Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 10 July 1894 — Page 2
The
l!i£^ I'sra*^
I&&
Journal Coupon.
.1 VL.Y 9.
Three of these coupons of different dnt.es and 10 cents good .for any number of Frank
Leslies
Scenes and Portraits the Civil War.
of
DAILY JOURNAL.
THE
ESTABLISHED IS 1SS7.
Printed Every Afternoon Except Sunday.
Entered at the Poetoftlco »t Ornwfordsvllle Indiana, as second-class matter.
TUESDAY. JULY 10. 1894.
THE fact is being brought to light that the Debs strike is more of a fight inaugurated by the American Railway Union against the old railway organizations. such as the Brotherhoods of Engineers. Firemen, Conductors, Trainmen, Brakemen and Switchmen, than it is against Pullman or the railroads. Ostensibly it is a fight against the latter. but it really is a fight for supremacy and to crowd the old and conservative organizations to the wall.
TIIK Lafayette Courier in commenting on the class of fellows which is in control at Chicago pithily remarks: "In the list of rioters killed and injured by a volley from the soldiers on Saturday, are these and other equally distinguished names: Walter Sehrwsky, Peter Icrijanski. Wade Kusmusku, Joseph Enyiltheler. Tony Grejeioski! The sijgiit of these names alone, without a word of comment, is a sermon in itself with a moral of impressive significance. These are the kind of fellows who are forevei prating of their "rights as American citizens!" Hod save the mark!"
SOfNIt ECONOMIC VIEWS. Judge 1'. S. Grosscup, of the United States Court in Chicago, who issued the injunction against the railway strikers and boyeotters to restrain them from interfering with the United States mails and interstate commerce last week, delivered the memorial address last Decoration Day at lialesburg. 111. In this adress he gave utterance to his views on the labor question, and the re iv a a pi a and labor, which are of interest at this
A re in re a a
a id it S at in wealth, Judge Urosscup traced the I process by which individual enterprises had been absorbed by corporation?, and individual control had been surrendered to directories and committees. This system, he said, has extended until it comprises a majority of manufacturing and commercial ventures. lie then continued:
It is not surprising that in the presence of these phenomena labor should also have learned the art of organization. From little societies, where ob-. ligations were voluntary, it has gone on until, in every specialty, workers to-day are compressed into unions, where the individual will is merged in the master will of .a ruler or committee. Before a boy can learn a trade he must receive a permit from the supervising body, and before he can work at his trade he must matriculate into the obligations which the union imposes. The remainder of his life as a mechanic is simply one long subjection to the direction of others. He can work only wlien they grant leave, and at wages that shall have received their approval, and he must be ready at any notice to deliver up his family to hunger and the street when the call for a strike comes. He has effectually sunk his will into the general will of his trade, and has cast away, for organization, all the advantages and inspiration of independent individuality. But the spirit of organization once stirred does not stop. The trade unions are each year approaching a closer consolidation. and the time is not distant, if not already upon us. when a single uniou will, for all the purposes of strikes and menace, be in control of all branches of labor. In that hour, the brick-layer or the boiler-maker will not simply have delivered over his personal rights into the keeping of his fellows of the same craft. A still deeper tyrauny will have overtaken hiin.
His rights will then be subject, not alone to the will of those who likewise lay bricks or make boilers, but to the remote, and to him entirely unintelligible exigencies of crafts with which has no personal relation, and to whose principles and demands he may be an entire stranger.
I have no quarrel with labor unions as organizations better the conditions of their members. The right of each to rise in the world is sacred, and if his rise can be accelerated by association with his fellows, no one
who stand side by side to advance their common interest. But the worker falls into error who surrenders his independent manhood to the decrees of a combination, and the combination is revolutionary when it aims by fnree to deprive any citizen of that which is his birthright—his accumulations, or his to a or .Neither have 1 any quarrel with that mobilization of capital which is essena to so re at industrial development. The railroad, the telegraph, the steamboat, and many of the otheradjuncts upon which the movements of the present day are carried, must, in the necessity of their constitution, gather into a central! management the control of individual capital. They are the legitimate ob-! at xi at in tangible life to which the State gives
JpSSSlcs of unequal conditions, ought to be i^ lavvless as the imposition of re/Steal?t upon aright to work. farther growth of labor and ir—animations can have but 01 .U divides mankind into ti tbe enforced discipline tltat of the fettg.
