Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 30 May 1891 — Page 6
THE DOMINIE'S NEW PIPE.
A Story with a Moral*
Within hi* chair the dominie Sat lit bis open cottage door: His neighbor's baby on his knee,
Another on the grassy floor. And as ho puffM hid brand new pipe Jle looked like peace's prototype.
Of carven stone that wondrous bowl—
MOu
r.
Capitis, from latest Dutch designs Upon Its top wiw shaped a scroll On which appeared these loving linear "Old Amsterdam semis o'er the sea This tribute of respect to thee."
It was a quiet eve in June, With crimson clouds and golden sky .Ami to her southern throne the moon
Timidly mounted, pale and shy. A Ins. that peace should reign above. And earth decline the ruld of love I
The governor, with angry brow, Paced up aud down the garueu walks Some pilfering brave had inched his cow, »_ And war was ysrevengeful tgljj* 'TO ftat A price," fiercely said,
every savage rascal's hcftdl'1 ••••••.
••Oh. shume"• replied the godly man. "Must human blood be shed for this? Believe me. 'twere the wiser plan
So stern a project to dismiss. Forgive them, sir, and they will learn To give your kindness kind return."
'-.Bold words! And now he pufTd so fast That soon the trees were veiled in smoke The great man's eyes were downward oust, 'Twas full a minute ere he spoke. -At last he said: "You're right the thief as a to pi of r»
The governor walked down the lane, Musing on—everything but "cow The parson tilled his pipe again,
And toid his neighbor's chatty vrot? H««w he had saved a brother race By words of charity and grace.
Next morning some stalwart burghers brought The robber of the brindled beast The gov'nor led them to the fort,
And when their angry threats had ceased He said: "For Christian acts I'm ripe ^J lla» anybody got a pipe?"
Up stepped the parson: "Sir, this deed Will surely your renown increase Perhaps you'll gain a friend in need
Hy this same pipe of love aud ponce. l*hls bowl awaiteth your command The b**t pipe in Xieuw Nederlaud."
The gov'nor took a whifl or two, Then passed it to that tawny buck, Who did the part he had to do
With many a wondering, grateful look: And then—a form uo brave omits— He stiULshed that previous pipe to hits.
"You dog:" the dominie exclaimed, -Your heather, blood for this shall pay! He war asainst his tribe proclaimed
Xieuw Amsterdam, arm! Arm, Isayi** The gov'nor thundered: "Silent be. Who touches him lays-hands on me!"
Then to the holy man he said: ••Henceforth your counsel you may keep, The seeds of precept oft art* spread
Mv those who ne'er example reap: Your sense of wrong is mighty tine— The pipe was yours, the e»w was minei"—Thomas Frost, iu N. Y. Herald.
A WOMAN CRUSOE.
Strango Adventures of an English Sailor's Widow.
She Eurapcs from a Doomed Ship und I.lvea for N'rurly Four Yrars Alono on an I'ninliablted Inland In the Jan Sea.
On the 2Gtli of October, A. D-, 1S71, the trading- schooner Little King sailed out of the port of Singapore, bound for the Rinderoon islands to the north, and only one of her crew \vas ever again met with, says the Toronto (Ont.) Truth. For five years before the schooner had belonged to and been commanded by C'apt. Ezra Williams, a Canadian from Halifax. He traded between Singapore and Sumatra, Java, Borneo and the smaller islands of the Java sea, and in Mny. 1S71, died at Singapore of fever. He had been married for three years to an English woman, whose maiden name was Danforth, who had been a domestic in aa Eng1lLsh family in Singapore. She h.'ul accompanied him on all his voyages, and had secured much, experience and information. As she could not readily dLsiRise of the schooner she determined to continue in the business, acting as her own supercargo.
Mrs. Williams secured an Englishman named I'arker as captain, another named llope as mate, and with three Malays before the mast and a Chinese cook, and with about fourteen hundred pounds in specie in the cabin, she sailed away on her first voyage, and it was four years later before she was again heard of. The purpose of this narrative is to chronicle her adventures in the interim, us I had them from her own lips.
While it was a bit queer to start on a voyage with a woman virtually in command of the craft, Mrs. Williams had nothing to fear from the crcw. The officers were good navigators and the men willing, and all were anxious for a profitable voyage. She had no complaints to make until the islands had been reached. The group lies lx-tween the Malay peninsula and the island of Borneo, alxnit one hundred miles off the coast of the former, and from two hundred and fifty to three hundred miles from Borneo. There are ninoteeu islands in the group, covering a length of one hundred and twenty miles by about forty broad.
