Decatur Democrat, Volume 45, Number 30, Decatur, Adams County, 3 October 1901 — Page 7
W r ' £y Hamff - J- H. Lenhart. Harruff & Lenhart real estate brokers. every state in the union, and in thirty days time can place your property before 100.000 buyers. This is a good business proposition and costs you nothing unless sale is made. Here are a few bargains.
No I —l° B<re farm - three and one-half 'mile’s from Dei’Stur, on new stone road; dose to church. one mile from school house. Ninety-tire acres cleared; all under good fence; all ' lack land, well tided. Good Inline house of seven rixnns. large frame barn and all necessary out-buildings. Good cherry orchard of seventy trees; plum orchard! of twenty-three trees: apple orchard of one hundred trees; all young, thrifty trees bearing select fruit. Good driven well and steel wind pump: also dug well with iron force pump; both excellent water. This farm is a bargain at 46,000 00. NO 2.— 40ncre farm - , ' lur miles south of catur. one fourth mile from stone road, close to church ana schixil Thirty-seven and one half acres cleared; two and onehalf acres small timber; all black land and well tiled, except one small field. Well fenced. One story plank bouse of three rooms and summer kitchen, fair condition; log barn with sheds on three sides; cribs, granary and other out-bcildings. Good driven well and steel wind mill, water tank, etc. Good bearing orchard. Price, *2,000.00. No acre farm, three and one-half miles southeast of Decatur, on stone road. All cleared and well fenced; all black land; good frame house of seven rooms, in good repair; large frame barn In good shape, granaries, cribs and other necessary buildings. fine young orchard of about two hundred apple, cherry and plum trees, fine and thrifty and bearing select fruit. Land all well tiled and very productive; good dug well, splendid water, with iron force pump. One mile from school and near to church. Cheap at $1,000.00. pj 0 4,—100 acre farm, three miles southeast of Decatur, on gravel road Eighty-five acres cleared and fenced into six fields;good fences; balance timber land; oak. walnut and other timber, (toil black sandy, river bottom loam, very pioductive House of seven room®, one ami one half story solid frame, well built and in good shape; also frame house of six rooms,one story, in good condition. Frame hank barn. 32x.V) feet; stable under whole barn, end all in tine -hape; cribs, granaries and other out-build-ings. Driven well with iron force pump, can not he pumped dry; first-class water: also dug well of good water Orchard of tine fruit.; thrlftv trees This is a fine farm and has been well cared for and is a bargain. Price. $4,700 00. NO. s.—Goof 40 acre farm in Lorain county. Ohio, four miles south of Grafton Station, and four miles southwest of Belden Station, in good neighborhood, near t > sch<>ol and church. House of eight rooii sin g<x>d repair; good barn, horse barn, granary cribs and other necessary out-bulldiugs Two good, never failing wells, gtxxi cistern; orchard of bearing trees—apples, pears, peaches, small fruits, etc Land all cleared and all under good cultivation. Ten acres creek bottom and balance fair clay soil, all in good condition A des ruble small farm. Cheap at 41.650.00; one-third cash balance in payments to suit purchaser, at 6 per cent, interest. NO o.—acres of pood unbroken prairie land in Kidder county. North Dakota, situated four miles from Diwson. on Northern Pacific railroad, ami twelve miles from Steele, the countv seat of Kidder countv. Church and school near to laud This land will make a tine home for the right party. If you are in want of a cheap home und a gtxxi farm, it will pai to investigate this offer. Will exchange lor small house and lot in Decatur. Is very cheap at $550.00. NO. 8. —PO acre farm on good graved road running fi jm Union City to Fort Recovery, Ohio, three-quarters of a miie from school, near to church, and good neighborhood. Six tv-fl ye acres cleared and fifteen acres in timber-maple, oak, etc. Land well tiled, fence* in tairly good repair. Frame house, one and one-halt stories, six nice rooms and cedar, all in good shape Frame barn, shedded on three Mdes for stables, two good wells, never failing, aid good cistern—always plenty of water. Good bearing orchard of all varieties of fruit. This farm lies nine miles from Union City and «ix an I onehalt miles from Fort Recovery, and one mile from postoffice with daily mail. This is a splendid chance to buy a good farm, and will not be in the market long at the price at which it is now quoted. Price, $3.u00 00. NO 7.