Decatur Democrat, Volume 39, Number 50, Decatur, Adams County, 28 February 1896 — Page 9

Business Directory, tin; EmTHnwiik. DHCAI’UR. - INDIANA J CAPITAL NTOCK. MUO.OOO. SIiKFLkS, - - - 4,000. ttWICEIW:- P. W. Smith. President; J II , T HfUjmol'xK. Vice-President: C A >o an E. X. Bhiv<Uß'«, Ass.stHnt Cashier MRECTOUS-John B. Holthhurk. .1 ' / ’ OOI.TKH, C. A t»CO»V. ). II I. HHOCK. P. W. / Huron, H. H. Holtz, J. u. Hale. / Intoie it given on money deposited on time / ■•ertiflcHtes. ~ The Old , Adams County Bank 6APITAL. M3UXMI ESTABLISHED. IWI Otßvem:—W. H. Nitdick. Pres., D. Studs ■ Otker. Vice-pres: Rufus K. iliison, Cashii > Bhas 8. Niblick. Ass’t Osshler. Du a general banking business. Collections made in all patts of the country. ■».■ County. City sod Township orders bought.. Foreign and Domestic Exchange bought ano • sold. Interest paid on time deposits. ■v’t; . - ;< Paul G. Hooper, Attorney a-t Law ItecMtur, Indiana. Patents a specialty. R. S- PETERSON, Attorney a.t Law DKCATUR, --- INDIANA.Olßco Rooms 1 and 2. A. Holthouse Block. J. IFL. 8080, HAMTBH COMMISSIONER AND . ATTORN EY-AT-LAW. .4 Heal Estate and Collections. > ■ — R. K. ERWIN. A.ttornoy»at-Ijaw, Room 1 and 2 Niblick & Tonnelliei Block, Decatur, Indiana. <;. R. DICKERSON, A. ttorney and Notary Public. Pension claims a specialty Real estate and ■ G dlection agent. Geneva, - * Indiana. y£RS. M. L. HOLLOWAY, M. D. Office and residence one door north of M. E. *• church. Diseases of women and children a specialty. A.*J. HOLLOWAY, Physician and Surgeon. Office over Boston Store. Residence ac-oss ■the street from tils former home. 38-31 ts • *T27*T*T. FRANCE A MERRYMAN. ,A.ttorxiey*"at-Ijaw, Office:— Nos. 1. 2 and 3, over the Adame Countv Bank. OoMections a specialty. D. a. ERWIN, Physician dte Sui-goon. All calls promptly attended 'lav or night. ■Office and residence over Journal office, corner of Monroe and Third streets. ar. <9. njeptunte, DENTIST. | I I | yY - 2-1— Now located over Holthouse’s shoe store. -» prepared to do all work pertaining to the ■dental profession. Gold filling a specialty. By the use of Mayo’s Vaporffie is enabled to ■extract teeth without pain. Work guaranteed. ail,!' ' "'.'T'-Jl—u—— ...t-<3-0 TO * H. M. ROMBERG P-or Your LIVERY, the Best Rigs and most Reasonable 'Prices. lit! ♦; i ■ " ■ Look Here! I am here to stay and cancel! Ows ail Hanns cheaper than anybody else can afford to sell them. 1 sell differentmakes. CLEANING AND REPAIRING •W. done reasonable. See me first and save money. . . J. T. COOTC De,.ut llr , Ind. J. D. HALE, A DEALEKIN Grain, Oil, Seeds, Coal. Wool Lime, * Salt, Fertilizers, Slerators on the Chicago AErie and Olovef Leaf railroads. Office and Retail •tore southeast corner of Second i .streets, ©»“YOUR PATRONAGE SOLICITED _! --- - _ - - - _ --I - I ■ ' l| ■■■l—■■ .... — ... . ; Speaking From Experience, Little Nau of four summers, considering it her duty to entertain a lady who is waiting fur mamma, enters into 1 conversation. Nan—Have you any little girls? The Caller—Yes, I have two. Nan—Ddo you ever havte to whip / •' ’em ? Ji. The Caller—l’m afraid I have to • sometimes. ' Nan—What do you whip ’em with? The Caller (amused) —Oh, when they’ve been very naughty, I take my slipper. Nan (most feelingly as mamma en-ters)-—Y-yo-y on ought to take a hairbrush. My mamma does, and it hurts * awfully,— Pittsburg Bulletin.