There are only seven or eight which are inhabited, and the time of which I write the people were a lawless set, and a share of them out-and-out pirates. The products were dried fish, sea sheila, cocoanuts, dye Btuffs, various herbs and roots for medicinal purposes, and several sorts of splaes. The schooner had been there once before and made a profitable trip of it. She had clothing, powder, shoes, axes, and a great variety of notions, and where none of these wcro wanted she paid cash.
On this trip the schooner worked to northward and mode her stop at the island of Quewang, being the third onu from the northermost island of the group. Sho met with a cordial reception, and at once began bartering for and r»ceiving cargo. She was anchored in a sheltered bay, within five hundred feet of tho beach, and had been there five days before anything occurred to arouse Mrs. Williams' suspicions that all was not right She then oljserved that the entire crew wero drinking deeply of a native liquor which the natives were supplying in a liberal manner, anil that some of tho fellows were becoming impudently familiar. When tho captain was spoken
to IK- lunched at her iden of troublo and prninisi'd K'tter things, but the drinking continued.
1
On tin- afternoon of the seveutli day Bovenil women came off" in the eanoos. tne of tliein who conid sponk English pretty freely was presented with some
1
ornuments by Mrs. Williams, and in turn .slie hinted to her that it was the intention of the natives to capture and loot the schooner that night. They htul discovered that there was a hirge sura 1 nf money on board, and they had found the erew an easy one to handle. The native woman hadn't time nor opportunity to say much, but no sooner had the crowd of natives loft tiie sehooner at dusk, as was their custom, itiau ^Irs.
Williams set out to sound the alarm. Imagine her feelings when she discovered that every single man on board, from def the '."alienee of liquor
no purpose.
The entirv lot were stu- fh£ W\
the natives had
pidlv dnjuk. just as planned for. It wa» a perilous situation for tho woman to be placed in. If U»e natives captured the schooner thev would mur1 der every one of the erew as a natural sequence, and the first step toward capturing her had already been taken.
The stop she took showed sound judgment. The schooner's yawl wasdowfi, having been in almost hourly use. The native village was about forty rods back from the bench, and as the schooner swung to th. ebb tide she presented her broadside to the village. When the yawl was pulled around to the port side she was out of sight. Mrs. Williams' llrst act was to step tho mast: her next to supply the craft with provisions and water. There was an unusual number of lights burning in the village, showing that something was on foot, but she had no fear of an attack until a later hour. The natives would wait until certain that all the people were helpless.
Mrs. Williams had determined to slip away from the doomed craft in the yawl, although she had no experience in the management of a small boat. After water and provisions she brought up all her money which was in boxes she could handle. Not- a penny of it was left behind. There war- a rilie. revolver and double-barreled shotgun belonging to her husband. These she took, togetlvr with powder, shot and fixed ammunition. Then she gathered up all her bedding and clothing, took three or four spare blankets, two suits of clothes belonging to the officers, and when these were in the lwat she took pots. pans, dishes and cutlery, bundled up a lot of carpenter's tools, secured two axes, a lot of small rope, several pieces of canvas, and in brief loaded the yawl with whatever was portable anil hand}*, including the clock, compass, quadrant, sextant and a lamp ami four gallons of oiL She. worked fcr upward of two hours getting these things into a boat and the last articles taken aboard were meat flour, beans, tea and provisions from the lazaretto.
It was about ten o'clock when Mrs. Williams took her seat in the yawl and cast off from the schooner, and the tide at once drifted her out of the bay and to the north. The only thing of consequence she had forgotten was a chart of the Java sea which she could have put her hand on at a minute's notice, and it was the want of this which made a Crusoe of her for several years. As the yawl went out to sea after its own fashion, Mrs. Williams lost the points of the compass at once. Indeed, had she kept them in mind it would have been no benefit just then, as she had not studied the chart and could not have told which way to steer to reach another group or the land.
She heard nothing whatever from the natives, but several years later it was ascertained that they did not board tho schooner until midnight The men, all of whom were still drunk and asleep, were stripped and tossed overboard to drown, and then the absence of the woman and her money was discovered. Five or six native crafts, were at once scut in pursuit, while the people who remained looted the schooner of everything of value to them, and then towed her out to deep water anil scuttled her to hide the evidence of their crime.
