Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 3 November 1893 — Page 2

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WEEKLY JOURNAL.

PRINTED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING

THE JOURNAL CO.

T. H. B. McCAIN, President. J. A. GKEBNE, Secretary. A. A. McCAIN, Treasurer.

WEEKLY—

One year tn advance II .00 Six months 50 Three months 25

DAILY—

One year In advance 15.00 Six months 2.50 Three months 1.25 POT week delivered or bv mall 10

Payable in advance. Sample copies free.

Bntered at the PostoOice at Cnnvlordsvlllf Indiana, as second-class matter.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1893.

IN order to reduce the tariff the Democratic party must increase the "war taxes."'

INDIANA

Democrats are complaining

of great stringency in the Administration pie market.

TnANKSGm is coming, but there has as yet been no rumor of a failure of the turkey crop.

IF the more foreign goods we import the better off our workmen are, why not import all we use?

THE United States is rnnning in debt about $7,000,000 a month. But a little thing like that has no terrors for triumphant Democracy.

THE deficit for the current fisctfl year is estimated by Treasury officials at $50,000,000. It would seem that it is not tariff for revenue only that the country most needs, but a revenue.

EVERY indication points to a Republican victory in Iowa this fall, by a plurality of from 20,000 to 30,000. The State was never so thoroughly and systematically organized KB it has been by the Republicans this year.

MHS, NELLIE GRANT SARTORIS has received a large increase of income since the death of her husband. She was already rich, as her father-in-law at his death, three years ago, left her an income of $35,000 a year and the London house.

Ex SPEAKER KEED is not a doubting Thomas on the question of Republican success in Massachusetts this year. He thinks the party will have a rousing majority, and that the bad habit which the State has recently fallen into of putting a Democrat into the Governorship has ended, for ihe time being anyhow.

Two years ago and one year ago every man who wanted work could get it and Ret well paid for it. How is it now? Democrats say it is the "robber tariff" and "silver bill," but both were then laws BB well as now. It is the threat, and the good prospect that the threat will be carried into execution, that the "robber tariff" will be smashed which hangs so like a pall over the country.

DURING the fiscal year 1890, 1891 and 1892 our exports exceeded our imports by an aggiegate of more than $311,000,000, although the free traders claim that we have no foreign export trade under protection. But for the fiscal year 1893 our imports actually exceeded our exports by $93,653. Is this the kind of prosperity the people voted for in November, 1892?

ONE year before the McXinley tariff went into effect tin sold at $5.50 per box. Two years afterward the same goods sell at $5.15 in spite of the duty of $1.29 imposed by the McKinley bill. Summarizing, the people are saving 35 cents a box, foreign manufacturers are paying Uncle Saoi about $500,000 a year, and American manufacturers are producing 100,000,000 pounds a year, supporting, directly and indirectly, 25,000 people.

THE American Protective Tariff League has completed the industrial census aud its results are astounding. In shows that in 681 industries reporting, scattered over forty-four States of the Union, in which 169,423 laborers were employed November 5, 1892, and to whom $1,762,288 was paid in weekly wages, on September 2, 1893, but 67,660 men were employed, to whom was paid but $549,436 in weekly wages. This census shows, furthermore, that whereas the average weekly wages of all the reporting industries in November, 1892, were $10 43, in September, 1893, they were but $8 08 for each person, an average reduction of $2.35 per week. These figures show, as nothing else can show, the heavy penalty which our industrial classes, together with our dealers, are payiDg for the elevation to power of a party, which is solemnly pledged to eliminate every vestige of protection from our revenue system.

AFTEB REPEAL.

Commenting on the effect of the pussage of the repeal bill by tbe Senate the Chicago Inter-Ocean says:

It by no means follows that good times are now assured. It Is not all of business to be able to borrow money on good collaterals at a reasonable rate of Interest. However much Importance may attach to the loan narket.lt is not the main thing. The prices of farm products and other raw material produced throughout the country must besot down as the basis of all business calculation. Labor is even a greater factor. The repeal of the purchasing clause ol the Sierman law ha6 not enhanced the value of our products, agricultural or mineral, nor has it started up the factories. Some factories have started up on short or full time, after a period of idleness long enough to exhaust the stocks on hand, but there is substantially the same paralysis of industry now as a few months ago. The silver question did not involve the industrial problem.

