Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Hancock Democrat from Greenfield, Indiana • Page 7

Location:
Greenfield, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE HANCOCK DEMOCRAT, THURSDAY MOKNTNG, JULY 5, 1917 7 DON'T risk heclect LIS CLOSE TO ALLTIIEPEOPLE Greatness of Woodrow Wilson Seen In Handling Problem of the War. Tourist at home. And Woodrow Wilson turned to the men who must fight the nation's battle in the field and said: "'You may carry to the trench this promise of the republic: while you are fighting the common enemy in the field, I pledge the honor of the republic to protect your wife and child against the copperhead of greed who dares to speculate with the nation's "And Woodrow Wilson turned to congress and said: "'You give me a law to make good the pledge of the republic' "And the buzzards began to swarm in the lobbies, and the snakes crawled out of their holes and coiled themselves about the columns of the cap-itol, and Joe Cannon, true to form, tried to rally the lawmakers against the protective measures of the president, but there stood Wilson, the at Low Round Trip Fares Daily to New York, Boston, Atlantic City and other Resorts in the East, direct or via Washington Pennsylvania TicItetG June7t8 Lines the leering features of the power trust which charged the people of this country 80 cents a pound for powder until Daniels proved that it can be produced for 34 and now these delectable patriots have found that they can reduce their price from 80 to 53 cents and still make a handsome profit. "Josephus Daniels made it difficult for the powder trust to steal that is his crime. "Before Josephus Daniels' time the manufacturers of armor plate were submitting exorbitant bids without competition and through the good old pirate rule of addition, division, and substraction.

He had the honosty and courage to reject the bids and force a competition which saved the nation on three ships more than a million dollars. And even then the profit was sufficient to permit them to hire men to poison with their pen the public mind against the man who wrung from them their million dollar graft and restored it to the public treasury. "Josephus Daniels has made it harder for the manufacturers of armor plate to steal that is his crime. "An, but they say the navy has retrograded under Daniels. Let's see: Under Long and Moody $83,000,000 were spent in the building of new ships; under von Meyer $128,000,000 were spent; under Josephus Daniels more than $655,000,000.

Let's see: Where we had a shortage of torpedo boats before Daniels' time, and had 100 when he went in, we had 158 more at the beginning of the war and these constructed in a governmental plant at a saving of $1,000 on each one. "Let's see: When Daniels took the reins we were 5,000 short in the number of enlisted men allowed by law. He raised the standard of admission also to Resorts in North Michigan, Wisconsin and the Northwest, Colorado and the West liberal Stopovers and Return limits Consult Local Ticket Agent for particulars or address ABLE EXPONENT OF TRUE DEMOCRACY Claud G. Bowers, Editor of the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette, Speaks to Democratic Editors of Indiana, By Willis S. Thompson.

Indianapolis, June 30. A fitting culmination of one of the most inter esting meetings ever held by the dem ocratic editors of Indiana, was the Claud G. banquet Friday night. Claud u. Bowers, Journal editor of the Fort Wayne Gazette, was the principal His address was a splendid speaker.

tribute to the administration and the tnuvrino' rprsrmalitv of Woodrow -v 1 Wilson, the president who has suc- cessfully met more complex situations, c. wit i.srACGir. Assistant Crn'ral Patxrnerr Agent. IXMAXAPOLIS, IX D. SltacBiritegft Mimes involving greater and more serious of organization who had fed the mil-consequences, than any other execu- lions of dependent Belgium, he found -v.

I the man the nation needs todav and TO i A Fast Train Every Few Honrs The Hoosier Leaves Indianapolis 7:45 A.M. Arrives Ch ca go 12:45 Noon Daylight Limited Leaves Indianapolis 12:00 Noon Arrives Chicago 4:55 P. M. Business Men's Special Leaves Indianapolis 4:00 P.M. Arrives Chicago 9:00 P.M.

Night Express Leaves Indianapolis 1:45 A.M. Arrives Chicago 7:05 A. M. (Sleepers ready in UnionfStation at 9:00 P.M.) Observation-library cars and large roomy dining-cars on all day trains. All steel sleeping cars on night trains.

