Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 9 April 1897 — Page 4

WEEKLY JOURNAL.

ESTABLISHED IN 1848.

Successsor to The Pccord, the first paper In Crawfortlvillo, established iu 1831, .n*ci to the People's Press, established in 18-i*».

PRINTED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING.

THE JOURNAL COMPANY. T. H. B. McCAIN, President. J. A. GREENE, Secretary.

A. A. MCCAIN,Treasurer

TKKMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:

One yearln advance. Blx months Three months

Payable in advance. Sample ooples free.

1.00 .50 .25

THK DAILT OOOKNAL. EBTABMSHEI) IN 1887. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION!

One year In advance ®£'92 Six months Three months. Per week, delivered or by mall 10 lntered at the PoBtolIlce at Crawfordsvllle,

Indiana, as seoond-class matter.

FRIDAY, APRIL 0. 1897

PRKSIIIEKT MCKINLKY yesterday sent a message to Congress calling attention to the destitute condition of the Southern Hood sutl'erers and suggested that money be appropriated for their relief, thereupon both houses passed a resolution appropriating §200,000.

JUPOK LIUHBAKD, of South lend, having declared that the new reformatory act is invalid, a halt has been called in the exchange of prisoners between Michigan City and Jeffersonvillc. The question will be presented to the Supreme Court at the- earliest day possible. The friends of prison reform are hoping that the decision of Judge Hubbard will not be sustained.

THE result of the Chicago election shows how absolutely the great newspapers are without influence. The Tribune, the Inter Occan, the Times Ilcr«,'7, the Chronicle, the Journal, the llccord and the News, the leading papers of the city, all opposed Carter Harrison for Mayor. As framers of public opinion the Chicago newspapers cannot be considered an eminent success.

GRADUALLY we excluded foreign ships from our coastwise trade by prohibitive tonnage dues and finally in 1817 we absolutely prohibited, by law, foreign vessels from engaging in any trade between American ports. The consequence of this more than centuryold prohibitive protection of our domestic shipping is that")we have the largest domestic water-borne commerce in the whole world, our freight charges for inland water-borne transportation are lower than anywhere else in the world, and the magnitude of our shipping is only equalled by its utility, its safety and its beauty. Why not do as well by our foreign shipping?

AMERICAN SHIPPING.

Senator Elkinb, of West Virginia, made a two hours' speech in the Senate on Monday on the development of the American merchant marine, and in support of his proposition for discriminating duties in favor of American vessels. Among other things he said:

Under a properjpolicy of encouragement to American shipping, the United States, with its- 8.0U0 miles of seacoabts, its navigable rivers and lake coast, line harbors, variety of climate, productive capacity, rapidly increasing population, its position on the globe— Asia on one side with 600,000,000 and Europe on the other side with 400,000,000 of people—should be the leading commercial and maritime power of the world. This would be the proud position of the United States to day had protection to American interests on the sea granted by the founders of the government in the ,early legislation of Congress been continued. No nation lias ever been truly great or an important factor in the tujl'airs of the world unless it has been great on the sea. The United States cannot reach its full growth and measure of progress until its shipping and commerce is relatively equal lo its industrii son land. The United States pays 8300.000 every day, or nearly $3 per capita p-*r annum, to foreign ship owners for carrying what its people sell and buy. This enormous sum, or most of it, should oe saved to the people and the country, and would be under a proper policy of aid to shipping.

Pew people in the United States are aware of the fact that the carrying capacity of American vessels in the foreign trade of the United States— that is to say, the tonnage of our own vessels carrying our own imports and exports—is less in ls(J7 than it was in 1807, Such is, however, the fact. The value of the imports and exports of the Unitec? States has increased twentyfold, and yeu there is a slightly less aggregate of American tonnage iu our foreign trade now than there was ninety years ago. Such comparisons as this strikingly convey to our minds what a fearful lo-s the nation suffers from the lack of doing its own carrying in its own ships, in its own foreign trade.

TOBACCO l'KOTECTIOX. Out of -1,238,000,01/0 cigars consumed in this country last year, only 37,000,000—less than nine-tenths of one per cent—were imported llvs shows how well our cigar industry has been protected. Few, if any industries have been more generously protected than that of the cigar maker, nor has anywhere the result been to reduce importations in greater proportions. But while thus highly protected, some few cigar manufacturers are insisting that the farmer, who grows filler and wrapper tobacco, shall not be protected at

AT THE COURT HOUSE.

