Decatur Democrat, Volume 51, Number 34, Decatur, Adams County, 20 August 1908 — Page 7
y ir Ik A ft s F «e> WCte Kind Ton Bar. Always Bought, and which has been t. ». for .... 30 TV y/n “a , b * eß ■“*• Wider hi* persn P«Tri*ton since its infancy. A3 Cfo.forf«u, What is CASTORIA Cartoria is a harmless substitute fbr Castor OU, PareKorle, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is f* contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Nareotio w 4B ***? 1U ,larant **- I* destroys WorS Co *J e L- *1 Te * thfn « Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS The Kind You Haie Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. ™* WT».« ■■■—», CT ——w CT—CT. mnM«n. W.JB. CORSETS' SV.B.Reduso ideal garment for doped figures requiril restraint. It has an er the abdomen and led as to give the wearer sedom of movement. 0 STYLE 759 ft t»H. utHjarti. Made of a durable rhits or drab. Hese supporters front and sides. Sizes az te 36. PRICE. $3.00 REBUSO STYLE 769 for thrt, a>ell-Je—iof>ad figure!. Made of white and drab coutil. Hose supporters front and sides. Sizes 34 to 36. PRICE. $3.00 9f. A NUFORM .ad W. A RECT FORM CORSETS uilt hygienically—they do ress or strain anywhere, ses are your lines, their at of your own figure, ike a bad figure good and re better. LE at all sealers 44 (£X) • n £S - JZOO ®) i.oo ux) ixs* 3.00 ’0 (W •r Ba see 1.00 (W) C*ut nr Batiste 2.00 ( Mode ) er Batiste 150 _ WEINBAgTEN BROS., Make**, 377’379 BROABWAY, N.Y, |a, FINAUrS HAIR TONIC (quinine) 1 LILLIAN KVSSELL, o the beautiful actress, “Wirheu* eues’den, an inenpeimbi: adjunct tea toilet table. Exceedingly awriMrfaui ia I W Faserring the hair aad aauiag it t. retain in luitre." B Y.O «« tnaka y«i hair tmautifai and impart yaor gerworl »CT«fante by ua| 88. FDTAVB’S HAIN T*M® evwy day. It I sarw daadnrf ao4 atop tailing hair, became it ;w> te the Mrt of th, I tr ” W *’ FAB* I A “™(' k * f BD PIBAVB'S MAIR T«BJC ( J for 10 cents to pay “I packing. | r '\dgFH B». POiAVD’S LILAC VEGETAL I 40V | Ao R»«« perfane far the handkerchief, uwaiear and bash. Used H J hy wameo of fsoHwa ia Paris and Haw York. I Send te eeato (to pay postage P*ck:«s) fa a free sample botds || OOBWining enongh LUoc V <»••*«. i Bxtrwet far 10 appecanoaa. W " te * B»- FWABB S Aouriou Ofc-, ED. PtNAUO BUILDING. NEW YORK CITY. « TONIC and LiIAC VHETAL I No Stropping, No Honing I 1 <SW M .^« ! .H2donble.«d f .dN.d., I mHAfefoliaUvtr-plated holier ia velvet liaed ease. Elch JL““ I lISS W«« avwraf. es mere th— J? | I <B>talH>4« raaneteed te be l ■ Mu&hi& Soli by lead! at Draft Cutlery aad Heraararc fleaiora, ® I vZa. snaAL rnu thial o™\_J
A rate of one and one-half cents > per mile has been granted by the rail-1 roads to the forty-third national G. A. I R. encampment to be held at Toledo, 0.. August 21 to September 4 inclusive, September 2 will be held the | grand parade in which nearly all the Grand Army men from over the coun-! try will be in line. Everything has ' been arranged for the enjoyment of j the guests in the way of side boat ' trips to Put-in-bay and Maumee Bay. I Headquarters will be established at' the Boody House, where the parade will end. Sandwiches and coffee will be served when the line is forming, the coffee being served in embossed tin cups, which will be given as souvenirs to the men in line. Twentyfive thousand of these have been secured. Water and resting places will be placed along the line of march for the thirsty and tired. Many side features have been placed on the program for the benefit of the visitors, such as a water carnival, all the craft in the harbor taking part. Forty thousand school children have been patiently taught eight patriotic songs, which they will sing on September 3. These were learned by heart by the children ,iand is probably the only time that the event has ever occurred with so many children and no doubt will be the only time. Many of the veterans will attend the encampment from this city and county, meeting many of their old comrades and friends and hear the sound of the fife and drum which is so dear to their hearts. Tfiis will be the last meeting for many of the men and the few days have been arranged so the event will never be forgotten. Nine cases have been appealed from Justice Liddy's court at Berne to the circuit court as follows: William G. Smith vs. Muri Laisure, suit on account, demand $125; A. B. Bailey and Peterson & Moran are attorneys for plaintiff. In the court of Joel Liddy judgment was rendered for the defendant and the case was appealed.