All Monon trains use Dearborn Station, Chicago, only two blocks from the loop. Automatic Block Signals protect you all the way, when you travel on the Don't neglect a constant backache, sharp, darting pafns or bladder disorders. The danger of dropsy or Bright's disease is too serious to Ignore. Use Doan's Kidney Pills as have your friends and neighbors. A Greenfield case.

Mrs. Ellen Wiggins, 29 K. Cemtery street, Greenfield, says: "My back was weak and lame and ached steadily through my kidneys. My kidneys were not acting right. I also had headaches and dizzy spells.

I used several boxes of Doan's Kidney Pills, which I got from the Karly Drug and they did me a great deal of good." Price 50c. at all dealers. Don't simply ak for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that Mrs. Wiggins had. Foster-Milburn Buffalo, N.

Y. Advertisement. There Is more Catarrh In this section of thf country than all other diseases put tope; her, and for years It was supposed to be incurable. Doctors prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to- cure with local treatment, pronounced it Incurable. Catarrh Is a local disease, greatly Influenced by constitutional conditions and therefore requires constitutional treatment.

Hall's Catarrh Medicine, manufactured by F. J. Cheney Toledo. Ohio. Is a constitutional remedy.

Is taken Internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. One Hundred Dollars reward Is offered for any case that Hall's Catarrh Medicine fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. F. J.

Cheney Toledo. Ohio. Sold by druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills for constipation. (Advertisement.) Woman's friend Is a Large Trial Bottle of Sanol Prescription.

Fine for skin and clear complexion. A real blackheads. Eczema and all rough skin Tonic. Get a 35c trial bottle at the drug store. April HUMPHREYS'" Humphreys ITomeopathio Remedies are designed to lucrt the needs of families or invalids, something that mother, fatlit-r, nurso or invalid take or givo to meet the neo.l of the moment.

Have been in use for over Sutx Years. No. for Fr1e 1 Fevers. Congestion. Inflammations 2 2 Worm ever 2 3 folic Crying and Wakefulness of Infants.

24 4 liiarrhea. of Children and Adults 'h 7 oiik-hx. Colds, 2 loolhnrhe, Faceachc, Neuralgia 2S 9 llcndache. Mi Vertigo 25 lO Hv ieii. Indiu'estion.

Weak Stomach 2. 13 froup. lloare Coiinh, Laryngitis 2J 14 Kczema. Eruptions 25 SS It liciimiitiHin. Lumbago 25 10 Krvrr and Ague.

Malaria 25 1 7 Piles. Blind or l.leedlng. External, Internal. 25 1 fniarrh. Influenza, Cold In Head 25 2 It honpinc ouch 25 2 1 Alhina.

Oppressed. T)lfiVultBreathing 25 27 Disorders of the Kidneys 25 SO I rinsry Incontinence 25 3 tore Thronl. V'lusy "5 77 Crip, Grippe i- Grippe 25 K-11 by drugsrtsts. or sent on receipt of pries. Medical IJook mailed free.

HCMPnRKTS- nOMEO. MEPIcrVH Coras William and Ann Streets K. York. Administrator's Sale of Real Estate The undersigned. John R.

Hinchman, administrator with the will annexed of the estate of M. Oooding, deceased, hereby gives notice by virtue of an order of the Circuit Court of Hancock County, Indiana, made in the cause of John R. Hinchman. administrator with the will annexed of the estate of Mary M. (londing, deceased, vs.

John R. Hinchman. trustee under the last will and testament of Mary M. Gooding, deceased, being Cause No. 13913 in said Court, he will, as such administrator, at the hour of ten (10) a.

m. on the day of July, at the office of John H. Hinchman, attorney. Room one (1) on the second floor of the Masonic Temple, tireenfield, and from day to day thereafter, until sold, offer for sale at private sale, all the interest of said decedent in and to the following described real estate, situit" in Hancock County, State of Indiana, to-wit An undivided one-seventh (1-7) part of th following described part of lot seventy-two (72) in Mock eighteen (18) in the original plat of the town (now city) of ield. Indiana.

to-wit: Commencing at the northeast corner of said lot seventy-two (72) in block eighteen (IS) in the town (now city) of Greenfield, Indiana, running thenee west on and along the mirth lire of said lot. forty (4i)) feet: thence south parallel with the east line of saiii lot to the south line thereof; thence east on the south line said lot to tho southeast corner of said lot; thence north on the east line of said lot to the place of bee-inning. Said sale will be made subject to the approval of the said Court, for not less than the full appraised value of said real estate and upon the following terms and conditions, to-wit: At least one-third of the purchase money, cash in hand, the balance in two equal installments, one-half in six (6) months and one-half in nine (9) months, or all cash at the option of the purchaser, said deferred payments. If any there be. to be evidenced by notes of the purchaser bearing six (6) per cent.