FITZ AN EASY WINNER* Peter Maher Knocked Out In Shirt Order by the Australian. FIGHT DID NOT LAST ONE ROUND Lnnkj Bob Got In Ono of Hla Favorite Jolts on the Corner of the Irlali Liul’a Jaw—The -Buttle In Petidi - Fitz Hay« It Was Easy—Corbett Challenges the Winner. Langtry, Tex., Feb. 22.—Peter Maher was knocked out by Bob Fitzsimmons yesterday in the first round after 1 minute and 85 seconds of actual fighting. Fitz played the same old game lie has so oi’ton played before, leading on his opponent. until he had him where he wanted him, and then landed a lightning c ROBERT FITZSIMMONS. righthand swing on the jaw and it was alb over. It was the identical blow that knocked out Jim Hall in New Orleans. For tire first part of the round Maher had the ■better of it. He led often and forced the fighting. In his eagerness to get at Fitz he committed a palpable foul during a clinch, and was warned by Referee Siler that itsrepetition would cost him the fight. Maher fought well, but he was no match for his red-headed opponent, who proved himself one of the craftiest men that ever stepped into the ring. Fitz is now, by Corbett's action in presenting the championship to Maher, the champion of the world, and after the fight was over he declared through Julian his willingness to defend the championship against .any and all comers. The train arrived at 3:80 central time, and over a rocky road winding about the. precipitious cliffs along the Rio Grande the ■crowd wended its .way to thetsaiidy beach of the river. Fortytwo Mexicans had carried the ring material down to the river bank after working hard all day upon a.roadwaydowli from the bluff. A narrow wooden foot bridge had been put up across the swiftly flowing stream. The crowd stumbled-over the stony path and waded ankle deep in the sand, guided by little Jimmy White, a boy who came from Toronto to be at the fight. After the principals arrived littletime was lost iu getting ready. Before he doffed his street garb. Fitz stepped up and took a look sit the ring. Soon thereafter he came into the ring wrapped in a striped bath and sat down iu the corner nearest the steps leading to the platform. A maai near him offered SIOO even on him. As Maher climbed into the ring near the corner he occupied, a voice near by offered SIOO tos7-s<m Fitz. There, were no takers. Geoi'ge Siler, the referee, climbed upon the platform almost the. same time as Maher. , There was some controversy about the purse, the SIO,OOO being in certified cherks, while Fitzsimmons wanted to see the cash. The latter finally agreed to fight for the cheeks. The battleground was a sandy fiat upon a big bend in the Rio Graude river on the Mexican side. It was just two miles from the village of Langtry. In the center of a canvas wall about 200 feet in diameter the ring was pitched. The bo;U"il floor was covered with canvas over which rosin was sprinkled. At one side was the frame compartment for the taking by the kinetiscope of the pictures of tiny fight as it proceeded. On the opposite side of the ring yyere two little tents for the princijials. The two men then came to the center of the ring, shook hands and at the call of “time” the heavyweight championship fight was < >n. Maher gets It on the <?hiu. Fitzsimmons led. with his left and Maher backed tow;u<ls his corner. Fitzsimmons landed with his right and a clinch followetl. Maher struck Fitzsimmons with his Tight hand while they were cli’iadied", and referee Siler warned him that if he did so again he give the fight to Fitzsimmons. 'After a breakaway Peter landed his left on Fitz’s neck. Close infighting followed and Maher succeeded in landed his left on FitzsTimnon’s upper lip. drawing blood. Fitzsimmons landed with left and right. Clinch followed. Maher feinted and Fitzsimmons led with his right, but fell short. A mix up followed, in which Maher, landed both right and left on either Tale of Fitzsimmons head. Maher led- yhh his left ami another clinch followed. Fitzsimmons seemed a hit bothered and broke ground on Maher’s leads. Maher followed him up ami led with his left, when Fitzsimmons side stepped and swinging his right landed f&Hy on thehfft point 111 Maher’s chin. Maher mi'asured his length mi the floor, his head striking the canvas with great force. As Maher fed to the floor Fitz stepped back, his eyes sparkling and a smile playing around his mouth; He gazed upon his fallen foe for about three seconds, and then walked over t<> his corner'and sat down. Julian, McCoy and Everhart crowded around him urging him to got up and fight. “Get away from mo, get away from mo, I t 01l you.” snarled Fitzsimmons. “It's all over; he’s out.” And by the time he had finished speaking. Maher'S championship was a thing of the past. Fitz Sat for a few minutes in his corner in the cold drizzling xnin looking across at Maher, and then jumping briskly to his feet he walked rapidly across the ring and shook hands with his fallen opponent. Maher was unconscious 16 seconds, and,it was fully a minute after he had bwm carried to hi# «ocp*r before ha wu M( ■■ ■

