Decatur Democrat, Volume 46, Number 11, Decatur, Adams County, 22 May 1902 — Page 6
f \ v*The fisherman, the sailor, the yachtsman and everybody, is liable to sudden attacks of disease. "Painkihev (PERRY DAVIS’) Acts like magic for cholera, cramps, sudden colds, or chills from exposure ; Take no substitute. Pri THE WAY OF A TORNADO. One That Was Remarkable Both In Appearance and Action. “A tornado that was remarkable both In appearance and in action was one that traveled from Texas across Oklahoma and Indian Territory in May, J 896." says Earl W. Mayo in Ainslee’s. “A man in Sherman, Okla., who had exceptional opportunitl°s for observing the storm, inasmuch as he was caught tip in it and carried several hundred yards before descending to earth again, is certain that it was not funnel shaped. He says of It: “ ‘lt looked to me like a great ball of vapor rolling over and over toward me. When I first saw it distinctly. It ■was at a hill perhaps an eighth of a | mile away. It seemed to be about 250 I yards wide and 100 feet high. The motion was that of a ball rolling over and I over, not spiral, and it came on rather I slowly, perhaps thirty miles an hour. I "Whatever the ball of cloud struck was lifted right off the ground. “ ‘I saw it pick up house after house between the hill and me. and the cloud seemed to be full of flying boards and timbers. When the ball reached Mrs. C.’s. the house nearest me. it went I straight up off its foundations. The house remained intact until it was j about twenty or twenty-five feet from ; the ground, then it burst open and the fragments flew in all directions. It looked like an exploding bomb. The corn and cotton standing a hundred feet on either side of the storm's path were uninjured, but whenever the cloud struck the higher ground it spread out, covering a wider strip of , the surface. “‘When the cloud struck me. I went up lightly and easily and the sensation was not unpleasant, but 1 came down [ bard and was badly shaken up. although not seriously injured. On the highway north of Sherman fence wires were torn from the posts and pounded into the hard surface of the road a dis- i tauce of two or three inches.’ ” ■ THE WOMAN WHO FAINTED. A I.eaaon on Courtesy In n Crowded London Theater, Here is an example of the courtesy and good feeling of the twentieth century. How are we to account for it’ The worst of it is that in such a case the innocent suffer for the guilty. When | a woman does really faint, there will' be some hesitation before she receives a seat consolation and brandy. In an overcrowded pit of one of the London theaters the other night a lady, I who was standing, suddenly became .very faint, and another lady sitting near kindly offered her her seat Not only this, but. seeing that she did not recover quickly, she went and fetched some restoratives from the refreshment room, whereupon the lady quickly recovered and began to thoroughly enter, Into the spirit of the play, apparently quite oblivious of her benefactress. As time went on she was asked by her benefactress if she would object to her sitting down again. But the other i would none of It. "Now I have a seat' I mean to keep it!” she replied. Where- ' upon her benefactress gently reminded J her that she had paid for her seat and 1 thought that she had every right to re : turn to it. hut no amount of talking would apparently move the former. A gentleman sitting near, having' watched the episode, leaned forward ■nd said, “Do you intend to give up your seat?" "No,” was the reply. Up he sprang and gently lifted her out of it. An onlooker said to a lady next to her, “I like that man.” "Thank you,” was the reply; "he Is my busband.” There seems to be no limit to the resources used by some people to secure what they have not paid for. The lady was no more faint than any one else in the audience.—London Free Lauoe. rEte^ : n! l ry III—I JQNES J 1 d:.- - " r ’"'- '