no individuality except that of the corps d'esprit. In the other, the loom of consolidation is weaviug into single fabrics the individual holdings and personality of American proprietorship. In the latter, as ill the former, individuality. depeudeut upon the generalship of the leaders for returns, ami upou their consciences for the discharge of obligation to others, will soon be. lost altogether. Two armies thus highly organized, and in their aims necessarily antagonistic, can not a id a as it is for conference or adjustment between leaders who ore thus feeding upon their senses of power. Most of the wars of mankind have been the battles of personal ambition: battles that would have been avoided could the rank and tile have freely intermingled with each other and taken on the sense of justice that such close contact imparts. The present industrial conditions of America. by unnaturally depositing the entire interests of life into the keeping and discipline of these antagonistic organizations, can only be a repetition of history. It is the drawing of a
Rhine between the men who toil and the men who •own. and conflicts like those of the Teutons and the Haul must be expected. Obliterate this river of division. Restore to .each individual, by the enforcement of law. not simply his right, but if possible, a returning sense of duty to control his own personality and property. Let us set a limit to the field of organization, and the people, freed from the restraint of interest and allegiance, will again intermingle and the clash of antagonism be replaced by the sympathy and wisdom that attends the personal association of independent men.
11
By OHABLES B. LEWIS CM. QUAD).
lOopyright, IS92, by American Presp Association.)
[CONTINtrED.]
CHAPTER rC
X1IL
A volt crcpt out of his luir. Sailors wrecked at sea go mad sometimes from the mere situation.
They may sail in their small boats or float on their rafts for days and days with the same monotony of scene—the water beneath, the sky above. There is a horror, a loneliness about it—a feeling as if shut out from the world—and even where there are three or four together to keep one another company some one will go raving mad within the* week.
When a man is lost on the plains those who may set out to search for him go prepared to shoot him down.
They may have to do it to save their own lives. If lost for but a single day he will fall down and weep at sight of his rescuers. Ho is weak and maudlin, like one drunk.
If lost for two days he may be so under the influence of terror that he will run away at sight of human beings.
If ho has been wandering about for three days and nights—beware! The chances aro nine in ten that he is dangerous.
And if this feeling is so strong upon men in their prime and men who may have weapons of defense and the experience of years, what must it be in the case of a woman fleeing out into the darkness to escape the murderers of her husband and the abductors of her child?
The mother was near enough to hear her daughter's cry of pain and the shouts of the man who overhauled her. For a moment she thought of returning to give herself up, but then came the thought that if Lizzie was to be rescued and the murderers punished all depended on her. She could see through the entire plot now, but she could not believe that it included any one except the four renegades. If she could reach the camp on the river tho men would turn out and hunt the four to their deaths.
The widow and mother was crouched on the earth within thirty rods of the wagon when it drove away She feared to move until she could no longer hear the rumble of the wheels, and then she rose and ran forward, believing she was following the trail of the train. She remembered it was only sii miles, but it was two long hours before she stopped
for a moment's rest. She saw no signs
of a stream. She had come far enough to reach the south fork, but where was it?
Almost like a flash of lightning the thought came to the woman, "I have gone wrong—1 am lost!" une thought took away her courage in a moment, and she found herself unable to reason intelligently.
She was lost—lost on tho great plains, can and that by night!
rightly object that, the opportunity is Then the poor woman did exactly embraced. Labor is a commodity pe- bat
uiailv a
euliar to itself, and a union of laborers .1,, „i. in a common field to enhance the price fes ing un il the alarm had passed away of the commodity is not only tolerable, j1
but is right. 'admire the brothers
her
,Ilan baa done. Instead of
U!.
l'g-it should come to guide
unSht-*he
rose and rau away from
herself, or tried to. All night long she wandered about in an erratic way and daylight found her back within half a mile of the spot where the wagon had stood.