F. SCHKFER & LOCH’S HARDWAB2 STORE. For STOVES AM RANGES. FPTnter is now close at hand and you will need a st )ve. TKe have an endless variety and a large steel o select from, and our prices are W™ Boaters bfi 1 1 p Robes, Blankets, IHiips l • AT Sleighs, Buggies, Surrevs. ijlIIlK 111 Road carts' and the celebrated Tunbul W agons Is Unequalled in the City. and see us, 2nd street, Decatur, Ind. . —— ■ - ■

hiniselFiigain. He was not disposed to talk much. He is no talker a’ any time, f and would have, had little to say if he j had won. “He got me good and hard, t and that was all that, there was to it,” * t he said. “I httard'the referee counting and heard the men in.my corner calling j me to rise, but 1 could not rise. When , I knew anything at all 1 was in my cor- . ' ner and they were rubbing my face with “ Witter.” Fitzsimmons was very modest considering the brilliant victory he had won. ( “I could have put him out the first , punch,” he said, “but did not reachhim s hard enough. There never was a minute since the match was made that 1 ’ , have anticipated any other result than 1 this. He was afraid the minute he put i up bis hands and I knew it.” ( The crowd was not in Langtry over j two and a half hours, ami was one of ] the-quietest and best behaved ever seen | at a prizefight. Peter Maher said: “I ant of course j disappointed. He is a (‘lever fighter < and I limi t know exactly where I was I ] hit: seems to me it was on the jaw. j , The back of my head has a big-lump on i < ' it, and that's where it struck the floor. ] i I thought 1 had him licked from the start, and far as my condition is concerned I have nothing to eoinplain of.” Corbett Challenges Fitzstninions. | Chicago. 'Feb. 22.—James.J. Corbett j had a big house at the Haymarket last i night, and he was wildly cheered when i he read a challenge which he bad sent( ; to Fitzsimmons. After reading the j ! telegram, Corbett placed sl,ooo’ in the ' hands of Manager Davis of the Hay- j market theater. “There are only three places on earth where we can fight”, said . Corbett. “England, South Africa and . Australia. I will go to any one of these ' jilaces to meet this man. I want him to do business, that’s all I want. 1 want Wi say right here, as a young ■ American of Irish decent, that I will ■ meet any man on lheface of the earth.” ■ BUSINESS CONDITIONS. . Reports on Trade Matters by Dun 4 Co.,and Bradstreet’s. . - i New York. Fob. 22. —R. G. Dun & ‘ Co.’s'weekly review of trade today says: f The restoration of the treasury reserve ( has been effected with remarkably little ] monetary disturbance, although strin- j gency in money has somewhat retarded ; business. The rapid rise in the price of ' bonds strengthens public confidence. f While money markets are growing, easier as rapidly as could be expected “ .after the withdrawal of over $70,000,000 , from uneniployed funds,.-the expected , activity in commercial loans does not < appear, as offerings are small. In no important branch of business is there t yet apparent much disposition to expand, and prices of commodities as a ’ whole are now at the lowest average 1 ever known. 1 In almost all manufactured products 1 the decline continues, though in some t classes quotations ate so iiregular that t the change cannot be aeeurately ~meas- « ured. Bessemer pigiroii and grey forge t are a simile lower at Pittsburg aml struetural beains and angles have been re- t duced to secure business. * t Textile manufactures fail to meet the c demand expected, and prices are gener- t ally weak. Dress goods and blankets are in fair demand, but men's woolens

iDaiiiel Schlegel, DEALE!,’ IN LIGHTNING RODS, SPOTTING, HOOFING, AND Tinware of ail Kinds. HOft aid Mending done to order. Front St., near Jefferson Street. Decatur, - - “Indiana, ■

