Decatur Democrat, Volume 58, Number 6, Decatur, Adams County, 6 February 1913 — Page 7

IffSMSTMU || ' c --~ j .^9XTg- fantß an( l Children. I ! CA«hW2 T ” e < I h?! S-SbSSi Always Bought |‘j fcjlsi I si™talin*ftefixxf;wlP(-(!uia KfiarS tnP * * sTg pißgUteSwiMdßMilßowd&rf x ’ oai ° bUC 2u\/r £• J LSignature /AjJ R‘£y| Promotes DigestionfWul -C X. X? r , ' ncssundfcsUConUiMrxiilar “1 # n 1U h-o , Opium .Morphine norMim'cai. r‘ »|i Bg ( Not Narcotic. H j i 0 Jr V H 1»8 2 S"d~ I R/l * !■ Mt. 1 I U'xJhM** a r* 4 I IEM I lb .TV In I Ift LV 5N I pg J Ai aJ» Use ■■bt I Aprferi Remedy forCrmsfip ’ I B &T ft ■ 11 i ton. Sour Stonach.l)tant<^ ( | Sft/ ~ >u‘ ■ E*£ “ I I L p Jy n y neo? ml Loss or Sleep. FUI IHUI SI St** 1 hcSsrft Sijnaran of fl 1 . Ls IIS Thirty Years ; ISHCORIA Exact Copy of Wrapper. c «t. u « ... ro.« «rrr. I . VT? T.r caa. ... j ja»-«_'_s IT. A*2 £■ ■ Have You Any Mantje Troubles ? - ’• I BLOCK INNERLIN MANTLES jr J J m ■ PATCNTtO-RMifcTfHCO ** II AND YOUR TROUBLES ARE OVER H Block Inneriin Lined Mantles give 50 per cent more light ana will outlast six ordinary Ml mantles. This means a saving cf 75 per cent, on vour manti- expense. TWO ■ COMPLETE GAS MANTLES IN ONE. Pnce,2s cents I get one to try without cost B /-K j Save (hebox covers from 12 Block Vy-tal ty Mamies—the best M A . a» 10 and 1 5-cent grade of mantles sold —fake them to your dealer, || w or send them to us, and get a Slock Innenin Lined Mantle free. f j I Block Vy-tal-ty and Block tnaerlin Lined Mantles sr- for sale at Hardware, ng China, Plum&ng, Grocery and Department Stores. Deafen Write for Cur Descriptive Circular and New Catalogue { | | The Elock Light Co., Youngstown, Ohio M (Sole Manufacturers) HH i *ar( rleadc |artar» for Incandescent Muntlet, Burners and St j>pliea of I desvriptioai. Gai, Gasoline, Kerosene, High Pressure, etc. I I ,-:i Ui’V-SWHWSS ■* ■■••■. tr I I M • f . \ ’tH I* '■ * 5? ' w - i. |9b it placet cvot-revelopecl women on >'■’ \ the same ba'is as iheir slender sisters, ji it tapers oft the bust, Hattens the ob- /-oj k ■ domea, and reduces tne x»L- l 2 ’. JMR hips from J , tc. 5 inches. Not a >Yi ( ' 1 1 \i, \ 1 harness —not a cumbersome affair, isM' - >r-’\ \ ■HE n ? twiuring siraps, but the most W X ' !J scientiffc example of corst try. boned * \ T ‘ iZv > \ 'I w * n,uc h a • nanaet#>toß * vel * ,e wearer 'vsS?'vkVl tiityr / x ji absolute of movement. a ■ New ». R. Kecfvio Ke. 770. Jar uca \ , v/ ij HE ,1C v-om—><Ml e of white .-nCTit M r . 4 ~, t , r- V IMr rr« fr<Mit»ed »*de« Sizes 20 ta 36. I‘nee $3.00. \\ “3 n fci®w T¥. B. Rcauso No. 77k Is the same as \ j,/ WAV, \\ — N No. 770, b_t ; .t made of L b ht u.ute batiste. Q\\ / . Vr it 1 Hi feocu Md >. :<s. I Mr Price $3.00. > ■/4 !%\ J■! New W. B- Roduao No. 772. Tor large ji » LS jl *hcrt women. The tame es No. 770, except tlut tbc IP P >’l 1 A bust is senewhst lower all wound. Mede ci >ipe SME couiil, hoe supporters front«rd aides Sizes 20 to 3-h fJ ® * s 1 He Pnc °s3.oo. iHE ” ev w - E - &•*»’<» N °- 773 - u ! ’ ? ” w-www J No. buri nac'o of k-t weight »!■ te r : /"?■_:-■ J7J2J-2—3 1 supporter. Loot udtidc. Size. 20 to 36. Price S3.<JP. ' Tgj ■* ME ~. , ■t‘ 4 A.E an j dealer anywhere to .now you the .iew W. B ’, p -v'j. ’ .in-' r.c L>«, , KSn| waich will jnoduce the eoivect figure for prevailing nioher, or e-v .1 <"jr ntiu.roui . ;••< j whirl- ve xade in ructi a. variety a» to guarantee perfect I t for ■■■■'<; t„;»~ cl figure. H From SI,OO to S3.CO per pair. c f | WFfIGARTEN BROS.. Mfrs.. f 377-27 9 BiiibuAiAi, bti. ' ■wrr.jamrr.vig.^.' r: • .