The two are distinct. The country is waiting to know what is ts be done abfout the tariif. Uncertainty and apprehension hang like a pall of dealli over nearly every industry. Hundreds of industries not directly interested in the tariff are finding that.iudirectiy they are no less dependent upon.duties than the protected lines of manufactures. Take, lor example, the watch makers of Elgin. There are to-day some five hundred of them out ol' employment who were working at good wages a year ago, and who voted for Cleveland. They were told by the Democrats that they would get just, as good pay for their work aud what thev had to buy would be cheaper under free trade. Tliej find that both parts of the prediction were all wrong. So it is the country ovei and the industries through. The repeal bill is only a small matter comparatively. It is unnecessary to attempt any measurementof its ITect.only it would fie unfortunate for the public to build extravagant expectations upon. Its passage was desirable for the purpose of clearing away the fog which obscured the vision. So long as the purchasing of silver continued it was held responsible for a great deal with which it really had little if anything to .do.

IN answer to the question, After Repeal, What? the St. Louis Globe Democrat eays the country will be in a position to do some effective work in the direction of international bimetalism. Europe will then understand that the United States has quit trying to bear the whole world's burdens in the way of sustaining the silver market, and the other great nations will be forced,therefore, in self-defense, to enter into some arrangement in which each shall do its share of this labor. The mints of the world cannot be closed permanently to silver. The amount of gold among the nations, coupled with the annual production, is hardly great enough, after supplying the demands of the arts, to meet the requirements of the coinage. Not only will all the silver now in the currencies of the great nations be needed, but the supply will have to be augmented before many more years pass. It is to the interest of every nation to keep the price of silver from declining further, and the only way in which this can be done iB by making a largfer field for it in the coinage.

THE Cincinnati Commercial-Gazette asks and answers this question: Why coin either gold or silver bullion at all Bars are preferable in the settlement of balances between this and other nations to coin. There is no use, therefore, for coin, beyond the amount called for as a circulating medium, and everybody may know this is only a small proportion of the gold and silver bullion in the country. The Treasury vaults are now loaded down with standard silver dollars. Why increase this load? The States that produce silver do not help to circulate it they do not want it in point of fact, they do business on the gold basis, and their contracts call for gold coin in settlement. A subscriber to the stock of silver mining compar-as is by the terms of the agreement required to pay assessments in gold thus silver, bj those who produce it, is virtually repudiated yet the barons would force the standard dollar at par, which is intrinsically worth less than sixty cents, upon the rest of the country.

"IT is not the repeal bill, but the condition of the treasury that now attracts most attention," says a Washington dis patch. The deficit, it is said, has attained alarming proportions and threatens before the end of the next fiscal year to be so large as to cause the Secretary of the Treasury very great embarrassment. Custom receipts and internal revenue collections have fallen off so heavily that at the present time the daily income is not large enough to meet the daily disbursements. As President Cleveland expressed it at one time it is not a theory bat a condition which confronts the country. It can certainly not be said, as conditions now exist under Mr. Cleveland's administration, that there iB any justification for a "reduction in the amount exacted from the people for its support." Under these circumstances there is no earthly excuse for tinkering with tbe tariff. Leave it alone and let the business of the country progress as it was doing a year ago.

THE assassination of Carter H. Harrison by an irresponsible crank calls for steps to prevent such dangerous characters to run at large. Threatenings of slaughter should be sufficient to confine such a man in the insane asylum until a cure is pronounced. This would include aiout fifty per cent, of the disappointed office seekers in the country.

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CRAWrORDSViLLE, allured with the paternal idea that the city should own and operate an electric light plant of its own, let a contract for $35,000, raising it through some legerdemain of Its council in a few months to $80,000, thus burtheniug the tax-payers with a debt which will oppress them for years. Jobbers skinned that cat to the tall. The citizens of Frankfort can thank themselves that they were sensible enough to vote this steal down.— Frankfort Crcsccnt.',

The Crescent is in possession of a good deal of misinformation concerning our electric light plant. The bonded indebtedness of the plant is $55,000, the interest on which is 5 per cent. The running expenses are $560 per month. This added to the interest makes a total of $9,470 in the way of annual expenditures. The revenue derived from commercial lighting averages $600 per month, amountifag to $7,200. Tbe city has 142 Btreet lights or one at every street crossing in town. Instead of costing the city $80 per light, as it does in Frankfort, it costs less than half of $80. By an investment of $10,000 or $12,000 additional a sufficient amount of commercial or private lighting could be secured to pay for the street lighting entirely. If Frankfort had 142 street lights it would cost the tax-payers of that city $11,350, while in Crawfordsville that number of street lights cost less than half of this sum. And besides this Crawfordsville is the best lighted town to day in the United States without any exception.

