Decatur Democrat, Volume 38, Number 7, Decatur, Adams County, 4 May 1894 — Page 9
* \ZfoAing’- ’ Purc A cream of tartar baking powder. Highest of all in leavening ptrength, -Latest United States Govern <mtnt Food ReportRoyal Baking Powder Co-, 106 Will st., i, r Many New Oaaew. Our -patrons are delighted with Dr. Marehrll’s Lung Syrup, and they say that nothing equals this medicine for coughs, oelds and all throat and lung trouble. Several new cases have been added to the list that have been cured where other medicines have failed to do the work. Dr. ItarshalPs Lung taking the lead. Isa genuine cough medicine it never fails io cure. The first dose gives relief, and is guaranteed to satisfaction. Sold everywhere. Pryyte. 60 and ♦I,OO. ni Whije Mr. T. J. Richey, of Altona, Mo., was traveling In Kansas lie was taken vloently ill with cholera morbus. He called it a drug store to get some medicine and be druggist aecommended Chamberlain’s Jolie, Cholera and Diarrhira Remedy so ilghly he concluded to try it. The result was immediate "relief, and a few doses aired him completely. It is made for bawel omplaint and nothing else. It never fails, for sale by W. 11. Nnehtriub, the drug[fat. m Ice the World's Fair ‘or Fifteen Cciils.j Upon receipt of your address and fifteeif entsin postage stamps, we will mail you -repaid our Souvenir Portfolio of the VorkPs Columbian Exposition, regtilai rice is Fifty cents, but as we want you a have one, we make the prid l nominal, 'ou Will find them a work of art and a ling to be prized. It contains full page tews of the great buildings, with descripons of same, and is executed in the highit style of art. If not-satisfied with it, we ‘fund the stamps and let you keep the ook. Addres? H. E. Bucklen & Co., Chicago, 111. There is nothing I have ever used for uscular irhumatism that gives me so uch relief as Chamberlain,s Pain Balm >es. I have been using it for about two sars—four bottles in all—as occasion retired, and always keep a bottle of it In y house. I believe I know a good thing hen I get hold of it, and Pain Balm is the «t liniment 1 have ever met with. W. R. enny, dairyman, New Lexington, Ohio, cent bottles for sale by W. 11. Nacheb, the druggist. m V All Free. ■Those who have used Dr. King’s “New [■scovery know its value, and those who ■ve not, have the opportunity to try it Hee. Call on the advertised druggists and ■t a trial bottle. Free. Send your name Hd address to H. E. Buckleu & Co., ChicaH and get a sample box of Dr. King’s Hw Life Pills, Free, as well as a copy ot Hide to Health an Household Instructor Hje. All of which is guaranteed to do Hi good and cost you nothing. Blackburn ■Miller's drug store. Successors to A. R. ■ j Bucklin’s Arnlea Salve. H’be best salve In the world for cuts Hiteee, sores, ulcers, salt, rheum, fever Ek's, tetter chapped hands, chiblains,corns ■skin eruptionaand positively cures piles Hio pay required. It is guaranteed to give Hfect satisfaction or money refunded. Hee 25 cents a box. For sale by BlackHu * Miller. 22*
■THE NEW BARGAIN STORE *■ DECATUR, WELFLEY’S ROOM, ■ INDIANA ■ Oiffi Door North of Post Office, x ' t; ’ . u.x, I g FILL OFFEMOI BWAIMS § f f f"" rn * 5 ►- — H B ® z: UZ H-l That will open your eyes. These Goods are 5. ° C___J bodght for CASH and can jbe sold at prices to >—j— j , B B" ■ s cc SUIT THE HARD TIMES. g l <.... J W rj We keep a large assortment of P HI- | Tinware, Small Hardware, tzs> >*• g< H| 110 ® * Notions and Household Goods. > —3 ft ■ S ® Al oo Clark’s Thread 4c. per Spool. r-j * BjMIU’S 1 L— 1 A We invite the people of Decatur and vicinity to j—- . 2 come and examine our goods and we will eon- I ( t i S "Evince you that we sell goods, C/O *IJ r ® Lower than the Lowest. C=D 3 We also keep L-*-J His 3 * Shovels, Hoes, Rakes and Firks, O O I and sell them lower than ever heard of before. — r : > A'? v ./ . ■’> .. A”' o . JFe sblicit.your trade and will trade with you honestly. , B E. STREIT, Proprietor.