IHarrisif

Albert McQuown and Lillie Hall. Allen Castetter and Anna Jackman. Wm. W. Heiny and Martha J. Ronk. Howard Lee Mauck and Maude Matie Shinn.

CIRCUIT COURT.

In the matter uf Stephen E. Allen. Partition. S. C. Kennedy, commissioner, files his report of sale of real estate.

John M. Schultz et al. vs. George Stump et al. On note. Dismissed. Louisa E. Spencer et al. vs. Nancy Butcher et a). Partition. Defendants make default.

Mollie K. Smalley vs. Riley D. Smalley. Divorce. P. S. Kennedy, special judge, overrules the motion to open issues in the cause.

Mary S. Kusininger vs. .lobn A. Ensminger. Divorce. Dismissed. Melissa J. Walton vs. Wm. 11. Walton. Divorcc. Dismissed.

Justice M. Ghormley vs. Grandville Smith. On note and account. Judgment for plaintiff in the sum of 857 50.

Charles McGuire vs. Wm. Martz. Complaint. Motion for a change of Judge sustained.

Charles A Miller vs. estate of Catherine C. Maher. Claim. Plaintiff allowed 852 20.

all, in order that they might get their so-called raw material free, or at least at a low duty. In this country we raise tobacco suitable for wrappers and fillers, largely in Pennsylvania, New York, Ohio, Wisconsin and Connecticut, and rapidly increasing quantities in Georgia and Florida. The growers in these sections insist upon a much higher duty than has been fixed in the Dingley bill, which by the way is §2 per pound as apainst SI.50 in the Wilson act. In recent years a Netherlands syndidate has established very extensive plantations in the Island of Sumatra, where, at comparatively trifling cost, they raise large quantities of tobacco of a pretty color and extremely thin but tough-fibered leaf, which has become a fad for cigar wrappers. It is a most remarkable weed and one pound of it will wrap 500 cigars, some two or three times as many as the American wrapper. It is worth in the market 75 cents per pound in, bond, while our farmers get less than 20 cents on an average. Upon this tobacco the syndicate has caused most astonishing profits, and a large proportion of those profits were, made from its trade with the United States. This tobacco is extensively used for wrappers, and supplants enormous quantities of American grown tobacco, probably nearly as good, but not quite so fashionable, and thus throws out of employment a large number of farm laborers. It has been suggested that the Netherlands syndicate will in some way retaliate for the increased duty. Not a bit of it It will stick to this particular market, and it will sustain the market by paying the additional duty, as it did under the McKinley law. The syndicate may not make quite as much profit from our people after this, but our cigar-makers will lose nothing, and our government, so much in need of revenue, will be largely the gainer. The government will divide to some extent the profits with the Dutch syndicate. Shedding tears over toe losses that the foreign trusts will avail but little. Its loss will be the government's gain.

WINGATE.

Hon. A. C. McCorkle, of Lafayette, visited friends here on Monday. Miss Francis, of Covington, is teaching a term of supscription school here.

Mrs Dr. Detchon, of New Richmond, visited her sisters here two days this week

Jesse U. Martin visited at Toloua III over Sunday. He is talking of locating there.

Mrs. Emma McClure, of Marion, is visiting her sister, Mrs. I. U. lJedell, on Wall street.

The little stepson of John W. Wilson died *unday night and was buried here on Monday.

Bertha Sidener, who had been visiting in Crawfordsville two weeks, returned home Saturday.

Miss May me Webb, who is attending high school at Fraukfort, spent her vacation at home last week.

Dan Hauk and wife, of Elmdale, have bouyht poprtv here and will move to it about the first of June.

Kev. Fred Stovenour, of Portland, delivered a very entertaining lecture at the hall on Tuesday evening on "Eden at the North Pole."

1

Hanson Kindel and Marion Twiddy

New Suits.

A. D. Lolland vs. Oliver U. Perrin. Complaint. Schultz it Hulet vs. et al. On note.

George Stump

Hugh Strain vs. Scott Peterson. On note.

Ileal Estate Transfers.