WHILE the Frankfort Crescent and other Democratic papers of small calibre are clamoring for an income tax the large and influential papers like the New York Sun are most bitterly opposed to this most hateful of all species of taxation. The Sun attacks the proposition in the following vigorous fashion

Once only in the histoiy of the United States has the federal government lound it necessary to impose and attempt to collect uu .income tax.

That was under the stress of civil war. The tax was forced by the enormous expenditures of a government engaged in military and navul operations on a gigantic sca'e. The income tax was a war measure, a last resort, si revenue expedient obnoxious iu itsell', but justified by tbe necessity that knows no choice.

A Democratic Administration lias now been in power tor a little more than six months six mouths of profound peace.

Has Denocratic rule for six mouths brought the country to a condition equivalent to that resulting from the stress ol war, with half the country in arms to conquer the other hall? Has Democratic rule proved such a misfortune that resort is necessary for the second tune in our national experience to the calamity tax, the extreme expedient and last ell'ort of the taxing power?

The Sun propounds some posers for its Democratic brethren but which Republicans can find a ready answer in two words: "IT HAS." Democratic rule has proved a great misfortune.

THE Seattle Times mentions the following among the agricultural wonders of the State of Washington:

An apple weighing pounds aud 4 ounces. One strawberry .10 inches iu circumference. A bunch of grapes weighing ti pounds. An onion weighing 4 pounds and 1 ounce. A potato weighing pounds and 4 ounces. A radish weighing 0% pounds. A beet weighing .'iO pounds. A pumpkin weighing !3 pounds. A watermelon weighing G4 pounds. A cabbage weighing 5:i pounds. A squash weighing 120 pounds. Timothy 7 feet 8 inches high. Clover 5 feet high. Alfalfa, a yield of 12 tons per acre. Cornstalks 14 feet high. A hill of potatoes that yielded 4:S pounus, Sixty-seven pounds of potatoes from pounds planted.

Hops from a yield of 9,50:2 per acre. Wheat fr^m a yield of 08 bushels per acre. Oats fn a yield of 125 bushels per acre. A blackberry hush showing a growth 1 feet this yeur.

A branch from a prune tree 3:i in. hes long with 46 pounds of fruit on it. The Times is eligible to member^ hip in the Crawfordsville Annan: a and Sapphira Club as professor of roots and yarbs.

S. S. GORBY, the Democratic State Geologist, has been on another drunken "tear." He went to his home in Franklin the other day and began a tirade of abuse against his wife and children, until becoming alarmed, they lied tr he house of a neighbor. He was fin., landed into the keeping of the marshal. The Franklin Republican in commenting on the affair says that he has a most estimable wife and children that are most highly thought of. It iu a disgrace, a burning shame and an outrage that he should thus bring humiliation and trouble upon them, to say nothing of the disgrace which he brings upon himself, the town and the State, as one of its officials. He has so often repeated the offense that he is entitled to no more consideration than any other man who persists in getting drunk. An iron cell and the law's limit iB what hiB case demands, until he reforms

A SENIOR of Harvard was recently fined $300 for kissing a pretty girl who waB showing him a suite of rooms. Such luxuries come high in Massachusetts. It only costs $75 in Crawfordsville.

SL. Louis Globe-Democrat: The de1 ly in the confirmation of Hornblower indicates that his contribution to the Democratic campaign fund must have been leeB than $50,000, to say the least.

