Decatur Democrat, Volume 39, Number 1, Decatur, Adams County, 22 March 1895 — Page 11
[ Business Directory. THE DECATUR NATIONAL lII.IK. DfiCATUU, - INDIANA. CAPITAL STOCK, 8100.000. I OFFICERS:—?. W. Smith. President; J H. k Holthoikk, Vioe-Piwidnnts U. A. Dipian, [ tJushier; E. X. Ehikubh. Assistant Cashier. f DIKECTOHH:—I*.' W. Smith, Wm. A. Kukh LKH, J. U. 11AI.K, D. O M. THUIIT, J. 11. Hobhock. C. A. Dugan, John B. Hoi.tiioukk. This bank doos a general banking biiFiaet-H. I Loans mo*cy upon approved hoouriiy. disI eounta paper, makes collections, xendrto any points, buys county and olty order*. f Interest given on money d<;>''Hltod ot time eertifloates. K’( : The Old ” Adams County Bank | 1120,001). ESTABLISHED, 1871. Officers:—-W. H. Niblick, Pres* I). Btrnlaoaker, Vice-prca; Kutus K. toisou/Crtsitlcr. I C. S. Niblick, Ass'l Uashler. ■ Do a general hanklmr huM'ie<H. made in all paats oi the country. County, City and Township orders bought. Foreign and DomestiQExohanpe bought and - aol< Interest pair! on tnno d.-poshs. |b — ~ Paul G. Hooper, Attorney a,t Law De.-Mtiir, ludlnuH. >. T. VRANOE. J.T. MBKHVMAN I FRANCK A MERRYMAY. A.ttorreoys-at-1-iaw, Office:—Nos. 1.- and 3, over the Adam’s Oouutvliank. Collections a sueelalty. J. K.. JE3OraO, HASTEK OOMMINSIONEK AND A TTO l< N K Y-AT- L A W. Real Estate and Collections. R *K. ERWIN. A.ttorncy-at-XjaxA’, Room J and 2 Niblick & Tonnellier Block, Decatur. Indiana. f» I "" 3 ' "" — A. P. BEATTY. P- MANN. MANN A BEATTY, A.ttornoys*at»ljaw, And Notaries Public. Pension Claims Prosecuted. Odd Felloxs' Buidilng. «. H. DICKIEHSON, Attorney and Notary • 3E»xi.t>lio. '• Pension claims a specially Heal estate and' collection agent — —- Geuevu, - - Indiana. M. L. HOLLO WAY, ‘M. D. Office and residence onedoor north of M. E. church. Diseases of women and children a specialty. A. G. HOLLO AV AY, Physician and Surgeon. Office over Boston Store. lies idem A one door north of M ,E. Chut ch.3B-31tf I’. M. THOMAS, 31. D. * Physician and Surgeon.; Office over Burns’ harness shop, east side of Second Street. Decatur. Indiana. All calls promptly attended to in city or country night ii' x or day. ar. <?. zsrsx’TtrisrjEJ. DENTIST. / ■ Now located over Holthouse's shoe store, s prepared to do all work pertaining to the dental profession. Gold filling a specialty. By the use of Mayo’s Vapor he is enabled to • extract teeth without pain. Work guaranteed. ca-o to— H. M. ROMBERG Vor Your XsIXTU3Ft.Tr. The Best end most Reasonable Prices. Iltl MONEY TO LOAN On Farm property on long time. . No Commimßioxi. Low rate of Interest. Feurtlftl Payments. In anv amounts can be made at any time 'and stop interest. Call cm or address, A. K. BBPBB or F - MANN, Office:—Odd Fellow’s Building. * —2l-T—- --> MERRYMAN’S factotty You can get all kinds of Hard and Soft Wood, r Siding, Flooring, Brackets. Moulding, Odd-sized Sash and | Doors. £ in fact all kftrds of buiklifflr material madore I z furnished on short notice. I » Look Here! I am..here;to stay and can sell. Ohs anfl Pianos K * cheaper than anybody else can afford to spll them. 1 sell different makes. i CLEANING AND REPAIRING done reasonable. See me first and save i money. 1 X. T. COfJ'TN Decntur Ind. R-... * ■. f .
