Daily Democrat, Volume 4, Number 116, Decatur, Adams County, 28 April 1906 — Page 3

fde Table ■ CIE railroad. _ > ■fft-C 1 ' s „ v ,. nl ber 12. 1905 ■ DECATUR. 9 c.-T BOVNO ■B ' ■ „ «:»« »• m. . ... F.vpr«-M> ” K* . . WIMIM. P. >n -A-mT BOUNH - ' . .Kt lon.. IO:10» m n.nttedl? Vu-n. 991 r ■ i ,re ° * ,:<w y * n ■u I '.' .... , *i*o. Ticket A««n« . 9; J' ~W- --A*-’,o • <•>. \.,w I’l’iffr-et. kun IM f-..' ■'* . EtMui. F.xHun Only 7.Ham 1 i*pm 7’«pm ►t-.nm 2 13pm M'P»> „ • »2arn 3 »>pin 1C ISpm S' • , . . io Hally U> HI - Bally G<l. lUpld» KiHun . I j»m 7 l*>m S.lfptn ' <„ m « «tm 4 on,,m ••*<" 1 ■' ,|,m “ Wu "‘ i r.pm ..M>pm - ' ■ Vmm “ *>pm «.(*»”> ‘ I'P® ' •”»'« „ .... p'l.s •••'■ »»’ M, '' k ‘"r *,. ■ .rwU. I and Ma. * Par or >.r toll K and K '< City. KsnOUiSi WESTERN R. R CO t«*r «outi“ ■ ~ Iff c» .'one M IWM ■ »AST. Tr.aeier, dally... IVi tr. r »«eep» ffunday .!> ** *»> t&ii dal!* W .' ?'« « « * “ ”■> ■ WKHT daily. Traveler, dally Hl* li «• rrairht 10-. B • rr. I uk« rna « Weeterw 9 flereard from Blafftoa lad. 9 tot’THBOUNb J■ 1 ■ 1 "unday *. I »r' *”c l ur»d a y 11 :• 1 1 m t •>r*v‘ aomlay »Mpm ■ir'jriir it »•■ lndlanap.HU wllfcout !r. I'.anopolW at I:<Xia m Bona • 11 ' anaa arrlvlni al Hlnfflou ®VuiM r-.v • a Munr.la * HU • mat’ ■he model H, . . . ..t i..be.T>> ami cuara I Wil! Open i*. pvb. f,,r Invpontlon ■lesdny. Moy I s... f y patronaff* vollrltwi , ■*. i- r ’• l ira! NaO-nial 11.. UM . ■ A. Erlstoe, ■ WEATHER. ■IOWERS

■»\ra Ai . of jUnfftotT wax « Lt in in> <iiy yesterday. ■bM '!•« pi*, i>f Geneva, was a fc<». ra.,. t<> our city today. |brn !> I'lmma*, of Richmoml. | 11 > ■ ' tiler to Otlr city Io- : far W, ! I Fort Wayne, wax | ■thus tin horns w»le in <mr city k* I hi,lo-. ~t St. Marya, wax atji'r t<. t urban maitora in one [ Maj. !’■ ligai, ariivod this niorniittf| ■ Fort VVavne aii>i ix the gueat > Kt. ( I Meyer*, a horxmnnn from' »;<• iii our <-ii* tolny at-| W’-lt tin - liorxe xale, L>* Jt>i.u», n returnetl to tJarrel t Binning after making n pietuiI'iwt »ith frienda here. If. »i>.| Mi, John Krick retiniieil met Wajne thia morning. While * tl*y were viwiting with rein-

The Better the Grade The Bigger the Trade Come to the store that sells Shoes of Quality Charlie Voglewede The Shoe Seller