Interest from their date, waiving relief, providing for attorney fees, and upon confirmation of sale, secured by a mortgage on the real estate sold. JOHN R. HINCHMAN. Administrator with the will annexed of the estate of Mary M. Gooding, deceased.

Hough Offutt, Attorneys for Administrator. Notice of Guardian's Sale of Real Estate Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned Farmers Trust Company, of Anderson, Indiana, guardian of Kllabelle Moore, will at the office of said Trust Company in the city of Anderson. Indiana, on TUESDAV, JI I.Y 31, 1917, at the hour of ten (10 o'clock a. and from day to day thereafter, until sold, offer for sale at private sale the following described real estate In Hancock County, Indiana, to-wit: The undivided one-half Interest in and to the following described tract: Commencing on the north line of lot number seventy-two (72) in block number eighteen (18) In the original plat of the town (now city) of Greenfield, Indiana, forty (40) feet west of the northwest corner of said running thence pouth parallel with the west line of said lot 72 to the south line thereof, thence west on said south line 21 feet and 9 Inches, thence north parallel with the east line of said lot 72. to the north line thereof, thence east on said north line 21 feet and 9 Inches to the place of beginning.

TERMS OF SALE Said real estate will be sold free from liens, for cash and subject to the approval of the Madison Circuit Court. At the same time and place the said Trust Company will offer for sale the other undivided one-half interest in and to said real estate, free from liens and for cash. FARMERS TRUST Anderson, Indiana. Guardian. Bagot Free, Attorneys.

June2St4 Administrator's Notice. Notice Is hereby given. That the undersigned has been, by the Judge of the Hancock Circuit Court, appointed Administrator of the Estate of John B. Dimlck, late of Hancock County, Indiana, deceased. Said estate Is supposed to be solvent.

CLARENCE HASKETT, Administrator. Hough Offutt, Attorneys for Estate. June28t3 Dr. F. D.

Dartlou Veterinarian CALLS ANSWERED PROMPTLY Both PboMt Nw and OM May S-tf. CUMBERLAND, IND. dreamer, now a doer, with flashing i eye, pointing to the republic's prom ise. And because Wilson of the velvet touch who wrote the 'notes' had become a man of iron, the will of Wilson was written into law, and during the period of the war murder, arson, and highway robbery may be safe, but (jod pity the copperhead and pirate who dares to line his pockets on the nation's needs. nation's needs.

I "But that was not enough. The times demand the mobilization of the producers of Jthe nation, the centrali- zation of distribution, the domination of a master mind in the problem of the nation's food. And Woodrow Wil- son with a passion for efficiency lonkpd flcrnss inf sp.t unci in the mnr- yeous record of the American genius at the beck and caU of Wilaonf Hoover put on the harness for the nation good. The Liberty Loan. 'But that was not enoujrh.

It re- quires billions of dollars to finance the greatest fight in the history of mankind for te greatest stake that humanity has ever batUed for since the dawn of time And Woodrow Wilson the dreamer, now a doer, had the courage and the genius to turn his back on the house of Morgan and hold forth his hands to the millions of the mine arid factory and field. God pity the man of such petty party spleen that he would withhold from the administration the meed of praise for determining to go directly to the people for the financing of the battle for democracy. "The Liberty Loan is the transla tion of the Declaration of Independ ence into the lantruacre of finance. "Because this war is for liberty and democracy and not for gain. ood row Wilson said that no buzzards of greed, no mercenary clippers of cou pons, no speculators on a nation necessities shall hover over the dead and dying of the battle field and lick their chops anticipation of their profits.

And he went to the people for the loan to the end that the people may reap the profit with the loss And he made it easy for the man in the factory and mine to contribute to the loan and share in the profit. "Thomas Jefferson gave us political democracy; Woodrow Wilson has given us financial democracy. "Thomas Jefferson freed us from the kings of courts; Woodrow Wilson has freed us from the kings of the counting room. "Thomas Jefferson gave us liberty, and oodrow Wilson gave us oppor tunity. "Thank God for McAdoo." And oodrow Hson did something more he gave us the greatest secretary of the treasury since Alex ander Hamilton.