EVENTS IN INDIANA, ! - .1M.,,;— nuntinjiton County Woman Celebrates llr.r lOOih Anniversary, ! STILL SPRY AND BRIGHT. Crawford County Cvmnitasloners Preparing *o Build h Mew Court Iwane »l Eur glhli to Cost 0,000 —Death of an Old } Mason—General Assortment of lutorosting News. Huntington, Ind.,. March 10.—Mrs. Margaret Bailey, living in Polk town- ■ ship, this county, a few days ago reached k the 100th anuivci Hury of her birth. The • old lady in commonly called “Aunt ■ Peggy” and she is well known for miles around. She is stiH in possession of her . mental fatuities, and rekjteS" circumstances happening 80, afiitieven 00 years i ago, which aotliui almost like fiction, but she has records iuul other documents to prove her age and the truth of what she represents. (Grandmother Bailey was born in Kentucky and resided in that state until the breaking out of the civil - war, when she removed to Indiana. 1 She says luir ancestors all lived to an advanced ago. She had a sister who reached the age of 110 years, and her mother was 100 when she died. ! SPOILED THE GAME. Qaick-vr itteil Trustee Evaden a Wellplanned Scheme to Knb Him. Brazil, Ind., March 19. — Trustee Modesitt of Posey township came to this ■ city yesterday and drew a large snm of money to pay off the schoolteachers. On ■ his way home a supposed woman carrying a sachel asked to ride. He took her in the buggy, but later discovered that his companion was. a man in female at- . tire. Modesitt dropped his whip out of the buggy and a-ked the masquerader to get it. When the stranger complied the trustee whipped up escaped. ■ After reaching home he examined the stranger’s grip and found two revolvers and a bowie knife He believes it was the person’s intention to kill him for the money he had about him. Young Wife*# Sail Experience. Brazil, Ind., March 19.—A year ago the 16-year-old wife of Patrick Hughes ran away from her home in Illinois, her father being a Baptist preacher, to join Hughes, who managed an overland show. Recently Hugh.es_abandoned the show and his wife. The wife walked ■ from Illinois to near Center Point, this county, where he was working in the ! mines. The same day her child was born in an old and empty hut. They were taken to Knightsville, where she lies at the p nut Os death. Friends wrote to her father, who is wealthy, and he sent money, telling her to come heme, M'her mother is dy She Secured a New Scalp. Tipton, Ind., March 19.—Physicians of this city are enthusiastic over the success in skin grafting on the skull of Mrs. George League, who was scalped in the Martz canning factory last summer. The skull was absolutely bare, but pieces of skill rearlily adhered, and it is hoped that her head will soon be entirely covered. It will take about 800 pieces, and friends readily volunteer in Contributing toward her recovery. Trying to Terrorize a Family* .Tefeehsonvillk, Ind., March 19.*Fifteen whitecap notices have been' served on Mrs. Tom Coward at Clays- j burg, a suburb of this city, and similar notices have been sent to Adam Schwan-, Anger for renting to the Cowards. The : stable has been burned and a part of the ; threat is to dynamite the house. The operations have been carried on so stealthily as to elude the vigilance of the citizens, who are indignant over the matter. Found a Skeleton* Frankfort, Ind., March 19.—While some boys were playing in an old deserted tenement house near the L O. O. F. cemetery, they found a ladder leading to a scuttlehole in the roof, aiid one of the boys climbed to the roof, which is a flat one.’ Near the chimney he found the skeleton of a good sized child. The , officer-8 ore investigating. Boom at Atlanta. Atlanta, Ind., March 19 — The Atlanta steel and tinplateworks is now in successful operation with a small force of employes, which will be increased in a short time to" 250. The town is ou the i boom, and there will be about 50 houses i built this summer, besides several large ! brick buildings, three of which—one of them a 3-story—are now under contract. — To Build a New Courthouse. English, Ind., March 19.—The county commissioners will hold a special meet-1 ing next Tuesday for the purpose of opening sealed bids for the erection of i county buildings. Two of the commissioners have spoken in favor of a stone building to cost not less than $70,000. | - i Postoffiise Robbed. Madison, Ind., March 19.—The post-1 office at Patriot lias been entered by ■ burglars and robbed of its valuable contents. The authorities have sent to Warsaw, Ky., for bloodhounds with which to pursue the burglars. STATE NOTES. Patrick McGuire was killed in a coal j mine at Newburg by the premature explosion of a blast. Loganspoyt and Lafayette find themselves without waterworks boards owing to recent legislative action. William 11 orndon, aged 78, an old resident and onejif the oldest Masons in the state, is dead; Jacob Huber fell under the wheels of an electric car nt Indianapolis and received > injuries from which he died. Fire destroyed the large barn of Middle- ; ton & Simeon at Marion, causing a $5,000 ■ loss. Five horses were burned. Jacob Wickliff, confined in the Shelbyville jail on a charge of criminal assault, picked the lock with a wooden key and escaped. Charles Koup. living near Rossville, was arrested at Lafayette for intoxication and o <. :Yw- - '■- - o
ndoommltted suicide In the jail by taking morphine. i Royal Davis and Miss Musa Moore carried off- the honors in oratorical contests in the Wabash high school. There were 10 > contestants. z j William Roll, aged Ft), fell off abridge I near English and sustained injuries which | are fatal, lie Is a veteran of the. Mexican ! and civil wins. i Mrs. Helen Miller, aged 57, wife of a i farmer, committed suicide by drowning I herself in a lake near Valparaiso. 11l ' health the cause. . i GREAT BRITAIN’S ULTIMATUM. J Nicnrnx'is Must Pur » llaixlsomn Indemnity For Expelllnn Mr. Hutch. Managua. Nicaragua, March 19.—The ; British government, through Its minis* ter here, has submitted an.ultimatnm to Nicaragua. It demands a cash indemnity of £15,000 its smart money to pay for * ' the expulsion of Mr. Hatch, British ' consular agent at Bluefields during the i troubles there last year, and also the ap- - pointmentdf a commission to adjudicate damages sustained by- the persons and property of British subjects who were ’ expelled from the Mosquito reservation ; about the same t ime. By the terms of , the Ultimatum Great Britain is to name one of the commissionersand’Nicaragua ’ another and these two are to choose a * third, who shall qot be a citizen of the United States. It was also matty known that a British warship is now on her way to Nicaragua.to enforce these demands, which must be complied with within seven weeks from Feb. 25 last,; ' the date of the ultimatum. , I VICTIMS ; —in lll■■ I - Little Boy Dead and Hi# Sinter Io a Precarious Condition* Norwalk, Conn., March 19.—William Havens, a brakeman, brought home ' a bottle of whisky which he placed on 1 the diningroom table. His son Janies, aged 5, and his little daughter Marguerite, aged -1. were up before the others next morning and drank a large quan- . tity of the contents. The boy died yesterday and no hopes are entertained for >. the little girt Intoxicated Baby F»I1h Down'tairn. Port Jervis, N. Y„ March 19.