MATTER AND FORCE. ENERGY CANNOT BE CREATED NOR CAN IT BE DESTROYED. If Pnny Vian Could Accomplish Either of These Impossible Thins*, He Could Cause '•th.- W reck Wf .flatter and the Crash of Worlds." If you could imagine an earthworm trying to run the Niagara Electric Lighting anti Power Transmission works, you would have some faint idea of the capacity of the greatest human genius that ever lived to run the visible universe. That is probably why the wisest of 'us is not permitted to un derstand the final secrets of nature. Here is a good example. Take a rifle into a place sufficiently far from the ; habitations of men, put tile butt on the j ground and support it so that the bar- . rel points straight up and pull the trigger. The bullet will leave the muzzle | with a velocity of. say. 3,000 feet a secI ond. It will rise to an enormous I height, come to a standstill for an In- , finitesimal fraction of a second and be- | gin to fall back again. It will strike I the earth with very nearly but not I quite the same velocity as it left the muzzle of the gun. It would be exactly the same but for the resistance of the air. What h» happened is this: The exi plosion of the powder has changed a solid into a gas. and the expansive energy of this has driven the bullet upward. In other words, it has for the time overcome that mysterious force by which the earth draws everything toward its own center. But when the energy of the exploded powder is exactly balanced by the pull of gravitation the bullet falls back. In the first second after its turn It falls ' 16 feet, in the next 32. in the next 64, in the next 12S. and so on till it returns with ever increasing velocity whence it started. Nothing has been lost, nothing gained. The gases set free by the exploi sion of the powder weigh exactly as i much as the solid. Some of the energy I has been used as heat, some in propel- ' ling the bullet. Gravitation, overcome for awhile, has reasserted itself. The sum of matter and force in the universe is absolutely unchanged. This is as true of the quickened beat of a girl's heart when she meets her lover as it is of the march of the planets and suns through the fields of space. Every atom of matter, every unit of . force, throughout the universe is constant. external and exactly balanced, and the whole strength and genius of humanity could not increase or diminish them by the slightest fraction. Now. let us imagme what would happen if man eould make that bullet strike the earth with greater or less force than it left the muzzle of the gun He would either have increased or decreased the total of universal energy. , and in either case be would have thrown first the solar system and then ' the whole universe out of gear. The earth and all the other planets would begin to revolve in different orj bits. The sun. with its family of worlds, would alter its path round the unknown center about which it revolves. Then world would be hurled against world and sun against sun. and stars and planets would be reduced to the flaming gases from which they cooled into solids and liquids before time began to be. Just the same catastrophe would happen if man could either create or entirely destroy a grain of sand on the seashore. The balance of the universe. ' in which swing stars and planets, | whose weight is inexpressible in human . figures (this tiny world of ours weighs ■ 6.OOO,OCiO.OOOXkiU.OOO.OGO.UOO tons), is infinitely more delicate than that which I the chemist has to keep in an airtight ; case and at an even temperature lest a breath of air should throw it out of ■ Kt-ar. Thus the destruction or creation of a ■ grain of sand would change the orbit of the earth round the sun. In the one case it would be drawn closer and I closer to the sun, perhaps after thousands of revolutions to be swallowed i up in fiery ruin. In the other case it would gradually leave the sun and year I by year wander farther away into regions of space where human life would j be impossible. The result of the dislocation of such a stupendous system, which has worked with unfailing exactitude for countless ages, is. of course, utterly beyond I the scope of human imagination, and I yet such a seeming trifle as the creation I or destruction of a single grain of sand might, and probably would, plunge it Into utter chaos and ruin.—Pearson’s. An Awakener. > A preacher, raising his eyes from his desk In the midst of his sermon, was paralyzed with amazement to see his rude son In the gallery pelting the hearers in the pews below with horse chestnuts. But while the good man was preparing a frown of reproof the young hopeful cried out: “You ’tend to your preaching, daddy. I'll keep ’em awake.” IDNEC Send or List. poH s£Al[ 18 BETTER ANU LOWER Priced THAN ANY OTHER WE MEAN IT. AUDKESS BOX JONES OF BINGHAMTON, BINGHAMTON, N. Y. HE PAYS THE FREIGHT.* . .
