Decatur Democrat, Volume 48, Number 21, Decatur, Adams County, 28 July 1904 — Page 8

Linn Grove. Miss Bauman, of Bluffton, Ohio, ■ is visiting her unole, Philip Bauman at this place. Charles Morrow left Monday for i St. Louis where “he will take in the sights of the fair. Adam Ritohley, Mrs John Ritchley and son Victor, of Craigville, ' called on Miss 4111a Newsbaum Monday. Sunday evening at the home of Frank Heller occurred the marriage of David Wall to Miss Clara Gilgen. F. A. W. Lindsey and wife, I hales Fonts and family were guests of their son and brother Fred, of Geneva. Sunday Last Saturday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Eli French in East Nottingham township occurred the marriage of their daughter Emma to Levi Brown, of South Hartford township. For the last two months the home I of Issac Ruple one-half mile south of the Adams county line has been visited by people far and near, es-i pecialy on the Sabbath, the attrac- | tion being the genius and talent of his son Albert, who is inventing ■ and about completing an air ship, ■ and expects to make a flight to St. | Louis and enter the contest in the aerial navigation in which Albert! (although a boy has full confidence of succeeding. On last Sabbath; yo ur itemizer in company with Le- i ander Rohn were among the many visitors. We found the vessel near I ready for trial test. The ship is 30x35 feet, equipped with a 15-horse power engine which propels the fans, their use being to foice the air under the stationary wings. Her estimated speed is thirty miles an hour, carrying two persons, and if not confronted with reverses renown and wealth will be the product of his invention. THE MANTCHOOS. U'beir Degeneration From Fierce Warriors to Lazy Parasites. The history of the Mantchoos is one of continued and rapid growth. From a small tribe their influence spread over the great plains of western Manchuria until they became a force which even great China deemed it advisable to conciliate. Their ambitions knew no limit, and early in the sixteenth century they began an invasion of China. A century later, by methods which at times gave evidence of the most crafty and skillful diplomacy, and again were those of a most cruel tyrant, the greatest empire that the world has known was acquired by a race of half savage nomads. As the home of the Mantchoo dynasty, Manchuria, in the eyes of the emperor, deserved honored treatment, and the followers of the standard — there was scarcely a Mantchoo who iiad not seen service—were specially eared for. It was declared by special decree that all Mantchoos for time unending should belong to one of the eight banner corps and receive a small monthly stipend. The great home country should remain the exclusive property of all Mantchoos. and Chinese were forbidden to bold land in it. The Koreans had now been driven to the south, and Manchuria extended virtually to the banks of the Yalu on the south and to the sea on the east. The Mantchoo policy, which in its conception provided for the continuance and development of a great race of pure Mantchoos, who would always be at the beck and call of the Mantchoo dynasty and would be a safeguard against the restoration of Chinese rule, brought on results quite the reverse of those desired. The Mantchoo found his small wage sufficient at first to provide food, and there was no longer the necessity to live the arduous life of a bunter or herdsman. In a generation or two the race had degenerated into a lazy band of parasites, who, in the absence of a strenuous life, had lost all the cunning and the warlike skill which bad brought to them a great empire. They maintained a reputation for fierceness, however, and at the time of the war with Japan it was predicted that the Japanese would find a match in the Mantchoo cavalry. The first engagement between the two dispelled forever this illusion.—James W. Davidson in Century. FOR SALE—A five year old mare perfectly gentle. Not afraid of automobiles or the oars. Also a six months old colt. Jennie Studabaker. 162d12

Eyes Examined Free and Headaches Cured —BY — ’ Drs. Burke & Lemontree of 221 S. Michigan St. South Bend, Ind., yho have been making regular visits to Decatur every sixty days will be here soon. WATCH FOR DATE

NOTSE OF BIG GUNS. FEARFUL EFFECTS OF THE TITANIC UPROAR ON THE NERVES. Even Old anil Hardened Naval lien Dread the Concuxxloa and the Physical Misery It Involves. While Auiinals liarely Survive its Deadly Force. "Men-of-war’s men in action are more concerned over the noise of the ship s guns than over the danger of being hit by missiles from the guns of the enemy,” remarked an officer of the navy who has smelt his share of powder in actual naval warfare. "They can in a measure get away from the thought of being hit, because they are too busy at their stations to consider that chance. But there is no getting away from the noise of yotir own guns. That can’t be forgotten or warded off. The men are. in fact, so absorbed in waiting for the barbarous detonations