—The two children of Patrick J. Knoud of , Tuxedo Park, a boy, aged 5 and a girl aged 3; found a bottle of their father’s, whisky on the table during the absence of the mother and drank freely of it. ' Both became intoxicated, and the little I girl, attempting to go downstairs, fell headlong, sustaining fatal injuries. TRIED TO Vy/fECK A TRAIN. Tie® Filed on the Track—U«ly Dizzier Narrowly Averted. Lenars. la., March 19'—The Illinois i Central fast mail ran into a pile of ties placed on the track near Marcus with the evident intent of wrecking the train, which was going at a high rate of speed on a down grade. Most of the ties were : knocked off the track and no injury re- j i suited except a damaged pilot. The of-, , fenders were not cengnt. ; Many passengers lives would certainly*; have been lost had the train left the ’ track, as Whisky Siongh bridge was I only a few yarda from \yhere the ob--1 Btruotidn was placed on the track. Powiler Storehouse Explosion 1 Oakland, N. J., March 19. —A build- * ing, used as a storehouse in connection j with A. M. Money’s powdermill here, i was blown to atoms yesterday by the i explosion of a quanti y of white powder. | Three workmen were injured by the 1 flying wood from the building and badI ly burned, and two of them died soon afterward. Eleclric Light Plant Burned. Bloomington, Ills., March 19.—The 1 powerhouse, including the steam and ; electric plant of the Bloomington Elec- ' trie Light company, burned last night. 1 Loss, $75,000; insurance, $40,000. The ' plant furnished about four-fifths of all ! the commercial light and power used in 1 the city. Street lighting is not affected. > Shot While Beating His Wife, Caqdo, I. T., March 19.—Late Saturday evening, near Blue, 10 miles southeast of here, Dave Chris, while beating his wife, was shot twice by his wife’s brother, 15 years old, from the effects.of which he died yesterday evening. Tlie boy is under arrest. Rubber Mills Resume. Woonsocket, R. 1., March 19.—Work was started in the calendar room of the Hillville rubber mills, which have been idle for weeks, and by tomorrow all ot the 1,000 hands employed in the mills will be at work. Weather. Indiana—Fair; slightly cooler in southern portion j MARKET QUOTATIONS. 1 Prevailing Prices for Grain and Cattle on March 18. c Indianapolis. Wheat — 53<®55c. Corn — 43@44X& Oats— ' I Cattle—Receipts light; shipments none. Market strong. i Good to choice shipping and export steers, i [email protected]: medium ; to good shipping steers, [email protected]; common to fair steers, i $8.75(34.50; good to choice medium steers, $4-' RE34.50; fair to medium feeding steers, I $3.40(33.90; good to choice heifers, $4.00@ I 4.50; fair to medium heifers, $3.25(33.75: 1 common light heifers, [email protected]; good tc choice cows, $3.50(34.00; fair to medium i cows, $2.75(33.25; veal calves. [email protected]. HOGS—Receipts, 500 head; shipments SOO head. Market act ive and strong. Good to choice medium and heavy, $4.55 @4.65; mixed and heavy packing,-$4.45@ 4.55; good to choice lightweights, $4.45(3 4.55; common lightweights, [email protected] pigs, $4.00(34.45; roughs, $3.75(34 30.. Sheep—Receipts light; shipments none. Market good. Choice to extra lambs, $4.75(35.25; common to good lambs, [email protected];- prime export wethers, $4.00(34.25; good to"choice sheep, $3,’25(g3.75; fair to medium sheep, $2.51K33.(X); common sheep, $1 .(X)@&2s; bucks, per head, $2.00(34.00. Chicago Grain and Provision*. WHEAT — May opened stJ££-%c. closed ' 56%c. July opened 57%e, closed 57%c. L CORN—Mtiy opened 4lic. closed July opened 45%c. closed 4t>J£c. Oats—May opened y.’K'c, closed 29X*XC- ! July opeiieil 28!*c, closed 28’t'c. ~~ - I. PoliK—May opened $12.()5. closed $11.95. July opened $12.05; closed $12.07. Lard—May opened $0.82, closed $6.80. July opened $6.92; closed t 0.92. RIBS--May opened, $5.90, closed $5.87-96. July opened $6.02; closed $6.02, • Closing cash markets: Wheat, corn 45k'-%c. oats 28>i'c, pork $ll.BO, lard i t 0.67, rilwss.77. I
