Decatur Democrat, Volume 38, Number 30, Decatur, Adams County, 12 October 1894 — Page 3
GROCERIES 11 cfc | PRfIPFRIFS I I Sr©xxxerlsL»ixxi>, j UIIUULIIIIaV • • (buCCKBBORS TO DONOVAN & COFFEE.) established j■ Everything / bu.lne.. p ,nlho,,no house enjoys -mKiflfrZU " ° f e trade ~ houßoho,d | second H ILOl] I " eoe88,tl( "‘ to none MTr.J aretobe In th. olty. W \%W VZI JBF' f ° Und the y MEioioZS 25» of allfkinds such as Asparagus Tips, (Club House Brand) Extra French Peas, Deviled Crab, Kippered Herring, Lobsters, etc., etc., sold at ROCK BOTTOM PRICES. 25 pounds of Light Brown Sugar for si.oo Cash Paid for Butter and XZsbm. Rf Donra & Bi'iitw Ea*t Side of Second Street. Decatur, Ind. X r ’ * Daniel Schlegel, DEALER IN LIGHTMNG RODS, SPOUTING, ROOFING, AND ' Tinware of all Kinds. SloiOTlpaiw andMenflingdone to order. Front St., near Jefferson Street. Decatur, - - - Indiana.
I W ' xr IWl'I I S NiillwaL VBr xy^_i Palpitation <>£tiie Heart Shortness of Breath, Swelling of Legs and Feet. “For about, four years I was troubled with palpitation of the heart, shortness of breath and swelling of the legs and feck. At times I would faint. I was treated by tire best physicians in Savannah, Gx. with nd relief. I then tried various Sorings without benefit. Finally, I tried Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure also his Nerve and Liver Pills. After betnnntna to lake tnem I felt better! I continued taking them and I am now in better health than for many years. Sinc&my recovery I have gained fifty pounds in weight. I none this statement may be of value to some poor sufferer." \ E. B. SUTTON, Ways Station, Ga. Dr. Milos Heart Cure Is sold on a positive guarantee mat tne first boule will benefit. All druggists sell it at. sl, 6 bottles forss, or It will be sent, prepaid, on receipt of price by tue Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elknart, lad. Sold by all Druggists, ■> x xfxxf/xtxxtxxf/xtxxtxxt/xi/ xfx X»X X iIWOCKj Jt • J. is | sta 4. :< r ''t&r s f intend (F* --CLOTHES WASHIKC,’} , F-IIPdiSH WASHINC, - -J<J •2 1 111 HOUSE CLEANifSC, -!<. (I VI HARDorSOFTWATERS , I x x I AN 8 OZ. PACKAGE FOR 5 CENTS.
Treaty Abrogation Creates a Stir. Baltimore, Oct. 10r“»The announce nient through E. Chermont, the Brazili ian consul, that after Jan. 1 next the rec m iprocity treaty which admitted floui 1 and provisions from the United State into Brazilian ports free of duty will 0 be at an end has created a big stir 3 among pierchants having trade with I Brazil. Arrested on Ills Wife’s Complaint. New York, Oct. 10,—John T. Cutting of the John T. Cutring company, this city, formerly congressman from San Francisco, was arrested yesterday and held in $2,000 bail in an action brought against him by his wife for a separation on the ground of abandoment and non- : Grand Rapids & Indiana Railroad r Took effect September 23, 1894. > GOING NORTH. ‘ ' I ..i STATIONS. No. 1 No. 3 ■ No. 5 No. 7 -.— - , Cincinnati. .Ive 4 55pm 8 05am S3lpm t Richmond 7 35.. 11 00 .’. 11 25 . I i Winchester.... 834.. 12 00 . |l2 20am| 1 Portland 9 14.. 1242pin!1254 • Decatur 10 12.. IK.. 144 . Ft. Wayne... arr 10 55 .. 235.. 220 , . “ “ ...Ive 2 55pm 230.. 740 am ’ Kendallville ..... 405.. 3 32.. 859 .. Rome City....'. 4 22.. 3 48.. 8 09.. Wolcottville 4 28.. 3 54.. 9 05.. , Valfentine 449 9 17.. LaGrange 450.. 4 12.. if 27.. , Lima !.. .’.... 503 9 41.. Sturgis I 5211'.'. 4 36.. 9 58.. Vicksburg , 6 12.. 5 22.. 10'53.. ' Kalamazoo, arr 6 40. 5 45.. 11 04 . “ ..Ive 7 20a 111 7 20.. 550 ... 1120.. Gr. Rapids..arr 9 15.. 9 15.. 728 am 100 pm ’ *’ “ .vlve .., 11025.. 740.. 125’.. D., G.H.&M.cr JlO 42.. 7 55.. 1 40.. . Howard City 11 45.. 905 .. 245 . Big Rapids 12 35atn 10 00 .. 340 . _. Reed City. . Cadillac... ..arr 2 10.. 1140.. 5 15.. “ ....Ive 11 15 .. 