Decatur Democrat, Volume 44, Number 17, Decatur, Adams County, 5 July 1900 — Page 7
I > KNEW THE H 0 WL T interrupted a discussion on THINGS B>LICAL. « w Tbe Olli Hunter Tell. About Wildcat Serlmninue and How. "tier He Thought He Hud the Old Homan I.U Ued. She Silenced Him. [Copyright, r.«». by C. B. • Wls.l '“One evenin,” said the possum hunt- , f TeiffiessiO. "as me an the old wonan sot smoktn our pipes on the doah--Btep an feelin at pence with the world, sl , e suddenly says to me: 'Zeb. do yo’ know why the preacher didn’t stop with us when he was ’long vere two weeks ago? .. Bekase he stopped with Jube Taylor,' says I. “ ‘He stopped thar. but he wasn’t jwlne to til! he heard what yo' had said. Then he got mad an wouldn't step foot over the doah.’ • ‘An what did I say ?’ “ ‘Yo’ was blowin round that yo' didn’t believe the whale swallered JonP r. ’feared that yo’ wanted to start a f US s with somebody. What's that whale an Joner got to do with yo’? “MEBBE THE WHALE SWALLERED JO.VER.” What’s the matter that what's good null fur Elder Hopkins an everybody else round vere ain’t good ’nuff fur yo’?’ “‘But I ain't a-bellevln the story. How's a man gwlne to live right on arter he’s bin swallered by a whale?* “ 'That's none of our bizness,’ she says. " 'But I'm makin It my bizness,’ says I. 'What don't seem likely to me I ain't gwine to lad love in.’ "‘But yo’ might keep shet about it in n't ’•*>'«• ,q fuss. Who air yo', Zeb White, that yo’ disputes the Bible?’ “That started the row,” said the old man. "an we had some purty hot words. I said I didn't believe the story, an she said she didn’t keer whether I did or not, an we was sassin away when we heard a cry up on the hillside. It was sunthln like the cry of a child, an the old woman gits up an listens an says: “ 'Zeb. thar's a leetle child wanderin about in the bresh. Jest hoot two or three hoots to draw it this way.’ "The cry come ag’in, an then I knowed what it was. It wasn't no lost child, but a prowliu wildcat. I hadn’t heard one fur two y’ars, but I was dog suah of the game. I’d hev told the old woman, but she got mad bekuse I wouldn’t hoot an called me names. When the third cry comes, she says to me: ‘“Zeb White, that must be Joe Baker's leetle boy Jim, an he’s wandered two miles away from home. If yo’ve got a heart In yo'r busum, yo’ll go up the mounting an find him an bring him down in yo'r arms.’ '“I ain’t buntin fur lost boys,’ says I as I tills my pipe. " 'Then I am. I’ll go up thar myself.’ “ ‘Better not’ “ ‘But 1 wilt Befo' the Lawd, but I don't know what’s come over yo', Zeb. Fust yo’ go an deny that the whale awallered Joner, an then yo' won't move hand or foot to save an Innercent child from perishln. Mebbe yo' air gittin ready to turn Mormon an run away from me?’ "‘I ain't takln wild varmints fur lost boys.' says I as the scream come ag’in. "'lt's no'wild varmint It’s the voice of leetle Joe Baker, an he must be skeert almost to death of the darkness. Yo' sot right yere like an old raewi. an I’ll go up an find him. I'm . (nankin the Lawd yo' haln’t got no children of yo'r own.’ " ith that -he gratis up a stick an •tarts up the | lUl> While J knowed tbat o wildcat was roamiu round. I didn't think the old woman would come to •ny hurt. I hoped the cat would yell out an skeer her. an so It was ten minds befo’ I fullered on. She went pushu. through the bresh an calliu to Joey, ' tni now an then the eat cried out in an•"h. i W as doln a heap of laughin to •uyself when the old woman calls back to me: 'tome on, Zeb: I've dun found the bring him along,’ says I. I can't. He's up a tree. Zeb, d!4 Jo ever hear of a lost boy climbin a tree?