Democratic Press, Volume 1, Number 48, Decatur, Adams County, 12 September 1895 — Page 4

THAT'S QUEER! 11 You sly a collar and cuff that are waterproof? Yes. And perspiration will not affect them* Yes. And when dirty you need onlv wine them off with a wet cloth or sponge ? Yes. -Wonderful! How are they mad.'? A linen c >;!. • vered on both sid '• with wat ’-pro.>f “Cbm.CLOid.’’ Looks exactly like a lint n collar. Is it the only waterproof collar and tuff made ? Ni : ti.e C":'. - mailow: h "the linen interlining aad consequent!'the that c:ut wive entire . i . faction, because it is the best. How can 1 know that 1 get the right kind ? Because every piece is stamped :.s follows : JI TRADc mark. Inquire for that and refuse anything else, or you will be disappointed. Suppose my dealer docs not l ive them ? He prob blv has, I * direct to us enclosing amount. Collars =c., Cuffs ,soc. State size, and whether collar wanted is stand-up or tin:.. . THE CELLULOID COMPANY. Bron-’war. M WVOttft The cAXjs HCHI.TSHE.iI WEEKLY. DKMOCHVTIC PRFss PIIiIISHING CO. LEW G. ELLINGHAM, EDITOR. PER YE IB IN M'V kliCB

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12. Subscribe for the Press. We print all the news. Two hundred and twenty-five thousand people in Louisville 1 his week. That sounds big but it :s true. The Fairhill rolling mills have gave their employes a second ten per cent increase in wages. So it goes. Bynum's “sound money'’ campaign las ended, so we are left to presume that his salary ceased to be. Too bad. Huntington is talking about the probabilities of street cars at an early date. This sounds big; for so small “pert.iters.” Pierueton, a small town west of Fort Wayne, went up in ashes Monday night. The fire originated in the postoffice buil ’ing in some mysterious way.

Thousands of people visited Muncie last Sunday aul attend! <1 the dedication of the St. Lawrence Catholic church. Bishop lladeinaehei delivered the sermon. Indianapolis was the scene of a bloody tr.gedy Monday evening. A jealous husba .d cuts his w : t'<-'s throat with a raz. 'r, fatally won:: s another woman ami then ends his own life. Foraker, the spit lire of Ohio, is uow busy embracing ;; 1 hi.- p-* iitieal enemies, for which indulgence said enemies propose to Secure him a seat along side Brother Sherman in the United States Senate. Fort Wayne is now busy advertising a centennial, the celebra tion of which will take place October 15 to IS. They are preparing to make the event notable in every sense the word may imply, and that they will succeed is uuquesti med.

The American boat, Defender,, won the first leg in cup match, and came out an easy winner by eight mintes and forty-nine seconds. This retains the American cup in American hands, a fact that will| cause every patriot to feel happy. McKinley’s compaign speeches in Ohio this fall are a calamity squeek from beginning to ending. Hia paniky utterances are unpatriotic, unmanly and small potatoesl for a national figure to indulge in. Such things will do for the tin horn politician, above which we had always classed McKinley. Terse Haute was the scene of a $40,000 robbery last Friday night. J. D. Tardea, cashier of ( the Adams express company, and j J. E. Barnett, city ticket agent of; the Vandalia lines did the work, and are now fugitives. The stolen money was a deposit made by Internal Revenue Collector Jump.

Still They Come. Resumption: Pottsville, Pa., iron works: Hazleton, Pa., eval mines, 350 men; Baltimore, M<l., clothing workers, 250 hands; Bridgeton, N. J., glass factories; Millville, N. J., glass factories. The New York Herald compiles a list of 400 mills and factories which have increased the wages of 420,000 employes. In 250 other mills, the nunilier of whose employes is not stated, wages have been increased. The Bethlehem iron company received word from St. Petersburg. Russia, that on Saturday a test of their plate was so successful that the Russian government has dee d ed t*> accept all that was ordeied of tin' company. The average monthly wages eat u ed and pa d out in Cicero, Ind., is over $14,000. It has doubled in population and houses since Population now 1,400. Compare the earning power of the people in your own tow >i w-th t!/■-. c<l vi-.ii Cicero. -W- 11. Roney iu a letter to Indianapolis Sentinel. Wages iu the co il mines ”f A'a b;l. m have 1 < n .1 ;■ . <. d 21 ; T cent since the Ist, of June ami the a vance made to the iron men is about the same. The lalmring men of tin South ;>s Well as the North like the way tin y have berm ruined by the Wilson tariil'. l-’oi ddu Lac Reporter. Settiemenls bine b<i n eii- cted in the glass trade disputes in South, .Jersey, and the eommitig blast promis s to be the bright >t -ea. >n for many years. News of the same , encouraging character comes fr m ! the West, and the glass business w ill probably boom within the next ' ’hirty d•. <. —Brads; reel. During the first seven months of tills year the Pennsplvauia railroad increased ns net earnings nearly 52,500,000 over those of 1594.