—Residence property, two and a half squares from court house. Decatur. Ind., *rame house of seven rooms.two closets and pantry, house needs painting outside.ln good condition inside.barn sixteen by twentyfour feet, wood house and other out buildings. House piped for gas, good well and cistern, pair cherry and peach trees grape arbor, ail situated on inlot No 277 and south half of inlot No. 278. on a quiet street in a good neighborhood, near io business center Price 32000.00; one half cash, balance in two equal annual payments. NO. 105. —Good residence property on south Ninth street. Decatur. One and one halt -tory frame house, six rooms and summer kitchen; house newly papered and in good condition; piped for gas; good tank cistern, aboutthii tv bearing fruit trees -apple, pear, cherry. This will make yon a nice home and can be bought on easy terms. Price, 11,0(0 00. v No* .—Residence property on corner of sixth and Jefferson streets: house one and one-half story, seven rooms, neat and in rood repair, good cell ir. bou«e piped for gas, city water piped into lot. plenty of fruitapples, pears, plums and peaches, good grape arbor and small fruits. This is one among the moat desirable residence properties in the city, and a bargain at 31.500.00. Will be sold on easy terms. No 7.—80 acre form, three and one half miles east of Decatur, on a goes! road, onehalf mile from school one mile from church, part black land and balance sandy clay loam, seventy acres cleared, balance in -mall timber and woods pasture, fences fairly good. One aud one-half story f rame house of five rooms, ami summer kitchen, all in good repair, rooms nicety papered and nil in good shape. Barn 46x66 feet, solid oak frame set on stone pillars and with slate roof, first class In every particular, good granary, corn cribs and other out-buildings built apart from barn good driven well with Iron pump, never falling. Bft barrel cemented cistern. good soft water for drinking or washing purposes. Two orchards of nice thrifty young bearing trees, apples, pears, etc; fine grape arbor, excellent grapes. About fifty acres of this farm is now well
REMEMBER, that if you want to sell your real estate we can find you a buyer, and if you want to buy real estate can sell you. NO COMMISSION UNLESS SALE IS MADE Harruff & Lenhart. DECATUR, INDIANA. mott’s DCUUYRnYAI PH IQ »•’ rtnUInUIHLrILLg known remedy for iMonmen a nleasure. SI.OO PER BOX BY MAID. SO><l JRSatir by druggists. DR. MOTT’S CHEMICAL CO., Cleveland, Ohio. For eale by Nacbtriob * Fuelling-
set down to grass. This Is a fine farm in an shoukf mH n X b at hOUd HQd i 8 a ba,gain you 00 per acre. NO] IQ -40 acres, one mile west and one-half ™ Ohio s?x rone, cr vol L". hlr '? Ohio ‘ 01116 ,r Om east lrom Berne to state line; xll bl ick land; drained by 12 inch Hie. drain along entire east, side, for outlet, and about Ilk) rods of 6 and 7 inch tile tapped wlVh.hfa ,1|6 _and smaller tile connected 6 n 2 ‘ ,nob til6 - One « od one-hall 110,186 18x28 'oft- 4 roomsand pantrj. new. Good stable about 16x24. room e’La a e .u?°J' Bes ’.. b "“' gy 9heJ aud llllv “hove 1 111 Ulf'l well with iron force pumpsplendid Sator. About2o acres cleared 8 acres in corn, about 8 acrls ready for wheat balance small timber suitable for fencing and wood; the wood can be sold lor enough 10 , 1,ay . 10r clearing the land. This is a splendid piece ot land for a home and will be sold on easy terms, and will not be in the p”c"i e ied o ?&<).^r useu wl “ 800,1 Beu “* NO. 11.-80 acre farm, nine miles southwest ot Decatur. 1 and miles from Bluffton macadam road, \ mile from proposed stone road which has been voted lor, mile from school. 1 and *■£ mile from churen, in good neighborhood. 55 acres mean d and well iLed and under cultivation, balance in small timber, about HO acres black land, balance sandy clay soil, all very productive. Frame house ot five rooms, and summer kitchen and wood house, barn 16 by 86 feet, stable room for three horses, young orchard of 80 trees, apples, pt ars, peaches and cnerries. and some other small fruits; 3‘i inch driven well, excellent water, never tails. This farm is one mile 1r >m postoffice, railroad station and grain market, and is a bargain, and will not be in the market long, at the price asked. Price 13,200, ‘icash. balance in two equal pay ments at 6 per cent. No- 100.