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Mrs. Ralph Hoover, the young wife 1 of a prominent Van Wert county farm- ' er, residing southeast of this city, across the state line, and well known here, died Monday night at 10:10 1 o'clock in the St. Joseph hospital. Ft. I Wayne. Death wps due, her physl- 1 clan stated, to Inflammation caused ■ by the bullet wounds in her head. j Mrs. Hoover lived three weeks with 1 three bullet wounds In her head, and ■ died without regaining complete eon- ' sclousnesg, and without giving a I statement concerning the mysterious 1 shooting. , The tacts will probably . I never be known, unless the husband, ) I who is in the Van Wert county Jail, 1 'charged with the shooting, talks, ' which is not considered unlikely. ,i Although two operations were per-' I 1 formed to save her life neither was 1 successful, and when her temperature 2 rose to 106 Monday morning, and she grew gradually worse all hopes for' {her recovery were abandoned Mon- : day night at 6 o’clock. Sunday she 'seemed much Improved and hopes for her recovery were extended. 1 At her bedside when she passed 1 away, were her parents, Mr. and Mrs. { A. B. Drake, and the nurse. Shortly before the end, she attempted to lift ; her head from the pillow, and although unconscious, smiled at her mother, and It was then seen that she was dying. Mrs. Hoover was only a ' little past sixteen years of age, and was exceedingly pretty. When it was seen that death was only the matter of a few hours, Pros- ‘ ecutor Good of Van Wert went to Ft. Wayne in the hopes of getting some statement from her, but it was impossible, owing to her unconscious condition. The only statement the girl made at any time since the shooting, was' given to her parents In the presence of her husband, Ralph Hoover, just I after the shooting, when she said: ‘Ralph shot me.” She could have | given a statement Sunday if she could have talked, but her speech was gone. Jit is said that Mrs. Drake Is inclined jto the belief that the husband really I did the shooting, although what motive he had, she is unable to deteri mine. The body was removed after the {death to the Getz & Cahill morgue for preparation for burial. Regarding the weakening of the I girl's young husband, a Van Wert dispatch says: “Although Ralph Hoover, in jail here charged with the attempted (murder of his girl wife, has absolutely refused to say anything regarding the shooting, it is said that he is breaking down and authorities expect him to make a confession, or some sort of a statement that will clear up the case. ‘‘Up until today he had kept his nerve. He read newspapers and paced up and down his cell to ‘get exercise.' ‘“When Mrs. Wilson, wife of the deputy 'sheriff, went to his cell at noon, with his dinner, she found that he had been crying bitterly. In the rest few days he has not been in . such bright spirits, which leads au-tho-ities to believe that he is about ready to confess. “When the sheriff informed Hoover that his wife was dead, he threw himself upon his cot and sobbed bitterly. After he had composed himself, however, die gave the following statement: “ 'Well, I’m sorry, but it can’t be helped. It looks pretty bad for me, but I am innocent. T never did anything wrong in my life, and I am sureI will be able to prove my innocence." “ ‘Who was the fellow that shot . your wife?' he was asked. “ ‘lt was an old man, and not very large,’ was the reply. “He attempted then to talk further about the matter, but his grief over-' came him and the sheriff questioned 1 him no more. It is the general belief that he will confess. “Deputy Sheriff Wilson hunted all day Monday for a man, whose name the. authorities would not divudge, to whom Hoover is alleged to have made t , Btatouients concerning his married, j life. The man was found toward ev- ( . ening and has been subpoenaed to ap- <’ pear before the grand jury when it, reconvenes tomorrow. In a conversa-. tion with Hoover, the man is alleged ; 1 to have heard the former remark: ‘L ! am getting G—d d—d tired of this, ' married life.' “Altliougn Hoover is not thought toj have had trouble with his young wife,, I whom he was forced to marry, Van Wert people who are well acquainted with both of them say that their married life was not happy. Hoover is ' I ! also alleged to have said to this man |' I that he ‘guessed he would have to get 1 ’ (rid of his wife.' 1 ■ | ‘‘After Prosecutor Good bad arrived 1 ■ in Fort Wayne and found Mrs. Hoo- i ' ver in a dying condition, he imrnedi- ! ately sent word to the authorities to; ’ rescind the $2,000 bond upon which I he was supposed to gain his freedom. I< 1 Although none cf Hoover’s relatives : 1 had said they would sign the bond, 1 it had been agreed that he was to be < turned loose if it was signed. ®|< “The grand jury will return an m-, t dictment against tbe young husband 1 it is believed. There is also a strong i