* ( Not skassly, but mebbe they do it.' ■ An his eyes are shlnin like /wo '' ,l|S of tire. I never knowed that lost c Udren’s eyes looked that way at bight,’ I knowed the cat had dumb a tree ‘ 1 ''as lookfn down at the old woman. “I bad jest opened my mouth to cry a . " art dn when the cat hissed an nn ra, Bed the bark with her : ' That was ’miff. The old worn- ' gin a y e p nn tst nr te<l to run but nt r *. USt u ‘°* e ®be fell over a log. I ‘ .°“ tllat cat ,nust ,ICV *'¥' In| ghty out. . ,unthl “. fur she screamed «, >D J um l*d to the ground an In two min ► WaH ol * fbe oll ' woman’s back an mtt . ,eet b an claws like sin. I tabbed up a dub an mixed In, but at ! cat U "* f be club broke, an the thin on me. Lem me tell yo' bud61t. "'b* wildcats. If yo' was to be buzz*'' D '° “ I 1 *’!*** 011 top °f fo’teen liey lß **’ ’* wouldn't be as bail a* • row with uue full grown wild-
cat She would gm me a bite nn then gi.l the 01,1 Wonun a Clawin. an 'ar was iogettin away from her. We had to ght tut “MS Ilves, an I never did sieh 1 | ilghtiu In nff my days. We'd hev both ' | bin done up except that I dashed the eat ag in a tree an stunned her. an while j locked the doah. We hadn't skassly > i got In befo' the critter was screechin I | round, an. not beta able to git at us she went round to tne shed an bit an < clawed my old mewl till he was no ‘ i good all winter, j “We was a drefful sight to see when I Iwe got into the house—me an the old i won ;,n. We was In tatters a:. tivered ! With blood, an we jest. 1.1! down An laid thar. I was the worst hurt, but I hadn’t got over beln mad ylt. Blmeby I sot up an says: " ‘Mebbe the whale swallered Joner an mebbe he didn't?' “The old woman groaned with her bites an didn't say a word. “ ‘Mebbe Zeb White has a right to his oplnyun. an mebbe he hasn't?’ “She groaned ag’in, but she hated to give up. An mebbe Zeb M hite has sense nuff in his head to know the yeowl of a wildcat from the cry of a leetle child? If yo’ think be haln't, then yo’d better tree some mo’ lost boys.’ “‘What’s the argyment, Zeb?’ she asks as she efts up with tears in her eyes. “ ‘The argyment Is, Kin I hev my oplnyun ’bout Joner an the whale?’ “ 'l’m considerin that yo’ kin.’ “ ‘An am I a man to leave an innercent child to perish in the bresh?' “ ‘Not skassly.’ “ ‘An air yo’ still thankin the Lawd bekase we haln’t got no children?’ “ ‘I don’t believe 1 am.’ “ ‘An. lastly, air yo' gwlne to fly up mad bekase I say them lions orter hev eaten Dan'l when he was cast befo’ ’em?’ “ ‘l’ll argy the p’lnt, Zeb.’ “ ‘Then that’s all. I’ll light another candle, git out the coon's fat an some rags, an we’ll see if we can't patch each other up an git along fur a month without no mo’ fussin.' ” “And so it ended all right?” I asked of the old man as he finished his story. “I thought it had,” he replied, with a sigh. “I thought I had the old woman licked an was gwlne to boss the cabin from that time on, but we was both still limpin from our hurts when I happened to mention that them people never crossed the Red sea dry shod, an she turned on me an got me by the ha’r, an I had to take it all back an shet up like a clam.” M. Quad. “DOING ONE’S BEST.” Sacce.a ot Tbo«e Who Take Thia For a Motto. A homely rhyme found in an old fashioned jingle book Imparts a sound philosophy: Thoughtful little Mary Wood Always did the beet she could. Let us follow Mary's plan, Always do the best we can. At the first glance this looks very easy, still, most of us know that there are days when we do not by any means attain to so high a standard. To do one’s very best Implies that one has a conscience that will not be satisfied ! with half measures, that one has more I than the average amount of good health and that one's ideal is a lofty one. Most of us start off splendidly when we begin anything