E<l Vmicil Himlo a hnsiin«s trip 1 1<> bort Wayne this morning. 11. M. lieVoss returned iaet evening from a buxiness trip to Portland. W. IT. Kooniff was atlen liiiLr to interurban matters in Fort Wayne today. ■I.o- .o I’. .T.■ b< , . .0 ;dH. ■. ,i. ,o. tti’.iing to Jegal matters in our city today. Ben S. \\ il-oti, ofl Philadelphia, was in our idty today attending the horse sale. Elm r Johnson returned last evening Iron B<rne, where he .la* buying horsed. Miss Purdy rvtuni«<l this moroing from Berne, where she w*a visiting with relatives. •'. 11. Porter of Geneva, was attending to banking busim -s in our city last evening. Mr*. M. V. B. Archbold a. • to Fort \\ ayue last evening to make a short visit with friends. • Mrs. Lantry returned to Willi i i - last evening after making a pleasant visit here with friends. Mr. and Mi-. John H.--hr went to Fort Wayne last evening to visit with the latter’# mother. Dr. and Mi«s Ennu Dvkeman left this morning for Riehmond to make a few days’ visit with friends. Mrs. E. D. Petrv returned to b rt Wayne this tnorngig. While here she was the gueot of relative*. Mr*. T. M. Reid left Inst evening for Jaekson. Mich., where she will visit for a few day* with relatives. Mn». L. <’. Helm rturncd la.it evening from Geneva, where »h< was nttemling n meeting us the Rebecca lodge. Barney Wertzberger and Barney Moilm i# went to New Haven la»t evening to attend the funeral of .Mrs. Hetker. Mis# Florence Merrisa returned to Teeuinseh, Mirh., this morning aftei making a few day*’ viait here with I friend*. 1 | M>. and. Mrs. Vail retut *d to Fort Wayne last evening. While here they were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Vail. Mrs. A B. Morrison v-.-pt to Fort Wayne Inst evening to visit w ith her sister, Mrs. W. J. \ Nolan King made a Inwim-ss trip to Pittsburg lust evening. John b’.hrman, the assessor of I'nI ion township, down't let any sinner j ■ get away. He even jumped 'he line and tried to tack on August Fuelling, over in Monroe township, Allen c hi. •y. Homer Watkins arrived last » n*ng from Union City, when- he istarring with Professor Galvani, the i hypnotist. Homer was d«»ing the sleeping stunt and acting the par’ of i the human block, on which Prole-«or Galvani broke a I lune hundred pound (stone. The show has closed for the season, hence his return. The Patten & Perry show last evening played to it large uudiei.ee st the Bosse O]>era House and like their former visit to this city, gave jMTfect satisfaetioii. The play ha# I Im*ii remodeled in some reapect* a,- | the is etileavorii. td make the attraction better each year, and they have certainly auceeede.l. They left this morning for Auburn, when- they show this evening.