220 .. 11 50 .. 520 .. Traverse City 145 pin 710 .. Kalkaska 3 47 ■< Petoskey 540 .. 350 MackiuncCity 7 40 Going south. STATIONS. No. 2 No. 6 I No, 4 No. 8 , ■—«- 1 ; MacklnacCity. 915 pm 740 am Petoskey .10 20.. 915 5 30am ' Kalkaska 12 27.. 1120 7 17.. Traverse City 11 05 .. 700 .. Cadillac.. ..arr 2 00.. 105 pm .8 50 .. 1 . ..Ive 2 10.. 125.. 6 55pm 8 55.. I Reed City 3 20.. 2 35.. 7 48.. 9 57.. . Big Rapids 3 50.. Sift'.. 8 35.. 10 30.. Howard City.. 4 25.. 3 55.. 9,15.. 1120.. 1 !>.. G.H.&M.cr 555 .. '5 00 .. 10 40.. 1225 pm 1 Gr. Rapids .arr ti 10 .. 515 .. 10 55 .. 12 40 .. “ “ . .Ivff 650 am 540., 1140 pm 215.. Kalamazoo.arr 8 40.. 7 35.. 135 am 3 58. “ ..Ive 845 .. .545 400 .. Vicksburg 9 08 ..-. 4 30 . Sturgis 956 .. 910 520 .. ' Lima 1010 .. 923 584 .. LaGrange ... . 1022 .. 936 5 41.. Valentine 1031.. 944 / 5 53.. 1 Wolcottville... 1042.. 951 603.. < Romo City 10 47 .. 959 608 .. Kendallville... 11 03 .. 10 111 623.. Ft. Wayne.. arr 12 15 .. 11 25 739 .. 1 “ ..Ive 1285 pm 11 45 .. 545 am < Decatur 125.. 12 37.. 630 Portland 214.. I 41am 780 , Winchester.... 2 49.. 2 25.. 809 i I Richmond...., 3 45.. 3 20.. 915 pm ........ ( Cincinnati 6 30. 6 55.. 1201., ; ( Trains 2 and 4 6 run dally between Grand Rapids and Cincinnati, , C, L. LOOKWOOD, Gen. Pass, Agent JEFF. BRYSON Agent, Decatur In d I S 9
mi® BLOWN UP. Terrible Catastrophe In Which 200 Lives Were Lost. SEVERAL OTHER ACCIDENTS. Miner’* Family Horribly Mutilated by Hl* Placing Giant Powder In the Stove. Sewer Digger Blown to Atom* by Dynamite—Railroad 'Wreck* In Which Death and Injury Were Inflicted. Panama, Oct. 9.—A dispatch to The Star and Herald from Grenada, Nica- % ragua, says: A terrible catastrophe has occurred here. The military barracks have been blown up and a whole quarter of the city has been badly damaged. The number of dead is estimated at 200. The number of wounded is much greater, but no exact estimate is yet obtainable. »• DELIBERATELY DITCHED. L. and N. Train Wrecked by Miscreant* and Crrw Injured. Memphis, Oct. 9. —The southbound fast mail on the Louisville and Nashville railroad was wrecked two miles south of Bells late yesterday afternoon. Engineer Lewis aud Fireman Burn were internally injured and may die. Thomas Baughman and Buckner Duncan, mail clerks; Aaron Brannon, express messenger, and John Bailey, baggageman, were painfully cut and bruised. Railroad officials are of the opinion that the train was deliberately ditched by some miscreant who had an alleged grievance against the company. JUMPED THE TRACK. Rock Island Fast Freight Piled In the Ditch and Three Persons Killed. Seymoub, la., Oct. 9.—A westbound fast freight on the Rock Island jumped the track at Sleepy Hollow, a small station near here, at 6 o’clock last evening. Twenty freight cars followed the engine into the gorge and Engineer Gerald Nolan, Fireman Marshall and Brakman Charles E. Dempsey, all of Trenton, Mo., were instantly killed. Conductor Sam Van Hook was injured. FAMILY BLOWN UP. Another Miner Puts Giant Powder lu the Stove to Dry. Ironwood, Mich., Oct. 9. —John Ravell, a farmer near this city, and his family of five were blown up by an explosion of giant powder yesterday. Ravell and a 5-year-old son were killed outright, the bodies being mangled in a frightful manner. Mrs. Ravell and a 6-year-old daughter will undoubtedly die. The others w£re not dangerously hurt. Ravell was thawing out giant powder in the oven of a stove, preparing it for blasting stumps. PUNCHED A DYNAMITE CARTRIDGE. Joseph Kosmoski Went Up VJHh » Shower of Stones ft«<l Caine Down Dead. Buffalo, Oct. 9.—Through heedlessness, Joseph Kosnii<ki was blown to pieces. He was working on a sewer job aifd punched the cartridge with a crowbar. He wont up with a shower of ■ stones and came down w' thout a whole bone in hiasbody. He had a large family- . - Train Strikes a Steer. Flagstaff, A. T., Oct. 9.