Death Gulch. A ravine in the northeast corner ol Yellowstone National park, in WyoI ruing, is known by those living near by as Death gulch. Grewsome as is the name, it is exceedingly appropriate. It is a V shaped trench cut in the mountainside and begins about 250 feet above Cache creek. Apparently it forms a natural shelter for the beasts of the forest, as food, water and shelter are there, but entrance to the gulch means death to any animal, for the IKiisouous vapors that rise out of the ravine are more deadly than the bullets of the huntsmen. For ages this death trap in the Rocky mountains has probably been luring the inhabitants of the forest to their doom. With the rains of spring the bones of the dead of the preceding year are carried down to the creek and the gulch cleared for the death harvest of the summer ami winter. The geologists say that the lavas which fill the ancient basin of the park at this place rest upon the flanks of mountains formed of fragmentary volcanic ejects. Gaseous emanations are given out in great volume. These come, the scientists say. from deposits of altered and crystalline travertine mixed with pools in the creek. Above these deposits the creek cuts into a bank of sulphur. In the bottom of the gully is a small stream sour with sulphuric acid. No wonder the poor animals seeking shelter in the gulch meet death there. A Cnrionn Trnp. A curious labyrinth in which elephants are captured alive is to be seen near Ayuthla, formerly the capital of Siam. The labyrinth is formed of a double row of immense tree trunks set firmly in the ground, the space between j them gradually narrowing. Where it begins, at the edge of the forest, the opening of the labyrinth is more than a mile wide, but as it ai>proaches Ayuthia it becomes so narrow that the elephants cannot turn around. Suspecting no danger the wild elephant enters the broad opening at the forest end, lured on by a tame elephant. The gradual narrowing of the boundaries is not observed until the elephant finds himself in close quarters. Having reached the end of the labyrinth, tLe tame elephant is allowed to pass through a gate, while men lying in wait slip shackles over the feet of the captives. The s[iort is a dangerous one, for the enraged elephants sometimes crush the hunters under their feet. Alphabetical Ahme. The prosecuting attorney in a lawsuit had waxed especially indignant at the defendant, whom be characterized as an “abandoned, baneful, cynical, diabolic, execrable, felonious, greedy, hateful, Irresponsible, jaundiced, knavish. lazy, meddlesome, noxious, outrageous and profligate rowdy.” "The learned counsel on the other side,” said the attorney for the defendant when he rose to reply, "should have put his adjectives in a hat* and shaken them up a little before using. You must have noticed, gentlemen of the jury, that they were in regular alphabetical order. This shows that he selected them from a dictionary, beginning with ‘a.’ He stopped at ‘p,’ but in his manner of reproducing them he has given us the ‘cue’ as to bow be got them.” This turned the laugh against the other lawyer, and he lost the case. A Bright Jnry. In a larceny case in Maine it was I agreed to go on with only II men on the jury. The trial lasted several hours, and then the jury retired to deliberate upon the evidence and find a verdict. After being out four hours the jury reported that it could not agree, and accordingly it was discharged from further duty in the case, and the prisoner was remanded to the jail. A little later the attorneys for the respondent “got at” one of the jurymen and asked him how the vote stood In the jury room. "Well,” said he, “we balloted about 20 times, and each time there were 11 votes for conviction, but at no time could we get 12 votes for conviction, so we bad to report a disagreement.” A Bit of Bowery Dinl<»icne. This gem of metropolitan English Is vouched for by the New York correspondent of the Pittsburg Commercial Gazette: I beard this bit of dialogue between I two Bowery hoodlums the other day: Said one as be pointed to bis shiny I black trousers: "Ob, Chimmy, boweber like me blacks?” “All right,” was the response, "but dey ain’t ez good ez yer lightest.” "G’wan, yer guy; git wise. Dese is I dose, only I had ’em dyed.” And then they got aboard a car. Row to Qnlt Chewing Tohaceo. The “substitute cure" is worthy of the attention of sufferers. We have a citizen of Mobile who has tried it He was an inveterate cbewer of tobacco. He stopped chewing and took to chewing a pine stick. He always has this bit of wood between his teeth, in waking hours at least He has not tasted tobacco In many years.—Mobile Register. Unavoidable. “Why do you wander aimlessly from I place to place?” inquired the philanthropist. “Well,” answered Meandering Mike, “eight hours’ sleep a day Is enough for anybody. And we’a gotter do somet'ing wit’ de other 16 hoiws, ain’t we?” Washington Star. Explained. Customer-Waiter. It Is nearly half an hour since I ordered that turtle soup. Walter-Sorry, sir, but you know bow slow turtles are, sir.