The other eight cases appealed were those in which Doc Ferris, Will Pierce, John Brandt, Gottlieb Brandt, Pete Burk, Charles Mann, John C. F. Manley and John Pitts were accused of making hay on Sunday, June 21st. They were tried before Squire Liddy and found guilty, each being fined a dollar and costs, amounting to $17.35 in each case. Bond for SIOO was filed by each defendant. The office of county treasurer Lachot is one of the quite places about the court house just now. Deputy Fristoe is the busiest man about the place, chasing up delinquents and he informs us that they are responding nobly. Homer Andrews, a son of Cash Andrews, of near Peterson, closed a deal today, whereby he becomes the owner of a half interest in George Steele's racket store at Lagrange, Indiana. He will report there in a few days and take charge of the store. Mr. Steele returning here to again assume the active management of the store here. Mr. Andrews is a splendid young man and will undoubtedly succeed In his venture in business as the Lagrange store is a prosperous one. The Modern Woodmen of northern Indiana will hold their annual log rolling at Auburn, Indinaa on Saturday, August 22nd and the event will hr one of the biggest in the history , ,of that city. It is estimated that from 3,000 to 5,000 people will attend and the day will be one of pleasure. There will be bands a plenty, speeches by state officers, races and other amusements enough to satisfy the most exacting. The fare from Fort Wayne is forty five cents, round trip, on any car, and if enough win signify their intention of going from Deoatur, a good rate can be obtained for the entire distance via interurban. There is a tendency to send the next log rolling to this city, which will be done if the Decatur lodge goes after it properly. Such an event would mean much to otir business men. The Woodmen in Decatur no whave a hundred members and expect to double that list within less than a year. They are arranging for splendid quarters and will soon be one of the leading orders here. A team is being organized. so that the work can be given at any time and another big class will be taken in this fall. Quite a number are arranging to go to Auburn on August 22nd. The writer was in conversation with two prominent oil operators from Erie. Pa., Saturday night, and as a matter of course, political talk was the burden of the conversation. The gentlemen are both republicans, but they asserted that they will vote for Bryan in November. The Guarantee Deposit plank in the democratic platform, and the splendid personality of Wm. J. Bryan, is what brought them to a parting of the ways of the g. o. p. And they both expressed themselves as believing that there is more than a possibility of Bryan and Kern carrying Pennsylvania. Now, then, wouldn’t that jar you some’—Willshire Herald.