Following is a list of real estate transfers furnished by T. T. Munhall, Recorder and Abstracter:

Henderson. Adm., to Margaret I. Burnett, 80 acres Ripley tp $ 2 800 00 Susan Line to Lola Smelcer, lot in city 1 250 00

Maxwell to Maxwell, interest. iu tract in Union tp 250 00 Ella Clore to Julia A McUlatu, pt 2 lots iti Wsiveland -iOO Ol) (J Cowan, guardian, to Forest (.'ope, 15 acres Union tp 750 00

Goouaell to tin O I! & S.-p Assoeiiin, lot in city §§:i 200 00 Jim litiskirk, assignee, to W H»

Mart/,, 124 ncres in Sugar Creek

016 67

II A and A LC'ook to W II Martz. 124 acres Sugar Creek tp 1 808 33 as Best toW it Lynch, lot in Darlington 400 00 Laura McCov to McCliimrock, lot in city "l 500 00

II Stark toO 1' Uruil, :i7 88-100 acres Madieoh tp 2 065 00 I- Poynts to W Chllders, tract Union tp 350 00 A II lleruley, guardian, to W O

I'arkc, 14 aces Union tp G00 00 W A Parke to \V A Parke, 14 acres 14 acres Union tp 600 00 Joshua Davis to and Davis, 107 acres Clark tp 4 800 00 Wm St. Clair Huth Nash, lot inneity 2 500 00 W I* itrittou to A Michaels, 1 acre

In ion t| 200 00 Iv Thompson to Louise Miller, lot in city 1 800 00 W li Harshharjrer to Wilford llarshbarger, 40 acres Clark tp... 1 800 00 Kuth Nash to Mary .1 Millet-, 120Yi acres in lllpley tp 6 400 00

20 transfers. Consideration $35 080 00

are cutting saw logs in Benton count}', and Wash Cord and Frank Jackson are there hauling logs for Wm. Jackson.

Our town officers are the most contented set of people we ever saw. About the middle of last summer they order sidewalks made on some of the principal sreets and those that wanted to built them did so, while those that did not choose to do so were not disturbed, and during the winter wl have had to wade through mud to an unmentionable depth and over broken and dangerous plank walks to go to church. If you speak to the marshal or town board about it they will tell you it will be finished in a short time, but time goes on and yet it is not done and no prospect of its being done. Some poor widows have built their walks, while others abundantly able did not. All ought to be treated alike and all should build sidewalks.

NEW ROSS-

James Hurt is getting better. Oscar Irnel was at home Tuesday. Cale Canady hauled 2,300 feet of lumber from Lebanon to New Ross Monday.

Wm. McComas is going to move to Iowa. Mrs. Maggie Mclntire was at Ladoga Tuesday.

Jesse Routh was in Advance Friday on business. Fred Jessee visited friends in Lebanon Sunday.

Mrs. Lou Gott, of Ladoga, was iu town Tuesday. W. P. Peterson was in Crawfordsville Thursday.

Join Powell, of near Lebanon, was in our town Tuesday. Henry Rettinger, of our plate, went to Wbitesville Friday.

Mrs J. C. Eddingfiekl and son, Paul, were at Ladoga Monday. E R. Richmond is building a barn on his lot near the saw mill.

Babe Bunton went to Sand Creek Wednesday to spend the summer. Mrs. Eva Walters, who has been very sick for some time, is some better.

Wm Burroughs and wife, of Crawfordsville, are visiting here this week. Marvin Britts, of Crawfordsville, was in town Wednesday on business.

Dr. Eddingfield, of Mace, visited C. Eddingfield Thursday of last week. D. Joseph and wife and Charley McCaffarty and wife were at W. S. Joseph's Sunday.

Allen Stewart is enlarging his house by adding a new room which will be used as a kitchen

S E. Benefiel, wife and son Guy. of Lebanon, attended George Swishe.-'s reception Wednesday.

Mrs. Anna Morrison and son, Evan, came over from Lebanon Thursday to visit friends for a few days.

Wm McComas, who has been selling groceries here for some time, sold out to H. Kivett who will sell groceries.

George Swisher, of Orth. was married to Miss Grioer, of Fincastle, at 1 o'clock '"uesday, Elder Murry, of Ladoga, officiating OThe correspondent of New Ross who reported for the Araiis-News last week had better see the doctor who is trying to look up business of his own.