After drifting three or four miles out to sea the yawl got a light breeze, and
When Sirs. Williams landed on the island site had no Idea of stopping there for more than a day or two, or until she could decide on some plan. She had scarcely gone bshore when a gale came up which lasted about thirty hours, during which the yawl was so damogod that she must undergo repairs. She unloaded her goods on the shore, covered them from tho weather, and then set out to explore the island, pretty well satisfied that it was inhabited, und hoping, if it was, that her money might secure assistance.. Hefore night she was satisfied that sho was all alone, and she made a shelter out of blankets, and slept the night away rus peacefully as if in her cabin on the schooner. Next day she changed her apparel for a
man's suit and began the erection of a •hut. Iu a grove about "two hundred feet from the beach she erected a shelter ten by twenty foot, which withstood the storms of almost four years. While the sides consisted of cnnvtu and poles,, the roof was thatched with a louy (.TOSS, which she found on the island in abundance.
It took the woman about a week to construct her hut and move her stores into it, and this had scarcely been dono when her boat, owing to carelessness mi her part, was carried off by the sea, and she now realized that she was a prisoner until such time as the crew of some trading vessel might land and discoverer. Afjer her hou^e was completed she made a more thorough ex-
oiiian had clothing to last her
five or six years, but the provisions she had brought from the schooner would not supply her needs more than a few months. While hoping and expecting to be taken off almost any day, she wisely prepared for a long stay. She had Usli hooks and lines in her outfit, and with fish from the sea, meat from I the woods and bananas and wild fruits from the groves, sho had a variety and
In plenty. Six months after she landed a native craft put in about a milu from her hut, but creeping through tho woods she saw that nil were Malays, and so savage in appenrance that sho did not dare make herself known. Seven months after a second craft sent men ashore to fill two water casks, but she was also afraid of these. She lived very quietly from that time until nearly two years after her landing, having remarkably good health all that time, but naturally lonely and cast down at times.
One afternoon, as she was in the forest about half a mile from home, having her shotgun with her, a Borneo sailor suddenly confronted her. He was entirely alone, and whether he had been marooned or cast away she never learned. As she was dressed in a man's suit he naturally took her for a man, but his iirst move was a hostile one. He advanced upon the woman with a club in his hand and uttering shouts of menace, and to save her own life she was compelled to shojt him.
Now and then, all through her stay, trading vessels were sighted in the oiling, with now and then a craft known to be manned by Englishmen, but the signals made to the latter by means of smoke were never heeded. Her main hope was that the loss of the schooner would in some way reach her friends at Singapore and that a searching party might be sent out to her reseuo.
One day, when she had been on the island four years, lacking about fifty days, the British survey ship Sahio, then engaged in resurveving the group, dropped anchor off the mouth of tho creck, and sent a party ashore to explore the interior. I had the honor not only to head the party, but to be the first to sec and speak to Mrs. Williams. Wo found her in' excellent health, although tanned and roughened by exposure to the weather. When she had donned her own proper apparel and had time to tidy up no one could find fault with her appearance.
After a few days we sailed for Singapore, where Mrs. Williams was safely landed.
HOW MAN MADE HIS ENTRY.
An Indian Version of the Creation of Uie World aud the Origin of tho ltnco* There are stories of a legendary nature that are not related in several different forma. A correspondent who has read tho Indian legend of the creation sends the following excellent version of it:
When the Great Spirit created the world lie first made three men, all uf the same color. Then lie led them to a pool of water and biide them jump in and bathe. One of them obeying at once leaped in advance of hi* fellows and came out clean and white.
The others hesitated, but one soon followed the first. When he went in the water liad Income somewhat stained and he came out copper-colored.
,, time the water of the pool had become after a few trials the woman learned ,,
., black, and ho Rfi.il mill 1 fLT* n.
how to manage the sail anil lay a course. She had no idea which way she was heading, but rim off before the breeze, and kept ffoing all night and until afternoon next day. She must-have passed the Upmong in the early morning, but so far to the westward she could not see it The wind hauling at miilforenoon altered her coursc by several points, and the northernmost Island of the group, named l'oillo, was thus brought in line. The Island is sevon miles long by three in width at its wid«st part, well wooded and watered. The woman landed on the east side at the mouth of a creek which forms a snug little harbor. She was convinced that this was one of tho islands of tho Kinderoon group, but she did not know tlint It was the most northerly one. Ily consulting the compass she got the oardinal points, but not having studied the chart she coukl not say In what direction any 'other land lny. Sho had seen the sails of two traders that morning, but as they were native craft sho had every wlsii to avoid tlicm. The boats which were sent in pursuit of her must have taken another oourse, as she saw nothing of them.