Sam Simison, of Berne, was s business visitor to our city last evening. Dr. J. M. Milh-r le*'t today for Ohio, being ril! •! there owing to the death of his uu-'i ■. He will return Imnie Tiiesd-; . Mr. ■„! M J. Gehring and daughter H- -sic. iilitined to Htie.t-! ington today. While here they were the gui .ot relatives. Two -t >u a heavy meat train on the Er.e ai Mvroi jump d the ’ -H | i number twenty-one to be two hours late, Tim eas s the State against Ed Young ami 1.. G. Botkin* v.hicii ve-i cent from t>> this city on a cliatige of •> ihv, were dismissed | this morning by Squire Smith, upon request of the state. The Decatur, Illinois, Revu tak>- a fail out with Tom Railing whom they claim was also signed to play hall with them thin year. Tin* would iiidjrate that Tom is long on sjg’o'ig i> e-.iiiracts and then taking FrCneh leave from them. Josephus Varger, the Wells county farmer wii >s is sns)w-vtel of hav iug fired t -.o barn* rn his own farm, m-ai Nottingham Monday night, is under wriest st Bluffton on a charge of arson, and the grand jury will investigate hi# cu-- Yargrr declarethat four mm, armed with gnus and rope#, appeared at hi# home on the night of the tire, ordered him out of the country on penalty of being I hung and tl>*n tired hi# buildings. WANTED -1000 buahcla of corn. Will pay 60c. |>er 100 liw. delivered at my farm, 1’ 2 mile* east of In-ea-tur. D. E. STI'DABAKER. IKMit FIRST CARRIAGE IN MAINEHow a Wlaiafer Cam* fa Bay If aa«l Uh r Hr ««.ld If, The Rev Frnm i» Wmp-r w»» a na five of Roatoii ami a graduate of Harvard college He went to Hath early In 17(17 and. after preiirblug on [initiation for the orthodoi •■faorcb, was invited to Mttlr. which Invitation be accepted. Hr waa ordained In the autumn of the aame year He went to Hath on boraeback in company with Ix-muel mt an dish. Mr Whiter < ano- from Bo"t«m, where be had ftssis iateT with »mb rm luent men u» Adatux, Vti* . nd Warren, himself becoming an ardent patriot, taking the lead hi th«- Revolutionary tDffasisrwi adopted In Hath during that memorntih' period. Mr Winter married .Mia» Abigail Alden io 17<x au«l It i» through her that the Winters of today truce their am <vs try back to the "Puritan Malden of Plymouth ” 'flirve y*ar» after the marriage of the Rev. Fran '•# Winter an 1 Abigail Alden ! they started to rlalt a ister of Mrt, ' Winter living in <'oiim---ti-ut and In ’ tended to rote all the way on horae- I back, but Mrs Winter b»v-am* *0 fatiruvd that Mr. Winter »oM one of the boraev for a carriage nod harness It waa the first carriage that ever came Into Maine and was cal!<-d a chaise. Traveling wa» so dllßcult that two ne gTOM were emi-loyed to accompany them with Khovela and airs to clear the road Several times the cbalae had to tie taken apart and lifted over fallen trees The minister’* pariabtoncr* thought that it wu« putting on too mueti at, le for their paator to ri«le In a carriage, and In couM-quem-e Mr Winter aold It This was in 1771 It ».:« a •wo .-.si.l -l.i.s, the tsMly ri-simg • u leather braces, which were att:nbed |to wooden spring# Lewiaton Journal. for in the etpenae* of John, king of France, when prisoner In England after the battle << Foltlera ttierv l» the following entry" Pour deus boutellle* de culr acbeteea a Lomlou pour Mon aelgneur llilUppe, M Ml./’ no iucoualderable price lu tboee day*. A. D. 13.’4» dtt. As the arts improved leather liottlc* wen- aupplem*ttted. but not displac'd, by vei-M-ia of clay, great cure being taken In the construction to avoid, ssudj earth or any aobatan,-* likely to tie |h rous These, like the hkli-s p.irtI ly to prwnht the llqunr from esmllnr,! I were all coated • n the inside w.tbi pitch, but principally aa cn ant septic, | to keep the wine sound. These veaaela w ere called au phorae and doubt- ( leas originally held ti.e standard gauge of eight gallon*, but a* their use bdtcame llmlt»<1 to <-<-liar storage their »ixe gradually lßCiaa#ed until they attained frequently the rapacity us iw gallon*, and upward. Hie smaller amphora* were made on. the potter’s wheel, tut the larger In; molds sunk in pits, where they were, baked over furttai-es. In many of the tmxlern bodegas in Valdc[>enas w tie 1* still stored m similar earthenware vea-j seis, narrow ut the baa* and widening Upward, with arms or ears on either side at the top, «ml every one of them has its coating of pitch esaetly the same as twenty live centuries ago. — —-

i BETTER THIN SPINNING? F Spanking does not cure children of bed* wetting. There is a constitutional cause for this trouble. Mrs. M. Summers, Box W, Notre Dame, Ind., will send free to any mother her successful home treatment, with full instruction*. Send no money, but write her today if your children trouble you in this way. Don't blame the child, the chances are it can t help it. This treatment also cures adults and aged people troubled with urmo ddhvulues Djr day or night.