A Light Repast. Hungry Horace—Kind lady, can’t ye gimme semepin ter eat? I ain't ate nothin sense day before yesterday. Kind Lady—And what did you eat then ? Hungry Horace-Nothin but de market report in an old paper.—Baltimore American. The Candid Suburbanite. “I suppose |n-ople around here raise their own vegetables?” “Some do; others merely plant tbeus.” —Puck. It may be that you haven’t more trouble than others, but that you have more time to think about it. —Atchison Globe. “An All=Day Food” Wheat and pure Iruit combined. •’Perfection” is a strong word to apply tn a food product. It Is nor recklessly used, however, when applied to ( ERO-FRUTO because this IS perfect human food. p<»**rssinir. as it <h>es. one hundred percent, nutrition. In other words, all of it- solids are-olible in the juices of the-totnach and therefore capable of being assimilated by old and young, weak and strong. The name indicates its character. It is a carefully balanced combination of the choicest wheat berries and the pure-t of fresh fruit. The elaborate and complete processes to which both the wheat and the fruit are subjected eliminate the undesirable waste of • ach. CERO-FRVTOi- sustaining. *atisfy- ; ing. delicious, healthful. It is not alone a breakfast food—it is adapted to any meal. | Being predigested it is an ideal dish to t>e eaten for late supper. It may also be eaten ■ with any digestible combination of foods without unpleasant effects <’ERo-FRl’Tu is garnished by nature. It contain-* more nutrition for the brain worker, the growing child, and the working man than any other cereal product. Physicianuniversally recommend the liberal use of fruits to assure a perfect sterile condition of the stomach as they are especially rich in the choicest of all sugars—Levulose, or fruit sugar, which represents starch in a state of complete digestion CFRO-FKUTO i- thoroughly cooked, ready to eat. and is pure, crisp, healthful and nourishing. Sold by a era Samples sent free for the asking. Address. Cero-Fruto Food Co. Ltd . Battle Creek Mich. John H. Lenhert E. Burt Lenhart LENHART & LENHART. Attorneys, Abstracters. Loan money at low rates with partial payment privileges. Write tire, accident and heaith insurance. Special attent' >n given probate practice and titles to real estate Brock Building east -ide Second street Decatur. Indiana. ROY ARCHBOLD, DENTIST. I. O. O. F. BLOCK. Phone -* Office, Phone ( Regjdence 153. —| J. D. HALE, DEALER IN Gfaiq, Seeds, Moot, Oil Salt, Goal, Lirne, Fertilizers. Elev tors on the Chicago 4 Erie and Clove Leaf railreads. Office and retail store south east corner of Second and Jefferson Streets 1W Your patronage solicited. 1 DR. FENNER’S KIDNEY - Backache -AU diseases of Kidneys, /Al t w-x w-w Bladder Urinary Organs. i* I I | Rheumatism Back I I I frache HeartDfsease Gravel 1 ■ I i |\ I Dropsy, Female Troubles. V/V' 1 Ik L/ Don't become discouraged. There is a cure for you. If necessary write Dr. Fenner. He has spent a life time curing Just such cases asyours. All consultations Free. "Dr. Fenner's Kidney and Backache Cure Is the cause of my being alive to-day. I had -offered greatly of kidney disease for years and reduced in weight to 120 pounds. 1 now weigh 165 pounds. W. H. McGCGIN, Olive Furnace. O." Dragflatt x . t, , , . ~t B . ~h ST.VITUS’DANCEr Home Seeker’s Excursions VIA Southern Railway To All Points in Alabama, Georgia, Florida, North and South Caroliua.Kenntucky, Missouri, Tennessee and Virginia. ON TUESDAYS. May 20. June 3 and 17. Julv 1 and 15. August 5 and 19. Sept. 2 and 16. October 7 anti 21. AT THE VERY LOW RATE of one fare for the round trie plus $2.00. Tickets are good going fifteen days and for stop-over south th<* Ohio River with final limit for return of twenty one days from date of sale. For information about rates etc., call on your nearest ticketagent C B. ALLEN j s McCVLLOtQH ' u. t . ■ „ bvrborn st . St. Louis. Mo. Chicago 111. For information about farm lands, business locations etc write. J. F. OLSEN, Lland and Industrial Dep’t CHICAGO ILL.