i Summer is fast disappearing and fall I jWih soon be upon us once more. I Mr. Trennum, of Fort Wayne, was i * a business visitor in our city yester- » day. f Miss Ruth Zeigler returned to her home at Bucyrus, Ohio, after making a short but pleasant visit here with ‘ friends. Mrs. Alex Beall has returned to her i home at Willshire, Ohio, after making ,a pleasant visit here with Mrs. C. A. f Dugan. r Mrs. Emma Morehead and daugh- € ter have returned to their homes at j M illshire, Ohio, after a pleasant visit g here with friends. f Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Hite and daugh- * ter and Mrs. Mary Yager returned a from a short visit with relatives at Ossian over Sunday. Decatur will be busy for the next two weeks with the Adams county institute and the Great Northern fair. 1 Both will be great events. Mr. and Mrs. Montgomery, of Mar- ] ket street are the proud possessors 1 of a big baby boy, which made its 1 appearance this morning. Mother and ! babe are doing well. Mr and Mrs. Dallas Hunsicker have returned to their home at Angola, ! Ind., after making a pleasant visit here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. ; • D. H. Hunsicker. i The retaining wall which has been under course of construction at the Monroe street bridge for some time, is now completed, and makes a much needed improvement. I , The Murray Hotel is sporting a new electric sign in front of this popular hostelry, which adds to the appearance, and will be a convenience to strangers in the city. t Mrs. W. P. Morrison and daughter Harriett left this morning for Mexico City and other cities in Mexico, where { they will spend some time in travelr ing through that country. c The U. B. conference at Richmond has adjourned and following is a list of the nearby appointments: PetrolB eum, M. Ball; Geneva, G. M. Myers; Montpelier, E. H. Pontius. e The Institute which is being held i- here this week, is a very interesting f one, and many visitors from far and near are in attendance. It will last y the greater part of this week. a Mrs. Samantha Dorwin and Miss 5 Naomi Dugan are making a several days’ visit with friends at Mansfield, Ohio. They will also visit at Niagara l ’ Falls before returning home. 1 Preparations are being made for the ■' removing of the ard Fence Co. office e at their present quarters to their e new home in the Weber building, corS ner of Third and Monroe streets.
The work of raising the Monroe street bridge will commence in a short , time and will be rushed to completion as soon as possible. The work will be superintended by Titus Ernst. From all appearances the Chicago 1 Cubs are not yet out of the pennant race, but will have to step some to win another pennant. The Cubs have had enough pennants and ought to be i satisfied. Don’t forget tnat tonight is dancing night at Maple Grove Park and lovers of the pastime will be out in force. : Fristoe and Miler as usual will furnish the music and the public is cordially invited to attend. Misess Ethel and Tottie Hildebrand Viola Hiers and Ida Bogner and Messrs. Tom Bogner and Charles Baxter, of Decatur, drove here Sunday and visited with friends.—Bluffton Banner. Inquiries are coming in daily about the famous Coppock automobile at the local factory, and many more will soon be placed on the market. There is a great demand for these machines and the management is well pleased with the outlook. Richard Blossom, of Pensacola, Fla., is in the city greeting old friends and making a visit with his relatives. Dick is a member of the marine band in that city in the service of Uncle Sam and is making good. He likes the country very much. The C. B. L. of I. picnic which will be held at Hesse Castle next Sunday will be one of the largest affairs of its kind around here, and gives promise of being a great event. Arrangements have been made to accommodate one thousand people and many visitors are expected to attend. Various amusements will be on the program, while good music will be furnished by a band. The event will be a pleasant one in the history of the ledge. A. A. Butler, secretary of the fair board, left this morning for Muncie and Celina, where he will advertise the Great Northern fair, and incidentally secure entries among the horsemen for the races to be given here. The races promise to be better than ever this year, and every man, woman and child should attend the fair at least one day, and encourage the fair board in their efforts to provide Adams county with the best fair in northern Indiana. i