Georgp Powell has a horse that after being hitched to the cart starts north for the farm and lets George walk looking after him'and saying '-Go by thunder, I can walk

George Swisher, who wa6 married yesterday, came home this .evening with his lady b-it the bovs rallied around and made such a loud demonstration with be Is and horns and raised such a ell that they were heard twenty three miles Too bad George, you should have stayed a way a day longer.

COUNCIL CORJMER.

Uncle Joe Moore is on the sick list. J. A. Baldwin started on his rounds of. assessing laBt Friday.

Miss Bertha Petro is taking music lessons of E H. McCrea. Mrs. R. A. Monroe and daughter Maud visiteg Mrs. Geo. Petro, Friday.

Miss Alice Baldwin visited relatives in Crawfordsville the latter part of the week.

Miss Bertha Petro was the guest of Miss Rose Bard Saturday night and Sunday.

Mrs. Rena Reprogle and Ethel and Nina Martin, ot Crawfordsville, visited here la6t week.

Last Thursday being the 20th birthday of Alice Baldwin, quite a number of her friends assembled to spend the evening with her Among those present were: Marquis and Olie Bowers. Homer Biddle, Dell Barnett, Harry Henderson, Jesse Moore, Ross Edwards, Vint Edwards, Henry Lewellen, Maurice Stonebraker. George Davis, and Misses Ota Bennett, Mary Shultz, Flossa Jordan, Ethel Ball, Lulaand Bertha Petro, Manda Llarshbarger, Lizzie Hultz. Stella Petro, and Miss Jacobs of Thorntown Bert Grimes, Bert Guinup, Misses Stella G.iinup, Ethel and Nina Martin, of Crawfordsville, and Mr. and Mrs. Elston Baldwin. All left wishing Alice many more as happy birthdays.

FROG LAND.

Wheat looks well in this vicinity. Most all the farmers have their oats sowed.

Timmy Lane helped his brother move Tuesday. John Smith will erect a new summer kitchen this Spring.

Wallace Martin has a new buggy. Now the girls will all watch for Wallace.

John Lane, of Boone county, has moved into the house with his brother, Tim.

Mr. John Smith, who lias been to the Martinsville springs, has returned and is in much better health.

We would advise anyone who wishes to reach a place in a short time to try the Midland. It runs a mile an hour.

Misses Nannie Miller, Ethel Wh^te, Maud Martin, Nannie White and Luther Miller attended the last day of school at White's school house Friday and report and enjoyable time.

—Millinery opening next Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Fridayi April 13, 14, 15 and 16. Everybody invited. Cox & Lewis, Darlington, Ind.

The convocation of the northern deanery of the Episcopal diocese of Indiana will be held at Marion, beginning April Sir.

Henry Call, l'or 30 vears a justice of the peace, was thrown from a horse and fatally injured, near Portsmouth, O. He was aged 80.

Allen Bergner, a sheep buyer at Clearport, (J., shut himself through the heart, whether by accident or design ia not known.

Mrs. Sallie Payne, daughter of Dr. R. S. Payne of Georgetown, Ky., took carbolic acid by mistake. She is in a dangerous condition.

Stephen Lyons, a young farmer of Gass county, is under arrest at Logansport, Ind., accused of attempting to pass a dollar bill raised to §10.

John Deloine, a tramp, was found lying in afire built by other tramps, near Elkhart, Ind., and when dragged out he proved to be horribly burned about the breast and arms.

George M. Bonner, a red headed widower, advertises in the Hebron (Ind.) News that he will give a gold watch to the widow over 45 who will say tho most kind words of him between now and May 1, 1897. It is to be in manuscript.

MARKET QUOTATIONS.

Prevailing Prices Fur Grain, Cattle and Provisions on April 7.

Indianapolis.

WHEAT—Quiet. No. 2 red, 86c. COKX—Steady No 2 mixed, 23%c. OATS—Dull No. 2 mixed. 19c. CATTLE—Steady at [email protected]. Hoos—Active at §3 [email protected]^. SHEEP—Unchangedat §3.00(G)4.50: lambs, unchanged [email protected].

Chicago Grain and Provisions. WHEAT—-May opened OSJ^c closed 65%c. July opened 07£c, closed Co/gC. Sept. opened Olij^c, closed 64%c.