GREETING TO THE , SICK ANU SUFFERING DRS. KELLER & SCHIRAfIt DKC'ATVN, IN»., Will give special attention to the treatment of Acute and Chronle Dixuu, Bleed and Skin Blseasu, x Scrofula, Syphilis, Few Smh, Indolent Ulcers, Catarrh, Ic. In short oil disease* whirl, th« hntann Ix-dv Is heir to. lllaanseu of Woman and Children a specialty. Consultation in t»Mi IztiguiweeKmii.ibii andl-IKKMAN-Free. tkßeaover Yager A Co’s grocery, Second street. Residence on Adams street In Chubb's property. All calls, whether by day or night, promptly responded to. Drt. S ELL EH A SCHIBACK. The Erie Lines will Nell Excursion Tickets to the Following Points. May Musical Festival at Indianapolis; tickets on sale May 14th and 15, with return limit to May 18th; round trip 94. 40. Meeting of the Rebecca Lodge, I. O. O. F.. at Indianapolis: tickets on sale May 13th and 14th, with return limit to May 16th; round trip tickets £4 40. Meeting Grand Lodge, I. V- O- F-, at Indianapolis; tickets on sale May 15th and 16th, with return limit to May 18th; round trip 94.40. Peoples Party State Convention at Indianapolis; tickets on sale May 22zd and 23rd. with return limit fro May 25th; round trip 93.30. Musical Festival at Indianapolis; tickets on sale May 6th and 7th, with return limit to May Btb; round trip 94.40. - T;- ■ ■' /‘Tl* ; . ';■■ ■■ — German Baptist (Dunkaids) Annual r Conference at Meyersdale, Pa. The . Erie Lines—The Chicago & Erie —will sell roundtrip tickets from all points at very low rates. Tickets on sale May 23rd, 24th, 25th and 26th, with return limit of 30 days. For full information call on or address anv Chicago & Erie agents. J. W. DELon<j, Agent. Decatur, Ind. W. G. McEdwards, T. P. A., Huntington, Irid. | » The promptness of and certainty of its cures have mad Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy famous It is intended especially for coughs, colds, croup and whooping coughs, and is the most effectual remedy known for, these diseases. Mr. C. B. Main, of Union City, I’a., says: “1 have a great sale on Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. 1 warrant every bottle and have never heard of ome failing to give entire satisfaction. ’’ 50 cent bottles for sale by W.H. Nachttieb, the druggist. m TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN. To convince the people of Decatur, that my ice is as represented, strictly pure, I bad a chemist analyze it. Below you will And his analysis. S. C. Niman. Fort Wayne, Ind., April 18, 1894. This is to certify that I have made an analysis of the sample of ice, cut at Bowers Stone Quarry, and represented by S. C. Niman, and find nothing whatever impure about it. The water obtained from it meets all the requirements of the United States Pharmacopoeia. The sample submitted to me for analysis was as clear as any made artificially, not the slightest traces of any dirt or vegetable matter being visible. Wm. F. Ranke, Ph. C. 15-6 With Meyer Bros„ & Co. To those parties hiring pasture of me, the pay must be in advance and I must be notified of the time yqri turn your stock in or they will be turned out. All persons taking out cows or other stock without notifying me will be charged time until I am notified. 16-2 w Mrs. Eli Zimmerman.