from their own huge barkers and in trying to neutralize the effect of the concussion that they hardly think of the projectiles from the guns of the enemy. "That it is the noise of their own guns that they abhor, and that only, is shown by the fact that men-of-wars men do not dread a battle more than they dread target practice with the big guns. They are proud of their proficiency with the gigantic shooting irons, and keen is the ship and fleet competition at the business of shooting at the anchored mark. “But the keenest among them hates and abominates the noise. The men simply can’t help making wry faces over the announcement of ship or fleet target practice with the main batteries. This dread of the roaring of the great guns is no indication of timidity on the part of the men who feel ft the strongest. It is purely a physical dread, a shrinking of the body and not of the mind. “Few men in the service ever become really used to the roar of the great guns. There are officers and men In the American navy who have been up and down the world on men-of-war for a generation and who abhor the yawp of the big guns as much today as they hated it on the first day they had to stand for it. “Bronzed old sailor men of the navy, who know Tangier and Tahiti as well as they know New York and who are as easy in their minds when combing shellac alcohol out of their mustaches with marlinspikes as when quaffing ale at half a yen a bottle in Nagasaki, grow grouchy and fine ladyish under the strain of great gun practice and incontinently curse the big barkers from ‘all hands' to ‘pipe down’ of a target day. Many bluejackets, in fact, purposely break their liberty when they get the chance in order to avoid being on board of their ships during great gun practice. “Half civilized men, fellows not highly organized, endure the noise of the enormous guns much less gamely than men of a superior order. The Chinamen, for example, go all to pieces under the continuous uproar. Americans who helped to fight the Chinamen’s naval battle of the Yalu said the detonations of their own guns drove slews of the Chinese sailors stark mad and made most of them, officers as well as men, hysterical and of no account for fighting purposes. They simply couldn’t stand the sound and the concussion. The sailors groveled at the feet of the white gunners and begged them to cease firing. Some of them jumped overboard and perished by drowning to get away from the uproar. Yet a Chinaman hasn't half as much fear of death as the normal white man. “White men, enduring the thing for the first time, have to keep a mighty strong clutch upon themselves to avoid doing something foolish. Men new to the titanic uproar have a peculiar and almost unrestralnable desire to scream with all their might while the big guns are a-going. “The old timers who have conquered this impulse look dumbly and helplessly at one another during great gun practice and say little or nothing. But they shake their heads in a queer sort of deprecating way after each stupendous report. These head shakings express a good many things, but nothing more strongly than that the head shakers wish to gee-whiz that they were somewhere else. “There is simply no way of explaining just how it feels to be within close earshot of the barking of the big guns. To know the singular misery of it each man must experience it for himself. “The mere concussion, let alone the strain of waiting for each report, tells severely upon many’ of the strongest men. It catches most fellows about the spine and jars them ail over and causes them to stay jarred for days afterward. Such attacks sometimes pass away with a series of atrocious headaches. “It is the nervous system that is attacked, and the hardiest and most rugged sailor men cave in under these attacks of concussion. It is to be remembered, too, that the human being is about the only animal capable of surviving the concussion following the firing of big guns. Inferior animals nearly always die from the effects of the concussion. “The concussion following the firing of a big gun on a man-of-war hits a man on deck like a sharp clap of wind, and when the full service charges are used, as in a battle, the concussion will rip and tear a man’s uniform into rags. It seems marvelous that the man's body is not ripped and torn in the same way. and the fact that it is not goes far toward proving that man Is about the toughest and most leathery live thing in creation. “But the fellows on deck are better off than the unfortunate snaps down below—the men at their fire stations