Cor.X—May opened 24£c, closed 23%c. July opened 25£c, closed 24^c. Sept. opened 20%c. closed 25J£c.

OATS May opened 17c, closed 16^c. July opened 18c, closed 17)^c. PoiiK—May opened $8 20, closed $8.07. July opened $S.25, closed S8.15.

LAUD—May opened £4.07, closed $4.05. July opened $4.15, closed $4.15. RIBS—May opened $4.47, closed $4.43. July opened $4.50, closed $4.45.

Closing cash markets: Wheat 65c, corn 22%c. oats pork $8.02, lard $4.05, ribs $4.42.

Cincinnati Grain and Stook. WHEAT—Lower No. 2 red, 86}£c. CORN—Quiet No. 2 mixed, 26c. OATS—Quiet No. 2 mixed, 20^c. CATTLE—Steady afr [email protected]. HOGS—Steady at [email protected]. SUE EP—Firm at [email protected] lambs, steady at $4.00(35.85.

Toledo Grain.

WHEAT—Lower No. 2 cash, 85%c. CORN—Lower No. 2 mixed, 24c. OATS—Weak No. 2 mixed, 17fc.

Louisville Live Stock.

CATTLE—Steady at [email protected]. Hoos—Weak at [email protected]. SHEEP —Weak at [email protected] lambs, unchanged at [email protected].

Kast Liberty.

CATTLE—Steady at [email protected]. HOGS—Active at

$3.''[email protected].

SHEKP Lower at [email protected] cholai lambs, lower at $4.40@5-35.

Local Alarketg.

Crawlordsvllle tlenicrs were paying the followinK prices lor produce on Thursday: Wheat, per bushel 75 Corn @19 Oats, new

Kye

15

26

Timothy Hav Butter 10 K«»fs G& Chickens

RISING AT VICKSBURG

Supreme Test of the Levee Sout^i of the City Fast Approaching,

GRAVITY, ,OF THE SITUATION.

IiOUtalnim People Apprehensive of the Worst—Memphis Semis Out :i Card of Thnnkfl—Three Thousand Water lloiiitd

SufTe'rers at Helena—Kiso Kxpeoted at Katcliez—South Dakota Floods.

MEMPHIS, April 8.—The supremo test of the levees south of "vicksburg and Arkansas Ciry is fast approaching. Tho river at Vicksburg has boen falling for some daj-s

011

account of the rush of

waters from the main channel through the crovasse above into the Yazoo delta. This water is again returning to the channel through the mouth of the Yazoo river, and its influence is being felt at Vicksburg, where tho gauge is now marking higher figures. Within a few days the crest of the rise will be opposite Vickburg and the channel will continue to deepen unless the levees break. The Louisiana people keenly realize the gravity of the situation. The destruction wrought by the water in the St. Francis basin and the Yazoo delta may be repeated in tho Tensas basin, which begins iu southeastern Arkansas and extends through tho northeastern counties of Louisiana.

Material and men are being hurried forward and the effort that had marked tlio work of tlio.so in charge of the lower levees lias been doubled. The news of the action of the national congress in appropriating a large sum for the relief of the sulieivrs was gratefully received hore and throughout tho overflowed districts. The prompt action of the president and secretary of war is especially commended. The, tax on tho energies uf the people of Memphis lias been great, previous demands having been fully met. The river at Memphis is slowly falling and the gauge at Cairo shows a gratifying decline. l°or tho first time in four weeks, the Kansas (Jit-y, Memphis and Fort Scott railroad sent its trains out over the line passing through the St. Francis basin. The citizens relief committee through W. A. Gage, chairman issued the following last night:

The citizens' relief committee of the city of Memphis having received oilieial information from Washington that the government has appropriated $200,000 for the relief of the llood sufferers and that said appropriation is immediately available, beg to announce that their recent call on the public is hereby withdrawn.

The citizens' relief committee takes this method of thankiug a most generous public lor tiie many donations received and to assure each and all that their contributions have done an immense amount of good and have been highly appreciated.