This showing is remarkable, even when it is considered that the com parison is made w ith small earnings last year.' The prospect for iu me earnings is said to beexeellent. In all the departments the c mpany's business is heavy, and it is likely to continue to grow during the an tumu months if the activity in iron and steel continues.—Philadelphia Press. A Pittsburg dispatch says the boom in structuial iron is so great the manufacturers are unable to supply the demands. For two mouths the Carnegie structural mills have been runningto the limit. The company put a time limit on the delivery of contracts for all kinds of material for structural work. It wasanuounced two eeks ago that no orders for material to be delivered within sixty days would be accepted. This week th ■ limit has been raised, and orders for delivery under three months are refused. The same conditions apply tootherlargestructural mi,is. It is estimated that the Carnegie company has contracts on hand at present aggregating almost 1,000,000 tons of structural material, t he limit of production f r the remainder of the year will not go much beyond 100,000 tons, and the contracts on hand will run well into 1800. '

The people of the • mfh are sick , auto 2 .ith >■; the din.-, d, ng a< s- etioual differt m They weary of the tomfoolery that they nurse; any gi i I- «>i • '!y a: an amicable am* sensible people. Thilo ses and crosses of the war king ago ce. sed to prey upon anybody . Peace we have io a- uudance; bin what we also " aid i - - truce to the chatter of the lew rear..ii>i.>g pro fess’onal patriots and pollticia is. north and south, who make a living upon the pretense that somebody is needed to watch somebody, and that if they don't keep the lamps lighted, they will go out. They are well enough in their way. We; don't blame them; but, as a matter of fact, they would serve their country better, and do each set of, them the particular cause they as feet to serve far greater good, if they should pool their issues and give both sides a rest.—Louisville Courier Journal. Next year there comes a presidential election, although it is over one year yet before you will lie called upon to cast your ballot for presidential preferment, as well as ' all the minor officers imaginable. The democrats ot Adams wants to begin to work up their political energies, so that when the propertime comes, you may roll up your ‘sleeves for work during campaign. Every democrat can do something, and every something counts more or less for the party's success. Now comes the information that the Hon. John G. Carlisle is figuring on bagging the democratic nomination for president. He expects his formidable stand on the “sound money” plank to carry him up the hill.

A Sufferer Cured •‘Every season, from the time I was two years old, I suffered dreadfully f»nn erysipelas, which kept growing worse until my hands were almost useless. The 1 tones softened so that they would l>end, ami several of my lingers are now erooked from /SSSy this cause. On my hand 1 carry large .-w ars, w hich, but for OT? AYER’S Sarsaparilia, would '/'lk 1" ores, provided I ‘ t was alive and able to carry anything. ” ‘ fight bottles of zXyer’is Sarsaparilla cured me, so that 1 have had no return of the diseii • *i .. i- ' i ■ ' The first lailtle seemed to f« IU h the spot ami a pi rs stent I!s ,> of it !••>< perfeetctl the cure.”—O. Davis, Wautoma, Wi-s. • •. • A •- ■’ - • •. ''■ THE ONLY WOBXJJ'S F.'.12 •i i a A YK2S PIiXS Promote vtxw i Dunn and Bradstreet F.eports. There is bo real reaction hi bu-trass. Guns which re re recognized as temporary are vanishing, but there remains a decide increase over last year a' -iau-, although p . • '..•••_■ "5 p-r •• •• ■ w.t ih.i ▼ear ■. I’ needs n-•r en •> s- e that the re j J >n fig ahis’. the rapid jJvr.uct lof prkvs h s’roDg. Cotten is gtron., Hit h.> p&gm 1. Th general tendency to curtail where prices have no'abh 1 alvaiiccd :r*r in Hy H »=h“e« in wo 4 and in s me proi-uc s of iron. Imports are large, hut it is stated that Bradford manufaciores find it Lard to get labor enough to till their orders, so that dels? way cancel many cod frac s as in-