WARNING. If yon have kidney and bladder trouble and do not use roiey’s Kidney Cure, you will have only yourself to blame for results, as it positively cures ail forms of kidney and bladder diseases. Sold by HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO. " oEXCELLENT HEALTH ADVICE Mrs. M. M Davison, of No. 379 Gifford Ave., San Jose, Cal., says: “The worth of Electric Bitters as a general family remedy, tor headache, biliousness and torpor of tbe liver and bowels js so pronounced that I am prompted to say a word in its favor, for the benefit of those seeking relief from such afflictions. There is more health for the digestive organs in a bottle of Electric Bitters than in any other remedy I know of.” Sold under guarantee at all dealers. 50c. o WHY JAMES LEE GOT WELL Everybody in Zanesville, 0., knows Mrs. Mary Lee, of rural route 8. She writes: “My husband. James Lee, firmly believes he owes his life to the use of Dr. King's New Discovery. His lungs were so severely affected that consumption seemed inevitable, when a friend recommended New Discovery. We tried it, and its us e has restored him to perfect health.” Dr. King’s New Discovery is the king of throat and lung remedies. For coughs and colds it has no equal. The first dose gives relief. Try It! Sold under guarantee at all dealers. 50c and SI.OO. Trial bottle free. o Ask for Alien’s Foot-East. A powder for swollen, tired, hot, smarting feet. Sample sent FREE. Also Free Sample of the Foot-Easa Sanitary Corn-Pad, a new invention. Address Allen S. Olmstead, Le Roy, N. Y. HAY FEVER AND SUMMER COLDS Victims of nay fever will experience great benefit by taking Foley’s Honey and Tar, as it stops difficult breathing Immediately and heals the inflamed air passages, and even if it should fail to cure you it will give Instant relief.” The genuin e is in a yellow package. Sold by HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO. o — Quick relief for Asthma Sufferers Foley’s Honey and Tar affords immediate relief to asthma sufferers in the worst stages and if taken in time will [ effect a cure. r THE HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO. I ' Kennedy’s Laxative Cough Syrup 1 acts gently upon the bowels and thereby drives the cold out of the } system and at the same time it allays I Inflammation and stops irritation. ’ Mother Gray's Sweet Powoers for 1 for Children. Successfully used by Mother Gray, e nurse in the Children’s Home in New York, Cure Feverishness, Bad Stotn r ach, Teething Disorders, move and ’• regulate the Bowels and Destroy Worms. Over 10,000 testimonials. e They never fall. At all Druggists, 25c. Sample FREE. Address Allen S, Olm>- ~ sted, Leßoy, N. Y. k 0 Bert Barber, of Elton, Wis., says: “I have only taken four doses of your 3 Kidney and Bladder Pills and they t have done for me more than any other medicine has ever done. I am still taking the pills as I want a perfect 8 cure.” Mr. Barber refers to DeWitt's e Kidney and Bladder Pills. Sold by B. Doolittle. —_—_— o ECZEMA IS NOW CURABLE.
A St. Louis chemist, after many years of careful experimenting and investigation, has discoverede a simple remedy that has cured hundreds of cases of eczema that had been pronounced incurable. This chemist believed that eczema and all Itching skin diseases were of local origin and were caused by germs which attacked and fed on the skin. He began to search for a remedy that would destroy these germs, and found that by combining the active principles of certain well known vegeteable drugs, and applying them locally, the first application stopped th e itching and burning, and if used persistently would drive all germs and their poisons t othe surface of the skin and destroy them, leaving a nice, clear, healthy skin. He gaye this remarkable remedy the suggestive name of Zemo, and since has proven a very popular remedy and is today recognized the most successful and meritorius remedy ever produced for the relief and cure of eczema and all diseases of the skin and scalp. Mr. Falk, the druggist, recommends and endorses Zemo and says he believes Zemo to be an honest medicine and will do all that is claimed fir it. o MORTGAGE INVESTMENTS We have a number of first mortgages for sale, on choice property ranging in sums from SIOO to SI,OOO, from one to five years time, netting the investor 6 per cent. All the protected by fire insurance, and guaranteed title. The Decatur Abstract and Loan Company, Rooms 3 and 4 Traction Building, Decatur, Indiana. 177-12 t o A Certain Cur* for Aching Feet. Shake Into your shoes Allen’* FootEase, a powder. It cures. Tired, Aching, Callous, Sweating, Swolen feet At all Druggist* and Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample Free. Address Allen S. Olin•ted. Leßoy, N. T.