A SALINE BHOWIR. Pocatello Clitaanii Are Halted Down From the Clouds *i>*l There !• Much Marveling. Friday was a balmy njn'ini drty. Late in the afts.noon a driazjing min blew up, carried oa u wind (Unoctly from tha sonlj*. It was of pacnliar whiteness, and after it had puabod "every one wh® had happened to have hnea eat hi it aad wiw n'ufa a dxir hA of electees or a daak ImR tiiat aad I*4 we/o' ejvei'isdiVV’X, HaAMauitei.af Ytoy wtewe sp»ok.4. Iml **i'iw*s aeHewd 9t«.t w.iiCiow m town bt'Amuf to the Wat t-'nt ewvotnd vtitL w-Uaj qteN. “It Im« kenu MMuag wad, *1 Mid My eaa wito aotieefl.tteii*yl|e®eas||aaa «i first, lust lilter xwtee of tiie muaeua toied taxtiuj the spots. T-teey had a distieieAty sal-ty flavur, awd-auntyiias aiade Kter Uy Am! tiiejr were srfit. Tim quosiiok new is, Where 4id,'tke sivk coma from? Thera «an, only lie oue answer—from the Groat Sait lake, nearly 800_ miles south in Utah R must have been a warm day over the Great Dead sea whew a strong. south, wind swept over it, catching up the salty vapor and sweeping it north to Idaho and finally bespattering the clothes and windows of the good people ot Pdoatelle with the salty spray.—Pocatello Tribune. • Shy of Leper Wing's Money. Three S2O bills and seven $lO bills of Uncle Sam’s good money are causing City Treasurer McCreary more anxiety than all -the millions that roll into his strong boxes in the course of a year. This |l3O was the property ot the unfortunate Japanese Hiper, John Charles Wing, who died in the Municipal hospital last January. The money was the savings of years as cook. Afteitfeis dsafh it was subjected to hijjh pressure steam disinfection, and as thu Jap twchuieally owed the city about's>36o for care in the hospitid it was turned into the ei-ty treasury. Mt. McCreary is a bit dubious about the bills despite the disHifectioß, aad h-. dsM-Hii't kiiovv vvhorh<'’r to deposit the bills in bank for general eirralatiiMi, lock them upiu the vaults or send them to Washington to be destroyed and replaced by new ones.—Philadelphia Record. Advertising Swindle. A lady in this city recently answered one of the adv«rtisetnentn which promised $36 to $75 a week, the work to be done ,at home. She learned that the money was to bo made by the sale of a certain polishing stuff, and she was so advertise -for agents, to whom she would furnish the goods. She actually expended S3O for the first installment of stock and outfit, and some more money in advertising fo r agents. One woman came, engaged herself as agent, took away a quantity of the stuff and never eaaie back. The rest the Troy lady has on her hands, , and it is absolutely worthless.— Troy (*N. Y.) Times. Beheaded* A tenge advertising bill on canvas 16 fpct high has been posted up all ,<?ver France, in which President Carnot and a lady, apparently intended for Mme. Carnot, are represented as sipping with evident gusto a new Algerian brandy. They are seated at a table, and the tablecloth bears M. Carnot’s initials. The government has ordered a piece of colored canvas to be pasted ovfV the two heads, the rest of the advertisement being left untouched.—London Tit-Bits. An Early Closing Argument. An extraordinary scene was recently witnessed in County road, Liverpool. Handbills had been extensively circulated in the district asking for 5,000 rotten eggs to throw at shops found*open after 5 o’clock on Thursdays, and on the following Thursday a great crowd gathered at a draper’s shop in County road and pelted it with eggs.—Liverpool Mercury. One Dollar No. 1 Jeans Pants sold at 50 cent per pair at Ike Rosenthal’s Modern Clothing Store. 4tf For best and cheapest gbods go to Henry Winces’. w9tf
WASHINGTON IN SIGHT. Coxey ami His Cohorts In Camp at the Edge of the Capital. DIRTY AND MOTLEY CROWD. ■ • Will Appi-nl t. tte. Court. W Pr«WHldd Froir Mi*rchirt< #u thu (■'•pitol aM«t Bajrg Tterre Will Krvoietlf Are Doniofi -SewattM Im Brightw«u<l Park - Army Washington, April 30.—Citizen J. S. Ouxey, commander in chief of the good roads army of the commonweal, standtag on a rickety wagon in the center of the Brightwood driving park, waving aloft his alpine hat to one of the most eoemopolitan and extensive audiences ever gathered in Washington, announced yesterday afternoon that the greatest march of the 19th century had been accomplished. Three hundred and a half of miserably dressed, woe-begone, grumbling, out-at-the-elbows and run-down-at-the-heels specimens of humanity marched into the park, led by a wheezing apology of a band, where they pitched tents and stretched themselves in the sun. Thousands from the city turned out to make a holiday of it and inspect the curious aggregation. Two endless processions swept along the roads all day with such variety of travelers as has never turned out in Washington since war times. The most interesting of the sights were human elements, the men who had marched and borne the brunt of mud and storms and cold. They vqere the most unique and inexplicable aggregation ever brought together. Some of them were at work about the tents and wagons, others curled up on. the damp ground munclriug great chunks of bread, ami many more stretched sleeping in the sun with their heads pillowed on rolled up coats.