She seemed to have aged twenty yearn in a single night. Her face was pinched and drawn: her eyes were sunken her form bent as if she boro a burden on her shoulders. "They are lost! I've got to find 'emDaniel and Lizzie!" she muttered as she faced the stm. "I've called anil called, but they won't answer. C'oo-eel Coo-ee! No, they won't answer."
She was advancing slowly upon the dead body of her husband. "Where's Darnel? Where's Lizzie?" shouted the woman. "Why, this is Daniel! Ho is asleepl Poor man, but
{birth in the promotion of its great pur-j he must be tired!" .poses. But it is time that we should She had discovered the body. debate whether corporate and all other "Poor Daniel, but you were lost!" consolidated management of individual crooned the woman as she sank down holdings should not be denied, except beside tho body. "You are tired and in those necessary agencies without
which industrial progress could not be
t)uepy_
achieved. It is time that we should ,? review, I think, the funeral policy irrown up in the United Mates of eon-j ierring corporate existence upon every kad
lawful project. The license thus ex-
1111
tended has done more than anything I patted the arm which lay stiffly extendelse to obliterate the individual from ed ou the earth beside her. •our industrial life, and to bring 011 the tyranny which consolidated power airways exercises. It is especially time that, in the management of business enterprise, the old privileges of competition should be re-established and the heavy hand of impersonal combination ,be removed. The exercise of a power itSrJ jthat prevents any man from the pursuch a calling as his means perl^fjnit, without subjection to the obsta-
Yea, you may sleep. I will keep
ieu
Maybe Lizzie will Boon
u, chlld
lu
her arms, ond now
then s:ie reached out her hand and
The sun climbed up and up. Would some of the trainmen ride back to sc-e why Brown had not joined them? The I xt that he had not come up the night before would be proof that he was still in trouble. Would they leave the river without knowing or caring what had become of him and the helpless women? And they would also miss the renegades, and perhaps suspect iome plot of evil.
Higher climbed the sun. The train had gone on. It was not like Americans—it would have been disgraceful to heathens to thus abandon one who had come with them so tax ai met with an accident to render hil
neipiess. it was avarice—me turn ii' gold— the fear that some one would ho ahead of cm at the base of yonder grim mountain.
The woir.au rocked and crooned and dozed all through the long afternoon. A wolf crept out of his lair in the rrocka a a he "Has Lizzie come?" queried the watcher as a savage growl suddenly aroused he N it a a a from us! Yon are one of the renegade gang! You helped to steal my child!"
The wolf drew oack. It was only a woman watching the dead, but ho feared I her.
The deserted one resumed her lonely vigil, rocking weakly and muttering vaguely. As the sun sank in the western sky her voice grew fainter, and when its dying rays illumined the
•without a sigh.
expired
CHAPTER XIV.
Harkins at first saw only the four renegades as li peered around the corner of tho rock. Looking again, he discovered a female seated at tiio foot of a tree not far away. Her back was toward him and her head was held down, and he could not mako out whether she -vas young or old, a white woman or a squaw. "I say, curso tho luck!" exclaimed one of the men in a brutal voice. "It looks as if they might also have heard of tho cave and gold, else why would they come so directly to this spot?" "How many did you count?" asked another. "Threo wagons and ten or twelve men," replied the other. "I didn't dare go too clus, you know." "Too strong for us to \vipe out, eh?" queried ono of the down. "But they've got to go somehow," growl in a ha ok
W ha is a a all these chances to be scooped out of that gold. With tho redskins on the id a 0 1 1 he we da-sn't show hand or head." "Wliar's all yer brains, Bob?" asked one of the men with a laugh. "Give us some head work and say how we are going to sarcumvent the wagon folks." "It's got to be head work, and I've got it all thought out. 1111 going down among 'em tomorror. Is that gal all right?"