ANAEMIA. Condition' In the BIo«hI of Which It I* the IlCMult. Anaemia menns a <’Ohe.ttion in which the blood in deficient either in quality . or quantity. It h a questfou among 1 physicians whether tin re Is ever an 1 actual [M-rmauent reduction In the toI tai amount of t’> blood. Tn* quanti- • ty must vary, of from hour to 1 I hour, according to the amount of fluid that is drank and the amount Wat is lost by perspiration and it» other ways, but It is jirolgble that the areiagff remains about the same from day tc ' day. except lu eases of actual starva tiun and <l, ;>in itiou of ■ >n r. Aiin» nila. then, is mainly n question of the tnnkettp of the blood that Is, of the iiimJ- r of Its red . vp l .-■o-h-s. ot cells, ami the r- ;ii;.oi,iit :.■ i.. 0 globin- the coloring matter which; the** coutaiu. The blood is a complex fluid, but in aimple terms It may lx said to t>e a salty solution, containing two kinds of •■!!» the red and th* White corpus* le*. The white ones are the scavengers of the body a* well as th* |K>l|cemen ami soldh-r* They pro tect the tsviy from th* d «-.>•«• genus which threaten its existence The red Coqmaclea. on tlie other hand, are th* commissary department llwy bring ; to tite tissues tije oxygen which they need and remove the gaseous waste products. If the r-d corpuscles and ths robStance of which they arc must largely routposed, the hemie.-lob.ii ar* redttod lu amount the t>»- ;>-- suffer for lack of oxygen, awl there I* a lowering of all th* vital processes The lessenel proportion of beni>>g|ot>!n accounts for the paleness whe b Is the chief outward sign of anaemia. It is common to speak of two fortn* • of auaeti. •> primary and ••mlary Primary I* the term used when the anaemia can I* traced to no definite cause, but aevtus to I* a dtseaa* lu Itself Secondary is the word used when the anaemia is erldently the result of some other comlitkin. such ** wasting disease or poor noitr-abluent It is then only one of the symptom* of such umleriv Ing state Among the chief causes of secondary i anaemia are drains u|»>n the system by frequent loaasw of blood or by diarrhea or other wasteful discharges, chronic poisoning by lead or mercury, by the essential poisons of certain diseases such as rheumatism and tut-erculoals and by poisons formed In the body and not promptly removed. wh..-h is railed “adtointoxication." and tlmrily the dostem t n of the red or; ,-s by a micno-orgxnism. a* I* the eaa* In malaria Youth's Companion. Great Casals a* t”aale Caasees. "The rff'- t of opon&lg the M.w* caBal." write* William It Htvwart in the Technical World M.tgagin- "was so nmrktvl in the Srst confusion which It tatrodncvd Into Ute business world that It c<mstitut«d one of the prime cause* us the uni''. -otumercla) and ludnstrb.i |>itih »f 1*73, •lb tratssfrrrii g the distributing points for trade from Eng <iid to the I Mciitvrrane.iu ports of southern Ku fop# It terminated the vast war*bouse J distribution system iif the former < oun I try and led to the dGnppeuran-'e of th* ' class of merchant prtao-a who hitherto bad motmi-oHird the eastern traffic As it was with th* o rners of English warehouses. *o It w.ss with the owner* of hundred* of «-sll ug vessel* and th* denier* In six ». '.tbs’ bill*. For the Huez canal, by bringing steamer* Into u*e lu place of tin- salting »•-«*»•!* which had been making the s,t«a> lull* loug>-r voyage around th* Cape, eaabied a cargo to be sold and delivered within a month after the order bad been sent, awl business men without capital were able to borrow money at a low rate and supplant th* old < *tab ilabvd house* lu the eastern trade." Assiae trumpeters like turn of otbet calling*, have their raewrda. of which they have good reason to be proud. The moat famous of them, say* th* Livrn>ool Poet, ha* probably been Harry Rowe of Nottingham. Howe was torn In ITB and was for a time trurnpeter lu the Huke of Kingston * light bona-, in wbkh capacity he took part in the fight at Culloden. After big military aervlce waa over Rowe set tied In York and bad the good fortune to be choas-t* as trumpeter to the high < sheriff of that eoutity, in whi<ffi offi’-e Ibe served for forty year* When he i died. In IMS’, the following wa» his spltaph "Here Hr* the body us Harry I Howe, who for the space of forty years held the office of chief trump, ter to the high sb- riffs of Yorkshire. During Ids wliole liletitnv he « ' ne'er known to give a blast that tended U» the dis honor of his king and his country, his favorite airs being 'God »iave the Klug' and Ttiile, Britannia.’ ” ■■■ Proats In Trees. Get right away from the Idea that be- , cause trees do not grow and ripen us fast a* other crop* forestry In the wool lot will ix-tietit future genera tlone only. Most forest tree* will I reach commercial sire well within an ordinary lifetime and many of them > In a much shorter period Did It ever occur to you that this country offers I today few Investment* which equal In safety and in net returns the thrifty growing tree of a commercially valu I able kind.- Don’t tall into the «iy of thiiikm.- that tin- baton st «■ ‘ tree ylelda I* it* tiunnal growth. ThaIn itself shows a fair return. But you. trees are not only Increasing in six.-, they nre also ltieren*lng rapidly In value. A few days’ work iu the wood lot each year will yield more money for the mum- effort tlmn any other work on tt»- farm. Tl.ia l» a strong *tntament but tha facts l>ear It out.*Farm* Ing.