In this list there are many good properties, offered below actual cost of i mi , r( ■ we have other properties not listed here for rent, sale or trade, < a-h trati-a. ta ln « .J” 1 id van lagt - to buyer and seller, arid I now have a large number ofcash purchasers what tht-v wan”.placed upon the market if you are interested in the rH,. o farm lands, bush-ess rooms, residences, mill machinery, town or r'i. write for one of our recent lists for full descriptions. Refer to properties by number. East side Second St. LP. SNOW, Dctalur,lndj aw . l
Mo. r '~ for sale. Thirty-five building low in. I price from 1135 to Jbjo. No. t'.l for sale Four acres south of De-atur, | vineyard. S6OO. < ! No. KT for sale. One-halt acre south of lie--catur. house, etc., two. No. <5 for sale of trade. Thirty acres north’ of Geneva, oil land 12100. No. •> for sale or trade Twelve acres in i west Decatur. Fruit and poultry farm F 3.50 No. 105 for sale. Sixty acres good farm land, Wabash township 13700. No. 107 for -ale or trade. Sixty acres. Root | I township, near Decatur futseO. No. «for sale. One acre in northwest Decatur. house, stable, etc. 11550. No. '2 for sale. Twdnty acres in north Preble township fUtX). No 9S for sale A forty acre farm in Union township SI3OO. No. r-v for sale. A forty acre tract in East; Hoot township 014.50. No 10s for sale. A forty acre tract in Faat Washington township 08000. So 101 for sale. An eighty acre tract. South Washington 04000. No. 103 for sale. An eighty acre tract in Monroe township, fair buildings 04700. No. KM tor sale. An eighty acri tract in Root 1 township 04500. No. 110 for sale. One hundred and eight acres East Washington 04300. No. 102 fur sale. One hundred twenty seres, Washington township O»SiW. No. 64 (or sale. One hundred fifty and one , half acres. Root township 07000. No i-l for sale or trade Two hundred and ninety acres, near Decatur, Indiana 02(MXi. No. 1W for sale of trade. The "New Craig” hotel in Us-ian. Indiana O2‘«' N«. 11l for sale or trade. A large five stand roller Hour mill in Decatur Indiana c apacity 75 barrels of flour daily 0«0t«' No. 112 for sale or trade A large and modern hotel property, "The Burt,” Decatur, Indiana osooo No. 113 for sale or trade. Five acres of coarse gravel near Decatur 15000 No. 114 for sale. Two story brick l-usiness room on East Monroe street. Decatur IW. No 67 for sale or trade. Two storr business room on W inchester street. Decatur lIISU. No K 5 for sale. Neat new cottage on Jackson street, five rooms 1675. N< 115 for sale. A modern, new. five room cottaire, large lot, on Mercer sireet 11100. No. 7s for sale or trade. A seven room cottage on (South Tenth -treet S7OO. No. 76 for sale. Six room cottage, three lots. Eleventh street fllOO. No. 116 for sale or trade Modern six room cottage on North Second street $1375, No. 117 for sale. Story and a half nine room bouse <gi Munroe street No. 73 for -ale. A nine ro- tn two story brick on North second street $l«C0.