Ho rose to his feet so that he could be sure she was still sitting at the foot of the tree, and one of the men growled: "She's right 'nufT, blast her! I only wish we'd hev let the wolves pick her bones! 1 never knowed any such foolin around witii winimin folks to bring luck." "Then I'll give ye something new," sneered Bob as he sat down. "I've got plans about that gal, and them as don't like niv plans had better go further and work ou their own hook!" "Oh, come off with yer quarrels!" called the fourth man as he rolled off the bed of brush and sat up. "Is there any move by the party below?" "Nothing except they hev trone into camp for the summer, blocking our road out!" answered the leader. "And they are going to stay right. thar, eh?" "Not after tomorrer—not if my name is Bob, and I reckon it ar." "Tlii-y don't suspicion us?" "Not the least. None of'em hev, cum I up this fur yet, and so they hevn't seen the wagon tracks." "Hev we made any mistake about the canyon?" "Nary one.'I'll slake my life on it.
I went fur 'miff up today to be sartain. All we want is a clear road for a day or two, and we'll load the wagon and be off."
Harkins had gathered enough to be certain that Bridger's cave and its treas-' ures were known to the renegades as 1 well as to himself and Taylor. The dying old hunter had said that he alone possessed the secret, but it was evident that it had been talked of to others.
These four men, outlaws though they were, and probably as brave as that class of men usually are, would not have penetrated into the Indian country thus far with 110 stronger force had not a valuable stake depended.
So the female was a girl and a pris1 oner? If a prisoner, then there must have been an act of violence to make her so.
Perhaps it was Bess! Tho father shivered at the thought, and the thought would have led him to do some desperate thing had it not been put away almost immediately. The prisoner raised her head and looked around, ami it was a face he had never seen before, It betrayed anxiety and suffering, and I ho instantly resolved that he would take I any risk to help.
The sun was now hidden behind the and it was twilight around the campfire. The men sat smoking or thinking for a quarter of an hour without a word, and then one of them rose and disappeared. Ten minutes later he returned with a Dag of provisions and a bottle of whisky, and Bob said: "Yes, we might as well hev a bite now as any other time. Give the gal her ehare. If she's still too mulish to eat let her throw it away."
mouuta
in
The man carried some bread and meat to the girl, but she gave him no heed. More wood was thrown on tbe fire, tho bottle passed from hand to hand, and by the time darkness had settled down the four renegades were in good spirits and seemingly good natured.
Then Harkins could no longer see the girl, though perhaps those at the Are. had her in view.
Here was a new and a double danger, he reflected as he carefully crept away. It was not enough that the renegades had come for tho gold, but they were plotting against the wagon train and would not stop at murder. It was clearly hia duty to reach the train as soon as possiwere good friends as far as I could see. It is an awful charge to bring against a man—that of betraying a comrade." "But he told two or three different Btories about it," answered .Joe, "and his actions are suspicious. If he has done thin he shall" "I will nhoot him with my own hand!" sternly replied the captain. "Let everything rest till I10 awakes. It may have been its he says—that fright and exhaustion may have upset him.'' "But he must guide us to the spot in tho morning," persisted Joe. "I shall insist upon that, even if wo have to leave the camp alone," added Bess. "It rhr.H be so," replied the captain. "We shall know ali in the morning."
Bess retreated to the wagon, rent with conflicting emotions and prostrated by grief and doubt, and the men went about their duties without a word to each other. All felt that there was something wrong about Taylor's story, but all hesitated to believe hiin guilty of tho heinous crime of taking the life of a comrade.
Night came down. Taylor had hidden his face under liiB blanket, but he had not closed his eyes in sleep. He was not tortured by remorse. On tho contrary, ho was elated over the thought that ho now alone possessed the secret of the cave of gold. But he was troubled tliat lie had not told a better story. Before firing the shot he had planned just liow he would act .4id what he.woqlitfk The which
guilt always brings had upset him and caused him to halt and hesitate and toll a very lame story.
Many a man who has planned a crime has thought it all over and prepared himself at every point only to realize after its commission that ho left loop- 1 I holes in his armor of defense.