MNT ffl ififfll). Powerful Combination of Postal Employes to llesiege Congress. SUCCESS OF OTHER EFFORTS. » DlMatlnlnctlon With Certain Pmtal RegnlMtlnii* by the Emptayea Led to Their Modifl.mtioir by Cot.grea* Upon Rrqneet. r lacreuM, of Pay Demanded Which Will Call For •5,000,000— Big Lobby Fund. Washington, March 19.—The postoffice department hnainformation of the formation of a powerful combination of postal einployre. designed to briqg pressure upon iGiigress to overturn certain regnlaiions and rules of the department. The employes have been encouraged by success in aitachtqg to the last postoffice 1 appropriation bill an amendment which ; suspended an order of the department. ' This order was issued last June, and di- - rectcd that by the May I, 181)5, all raili road mail should remove to ; some point along th- line,of the route on I which he was entployed. I This was unsatisfactory to some of the ; clerks and they obtained legislation overruling the order. The reason for issuing the order is explained at the department as necessary because at the time the order was issued there were about 1,800 of the 7,000 clerks in the sen’iee who did not live on the lines where they worked. I When there was an accident, or anyI thing else that required the emergency men, those who were ou leave and away from the line- where they worked escaped the extra duty, and it fell upon thosmliving on the route. Os Hie 1,300 who Vere living off the lines where they worked all but about 300 have notified ■ the department that they have or will remove their homes to where requested. Probably all of them will so remove, withstanding the legislation overruling the order. The department is now informed that since the failure of legislation in the last congress increasing the pay of employes a combinat ion has been formed to pass this legislation and also to overturn or- , ders aiirj rules of the department which < are nnsatisfac tory to them. A high official of the d< partment said: This combi ation iucludes some thou- , ' sands of employes in the rail'.vay mail ser- j vice, tlis-VettefTiuTiers services ahdTn post- ' offices. Ib. y are all in the classifietl ser- . vice aid protected from removal. The aggregate amount of the increase demanded is about $5,000,000. That perhaps is not of so mrch importance as the effect on the j discipline of the d'.jmtm. nt and the effi-I , ciency <4 the service. | These employes, numbering about 30,000, ‘ .by ac< :itribmion of $5 each would raise a fund c! B!s'..\wX) for of a lobby. One : ffee; of this combination would be to create a sentiment against the civil service law winch protects the employes How torn.liliihie the combination maV become is n mat ter of conjecture, but the wb )<• affair is the result of congress l legisla. ing to overturn the rules and regulations of the department affecting its employes. Comphiint has been made about the order of the postmaster general in directing,the recall of passes to railwaymail clerks who did not live on the line of the road where they worked, but it is ■ said that the order was issued while j congress was in session in order that the ; clerks and their friends might secure 1 legislation on that.subject if they could, j and as an intimation to dbngress that j the department resented interference with its legitimate affairs.