Then the third man went, in. liy that
1
was consequently black
when lie had bathed. Thus it happens that tliere are white men, red men and black men in tho world.
Then tho Great Spirit laid down three packages before the tlireo men, which contained their future fate Out of pity for the black man lie permitted him to have his first, choice of the parcels.
Tlio black man, without hesitation, took the largest of the parcels the red man, whose turn was next, took tho next largest parcel, and tho white man got the remaining one, which was very small.
Then the men opened their packages. Tliat of the black man was found to contain shovels and other implements of laljor, the red man's contained bows and arrows and the white man's small parccl consisted of pens, ink and tools ?0r light work.
From that time on each man made use of the tools he had clio6en.—Chicago News.
Not Given Fair Show.
Mrs. Quibble—The trouble with you, Silas, is that when you make a mistake yon are never willing to admit it.
Mr. Quibble Oh! yes, I'm ready enough but when I never moko a mistake, I don't have any chance to admit •it.—Light.
He IIIMI Provided for That. Jack Meadows—I want a plain ring. Jeweler—Would you like a filled one? Jock Meadows No. Give me an empty one. I know a girl that will fill it exactly to my motion. Jewelers' Weekly.
—Having heard of tlio attempt of a citizen of the town to commit suicide by cutting his throat, Uncle Simon sagely remarked: "Well, if he'd a scverated the bugle vein there wouldn't a bin any alternity under the panickcs o' heaven!"—Lcwiston Journal.
•A YOUNG WOMAN AT FiFTY,"
Or, as tho world expresses it, "a woll-pre-sorved wounui." One who, understanding
ploration of her island home. There wf re parrots and other birds, jjnulcc^ of tho rules of health, has followed them, and
eapt t',1 ss ljiueh un- harmless variety, Borneo fnts and preserved her youthful appearance. Sirs. 10 '".'alienee of liquor a-, to n? HJi- drove of nixmt thfee hundred Java yngsl, able comprehend her words. S^he which are about the size of the Ameridotised them with sea water and pound- can peccary, but are wild instead of ed them with belaying pins, but all to fierce.
l'iukham has many correspondents who, through her advico and euro, can look with satisfaction in their mirrors.
LYDIAE. PINKHAM'S
Compound
ROCS to tho root of all fomalo complaints, renews tho waning vitality, and invigorates the entiro system. Intelligent women ol middle age know well its wonderful powers.
All Druggists sell it as a standard article, or sunt by mail, in form of Pills ot Loii'ngcw, on receipt of S1.00.
Mrs. l'iukham freely answors letters ol inquiry. Enclose stamp for reply.
Send (wo 2-cent stampt lor Mrs. Plnkham's beautiful 88-page Illustrated book, entitled GUIDE TO HEALTH AND ETIOUETTE." It contains a volume ol valuable Information
It has sated lives, and may save tours.
Lydia Plnkham Med. Co., Lynn. Matt,
Hnvoyou hoaitlnf Email's Pills, For rurintf billons ills? Could you know* what OUIITS MIV. How ihey wlml wlih irrlpelcss way
As 1 hoy ever will, Ami how they've tnude A hasts money trade. He's made uo fuss
Nor muss, And had no row: Has simt'ly jrone ahead.
Ami now
llasirnt them in a way complete. Or, a tho ho\ av, ith ho:h trrt. That they art' dal^ie? everybody knows
And Small's a lull-blow mse
Notice to Bondholders.
Notitv i-hereby jriven to the holders nf the llrst mortiraire bonds the t'rawtorNvUle Water and l.luht. Company of Cr-iWinrd-.YiHe. Indiana, that a meeting of said bond holders will be held the olllre tif folNt Stanton, No. 7'J llroadway. in tie* city of New York, on tho-Hh day ot ,June, Jil,lor thi? purpose of ehoosinjr i-nd appointing a sueeesvu' of the. American Loan and TnM (.'ompmy. In. the trust, created by the tnortjraire or deed ol trust I securing said bonds. 1 This eall is made In view uf the fact thiit said
American l.oan and Trust Company, by reason of Insolvency has become Incapacitated to perform the duties impo-cd iu snid tnortjraL'c or trust,and is made under and purMiant to article eleventh thereof.