on the lower decks, but most p.arttcnlarly the members of the black gang, or engineer's force. The black gang fellows are. most of all. ths ones out oi luck during the big gun practice. "The detonations come down the hatches with a force of concussion enormously amplified by the narrowness of the passage, and the machinists and firemen and oilers and water tenders and coal heavers are hit as by invisible pile drivers. The advantage of the fellows on deck consists in the fact that they can see when each shot is going to be fired and brace themselves for it and lay against it, aS they say. They have a chance to get to their tiptoes and separate their lower from their upper teeth. "But there is nothing doing of that kind with the black gang. They have j simply got to take it as it conies. It is the horrible uncertainty as to the exact instant when the next shot is going to be fired that tells on the man down below. He tries to figure out by guess- , work just when the next explosion is going to happen, but this is always vain and fruitless figuring. The detonation always nails him when be isn't prepared for it. That Is why the language heard in the bowels of a man-of-war during the raging of the big guns is simply saddening to listen to.”—Washington Star. EAGLES OF SCOTLAND. Where They Build Their Xenix and How They Feed Their YouhkA writer who has studied the habits of eagles among the Scottish hills says that the birds construct their eyries toward the end of March and the eggs, which number two or three, are laid in April. Eagles seem to prefer for a nesting site some ancient pine with a southern position and wide outlook or a ledge on a cliff, but this writer noticed that they sometimes build their eyries on quite small rocks, where they can be got at without much difficulty, while all around are immense precipices where man's foot has never trod. It has been said that the eagle will fearlessly attack any one attempting to rob its eggs and young, but this is probably much less often the case than is generally supposed. When one of a pair of eagles is trapped or shot the remaining bird has often great difficulty in finding a mate and may haunt its nesting site for several years by itself. While soaring round and round their eyrie the eagles utter a musical note somewhat similar to the cry of the wild goose. Young eagles when first hatched are white balls of down, and many weeks elapse before they are able to leave the eyrie. Their parents supply them with a very liberal larder, consisting principally of ptarmigan, grouse and blue hares. The rush of their wings as they swoop down on their luckless prey may on a still day be heard at a great distance. Eagles at times will carry off lambs and young deer and have been known to drive deer over a precipice and to tear them to bits while lying lifeless at the foot. Sometimes they will even condescend to bear off moles and mice to their eyrie. Although the eagle, as a rule, prefers to capture his prey himself, yet at times he is not above feeding on the dead carcass of a deer or sheep and often gorges himself to such an extent that he is unable to rise after his too hearty meal. In most localities of Scotland where the eagle has its home there will also be found the hoodie crow. The eagle will seldom if ever attack the hoodie, but whenever the king of birds ventures too near the former's nesting tree the angry hoodies will immediately drive off the intruder. It is laughable to see the eagle flying for dear life before the fierce onslaughts of the enraged crows, which swoop and dash after him with shrill “craas” until he is far from their nesting site. Incident of the French Revolntlon. Mme. de Crequey. a French court lady who was Imprisoned in the Luxembouig at the time of the revolution, tells in her diary of “a small, pale woman” who never said a word for the two or three days she was in the same room, never went to bed. but sat in a chair watching a casket she had brought with her. “One morning on returning from the yard,” she says, “we found the little woman gone and only the casket remaining. A jailer came in about an hour after to fetch it. Mme. Buffaut boldly asked him whether the owner would return. His only answer was to pass his hand across the back of his neck. Then he proceeded to break open the casket. It contained a man’s bloody shirt, without a collar, which was always cut off before an execution; also a luwidful of silky black hair and a piece of paper on which was written. ‘For my mother.’ Our jailer never would tell us the name of this unhappy woman, nor did we ever discover who and what her son wag.” Keep the Month Sweet. Nothing is more uncomfortable oi even dangerous for an invalid than a neglected mouth. If the vitiated secre tions are allowed to remain there is great danger of disease germs finding lodgment in the mouth and thence being absorbed in the stomach. A good mouth wash is eight or ten drops of tincture of myrrh in a glass of water. With this the mouth should be rinsed thoroughly two or three times a day. Another excellent wash is listerine. It is less expensive buying it in the seven ounce bottles. A half teaspooi tui m more in a wineglassful of water’s a refreshing mouth wash and a gooc tooth wash. If the mouth is very dry, u good wash is one tablespoonful ojtatrl eerin and one teaspoonful of to a glass of water, ns the glycerit does not evaporate and consequently stays on the tongue and in the mouth longv' than clear water.