CoxeyS Creased Trousers. Over in the most pretentions tent, which bore the sign “Headquarters” painted across it, a reporter later found the leaders of the army. Clad in a fashionable spring suit of light drab hue, with as perfectly creased trousers as . could lie seen on Fifth avenue, with a cup of coffee in one hand and a boiled egg in the other, from which he alternately took refreshment and sustenance, sat General Coxey. The reporter approached hint with the important inquiry as to what he was going to do when the police prevented a meeting in the capital grounds. He declared that the constitution was made before police regulations, and .that if there was any attempt to prevent the meeting there would be an appeal to the courts. “We will go before the highest court in the land if necessary,” he said. “Meanwhile we will wait here in Washington, if it takes all summer. ,If the courts refuse us our rights there will be a revolution. Ido not advocate revolution, nor do I desire it, but it will be irresistible and it will be the greatest revolution of history if the American people are once thoroughly aroused.” Senators as Sightseers. The conversation of Coxey was broken into by a trumpet call which summoned the choir of the army. Following Carl Browne, this choir of a dozen privates flocked out to a platform wagon. Browne climbed iu and the choir sang in various keys—a key to each individual—a parody on the revival hymn of “Hold the Fort.” Across the rapetrack, in front of the improvised platform, the grandstand seats were filled with solid rows of women and men. The track itself was full of carriages, in some of which ladies and gentlemen of the fashionable world leaned' back, shaded by parasols, and listened curiously. Senators Manderson and Frye with their wives were in handsome carriages; Senator Coke and Representative Kilgore of Texas stood wedged in by the populace; the long, grej- beard of Senator Dolph of Oregon shone conspicuously. Representative Dolliver was at the head of another group of congressmen. Mrs. Anna L. Diggs of Kansas, the Populist speaker, stood with a baby in her arms. The speech of Carl Browne was a strange mixture of theology and finance. Speech by the Leader. Coxey followed and asserted a belief that his bills would pass within two weeks, adding: “Congress takes two years to vote anything if left to itself. Twenty millions of people are hungry and can't wait two years to eat. Four million men idle for nine months. That’s what Grover Cleveland has cost this country. [Great applause.] Sherman and Tom Reed have helped him. so the Republicans have not get the horse on the Democrats. [More applause]. If congress knows what the people need and does not give it, congress is dishonest. We propose to give them the benefit of the doubt and show them the way out of the hole.” In this strain Coxey talked for half an hOUT. - .u meantime tne army inside the canvass had been disposing of a miserable meal. The men lined up before a commissary wagon from which squares of bread, which they call “punk,” was dealt out. This they took over to the campfire, Where several buckets of uninviting meat stew had been concocted. Each wealer received a big spoonful of the atew on his bread and then sat about on the ground gnawing this ration in a famished way. A much more elaborate meal was prepared for the leaders in the headquarters tent. General Coxey declares that his army will march to the capitol tomorrow noon, hold its great mass meeting on the steps to demand the passage of its bills, and then return to camp to wait until they become law. HARDSHIPS FOR KELLY. Hie Army Held Outside Des Moines During a Driving Storm. Des Moines, April 80.—Des Moines is in a state of intense excitement over the arrival of Kelly’s industrial army. The men had marched 27 miles Saturday night, without food, and were held by the police five miles out of the city in a driving rainstorm all ’day Sunday with no provisions or shelter. The action of the authorities aroused much indignation among laboring people, and when
