Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 25 November 1898 — Page 2
WEEKLY JOURNAL.
ESTABLISHED IX 1848. Successor to The Record, the first paper In Crawfordsville, established In 1831, and to the People's Preu, established in 1844.
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Entered at the PostoiTice at Crawfordsville, Indiana, as second-class mutter.
ITRIDAY, NOVEMBER 25. 1808.
Thk fifth state to adopt woman suffrage is South Dakota. The others are Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, and Montana.
THE infamous Altgeld announces that he is still for Bryan. If Altgeld really wishes to help Mr. Bryan he will keep still. The people of this country do not take kindly to his vicious ideas of government.
IN ten months of the present year the imports of gold in the United States have been $142,000,000, and the exports 814,000,000. For every dollar iq gold that goes abroad a gold eagle returns. The country can stand this a long time.
THE initiative and referendum are to be tried in South Dakota. This will give the country an opportunity to judge of its practical workings. In theory there is no objection to it. In practice there is some doubt as to its being such a general panacea for political ills as its friends claim for it. At any rate it can do no harm and the experiment will be watched with a great deal of interest.
THE long expected order of the President revising the civil service regulations is looked for in a few days. The enemies of the merit system have been urging the President &to let down the barB and give "the boys" a chance at the government clover, but the indications are that it will merely except from the rules certain places, a very few, too, of a fiduciary nature, at the recommendation ofi the civil service commission. If the«President is sincere and consistent nothing else could be expected of him.
SINCE writing up the senatorial situation yesterday we have learned of two changes. Governor Mount again refuses to have bis name considered, believing it to be his duty to serve out his term as governor. And Perry Heath appears as candidate. He will be a great favorite with the politicians because he has a warm place in his heart for the "boys." This is no argument against him if he is otherwise qualified for the position. It can be said for him that he has never failed to fulfill hiB duties efficiently and honorably wherever he has been placed.
THE Lafayette memorial commission has been requestednby President McKinley to report to him the amount of funds contributed by the school children of the United States for the erection in Paris of a monument to Lafayette. The commission is desirous that postmasters and public- and parochial school officials forward the amounts held by them at the! earliest possible date to treasurer Chas. G. Dawes, Washington. It is expected that congress will appropriate tfor a pedestal an amount of money in duplicate of the pennies and nickels given by the children, which will "approximate $50,000 or $60,000. This appropriation will be asked for in the form of Lafayette souvenir half dollars, the silver for which will cost the goverment half the face value or $25,000. It is thought that the coins may readily be disposed of at a premium or one dollar each.
BENJAMIN KIDD, the distinguished English sociologist, opens the December Atlantic with an article on "The United States^and the Control of the Tropics," in which he shows that the tropicB must be developed under the management but not by the labor of northern races that the northern races must control the tropics as a trust for civilization, as England is doing in the case of Egypt that Spain has forfeited her right and shown her inability to do this great task. The United States (as w»b inevitable sooner or later) has now the opportunity and the duty to further the progress of civilization in this way. He believes with President McKinley that expansion is the manifest destiny of the United States. A recent tour of observation haB confirmed his belief, and convinced him that the great west is determined upon it in spite of individual opposition from the ea6t and he points out that "this nation will have a population of 200,000,000 before many years, has already passed the ^limits of local expansion, and must become one of the greatest world-pow-ers, and must meet and discharge the duties and responsibilities involved in its very existence.
DR. ZAHM'S ODD GUN.
NOVEL CANNON MADE FOR USE IN SCIENTIFIC EXPERIMENTS.
Inventions That Accurately Meaamre Wind Rentstnnce to tlie Snialleaf Fraction—Flight of Bullet Is Timed by a Camera Chronograph.
What is probably the most ourions cannon in the world has recently been oast at South Bend, Ind., for the use of Dr. A. F. Zahm of the Catholic UniverBity of America at Washington. It is intended to shoot hollow steel bullets larger than croquet balls and as thin as eggshells. These are to be aimed at the atmosphere to determine anew law in physical science.
