Decatur Eagle, Volume 12, Number 47, Decatur, Adams County, 26 February 1869 — Page 3
SEB —— ■■ ... ... — ... «—— THE EAGLE. I FRIDAYUFEB. 2«, 18S9. Local & Miscellaneous. New Advertisements. Dry Goods —Root & Co. Wagon Material, &c.—Shackley. Petition to sell Land—Hill. Run Away—Rockwood. jyThe Legislature will wind up their business next week. £3T Judge Studabaker is holding Court at Fort Wayne this week. was the one hundred and thirty seventh anniversary of Gen. Washington's birth. Measles after exhausting themselves in town are gradually spreading over the country. Wood! Wood!! My Kingdom for a cord of wood has been theory in town during the week past. JfSTlldn. J. R. Bobo reached home, from Indianapolis, on a short furlough, Saturday. He returned to his post of Monday. - jtirSome of our farmers could realize greenbacks for potatoes, if they had them and felt disposed. If they don't believe us let them try the experiment. jjjqjr According to the Chicago Times, a strong-mined ferfrale of Boston, a Mrs. Howe, has discovered that it is a “polarity” that makes the between the sexes, and that when a man loses his “polarity” lie becomes a woman I She says: “You can not destroy your polarity, your native centrality and circumferentiality without destroying yourself.”— Jes so. has been at a premium fur the last week. Bad roads cut off our communication with the outside world, and holders of wood were not slow in advancing the price. Wood is worth what it will bring, and it has brought, so far, all that has been asked for it — Price gauged by the holders conscience. jE-fFWe call attention to the advertisement of 11. W. Shackley, manufacturer of Wagons and Carriages, and manufacturer and wholesale dealer in Wagon and Carriage Material. He is enabled to offer superior inducements to the trade; all of his material being made of the best timber, thoroughly seasoned. He is prepared to fdl all orders with promptness and dispatch, and will duplicate the bills of anj’ regular dealer in Wagon and Caniago material. JEfTThc spring campaign has opened. Root and Company, Ft. Wayne, have completed their organization, as announced in general orders in another column.— They claim, and after a personal inspection of their stock, we are ready to concede, that their House is really the headquarters for Dry Goods in Fort Wayne. They always have the latest styles going, sell cheap, are gentlemanly and courteous to all, making it both pleasant and profitable to deal with them. Read the notices of the press in their behalf, their advertisement, and finally when you ,go to Fort Waj’ne don't fail to give them a call and verify our statement. JtyThe engineers engaged in surveying the route of the C. R. I Ft. W. Railroad, in company with Mr. C<dy, of Allen county and Mr. Parry, President of the j road reached this place Saturday j night. The first line they ran 1 they crossed the river in the neigh-: borhood of Williamsport and came np on the South side of the St. Marys. They returned on | Monday, following pretty closely [ the old surrey of the Cincinnati Union <fc Ft. Wayne Railroad. It is unknown which line they will ‘ adopt, and it is understood this will depend upon the liberality of the citizens in granting the right of way to the Company, difference in length of the two lines, estimated cost of construction and facili-: ties for obtaining gravel. Mr. Parry seems to think he will be able to put the road under contract by the Ist, of May. *
for income must be made to Assistant Assessors, whether liable for tax or not, before March Ist, after which time the penalty attaches. Parlor Companion.—Peter’s Parlor Companion for the flute» violin and piano, has reached its tenth number. It is issued monthly by J. L. Peters, 198 Broadway New York, $3 per sists of sixteen pages oUnuiAic, Review size, arranged for the flute and violin, with piano accompani ment ad libitum, or for two violins, and may be used as flute or violin solos, if desired. Address as above. Root <t Company.—The new advertisement of this populor firm will be seen in this paper. We have frequently visited their magnificent establishment, and know whereof we speak when wo say that there is no more extensive, Dry Goods establishment in the city of Fort Wayne, than theirs. Their storeroom is always filled with customers, —a sure indication ofpopularity. When visiting Fort Wayne, should you desire to pur chase anything in their line, call upon Ropt & Company.—Huntington Herald Feb. \ftth. Beekeepers’ Journal and Agricultural Repository is the title of a paper published at Nevada, Ohio, by 11. A. King &Co. They are men who have been largely engaged in raising and managing bees for years and are the authors of Beekeeper’s Text Book,” a practical work containing much valuable information to those who are engaged in raising bees. The Journal is 31 a year; sample copies will be sent to all who apply free of charge. Address, 11. A. King ifcCo., Nevada, Ohio.
