Decatur Democrat, Volume 45, Number 25, Decatur, Adams County, 29 August 1901 — Page 5

Races by the driving club September 18-19-20. If you are in the market for a Whitman 'hay press see Schafer, Son A Loch, 2512 The three biggest days Decatur ever saw The Driving Club’s big race meet September 48-19-20. Among the unique features of the big county fair is a grand automobile race which takes place on Wednesday. Are you coming to Decatur September 18-19-20? The races will be the best you ever saw. §1,600 in prizes. For sale cheap. Thirty three ewes and one buck. Nine months time. Inquire on Schirmeyer farm one mile ' west of Decatur, Indiana. 21 4 i We have two second hand traction ! engines, 12-horse power. Must be ' sold and can be bought right. Schafer, Son & Loch. 25t2 i I have One Hundred Thousand ' Dollars 8100,000, to loan on real J estate at 51 per cent interest. No commision. D. B. Erwin. ts !

We have the agency for the Eirdsell clover huller. If you are in the market it will pay you to see us. We have a second handed one that we can sell cheap. Schafer, Son & Loch. Huntington County Fair. September 16, to 20. Don’t forget that Huntington county will have another old fashioned fair. No charges for entries, no charges for straw, no charges for stalls. 24-4 The following letters are advertised: ' Joseph Andrews, Henry Derkson Jr., J. H. Farmer, Henry Bushmaster. Miss Minnie Brenier, Will Myers, Ed. MeCardle. Dimerick Livery, Miss A. Kreffer, William Heckman, J. N. Smith, W. W. Kooper, Ruby Hamle- ' son. P. L. Andrews. In the September Review of Reviews Dr. Shaw touches on the SchleySampson controversy, and discusses the steel strike, the trouble in Panama and many other foreign and domestic ' topics of current interest, including a ' valuable summary of some of the important European expositions of the ! past season. r i National Encampment G. A. R. Cleveland, Ohio. For the 35th annual I encampment, the Chicago & Erie R. < R.. will sell excursion tickets to Cleve land, Ohio and return at rate of one 1 cent per mile. Tickets on sale at all I stations, Sept. Bth to 12th inclusive, ; good returning until Sept. 15th and, i on payment of 50c. to Joint Agent at j Cleveland, tickets will l>e extended to ' October Bth. For information regard I ing rates and side trips from Cleve- t land to Buffalo, Niagara Falls and I’ut-in-Bay, apply to Erie Agents, or i W. S. Morrison, T. P. A., Hunting- 1 ton, Ind.

A SMASH IN PRICES! ’•AW"'/-' Saturday Morning, Sept. 31, I I And continuing for 30 days, we will begin the greatest Price Smashing Sale of Ladies’ and Children’s FURS, including Colarettes, Boasand Muffs, ever held in Decatur. We have 150 different styles—samples consigned to us by one of the largest New York fur houses—to be sold at wholesale prices. They must all go and you can get the best goods on the market and save yourself 50 per cent. We will not carry them over. We have arranged them on bargain tables, so you don’t have to look all over the house. No baits offered to catch the unwary. Nothing but genuine fur bargains in this sale. Our Dress Goods Department. I We wish to announce that we now have a large stock of the highest grade of Dress Goods we have ever handled and which we believe is the finest line in Decatur. Included in the line are goods of every grade, quality and price. Come in and inspect them. We are 0-iod fn nnnte vou prices. We also have a large line of fall dress goods especially suited for school wear. You can buy them at 25c on the dollar. | GASS & M. FULLENKAMP.

. .. Notice. indiLtou’ ™ i " g tb “lvestobe nd bted to the late Nicholas Schafer or any one having an account against h>mwdl please call at my place ß « door west of the Big Store, that we may settle his accounts. M. Schafer. Mnel-irmT ® nn ”al excursion to i*i( 1 ri S a,U i Saturda y, Sept. 7, • . via lover Leaf route and D. A mil tean n r ' Gra, . l(l lake to 'ir of 320 ehennest >o t 0 i uiu our heapest and best excursion of the ™n. For tickets and full informaroute ° U ° Cal ageuts Clover Loa ‘ e ? rria K PH below cost; they must be closed out at following prices: for Zn • P T e Sl9 ' (X) ’ 'vi'l sell or l ' 90 .’ pr l ce ?17 ' 00 > will sell for 10.2;> pnee 816.00, will sell for §9.95, price §15,00, will sell for §8.15. Now 1 Q XI iv ivmc A1 . .