Architects and engineers have for generations been desirous, when designing buildings, bridges and other structures, of calculating the pressure of the wind, especially in violent storms, which are critical tests of stability, but there has been no reliable rule to guide the designer, and so a great many experimenters have tried without much succes to measure the force of the wind at high velocity. Military engineers, too, have many times attempted with the most ingenious instruments to find the pressure of the air in front of projectiles. but their results have not agreed, especially for speeds over a thousand feet a second. Dr. Zahm has invented entirely new methods and wonderfully accurate instruments by which he has succeeded in making these measurements so long desiicd by architects and engineers.
Dr. Zahn observed at the beginning of his research that the methods employed by military engineers of the various governments were defective in several features, some of which are of cardinal importance in the determination of atmospheric resistance. For example, the experiments were usually made out of doors, where there is always some breeze or movement of the air independent of the motion of the projectiles, thus making the measured resistance Bometimes greater, sometimes less with the same projectile velocity. Again, the ordinary projectiles employed are too massive to make the resistance in fiont of them apparent, for, since this resistance is manifested by the slowing up of the bullet, the latter should be aB light as possible without collapsing or straining, and, most notable of all, the chronographs used to measure the slowing up of the projectiles during their rapid flight were all inadequate to achieve accurate results, many of them not being competent to precisely measure the onethousandth part of a second, whereas it is desirable that they should measure the one-millionth part.
Dr. Zahn has located a gun target and chronograph in a long room where the air is still and its temperature and barometric pressure are observed at each shot. He uses hollow steel projectiles, and has a chronograph which records and measures a millionth of a second more accurately than a common watch can measure one second. Dr. Zahn's cannon is of peculiar make, as demanded by the extreme lightness of the projec tiles to be fired from it. Though these projectiles are four inches in diameter, thoy only weigh four or five ounces, and require hardly an ounce of smokeless powder to give them a speed of 500 miles an hour. This powder is contained in a common shotgun, the barrel of which is cut down to about six inches in length and screwed into the fereech of a cannon, thus presenting the curious spectacle of a common bird gun shooting a bullet larger than a croquet ball.
The cannon is 20 feet long, the first six feet from tho breech having a common smoothbore, but the next 14 feet is full of big holes and looks liko an elongated squirrel wheel. In the first part of the cannon the powder gives the ball its full speed, while in the second part the gas rushes out sidewise through the openings and dies down so completely that the shell on emerging from tho muzzle passes onward through perfectly still air —so still, in fact, that a newspaper held near tho muzzle does not flutter perceptibly when tho cannon is fired. Without this open structure the gases would follow tho bullot to a great distance, whereas it is desired to find tho law of resistance in still air. Moreover, the blast would deflect the light bullets so much that they could not be made to strike a target and so tho chronograph would not record their velocity.
But tho most remarkable instrument of the whole apparatus is the chronograph. This had to be so designed as to offer no resistance to the bullet and yet measure the time of its arrival at three points of its path as it iiies from the gun's muzzle to the target. Dr. Zahm asserts that ho has invented an instrument that will measure a hundred-mil-lionth of a second. The chronograph is as simple as it i.e accurate. To understand its main features oue must picture three thin streams of light shining squarely across the bullet's path, one near the gun's muzzle, the others at intervals of several yards. After crossing the bullet's path tho pencils of light strike oblique mirrors, which deflect them and make them all pass into one pinhole in a cast iron box, inside of which is a photographic plate moving rapidly. The three pencils of light, touching the sensitive plate in sharp focus, trace three fine black linos, each of which is momentarily interrupted when the bullet cuts its tracing sunbeam. The plate is then developed, and the distances between the interruptions in the tracings are measured under a microscope accurately to one five-thou-sandth of an inch. From these measurements the velocity and resistance of the bullet are easily calculated. Tho castings for this interesting cannon have been sent to Washington, where Dr. Zahm is arranging to have them bored and completed at the gun works of the navy yard. The gun will then be installed in one of the large laboratories of the Catholio university.—Special Cor. Chicago Inter Ocean.
VAST SCIENTIFIC PROJECT.