—Passenger train No. 3 on the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe railroad was wrecked two miles west of Denison by the locomotive striking a steer. The engine, the express and a baggage car were thrown from the track and the engineer and fireman slightly injured. Careless With a Lamp. Ashland, Pa., Oct. 9.—John Bugdanius, aged p l 6, was instantly killed and Peter La Soutski, aged 35, was fatally injured yesterday by an explosion of gas in the Maple Hill mines. The explosion was caused by the careless handling of a safety lamp. IT’S” CONSTITUTIONAL. Tillman’s Dispensary Law Upheld by a Supreme Court Majority. Col. iißiA, Oct. 9.—The decision of tho supreme court in the dispensary cases was filed last night. Justices Pope and Gary declare the law constitutional, while Chief Justice Mclver dissents. The effect of the decision will be that Governor Tillman will begin an active warfare against “blind tigers,” which have been flourishing without* much molestation since the act was declared unconstitutional. What the saloon men will do is problematical, but it is more than likely that some kind of a case will be gotten up which will finally bring the question to the supreme court of the United States. Valuable Slock Poisoned. Brazil, Ind., Oct. 9.—The stock poisoner is getting in his work in the south part of the county. Recently several fine hordes have died suddenly. Yesterday a fine team of horses belonging to Simon Sticrwalt was found dead in the stable'. Farmers are organizing and a strong effort will be made to arrest the miscreants. ELECTRIC ECHOES. Part of the Antwerp exposition, called “old Antwerp,” burned. John L. Sullivan thinks Fitzsimmons would have a very fine chance of whipping Corbett if the two meet; Governor Curtin will l>o buried tomorrow after lying in state in the Bellefonte courthouse for some hours. New York Democratic state Committee is sending out a letter by ex-Secretary W. C. Whitney urging harmony anti support of Hili for governor. Hon. S. O. Fisher, Democratic candidate for governor of Michigan, denied in a public speech at Bay City that he was affiliating with the A.P.A- ,-'■: - J. '
HER HEART IS BROKEN. Michigan Yiung Lady Dying In Laporte From a Shock. HER RELATIVE MURDERED. Vl*lt to the West Interrupted by • Telegram Announcing the Death—Greenwood'* Saloonkeeper la Jail—New* of Death*, Accident*, Fire* and Other Intereiting Hooaler Affair*. Laporte, Ind., Oct. 9.—Miss Jennie Hatt of Greenville, Mich., is dying at the home of Orrin Fox in this city of a broken heart. Miss Platt has been an invalid for x some time, and a physician 1 at her Michigan home told her that a trip to the south or west would do much to regain her lost health. She had a sister-in-law, Mrs. Platt, who was a teacher in an Indian school on a reservation in California. The sister-in-law , wrote Miss Platt to come west and live , with her. The invitation was accepted and Miss Platt started for the west. When she had reached Albuquerque, I N. M., a telegram apprised her that an : accident had befallen her intended host- ; ess. The telegram didn’t state that Mrs j Platt had lieen murdered — although I such was the case—but the young lady ■ surmised as much. The shock made her speechless aud, unable to communicate 1 her wauts except through the medium | of signs, she returned to this city and is now dying as the result of the belief that her sister in-law is dead, although her sister-in-law's true fate has never ybeen made known to Miss Platt. SERIES OF ACCIDENTS. Four Persons Seriously Injured In Camalties Caused by Horses and Cow. Ft. Wayne, Oct. 9. —Several fatal accidents occurred here yesterday. William Brenaman and wife of Berne were thrown from a carriage in a runaway accident. Brenaman fractured three ribs and sustained internal injuries. His wife’s recovery is hopeless. Charles Kelker was kicked in the head by a horse and his skull fractured. He will die. Henry Niemeyer, Sr., an aged German resident, while leading a cow got tangled up in the rope and was dragged over the railroad track. His legs were broken and he is injured internally. He cannot recover. Horrible Death of a Convict. ' <- Jeffersonville, Ind., Oct. 9.