THE FIRST BASEBALL HOW THE GAME WAS PLAYED IN THE DAYS OF ITS INCEPTION. Then a Mnn Could Be But ..soaking” Him With the Ball-Tlie Inspire Took It J'asy While Team. Filed IP Half « Hundred Run*. The first newspaper report of a base ball game that 1 rememl-er reaffin.4 was an account of a game Hoboken. N. J., in 1859. It appeared in an illustrated weekly and was such a novel and interesting event that the weekly gave a double page illustration. There was no baseball schedules in those days. All that was needed was an occasion such as a Fourth of July celebration, a county fair, a house raising or some other event of that natuie. The occasion for this particular game was the entertainment given to a team of English cricketers then touring this I country. We had evolved a game from the old English "rounders." which we | called baseball, and we wanted to show our cousins what a high old game it was. . ~ It may have been the “humors of the day” editor who wrote the report, which was as follows: “Baseball differs from cricket, especially in there being no wickets. The bat is held high in the air. When the ball has been struck, the ‘outs' try to catch it, in which case the striker is ‘out’ or, if they cannot do this, to strike the striker with it when he is running, which likewise puts him 'out. “Instead of wickets there are at this game four or five marks called bases, one of which, being the one at which the striker stands, is called ‘home.’ “As at cricket, the point of the game is to make the most runs between bases. The party which counts the most runs wins the day.” The fact that the reporter thought it necessary to explain how the game was played indicates the extent of the public's knowledge of baseball at that time, and even be wasn't quite sure whether there were four bases or five. When be says a base runner may be put out by hitting him with the ball he makes no mistake, for that was an actual fact, and it was considered a good play on the part of a base runner to draw a throw from the pitcher, for usually the runner would dodge the throw and gambol around the bases while the fielders were hurrying after the ball. This rule was abolished as soon as the game became popular, for a baseman, instead of touching a runner with the ball, would often "soak" him at short range, which generally brought forth unprintable remarks from the soakee. The artist in illustrating this game was not far behind the reporter. The picture shows us several hundred spectators. and, with the exception of a few ladies and gentlemen seated in carriages, the only person sitting down in the entire assemblage is the umpire, and, as if to show the perfect tranquillity of his mind and his contempt for foul tips, he leans gracefully back in his chair with his legs crossed. The basemen, instead of “playing off," are standing, each with one foot on his base, and a base runner is “glued to third,” although the pitcher is about to deliver the ball. In short, the general aspect of the field is enough to give the modern baseball captain nervous pros tration. The year 1870 saw baseball well established and deserving the title of national game. Os the amateur clubs the Harvard university team was one of the strongest, virtually defeating the famous Red Stockings in one game. The score stood 17 to 12 in Harvard's favor at the beginning of the ninth inning, and with two Reds out, Goodwin, the Harvard pitcher, was hit by a batted ball and injured. He recovered sufficiently to pitch the game out and then fainted, the Reds meanwhile piling up eight runs and winning. The game was played in Cincinnati. Another notable achievement of a Harvard nine was the twenty-four inning and no run game in 1877 with the Manchester (N. H.) club. In this game Catcher Tyng of the Harvards (yes, Jim Tyng, perennial Jim Tyng) made the unprecedented record of thirty-one put outs and three assists. While this game was interesting and exciting in its early part, it grew somewhat monotonous after the fifteenth inning, owing to the fact that the dead ball used became “punky.” and the batsmen were unable to knock it outside the diamond. The pitching of Ernst amused the spectators, however, and I think Ernst must have been the pioneer contortion pitcher. It was customary in those days for pitcher to stand erect and deliver the ball with the hand below the shoulder, but Ernst had away of tuck g the bail behind his back, looking < , er his right shoulder and elevating his ieft leg as he pitched. That seemed to the spectators a bad case of monkey business and always called forth derisive remarks from the small boys. His record of fifteen strike outs and but four flies knocked into the outfields as outs shows that he knew his business at all events. The scores of a few games played by leading clubs in 1869 show that the ; play"r’g occasional request for a substitute to run a few laps for him was not without reason: Harvards, 39: Lowells, 16. Clippers of Philadelphia. 87; Nationals, 9. Lowells, 102: Andersons of Lynn, 8. Cincinnatls, 70; Vnions of St. Lou- : is. 9. Eckfords, 45; Atlantics. 25. | These are fair samples of the scores ■ made by the best clubs. Those of Some ■ of the minor clubs oftentimes resemI bled the scores of a billiard match.— I Outing.