is your time to buy a fine carriage as they must sell, for we need the Hdor room for our fall stock. L. Yager & Two departments are begun in the September Everybody’s. One is a department of humor, the other a department of practical suggestions for nomen who wish to make money by home work. There are thousands of women who. if trained, would be excellent workers, and others who could execute ably if plans were devised for them. In order to bring together the forces of the wom°n of ideas and the women of practical abilitv, Everybody's offers a prize of §SO to whoever sends in the most practical, novel and effective suggestion for immediate self-support for untrained women before December Ist. M illiams & Flickinger, state agents for the John Hancock Insurance company, have, through their local attorneys, Peterson & France, filed suit against Clarence L. Ayres and his father Nathan Ayres, demanding the sum of §275. Ayres was formerly a district agent for Williams & Flickinger, and as such handled quite an amount of money. He was under bond for the sum of §I,OOO, being secured by Nathan Ayres and Norval Blackburn. It will be remembered that a few months ago C. L. Ayres became entangled in an ugly mixup at Portland and hurriedly left the state, going to Grand Rapids, Michigan. At the time of his departure he was short in his accounts the sum of §219.54. which has never been paid and is the cause of the present suit. Mr. Blackburn having died in the meantime the claim was filed against his estate and suit brought against Ayres and his father.

California Excursions. For the Episcopal Church Convention at San brancisco in October. The Chicago & Erie R. R. will sell cheap excursion tickets to San Francisco and return on Sept. 18th to 27th inclusive, good returning until November 15th. Stopovers will be allowed west of St. Paul and at Colorado points. For information see Erie agents or write W. S. Morrison, T. P. A., Huntington, Ind. Astounded the Editor. Editor S. A. Brown, of Bennettsville, S. C., was once immensely surprised. ‘'Through long suffering from dyspepsia,” he writes, my wife was greatly run down. She had no strength or vigor and suffered great distress from her stomach, but she tried Electric Bitters which helped her at once, and. after using four bottles, she is entirely well, can eat anything. It’s a grand tonic, and its gentle laxative qualities are splendid for torpid liver.” For indigestion, loss of appetite, stomach and liver troubles it s a positive guaranteed cure. Only 50c at Page Blackburn’s. a Good Advice.—The most miserable beings in the world are those suffering from dyspepsia and liver complaint. More than seventy-five per cent, of the people of the United States are afflicted with these two diseases and their effects, such as sour stomach, sick headache, habitual costiveness, palpation of the heart, h..art-burn. waterbrash, gnawing and burning pains at the pit of the stomach, yellow skin, coated tongue and disagreeable taste in the mouth, coming up of food aftereating, low spirits, etc. Go to your druggist and get a bottle of August Flower for 75 cents. Two doses will relieve you. Try it. Get Green’s Prize Almanac. Page Blackburn. ts Our cash box this week registers the following as having paid up: C. E. Suttles, Theodore Smith, Jesse Beitler, Jesse Rowe, Fred Bender, Jacob .Mangold, George Dutcher, Mrs. Tim Coffee, Peter Bailey, P. B. Thomas, Michael Steveley, Daniel Death, Mrs. Cordelia Bey, Mrs. D. McLeod, Jacob Hunzicker, C. C. Schug, J. C. Schug, J. E. Rose, C. E. Stuckey. Mont Ruse, Fred Liddy, Vai Snell, Theo. Kennedy, Mrs. Margeret Meibers, A. A. Butler, Gus Schlegel, Bert Mann, George Woodward. John Hessler, Gus Christen, Henry Krick, Peter Canter, C. W. Grove, Ellen Brown, G. R. Dickerson, T. P. Harris, Fred H. Fuelling, Herman Reinking. T. S. McCullough, Adam Zeaser, Jacob Wechter, C. E. Bollinger, Jacob Hart. A. G. Briggs, W. H. VanCamn, H. F. Callow, James Ernst, R. J. Holthouse, Harlo Mann, Henry Schultz, S. J. Bowers, Mrs. Hattie Sells, Richard Haifling, C. H. Baker. P. K. Kinney, T. S. Coffee and J. B. Corson.

Gus Rosenthal always guarantees goods Gus Rosenthal always leads with quality as represented or refunds money. —always below in price. ADVANCE Fall Clothing Sale!

THE GREATEST STOCK and assortment of fine men’s and boy’s Clothing ever shown in this city, consisting of fine Tweeds, Thibets, Worsteds, Scotch Cheviot and Homes fine effects, is now ready for your inspection, and as we have spared no pains in selecting these goods from the best lines in this country, they are really marvels of beauty and sure please the finest dressers as well as the most economical buyers.

r> .’iO V? -®/ ■ Jil w 4

New fall Hats have arrived in Howards. Derbys, New Golfs, the Dresser Soft Hats and many other late productions. ON THE DOLLAR for 300 fine fall samples soft Hats. Your opportunity to buy a fine and good wearing hat for less money than you have to pay for inferior goods. __ Buys aSO cent black and white work shirt with double front and back, 36 inche3 long and double sewed all over. Many more great money saving values. Call before buying and the superior quality cembined with low prices will conqince you that you are saving money and getting the thing you want by buying at Gus Rosenthal’s New Store. Old Kern, Brittson & Beeler stand.

A* /T '* T f *.F t 'I I > I 1 w