— t fine residence property in Decatur, Indiana, six squares from business center. on a stone street; corner lot 83x132 feet, lies high ami dry, fine maple shade trees next to streets; bearing apple and pear trees and grape vines in good bearing condition. One and one-half story frame ho ise of icn rooms, well built and in good repair, piped tor gas, well of good water with iron pump, under roof, good dry cellar, good barn with stable room for six horses; also a large building which has been used lor a carpenter shop, can i>e arranged tor dwelling house with small outlay. A very desirable residence property. Price, 12.000,00, one-half cash, balance in one and two years at six per cent. NO- 101.—Five room house on Ninth «treet. norm of Monroe. Decatur, l-»t 66x132 feet; house in good repair, except needs painting outside, well finished inside, gas piped for two stores, good well of splendid water, good cistern, forty-five fruit trees on lot, apple pear, plum and peach trees, grape arbor, currant and gooseberry bushes. '1 his property will make a fine home for the right man. Price, 3900,00. NO. 103 .—Residence property.—One and nnebalf story frame house of eleven rooms, t wo large clothes rooms, buttry and china closet, room-* all newly papered, and all in good condition, a large dry cellar, house p'p* d foi gas. fine drilled well, iron force pump, splendid water, eighty-five barrel tank cistern with pump in kitch* n. good large woo 1 house and summer kitchen, also coal house. This desirable residence is situated on a fine, large lot, on a brick street in Decatur, inside of the railroads, less than three squares from the business center of citv. The 10l contain 6 apple, pear, cherry and plum trees all excellent fruit, and is nicely situated in a good neighborhood. Price. 31,600.00. NO. 104.—Residence property in city of catur. House of flit* rooms, two clothes rooms and fine large butt ry. rooms newly papered and painted last spring, house is pip* d for gas and city water, also has fine drilled well of splendid water, new fifty barrel tank cistern put in one j ear ago. good large summer kitchen piped for gas. good barn and out-buildings, i his residence is situated on a good alley lot on Indiana street, one-half square we«t of Fifth street and one-half square from Third Ward school building; lot is 66x132 feet with maple shade trees next to street, also next to alley back ot summer kitchen. In good neighborhood and cheap at 3900.00. NO. 12 -8.1 acres of as good corn land as there is in Aditns countv. U mile from school. mile from gravel road. Oft acres cleared ano well tiled. 15 acres ot good pasture, all well fenced, hewed log bouse, comfortable, large farm barn, new granaries and cribs, good orchard, driven well with iron force pump This is all black soil, and lies6 1 , mi es southwest of Monroe. 7 miles from Bluffton. 10 miles from Berne and 1J miles from Decatur. in a German neighborhood. No open ditch on th»» farm. Price 34.600. 52.500 cash, balance to suit purchaser. NO 13 — Fifty acre farm, one-half mile west of Peterson. Indiana, forty acres clear 'd, balance in timber, building timber to build house ot barn, sown to grass and is irood pasture, land mostly black so’landisall well tiled, fences in good repair, aud land has been well kept up. log house, can be used for dwelling for years with little repair, barn room for eight hones ami room above toi five to seven tons of hay. corn crib and wagon shfd at side of barn, granarj’ and shed built seperate from other bui.dings, wood house, hog pens, smoke house, etc., good bored well, never fails, iron force pump, good bearing orc hard of twenty-five to thirty trees. This farm lies less »han one quarter mile from stone road, one-half mile from postoffice und geneial store, and as goo 1 gram market as there is in the county, one and one half mile from church and one-halt mile from graded school. This farm should be seem to be appreciated. Price, 32,400.00; 4400.00 cash; balance to sub purchaser, with Interest at six percent, paid annually. NO —.—One hundred and sixty acre farm fixe miles northwest of Decatur, on good gravel road, one hundred and five acres cleared, fifty-five acres in timber and woods pasture, some good timber, frame house of six rooms In fair condition, good collar, frame barn 40xrO feet, corn viihs, wagon shed, granary and other out-buildlngs. voung bearing orchard of apple, pear and cherry trees, grape arbor and other small fruits; soil partly black and partly day. fairly well tiled, and has been well farmed. A bargain at 3W.U) per acre.