AprlM. J, S. HIMWN, President. CrawfordsviHe Water 1,1. lit Co.
2
Cincinnati Hamilton and Darton Thousand Mile Books art now told for Twenty Dollars and good on fifteen different roads »11 connecting
An
eTer-rcady ticket between Cincinnati
CENTS
Davton Chicago St. Louii
Salamanca Ft. Wayne Indianapolis
PER
MILE
Ann Arbor Toledo Buffalo
Feoria
VIA:
Cleveland
Ki
Niagara Falli and r. Thousand other pointi.
CiHI&DI
INVEST
YonrSavings in ChicagoProporty
SHERIDAN DRIVE SUBDIVISION. Situated East of Clark Street, between Sunnyside a Lawrence Avenue,
North of Buena Park.
$200,000 Was Sold the First Month. There are between 80 and !00 Acres in the Sub-Division. Lots are sure to advance.
Fifty-four lots, from K0 to l.so feet in depth. All streets to l»o nmcsuhuni/.cfl »in1 sowered, stonu sidewalks, lake water in streets, aim trees and shrubberies of cverv variety.
The subdivision has been lufd out ami now beint?graded and planted under the supervision of oue of the best landscape jrardetiors in the country, and he is now preparing a plat to show the way in hlch the Mibdlvision will be planted It is the intention ot'the owners to jrive a park-like appoarauee to the entire sub* division.
The owners will place l»otilevard lamp posts In all the streets. The streets will be rolled and kept in jrood repair, the prnss-plots between sidewalks and curbs wli' be kept in irood condition, together with all trees and shrubs thereon, and the streets will besprinkled during the last sprtnir. summer, aud eaWy fall months, aud the sidewalks plowed clear of snow for a period of live vears from Mav 1. IK!) 1. FitKEOK CI OTTO till? IMIKCHASKu!
The land of the Sheridan Drive subdivision is well adapted for raisitur trees atid shrubs. His a portion of the raet recommended above all others for the World's Fair by Mv.Olmstead the eminent landscape gardener* Nearly onehalf of the subdivision is covered with a growt of uatlve oaks aud wild apple trees, and it Is the intention of the owners to plant all the kinds of trees and shrubs that have been found suitable to this climate. These Include some six or seven species of maple, several kinds of elins, oak. ash. lindens, cherries, thorns, and willows. The larch niLs shown Itself especially adapted to the hhrner rldures and *"fll be used qulto larprely. Th 'here will also be
.... lararely. ..
planted
ID
suitable locations groups of tulip
trees, magnolias, pcpperldjre trees, BasafraB, Juneberries, irouwoods, liaekberrles. blue beeches, catalpas, horse chestnuts, birches, etc., etc.
The use of shrubbery will be aspeclal feature.and it is believed will ipve an uuusually attractive and cozy effect to tho resident streets. Tho red dogwood will be very largely used U) give a warm ellect of color in winter, and barberries,syrlngns, snowberries, Indian currants, Japan )uinces, snowballs, high bush cranberries, sumachs, mnhonlas. Hydrangeas, elderberries, ha/.uls. spiraeas, honeysuckles, and many other kludsof shrubs will give va* rioty not often found in new subdivisions.
An abstract delivered to the purchaser for each lot. Tltlesare perfect. Tlie Chicago Title Guarantee and Trust Co. nas guaranteed the same to the prescutowuors for 15(10.000.
No house to he built under $3,500. Building lines to ulllots, excoptlugon Clark street.
A station will be built at Wilson nvc., on the C. & K. K. K., and the building now being plaoned will be one of the most elegant and attractive around Chicago.
TliKMS-Ono-iiuarter down balance in oue, two and three years, at (J per cent. Interest. OHiceon the ground, corner Wilson ave. aud Clark st. Correspondence solicited.
Soud postal for plats. SAM BKOWN. Jit., Agent and General Manager, *100 Chicago Opera House Hlock. Chicago, 111.