chain of evidence upon which the would-be-murderer can be convicted." j That a doctor may wreck the fam lly he attends by failure to report l births appears from the following stories from Alabama, and from In ' diana: [ “A man In BeffersOn county died, leaving his widow a piece of property which was not considered to be valuable. Some months after the husband’s death a child was born. After a while the property was sold for ' . its taxes. Some years later a cor-1 poratlon desired to purchase the property which Is now worth a fortune. The investigation of titles showed a child had the right of redemption if It could be shown that said child was the legitimate offspring of the former owner. The date of the death of the man was known. The date of the , birth of the child had to be proven. ,A search of, the records of the county health officer showed that the doctor had failed to report the birth. The doctor was dead. The mother could find no one by whom to prove the date of her child's birth. Hence, the mother is branded as a bad woman,. and the child is an illegitimate. The child also loses a fortune of fifty thousand dollars, all because the doctor .failed to his duty." ■ A young couple came to Indiana j from Switzerland. They were hon { | est. Industrious and excellent people. | They were in every way just the kind of People Indiana desire to have.: Within three years the husband had become foreman In a saw mill and was laying up a little daughter had come to bless their lives. Through an accident a log rolled over the father and killed him, | leaving the mother to struggle on as she could. Tn time the news came than at uncle of the child, a ! brother of the father, had left twelve ' thousand dollars in Switzerland to his 1 brother’s issue. The physician who was in attendance at the birth refus1, ed or neglected to- make out a birth certificate and have the same record'ed. There was, therefore, no legal 'proof that the child was the issue of the dead man. The motherj-could, of ’ course, testify to the fact, but her testimony is not admissable undei 7 Swiss jlaw inasmuch as she could come into ’{court leading any child and swear ’ j that any man was its father. The I Swiss government would not accept 1 , her testimony, and the neighbors, though believing and practically ■ knowing the little girl was the child ' of the dead man, could not testify. '.The consequences were, the child lost • its Inheritance. It was the doctor ’ that brought this wreck upon the 1 family. It was his negdect or his ignorance that caused the havoc. Had 1 he promptly, as the law commands, 1 and in accordance with his duties to the families he treats, made out a {certificate of birth, then this calam--1 ity would not have occurred. After March 1, the common drink- ’ ing cup and the common roller towel 1 will disappear from the passenger car ' lavatories and any station where they ■ may have been used. Henceforth {when traveling by steam or inte - state trolley, you must carry your own little cup and your own towel, if you would assuage your thirst or dry your brow. This is according to an 'order issued by the United States Public Health service concerning the inter-state travel and commerce. The Indiana State board of health heartily endorses this order in a bulletin sent out and earnestly expresses it'self as wishing that it had legal authority to do like excellent service Mor Indiana, and states the possibility lof the 68th assembly passing a law(abolishing common drinking cups. The bulletin set forth the new public (health law in full as follows: I Paragraph 13. Common carriers 'shall not provide in care vehicles, vessels, or conveyances operated in Interstate traffic or in depots, waiting rooms, or other places used by passengers traveling from one state or territory or the District of Columbia, 'any drinking cup, glass, or vessel for common use: PROVIDED, That this 'regulation shall pot be held to preclude the use of drinking cups, glasses {or vessels which are thoroughly cleansed by washing in boiling water after use of each individual, nor shall it be 'held to preclude the use of sanitary (devices for individual use only.” i “Paragraph 14. Common carriers ■shall not provide in cars, vehicles, vessels, or conveyances operated in interstate traffic, or in depots, waiting room, or other places used by passengers traveling from one State or Territory or the District of Colubia, any towel for use by more than one I person: PROVIDED, That towels may be used again after having been sterilized with boiling water.” ' Charles Ault, night watchman at the hoop mill in the west part of the city, is thankful for the good strong j mace he carried, and th* good, strong right arm wherewith tr wield it. Monday night at 8 o’clock as he was on duty at the mill, his building was entered by two drunken tramps, who, after some parleying, made for Ault, with a<lub. Mr. Ault got busy with..