UngneHc Survey of the Globe Recommended at a Meeting In England. A meeting of scientific men has recently concluded its labors at Bristol, England, in connection with the meeting of the British Association For the Advancement of Science. This body was composed of the leading authorities on the study of terrestrial magnetism, and among those attending were Dr. A. Schuster of England, Dr. M. E. Sohenhagen of Potsdam, Professor T. Liznar of Vienna, Professor E. Mascart of Paris and General M. Rykatchew of St. Petersburg. The United States-was represented by Mr. Charles A. Schott of the coast and geodetic survey. Magnetic surveys of the United States are by law intrusted to the coast and geodetic survey, and it was very important that a representative of the survey should be present at the conference.
Tho questions submitted for deliberation before this body concerned the preparation of a plan for a systematic magnetio survey of the entire globe, and the deliberations of the convention resulted in a general recommendation for that purpose. The principal work of the conference, however, centered in the wider questions involving magnetic observations, their present unsatisfactory distribution over the globe and their inadequacy as regards numbers. It is here that the United States is in a position to take a most important step in the advancement of knowledge by establishing and maintaining a well equipped magnetio observatory on one of the Hawaiian Islands. The position of these islands is unique, being central to a vast unexplored or magnetically unknown region and well adapted for the special study of the modifications which the diurnal and secular variations of the magnetic needle are supposed to undergo in consequence of a surrounding ocean, as contrasted with a continental surface.
The president of the conference, Professor A. W. Rucker, took occasion to call attention in a most flattering manner to the work of the coast and geodetic survey in the field of terrestrial magnetism and particularly to the long and valuablo services of Mr. Schott in this field.—New York Sun.
AMERICAN ACTORS TAXED.
London Exacts a Titlie From Yankee mmert*. AH hope of an Anglo-American aliiance has been destroyed by one fell swoop so far as tho theatrical profession is concerned. Her majesty's taxgatherers have descended upon the American actors in London for an income tax, and cordial relations between the mummers of both nations no longer exist.
For mouths the American actors and actresses have been swaggering about bragging of their enormous salaries and lording things generally over the poor underpaid English actors. But the other day from tho talk on tho Rialto a stranger would think the American actors were not .earning enough to save themselves from starvation. A few days :iqo a tax agent secured from George Musgrove, the English manager cf Shaftesbury-theater, a complete list of the salaries given the members of the "Bellu of New York" company. All those members whose salaries amount to more than $1,000 a year recently received official notice to pay six months' income tax in advance at the rate of 3 cents on tho dollar.
Indignation meetings were held every hour of the day, and numerous delegations visited the American embassy, while others sought legal aclvice. But there is no escape, and a wholesale* emigration of tho American actors is threatened unless the manager of the company pays the tax for them. Those hit hardest by the tax are Edna May, Phyllis Rankin, Helen Dupont, Edgar Davenport, Frank Law toe and J. E. Sullivan. —Philadelphia Press.
CHAIR WARMERS.
How a ciiicnp) Hotel Mtikcs It Hot For Tlicm. Mr. Eden, the genius of the Great Northern, has invented a method for ridding the rotunda of his hotel of chair warmers. When tho clerk wishes to evict any one whose affection for a chair seems to defy the divorce law, he simply presses a button, and steam does tho rest.
Liko other useful inventions, Manager Eden's invention is simple in the extreme. Tho chairs in the Great Northern rotunda aro ranged around the walls, and behind each chair is a steam heater. These naturally mako the chairs warm and cozy, which the "chair warmers" appreciate. But Manager Eden has beaten them at their own game. In the top of each heater he has had his engineer place a valve right opposite the position of the neck of the recumbent warmer. Electrical connection has been put in between the heater and tho clerk's desk, where a keyboard indicates the number and position of each chair. By pressing a button the clerk can open the valvo behind any chair, and Mistering steam issues from the heater.—Chicago Inter Ocean.
Kxit. tliu Cannibal.
Oh, tho Ijlitho and eager caun ibal lias seen Iris brightest days! They nro fading out. forever in Old Glory's coming rays, And tho liappy missionary will not dread the fatal broth As he drops that ragout feehnrr which was common to tho cloth.