The Sense of Sight. Like every other sense that of sight improves by use under healthy conditions, and‘therefore the people who have the greatest exercise of vision in the open a>r under the light j of the sun have the best eyesight Generally speaking, savage tubes pos sess the keenest eyesight, nequned 'through hunting. Natives of the Solomon islands are Very quick at perceiving distant objects, such as shins at sea and will pick out birds concealed in dense foliage some sixty or seventy feet high. Shepherds and sailors are blessed with good sight. Eskimos will detect a white fox in the snow a great distance away, while the Arabs of the deserts of Arabia have such extreme powers of vision that on the vast plains of the desert they will pick out objects invisible to the ordinary eye at ranges from one to ten miles distant. Among civilized peoples the Norwegians have better eyesight than most, if not all, others, as they more generally fulfill the necessary conditions. The reason why defective eyes are so much on the increase in this country and in Europe lies in too much study of books in early life and in badly lighted rooms. The Boy Handel. Handel's father did all he could to crush to death the child s mania for music—in vain. When the household was asleep the little child stole up to an attic to play on a spinet which a good natured aunt had helped him to smuggle there. When he was seven he entreated his father to take him with him to the court of Saxe-Weisen-fels, and, on being refused, he pursued the chaise on foot till he was taken up and carried to the duke's, who, on hear ing him one day play the organ, was sc amazed that be insisted on his father's allowing him to study music. At the age of nine he began to compose the church service for voices and instruments, and during the three succeeding years he actually composed a servlet a week. Before he was fifteen he had composed three operas, the first of which. “Almira.” where the immortal air, “Lascia ch'io pianga,” occurs, was performed for thirty nights in succession at Hamburg. At Venice, Scarlatti, hearing at a masquerade a harpsichord played divinely, at once and truly Identified the player with Handel: “It was either the little Saxon or the devil.” Night was Her Terror. “I would cough nearly all night long," writes Mrs. Chas. Applegate, of Alexandria, Ind., “and could hardly get any sleep. I had consumption so bad that if I walked a block I would cough frightfully and spit blood, but when all other medicines failed, three SI.OO bottles of Dr. King’s New Discovery wholly cured me and I gained 58 pounds.” It’s absolutely guaranteed to cure coughs, colds, la grippe, bronchitis and all throat and lung troubles. Price 50c and ?1. Trial bottles free at Blackburn & Christen. MARKET REPORT. Accurate prices paid by Decatui merchants for various products. Corrected every day. GRAIN.

BY E. L. CARROL, GRAIN MERCHANT. N T ew Corn yellow I 67 N'ew Corn, mixed 65 Machine shucked one cent lees. )ate. new2s No. 3, White Oats old 35 .Vheat, No. 2 87 vVheat, No. 384 3ariev.4o Rye No. 2 50 □over Seed 5 05 llsyke @ 5 25 Buckwheat4B ?lax Seedßo TimothyJ 95 CHICAGO MARKETS. Chicago market closed at 1 :ll p. m ioday, .according to J. D. Hale’t special wire service, as follows: Wheat, July 972 September wheat 89| Wheat, Dee. 88g Corn July 494 Corn, September 47 J ■Corn, December46i Oats, July 39| Oats, September. 331 Oats, Dec. 33g Sept. Pork 12 85 Sept Lard 6 90 TOLEOO GRAIN MARKET*. Changed every afternoon at 3:00 o’clock by J. D. Hale, Decatur Special wire service. Wheat, new No.’2, red, cashl 954 July wheat,3sJ September wheat; 92.1 December Wheat 92§ Corn cash 534 Corn, July 521 December corn 451 Oats. Cash 42 Oats, July 42 Septembe ” oats 34 Oats December 34j Rye, cash 67 OTHER PRODUCTS. BY VARIOUS GROCERS AND MERCHANTS. Eggs, fresh, per dozS 17 Lard 7 Butter, per pound 10 Potatoes, newl 40 Onions 75 Cabbage per 100 lbl 50 Apples, per bu 80 Sweet Potatoe. per bu 75 STOCK. I BY FRED SCHEIMAN, DE LEB Lambs 4@ 5 0) Hogs, per cwt 15 CO 5 25 , Cattle per lb 3 @ 3| 4 Calves, per lb3j @ 4 1 CoWB 2 @ BY J. W. PEACE CO.