new. The real testing time comes when the novelty is worn off and we are tired and begin to carry the load wearily. The old proverb, “A new broom sweeps clean.” would never have been spoken if the invariable custom of the world had always been to do the best on all occasions. The great cathedrals of Europe were built slowly through the ages by men who did their best. The great explorers and Investigators in science have done their best. Whatever the work, if it is worth doing at all, it Is worth doing well. The person who has a reputation for accuracy and for punctuality, whose work is always thorough and whose name stands for the best he can do, never need fear that he will not find room at the top—Harper’s Bazar. A Mlalendlnic Motto. "I was down in Charleston, W. Va., ; recently.” said a business man, "look- ! Ing after a contract, and I noticed a | funny thing. “You know." l.e went on. "that the motto on the great seal of Best I Virginia is a Latin lingo something ] like ‘Montana nil non est exto,' menu- , in ‘Mountaineers uro always free. , Well, sir. they slap that state seal all I around their capital, and ns 1 was going j Into the penitentiary I looked up ami ; i saw it over the door. 1 !:< re it was ‘Mountaineers are always free.' "It maj ba un o e < b< ering to tin convicts to read that than t|ie old slogan, ‘Abandon hope all ye who enter here, but it's a blasted lie on the face of it , at that, for I saw plenty of mcuntaln | men wearing the stripes once I got in- ; alde.”-Clucinnatl Enquirer. llouua Coffee Berrlee. Unroa«ted coffee berries are often made from ‘ at and rye flour meal. The natural aroma of these grains Is destroyed by sojjte process, and after the proper amount of coffee aroma is added th. berries are formed | and aused to maintain their shape by I some adhesive substance. —« I *t<rry-Be hlvina, Dlnnls, that ould | i hen’s atln tacks. Dlnnls-Maylte t>l‘ p ’ 20111 t 0 lnr “ I I carpet.—St Andrew’s Gazette. The native the better class of Japanese of both sexes Is a ooso wrapper, open at the chest nnd at the waist confined by a girdle. It Is Mtlmated that an average of eight matches * used dally by every man, woman and child.
AN APPALLING LOSS TRANSATLANTIC LiNEKS BURN AT THE HOBOKEN BIER WITH GREAT LOSS OF LIFE. 1 # SICKLING SCENES OF DEATH I Hundreds Caught On Board Perish Miserably By Fire Or Escape Only to Find a Watery Grave—Property Loss of More Than $10,000,000 Entaileed By Fire. New York. July 2.—Ten million dol- I lars’ worth of property was destroyed, many lives were lost, many persons : were injured and at. least 1,500 lives I were imperiled by a tire that started among cotton bales under pier 3 of the North German Lloyd Steamship company In Hoboken, N. J., late Saturday ; afternoon. In less than 15 minutes the flames covered an area a quarter of a mile long, extending outward from the actual shore line to the bulkheads, from (MX) to 1,000 feet away, and had caught four great ocean liners and a dozen or more smaller craft in its grasp. The fearful havoc to life and property caused by the tire can not be approximated with any degree of certainty. Conservative people who have had experince along the docks are of the opinion that not more than 200 lives were lost. One of the officers of the steamship visitors on board that vessel when the visitors on board that vssei when the tire touched there, the majority of them being women. A boat was lowered from the Bremen shortly after the alarm bad been given, but the craft capsized as it touched the water and all hands were precipitated into the water and none of them was saved by those remaining on the vessel. This | in itself would indicate that the list | of dead may be larger than it was at first