Oh, no mora the paunchy savage will set v.p his Kti-umnu: pot, Out of which the rug rant parson will bo forked or ladled hot. And no mure will grinning henchmen squat besido tho chief while lie With a nice discrimination hands around the late D. Dl
For the Yankee sweeps the ocean, and the polishers of bones In tho Philippines and Sandwiches and faraway Ladronea Must resign their meaty diet and come down to plainer things, For there'll be no moro man eating 'neath the eaglo'a sheltering wings. —Cleveland Plain Dealer.
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL.
LESSON IX, FOURTH QUARTER, INTERNATIONAL SERIES, NOV. 27.
Text of the lesson, Prov. Iv, 10-19—Mem-ory Verses, 14, IB—Golden Text, Prov. i, 10—Commentary Prepared by the Rev.
D. M. Stearns.
[Copyright, 1S98, hy D. M. Stearns.] 10. "Hear, O my son, and rooelvo my sayings, and the years of thy life shall be many." We may think of David addressing Solomon (see vorso 8), but it will be more profitable for us to receive the words as from God our Father to all who are His children by faith In Christ Jesus. We may hear His words and not receive them, but whon wo hear and receive, or believe, for belioving is receiving (John i, IS), we thus have lifo (John v. 34). It will make this teaching simple if whon we read of wisdom, as in vorses 5, 7, etc., wo think of Him who is tho wisdom of God (I Cor. i, 24, 30). In Jas. i, 21, we are taught that the word must be received with meekness. 11. "I have taught thee in the way of wisdom I havo led thee in right paths." Her ways are ways of pleasantness and all her paths aro peaoe (chapter ill, 17). Ho always leads by a right way to our city of habitation (Ps. cvii, 7). Ho is the Way, and He is our Poaoe when He putteth forth His sbeep, He goeth before, and to follow Him is to go in perfect peace, for His will is always wisest, and His way is always best, and in perfect acquiescence there is always perfect rest. Abide in His love. 12. "Whon thou goest, thy steps shall not bo straitened, and when thou runnast thou slialt not stumble." Thero is no straitness with Him. His is an abundant way abundant grace and glory all our need supplied according to His riches (Phil, iv, 30). Philip's 200 pence would have givon each of the 5,000 a littlo, but our Lord's way was to fill them with as mach as they dosired (John vi, 1-12). When His people hearken unto Him and walk in His ways, He fills and satisfies thorn (Ps. lxxxi, 10-lG). Ho makes them to be satisfled with favor and full with the blessing of the Lord CDout. xxxiii, 23). The blessing which makcth rich and to which our toil addoth nothing (Prov. x, 22, R. V.). 13. "Tako fast hold of instruction, let hor not go, kocp her, for she is thy life." She is a treo of life—life unto thy soul (chapter iii, 18, 22). By comparing text with text wo got the unity of tho Scriptures, tho oneness of thought, for all contors in Him who is our lifo (Deut. xxx, 20 Col. iii, 4). To walk in His way and keep His commandments is lifo and righteousness (Deut. v, 33 vi, 25), but Ho is tho end of the law for righteousness to overy ono that believeth so it is summod up in receiving and walking in Ilim (Rom. x, 4 Col. ii, 6). Having received tho word with meekness, tho next thing is to hold it fast, for it is a faithful word (Titus 1, 9 Rev. ii, 25). When satan by his servants questions any part of the word of God, the believer should take the hint to hold that portion all tho more firmly. 14. "Enter not into the path of the wicked and go nut in the way of evil men." Sinco tho devil tompted Eve in tho gartlon of Edon he has beon ever seoking whom ho may devour, and he seems to find multitudes willing to bo devoured. 15. "Avoid it, pass not by it, turn from it and pass away." Bo not deceived evil communications corrupt good manners. Awake to righteousness and sin not, for some havo not tho knowlodgo of God (1 Cor. xv, 33, 34). Blossod is Clio man that walketh not in tho counsolof the ungodly, nor standcth in tho way of sinners, nor sitteth in the seat of tho scornful (Ps. i, 1). If Evo had not stopped to look at tho treo, the fruit of which sho was forbidden to eat, she might not have fallen. If Achan had not looked upon the gold and tho garment, ho, too, might not have sinnod. All that is not of God we must turn away from, lest we fall into temptation. Looking unto Jesus is the only way to run our race. Beholding tho glory of the Lord is tho way to become like Him. 16. "For