meant that every so often, as much as the public would stand, waa » toll gate. A gale tender lived nearby and collected so much per each according to the site of the auto and perhaps a little extra from a foreign Hcenae plate. At any rate no one in any way waa displeased. Other folks encoded the road from Willshire to st Mary's and folks from < inclnnatt jVruy could barge lip the canal to Sf Mary's and play bridge all the Wtt v to Fort Wayne Bully for Hugg .nd Nuttman and Pltoy Hoagland and all the rest of 'h-m. Year after year all we.t .. .merry « ( wedding bells. B ut ••tne the days of trouble. j.| ank ' •or. out., busted cracUd and.?” 1.-rtod gangs went on strike •»•» doggone thing after Tsc -> »«■£ £ t on * *”’P* charging toil as Inng as 't|| IKC4. my * h " *“ »»" I'tX s t " Ur history, touted **Mtor-<g| H Ihmirm' r ,* 11 ' ” **’ Wlow'e ""Hight mat..yielded «... . B * ob" of our Bexans but t*. ’ ti... . ,h ‘“ '""tonce. we t-i man whn could sell .* M '. <"aned on persist ’" ' ,M »“ i cording in lhw *’«te 1 **•> 'he imm "" r * hoy
ckle Spoils Mhc}. W » Wheat In J (United Pr.-ss Serv| W) ® sSBS22E afayette. Jnn. 1-M or „ S erased for certifi< afio n itl account of the present O f"J u for any other reason," Hansen of the l>ur<i ue iculture extension staff, !r Th* trouble In the p art h|| ' practicable farm niKll Wertf ' loving cockle from seed ..ij,, 1 n available. A machine f* ' tly been developed V ites practically a perfect lOf cockle from wheat." ; " O ‘J (1 armers troubled win, sjfc Vjj ilarly growers of wtiflH .j ta g“fr I be Interested to know th, Woston ,hlnA will be thoroughly t ,yk in tted on Tuesday January, i; Bl iding the farmer’s short iouh* ro nts. 5 I here Jan. 14-18. ph(J Mla 0 ~ *era, Hu nffton Is Facing »•» »«« Smallpox Epidty* cvc " - Mr. an I luffton, Jan. I—From1 —From the grtment today came the nJ a! "’ ° r gluffton citizens that the Ru n exposed to smallpox : *’ loi, “v i defined cases found this F l> 1 those who would wish to .J* ,!C tdisease are advised to l» J l ' 10 Ini. IBB© ie two cases now under -' ,r ‘ t are Jocelyn Woodward ' r IJ. ‘y With is said that Nottingham Monn s people who had the .iiiiiffton during the holiday. < a thereby had opportuitj , " rn ’ std the disease. is statement is issued land Is a precautionary ’n- than that of an aunt , I e city had a smuilpcx s ? " I ~ tart* tl n year* ago. X accmatto* g; ti probably do not hold T department advises n«s a precaution in »uch 0 tilt. B« iwfordsville — Th- Mot. aft Ice. board of childr-n < zsi-jZLj K I hallowing orphan- . M Mt Fill- of citizens during the | lf- children are suitable ttl [B be I per - visited, the hosts nnf--|. G. jlb.ildren. cre tb AEELING OF — — f<cr a 1 : naturally feel seen-* wheT' AlM * k> ■ hat the medicine \ i *r»»bz Mr - a •o is absolutely pure snl titok a» to • ' harmful or U*' :t pr.■cch* un dr I’aync a medicine is Dr. K;sn|i*. F •* Root, kidney, L et tad I* [■f-’li and excellence 1- .aintui bottle of Swamp-Roet yin scientifically cot post* Ell getable herba. * Ran I not a stimulant and is Utea c kf (ffa- ful dooet. j. |Vuot racommaaded for tap j|*tnstare's great helper :n * I overcoming kidney, livaff® 1 Wd trouble*. fmaft ’ A ,ru statement of; untyiivmarrii ttleof Dr. Kiln.cr s S»i3(9u6. 1*" ThD ; nevi a medic me, you W»- be*t. On sale at til '’ W || ln •tar' bottle* of two » .r«. a^a prg u er if yon wish fir< U t* k: preparation wnd tex -e""™ Warner &Ca.Binght*>«' Hu,h -mple bottle 'Vhe. ■“ikt and tncntiou 1 a nout BUtu ■ p-' I II II II Kg I