— Thomas Davis, a convict in the Indiana ' prison south, was killed yesterday while j working at a drill machine in one of the | shops. His hand caught in the belting and the revolving pulley hurled him against the ceiling. His left arm was pulled out at the socket and his body otherwise mutilated. , Greenwood’* Saloonist In Jail. Greenwood, Ind., Oct. 9.— Peter Conway, the saloonist who has been giving,..,! the people here so much trouble, is in jail in Franklin on a charge of“lhrceny. ■ He had bedh arrested for carrying' concealed weapons, when a search of his person revealed a watch, chain and diamond pin which liacP been stolen a few days ago from Grafton Peek’s residence. — Exciting Fight. Muncie, Ind., Oct. 9.—Considerable excitement was occasioned yesterday , afternoon by John Singleton assaulting i Frank A. Leon in the latter’s place of business. Leon is Mancie’s oldest clothing merchant and Singleton is super--’ i intendent of the city Electric light plant. ■ Undertaker Suffers From Blood Poisoning-. Anderson, Ind., Oct. 9.'—-Undertaker Jesse Sells is in a serious condition from blood poisoning. A finger slightly : ' abrased came in contact with the mouth tof a corpse whose death was caused by diphtheria, and his arm is terribly ■ swollen. Run Down by a Train. Wabash, Ind., Oct. 9, —An. unknown I man was found fatally injured on the ■ track of the Clover Leaf railroad north i of v Marion yesterday. It is presumed ! lie was run-down by a Clover Leaf ! freight. Hairpins Driven In Iler Head. Indianapolis, Oct. 9.—Mrs. Mary Smock is dying from a fall out of a sec-ond-story window, the principal injury . being inflicted by the driving of three hairpins into her head, upon which sho ! fell. ' Child Burned to Death. Vincennes, Ind., Oct. 9.—Last even- ■ ing, while children were burning leaves, i the clothes of a little 'son of Hon. John i Burke caught and instantly the child I was wrapped in flames. He died soon I after. INDIANA BREVITIES. ■ .1 Simon. Hirsch is a-cused in Terre Haute I of embezzlingsl,soo fromS. C. Barker, his employer. Nort li Manchester has a new bank organized to occupy the rooms of the defunct First-National. 7""' William Bunch was'sent to prison fop ! three years and Albert. Cra.sk for two from i Washington. Larceny the charges. Professor W. G. Wittman of Anderson has been called to the chair of music, in the 1 Southern university at Hnnthigtoil, Tenn, i Grace Hamilton, aged 16, of near Mun- . cie, has been divorced from Marion Hainil- I ton. aged 17, after living together since . April. ‘ , Wabash county has 113 brick, 33-frams arid T stone schoolhouse, valued at $210,000. The school enumeration of the county is lO.RS< . « , Bailey Roberts, express agent- at English, went to Louisville last Thursday and has been missing since. His father died suddenly Sunday. Charlfs Rivers, the captured Bloomfield bank robber, is thought to be r.io same person sent- fjom Martinsville to prison in for burglary'. Marshal Nicholson of Edinburg was 'comp-11. dto perforin the uupleasint duty of handcuffing his own, sou while discharging official labor. Elkhart is excited over the discovery of a dead man near town, where the body had been hidden and covered with leaves. The corpse is unidentified. Two tramps are under arrest.