"Thank God for a secretary of the treasury who has the genius and the courage to transfer the financial capital of the country from Wall street to Washington. "Thank God for a secretary who is not ashamed to place the bonds of the people in the hands of the grimy sons of toil. "Thank God for a secretary who fears no ridicule for going out among the masses and asking them to buy a bond and showing them how it can be boucht. "Thank God for a secretary who has more democracy than dignity, more courage than craft. "Yes, and I say it reverently, in this crisis of our history, thank God for the genius, the energy, the grit, and greatness of McAdoo.

Wilson The Efficient. "But WoPdrow Wilson was not through. His keen, constructive mind foresaw the vital need of co-ordinat ing the industrial resources of the na tion to meet the grim demands of war and he called to his side the greatest minds of the industrial world and placed within their hands the power to act. "Note the intense activity and the unerring judgment of Woodrow Wilson: "He needed a builder and there stands Goethals. "He needed an inventor and there looms Edison.

"He needed a master of transportation problems and there is Willard. "He needed a director and Ndistrib-utor of food and there stands Hoover. "He needed an inspiring, dashing, dominating, safe and sane leader for the fields of France and these rides Black Jack Pershing the son of Mars. "He needed a concilliator and diplomat for Russia, and brushing aside all party thought, he turned to Root. Daniels-Lies vs.

Truth. "And now for the copperheads of greed and their vile conspiracy against Josephus Daniels. And I want to reaah you with this message now that any democratic editor who fails to disclose the perfidy, the cupidity of the infamous conspiracy of lies against Josephus Daniels, fails less in his duty to his party than in his duty to his country. "I place my hand upon the tomb of Dewey, and by the token of his written words I here proclaim that Josephus Daniels is the most efficient secretary of the navy that the republic ever had. "Scratch the slanderer of Daniels and you will find beneath the skin of patriotic respectability either a private interest that can no longer foot the public treasury at will, or one of its hired pensmen.

Behind the mask of the politician who damns him are ilii Cive wno ever pr.ueu tion. 1 In part Mr. Bowers said: I "We meet this year in the midst of tVi.it we have ever I waged," for a greater stake than we wi i fnr- tv, nrpQprvi- have ever played for the prea tion and the extension of the benen- cent principles of democracy, uuring the last three years the responsible head of the American people has ad-: vanced every argument and resorted mow in TMitient effort to keep the sword within the scabbard, i liut wnen a muciwiie representing, as 1 think, me peopie 01 Germany, dared to violate our rignts, degrade our dignity, destroy the lives of our people, and obstruct the path- way of democracy, while presuming to put out the light of liberty, every militant paee of our herioc history i cried out in protest against the con-sumation of the crime. "I am one of those who are proud of the fact that Wilson broke the pen before he drew the sword. The page of history will record no parallel to the ineffable patience with which he faced the provocations of Berlin and fought for peace.

And then, confronted by the insufferable perfidy or stupidity of the junker crew, he faced the world that day in the senate chamber with the noblest appeal for peace that has ever fallen from the lips of mortal man. On that memorable occasion he not only made an utterance that will rank in history as one of the few immortal political pronouncements of all time, but he unfurled a banner that every devotee of liberty and democracy can follow with the sword. "History will dispute why Italy entered the' war, why England entered the war, why "Roumania entered the war, but thank God posterity will never be in doubt why America entered the war and the answer is the matchless 'notes' of Woodrow Wrilson. Wilson of the Sword. "And this the miracle the moment he drew the sword the foremost champion of poace became the most virile, far-seeing', energetic, constructive militant figure that ever led America against a foe.

"He had the courage to proclaim the passing of the volunteer and to demand conscription that can reach the. rich and poor alike, and make it possible to utilize the service of each man where it can best contribute to the common cause. The protest of the slacker and the coward and victim of tradition beat against the stern, strong figure of Woodrow Wilson without avail and now we have an army of a million in the making before whose tread the tyrants of the earth may tremble. "But thtit" was not enoueh. We needed ships our allies needed ships that thev mieht live until we can join 1 their soldiers with our guns.