Tlir"« Thousand Snil'orors. LITTLE KOCK, April 8.—A telegram was received here yesterday by J. P. Clarke from a committee of citizens of Helena, stating that there are 3,000 sufferers at that placo and that water is now in every house from Helena to White river. The committee asks Mr. Clarke to help secure Helena's portion of the appropriation for immediate relief, Reports received last night show that the levees

011

5

Spring-chicks 5)^ Turkeys, hens 0 Turkey toms -6@7 Ducks 51/ Geese

4

Countrj hamB 8 Bide Meat 514 Shoulders 5 Lard per pound 5 Potatoes 211

INSURE with A. S Clements against fire and cyclone. Office, 107 North Green St., Crawfordsville. 2 12 '98 't

the western side of

the Mississippi from Arkansas City to Buna and below are still holding. The Ouachita is still rising.

In the Northwest.

YANKTON", S. D., Aprils.—Never before in the history of this section of country has there occurred a flood that compared with tho one now raging in tlio Jim river valley. The snow covered country reaching far into North Dakota is now pouring huge volumes of water into the Jim river. Reports reach here day by day of immense rises far up the stream. Railroads have suffered great loss by the flood. No trains have entered here for nearly a week and it will probablv be a month before railroad trailie is restored to its normal condition.

luse Kxpected at Natchez.

NATCHEZ, Miss., April S.—Tho river was slowly rising hore last night but the indications were that a considerable acceleration would take-placo when the crevasse water from tho Yazoo begins showing itself. The, levees generally here are still in good shape and so far as height is concerned bid fair to hold out against the water coming.

PIPE COMPANIES INDICTED.

United States Grand Jury After Six «f Them. CHATTANOOGA, April 8.—Tho United States grand jury late yesterday returned a true bill of indictment against Bix castirou pipe companies for violations of the Sherman antitrust law. The companies are: Chattanooga foundry and pipe works Addyston Pipo and Steel company, Louisville: Dennis Lone & Co., Howard Harrison Iron company, Anniston Pipe and Foundry company, Anniston, Ala. South Pittsburg pipe works, South Pittsburg, Tenn. It is charged that these companies have entered into an unlawful conspiracy and combination to control the output and prices of castirou pipe in 30 states and territories of the nion.

Askiug the Government lror Work. TORONTO, April 8.—Hundreds of unemployed workingmen yesterday gathered iu front of tho •parliament building and asked the Ontario govevnment to provide work for them, so that they could keep their wives and children from starving.

Minister McKenzie Better. LIMA, Peru, April 8.—United States Minister McKenzie is somewhat better and able to sleep a little. His physicians now feel that there are excellent chances of saving his life.

Dean's Cleveland Office Attached. CLEVELAND, April 8.—The Cleveland

office of E. S. Dean & Co.,of New York was attached by the sheriff late yesterday on a claim of $825 presented by a Cleveland investor.

The Law

—AND—

Real Estate Office.

W. P. BRIXTON. 125'/5 East Main Street. Over Jlotlott & Morgan's UruK Store, Crawf,»rdsville, Ind. £n addition to the transaction of legal business this ofUce

comifssioN:

SELLS UEAL ESTATE 0N

r.*AI»,l.CT?,S1,NVES™ENTS

OI?

MONEY FOR.

ANV

Sl'KPJ ES OP PROPERTY,

Oti IN WBLI. SECURED LOANS. Property listed at the owner's lowest price, and advertised iu such manner as not to disclose tho owner's name.

or

ale" caj-dspiaced on property.

Ail needs and examinations of title as well as iiavcrtisiiiK tree of expense to sellers. llie ollice is supplied with a lar^e listof rarnis and city propprty at low prices.

Now Is the tune to buy Real Estate. (492) To trado a line cottage home of six rooms, almost new. with large lot, (i squaresof business, in flue neighborhood, cellar, cistern, j^as, electric liuhts, barn, fruit, for a large house and pay difference. Must be well located and all modern improvements. (48K) Fine two story house, new and modern house of 10 rooms, tinely located iu one of the best residence neighborhoods in the city, front and two Bide verandas and back porch, reception hall with elegant front stairs, parlor, sitting room, dining room, bedroom kitchen and sumniFr kitchen, 4 chambers upstairs and bath room, all finished in hard wo.id basement and attic, laundry, furnace, open grates, gas, hot and cold water, stationary washstands, all new and best of style, good barn and earrhigc houso, gravel drives cement walks can be bought for ^,550 less than actual cost. (484) 80 acres 5 miles north of city, 50acres in cultivation, good house and barn, will trade for other properly, Price 42,u()0.n (482) House and lot 2 squares of business, 12 rooms, line location, good repair, line barn, will trade for smaller properly wed located. Price $3,500. (495) 35 acres one mile of city limits, ali iit cultivation, level land, good soil, good houso and barn. This is an ideal small farm. Per acre $100. (49G) anted, a good residence property well located. Will give in part payment, a good house and lot well located iu good neighborhood. (481) A beautiful home, snua'os of court house, two story nt-w house wit'h all the mod-" %-n improvements, good barn, plenty ol fruit, "rice $1,500. (iUO) House and ii acres of land near city