ft-rior quality has cancelled sme Tiie eotioii manufacturer has rio-g cott<-i- ; and strong market to help, but a chance of I a great strike for higher wages. | The brightest feature in all the horiz n I is the certainty that the cr- p of corn will be enormous. Frcgts new can only effeci I a small fraction, and the sni-plus will g ■. into the manufacture of meals, because at i 35 7 cents al New York, nearly four cents | lower than a year ago, there is no othir profitable use for corn. One farm prodiu t ; which has been strong be a use certainly shoit in yield, rose from 8.19 cents forapt t cotton la-t week to 8.25 on Tuesday, but' has since b< en weak in spite of concerted official statement that the ddcrease is 33 per cent in some state-- and 27 per cent, in Texas. The public observes much skilled ■ and organiz d labor in these reports and also sees what many -peculators refuse t*! -e->. the 3.000,000 bales old American ! brought over. It is earnestly hope,, that , southern agriculture has not sustained so , great a calamity. The annual reports, i showirg a larger yield la-t year than h: s been supposed, only indicate that more cotton must remain in the country bes des j the uuconsumed stocks abroad. A quiet I market without much change in price- for | a time would be a blessing to the south. The railroads have gained .3 of one cent in earnings over last years for August, the last week doing fatter, though the t nnsge. |

eastbeund from Chicago was 7 i*-r cent, i - ’.taller for the month that in 1592 and the earnings of all roads were If 3 per cent, smaller. Th-- dii.:.;ud for r u ni and tnsnofaciur’ g b an-.:n-l set the west is - ■iiicw al larger, 1 it the u, -u y maikst i- -oil ,-a-v. I -in four w--- k- r-f A ; ' show liabilities «»f $->,<>l6 237, ~-f which - ’>,- 01e.822 were u: mauufacturi- gaud -I. 3-5 ol trading CWH-.rus, sga-n-l t’lO.ld! 1 .-I -177 last year, in all $3,173,3-0 man. s a c- ; turiugau-l s'-',<‘77,5-'3 trading concerns. Failures for the w-'ek t.-va been 1 Si> in the United Stales, against 219 and in Canada 38, gainet 47 last year. iiradstri iii> ,<i ai..ment say-:

Favorable crop reports from nearlv all s .liiections and a continuance of the boom in i steel and iron continues to characterize the ! general trade situation. Harvesting and threshing are interfering a little with business, in the spring wheat country yet Duluth, Minneapolis and St. Paul j ibbers in general lines are pushing for new business. Iron and steel prices have advanced from fl to 52 further and the demand at this time continues in excess of the output which probably almost equals the largest preceding rate of production. All finished J products are beginning to show the effects , of higher prices for raw iron and steel in ’ ' corresponding advances. Western iron and steel mills have orders to keep them I j busy into 1896, and refuse to name prices | for future delivery. Apparently every ’ mill and furnace in the country is at work and the current fiscal year will probably break the record of production. As nearly all iron makers bought a year’s supply of ! ore at lowest prices, advances in wages and other items of cost to manufacturers have been more than equalled by the advance of prices. Diversity of demand and certainty of heavy requests yet to come forward point to the iron «nd steel boom as the greatest on record here. A second shooting bee took place at Nottingham, Wells county, last i Saturday evening

WARM TO TALK ABOUT I I I I I I i •• -• *' t /JIBS I **: . .. I I ' 1 • . » • F'V • * I FiivS- I ■ i> • i — rrjwt—— K » CLOAKS * • I BUT THEY ARE WARM CLOAKS AND WILL BE WHAT YOU x*EED SOON. ALL I THE NEW CLOAKS AND JACKETS JUST OPENED. CAPES AND SHORT I JACKETS AT ALL PRICES. SEE THEM AT THE | STORE. : J 1.0.0. f. BLOCK. KEUBLER & (O.

• Legal Advertising. I N‘ - <»TI<T ol FINAL SETTLEMENT OF | ESTATE. Noth’** is hereby given to the creditor*. I heirs and h-gnlces of Joseph Wherry, deIceased, to appear in the Adams < ircult CoUH.kltiai Ik-cntur. Indiana, on the- 1-ith IdiiV of September. and show cause if any, why the final -ell lenten ts accounts with i the estate of said decedent should not lie approved: and said heirs are notified to then and then* make proof of heirship, and recvivv I their distributive shares. \V. K. Smith. Adm r. i lleeHtur. Ind.. Ail'Z.£2, K. h. Erwin ano -I- I ■ Mann. Attorney. gHERIEi S sALi The Stale of Indiana. Adani'* rounty. ss: in the Adams Circuit (burl ot Adams County. Indiana. i Tin Union ( rnlral Life Insurance Company I VS. (> I Isaac Robinson. . sarah Robinson. et al. I By virtue of an order «.f sale to me d.-e. iist 'by the ch rk <d the Adams ruvi ’t < --..n of I said county and state. 1 have levied up"U the I real estate hen inalti r nu ntiomd and uill expose for .-uie at public auction at the • ; >t door of the court iwuse in the city of fk < .1I tnr Adams county. Indiana. the I hours of 10 o rI(M-k a. m. and i u cip. in. : on Saturday. September >. tin n nts :u-i • profits f> 1 a term not vxcvetliiu seven yu.tr ■ lof the following described real estate, situ- | ated in Adams county. Indian;;, to-wit The northeast quarter of section one [l]. In to n- - 1 ship twenty-seven (£4] north, range fourteen