It was long after dark before Taylor rose up. 1-le had then settled on a story from which he would not vary. He told it to the men, and he told it with snrh I apparent sincerity that some of them believed him. while none disputed. Bess had come forward to hear it, as was her right, \Yheii lu had finished there was a long, paiuful silence, broken at last by the girl, who said: "If this story be true you have done only what another might do so situated.
We shall know tomorrow. You can
mournful scene she fell forward beside "10 pl"'e and yon will lead her murdered husband and expired
u?
tlu-ro-
'1—I was dreadfullv
men who was lying keenly alert, he heard a whistle. Ko Indian would make use of such a signal. There were r.o white men in the neighborhood, Was it the note of some bird, of night?
There it came again—a whistle of in?: qniry—as if some one was seeking to lo-) cate the camp. Believing it to be some prospector or hunter who had lost himself during the day, Joe answered the signal.
It came again and nearer. Kow he heard footsteps and a moment later a man and a woman approached him from out of the darkness. "Halt! Who is it?" challenged the sentinel. "Harkins!" was the roply. 'v,^^ .':v.,^•'•' '•'•,'• "Great heavens!" whispered Joe as tho pair came to a halt before him. "But this does beat me. And that is you, Harkins, and alive!" "Yes, it is Harkins, and here is a poor girl 1 rescued from a camp of while ren-. egades up the valley. I've got lots to tell. Has Taylor come in?" "Yes, and ho reported you killed by the Indians." "He sought my life himself, but be quiet. If he is asleep do not arouse him. Wake the captain, and after we have cared for this woman 1 have a story to toll."
|TO ltK CnXTINfKI). I
FLYING MACHINES.
Among Other Tiling* They Mould Opeu Up Va»t Tract* of I.am! t» CgefuInc'SA. Samuel Cahut. a manufacturing' chemist of Boston, i* intereted in Hying machines. At present he trying' to discover tho best form of aerial screw—one which'will g"ive the greatest push with tho Least amouut of power. In an interview with a reporter of the Boston Trawler, h^ said: "Two questions have been frequently asked, which'perhaps it will be worth while to answer now. and as part of my reply will be in the form of a prophecy, this 'credo' may be worth the trouble of preservation to compare with the developments of the future. What important service can ili#ht in air serve? Maxim. I^ang-ley and all who have studied the subject thoroughly, agree that the speed "f aeriation will greatly exceed that, of any t«rrestial locomotion. From this follows an entire economic chancre in the direction of rendering immense tracts of comparatively worthless territory at.distanees of twenty to forty miles from cities much more available. There would also result the ivle^atiny of city property in lar^e measure to business and storage purposes. This would to a large extent accomplish what Henry Ucorgc sighs for. but would do it by means which do nut involve any wrong to the land owner by the wage earner. With flying navies, capable of carrying unseen at night large quantities of explosives to the center of a city, war would become so destructive that it would be soon supplanted by arbitration as a matter of common sense and self-preservation. "Arbitration once established, an international police system, controlling nations as we do individuals, and enforcing the decrees of boards of arbitration, would be enormously assisted
by this power of rapid ami, if neeessary, destructive patrolling. Immense areas of country, now well nigh impenetrable, would be open to usefulness. Large sources of wealth would thus be added to the civilized world, and would result in the amelioration of the condition of the savages of such regions as central Africa. We should have to give up selfish legislation and restriction upon tho commerce of other nations, and be obliged perforce to •stand on a broader heritage than that of nation or of zone.,M
THE CZAR'S JOTTINGS
Characteristic ConnnentH of tho Itulcr of Ail the Itusshi*. It Is the daily oflieial work of the czar to read and si#n edicts, ukases, laws and reports. Cpon the margins of these documents lie writes his decision or his impressions with a frankness which makes these jottings more characteristic of the man than his conversations with his ministers and courtiers. M. Lanin, a Russian, reports in the Contemporary Review several of these marginal jottings.