bls mace, and held them at bay, finally knocking one down. Deputy Sheriff Jesse Kelly and Po- [ liceman Melchl, who were called, 'made the trip on double-quick time, (but on arriving there, found the two! intruders had made for parts un(known. Before leaving they told Ault that they would come back and make a clean-up of the place and he proceeded to get together arms to defend the fort. To date, however, they have failed to report for their self- j t imposed task. • The Erie depot was the scene of { another disturbance created this morning at. 7 o'clock by a party of. five drunekn hoboes. Deputy Sheriff Jesse Kelly was called to take them ! in charge, which he did on short notice, "toting,” coaxing, pulling and dragging them, by turns, to the county lock-up. As soon as they sober' up, they will be given a hearing, | probably this afternoon. By their | names, and also by the goods found 1 upon them, says Deputy Kelly, who is 1 also a son of “Old Erin, the Emerald,” ! the greater number of them are Irish. They gave their names as David .Welch, Dick Sullivan, Scott O’Brien. From two only the surnames, Mansllp and Wilson, could Intelligently be gotten. I The men were taken before ’Squire j Stone this afternoon and given fines ■ of $1 and costs, \>ut as usual everyone ! was “broke,” and it was necessary to send them to jail for ten days. EXPERT COACHING IN ATHLETICS Proper coaching in athletics is half the battle; it teaches one how to use his bodily powers most effectively, With the least waste of strength. Next 1 t ohaving personal discipline by ex'(Perts is the sound instruction given "in The Youth’s Companion. A depart- ’ ment cf the paper is devoted to point- ’ ing out the best practice in base bail, ’, foot ball and other great sports, ex- ’ 1 plaining the scence of pitching a ball, 1 j how’ best to train for sprinting, cross- ' 1 country running, etc. The contribu- ' tfons to this department are made by I the best authorities. It is an exams pie of the thoroughness and accur- ' acy which distinguishes The Compan--31 ion. The stories are of the most ’{varied kind —those for boys and girls ''(proving equally interesting to their ’ elders. The Youth’s Companion occuII pies a unique place in the field of pe- ■ riodical literature. It is pre-eminent- ’’ ly a family paper—a home paper, 1 touching every interest of home life. ■ And yet it costs only $2.00 a year—- * fifty-two crowded weekly issues for ’ 1 less than four cents a week. Every 3 new subscriber during 1913 will re- ' ceive free The Companion Window '(Transparency and Calendar for 1913, ■ in rich, translucent colors. ’ The Youth's Companion, 144 Berkl ,eley St., Boston, Mass. New subscrip'(tions received at this office. ' “The new jury commissioners, W. H. Rupright, of Ossian, democrat, and Mose Spake, Bluffton, bull moose, Monday drew the names for the grand jury which will investigate the 1 murder of Samuel T. Purdy for which John Lee and his wife, Mrs. Cora Lee, (. are now held in the county jail,” says the Blugton Banner. Lee is the slayer of Mr. Purdy, shooting him three times, at the rear of his home on West Wiley avenue at noon January 9th. By his own confession the murderer says that his wife' urged him to do the killing and she is held as an accessory to the crime. ! { “The grand jury will investigate both cases and will without a doubt ! I return a charge of first degree murder against Lee. What action will be taken in the case of the woman is ' doubtful but the state’s attorneys ' think they have sufficient evidence I for an indictment. 1 j “It is not known yet whether Lee’s ’ I trial will be called during the term, ! starting next Monday, but he is anx{ious to get it over with according to his statements made at the jail. | “Marshal Charles Pierc* made the affidavit charging Lee with first degree murder immediately after the arrest had been made and the similar charge against Mrs. Lee was signed , by the murderer. ! “Neither of the prisoners has had much to say about the murder within the past fevr days and both appear to be content in their cells at the jail , 'Lee, however, asks repeatedly if his, 1 trial is to come up during the next' , term of the circuit court and appears l .anxious to get it over with. Everyj j detail of the killing will be taken up { Iby the grand jury and it is thought. ■ that many witnesses will be examined. j “The case has attracted much attention throughout this part of the state and the outcome will be watch- ( ed with Interest. “The jury comprises: John Thom-, (as, Nottingham; Oscar Way, Jeffer-, eon; Willis White, Lancaster; William Prilliman, Harrison; Ernest S. i Cotton, Jefferson;' William S. Rediding, Liberty. “John Lee spent Most of Sunday Children Cry ® FOR FLETCHER’S CAST O R I A