■TRADEWITHGERMANY. Large Dealings Would Be Affected by a Retaliatory Policy. OWNERS OF INDIANA FARMS. New Htatl.tlo* Hhowlng the Proportion of Owner* and Renter* In Thl* and Other State* —Reque*t That General Harri*on Have Hl* Portrait Painted For the White House—Other Naw*. Washington, Oct. 9.—The officials of the state and agricultural departments ' are much interested in the reported purj pose of Germany, as given in Sunday’s 1 Berlin cable to the Associated Press, to 1 retaliate against the United States because of the special discriminating duty imposed on sugar from export bounty paying countries by discriminating against our meat and breadstuff's. “It will be very unfortunate,” said i Dr. D. E. Salmon, chief of the bureau I of animal industry, discussing the rOi port, “as the German markets have ! been opened to us after a good deal of i trouble. But it has not been the foreign ! ! duties as much as it has the alleged dis- ] | eased character of American meat, cat- ' ' tie and hogs that has kept us out of their markets. Our inspection service has re- ! suited in establishing that American ■ hogs are free from trichinosis and our cattle have no trace of pleuro-pneumonia. “That being established, this country I is able to make large shipments, and I am inclined to think we can hold our own and continue these shipments if the retaliation does not consist in charging om meat products with being diseased.” The treasury statistics of our trade with Germany, which would be affected by retaliation against American meat aud breadstuffs, show that our sales to that country last year were as follows: Cattle, $285,792; canned beef, $376,- ’ 917; salt and pickled beef, $441,484; tallow, $220,800; bacon, $1,036,000; hams, $146,350; fresh pork, $190,611; lard, $8,488,650; oleomargarine, $2,850,000; butter, $113,000. Breadstuffs- —Corn, , 'i $5,339,400; wheat, $1,177,000; flour, sl,187,000. , Ip the aggregate a retaliatory j policy on the part of Germany would affect alxiut $20,000,000 of American trade in meat products and breadstuff's. INDIANA FARMS AND HOMES. ' New Statistics Showing Proprietorship In Several States. |‘ Washington, Oct. 9.—Statistics of I farm and home proprietorship in several ; states are given in a census bulletin just , issued. It shows that in Indiana over ■ , 29 per cent of the farm families hire anil ■ the remainder own the farms cultivated by them in the state; in Oregon almost I 19 per cent hire and. 3 Uper cent own, ! and in Mississippi over 62 per cent hire . ' and almost 38 per cent own. f I. The percentages home families are: j Indiana, almost 53 per cent hire and thej remainder own; Oregon, 53 per centhird j and Mississippi, 6? pet- cent hire. Liens on owned farms are as follows: Indiana, $46,731,1.53: Oregon, $6,841,047; f i Mississippi, $2,899,191. j Debts oil owned li '-n.es aggregate; Indiana, $19,967.16'1 Oregon, $6,619,499;: Mississippi, S3S : vS2B. CARLISLE AND THE SENATE. j !. . —-— 1 ' lie Is Not a C indi.'hite to Succeed Black- ; buri), Says His Son. Washington; Oct. 9.—Secretary Car- ' lisle is not a candidate for the United j ' States-senate to succeed Joe Blackburn, I if the word of Logan C-arlLle, chief clerk i : of the treasury, is to be--taken as prop- : erly indicating-his father’s political intentions. Such an aimouneement in eastern papers, purporting to come from Frankfort, produced intense excitement ■ among the Kentucky Democrats in Wash- i i ington, but the denial seems to bo authoritative. In the same line comes a Lexington \ dispatch saying Breckinridge, lately de- ; seated by Owen for congress, is being j urged to enter the race for the senate. Itarrison Portrait For tile White House, i Washington, Oct. 9. —The sundry 1 civil appropriation act contains an item i appropriating $2,500. for a portrait of I Benjamin Harrison, to complete the i ' gallery of presidential portritits in the 1 i white house. Colonel Wilson, superin- | • tendent of public buildings, has accord- I . ingly notified the ex-president of. the I ' action of congress and has suggested { • that he select an artist aud have the i picture- painted. » Fall Term Supreme Court. Washington, Oct. 9.—The fall term of the United States supreme court [ opened yesterday, all of the justices beI ing present, but actual business was not ! begun until today. About 900 eases are pending. Treasury’s Condition*Washington, Oct. 9.—The cash balance in the treasury last evening was $120,360,437; gold reserve, $59,748,870. Republican League In the East. Chicago, Oct. 9.—W. W. Tracy, president" of the National Republican league, j arranged for the establishment of east- j era headquarters in New York under' f the direction of E. B. Harper, treasurer, I and in charge of Colonel J, L. Swords, • sergeant at arms of the national com- • mittee. - . New Distillery Started. ' A Peoria, Ills,, Oct. 9.—The Atlas dis- 1 tillery commenced yeast making this j morning, add will: commence mashing ' corn Tjihis, is the new 8,000-'i bushel distillery receujly erected by the I Woolners. Contest Between Marksmen. Kansas City, Oct. 9. —The final series ■of three shooting matches between Dr. Carver and J. A. R. El'iott will take place at Exposition ball park on Thursday, Friday aud Saturday. Farkhnrst Crnsado In. Baltimore. BALTmoitE, Oct. 9.—A somewhat similar crusade to that of Dr. Parkhurst- is soon to be started here, the Baptist min- i jsters taking the initiative.