■ ■ P fJDr. Williams'lndian Pile ■ IS H .:. | ..r.i’ s:.’i !’i i. ng ■ I ** -t n*- tumors. ■ ■ a..as> the itchinc at once, acts ■ ■■as a poultice, gives instant reH ■ lief. Dr. Williams’lndian Pile Oint- ■ " ment is prepared for Piles and It. h- ■ ing of the private parts. Every box is warranted. By druggists. by mail on reeelpt of price 50 cents and fil.isi. WIL LUMS MANUFICTURING CO.. Props-. Cleveland, dbE Na-'htrieb t Fuelling. <©> RAILROAD WEST. No. 5. vestibule limited, dally for I Chicago fl2:Sfp. m No. 3. Pacific express, daily for ( Chicago ( 2:25 a. m No. 1. express, daily except Sun- i day for Chicago ( 10:43 a, m EAST No. 8. vestibule limited, daily for I New York and Boston ( 7:57 p m No. 2, express, dally except Sun-1 day for New York f 1;55p. m No 12. express, daily for New i * York ( 2-25 a m Through coaches and sleeping cars to New York and Boston Trains land 2 stop at all stations on the C t E. Division. . T , rain * So ' '■ carries through sleeping cars to Columbus. Circleville. Chillicothe. WaverIts. Portsmouth. Ironton, and Kenova, via Columbus. Hocking Valley A To.edo. and Norfolk t Western lines •No. 13 will not carry any baggage. Grand Rapids & Indiana. [Effect March 2, 1902. | TRAINS NORTH. STATIONS. , X<> . g *No. 3. *l2o 7 Rlcnmona... . 11:10 pm 12:50pm 5:40 am Khn“wn" ’ ”* P “ I;t * p "’Ji** 1 11* 1 sJo^Hiii:::::: 11:42p "' lr -’ p “ J=|' a “ « I d che <u er "«•«• Yaipm eJrSE I Portland e w* * I:SZ1 :S Z p " ;t4 a “ Brians • “ 2:17 p m 7:W H m Geneva i ’ <«■ ; :31 p m 7:18 a m ! :W,m 8: *P“ 7:2bam I Monroe / . H l $J S >:s Bi S%i’' * : * P “ «:SpS , ■ :s 5855 Cadillac 7 a I 1: »»n> 4:40 p m >tX ; :10a “ 5:45 pm Mackinaw ciVw’ * n ‘ s:*Sam 9:2ft pm -J-ft'kinawCity. 4:15 pm I <1:55 a m 10:45pm •Dally, except Sunday. Wally. TRAINS SOUTH /•TathTns—, No „ |N() . Pe*toske7 CU> ' ~... " IF&d rt O.: is:* }?| : “ K' -O'azoo 0:50.2 JllXEg 1130 ,ln ' tar. • }:2 p £ g« a » *SS i BOan? //• |$ P ” :“’ a - Portland. 217 S S w" *“ iS* ll Ridgeville..... iiainm 1? i L :I ° a m I Winchester. . 2:49 pm - : J!! ani SnowHlll. p -04 am ..-Warn ten::;::;: • idi ’ ni Fountain City 317 n m u.»’2”’ ,i | '»ni ißichmtrnd.,": 15; p ‘ !sati*da r y from'llacVnacCltv. ‘ Dallp i 3.L LXawoon, Oen.PaVAMn? 0 " AMn ‘
'No US for saie. Story and a h„ lf I terson street 12.150. 011 ' No. 75 for sale, seven . ... . M roe and Tenth street‘l.io )0 No. for sate or tratio E.clit r,..,,,,, B . a half residence in Mono., v •. Ind'l, ,'r**■ No. 70 for sale or trade. brick residence on V.rtl s, , , . '•* ■Jaßj No. 50 for sale or trade. A ra.«| ( .r n ’Z room story and a half n ■ , Cv .,' ' . Munroe stre et *I2W: No. 51 for sale or trade. A la-ee t» n nine room residence, on Murstia St f','? 7 No. st for sale or trade Nin. property in Ft. Recovt r> No 79 for sale Story and aI u - 5( .v,. house on Madison street n r,c * No. IC for sale. Good six num -..Tti,.,, „ | uevateoo. 