' Chickens, young, per lb. Fowls, per lb ~ W Ducks, per lb Young Ducks Young Turkeys, per lb. p/ ; Geese, old per lb 2“ i Geese, vouug, per lb L , MAY fIARKET. No. 1 timothy hay(baled) No 1 mixed hay (baledj?.® I No. 1 ciover hay (baled). WOOL AND HIDES. BY B. KALVEB & SON. Wool, unwashedißto23 Sheep pelts 251. lo \ ' 0 Beef hides, per pound rg. Calf hides Tallow, per pound OIL riARKET. Jona----: Pennsylvaniaj rg Corningj New Castle North Lima' South Lims 95 Indiana 95 Whitehouse j 23 Somerset Neodasha, (Kan.) 47 Barkersvillej gg Ragland 53 COAL—Per Ton Anthracite| 6 75 Domestic, nut 3 60 Domestic, lump, Hocking 3 40 Domestic lump, Indiana 3 20 Pocahontas Smokeless, lump 400 164 Acre Farm for Sale Three and one half miles east of Geneva, Ind. Well improved and in the oil knelt. For terms, etc., address Jacob Miller, Geneva, Ind. 18w3m ...Legal Advertising... Appointment of administrator. Notice is hereby given, that the undersigned has been appointed administrators, or the estate of William R. Hall, late of Adame county, deceased. The estate is probably solvent. Eli Hai.u Administrator. July 6 1984. 19-3 . APPOINTMENT OF EXECUTOR. Notice le hereby given that the under- ’ signed has been appointed Executor . of the estate of William Elzey. Sr. late of . Adams county, deceased. The estate is proI bably solvent. John Elzey, Executor. 1 June *7, 1904. B-3 Merryman & Sutton. Attorneys

OF FINAL SETTLEMENT xN OF ESTATE. Notice is hereby given to the creditors, heirs and legatees of Ellas Barkley, deceased. to appear In th» A**am' e'rcii’t *v>urt. held ar Decatur. Indiana, on trie sth dayof Septemlat. 190 . and sh weause.if »ny. wky lhe final settlement accounts with theistae of eaid decedent should not be ai proven: and said heirs are notified to lin n and there make proof of heirship, and receive their distributive shares. „ „ Joseph D. Barkley. 21.2 Administrator. Decatur, Ind., July YV, I*JO4. Erwin & Erwin. Attorneys. A PPOINTMF.NT OF ADMINISTRATOR. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed administrator of the estate of Mary C. Wilhelm, late ot Adams countv, deceased. The estate is probao.y solvent. j OHN c Moran. Administrator. July 15. 1904. 20-3WR Appointment of administrator. ‘ With the Will Annexed. Notice is hereby elven that the' "nderfiined has been appointee administrator with tw will annexed, of the estate of Jareb Knc . late of Adams county deceased. Iheesta is probably solvent. Joseph D. Krick. Administmtor With the b il. Annexed. July 18. 1904 John A. Connelly. Attorney. I? X PENDITI' KES AN D TA X LEVI l.r L FOR THE YEAR 1 i 4. The trustee of Jefferson township. Adam* county. Indiana, proposes for« be >ear. p nditures and tax levies by JI, ■ ' t tie Board at i» s annual meeting. to be h ; sec bool hoyse of school distn. t >; ]nl “ eiD? Second day ot September. «4, e at 1 o’clock p. m . the following esinr amounts tor said year: . town1. Township expenditures M.«>«. ana ship tax 8 cocos < n the hundred dollar • ■2 Local tuition exiynditu s • * tax 5 cents on thu hundred do]la. -. 3. Special school tax expe>d,iuri> I and 5 cents on the hundred <10...<r ; ♦. Road tax expt i diiurt s >» • 10cent' on the hundred doiiai- 5s 5 Additional road tax experdi tr. st d tax W cents on the tot* l tax Total expenditures J-i 33 . 1 .• **s“ 38centson the hundred dollars Total valuation of lands and im * To^al7a n i\m«on of personal pr .perty f 644.705 Amount of credit on account of 3Jl# mortgage exemption Net taxable v. Tru-tre , Dated July ®, 1904. TO NON-HESIDENTs The State of Indiana. ( gB . County of Adams. I In the Adams Circuit Court. Septem term, 1904. No. 6765. Action to quiet title to rea T? "ff V 8 AP p^et Charles D. Porter. John § p ' Le gler. et al ta A. Burdg. John Burdg. Peter It appearing from affidavit^' d Anne tta above entitled cause. Hat ug|er the Burdg. John .re* non-resident 9 above named defendants, are of the state of 1 “°“ , ' 1 “ pr pt, v given the sa Notice is therefore hereby K gn<l Peter Annetta A. Burdg. J° h “ d appear bef® Legler that he . a urns /Ircuit Co• the Hon. J udge of the Adams ]sW tbe sa m on the 12lb day of 8ep«e““^ f Ihe next reg being the 7th Juridicial day at the Court ular term thereof, to commene House in the City ot De. Jp ten) ber. .j on Monday, the Sth day ■ dcmu r t° ??„. 1904. and plead by answtr ( heard and complaint, or the sa' l '' ' id termined in their absent Seal of WITNESS, my name, and tne ujs day Court hereto affix (SEAL) of July. I ,JW - clerkDAVID 20-3 By Paul Baun.gartier. tton F. M Schermeyer. M ( ' rrym rlaint iff. Attorneys for i