at 5 o’ciocK lusc evening the army ’ marched np Grand avenue to the camp on the east side of the town —wbt. hng- I ! gard and weary—their pitiable I aroused sympathy almost as great as i that which was theirs in Council Bluffs. A mass-fleeting of laboring men lias • been called, committees are at work soI liciting fo.nl aii<l money, and threats are | made that nidrss tratvqiortation is se- ! cured radical ..tops wifi be taken. Dur- ■ ing the marah and d-my the army had I undergouu great »r har Ask ips than at any I tim« siti'-Q it left Utah, but n<-tt 25 men i were toLaing when Des Motives wus reached. FIFTY DrtOWNECX PUrr With I’toplr Give* Wny With Awi»il Rr«ult. Brahh.cv, Rnumania, May I.—Fiftylives l<«t is the laist obtainable estimate on the result *f uh accident here yestorday. While the pier was crowded with people in holiday attire bound for Galatea, on the Dann lie, waiting for the steamer which was to convey them te that place, it gave way and threw about 120 people into the water. Budapest, May I.—The newspapers here in their accounts of the accident at Brahilov assert that 200 people were drowned, MURDERER LYNCHED. lowa Burglar Who Killed an Officer Puninhed by a M6b. Council Bluffs, la., May4.—Shortly after 2 o’clock this morning a mob took A. M. Johnson, a burglar who shot the marshal‘at Missouri Valley, from jail and lynched him. Called For His Share of Wealth. New York, May 1. —A crank named Camille Rhinert yesterday rang the beU i at John D. Rockefeller’s residence and ‘ demanded admittance. When told Mr. i Rockefeller was not in he said: “Well, 1 he’s got $05.0(10.000 and I’ve called to get ‘ my share of ik” He then took a seat on the stone steps and was arrested. Eighteen Inches of Snow. Red Clique, Colo,, May I.—Snow is 18 inches deep here on a level, and it is stiM falling fast. ■ —•_ ■ BRIEFS. Kentucky Midland railroad reduced forces and wages. Texas reports heavy losses by rainstorm and electric disturbance. Jimmy McHale, "the Kentucky rosebud,” has been matched to fight Georgs Dixon. Striking joiners and. police collided in Vienna. Two strikers were wounded and a policeman hurt. The management by Receiver Oakes of the affairs »f the Northern Pacific railroad is being investigated in Chicago. Adolph and Montague B mhardt are held in London for the theft sf |2s,ho>) . worth of furs Prom Isaac Levi of New York, i The Dawes commission has submitted a new proposition to Choctaw ami Chickasaw Indians for the transfer of the Nation. The Sons of the American Revolution will give medals to American schools and . colleges for the best annual essays on American history. War oat the American Tobacco company i as a trust has begun in-Chreago-courts, I the attorney general asking that 200 deal- j ers be enjoined from selling its cigarettes. : “ARMY ECHOES.” Industrial train thieves in Oregon were | discharged on promise to observe tne laws. Mr. Carter, leading a Utah detachment, I gives his battlecry as “To arms, we will I endure tyranny no longer,” when peaceful supplication fails. Dean Wayland of Yale college told students to have nothing to do with the . “vermin - haunted, soap - fearing set of tramps” which reached New Haven last night. Allen Jennings of Indianapolis has been made active commander of the forces in that city while “General”' Frye dwells at an uptown hotel and says there will be no movement until a train is furnished. Kelly is having a tough time in Des Moines, but says a train must be furnished before his contingent moves again. Talk that Rock Island employes would strike anless transportation is furnished is unauthorized. A TRAGEDY IN TURKEY. Example of the Cruelties Practiced Ag.iinst Armenians In the Sultan's Domain. Stories multiply of the fearful persecution of the Armenians in the sultan’s domain. Here is an example, and there are many similar: The Kurds attacked the Armenian village of Herfev and demanded that the beautiful daughter of the priest be delivered to them. The girl, hearing that the villagers intended to comply with the order to escape further barbarities, fled with her bfother toward Russian territory. The Kurds heard of hej escape and followed and overtook the couple in the mountains. The brother and sister defended themselves behind a rock until they had fired all their cartridges but two. The sister then threw herself into the arms of her brother and begged him to shoot her with one of the cartridges so that she might not fall into the hands of the Kurds nor see the death of her brother. With the second hb should deliver himself from the Kurds. This was done. The sister was killed, but the brother was taken half dead and delivered to the Turkish authorities. He is now in prison.