thought to be. The property loss can scarcely be approximated at this time. None of the officials around the docks can give anything like a precise estimate of their losses and none are prepared to make a statement on this point. A conserva- j tive estimate made by a prominent tire underwriter, places the entire damage at less than $10,(XX),000. The three docks of the North German Lloyd line are total losses, with all their contents. The pier of the Tliingvalla line is totally wiped away, and an extension which had just been built on the Hamburg-American line’s expanse of piers was burned down to ; the pile tops. Numerous warehouses ! and much minor shipping were destroyed. The steamship properties destroyed were the steamship Main of the North ! German Lloyd line, (listing $1,5<X).000 outside of the cargo, fitting and stores; the steamers Bremen of the North German Lloyd line, costing $1,250,(XX), and her fitting and cargo were valued at S3(H>.iHH); the Saale, the steamship. : which will have the most horrible story of death to unfold when the i divers go dotvn in her. cost the North German Lloyd company $1,250,000 and the fittings and cargo were valued at S3(M>.O(Xt. The damage done to the xvaiser Wilhelm tier Grosse is estl-' mated at $25,000. It is estimated that from 300 to 400 persons were injured and taken to the different hospitals in this city, Jersey City and Hoboken. Many of them wore found to be not seriously hurt and were discharged Sunday. Many others are believed to be so seriously injured that they can not recover. While the fire was still burning the work of relief was begun. Men came to the office of the North German Lloyd line almost naked and with their clothing ruined by the salt water. Men who had been treated by doctors, but who were not sufficiently injured as to be taken to hospitals also gathered at the office. Every man was given money and clothing and taken to a temporary lodginghouse by agents of the company. The sailors from the ships lost absolutely everything they' possessed. Fully NG per cent of the sailors are Germans who have no home and no relatives in this county. Most of them lived in Germany. Nineteen men. machinists and firemen, were taken off the steamship Bremen after having been held very close bound, with death staring them in the face, I for nearly 12 hours. It is feared that some of the Chris-j i tian Endetivorers who were to have sailed from Boston Tuesday for South-! ampton on the Saale may have lost their lives. It is said that some of these people had come to this city to inspect the ship, which had been chart-1 cred to take S(X) of them to England! and tlmt they were on board of her: when the flames broke out on the pier. | As many people, to avoid being j buttled to death on the ships and docks! jumped overboard and were drowned,' It is believed that their bodies were! carried up stream and when they rise! will come to the surface about Twenty | third street unless they drifted Into! tin Central current and .'aught the flood running out. The only way the steamship officials have of approxlmating.the loss of life is by comparing the list of those reported safe with the list of the employes on thv steamships. Late last; night Gustave Schwab, general agent | of the North German Lloyd line, gave! out a list showing what men on each vessel are missing. On the Saale 2551 men were employed and 127 of tliese had only been accounted for to 11 o'clock, leaving 12K men actually employed ns officers, sailors, stewards, engineers, coal passers,' oilers and trimmers to be accounted for. Hie Bremen had 204 men on board, but 127 of these have been found. The Main had 137 employed on her at the thuee and of these 70 have been reported safe.