they sleep not except thoy have done mischief, and their sleep is taken away unless they cause some to fall." To kill and to destroy, to give torment and anxiety, is their master's business and theirs. They speak loftily, they set tlioir mouth against tho heavens, and their tonguo walketh through tho earth (Ps. lxxiii, 8, 9). David said concerning them, "Thoy that seok my hurt spoak mischievous things and imagine deceits all tho day long" (Ps. xxxviii, 12). The Son of Man oame to savo, not to destroy L.u gives lifo and life abundant and joy and peace and glory. The followers of the devil are ever taking all they can got and giving nothing roal in return. Tho Son of God gave Himself for us and bore all tho devil's hate that He might redeem us from his powor. 17. "For they eat the bread of wickedness and drink the wino of violence." Contrast the bread and wino of Melchisodco in connection with tho blessing of the Most High God, possessor of heaven and oarth (Gen. xiv, 18, 10) also the bread and wine of tho communion, representing our Lord's body given for us and His blood shed for us that we, eating Him, might live by Him (John vi, 54, 57). Tho ungodly may be said to live upon tho flesh and blood of those whoso downfall they accomplish, but our Lord, by humbling Himsolf unto death, gives us His life to be our life. He is tho bread from lioaven. 18. "But tho path of tho just is as tho shining light that shineth more and more unto the perfect day." He is tho truly just ono who suffered for our sins, the just for tho unjust. He is tho truo light, the light of tho world, and as Ho is increasingly made known His light will shine more and more until He shall have gathered out of all nations His complete body, and after that He will come with all His saints as the Sun of Righteousness, and then it will be tho perfect day on all the earth, ushered in by the morning without clouds of JI Sam. xxiii, 3, 4. If we are justified by faith in Him, then, though our path may lead through many a dark valley as Joseph's did, and David's and Joremiah's, it is ever leading on to the perfect day of His kingdom whon wo shall be liko Him, for wo shall 6eo Him as Ho is. 19. "Tho way of tho wicked is as darkness thoy know not at what they stumble." The wicked are children of tho night and of darkness they livo in darkness and when they die they go out into tho outer darkness whoro there is weeping and gnashing of teeth (I Thess. v, 4, Eph. v, 8 Math, xxv, 30). The Lord knoweth tho way of tho righteous, but the way of the ungodly shall perish (Ps. i, 0). As childron of light let U3 walk in the light, having no fellowship with tho works of darkness, but trusting tho Lord to so shine in us that many may bo turned from darknoss to light (II Cor. vi, 14 iv, 0). Tho righteous need not stumble (verse 12 Judo 24 R. V.), but tho wicked, being blind, see not their stumbling blocks.
Recent events show that a camp is more dangerous than a battle. Not only in the army, but in ordinary lire, more lives are lost by a heedless disregard of the beginnings of poor health than by all other causes combined.
Dyspepsia or nervousness is absolutely inexcusable now. Thero is no more reason for a man or woman eating with poor appetite, or sleeping poorly, or suffering continually from neuralgia or rheumatism to-day than there is of his or her going without the necessities of life.
Every candid person who has dragged along, under the depressing effects of nerve and brain exhaustion, needs to take to heart the words of such unbiased pnrsons as Senator Tabor, who cannot afford to attach their guarantee to anything they have not themselves investigated.
PAINE'S CELERY C0MP0UWP
United States Senator Tabor Says That It Should Now Be Used.
DENVER, Col., Sept. 20, 1808
Messrs. WellB, Richardson & Co., Burlington.Vt —I heartily recommend your Paine's celery compound.
It is the one remedy which should be widely used. I have used it, end I therefore know whereof I speak.
Very truly yours. N. A. W. TABOR, Formerly U. S. Senator.
CHINA.
A Few Side Liglitu on a Moat InterentinK Country. China is called the Celestial Kingdom because it is the most antiheavenly place on earth. It is very, very old, so old indeed that it is breaking up, and its decease may be expected at any time. Its ruler is called the Son of the Sun. His mother was the moon, and from her he derives most of his qualities. Our word lunatic most aptly describes these lunar qualities.