—London Letter. 801 l Fighting In France. Bull fighting has invaded France. One of the entertainments of Easter Monday at Bayonne was the so called sport of the Spanish aren% in which five bulls were killed. Many English visitors from Biarritz, Gladstone’s favorite watering place, attended, but most of them left in disgust after the animal was killed. Now they are writing to the London newspapers complaining of the barbarity of the sport INDIANA NOTES. Cennersville has a smallpox suspect Cadiz, Henry county, had a $30,000 blaze. Logansport will have a footrace between octogenarians May 7. Vicious dog seriously bit Hattie Hevalin, an Anderson child. Robert Gibson of Columbus was suddenly stricken blind and speechless. Three eloping Kentucky couples were married in Jeffersonville yesterday. t- • , '■*
To Fanners mid iiorsenien. Having t‘-.tal>lish< <l injfself In the Blacksmithing and shoeing Bii‘-i»c“* in Dcca'nr, I woul'l respect f illy i' 'no .' in i. ;•<! of U'erfr if .iij kii.il iu tny hili 10-dvr isem *!;. “I will Warrant my Work as any. «ivl at i’ricn ax RriisnHLhk. Shop in Kl'-worth On'« bn IMi ng, east 1 side of Becon<l Street, Deeattir, Ind. * 1 DR. C. V DONNELL Veterinary Surgeon and DEJXTTIST. ■ Graduate of the Ontario Veterinary j College and Toronto Veterinary Dental School. Treats all diseases of the domesticated animals. All calls promptly attended day or night. iS'irierj and Dentistry a specialty. Headquarters al Nachtrieb‘9 Hilig store. Deeatjh\ Ind. 2 * I - § n ha i i? tP • jt r • I: 1,a.1 IS A j —DEALER IN— Grain. Oil. Seeds, t Coal, Wool fJime, Salt, Fertilizers. Zl’V’tsr; on tho Chioajc & Erie ani Clever Ltaf railrn is. Office ahd (Retail store iouthoast corner of Second and Jefferson streets. PATBONA&S SOLICITED, I . tA CARD. .1. S. BOWERS, headquarters tor t„he Hercules Blasting i Stump Powder, Gaps and I Fuses. Foundation Rock of j the best quality always on i hand. Hercules Powder he- | tng cheap, clear your fields of I stumps. J. S Bowers & Co., leaders in alLclasses of Gobds. What Can’t Pull Out? Why the Bow on the Jas. Boss Filled Watch Cases, made by the keystone Watch Case Company, tecta the Watch from the pickpocket, and prevents it from dropping. Can only be had. with cases stamped with thistrade mark. IS# Sold, without extra change for_this_bow_( ring', Watch dealers only. Lots of watch cases are spoiled In the opening. An opener to obviate this sent free. For sale by P. M. Hensley and Jacob (.’loss 4 Soil'.' our jewelers f I*HE best investment in real estate is to keep buildings well painted. Paint protects the house and saves repairs. You sometimes want to sell —many a good house has remained -unsold for want of paint. The rule should be, though, “the best paint or none” That means Strictly Pure White Lead You cannot afford fra use cheap taints. To be sure of getting Strictly Pure White Lead, look at the brand; any of these are safe: “Anchor,” “Southern,” “Eckstein,” “Red Seal,” “Kentucky,” “Collier.” For Colors.— National Lead Co.’s Pure White Lead Tinting Colors. These colors are sold in one-pound cans, each can being sufficient to tint 25 pounds of Strictly Pure White Lead the desired shade; they are in no sense ready-mixed paints, but a combination of perfectly pure colors in the handiest form to tint Strictly Pure White Lead. A good many thousand dollars have been savea property-owners by having our book on painting and color-card. ’ Send us a postal card and get both free. ' NATIONAL L?AD CO., New York. Cincinnati Branch, \ \ Seventh and Freeman Avenue, Cincinnati.