I
turned around,
and 1 might not be able to find the exact spot," replied Taylor. "You must!" answered Doss. "JIv father's bones must not lie unburied! His death shall not go unavenged!" "Well, I'll try, and if wo all lose our scalps in the effort 1 cannot be held responsible. I'm sure there's an Indian camp not far from that spot, and it's a wonder to me we haven't been attacked sinco I came m. There were as manyj as seven right after mo for two or threo miles."
The men, and especially Joe, had looked to see the girl break down under the strain, but she did not. She fought against it and clung to tho hope that, her father still lived, though ha might be wounded and a prisoner.
Midnight came and all was quiet. Joe went on guard at that hour, and an hour later, as all his senses were
Two years af 'o the c/ai' «iv.ti: this disparaging remark upon the margin of a document prepared by hi» own imperial council: "The council thought to tric.W me, but they sha'n't." As it is the custom to fjiaze everything tho czar thus pons and preserve it in the imperial archives, the members of tho council wore highly indignant when they heard of the libel. Tin? state seocretary was requested to explain mat-: tors to the emperor.
Well, and what do they want done?" asked the czar. "That your majesty would bo graciously pleased to order that, the words should not be gla/.ed over nor pro served in the imperial archives, lest they should be endowed with an invidious species of immortality." "What foolishness!" exclaimed the czar, smiling-. "However, I'll have the words struck out." ?"i'he libel disappeared.
THOUSANDS of new jiitrons have taken Hood's Sarsaparilla' this season and realized its benefit m. blood purified and strength restored.
FOR pamphlets see TIIK JOUBNAL. Q/f., PBIOTJEBS.
N paint the bpst is the A
cheapest. Don't be misled by xjL
trying what is said to be 'just as good," but when you paint insist upon having a genuine brand of
Strictly Pure White Lead
It costs no more per gallon than chcap paints, and lasts many times as long.
Look out for the brands ofWhite Lead offered you any of the following arc sure: "Anchor," "Southern," "Eckstein," "Red Seal," "Kentucky," "Collier."
FOR COLORS.—National Lead Co.'s Pure White Lead Tinting Colors. These colors are sold in one-pound cans, each can being sufficient to tint 25 pounds of strieilv Ture White Lead the desired shade iheynro in no sense ready-mixed paints, hut combination of perfectly pure colors in the handiest form to tint Strictly Pure White Lead.
A good many thousand dollars have been saved property-owners by having our book ou painting and color-card. Send us a postal card and get ...both free,
NATIONAL LEAD CO., New York. Cincinnati branch, Seventh and Freeman Avenue, Cincinnati.
STRANGE CASE.
1 How an Enemy was Foiled. The follntvin.sr prrauhlc statement will be road with intense interest: "1 can not describe the numb, creepv sensation that existed in my arms hands and leers. 1 had to rub and beat those parts until they were sore, to overcome in :i measure the dead feeling that. li"d taken possession of them. In addition, I had a
Mi'iittse weakness in my baek and.around my vaisr,''tonel her wii an indescribable 'jrone* feeling in my stomach. Physicians said it was ereeping paralysis, from which, accurd-|-mi? to their universal conclusion, there is no. relief.- Uneo it fastens *jpon a person, they I ^OVit continues lis insidious progress until leaches a vital point ami the sufferer dies, .-'-icir \va« mi' prospect. 1 had been doctoring I your and a half steadily, but with no parlicular benefit, when I saw an advertisement.
Hr Miles' Restorative Nervine, procured ii bottle and be«ran ushiig it. Marvelous as itmay seem, but a few days had passed before eve'ry bit of that creepy feeling had left me, and'there has not been even trie slightest indication of its return. now feel as well as 1 ever did. and have gained ten pounds in weight, though 1 had run down from 170 to wr. Four others have used Dr. I Miles'Restorative Nervine on my recomendation, and it has been as sat isfactorv lu their cases as in mine."—.James Kane, La l\ue, O.
Or. Miles' Restorative Nervine is sold by all druggists on a positive guarantee, or sent
1
direct by the Dr. Miles Medical t'o.. Elkhart, Ind., on receipt of price, £1 per bo!tie, six bottle* for ••xnress prepaid. It is free from ociated or dangerous dru**. b.v!ali druf gists.