u , — - . are both inactive and much demoralized by competition among makers, so that actual transactions are iu many cases 5 to 10 cents below open quotations. Failures for the week have been 980 in the United States against 302 last year, and GO in Canada against 30 last y«ir. I Favorable Trade Influences. New York. Feb. 22. —Bradstreet’s, to- j day says: While no radical improve- i meat has appeared in the general trade situation, more favorable influences are rt ported that for some weeks. The drop in the temperature has affected the movement of dry goixls, ha{s and groceries most. No impnivement is shown in demand for cotton and woolen goods, niaiiufactnrers of each continuing to find cause for complaint. The only advances in prices to be noted are on coffees and sugars, although leather is firm after the advance for hides a week ago. Exports of wheat (flour included s wheat) from both coasts of the United States this week amount to 3.143,WK) bushels, against 2.7 is.0()o last week and 1,808,000 in the week a year ago. Will Be a (andulate. Andersox, Ind., Feb. 22.—One thousand glass workers yesterday presented a petition to Lase Johnson, one of the best known glasscutters in Indiana, asking him to be a Republican candidate for joint senator. Mr. Johnson has consented to make the race for the nomination. Smith Murder Trial. .TEFFERSOXvn.LE, liidbyTeb. 22.—The argument in the trial of Milas Smith f< i murder closed yesterday afternoon. Public sympathy is 'with flie defendant, and it.is thought that he will be acquitted. At the time the crime was committed he was but 21 years old. Not the Sight of the Audience, but tha Sound, the Cause of It, an Actor Says. Ip discussing stage fright an old actor Said: “It is not the sight of the audience so much as its sound that worries the beginner. Probably very few persons realize what noise an average audience makes: It is not loud er definite, but a st' .idy suppressed hum, like the whir of the Broadway cable. It is the combination of those little noises which age present in every largd* assejqjdaiice, no matter how attentive and respectful. Oi e moves an arm, another, adjusts a skirt, a third rustles a programme, a fourth coughs, and so on. It is the .strangeness and iudefiniteness of the cciuglomerate of these sounds that startles and upsets the beginner. He caniiot analyze them, and they sound angry and threatening to liirm ~. “I know that I did not get accustomed to the noise for some nights. Ti e first time I went on (he stage I did not see the audience at all, for the footlights seemed so high and broad that they.made a wall of fire beyond which I could see nothing. The murmur of the audience on the other s-ide <f that wall was awful. I quaked with the feelingof a wretch pursued by a mob and convinced that there is no escape. “It is popularly supposed that only beginners suffer from stage fright, and that it soon disappears. -There are succe'.'ful actorsand actresses who have attacks, of the same sort every time they go on the stage,.and who will never get over them.” —Now York Sum

"peculiar accident Piece of Rusty Iron Passes Almost ; Through a Man’s Body, , OVERCOME BY GASES FROM OIL. Mnket a Vain Attempt to Beach a Place qf. Safety—Village School Building Totally Destroyed by Flie — I’.wtintttrvM Appointed to Office by Abraham I.inr colli—‘Priibher Shim lilting Insanity. Whitino. Ind.. Feb. 21. —An accident 1 thut will probably result in a man’s death iK-curred here yesterday. John Cummings was su]>erinten<liug the loading of a lot of crude ofl. Without warning the deadly gases began escaping and before he could reach a place of safety he was overcome by the fumes and fell to the ground. He struck on a piece of rusty iron which entered his side just below the heart, passing almost through his body. He was removed to a hospital, but it is thought he cannot survive. ■ Several other men were also affected, but not seriously. Failed to Indict Philip Hank. Covington, Ind., Feb. 21. —TlieFountain county grand jury failed to return an indictment against- Philip Hauk, the Montgomery county school teacher who is said to be responsible for the death of , Grace McClannock, a pupil, the daughter of a prominent farmer. Hauk, howJJ ever, was immediately rearrested by Sheriff Davis of Montgomery county and taken to Crawfordsville. Much dissatisfaction is expressed at the grand jury's failure to indict. Yesterday Hauk was arranged at Crawfordsville, but was sent to jail in default ot s2,<>(W bail upon waiving preliminary examinaI tiou. It is said that he w ill plead I guilty. SOO,OOO School Biiililiiig Burned. Wn.Kixsox, Ind., Feb. 21.