For every ship that sinks before the torpedo of a submarine, another ship must be launched upon the sea. And Woodrow Wilson the dreamer, now the most virile and tremendous doer that ever led a people to the field battle instantly summoned to his side the titan of the Panama canal, and ordered him to build a thousand ships and give them to the waves and almost in the twinkling of an eye the gigantic genius of George Goe-thals was kending to the task. "But that was not enough. We needed food our allies needed food. The fertile fields of France have sent their toilers to the trench to hold autocracy at bay.

The men of the warring nations have been summoned to other fields than those that grow the grain. And the weary allied soldiers on the fields of France, and the civilian population behind the firing line, are more in fear of the lack of bread than the want of bullets. Every man throughout the world who is fighting and suffering tonight in the battle for liberty is looking to the vast and fertile fields that are spread out to the sun and rain between our eastern and western seas. And Woodrow Wilson, the dreamer, now a doer, said to them: "'You give your shot and shell to the common enemy, and we will give our corn and wheat to Hoover "Called." "And that promise carried, too, another imperative duty that Woodrow Wilson met in the Woodrow Wilson way. He knew from history of the gluttons of greed that fatten on the necessities of a state in the days of battle.

He knew of the buzzards of speculation that hover over the field where heroes fight and die. He knew of the reptiles of gain that snake their way into the larders of the women left and added more than 6,000 more. "Let's see: The number of re-enlistments under Daniels has increased from 53 to i0 per cent; the number of desertions has fallen off from an average of 216 a month to 'JO a month; and the number of prisoners has decreased from an average of 1,800 to 700. "With millions of dollars in loot chopped off by the common honesty of Daniels, with more shins, better and bigger guns, greater efficiency in the general staff, the finest record in target practice ever made upon the sea, and more men better satisfied and more efficient than ever before in the history of the navy with more brain and brawn and less booze more liberty for the men and less loot for the interests Josephus Daniels will go down in history as one of the great constructive minds of the Wilson administration. "If he can fight Germans as well as he has fought greed, if he can fight ruthlessncss as successfully as he has fought rapacity, his position in history is assured.

"When Admiral Dewey, after sixty years of service, wrote the private letter to his wife which she has given to the public to proclaim to Josephus Daniels the greatest secretary or his time, he tore the mask of patriotism and respectability from the repulsive face of cupidity and greed and placed a weapon in the hands of honest men with which to crush the foul conspiracy against an efficient and an able servant of the state. The moment the roll call in congress ended on the declaration of war, the navy, under Josephus Daniels, was ready to respond. It cleared the decks immediately for action. And while the peanut politicians and the carping critics of the fleshpots clamored against the navy and its chief, their sneers and snarls were drowned in the frenzied shouts of enthusiastic welcome from Queenstown's crowded wharves as America's flotilla of destroyers sailed in from the open sea and reported ready for instant action. "'When will you be asked the British commander.

are ready was the proud response. "The record of Daniels was known to Woodrow Wilson that's the reason he called him to his side for four years more. "The record of Daniels is known to Col. Georce Harvey, cf the North American Review and that's the reason he assails him, for it has been written that the ass knoweth his master's crib. "The armor pjate grafters hate him, the powder trust hates him, all the gluttons of greed hate him, and their hirelings of the pen hate him to the jingle of the coin.

And because they hate him he republic, when it comes to know nim, will love him for the enemies he has made and the manner that he made them. Honest, energetic, wonderfully efficient a constructor and a creator with a record never equaled in the history of the navy, we send our ships into the moke of battle with a supreme faith im the wisdom of Josephus Daniels. Wilson and Mankind. "And now let us immolate all party thought upon the altar of the common good, and granting full meed of praise to the patriotism of Roosevelt, Taft, and Root, let us rally 'round the standard the genius that we gave the nation as a leader in this the might iest war in all the tide of time. I cannot think of Lincoln and Wilson without the firm conviction that there is a divine direction in the destiny of the republic.