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoriai
lVeefiMekllteip,soiled tfoeir Aliens Aid ctofyt to do$ •fill* Wise old friend
SOAP
V^%se little,
18 Carat Cigar
Insist on Having
for
FOR EACH
QuickC i&nisJjed e&cb stato ARdHpirniilfeipegaJn •y/ere soFt asrpv/
SANTACLAIIS SOAP-MADE
N.K.FAIRBANK& Co." i. CHICAGO]
Fine Lace Cloth Tops, Fine Lace Tipped, Fine Lace Plain,
Oxlorci Congress, Oxlord Lace, Oxiord Plain.
124 East Main Street.
Infants
and more. Our AUSTIN l'ARK lota niuBlbeuutlful Ruburbs iirouuil Chicago ore built mid si rwt.s urnuleil. Ilulltlln^ft Kolng up In
IAKE
For Lawn and Cemeterl
Hanging Baskets, Flower Pots| and Stands at the
Very Lowest Pricesj
Ross Bros,, 99 Cent Store.
MANUFACTURED EXPRESSLY FOR
f!. T. LAYMOX. AT BONNELI.'S OLD STAND.
ALBRIGHT'S BREAD!
and
"Caatartaliao well adapted tochftdrenthtt recommend it vupenor to maj proscription H. A, Aacani, M. D., 818u Oitari SI, BraoUjm, V, T.
Children.
I
yau Worms, gir— *-v geetion, WUAOUI tojorioai Til* CCHTICK CoMPANT, 77 MtUT*7 Stl**,
The CrawfordsviHe Transfer Line,
H. C. WAM4UP, l'roiirletor.
Passengers and Baggage transferred to hotels, depots 01 any part of the city,
OMNIBUSES, CABS AND HACKS.
Leave orders at the stables on Market street, or at the branch office at C. A. Snodgrass' store on Washingion street. Telephone No. 47.
YOU181)1.(ret
AND MOItR
$1,000 $500!
will by Investing In good Chicago population has increased from 500,000 in }*, 'mnro won-1 000 In Tho next ten years will witness ni the rnP derful growth and a corresio 11
000 In 181)1 I grow. ... erty. Ixjta bought a year ago for $400 arc now
will even do hotter, bocauso
electric railroad. Grant Locomotive Works, employing from 8500 up. Title perfect. Terms: 8umll payment down, cago and we will pay your lure If you buy. Write for plats.
Bass, Kessler, Ennes &. Co,. 108 Dearborn St., Chicago^
*HARVEY©' PS
LOTS $100 AND UPWARDS
s.
CI
little foui •jvntcd cns trca 1 results. A 1 hor soun yefti-H ag°i jot tlio diw jcrfectly em union lilt) on Sk
eirAis
Swift Spc
I.J.and
ONLYBV
I
JI'C IIN'L Hi'slt on ir. Orttnth •ontc and fomou. Child klrlffltb.ftge
CON9U
A. D.
Estate
GOOD
it Mat"
stl',M
(iseasc
AN
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South •.I'ldU
Dr.,
I in ill win-f lil" sciit f»"'
Viif luiiir Ir I.tsous UlIlK i.wViiit'C. mi i- laiiimvomi
EARTEI
llTTLl
IVE PILL
|k Headache I to a bilto mess, Nan irg, Tain in likable euc
S
kii'.ho, yet fcxllj valuabl (usg tliiaan wctalldiBoi fcriodrcg
wtteywoul •(frfremthi •tlythelrgtx loc&cfttrytk fee la *o man Ittodowitlu
enr*J5°'?& 0b"SS2SS«.
BOUT 8
to mack,
Austin
hicago's Great Manufacturing Temperance Suburb-M.s.ci
8 i.iirgi':
JG
telanoof Iciicourp ^tndonot.
Ftttfs Litt tisj to ta Ij iroBtric fr. t-ui by itea. In iiuggista
II Is the Ufft.J
ARTER
BE
Cure
Ql
l\S
eem
fare cor 7 most RE I
Free
|cSCists
bp
Pi"g,telliuV for I ot tl*
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1 only 7 inllos from Court House. Side'« »i
ts
up In nil directions. Lots noar ,^1, Jinploylng army of worklnRinoii. payment down, bftlauco to Bult. write for plat-s.
ty
Lim|ts'
Manufactories Utnilol In -s -M""
double^ln one your or less. .lN() i,ir
Write lor maps of Chicago, allowing location of llarveg and World ,',S nric*' graphic views of the principal factories and buildings at Harvey, platol to« i' T11B IIAKV15Y LAND ASSOCIATION. HID HH)ker