To Formers and Horsemen. Having established myself in the Blacksmithing and shoeing Business in Decatur, I would respectfully ask all those in need of work of any kind in my Hue to give me a call. I will Warrant my Work as good as any, and at Prices as Reasonable, Shop in Ellsworth & Go’s, building, east side of Second Street, Decatur, Ind. C. W SCHIEFER, DR. C. V. CONNELL, i -*J■Veterinary Sux-geoxx n.xxd XJJEUKTTIST. I Graduate of the Ontario Veterinary College and Toronto Veterinary Dental School. Treats all diseases of the domesticated animals. All calls promptly attended day or night. Surgery and Dentistry specialty. Office in Odd Fellowsjßlock Decatur, Ind. 2-* J. D. HALE, DEALER in ’ Grains Oil, S»eds, Coal, Wool Lime, Salt, Fertilizers, Elevators on the Chicago & Erie and Clover Leaf railroads. Office and lietail store southeast corner of Second and Jefferson streets. ' PATR3NAS2 OLICITSD M*--. , ■■ A CARD. J. S. BOWERS, headquarters for the Hercules Blasting j . i Stump Powder, Caps and j i Fuses. Foundation R-ock of i ; the' best quality -always on i band. Hercules Powder be- i ißg-cheap, clear your fields of ; > stumps. J. S. Bowers & Co., ; leaders in all dasr-es of Goods.. : ' I' ~ — . I Every Man whose v<atch 1 has been rung out of the Low (ring), by a pickpocket, Eypry Man whose watch j has been damaged by dro’p- ; ping out of the bow, and Every Man of sense who merely compares the old pullout bow and the new will exclaim: "Ought to have ) : been made long ago! ” > J Itcan’t be twisted off thecase. ; Can only be had with Jas.-Boss | Filledandothercasesstamped 1 with this trade mark - -j.. Send for a watch case opener (tree). Xeystone Watch Case Co., j Philadelphia.’ Fo r sale by Ih Henslev nn<l Jacob (los A Son our jewt lers PAINT cracks.—lt often costs more to prepare a house lor repenting th.been " painted in the first place with,cheap ready-mixed paints, than it would to have painted it twice with strictly pure white lead, ground in pure lijjseed oil. Strictly Pure * | White Lead i fomis a permanent base for repaintj ing and never has TO be burned or ) scraped off on account of scaling ■or cracking. It is always smooth j and clean. -To be sure of getting j strictly pure white lead, purchase l any of the following brands: “ Anchor,” " Southern,” l “Eckstein,” “Red Seal,” “Kentucky,” "Qollier.” For Colors.—National Lead Co.’s Pnra XV;’- te Lead- Tinting Colors, a one-pound i;aii to a 25-pound keg of Lead and mix your own paints. Saves time and annoyance in matching . j shades, and insures the best pautt that it is pos--1 si’ eto put cn wood., Send us a postal card a,ixl get our book on ! paints find color-card, frea; it-w ilt probably save, 'you a good -many dollars./ — NATIONAL LETO CO., New York. ■ Cincinnati Branch, • I Seventh and Freeman Avenue, Cincinnati. ►