The mammoth advertisement in to-day's issue of the Post, of Root <fc Company, Fort Wayne, Ind., will, as it should, arrest the attention of every render of the paper. Nine years ago this well known and popular firm commenced the Dry Goods trade in Fort Wayne. Their success, won, as it has been, by selling cheap and goods goods, acting honestly and conrteously%ith all thpir customers, has been a marvel. Their storeroom is one magnificent in proportions, and filled to overflowing with the best selection of goods in the market. It will well pay you to pa}’ tlfsn a visit when you go to Wayne. Seo tfieir advertisement.— Columbia City Font, Feb. lOf/i. The jury of the United States Court, at Richmond, gave $1,600 damages to. Robert Stevens, a South Carolina negro, against the Richmond and Fredericksburg Railroad, for putting his wife in a second-class car by force, after selling her a first class ticket A young couple in Rockport, Maine, while courting, walked out together arm-in-arm, and fell through a hole in the sidewalk, each breaking a leg. Their fall proved a “lift” to them and set them in the world, a jury awarded them a verdict of 812,000 against the town. SPECIAL NOTICES. The Inclement Season, and its effects on the Weak and Feeble. * The drafts which searching cold makes upon the vital powers of the debilitated are not loss severe tffnn the drain upon their strength caused by excessive heat. The vast desparity between the temperature of over-heated rooms and offices, at this season, and the fridgity of the outer air, is a fruitful source of sickness. To fortify the body against the evil consequences of the sudden alternations of I heat and cold referred to, the vital or- ' ganization should be strengthened and endowed with extra resistant power by the use of a wholesome in ;>go¥ant; and, of all preparations for this purpose, (whether embraced in the regular pharmacopoeia, or advertised in the public i journals,) there is nene that will compare in purity and excellence with HOSTETTER’S STOMACH BITTERS. Acting directly upon the organ whieh converts the food into tho fir lof life, the preparation imparts to it a tone and vigor which is communicated to every fibre of the frame. The' digestive Ainction being accelerated by its tonic operation, the liver regulated by.its anti-bil-ious properties, and the waste matter of the system carried off punctually by its mild aperient action, the whole organization will necessarily be in the best possible condition to meet the shocks of winter and the sudden changes of temperature. The weak and sensitive, especially, cannot encounter these vicissitudes with safety, unless their tender systems are strengthened and braced by artificial means. Every liquor sold as a staple of trade is adulterated? and were it otherwise, mere alcohol is simply a temporary excitant, whieh. when its first effects have subsided. Wives the physical powers (and the mind as welk) In a worse condition than before. HOST ETTERS BITTERS, on the other hand, contain the,, eesential properties of the most valuble tonic and alterative roots, barks and herbs, and their active principal is the mellowest, least exciting, I and most inocuous of all diffusive stimulants.