THE REPEAL BILL PASSED. The bill to repeal the purchasing clause of Pthe so-called Sherman act of 1890 passed the Senate yesterday evening by a vote of 43 to 32, or a majority of 11. The repeal bill which bears Senator Yoorhees' name was framed in accordance with the views of the Republican members of the Senate Finance Committee, and contains a positive aud outspoken declaration in favor if bimetal ism. It says:

It is hereby declared to be the policy of the United States to continue the U6e of both gold and silver as standard xoney, and to coin both gold and silver into money of equal intrinsic value. And it Is hereby further declared that the efforts of the government should be steadily directed to the establishment of such a safe system of bi-metalism as will maintain at all times the equal power of every dollar coined or issued by the United States iu the markets and In the payment of debts in exchangeable value, such equality to be secured through international agreement.or by such safeguards of legislation as will insure the maintenance of the parity in value of the coins of the two metals, and the equal power ol every dollar at all times in the markets and in the payment of delits.

These statements are in line with consistent Republican policy and conform to the declarations of the Minneapolis platform. They pledge the government explicitly to the Republican and American principle of bi-metalism, equally opposed to unlimited silver coinage, which means.silver monometftlism on the one hand and gold monometalism on the other. The enactment of this measure constitutes a guarantee that the vast silver interests of the nation shall not be wantonly sacrificed. It will paye the way for the legislation for the protection of silver, which iB necessary to place the currency on a thoroughly stable basis and promote the welfare of the whole country. The gloomy view which some of the friends of silver are taking over the repeal are entirely unwarranted. The repeal, however, will not bring the relief to the country that is desired. It will not start a wheel nor rekindle a furnace fire. Until there is an assurance that there will be no tariff tinkering the present deplorable condition of tbe country will remain.

How CAN the present business trou bles be charged to the operation of the silver law when Secretary Carlisle has practically nullified the law by refusing to purchase silver at the market prices? The law requires the purchase of 4.500,000 ounces of silver per month, but the Secretary has, during the last three months, interpreted the law to mean that he bad the option of buyine or not, as he chooses. So instead of purchasing 13,500,000 ounces of silver in July, August and September, but a little more than 7,000,000 ounces were purchased. How unfair then to ascribe the present deplorable condition of the country to the silver law when the law is no longer in operation. The silver law should not be blamed ills it did not cause.

FOR a long time the Frankfort Crescent kept standing at the head of its columns the civil service plank o* the Democratic platform. But the place that once knew this piece of timber now knows it no more. Like phyric its civil service pretensions have been thrown to the dogs, and yesterday it copied from the St. Louis Republic this spoils morsel-

If Grover Cleveland is tor binding up t-.i. wounds he will show his Abraham Lint"'spirit cutting loosj on the offc*, For rest ot 'his evntful year let hi. give the baci 2 a ation and work the hands of dispensation so fas" hat the right, will not 'now what the left doeth.

The Crescent appro" the .tocve by saying that there is not a Democrat in all the land that will not give a hearty endorse ont to this suggestion.

THE acquittal of Jan ua C. Bn, a, Lebanon, chewed with ije murder of C. 8. Wesner, will neet with „:.3 ap proval of all who have read the published evidence. That he committed the act in self defense was proven not only by hie own evidence but by the testimony of other credible witnesses. As Judge Stevenson said in his charge to the jury, the Creator has given to every creature Lb" rit?ht of Belf-defenee and coarts and juries cannot take that right from them.

AJEIF MARK El.

Tom Brown is on the siok list. Mr. Busenbark has moyed into his new bouse.

Til Davis occupies the house vacated by Wm. Rush. A number from here attended the C. E. convention at Ladoga.

Mrs. James Brown, of Rockville, visited home folks last week. Mrs. Artie Harlan, of Terre Haute, visited her father last week.

Mr. and Mrs. Todd have returned to their home in Hutchinson, Kas., after a visit here.

The funeral John Busenbark occurred at his home in North Union on Oct. 24, conducted by Rev. Howe. Interment at the Masonic cemetery.

•••••.••*• .• -1-. •••-. *-. :.... .• -.•••• :i •••.. -v:* ,v .,-

PARKER'S

HAIR BALSAM

Cleanses and beautifies tbe hair. Promote* a luxuriant growth. Hever Fails to Best ore Gray

Hair to iU Youthful Color. Cures acalp diseases & hair falling.

tj0Cj_»nd_$l00jit

HINDERCORNS.

DF a

N

Druggists

J,£"£on?u™p*,v©and Feeble ami «n who

The only sure cure for Corns.