[l4] east, except therefrom the foilowing dvscnbvd part thereof, to-wit: Commencing at the northeast corner of said section «»n---[l]. thence so ith one hundred and sixty [lo'i rods, thence west sixty [b»] rods, thence nori : one hundred and sixty fU’bj rods, thence east sixty ['id] ruds to the place of lx ginimr. leaving one hundred one and seventy-six one hundredths acres, in Adams county, state of Indiana. , ... And on failure to realize tin*re-from the i ... amount of judgment, iiiknsl then on ■> .u costs. I wit* at the same I.La- am! in the sa inauner aforesaid, offer for sale the : *v simple of the abu' e descridcd premises. Takvn as.th<» property of 1«...ac Ro t . .a 1 Pi Tr it T. AslißAl 1 Hi K. 'I. ’ 47-3 By Pm N, Erwin. U TH SUU ■ ■■■' In liana. -x;. y. . In the Adams Cuca.t < ouri « : i' AC - •> County. Indiana. r . l.' . tompany Vs . N

John < >rki ;x:.i ic Urijux. By.i: -l> ~r :.<i«>r,ler,.f-. by lie clerk ,-f the A-i-e .-tre-iiil ’-I -, ■. i »• •>t v•<i» 1 1 -: '• ■>■ i ■ i ■ , ;• <■•.■ •<j i, <' n-al estate hereinafter ri.z utkrned a..d - .i! expose for saie at publ; aL-’tion ti. ■ . ..-t . door of the court hoie-v .tithe -ity « . !>■- > tur, A<l; tus county. Indiana, iniwu* i. ■- hour* “f lu u’cliKk a. ILL and 4 o’clock in.. uii Saturday. Septeniixr the rents and profits for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following d<“>«-ril»ed real estate, situated in Adaros rujinty, Indiana, to wit: t onimenchig at the southeast corner of s» <-tion thirty-four [34], township twenty-five |2.‘>] north, range fifteen H’>i east, thcuue north along the Ohio and Indiana state line one hundred and sixty [iM] rods more or less, thence west on the north quarter section line, eighty [?*)] rods mure or less, thence >uu<h one hundred and sixty [l6oi n<is more or less to the south line of said section. tmu<*v east to the place of beginning, containing eighty [SL»] acres, strict measure. And on failure to realize therefrom the full amount of judgment, interest thereon and costs. I will at the same time and in the same manner aforesaid, offer for sale the fee simple of the above described premises. Taken as the property of John Orlans and Katie Orians to satisfy said order of sale tills j stb day of tH*pleiuU’i-. i’EIEK I*. ASHBACCHER. sheriff. ■ Shurger. I teed & Smith. Atty’s for Pl’ff. 47-3 Decatur Markets. I Wheat. No. * new.V». >id 57 I Corn. No. 2 34 I Kye 42 j ( lover, red prime 5 00 : Clover (Alsyloe) 4 Si) I Timothy' J 25 h’lax.... l»i : Butter 16 i Eggs 10 ' Lard 8 j Potatoes . 60 ! Harns 10 Shoulders.- s ! Bacon * 1 Wool, unwashedlo to 14 I Wool, washedl7 to 20 | Cattl«6 00 to 6 00 Hogs 4 50 to 500 I Sheep ■ 300 to SOO i Hay ...IIS 00 to 15 00

■■ ■ I i WE CARRY A FULL LINE _OF I And exerciss special care in filling Prescriptions, | | using only the best goods obtained. Our line of I I Perfumes and Toilet Preparations is complete. We I are sole agents for the world renowned GARCIOSA I CIGAR. Come in and see us. I K Stengle & Craig. I West Main Street. BERNE, INDIANA, j B VIXEGAK THE FINEST EVER USED I FOR THE I Pickling and Preserving of Fruits of All Kinds I It is made from Pure White Wine and is Vinegar from Vinegary Ila. Try ii. DONOVAN & BREMERKAMP. I J F STOOl’i. ‘ c. L. WALTERS. LEGAL AND GENERAL AGENCY OFFICE. STOOPS & WALTERS HAVE ESTABLISHED A A REAL ESTATE, BUILDING AND LOAN, FIRE, LIFE AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE OFFICE. Any one having legal business; any one wishing to buy. sell, rent or insure property, or carry life or accident insurance, will do well to give them a call. Office:— Monroe street, second door west of the Burt House. - IF YOU WANT TO BUYI DRY GOODS ’ t ridiculously low prices, see : A. CILLIOM