10 * . No. S«for sale. Story and a house on Nuttnau ami sixn, , 1r ,. el No. SO for sale. Four room cottage <m Chestnut street (Ml. or ‘ No. si for sale. Desirable root. near Fifth street. North | W4r No. 47 forsaieor trade. A two storv » I dence property and two lot? ..i, E.mst Ida ' No. 4S for sale or trade. New n.odeni e.a room, story and a half resid, - , . ■ street MMO. No. 53 for sale or trade. Sev, d ce-m «« and a haH residence property in Lion Grow' No. 52 for sale or trade. A six r-utn eottuw on Nutman street piudO. No. 49 for sale. Large two st, ; v tea mresidence on Winchester etre. t J27W. No 104 for sale. A nine mor. cottage « Sixth street, near Munroe fl 175. No. 90 tor saie. Seven room cottage on ku, street Ls"). iNo 119 for sale. Story and a half seveamoa , residence on North Second street ?l«oo, ! No. 120 for sale Cottage of six room. n» . Short street fIOOU. No. 71 for sale or trade. Story anfl a half eight room residence on Line street 111!#, No. T 4 for sale. Story and a halt -even rooa I residence on Monroe street f 12X | No. 121 for sale. Modern two story t rick rets dence. large and roomv. on East .Motree | street f4t«t No. 77 for sale or trade. Five room cottage near South Third street loft No. 122 for sale. New four room cottage og West Madison street 1525. No. 123 for sale Story and a half ree.denceos I Chestnut street $725. No. 124 for sale. A new five room resilience on South Main street SSOO. No 125 for sale. A cottage r» dence Jre rooms, near West Elm street Istu. No. 126 for sale. Two story brics reeidence and store room in Hoagland. Ind S37K.
EAST. No. 6. The ComuFi Trav.-ler daily "lit Ni 2. Ma:>. daily, except Sunday .12-*t.m No. 4. Day express, daily. : 12f a No. 22. Local freight .... lilOal WEST. No. 3. Day express, daily s:Sai| No. 1. Mail, daily except Sumi • • ll:l*t>« No. 5. TheComm’i Traveler, ds y '- Spa No. 23. Local freight I’-liWy a Mortgage Loans. Money Loaned on favorab'e terrs, Low Rate of Interest. “ Privelege of partial payrents. Abstracts of Title carefully prepared. F. M. SGHIRMEYEH, Cor. Second and Wadiaon , Decatur’, Indiana- - -Ulo M|EXAS » MEW FIST T»M Between St. Louts and Kansas Cttf * Bi OKLAHOMA CITY, WICHITA, . DENISON, SHERMAN, DALLAS, _ FORT W» RTH And principal points In Texas asd west. This train Is new through! • made up of the finest equipment, rv • n with electric lights and all othr ® f traveling conveniences. It runs 'i“ jur completed Red River Division. lroi^nT.nrrX7di k nW In the make-up of thia service, includmir Case Observation CarSs under the management of F l ** s .; ~..i\iiiof Full Information as to t»t®a •P l ! J LsserftW a trip via this new route wiHJ* „ —pre furnished, upon application, by •entatlve ot the frank C Reilly. General Agenl- , 0 t nton Trust Bldg, 407 Walnut st, vine