Stops all paui. Makes walking easy. J5cts. at Druggists.

CUSHIONS. Whispers heard. Com-

roruble. anteM.fql wk.re all R»*dlM fall. H.Hbr r. HI8COZ, Uljr, tM Ur'awar, Ycrk. Writ, r.r Imk •tpiwb rut

OTICE OF NON-KESIDENCE

State of Indlanp, Montgomery county: In the Montgomery Circuit court, November term, 1893,

JerreVorlsvs. Joseph }A. Davis etal. Complaint No. 0982. Comes now tho plaintiff by Paul & Bruner, Attorneys, and tiles his complaint herein, together withoan affidavit that said defendant. Joseph A. Davis, Is not a resident of fhe State of Indiana.

Notice 1B therefore hereby giveu said defendant, that unless ho beand aouearon the 39th day of the next t^rm of theMoritgomery Circuit court, the same being tbe 20th day of IDeceniber. A, D., 1893, at the court house in Crawfordsville, In said county aud State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be hoard and determined In his absence.

Witness my name, and the seal of said court, allxed at Crawfordsvilie, this E'JTth dav of October, A. D., 189:5.

WALLACE SPARKS,

October, 27, L893—4t. Clerk

NORTH UNlOn.

Joseph Thomas is spending the week at home. Alfred Shepard is husking corn For. Wm. Pinkley.

Mrp. Maggie Busenbark is working at James Caplinger's. James Foster and family returned Monday from a visit at Lebanon.

John Brewer, Ol Grider and George Thomas are husking corn for Will Smith.

Mrs. Jennie Saunders, of Lebanon, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Foust.

Francis Surface and family, of hear New Market, spent Sunday at Joseph Thomas'.

Corn husking in full blast, the quality good and the crop much better than anticipated.

Wm. Mulligan, Wm. Galey and Jim Gilliland with their families spent Sunday at Mrs. Armantrout's.

There will be literary exercises at our school next Friday afternoon consisting of declamations, dialogues, etc.

Edgar Thompson and Edwin Crane, of Crawfordsville, spent Saturday and Sunday here with George Thomas*

Dave Kirkendall has added one more string to his bow, that of lighting the switch light for the railroad company.

Robert Smith has been hauling water for quite a while but has concluded that it was too expensive, conseqnentlv i.having a well driven.

The section hands on tbe Vandalia are improving the line between here and New Mardet by taking out the old trestle wood work and ballasting up with gravel.

Milton Newlin has bought the stock of groceries of John Williamu at New Market, with Clarence Taague, of Russell's Mills, as clerk. May success attend you.

News in general: Health generally good everybody busy corn husk: demand potato crop short not enough cabbage to make krout no fruit, no parties, no entertainmets, no startling news of any kind.

M. C. Burr, special agont for the Bak er Medicine Co., of Keokuk, la., visited the agent for this county, E. M. Saun ders. here Friday, and highly amused fn.--- with whom he came in contact wuh by singing comic songs, etc.

The family of J. N. Britton, who ro been so seriously afflicted '-ith typhoid fever, four of the family

tions.

L.

ng it and

one dying, are all convalescent now PP-' were able to go to CrawfordsvP'e day for the first time

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Heath of Tom Ourtain.

Tom Curtain, the 17-year-old son of and Mrs. Cornelius Curtain, died Monday afternoon at the family residence on Indiana avenue. He had been sick some time with typhoid fever. The deceas3d was a good boy aud his death will be generally mourned. The funeral occurred from the house Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock "onducted by Rev. J. R. Dinnen.

Men Dorii .cderstand No man ever sufi ^ed a single pang like unto woman.

Women, therefore, gladly turn to a woman syr-'pathv, counsel, and help in theu peculiar troubles.

Lydia E. Pinkham deserves the confidences showered upon her by thousands. Her

cause

Children Cry for

Pitcher's Caetorla.

Veg

a 1

Compound ,h as done

women than a remedy. "The great

of woman misery is in

her womb. Lyaia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound goes direct to the source of trouble, drives out disease, and cures backache, fainting, despondency, bloating, ovarian troubles, and leucorrhcea.

I would have been in my grave if I had not taken Mrs. Pinkham's medicine." Mrs. Hannah Hyde, Bethel, hid.