WOMAN.— FEMALES, OWING TO ; the peculiar and important relations which they sustain, their peculiar organization, and the offices they perform, arc subject to many sufferingt.— Freedom from theste contribute in no small degree to their happiness and welfare, for none can be truly happy who are ill. Not only so, but no one of these various female complaints can long be suffered to run on without involving the general health of the individual, and ere long producing permanent sickness and premature decline. Nor is it pleas ant to consult a physician for the relief of these various delicate affections, and only upon the most urgent necessity will a true woman so far sacrifice her greatest charm as to do this. The sex will then thank us for placing in their hands simple specifics which will be found efficacious in relieving and curing almost every one of those troublesome complaints peculiar to their sex. Helmbold’s Extract of Buchu.—Hundreds suffer on in silence, and hundreds of others apply vainly to druggists and doctors, who either merely tantalize them with the hope of a cure or apply remedies which make them worse, f I would not. wish to assert anything that would do injustice to the afflicted, but I am obliged to say that although it may be produced ftom excessive exhaustion of the powers of life, by laborious employment, unwholesome airand food, profuse menstruation, the use of tea and coffee, and frequent childbirth, it is far oftener caused by direct irritation, applied to the mucous pembrane of the vagina itself. When reviewing the causes of these distressing complaints, it is most painful to contemplate the attendant evils consequent upon them. It is but simple justice to the subject to enumerate a few of the many additional causes which so largely affect the life, health, and happiness of woman in all classes of society, and which, consequently, affect marc or less directly, the welfare of the entire human family. The mania that exists for precocious education and marriage, causes the years that nature designed for corporeal development to be wasted and perverted in the restraints of dress, the early confinement of school, and especially in the unhealthy excitement of the ball-room. Tliuq . with the body half-clothed, and the mind unduly excited by pleasure, perverting in midnight revel the hours idesigned by nature for sleep and rest, the work of destruction it half accomplished. In consequence of this early strain upon her system, unnecessary effort is required by the delicate votary to retain her situation in school at a later day, thus aggravating the evil. When one excitement is over, another in prospective keeps the mind morbidly sensitive to impression, while the now -constant restraint of fashionable dress, absolutely forbidding the exercise indispensable to the attainment and retention of organic health and strength; the exposure to night air; the sudden change of temperature; the complete prostration produced by excessive dancing, must, of necessity produce their legitimate effect.— At last, an early marriage caps the climax of misery, and the unfortunate one, hitherto so utterly regardless of the plain dictatesand remonstrances of her delicate nature, becomes an unwilling subject of medical treatment. This is but a truthful picture of the experience of thousands of our young women. Long before the ability to excicise the . functions of the generative organs, they require an education of their peculiar nervous system, composed of what is called the tissue, which is, in common with the female breast and lips, evidently under the control of mental emotions and associations nt an early period of life; and, as we shall subsequently see, these emotions, when excessive, lead, long before pnbeiity, to habits which sup the very life of their victims ere naturej has self-completed their development.
For Female. Weakness and Debility, " Whites or Leucorrheea, Too Profuse Menstruation, Exhaustion, Too Long Continued Periods, for Prolapsus and Bearing Down, or Prolapsus Uteri, we offer most perfect specific known: HklmnoLD's COMFOUXD EXTRACT OF BUCHU. Directions for use, diet, and advice, accompany. Females in every period of life, from infancy to extreme old age, will find it a remedy to aid nature in the discharge of its functions. Strength is the glory of manhood and womanhood. Helmbold's Extract of Buchu is more strengthening than any of the preparations of Bark or Iron, tnfinatcly safer, and more pleasant. Helmbold's Extract of Buchu, having received the endorsement of the most prominent physicians in the United States, is now offered to afflicted humanity as a certain eure for the following diseases and symptoms, from whatever cause originating: General Debility, Mental anil Physical Depression, Imbecility, Determination of Blood to the Head, Confused Ideas, Hysteria. General Irritability, Restlessness, nnd Sleeplessness at night. Absence of Muscular Efficiency, Loss of Appetite, Dyspepsia, Emaciation, Low Spirits, Disorganization or Paralysis of the Organs of Generation, Palpiation of the Heart, and, in fact, all the coneomitiants of a Nervous and Debiliated state of the system. To insure tho genuine cut this out. Ask for Helmbold’s. Take no other. Sold by Druggists and Dealers everywhere. Price $1.25 per bottle or six bottle for $6.50. Delivered to any address. Describe symptoms in all communications. Address H,T. HELMBOLD, Drug and Chemical Warehouse, 594 Broadway N. Y. None are genuine unless done up in steel-engraved wrapper, with fac-sitnile of mv Chemical Warehouse, and signed lwm2m H. T. HELM BOLD.
HALL’S Vegetable Sicilian 1T HAIR RENE JKER. DISEASES OF THE SCALP PRODUCE GRAY HAIR & BALDNESS! The use of HALL’S VEGETABLE Sicilian Hair Renewer will restore it to its natural color and promote its growth. Onr Treatise on the Hair sent free by mail. R.P. HALL A CO., Nashua, N. H.. Proprietors. JOB PRI ATIAG. of every description, neatly executed at the Eablk Offioa.