&01
l**'VWWWWWVVWWWWVVVWVi/W4
INTERNA TJONA "'"r"(he DIC TIONA RI Abrrnst of Times A (jruttdliducat ucvt'-$*or of (hp
Unabridged.
The Ono dresit Stnitrlnrd tithonty. Hon. I. J. 15re»er, Justice of U.S. supreui fYmrt. wIte* The IntenmUonal iMPtionary liy ivMrffiotion of dictionaries. I commend it to all ns the one grout standard authority. ^oct by Alt fiooks'jlri G.
C.
Mcrnam Co. Publishers,
... ... ng on the D. & 0. floating palaces. The
1 hoy a iv sot of hops, is phrase ittractions of a trip to the Mackinac region that .recurs frorjucntly. hut beast iro unsurpassed. The island ilsclf lie is!" i* another. "Diseimragin} is tho sterotypi'd common tarv written upon reports of fires, of failure of crops or of some other calamity.
1
I$verybo(1r
shouid own tlfj Dictionary. It an ewers all piesii concerning the his ton*, spelling, pronunciation, ami meaninif of words.
Library in
Itself. It alsi gives the often (k sired information
concerning eminent persous facts concern in-r the countries, cities, towns, ami natural features of the globe particulars concerning noted fictitious persons and places translation of foreign quotations, it is invaluaMo in tho home, otiiee, mudv, ami hoolroom.
WEBSTERS INTERKffllONAL DICTIOXART
Sprhirjfuhl, Mass. £*ir°*Do not buy ohcnpphotr ints of & graphic repr ii.Ut.iotr*.
of aricteDt
ifSend for free prosncetus.
GRAHAM & MORTON
TRANSPORTATION CO.
a
|.
Rail Route to St. Joseph.
unsurpassed.
l.lucaLro
'Ihe favorite pesseiiKcr sreHinerp "Cttyof ChUmuo" and "Ohleora" uutko double daily trips between Ht-inon Harbor, iSt, Joseph and Chlcnvn, conncct-in#- ut St. Joseph with the Vandal ia Uy. Equipment mv.i sei vice t.he best and titiH' lews than by any other lake route, Tie4 following schedule will bo observed on and ajior June 1.0:
Ih'tweon M.. Joseph and Ciiicajro:--Leave St.. Jos ph .Vandalia Dock) at p. in., dailvex* eepl Sunday ^Sunday leave at 0 p. m.) and at i) r. in., daily lneludlnir Sunday. Leave Chicago from dock foot of WnbjiHh avenue at 0:3" a. m. and IX :J0 p. m.. dally Sunday included: 1U0 leave Chicago at. 2 p. 11., Sat unlay only.
Milwaukee Dlvird in:—'The Steamer Held will I make tr'-wecklj trips between ^t Joseph and it a a vi S am a I at S p.m., Monday, Wednesday and Friday,
Leave Milwaukee from Vandalia Dock, foot of Mroadway. Tuesday. Thursday and Saturday at 7 p. in.
For information as to through rateB of freight or passage via these routefe. apply to age-ntl Vandalia Ky.
J. II. 0 UAH A M, President, Jlcnton Harbor. Mich
fl'nxrt TOUR OUTING OX TH1* (iKKAl LAKES.
Visit picturcsquc Mnckiiinc Island. 1 rill only cost you about $12.50 from Doroit §15 from Toledo $18 from Cleveland, or tiic round trip, including mrals and lerths. Avoid the heat and dust by travel
rand romantic spot, its climate most inrigorating. Two new steel passengci itcamors have just been built for tin lpper lake route, costing $300,000 cadi. They are equipped with every modern lonvcnicnce, annunciators, bath-rooms, tc., illuminated throughout by electricity, tnd are guaranteed to be the grandest, argest and safest steamers 011 fresh water These steamers favorably compare with .lie groat ocean liners in construction and ipccil. Four trips per week between I 1 oledo, Detroit, Alpena, Mackinac, .St. I Ignace, Pctoskcy, Chicago, "Soo," Mar quelte and Dulutli. Daily between Cleveland and Detroit.. Daily between Cleveland and I'ut-in-Uay. 'i he cabins, parlor? and staterooms of these steamers aro designed for the complete entertainment, oj humanity under home conditions the palatial equipment, the luxury of the appointments, makes traveling oh these steamers thoroughly enjoyable. Send foi illustrated descriptive pamphlet. Address A. A. SeuANTZ, G, P. & T, A. D. & 0. Detroit, Mich.