Can also sell vacant corner lot close to business on very reasonable terms. All sales on easy payments.

Sent Free!

To any person interested in humane matters, or who loves animals, we will send free upon application, a copy of the "Alliance," the organ of this Society. In addition to its intensely interesting reading, it contains a list of the valuable and unusual premiums given by the paper. Address

The National Humane Alliance, 410 jiyyi United Charities Building, HR}- :.-' New York.

Photographs

May come and Pliotogruphs may go But ii

NICHOLSON'S

1

limits, house 1 8 rooms good repair, burn, fruit of all kinds, will trade 'for citv property close tobu*iness. (484) 20 acre farm 3^ miles of city, 20 acres In cultivation, ull good lund, good house and irn, fruit of all descriptions. This laud for sale cheap. (478) To trade for a gootl farm and pav tho dilleience a house and lot, well located in'city, house of nine rooms, clone s, gas, water, verandas, cellar, cistern, line barn, fruit.' All modern and nv. (501) Wanted, a good houso and lot worth in the neighborhood of 8800 for a good :\'2 acielarm, ail blacK land, new house and barn, 7 miles of city. (407) To trade for a farm, anew house well located, 7 rooms and summer knehen. Will pay dillerence between this property and a good farm. (459) A t^vo-story eight room hou^e and 3 acres of land just outside of city limits iu a line neighborhood, house almost new, good barn, tubular well, gas, fruit,. 53,5(10. (50-1) A two-story nine room house, well located and lot 100 feet front, land alone worth $lo front foot. Will take in part pay lnent a smaller piece of property will located.' Price $2,5011. (4-15) Farm of 55 acres. 0 miles south of city, 35 acres in cultivation, all go lanu will trade for city property. Price, $1,900. »30'-It very rarely happens that a No. 1 business property in this city is otlered for sale at a reasonable price. This oillee is rorninate, however, in being able to offer one such iu this issue. It is a two-story business block situated right in the center of business and can bo bought so as to pay the purchaser 10 percent, on Ills investment.

PHOTOGRAPHS

Go on Forever They Never Fade.

"A

T.-V I "-ft

IN

I IN

I

•!..:••

A.

O I

strike your house or you might upset a lamp, or your furnace pipe might get over-heated, or In any one of a thousand unforeseen ways your building might take fire."

EVANS & COX.

Loan & Insurance *gents. 111 N. Green St. Good notes cashed.

1897 SEASON 1897 The Inbred Mnmlirino Stallion,

S O N

-SIItKl) UV—

Western Hoy, J55!), liecord 2:'20. JUDSON'S 1st dam. Nannie 0., by Harrison Chief he by Clark Chief 2d dam by Milford's Rlambrino. JUDtiONisa red chesthut, 16i4 hands high, and weighs 1.200 lbs. Has superior trotting action, having gone si. mile In ~:33 Ho has proven himself to be a good breeder as his colts will show.

TERMS:-$10 to Insure a coH to stand and suck. Care will be tak-n to prevent accidents but will not be re-ponsible should any occur. Persons parting with mares the season become due. Colt to stand good for the season. MADISON BARTON,

Darlington, Ine.

Judson is for sale.

Kpworth League Convention, Toronto, Ont., July l-ltli to 18th, Via. the WabaBh Line.

For this occasion tickets will be sold Suly 13th to 15th. good returning until July 24th, with privilege of extension to leave Toronto not later than Aug. 12th, For further information call on or Address Tiios FOLLKN.

PaBS. Agt., Lafayette, Ind.