PowJer Absolutely Pure Made from epure Grape Cream of Tartar In baking powder Royal is the standard, the powder of highest repufafit n ; found by the United States Government tests of greatest strength and purity. It renders the food more healthful and palatable and is moist economical in practical use. Housekeepers arc sometimes importuned to buy alum powders ticcause they arc “cheap.” Yet some of the cheapest made powders are sold to consumers at the highest price. Housekeepers should *top and think. Is it not better to buy the Royal and take no chances— J the powder whose goodnev and honesty are never questioned ? Is it economy to spoil your digestion by an alum-phosphate or other adultered powder to save a few pennies ? I ( ROYAL BAKING f OWDf R CO*, MW YOW< ■ " 1 "■ 1 "" 11 ■— - — Get Ready for Hot Weather It’s about as sure to come as “Death and Taxes," and you may as well get ready for it brst as last. You have a good, big assortment of all kinds of summer goods to select from and no one in Adams county or anywhere else would E< more pleased to show you j through. Our Mott□: ’ t • ; '. . e y I At T rue s ' ' "7 \ - ■■ - ■ —*■ — I | MUI— I*l m liigim «■■**•■» mwwmwrowwrorowwwK" """ "" i>■ " ■' 1 w- ■ '•« 11 -wreiraire ij w w I*3l ol CO .... ; i wli 8 I When You Paint I Use the Best Paint f J vJI M I Lowe Brothers t I I High Standard I ■ Because I Mfim|9 I ■ whole ;ob. ll - ..v.-r I<■ t a J 4 ’ ■ I ■ I. 11 w• ai *'■ '”K' ' 1 .i -1 ] r -ataw | ; • ■ ot ■ 4 . it I !- '• -o’ nBWTJsM'iiM ■ dll* 10l ■ W< fl | Aik I-» i A- H.m. ivx H||re 1 T\i M j Foundai.onc" eV IBUW ■llIB I The Holthonse Orue; Company I Eg ♦

laiwn fertilizers for ante at J. D. i Hale 105-l.‘t.d. | ail employees oi the Mitten Factory will report for duty Monday April 30th. WANTED A renter for the Park. ' Ilot-.rJ. wluth will be c l >u.pS«‘tr»l in a f u w weeks. Inquire of PAN 11 L •MEYtUS. 110 Jwks. !

NOTICE OF ELECTION. To the Mettberw of the Decantr Iloiumereiai Club: The a . tai cleeifiott of nine f'.M directors to serve I tor the ensui year will b«- held at RHin.s of the Decatur Commetvial (Sub. Monday. May 7, at 7 :' p. t |IU-2wk> E. B. ADAMS, Secretary,