-i " Income Tax Returns. Washington, March 19. —A large number of income tax returns are being received at the internal revenue bureau by every mail, and the work of examining, extending and filing them is well in hand and is going on without any hitch. Nearly all the collectors throughout the country have made their Febriiary reiwrts. They show a very satisfactory acquiescence on the part of income tax payers in all of the regulations govering the collection of the tax. The utmost secrecy as to the amount and character of the returns is being observed, but it is believed, that the r-e---ceipts so far are behind the expectations of the officials. ' Public Lund Openings Delayed. Washington, March 19. —Secretary Smith says that it is probable that proclamations will not be issued opening public lands within the next three weeks. The proclamations have been prepared for opening the Yankton reservation in South Dakota and the Siletz reservation in Oregon, provided that within 30 days after being issued the lands shall be Spened. The weather would not be propitious for land opening 30 days hence, aud so the proclamations will not be issued. The President's Birthday. * Washington, March 19. —President Cleveland was 58 years old yesterday. There was, however, no special observance of the day at the white house, and the president kept closely at his desk as usual. Several ■ congratulatory - tolegrams were received ami several of his intimate friends called, while others sent their congratulations accompanied . by baskets of flowers. USED THE MAILS TO DEFRAUD, j . • I Matriinuninl Agent of Daixling Taleuta •- a Come, to Gi-ief In Chicago. Chicago, March 19.*— Warren F. ; Thompson, tlie matrimonial who claims to l>e able to supply wives of; dazzling beauty and unlimited wealth. has been ( (mvicted in the United States court here of using the mails to ; defthud. He is the publisher of the matrimonial paper “Heart and Hand” and got himself into trouble by, advertising heiresses at 25 cents apiece,‘three for 50 cents. Last January Thompson | advertised to sell-the i addresses of six ; beautiful‘’heiresses, some widows aud some maidens, at the above terms- and the prosecution alleges he has been receiving several bushels of mail a ddy since. His arrest told conviction result-. ; ed. Pending the hearing of a motion I for a new trial sentence was vl'ithheld. >■
F. SCHAFER. & LOCH’S HARDWARE STORE. Ilcaclciiinrtorfe. l?or STOVES A® RANGES. IKinter is naw close at hand and you will need a stove. We have an endless variety and a large stock to select from, and our prices are pul roimj 4 A 1 1* P-lankcts, frT;ips, iIIOF Al SWfc Sum vs. i vlil mlkFvil vl I<oad Carts aijd the cele- ; '■ ... brated Tunbul Wagons Is Unequalled in the City* tSeT’Call and see us, 2nd street, Decatur, Ind. , ..... . - ,2 • HOW 1)0 YOUR FEET FEEL? n a Do poor shoes make you limp or shuffle flLa pinch corns orsrub up blisters ? Yypfffi g~ 1 " LEWIS Shoe is fool-shaped— made frem the Tannery Calf Skin—soft, solid leather a'l over cork filled, water-proof sol ?. A Genuine go days Accident Insurance Policy for SIOO.OO goes h :th every pair. Examine ’em at your dealers. J. B. LEWIS CO M Makers, = Boston, Mass. ' . . saved from * uvihb brave. iTI * xouth la.-t y<m. oi I.< >1 511 t li< cd, - Ners <-pf Debility, Lora <t lower, qjAT-7’. p-?" wwh N’ghtly Fmit-sions, nod ah ?< minal weukii S-HS of Jgl*, Y® U m- at.y Ha’ure-rts jArtfi.-I tem r rncH-p-r ri c Mb p tV*' 'ipT •Kr rSS or hboeof any kir.i: ot eithei Fex. Have iht drug. Li- 1 ' lew. gi-lsiK>W.V4xU.dl A i t>HU+Hie4|Fei. aed;r<-M- tnp tp*®' 'fi Jg ac'i we will send tieni. AiitfcrElixftcfTwti,triers ' ‘ST vJ s (_ JR other. >1 per bottle. r; Jer hold under a guaran J 9J ( 4 rSJI. t< «• t<> ern e 1 r rrionr» r> 1 trnd.d. I’r< r> r< <: < i 'b» SE * i! A IJ HC-HTAL SLKErT CO, Greti sapdc, Kick yr’i/T' a SMITH, mirdur. I YAGER BROS, Deeat ur. wWissdeodtf wt?