I iT WAS A MASSACRE Company C, Ninth Infantry Wiped Out By Troacharous Filipinos In Samar. CAUGHT WHILE AT BREAKFAST ■ A Force of Four Hundred Bolomen Overcome Seventy-Two of Uncle Sam's Soldiers Nearly All of Whom Were Slain— Insurgents Show Unexpected Strength. Manila, Oct. 1. Later returns from the Island of Samar, where the almost utter annihilation of Company C, Utli infantry, at the hands of insurgents occurred last Saturday, say that the officers of tlie company, who were at first reported to have escaped, were killed with the majority of the company. The troops were attacked while unprepared, by 400 bolomen, of whom tlie Americans killed about 150. Many of the soldiers were killed in their quarters before they had time to grasp their rifles. General Hughes is going to the scene of the disaster and will personally command tne troops. Manila, Sept. 30.—A disastrous fight between United States troops and insurgents occurred Saturday in the Island of Samar, near Balanglga. A large body of insurgents attacked Company C, Ninth infantry, only 24 members of the company escaping. All tlie others are reported to have . been killed.
The company were at breakfast when attacked and made a determined resistance, but tlie overwhelming numbers of the insurgents compelled them to retreat. Gs tlie survivors who have arrived at Basey 11 are wounded. According to tlie latest returns the strength of the company was 72. The survivors include Captain Thomas W. Connell, First Lieutenant Edward A. Bumpus and Dr. R. S. Griswold, surgeon. Captain Edwin Bookmiller of the Ninth infantry, reports that General Hughes is assembling a force to attack tlie insurgents. The insurgents captured all the stores aud ammunition of the company and all the rifles except 2(1. CHEATED A SENSATION Official Circles In Washington Try to Account for Blow. Washington, Sept. 31).—News of the disastrous tight between troops of tlie Ninth infantry and the insurgents in the Island of Samar was sent promptly by General Hughes, commanding in that island, to General Chaffee at Manila and by him transmitted to the war department. It reached tlie department Sunday, and Adjutant General Corbin, realising its importance, made it public, after sending a Copy to the Whitee House. Tlie news created a sensation in official circles. It was the first severe reverse that lias occurred for a long time. Still, tlie officials were not unprepared for news of just tills character from Samar, in which tlie revolution started by Aguinaldo still continues. Samar is a country about as large as the state of Ohio, aud the Anierlcan torces of occupation number in all between 2,000 and 2,500 men. MARKET QUOTATIONS Prevailing Prices For Grain, Provisions and Livestock on Sept, 30. Indianapolis Grain and Livestock. Wlieat—Wagon, TOe; No. 2 red, steady. 70’Ac. I‘orn-Steady; No. 2 mixed, oS’-e. Oats Firm; No. 2 mixed. oiLie. Cattle Dull at Hogs-Stiady at OoL.'to. Sheep Steady at sL.'>o<(i;L2s. Lambs Sternly at $:r04.7.’». Chicago Grain and Provisions. |<!|>em-d-; Clusec. Wheat— | I Sept •f -'W'iS .08% Dee | .?)'» .70’4 May id.N Coin - | i Sept .s'>Ui .54% Dec 4 ..| .•’044 ..a-.-S May I -Wj .58% Oats— i Sept ; .34% .34 s, I •"■'•l "yX Mnf i ..ii'j. .di-> s Poti. i _ Sept 14 112 , 14 02 Oct 15 00 , 14 t!2 Jar I HI 2-’ I I'l 00 Lard- I Sept I" 4ti , t> ir_ Oct | 10 15 II si Jan. » 50 l> Itlbs- I | Sept I 802 8 82 (let I 885 I K SI) Jan. -- I t» *0 I 822 Closing cash market—Wheat. 08!4c; cor-., 54%e: oats. 34)5,e; pork, 414.02; lard, 60.1 L; ribs, $8.82. Louisville Grain and Livestock. Wheat No. 2 red aud lougberry, 71c. Coni No. 2 white, Ol'ac; No. 2 mixed, Cuttle Dull at s2.2.V<i t.IH). Bogs Slow at $4.50®t7. Sheep- Slow at s2'tt2.7O. Lambs Steady at 42.50fd4.50. Cincinnati Grain and Livestock, Wheat Firm; No. 2 roll, 74c. Corn Finn; No. 2 mixed, like. Oats Steady; No. 2 mixed, .lUtie. Cattle Lower at 41.7.V<|5.2.'>. Hogs Active at »4..'11W(7.22',4Sheep—Dull nt $1.25f<t3.25. Lambs Dull at $2.2.V<i4.50. Chicago Livestock. Cattle Steady: steers. »4fatl.(M); utoa> eis and feeders, $2.50(j1.30. Hogs Strong nt $4f07.20. Sheep Lower nt f8.2NU3.75. Lunins Steady nt 42.1Wt1.1W. — New York Livestock. X Cattle- Steady at $3.1106/5.10. I ' Hogs Firm nt s<Wi7.lo. Slii-ep-Stendy nt $2.50/1/3.75. LJ4. Lainba Steady ut sl.2o(ijO.*X