1860. SZ»H.XMTG- TRADE. 3 1860. » - ’ GENKRAI. DEALERS. I3ST 90 COLUMBIA STREET, PORT W A YME. In presenting our Spring Circular to the great trading public, we take occasion to express our thanks for the liberal patronage extended to us for the past nine years. The coining season we shall use all honorable means to merit a continuation of the same, and can assure our patrons that no pains will be spared by us to make our House the great Head-Quarters for Dry Goods in Fort Wayne. OUR. SPECIALTIES ARE: i I DOMESTIC GOODS, SILK GOODS, SHAWLS AND CLOAKS, DRESS GOODS, LINENS, , WHITE GOODS, WOOLENS, EMBROIDERIES, HOSIERY, FANCY GOODS, NOTIONS, Etc., Etc. GREAT ORIGINAL “NEW YORK STORE.” . Feb. 26, 1869. v!2n47tf.
H. W. SH ACKLEY, MANUFACTURER OF WAGONS & CARRIAGES, And Manufacturer and Wholesale Deali er in 'I £aRRIAGE SULVEEZM, HICKORY & OAK SPOKES, Bent & Sawed Felloes, Shafts, Poles, Single-Trees, Neck Yokes, Wagon Bows, &.C., DECATUR, INDIANA. ®®*The attention of Manufacturers and Dealers is respectfully invited to my stock of Wagon and Carriage materials, which for superior workmanship ■ and excellence of timber, I think, can- ! not be excelled by any other establishl ment. • I lam prepared to fill orders by sample, I of any style that may be desired. Samples sent when requested. Cash paid for Hickory and Oak spoke timber. BtaF“Wagons and Carriages repaired, and Horse-Shoeing done on short notice. v12n47 H. W. SHACKLEY. A. CRABBS & SON, Dealers in all kinds of GENERAL HARDWARE, STOVES, TIIST WARE, STONE COAL, Glass, Sash, Doors, Ac., DECATUR, INDIANA. Tea per cent, will be deducted from all bills over One Dollar, exI cent on Iron, Nails, or Stoves, for | CASH. £yTho highest market price paid for all kinds of Country Produce. Cash paid for Poultry and i Game. vl2n4ttf. II rQ teachers wasted. $75 to ?1-V> per month: for full par-1 , titulars address “The People's Journal," I Philadelphia, Pa. v!2n3l-47w4
WE ARE COMING, joe tnrt a> M-l •UiMMCkMMaa And will present to any person sending us a One llurdred Club in out Great One Hollar Sale o( Dry and Fancy Goods. A Watch. 60 yds. Sheeting, Sewing Ma-j chin*, &c., &c., FREE OF COST. Smaller Clubs in the same ratio, viz: 60 Club, 40 yds. Sheeting. Ac., 30 Club, 20 yds. Sheeting. &c. ’ Messrs. J. S. Hawes & Co. take pleasure in announcing, being the oldest nnd largest house iu the Dollar Trade, that | they have been enabled by their long! 1 experienee and extensive resources to | make, this present season, many important importations and contracts with manufacturers, which, with these additions to their Winter Stocks, has ena- ‘ bled them to greatly enlarge their rates and Exchange List. Send for new Circular. Catalogue of Goods and Sample sent . to any address fres. be very particular and send money by regi.siered letter. Address all orders to J. S. HAWES & CO.. 15 Federal St., Boston, Mass. P. 0. Box C. V12n31-41w12
I ' X. Dr. JHa V. BUBTOirS/ TOBACCO ANTD)OTE. aaaovs au Toasocn. * •nilraly KI AaraMw. and llx Wood, InTlaoraUKlh* anM noarKtkIn* «nd itrsncUMnliMnvvar.XW tXMUaaI Wole end eopeilwr. enetdw the eiAgWt* d«eet Uw heertieet food, uukee eleep reTreehtei*. deUMlebee wheel health. /<«a*ere oad eared. Price Fifty eeote per box, poet fryT Aa Mbstltw irwtlee oo iho l>Jurtoue eOMte of USaoeo, with llrtTSiCloetiinoolale, refte* rpr SALS BY AU ORUOGlitk ( . S^Zvaution. —Bevaro of hambog UnlUdkuT ITradtmarlt x
BOOK—2OO ENGRAVINGS. JN The Farmers and Mechanics Manual. Edited by George E. Waring, Jr_ author ! of “Draining for Profit,'’ “Elements of' Agriculture, 'Ac. A book of great value to working men of all trades and occupations. 500 pages. Agents wanted. Send for 16 page Circular. TREAT A CO, Publishers, 654 Broadway. N. Y. vl2nSl-47w4 TOs2oo PER MONTH Salary paid to good Agents to sell our Patent Non-corrosive White Wire Clothes lines. State age and past occupation,) and addresss the American Wire Co_ 75 William St., N. Y., or 16 Dearborn St, Chicago, 111. vl?n3l-47w4