Rellcrlu One bay. Sorin American Nehvine rein res the. worst v s- s ot N< rvou> Proctration. Nervousnous apd Nervous : yipepsia in a sing e day No such reiiei a id blessing; as ever come to the invalids of this eotintry. Its powers to cure the stomach are wonuertul in the extreme. ItaluajH cures;, it cannot full. It ; radically cures ail weakness of the stou ncfe • and never disappoints. Its <th cfs are tjia-vel-ous and surprising.—J t gladdens the hear’., the s nfcritig and bringstuimeiliate lefief I; is a luxury to take and tilwity.- sate. Trial bottles 1‘- cetos. Sold by Hoilhousy S Sui'.ii. -1 Druggists, Decatur Ind. A Censns ot V«ll »<naif i-s. M. de Varigny has just published ' at Paris, a statistir.il work a limit the I largest fcctuncy of the United States I and Engkind. Ite says ir. p rt: V.' .ile i wefihi in the Deal States the ' largest itfdividual . fortunes in the ' world, most millionaires cart'he found in England; After careful re.- arch we find fortunes representing a "valfte of fl.GdO.OO!) sterling, or. more, that is.y $5,00?.000. divided as follows t’lpn: the nations’ England. 200:. 1 cited State-’., iv". tic;-i;ant! . 100: i Franco. 75; Russia, .7:j; India. 50; all other countries. 125. HiK kleu’x Arnica Salve The best salve in the world lor cuts, •bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum. fever sores, tetter, chapped Jiaads, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions, aud positively cures piles or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfectisatisfaetiou or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box For ! sale by Biackburn jr MiUer. » .Ivnitfr *•! Hiphthoria. Prof. Behring, the discoverer of the anti-diphtheric vaccine., is staying in Parfs, anti has received a reception. The Government intends to bestow upon him the cross of the Tegio’.i of Honor. The Professar says that diphtheria need no Itfnger be looked upon as a dangerous disease. It w2s at first thought that the vaccine was harmful for the system. but with the 100.000 cases now on record in which it had been empu.y there was net one in which evil eff< cts had hhen observed. In a few weeks, when be is Tn“iVpbsitioh~to~rnfJ’bTi the serum to all who ipay require he believes the mortality wßl.bc less than 5 per cent.; in other word . that cue of the most ’ cruel .vend pitilc.-,- diseases known to science is prm ti.-jiUy conquered Marvelous Results. From a letter written by Rev. ,1. Uumlcr-' yniur, of Diamonitule. Miidi., we are pi rhiitted to snake thf-abstract: “I have no 1 hesitation in recommending Dr. Klim's j New bixeovery. as the results were a'p < st 1 marvelous in the case of my wife. While j 1 was paster of the Baptist church at FivI era .Junction she was brought with puen- | mouia succeeding Itigrippe. Terrible paroxysms of coughing would wi ll kittle interruption amt it spemed as if Ire could not survive them. A, friend recoup. mended*Br. King> New Discovery; j.t was tis.f a c’vry results.” i'rial bottles free: at Blac'kbt .n ■&.'Miller's drug store. Regular size soc andSts'o. ° - Heliel In six Hours. Distressing KfdhCy .and Bladder direlieved in six hours by the ‘'Nf.xv (»m u South Amkru ax Kidney CvrJ!.’ This new j remedy is a surprise on account ot its excis’di ing promptness in relieving pain in the -bijdder. kidneys, back and every part of the utinary passages in male or female. It relu’xes retention of water and-pain in passing it almost immediately. If you want quick relief and euro this is your remedy. Sold l«v Holthoueei Smith, Druggists, Lecotur. Ind.
j r_ — —— DE. C. V. CONNEI.I., w • e? ■ '■ __ ■XZetoi’ixs.n.ry J-ni’goon «M.cl ±332Kr-'X , XSST. Graduate of the Oiftario Veterinary College and Toronto Veieripary Dental School. . Treats ail diseases of the domesticated anynais. All calls promptly attended day or night. Surgery and Dentistry a specialty. Oflice in Odd Fellows Block Decatur, Ind- 2-* J. D. HALE, — DEALER IN Grain. Oil, Seeds, Coal, Wool Lime,, Salt, Fertilizers, Elevators on the Chicago & Erie and , Clover Leaf railroads. Office and. Retail store southeast corner of Second and Je§erson streets. » OT YOUR PATRONAGE SOLICITED
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