DRIVEN TO MADNESS. TIMES WHEN AN EXCESS OF JOY IS LINKED WITH INSANITY. Some of the Saddest 4 uses of Lunacy Are Those Where the Mind Is I nnLlc to Stand the Shock of Sudden Good Tidings. It is no exaggeration to assert, said an asylum doctor of long and varied experience, that there are scores of men and women in our asylums who have literally been sent there through excess of joy. Many of these cases which are, in my opinion, the saddest of all have come under my own observation. I remember in tlie very first asylum with xvhicli I was connected one of the patients was a strikingly handsome and very well educated man, who was as sane as you or 1 except on one point. He was really a man of considerable wealth, but liis delusion was that he was a pauper, and he would tell the most pitiful tales of his destitution, begging, with tears in his eyes, for a few coppers with which to buy bread. According to the story told me, he was the only son of a wealthy merchant. In liis youth he had fallen among evil companions and had led sucli a dissolute life that liis father not only threatened to disinherit him, but forbade him ever to enter his house again. After that he seems to have sunk into the lowest depths of poverty until he was glad to earn a few coppers by selling papers or matches in the streets. It was at this last and lowest stage that news came to him that his father had died intestate and that lie was heir to all his vast fortune. The sudden news completely turned the man’s brain and brought on such a condition of excitement ihat he had to be sent to an asylum, and when lie calmed down again he had lost all recollection of his good fortune, and nothing can shake his delusion that he is on the verge of starvation. Another patient in the same asylum was a young and in Ills lucid moments a most intelligent fellow, whose "brain was turned,” as the saying is, on learning that he had passed an examination. He had sat for tlie matriculation examination at the University of London, on passing which he had set his heart aud bad asked a friend in London to wire the result as soon as the names were screened at Burlington House. About three weeks later came a fatal telegram, “Failed—sorry,” which sent the young man into the lowest depths of despair, for he was too old to sit again. Not many hours later, however, came another telegram, “Passed honors —very sorry crusli so great did not see name this morning." The revulsion of feeling was so great that the student's reason gave way, and he became so violent in liis excitement that he had to be confined. Fortunately he was not with us long and is now, I am glad to know, doing very well as a solicitor. Disappointed love sends many people to asylums, but it is very seldom that success in wooing drives a man mad. It had this strange effect, however, on one of my late patients. The girl he loved bad gone out to India to keep house for her brother before he had screwed up his courage to the point of proposing to her, but an offer followed by mail very quickly after iier. Weeks and months passed, and no answer came to the impatient lover until, after waiting two years in despair, lie became engaged to a girl who had nothing but her money bags to recommend her and for whom he had not a particle of love. Scarcely, however, was his fate scaled than lie received the long despaired of letter from India, accepting his offer and explaining that the girl’s brother had received and mislaid tlie letter, which bad only Just been found and bad come into bethauls.