V’ GENTS WANTED TO SELL THE “PEW» LETTER BOOK,” For copying letters without press or ; water. This great time, labor and mon-ey-saving invention fills a long-felt want, bringing a really indispensable feature of business within the reach of all.— Price $2.25 and upward. None see it but to praise its simplicity and convenience, as it recommends itself, and sells at sight. Adapted to every kind of bus- , iness. It does not play out, as the first sale is only a beginning. For testimonials, terms, &c., address P. GL‘. HRETT & CO., 122 S. Clark St., Chicago, 111. v12n31-47w4 ANTED! WANTED!! I Agents of either sex, in every town and village, for the largest One Dollar Salo in the country. The smallest articles sold can be exchanged for a j Silver Plated five-bottled Revolving 1 Castor, or your choice of 200 articlesupon exchange list. Commission to agents larger than ever. Send for circular. S. C. THOMPSON & CO., 136 Federal Street, Boston, v12n31-47wl Mass. WANTED. For the only steel engraving of General Grant and his family published with their approval. Engraved by Sartain. Size 15 by 19, $2.00. 100 per cent, to agents. Address GOODSPEED & CO., Chicago, or No. 37 Park Row, N. Y. • v!2n3l 47w4. j> UN AWAY—ONE CENT REWARD, j Jasper Cole, a bound boy, 18 years old, left me on the UthofFebruary, 1869. I forbid any person hircing, harboring or trusting him. Feb. 26, w 3 G. W. ROCKWOOD. $5,000 " EiR Can be made by live agents, selling my 'new and valuable invention. Address J. AHEARN, 63 Second St, Baltimore, Md. v12n31-47w4. Petition to Sell Land. State of Indiana, Adams County, j ' ' In the Court of Court of Common Pleas, May Term, 1869. Notice is hereby given that Thomas P. I i Andrews, Administrator of the estateof. i Caleb Odle, deceased, has filed his petition i to sell the real estate of the decedent, his personal property being insufficient ' to pay his debts; and that said petition | will be heard at the, next term of the ' Court of Common Pleas of said county. Witness my handand the seal of j (t.j.) said Court, this23ddayof February, 1869. A. J. HILL. Feb. 96, w 3. Clerk. S. C. AYERS, n. D., , RESIDENT Ear and Eye Surgeon, FORT WAYNE, INDIANA. OFFICE—South we>t corner Main & Calhoun streets, over Dmg Store. feg” Artificial Eyes inserted.
Notice to Non Residents. -State of Indiana, | gg Adams County, j In the Adams Circuit Court, April Term, 1868. Mark Aspy, Adm’r Est. Lawrence Aspy. sen. deed, - vs. David Michael, Esther Ann Michael, Catharine Chrisman, Catharine Thacher, William Thacher, John Chrisman, Elizabeth Wickhizer, Foreclosure William Wickhizer, Henry Chrisman, John Chrisman, Barbara Chrisman, W illiam Chrisman, Daniel Chrisman, ‘ James Chrisman, Franklin Chrisman, Mary Chrisman, " George Chrisman, J It appearing from affidavit filed in the above entitled cause that David Michael, Esther Ann Michael, Catharine Thacher, William Thacher, John Chrisman, Elizabeth Wickhizer and William Wickhiser, are non-residents of tho State of Indiana, ——- Notice is therefore hereby given the said David Michafel, Esther Ann Michael, Catharine Thacher, Willism Thacher, John Chrisman. Elizabith Wickhizer and William Wickhizer, that they be and appear before the Hon. Judge of the Adams Circuit Court, on the first day of the next regular term thereof to be begun and held at the Court House in the town of Decatur, on Monday, the 19th day of April, 1869, and plead by answer or .lemur to said complaint, or the stftne will be heard anddetermined in their absence. Witness my hand and seal of said (l. s.) Court this the Ist day of February, 1869. A J. HILL. Feb. 5, w 4. Clerk.