—The new SIO,OOO schoolhouse at, Warrington, two miles north of this city, burned yesterday. The loss is total, with SO,OOO insurance. The village is without a school building or accomodations to complete i the present term of school. It is thought the fire originated from an overheated grate caused by an irregular supply of gasPeculiar Accident to a Boy. Brazil, Ind., Feb. 21.—The young son ■ of James Foster' of this city lies at his home in critical condition. He accidentally swallowed a marble, which lodged in the gullet’near where it empties into the stomach. The ductors have been unable to dislodge the marble and no food can pass into the stomach. He xvill die unless help comes s[>eedily? One of Lincoln's Appointees. Winchester, Ind., Feb 21.— Mrs. Mary Ann Paschal, who has been post- 1 mistress at Huntsville, this county, for more than 30 years, celebrated her 80th anniversary a few days ago. Mrs. Paschal is probably the last., appointee of . President Lincoln renuiiuing iu office. Prisoner Simulating.nsanity. Logansport, Ind.. Feb. 21. —Ed Nisbitt, held for horse stealing, made a viscious attack ou jailers Shexyman and Truax. Nisbitt is a very powerful man,' ami the jailers had a narrow escape from injury. It is thought that Nisbitt is simulating insanity. Candidate of the Prohibitionists. ■' Laporte, Ind., Feb. 21.--Prohibition-ists are bringing strong infltlCfice to bear on Abraliani; P. Aiidrexvs, a banket and prominent citizen of this place. To so-; cure his consent to use his name in ecn-nde-tiun w ith the Prohibition nomimhion ' lor governor. j Aged Mau Coni mits Suicide. Oxford, Ind.. Feb. 21.—John Thompson. Sr., S7 years old, committed suicide lieixi by hanging himself in the stairway of the Oxford hotel. Mr. Tlmmpson was the father of Jotm Thompson, Jr., until recently publisher ot the Roswell Enterprise. ' I, . , ———— Kesiilenee Destroyed by Fire. TitKRE Haute. Lid., Feb.-21. —The handsome, residence of J. W. Landrum was destroyed bv fire yesterday. Loss, S7d)OU; partially insured. The blaze started from the furnace.' Farm Residence Burned. Plainfield, Iml,. Feb. 20.—1 fhe large farm residence Os Henry Sanders, two , miles northeast of here, xvas tomlly destroyed by five. Loss about S2,(W. INDIANA NO I KS. George Reel, a well known glassworker ' of Elwood, was seriously injured from a ! fall sustained while trying to alight from a rapidly moving freight train. Harry Block, the son of a pi-mni'iieut, i Franklin comity farmer, drank hu : bin,-J tie of a certain cough syrup. Hr- went 'rw deep immediately mid in a few horns was ('lamb' Sr. Clair, who tried tq rob 11. S j Garnerat Burford's printing hoc-,- hi I a ' dimi.qmhs i ist .Saturday, w livei'i a pre- | limirrary examination yesterday .uidnae, . held ill »3..'>u bmids. -...C...... 1- ; sere is said to r,.- a oil oeiwevti th* : cenivtir triisi, and a new ipdepend . > m , pain w hich recently begiuv vper : :i> m Clark coni (Tv. Thy trust is rTyr. . o.cut- ,r---its ( oinj.ici'iiiir oil Iroui railri.ad . . : . I- - I Pytliians-of the counties of ‘Viur. \ er ' ! hiiiiinii. Clay; Put nan) anu I’.-i. < held, ; lu-ir annum meeting aV Terra H ...v\<steriiay. Many visitors were in atr : Lima-, the ci'i’emyuies closing with a smaptuous banquet last night. The White block, one of the largest business buildings in Marion, was bad!', damaged by fire yesterday The lowt r . tloor oi i ’mied by" the New York.dry goods store,and W. C Smith's shoe store. ' Their slot ks were badly .damaged by lire I iiiid water, the losses ' being estimated at ■ about ji.r.Ot"'each; insured. Fx-<<overii<>r Robinson Critically 111. SpringfieLd, Mass., Feb. 2L—The condition of ex-Governor George D. RobiusoYl was very. lurti'h worse last night. His mind, which had been clear, seemed to collapse Ute iu the evening. His physician thinks it doubtful if he can survive the dajr. ■ C ' - z-'-'-i ■ -