Within an hour of tlie receipt of this letter the man was a raving maniac, and although liis condition is improved I doubt whether lie will ever recover liis reason. In another remarkable case It was the joy at seeing her husband again that robbed a lady patient of her reason. Her husband was tlie captain of a merchant ship which was reported to have gone dotvn with all bands. The widow had deeply mourned her husband for nearly a year, when one day on returning from a walk she found him sitting in the drawing room as hale and robust as ever. With a shriek she fell unconscious on the floor, and when she recovered her reason was gone. It seems Hint her busband, after floating for some time, had been picked up by a passing “tramp" and had been lauded on the west coast of Africa, from which he had returned home by the first available vessel.—London Tit-Bits. •Tin Different In Knfflnud. “1 suppose It’s all right for Americans who visit Europe to talk with an English accent when they come home,” reflected Uncle Allen Sparks, “but you never hear of any Englishmen talking through their noses and saying T guess' after they have spent n season in tlie United States and gone buck borne.”—Chicago Tribune. Hope. “Sny, l»p, I’ve got to write n compo sltlon on ‘Hope.’ What is ‘Hope,' any way?” "Hope, my boy, Is tlie joyous expectation of being able to dodge our just deserts.”—Life. Hyde park, the Green park and St. James' park cost London between them £32,970 n year to keep up. More than four-fifths of tbo population of Mexico are of mixed or Indian blood.
Women Cannot Dobk Each Other. The old theory that woman is man's helper seems incorrigibly well founded, says E. S. Martin in McClure's Magazine. If the situation Isn’t satisfactory to her. there is no help for it. for the conditions it came out of seem to be eternal. Women may vote. They will be none tlie less man's helpers if they do. They never will band together to put man down and tench him liis place. Tin y will push him ahead if they can, they will pull him along when they must, they will influence liim enormously, as they always have done, but they will never conspire together on any very great scale to make him play second fiddle. Some one has got to be master. Women In general will never agree to have women bosses so long as there are competent men for that use. Arriving nt n Total. Tax Collector—How much is your husband worth? Mrs. Wise—About a million. Tax Collector—Are you sure? Mrs. Wise—Oh, yes. You see, the jury awarded him $2.C00 for the loss of a finger. 1 think In proportion the rest of him would be worth about 500 times as much.—Chicago News.
JAMES T. MEKRYMAN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, DECATUR. IND. Office—Nos. 1, 2 3, over Adams Co. Bank, 1 refer, by permission to Adams Co. Bank. ERWIN & ERWIN, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Office.—-Corner Monroe and Second streets General practitioner. No charge for consul, tation. Are you after the best and cheat est wire /% fence? fl 1 Do you need any flrst-cla's machinery ! Are you safe in fire and life Insurance | 1 am to be found Rt Fred Mills’grocery or at my home, ’phone 265. ■W. O’. MYEnS. Ellsworth. Myers & Co. accountsjare payable to me only. Dr. G. V. Goqqell, Veterinary' Surgeon Dentist. . . DECf»TtIIL INDIftNA. Office-I. 0. O. F. BLOCK. Graduate of the Ontario Veterinary College aud Toronto Veterinary Dental School. Treats all diseases of domesticat 3d animals Culls attor dod to day or night.