Notice of Attachment. Before J. W. Grim, J. P. of Washington Township, Adams County, Indiana. Adam Gillion, ) vs. [• Attachment. Jer.emiah Kitnple, j Whereas, before me, J. W. Grim, a Justice of the Peace in and for Washington Township, in Adams County, in the State of Indiana,. Adam Gillion, plaintiff in this action, did on the 9th day of December, 1868, file his complaint, affidavit and bond, in attachment proceedings against Jeremiah Kimbel, defendant, and whereas, on the 9th day of December, 1868, summons was issued against said defendent and said summons was returned “not found," and at the same time attachment issued against the goods, chattels, rights, credits, moneys and effects of said defendant, nnd that the rights, credits and effects were garnisheed in the hands of Isaac Newcn- . schwander, and whereas the trial of said cause is set for hearing on the 27thdsy of February, 1869, at 2 o clock, P. M., Now. therefore, the said Jeremiah Kimbel is hereby notified of the pending of said proceedings, and that unless he appears and answers or defends, tho same will be taken by default as confessed. and the proceedings will bo heard in his absence and determined J. W. GRIM, Feb. 5, w 3. Justice of the Pence. Licence JToticr. XTOTICE is hereby given to the eitlzens of Washington Township, Adams county, Indiana, that the undersigned will apply to the Board of Commissioners of Adnms county. Indiana, nt their March session, 1869, for a license, for one year, to sell spirituous, vinous, malt and olher intoxicating liquors, in less quantities than a quart at a time, to be used and drank as a beverage at my building situate on the following premises in the town of Decatur, in Adams county, in the state of Indiana, towit: Commencing at a point on the west side of Second st reel, in said town, thir-ty-six feet south east of the north enst corner of In lot number sixty-one (61), in said town of Decatur, thenee running south west at right angles with Second street forty feet, thence south east parallel with Second street thirteen feet, thence north east parallel with tho line first described forty feet, thence north east along Second street thirteen feet to the' place of beginning. Feb. 5, 1869. GEORGE SMITH. Administrator’s Sale. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Administrator will sell at public sale at the Court house door, in the town of Decatur, in the county of Adams, in the State of Indiana, on Saturday, March 6th, 1869, between tho hours of 10 c'clock, A. M., and 4 o’clock, P. M., of said day the following described real estate, to-wit: The east half of the west half of the west half of the south east quarter, and the east half of the west half of the north east quarter of section number twentysix. in township number twenty-eight north, range number fourten east, in Adams County,lndiana, containing sixty acres, known as the Gessinger farm. TERMS: —One third cash in hand, one third in nine months, and the remainder in eighteen months, with interest on deferred payments, and security to ths satisfaction of the undersigned. NOAH GLASS, Feb. 5, w 4. Administrator. Administrator s Sale.
Notice is hereby given that the un. dersigned Administrator will sell at publie sale, at the Court House door, in His County of Adams, in the Stats of Indiana. on — Saturday, Marcb Ctb. 1869, between the hours of 10 o'clock, A. M_, and 4 o'clock, P. M, of said day, the following described real estate, to-wit: The north half of the north west quarter of the north east quarter of section number twenty-four, n township number twenty-eight north, range number fourteen cast, in Adams County, Indiana, containing 20 acres, known as tke Stephen Hill fhnn. TERMS.—One third of tho purchase money cash iu hand, one third in nine months, ami the remainder in eighteen months, with interest on deferred payments, md with security to the satisfaction of the undersigned". NOMf GLAM. Feb. 5, w<. Administrator.