HEALTHY OLD AGE CCC rtjMCrssfc. S The majority of persons upon reaching middle age and past "ISsdSw SgjaacriwW find their bh od becomes weak and thin, and diseases that were MKMS&p’ A* easily controlled in earlier life begin to affect the constitution • I—— 'j Those predisposed to Scrofula, Cancer, Rheumatism, Gout and other hereditary troubles may escape 1 till then, but as they age the blood, so long tainted and weakened by accumulated waste matters, is no M longer able to properly nourish the body, and it becomes an easy mark for disease. At this critical period of llfe the Wool lnust be re-etiforeed before it can perform its'legitimate functions and rid the system of - these poisons, and nothing so surely and effectually docs this as S. S. S. i i- S ®‘ S ' strengthens and enriches the blood, improves the appetite, and builds up the general constitution ' 11 is not onl >' tlle best bloo<l Pttrthvr. but the best tome for old people. It warms the blood, tones up tbe !ler y es - removes all taint from the blood, and prevents the development of disease. / J.' s. S. S. is the only purely vegetable blood medicine known. Not one particle of mercury, potash or aS \ other mineral poison can be found in it, and it may be taken for any length of time without harm S. S. J», is the only remedy that reaches deep-seated blood troubles like Scrofula, Cancer, Rheumatism, Eczema, Tetter, etc. It purines and restores the blood to a healthy, normal condition, and makes it impossible for ; any poisonous waste materials to accumulate. If you have an old running sore or an obstinate ulcer that refuses to heal, or are troubled with boils and carbuncles, try S. S. S. ! It never fails to make a quick and permanent cure of these pests. If your system is run down and you feel the need of a tonic, S. S. S. will strengthen and help you as it has many others to a happy, healthy old age. TCWr S. S. S. cured Mr. H. Borden of Saumsville, Va„ of a case of M™' D R -Johnson, of Blackshear, Ga was for years afflicted Eczema of thirty-five years’ standing, after the best physicians a seve * e k v P e °i rheumatism, and had used every remedy in the surrounding country had failed. This was seven years and commended as a cure without receiving any U ago, and there has been no return of the disease i benefit S. S. S, promptly reached the seat ot the disease and --i"- 1 made a complete and permanent cure. : $1 If you are in doubt about your disease, and will send us a statement of your ease, our physician will give yon any information or advice wanted, for which we make no charge. “ ’ Book on Blood and Skin Diseases sent to any desiring it. Address Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga. S. S. S. IS THE IDEAL TONIC AND BLOOD PURIFIER FOR OLD PEOPLE.
Keep your Eye on this Column. If you want to buy, sell, rent or' trade a house or farm, let us add your wants to our list. Call at our office, Brock Building, east side Second | street, Decatur. Indiana, for full particulars. Following is the present list: FOR SALE. W acres, Washington tp. 52.500. Inlots 51)f> and 597, Decatur. SI,OOO. ;>4 acre farm in Kirkland township. J mile from stone road. 8 room house good condition, barn 77x36 feet. Brick top ground cellar and all necessary outbuildings. Plenty of fruit, i Good well of water. Easy terms. Harruff Al Lenhart. August Flower. "It is a surprising fact, says Prof. Houton, “that in my travel’s in all ) parts of the world, for the last ten years, I have met more people having used Greene's August Flower than ; any other remedy, for dyspepsia, deranged liver ami stomach, and for constipation. I find for tourists and salesmen, or for persons filling office positions, where headaches and general bad feelings from irregular habits exist, that Greene's August Flower is a grand remedy. It does not injure the system by frequent use. and is excellent for sour stomach and indiI gestion.” Sample bottles free at Page Blackburn's drug store. Sold bv I dealers in all civilized countries. No Pimpers In Wichita. The board of county commissioners of Wichita county. Kan., lias just abol- ! isbed the poorhouse, there being no more paupers In the county. One old soldier is the only dependent person in . the county, and lie is being cared for I by popular subscription, so the county i may be said to be pauperless. Ten I years ago there were over 500 paupers | in Wichita county, but the crops have been so large since then that everybody has made plenty of money. No tramps are allowed in the county. I They must work cr leave. He Got h Dox. Susie—So Harry is going to take you to the theater, is be? Maude—Yes. indeed. Susie—Do you think he will get o box? Maude—Oh. he always does. Marshmallows don’t cost so ve-y much, you know.—Boston Transcript.