So Tired It may be from everwerfc, but the chance* ar* its from aa inactive live* With a well conducted LIVER cue can do mountain* *f labor without fatigue. It add* a hundred per cest t» one* earning capacity. It can be kept ia healthful action by, aad *n!y by Tutt’sPills TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. ~FASTIDieCS WBNEN consider Paxtia* Teiiet Antiseptic a neceasity in the hygienic car* *f the person and for local treataont *f feminine ilia. As a wash its deanMng, germ'cidal, deederiiing and healiog qualities are extraordinary. Fer eeie at Druggists. Sample free. Addrea* Th* K. Paxton Beston, Mas*. i HAIR BALSAM I .JgClean»e S and ttotnefie* th* hab. I ProiDuteg • luxuriant fnitrft. Fails to Atestoro er«y| '• air to ,ts Youthful Color. [ FARMS Bought Sold and Exchanged CALL OR WRITS O. GANDY <a CO. 205 Went Berry St. FT. WAYNE. IND. i. m n mm ii in ii G‘ ve PrMecgion I nTHlllti Beventeen y ears at 1 UIUIIIU uttle Coßt Send so . free booklet. Milo B. Stevens & Co, 884 14th St., Washington, D. C. Branch Chicago, Cleveland. Detroit. Est. 1884. TEN YEARS IN BED. “For ten years I was confined to my bed with disease of my kidneys,” writes R. A. Gray, J. P., of Oakville, Ind. “It was so severe that I could not move part of the time I consulted the very best medical skill available, but could get no relief until Foley’s Kidney Cure was recommended to me. It has been a Godsend to me.” Sold by HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO. Every Woman Will Be Interested. If you have pains in the back, Urinary, Bladder o r Kidney trouble, and want a certain, pleasant herb cure for woman’s ills, try Mother Gray’s Australian Leaf. It is a safe and neverfailing, regulator. At Druggists or by mall 50 cts. Sample package Free. Address The Mother Gray Co., Leßoy, N. Y. o PICKLES —We have pickles for sal* any size you want. Phone No. 113. Benj. and Wm. Beavers. 181-8 t Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup is sold under a positive guarantee to cure constipation, sick headache, stomach trouble, or any form of indigestion. If it fails, the manufacturers refund your money. What more can any one do. Sold by HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO. o What a New Jersey Editor Says M. T. Lynch, Editor of th e Phillipsburg, N. J., Daily Post, writes: “I have used many kinds of medicines for coughs and colds in my family but never anything so good as Foley’s Honey and Tar. I cannot say too much in praise of it.” Sold by HOLTHOUSE DRUG CO. o Here is Relief for Women. Mother Gray, a nurse in New York, discovered an aromatic, plasant herb cure for women’s ills, called Australian Leaf. It is the only certain regulator. Cures female weaknesses and Backache, Kidney, Bladder and Urinary troubles. At all Druggists or by mall 50c. Sample FREE. Address The Mother Gray Co., Le Roy, N. Y. * A«k for Allen’s Ft>ot-Ea*e, a Powder. It makes walking easy. Cures Corns, Bunions, Ingrowing Nails. Swollen and sweating feet. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores. 25c. Don’t accept any substitute. Sample FREE. Address. Allen S. Rmsted. Leßoy, N.Y. o FOR SORE FEET. “I have found Bucklen’s Arnica Salve to be the proper thing to use for sore feet, as well as for healing burns, sores, cuts, and all manner of abrasions,” writes Mr. M. Stone, of East Poland, Maine. It is the proper thing too for piles. Try it! Sold under guarantee at all dealers. 25c. o — SHE LIKES GOOD THINGS. Mrs. Chas. E. Smith, of West Franklin, Maine, says: “I like good things and have adopted Dr. King’s New Life Pills as our family laxative medicine, because they are good and do their work without making a fuss about it.” These painless purifiers sold at alt dealers. 25c. ~<t