]luckltn'8 Arnica Kitlvc.
The best salve in the world for Cuts Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands. Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles* or no pay required. 11 is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refimded. Price 25 cents per box." For sale by Cotton & Bife's, the Progress /Pharm acy.
Of Our Specials
We have sold more lace curtains, chenille and tapestry curtains this year than in the I past two years combined. Consicering the many complaints from our competitors as to dullness of trade in this line, we i«-.el enct-ur-aged in our policy of always supplying your buying the best stocks in all lines re-
CJirdless of the outlook for hard times.
OUR MOTTO—Progressiveness. OIR METHODS—Progressive. OUR SUCCESS—Progress.
For this week we offer
Black
Promptness
In
Plumbing
house in the city. "Glove
Majesty,''*etc,-The best
suil more wool dress yoods than all our comptlilors combined,
because we have the correct tbmgs. We are sole agents
for this city for Frederick Arnold's famous
Wool Henriettas. Full line of
Priestley's Black Goods
Always in Stock.
Our stock of Handkerchiefs, Mitts, Gloves, Veilings atidC^, Ribbons always contain the Latest Novelties and the best staple articles the market affords.
We
claim to have the these hot weather nt-cn the city.
250
per yard, at
yards
Silk Grenadines
Willi Satin Siripes, four designs, worth $1
62 I-2C.
Is a rare virtue,
But we have it.
WILLIAMS BROS.,
IS So re S re
Nexi, to TUE JOURNAL Building.
We are agents for more popular makes of corsets than any
Fitting," ''R & G," 'Her
50c Summer Corsets
We have ever sold.
lsn'l That Having Mueli
Come to Us For Your Wants
Can
Supply You.
This has been the best se on for laces ever known, and we have been prepared at all times with the newest and best styles at the lowest prices. Our embroideries need no mention everj' lad}' knows we carry the largest st ck in the city, and can
always fi ul here their wants in
this line.
Wo arc agents for the celebrated "Star" and "Mothers1 Friend" shirt waists fur boys. New designs in Percales, etc.
The success attending our adiea1 shirt waist selling convinces us we substantiate our best
None Geuuitie unless rolled on the v.
44
VARNISHED HOARD.11
AND STAMPED EVERY FIVE YARDS WITH THE MANUFACTURERS' NAME*
stock of ities in
Our Prices
c. M. SCOTT,
Fire, Life and Accident
INSURANCE,
Agent for the Bartlett Bindery. Any weekly newspapes dsired. Agent for the State Building and Loan Association of Indiana. Special rates on binding Art Portfolios and World's Fair Views. Call on me for rubber stamps, stencils, seals, house numbers, accident tickets. City Clerk's office, city building, north Green street, draw fordsville, Ind.
Are Also A Great Attraction.
-rSLv-
/V*
&
zmmmi
ABSTRACT BOOKS,
A. C. Jennlson'8 abstract books contain a copy of every deed oi rouord to every tract of land in the county. U9 well us to every unsatIsftcd niorUrage or lien. His twenty ycura experience, aided by these unrivaled facilities In racluK titles enuble him to claim that his olIlce Is the best place to have Deeds, MortR:iKcf» Leases and Cont racts prepared, as well as reItahlu Abstracts of Title.
MONEY TO LOAN REAL KSTATK AND INSURANCE AGENT.
O. U. PERRIN,
LAWYER
Will practice in Federal or .State courts. .5 ey~OlBco. Sulty 2, Crawford |llulidh)|r, soutllj^ Groen Stroet.