The plain, comparatively obscure lawyer of Illinois, who reached the pinnacle of nower bv passing by the seasoned politicians of nis time, now has his counterpart in the polished scholar who emerged, compartively unknown, from the classic shades of a univeusity to pass the idols of a party by and grasp the sceptre of the state. As Lincoln startled Seward by his prescience and grasp, so has thie scholar amazed mankind by the superb caoacitv with which he has met the problems of the nation's life the trreatest and the gravest that we have ever known. "And I am so firmlv anchored to the faith that the blessings of liberty and democracy wilr always follow the fluttering of the flag that I like to picture to myself the day. nerhaDS far off, when the man on horseback no more, and autocracy is but a hateful memory in the twilight land of kings, when in a Germany no longer blighted by the shadow of the Junker's sword, the German DeoDle so beautifully and brilliantly exemplified by Maximilian Harden will sit down in a German garden and lift their steins in a grateful toast to the immortal memory of Woodrow Wilson." CHICAGO, INDIANAPOLIS LOUISVILLE RY. For tickets, reservations, call on or telephone F.

V. Martin, Dist. Pass. Claypool Hotel Indianapolis 65 i PASCO BROTHERS FUNERAL DIRECTORS Lady Attendant Successors to O. S.

Morrison. Gram field, Indiana Rtl67m '4 Ot 1cm Pttonm 37 TERRE 1IACTE. INDIANAPOLIS AND EASTERN RAILWAY. I Auto Ambuwnc NEW ADVERTISEMENTS Novl6w4 PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM A tolls preparation of merit Helps to eradicate dandruff. 1 BssstTtoGrmTor Faded Hair.

Kill All Flies! "oTbSS0 riJioed anvwner. DAISY FLY KULCM attracts an4 kuis lA Hies. Neat, clean, onutmenul, convenient, anil charx Lasts all aaon. Made ot metal, can't api 11 or Hp over will not "oil or Injure anything- Guaranteed ffctive. A sic for Daisy Fly Killer Sola dsslsrs, or 6 sent by piprws prepaid, vi.w, HAttOLO SOMEftS, 1 BO DsKalb Av sssalya.

N.Y. 3 Stoorafe and indistioDcanmd me grea distress ixvr oso years, men innt tnr" Mia fr" nn i ififtl i in CB. Hatfield. 3nyn, W. Va.

25 CERTS PER BOTTUEATALL 0RU6CISTS. mm TIME TABLES FOR GREENFIELD. TND. Eastbonnd Train. Local Car 5:10 A.

M. Local Car 5:50 A. M. Local Car 7:06 A. Richmond Limited A.

M. Local Car 9:06 A. M. "Columbian" Limited 9:51 A. M.

Local Car 11:07 A. M. Richmond Limited 12:15 P. M. Local Car 1:08 P.

M. Dayton Limited 1:51 P. M. Local Car 3:07 P. Richmond Limited 4:15 P.

M. Local Car 5:06 P. M. Richmond Limited 6:15 P. M.

Local Car 7:06 P. Richmond Limited 8:15 P. Greenfield oniy 9:06 P. M. LocaJ Car 10:05 P.

M. Greenfield only 12:28 A. Westbound Trains. Local Car 6:19 A. Local Car 6:35 A.

M. Local Car 7:22 A. M. Local Car 8:19 A. M.

Richmond Limited 9:22 A. Local Car 10:19 A. M. Dayton Limited 11:07 A. M.

Local Car 12:19 P. M. Richmond Limited 1:22 P. Local Car 2:19 p. M.

"Columbian" Limited 3:07 p. M. Local Car 4:19 p. Richmond Limited 5:20 P. Local Car :19 P.

M. Richmond Limited 7:20 P. M. Greenfield oniy 8:07 P. M.

Richmond Limited 9:17 P. Local Car 10:69 P. M. Greenfield only 11:69 P. M.

Greenfield only 12:1 A. M. 'Makes loaa.1 stops Greenfield to Indianapolis. Children Ory FOR FLETCHER'S A3TO RIA MONET TO LOAN. 6 per cent, farm loans I to It years.

per cent, farm loans 20 years. Mo commission. We loan from 850 to $109 per aero. Loans made on short notice. Wo bay and sell farms.

If you want to sell jroar farm or make a loan, call or writ ua. WALTER BT. CLAIR. 01 Traction Indianapolis. Phonos Main I69S; Now St4-R.

Jaa. litems..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Hancock Democrat Archive

Pages Available:
37,494
Years Available:
1860-1963