All druggists sell It. Address In confidence, LYDIA E. PINKHAM MBD. CO., LYNN, MASS.

Mrs. Pinkhnrn's Liver Pills, 25

coats.

73jT

Albert W. Perkins,

AUCTIONEER

Sales of all kinds made anywhere in the United States.

Sales of Stock a Specialty. Charges always Reasonable.

Leave orders with T. S. Patton, at Iirause & Crist's. florists, 204 east Mam street, Crawfordsville.

ED VORIS.

Mammoth Insurance Agency.

Established 1877.

Twenty of the Oldest and Largest Companies represented Losses promptly adjusted and paid, farm property a specialty.' ha?. C. Rice and McClellan Stilwell, Solictors- Crawfordsville, Tnd.

FORSALE!

Thoroughbred Poland China Pigs Of both sc.xe.s.ol'Fall litter sired by the noted hog, worldboater, Jumbo No. l."i,201, A.P.C. record. This is one of the'iargest breeding hogs in the State. Now is the time to purchase a pig that will do vou good in tho future. N.U.—I breed barred Plymouth Hocks exclusively. I have the finest birds I ever raised, and still add a lew good birds to my flock each year. I am breeding from two yards. Wggs from either yard will no sold at Jl .25 for one sitting or #2 tor two sittings.

Address. GEO. W. FULLElt, Crawfordsville. lnd.

J. J. DARTER,

REAL ESTATE & LOAN AGENT

Farm and City Propertyfor Sale. Mone to Loan at Lowest Rate of Interest, 122 North Washington Street.

$100,000 TO L0ANI

7 per cent. Annual interest

Without Commission.

NO HUMr JO.

Cumberland & Miller

118 West Main St.

ABSTRACTS OF TITLE Hster,

aving secured the services of Wm. Web lute ol' the firm of Johnson & Webster, abstractors of title, 1 urn prepared to furnish on short notice, full and complete abstracts ot title to all lands in Montgomery county, Indiana, itl reasonable prices. Deeds aud mortframes carefully executed. Call at the Hocorder's office. octovl THOS. T. MUNHALL.Recorder.

/O ran Make Money

$ ucation at the Union *4 /Sr liusinuss College, La-

'if Jty J?

lavelte, lud. A high

..—'/'if S&sff/ irrude CommercialSe li oool furnishingjjnplfte equipment for business life. Practical lJusiness, Shorthand. Typewriting, Engli li, Penmanship, Klocution. Low Rates, Mot.orn Methods. Kirst class lust ruction. Services ot g-r,id wates always in demand. Catalogue and Specimen of vi'ritinir, free. S-l'2-Gm

MONEY to LOAN.

At -i'4 and 6 per cent for 5 years on Improved Farms in Indiana. We grait you the privilege of paying- this money back to us in dribs of $100, or niurc, at any interest 1 a.vmen

Write to oi call on

O. N. WILLIAMS & CO.,

Crawfordsville, Indiana.

G. W. PAUL. W. BKCNEK.

PAUL & BRUNER,

A r,t or ney a-at-Law,

Office over Mahorney's Store, Crawfordsville, lnd. All business entrusted to their care will receive prompt attention.

THEO. McW ECHAN, DENTIST,

CRAWFORDSVILLE. INDIANA. Tenders his service to the public. Motto good work and moderate prices."

Money to Loan.

Houses and Lots for Sale also Dwellings to Relit.

Abstracts ot Title and Deeds and Mortgages Carefully Prepared.

ALBERT C. JENNJiSCN

Loan and Insurance agent, abstrac* and Conveyancer.

122 E-ot Main St.. Crawfordsville

Morgan & Lee

ABSTRACTORS*, LOAN AND

INSURANCE AGENTS

Money to Loan at 6 per ccl interest.

Farms and .City Property or Sale.

Life, Fire and Accident Insurance. Office North Washington et., Ornbann Block, Crawfordsville, lnd.

O. U. PERRIN. Lawyer and Patent Attorney.

Crawford Block,

Opp, Music Hall, Crawfordsville.

FIRST MORTGAGE

LOAN,

AT 41-2 PJBB. CENT,

Interest»payable Annually

APPLY TO

G. W.WRIGHT

Fisher Block, Room 8, Crawfordsville, In7»