singing and praying at the county jail. His wife spent the day in quiet. They are In separate cells in different parts of the jail and have no chance to talk to each other.” To the Promoters of the Adams County's Soldiers’ Memorial to be erected at Decatur: While 1 am heartily In accord with the movement, and glad to know even at this late day, that the whole people have been brought to realize and appreciate the true greatness and heroism of the soldier boys who braved the storm of battle, ami suffered the privations accompanying army life, and to shed their life blood for the (preservation of the union of the (states of the greatest country In the world, yet we must surely realize there is much remains to be done if ,we are to maintain that greatness, and take the lead in the march of {progress of civilization. Our modern writers who have delved into the mis.terles of antiquity, hold up to our {gaze the great pyramids of Egypt, and the great towers and cathedrals of Greece and Rome as indicative of a very high state of civilization, but really those relics of antiquity only remain to tell the tale of a decay of nations, that great waste of money and energy, in placing those huge piles of worthless rocks and mortar, Is simply tbe last chapter in the history of a degenerate people, as we follow them to the tomb of antiquity. Our nation has also caught the spirit, and where is it going to end? Our states, and nation, are continu- ; ally appropriating money to erect a worthless pile of stone in commemoration of something, or some one who has returned to mother earth, it has . become a fad throughout civilization 1 (many of those appropriations reacb- . ing into the millions), seemingly . thinking there is no other, or better way, to perpetuate their memory. . Now, my suggestion is to fall in line with progressive ideas, in the con- . struction of a fitting memorial, that Jail money already appropriated and f as much more as can be secured by . donation or otherwise, be used to construct a suitable building for a meeting and club room for the G. A. t R. with a rest room in connection j thereto, all on a ground floor, for r people who feel inclined to sit down from fatigue and are to wait in *he town for any cause (barring loafersL Place sotnewh-'-e in that building a . stone panel, under a porch protected from the w’eather, with every soldier’s name emblazoned thereon, and dedk r cate said building to the memory of . the Adams county heroes of the civil war. If there are no bids received, or if the program could be changed from a monument to a good substantial building. I hope to arouse a discussion through the columns of the Democrat, especially would like to hear from the promoters of the cause. A READER OF THE DEMOCRAT. EATS THREAD—IS CURED. ? Fort Wayne, Jan. 28 —Chewing silk > threads effected a cure for fifteen--1 year-old Katharine Besse, whose throat had been closed since she was j two years old. She has tasted her . first bite of candy. For thirteen . years she bad not tasted food, nours ishment. being provided by means of , a tube inserted in. her stomach. The case has been under the care of Dr. [ Maurice Rosenthal, head of the med- , ical staff of St. Joseph's hospital. The girl, when two years old, drank . some lye and herthroat was so burnt ed that it closed up. She was treated . in a number of hospitals, being fed 1 through the intestines for several j years. Every effort to open the tra- , chea failed and finally a surgeon . made an incision into the stomach, which has been kept open for the in--1 sertion of a pump, by which food was placed in the stomach. Dr. Rosenthal . received the case September 3rd. He , had the child chew a silk thread, which has found it way through the . trachea and was pulled out through . the hole in the stomach. Then larger . thread was used, and in time the sur- ■' geon found it possible to insert a 'probe. Gradually the size of the probe ■ was increased and now the girl can 'eat solid food. She lias had her first . taste of candy and declared it tasted 'good. Rhe had no recollection of ever having tasted her food. As soon as tbe hole in the stomach can be sewed up and heals, Katherine will be sent home to her parents a normal child 'so far as her ability to take solid food is concerned. Her home is in Mill(stadt, 111. NOTICE TO KNIGHTS. The attention of all Knights of Pythias is called to the session to be 'held this evening, beginning at 7:30. 'Page R. M. Collins, manager of the Morris store, will be proven in rank of esquire. Besides the matter of especial importance mentioned in last Friday's Democrat, which will be discussed tonight? some features of a social nature will be in order. Knights are requested to note that all matt ters of interest will be taken up in ’ open lodge, and not in club rooms. I K. R. S.

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