The DECATUR NATIONAL BANK, of Decatur, Indiana, with its CAPITAL and SURPLUS of ONE HUNDRED AND TEN THOUSAND DOLLARS, and its total resources of over ONE HALF MILLION DOLLARS, through its Directors—P. W. Smith, President, W. A. Kuebler, V Pres., C. A. Dugan, Cashier, E. X. Ehinger, A Cas., Daniel Sprang, John B. Mason, and J. H. Hobrock—desires to call attention to its facilities for the transaction of all legitimate banking business including the sale of EXCHANGE payable at any PLACE in EUROPE, nd nvites you to become one of its customers. HEALTH and vitality W Cm I« QLc Km ■ ■ ■ mot-x-o A The great remedy tor nervous prostration and all diseases of the generative £ organs ot either sex, such as Nervous Prostration, Failing or Lost Manhood, Itnpotency, Nightly Emissions, Youthful Errors, Mental Worry, excessive use 1 " of Tobacco or Opium, which lead to Consumption and Insanity. With every ICTCD IKIkIC #5 order wa guarantee to cure or refund the money. Sold at SI.OO per box. Arlen UOIHO. G boxes for $5.00, Hit. .’HOTT'S CHUUK AL, CO., Cleveland, Ohio. For sale by Naehtrleb A Fuelling Il A FAIR QUESTION ' TO ASTHM/X SUFFERERS, f ]OULD you give two cents or two and Ml a half cents for immediate and post- X jjJ tive relief from the exhausting and (JC/ nerve-racking asthma from which you -— suffer ? One dose of Foley's Honey and Tar is positively and unconditionally guaranteed to give relief, and there are ten doses in a 25 cent bottle—twenty-five doses in a 50 cent JBFiz bottle. Foley’s Honey and Tar will cure asthma if not too far advanced, and always will bring relief. Hemember one dose means relief from the terrible wheezing and choking-up. .... , our guarantee worth the price of a trial to you? Foley’s Honey and Tar ” is the name. Louise Prickett, 509 Bryan Ave., Danville. 111., writes : “ I had suffered several years with Asthma and alter try- jdfctX Inga great many remedies I had given up all hope I was GSSfi' advised to try Foley’s Honey and Tar It immediately stops the coughing spells and I get my breath more Ireely. It is the only medicine that ever gave me relief.” BANNER SALVE heah all hurts. “ 80 by Holthouao. Callow & Co. .druggists, Decatur. WHEN IN DOUBT. TRY They have stood the te« ot year*. OTO nun y\ 4 1 a "d h, ‘ v * cured thousands ot AiKIIibH BW X °f Nervous Diseases, such W I VlllUllU fipyXXnas Debility, Dizziness. Slerplw M WCj an a It] I nets »«’d Varicocele, Al. ophy, Ac* t* F AhnlN ' They clear the brain, strengthen \ 1 the circulation, make digestion z- \ perfect, and impart a healthy vigor to the whole being. All drains and losses are checked/rrM<a«irvi*/y. Unless patlenf* nre properly cured, thnr condition often worries them into Insanity, Consumption or Death Mailed sealed. Phr |r per box; 6 boxes, with IrotKlad l«*gal guarantee to cv-e or refund the BBK xs-JItS nfDCy.fcan. Send lor tree book. Address, PEAL MEDICINE CO. "Lund. U> Page|Blackburn, druggist,-Decatur, Indiana.
K Rain and sweat < \ \ H E have no effect ca M K Rk ness Oil. it re- \ W sista the d.urp, rr \ \ fS3j do net break. \ V \ H JJj| No rough stir- \\\ \ B ggf. ~ H KB face to chafe \ f \ H QB and cut. \\\H M harness not X '\\ \ \ N w Ki only keeps \ \ \ ' looking liko ™ V/ \ p cS new, but Lwjf , \ I |fl twice | . // X ■| as long by the mH use of Eureka ‘ n| Harness OU, \ 1 1 J in cans— // \ \xAv x \ all sizes. (Vk ' [/ \ \X ’ Made by '-«J If \ Standard Oil j\ ' . \ \ Company \ Postmaster Palmer of So. Glen Falls, N. Y., describes a condition which thousands of men and women find identical with theirs. 'jy Read what he says, and note the similarity y° ur own case. Write to him. < il !os;ng stamped addressed envelL. D. Palmer. °P e , for 1 /- and get a personal corroboration of what is here given. He says regarding Dr. Miles* Heart Cure: “I suffered agonizing pain in the left breast and between my shoulders from heart trouble. My heart would palpitate, flutter, then skip beats, until I could no longer lie in bed. Night after night 1 walked the floor, for to lie down would have meant sudden death. My condition seemed 'imost hopeless when I began taking Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure, but it helped me from the first. Later I took Dr. Miles’ Nervine with the Heart Cure and the effect was astonishing. i earnestly implore similar sufferers to give these remedies a Dial.” Sold by all Druggists on guarantee. Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind. AMOS P. BEATTY. ATTORNEY AT LAW And Notary Public. Pension claims urosecuted. Odo Fellows building. 1