For Throat And Lung Troubles, Take AYER’S Cherry Pectoral Received Highest Awards At World’s Fair. When In Doubt, ask for Ayer's Pills. ~ THE RETIRED BURGLAR. A Brief Account of a Lively and Interest. Ing Incident In His Career. “A house that I went into one night In a toxvn not very far out of Nexv York, ” said the retired burglar, ‘‘didn’t begin to pan ont as well as I expected it xvonld, and I couldn’t help feeling a little bit disappointed; I’d been all over the house, and hadn’t got much more’n enough to pay niy car fare. But when I came down stairs again I saxv standing in a corner of the hall by the front door something that I hadn’t noticed when I went up that pleased me very much, and that was a tricycle, a girl’s tricycle, with two high wheels and a small wheel in front, with galvanized -wire spokes, and a long handle to steer by, and a seat upholstered with red velvet, and all that sort of thing, you know. You’ve seen lots of ’em, no doubt. ‘‘Well, now, my little girl had been asking me for some time for a tricycle, but business had been so everlasting bad that I really hadn’t felt as though I ! could afford to buy her one. but here i was one xvaiting for- me to carry off, 1 and it made me smile to look at it ; a bright nexv one it xvas too. It was pretty near Christmas, and I thought I’d. keep it and give it to her for a Christmas present ‘‘There wasn’t any rubber tires on if, so I didn’t dare roll it across the hall, but I picked it up and carried it to a door that opened into an entry that i opened oh to the cellar stairs, the way j I’d come in. I got it to the first door ! all right, ami into that entry way or ball xvithout hitting anything, but getting it through the door leading to the cellar stairs, going first myself and backing down xvith it, the long handle flopped over in somehow and caught in the door when I xvas just a step down. I. tried to free it, and it freed easier I expected, aiql I lost my balance ana ; lost my hold on the tricycle and fell down stairs. ‘‘Noise? Well, now, I tell you, I was 1 in a steamboat explosion once, and once in an explosion in a sawmill, but I never began to hear so much noise in my life as I did xvheu me and that tricycle rolled down the cellar stairs. The tricycle fell over me and I fell over the tricycle, and somewhere on thexvay down I believe I must have fallen through ■ the tricycle, for xvheu xve get doxvn to the bottom, I was all scratched and cut 1 and my clothes xvere tore and the tricycle was a wreck. I stood there for a minute looking at it, till I heard two i men coming doxvn the to the hall i above, and then I went away and left it ■ lying there ar the foot of the cellar stairs. “So, you see. niy little girl didn’t gef I .her.tricycle that Christmas after all.” i —New York Suu. Sian Over:>oarc|. The presence of mind of a certain, ' well knoxvn actor xvas always very re- ■ markable, but xvas never put to so severe a test as on the following occasion: While acting the part of a pirate chief he xvas being conveyed in a vessel across the stage xvith his baud of brigands on deck beside him? , Ono of the supers, whose duty it was : to xvork the waves under large sheets of ! gauze, xvas so unfortunate as to put his head through the gauze and to appear standing in the middle of the mimic sea before the full viexv of the audience. The actor on the vessel, xvithout losing his presence of mind, called out, I“A man overboard!” and the astonished super was. hauled upon deck by the pirates amid the applause of tlte specta--1 tors, xvho imagined it xvas a part of tha nluy.—London Sdeotator. Stepniak on Russia’s Czar. In an interview xvith Stepniak, a report of which appears in Great Thoughts, he was asked his opinion of the new czar. “There was a time,” he replied.’ “when Russian Liberals cherished a hope—l may say, indeed, a considerable degree of hope—but the nexv .czar has\iis:n.pciiite(! every expectation of . the most moderate among our progressive parties. He has shown himself utterly incapable of departing from the traditions of his predecessor, and will continue to play tlte ungrateful part of offieial_sereen to bureaucratic tyranny. ” —\Veidmiii-t( r Gazette.

pKtIHZZ? MOTHERS, SB-’ “MOTHERS’ FRIEND” / Robs Confinement of its Pain, Horror and Risk, / ( My Wife used “MOTHERS' FRIEND” be C y for, birth of her first child, she did not r ( suffer from CRAMPS or PAlNS—was quickly J J relicved'nt the critical hour suffering but J S little—she had no pains afterward and her X / recovers’ was.rapid. J X E. E. Johnston. Eufaula, Ala. \ S Sent by Mail or Express, on receipt of / S price, per bottle. Book “To Moth- S \ ers” mailed Free. / BRADFIELD RKLFLATOR CO.. Atinta, Oa. $ J 80LD BY ALL DRUeeiSTS. \ 1