•*■*•-*< 4. I The Cure that Cures t Coughs, t Colds, * | Grippe, ; J WHOOPING COUGH. ASTHMA. 1 , 7 BRONCHITIS ANO INCIPIENT f i 7 CONSUMPTION IS f | OTTOS CURE £ &!d by all druggists ■ gajjEHF not ■ |ISF ‘ROGERS’’ pg, Jf tfIMLY-BUT r‘18471 S Rogers Bros IB jSBE i» the I rude mark HB SIM th.-t ,;•■<•’ i.-in.il ggi|i ~r‘ u ,J o|r IISS W Knives, Fork S S mid Spoons. *g Mil I hrs nftneiv !••>■! J •■■ls . |||||| “M/7 is idriiti I vuitf tn.uk fljjlKl •?v4 v .l <’l ’•'■ g' •> ■ Ik h d MHB by lending dealer* Send to / the niakti- sot booklet / W I 1 deeigtii. I 1 THE INTERNATIONAL AJL J SILVER CO. MmWuL M'-riden Conn '■ £ Sk weml JSI V c. ■r jrtt'M
' A Lesson in Health Ls 11 jrtßßn HATE\'ER the apparent 'L <7 1 Wil cause y° ur >ll health, arc • ’ ' v ’" "‘B' l '■ Cc.tain Ui.it la A Ai real, underlying cause M 1 1 isn’t disorder in your kid- " M ne\<’- \ :.e ten :t" your L Q kidneys that need attention, if the real O O root y° ur P oor health is to be Fj reached. Treating your stomach, ; M your liver, your blood, your heart or * rl ' - r : It symptoms id Treating your kidneys is to reach and M remove the cause of disease. LJ Lj If you neglect disorder in the kidneys you’ll Ljf ’*’l h;o, te-. Bright s lisease. grar el or ’■x IKwjMKjßßilMjtgMftCniKaSpK on So Ms'" <0 Foley's Kidney Cure is absolutely guarG* MX anteed for all kidney disorder. You run no pf MB risk. Try it to-day. * rs SORE ? BANNER SALVE will heal it. Sold by Holthouse. Callow & Co., druggists, Decatur. Edisons Phonograph Better than a Piano, Organ, or Music Box, for it sings and talks as well as plays, and don’t cost as much. It reproduces the music of any instrument—band or orchestra—tel la stories and sings—the old familiar hymns as well as the popular songs—it is al ways rea-’y. See that Mr. Edison’s signature is on every machine. Catalogues or all dealers, or NATIONAL PHONOGRAPH CO., 135 Fifth Ave., New York. SWHffM IN DOUBT, TRY ”wy have steod the test of years,' k QTnrjljp a J an d h av ® cured tnousands of I I’l liuliu X C *' l er ' 4 Disease- 'ich w aX* JF uZA/jas Debilit} , Dizziness, Sleeplesss 101 I ce>s ar. i ar 1 ccele. Atrophy.dec. ' A0 AI H 1 They the brain, st. engtheu the ircuiation, make digest! a perfect, and impart a healthy v >?cr to the whole being. A!I drains and losses are checked perman-nily. Unless patients K P ro P er *y cured, their condition often worries them into Insanity, Consumption or Death. .Jailed sealed. Pri ? ? 2 • per box: 6 boxes, with iron-clad legal guarantee to or refund taa A cone; ,ss.ar. Send *ut tea bock. Address. PEAL MEDICINE CO . Clcvsiand. 0 Page Blackburn, druggist. Dectiur. Indiana. PENNYROYAL PILLS I — °r and banish "pains tptUS of menstruation.” They are “LIFE SAVERS” to girls at womanhood, aiding development of organs and body. No known remedy for women equals them. Cannot do harm —life becomes a pleasure. SI.OO L*ER BOX BY MAIL. Sold ! JkSSSm? by druggists. DK. MOTT’S CHEMICAL CO., Cleveland, Ohio. For sale by Nachtrieb Jc Fuelling. HEALTH AND VITALITY ■ SI IDIV. ■BO.O’I'T-tS I ■ ■■ reEKVEnxivk: x»ix.x.ai ! The creat remedy tor nervous prostration and ail diseases ot th“ k---n< rstive ■ organs ot either sex. such as Nervous Prostration. Failing or Lost Manhood p Impotency, Ni.-hCy Emissions Youthful Err r>. Mental We-: >- use ot Tobacco or Opium, which lead to Consumption and Insanit y With every IFTFR ANU! UOIIW. 6 boxes tor $5.00. DH.MOTT’S CHII.VUt At CO., Cleveland, Ohio! For sale by Nachtrleb A Fuelling.
! Legal Advertising. OF EXECI TOR. I Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned have been appointed executors of the estate ot Eliza A. Patterson late of Adams county, deceased. The estate is probabh solvent. R. D . J. C. and G. W. Pattehson. Admr's June 13. 1 WO. 1.5-3 I X ITOI VI.MEXT Os ADMIM'TR A TOR. Notice is hereby triven that the undersigned hn« been appointed administrator ot the | estate of Eiias Uridegani. late of Adams county, deceased. The estate is probably *olvent. GRANVILLE W. Kri’RIOHT. lune2it. twin. Admin orator. J. T. Merry man. Attorney. 17-3 ’ ROY ARCHBOLD, DENTIST. I. O. 0. F. BLOCK. Pliono -J . j HENRY B. HELLER. ATTORNEY AT LAW, Office, rooms 1 and '.’. Stone Block, opposite court house. Collection.. Notary Public. AMOS P. BEATTY. ATTORNEY AT LAW And Notary Public Pension claims prose-1 culc'l. Odd Fellows building. I ® JAMES T. MERRYMAN. ATTORNEY AT LAW, DECATt'R. INl>. Office Nos. 1. 2. .1. over Adams Co. Bank, 1 refer, by permission to Adams Co Bank. ERW IN * F.RWtN, ATTORNEYS AT < irririe —(* rn»*r Monroe and Second si reel s General practitioner, Nojdiarge for consul. ' tutlou.
Pdi UhMUr'< Fa«Hab THaaiviid Arend. CNNYROYAL PILLS K Original aad Only Genuine. Ak ■< r '~hl -hr,t9T I ■ a* a ,'lran.i iu K«*«l ax.! '. ■! 1 metal .u\V|y —*?<p7boxea •-ai«i w -.h b.ae rC ->■. Take \Br no Other. x-**eeda»i<*r-*4 n.’«*uv- ▼ j 4 •“ frr twiu »nu loumcvwMi At j * la vtampa f -r par’irniarw ■ -**iuu>aU.i ar < *s?» JS “Rein r fer La<l l«-a. *'m L ttzr. vy r»l«r« jv 10,0110 r«-e-..i. .ttiiais Far.tf ."afv — I »• * I'rugruu < l*lch«*alrr < kr»nt< ai < 0., 1100 Muuisoa Huuare. ■« **A. SRfflt ? 8 jjejj Dr tTIL an: ■ In I ar. Pile I L jwi ■ ntnie .t " ill c are 8.:;.d. H aS f D 1 ’•Blv ori.- and Itcuinir fi w Il :d ~ .r: • the tune r . ■V ■ ■ alia:,-, the lie!.".. K < a | ..tic in ■v •_ re- ■ ■ lief. Dr. WU.iatns 1 Ind inn Pile Oint;3 " I ■ Ing ol the private parts Every !■ is v.arrante i. Bv dr • .is. by mu ! r celpi ot p • .‘><l . nu ~ i fl.oo. WILI4MS MANUFACTURING CO . < i. .. „ ; .j. Nachtrleb J, Fuelling. CHARLES N. CHRISTEN. Decatur, Indiana. All kinds of Plans ami Specifications furnished for building of every de acription. Reasonable terms. 12 JXTJEX’TTTIXTJE! X3IIOB. Surgeon dentists. Located over Archboid\ grocery A ...— John Schurger. have E.Smith H< HFUGKR At SMITH. ATTORNEYS AT £AW. « i Money to Loan at. lowest rates of Interest , Aiist mets of title. renlestate and collection* I Rooms I. J and 3 Welllejr block It