The greatest Chinaman that ever lived, and that is saying very little, •was Confucius, which is the cause of China's being full of confusions. The smallness of the feet of Chinese women is artificially secured, but the smallness of the brains of the men and women is wholly natural. The Chinese have curious customs. One of them is that politeness permits, even commands, one to ask any one he meets, "How old are you?" This is said to women as well as to men, which proves that the Chinese are savages.
The Chinese make good actors because they always look out for their ones. These cues are worn out of reverence for the sacred animal of China, the dragon, whose taii was his chief part. The dragon is now extinct, but his ghost is permitted to drag on a sad career. Those who have seen pictures of the dragon will understand me when I say that his form is full of twists and wrinkles. In this fact is found an explanation of the elaborate and quibbling methods of Chinese form and ceremonial observance, which are the most fearful in the world. The dragon is brother to the serpent, the devil, but is not half so civilized. The Chinese eat mice, which is the reason so many misers are found among them.
As a general rule, the Chinese mind operates at irregular intervale, long apart, though in a large number of cases there is no apparent mentality. Nobody on earth but a Chinaman could, without being particularly displeased at tho task, turn a wheel for life, not knowing why tho wheel must be turned, not caring why, well content with the wages of a penny overy other year. The Chinese are greatly pleased with the foreign devils' railways, as they expect the said devils are constructing thes» routes for the sole purpose of going away by them. The greatest living Chinaman is Li Hung Chang, who goes in and out of office oftener than any other man in the world and with less cause for either.— Judy.
Do you suffer from insomnia? Are you one of those much-to-be-pitied individuals who wrestle with the pillow through the long hours of tho night and rise in the morning with haggard features and hollow eye6? If so, take advantage of the remarkable power of this greatest of all remedies for restoring1 strength.
Paine's celery compound calms and equalizes all the nervous tissues and induces the body to take on solid flesh.
Nervous debility causes timidity, depression and lack of confidence in the 6trugirle of life whereas plenty of nervous force insures self-reliance, enterprise and prosperity. In untold number of cases the lack of success can easily be traced to a simple lack of nerve force.
There is no better foundation for permanent good health, or a better preparation for coping with the hard work and taxing strain of life, than rich, red. pure blood and plenty of it, acquired by use of Paine's celery compound.
Physicians recognize Paine's celery compound as the one scientific remedy for restoring health and strength to the worn-out system.
What a Uoctor Says. f~—1 r—n
PANA, lri.7 Jan. 11, 1898.—Gents:—I havo used many medicines but tbinkil got the best results from your Syrup Pepsin. One other member of my family also used it with the 6ame happy effect. The complaint for which we used the Syrup was a stomach trouble called in the books Gastralgia, a great deal of acid eructations (belchings) with flatulence of the stomach.
Very truly. DR. W. E. MCDIVIIT.
Sold by O. E. Dunn, Ph. G., Y. M. C. A. druggist, Crawfordsville.
Winter Kxcnrslon Kates to Southern Resorts via Southern Ky. Beginning October 15, winter excursion tickets to principal southern resorts, including Asheville and Hot Springs. N. C., and Florida points, are on sale by connecting lines via Southern Railway.
Tickets allow 15 days'stop overs,and are good to return until May 31, 1899. The Southern Railway quickest and best. Write for maps, schedules and rates. VVM. H. TAYI.OE,
Asst. Gen. If xss. Agent, Louisville. C. A. BAIRD. Traveling Pass Agent, Louisville. 10-31tf J.
c.
BEAM.
Northwestern Pass. Asrent, Chicago.
Magnificent Train Service
Of the Union Pacific from Council Bluffs or Kansas City makes it the popular line to all points in Nebraska, Kansa Colorado, Wyoming, Utah and the Pacific coast. Three trains daily from Council Bluffs. Two trains daily from Kansas City. Pullman Palace Double Drawing konm Sleepers, Buffet Smoking and Library Cars, Free Reclining Chair Cars, Dining Cars. Meals a la carte.
For time tables, folders, illustrated books, pamphlets descriptive of the territory traversed, or any information, apply to your local Bgent. who can sell you a ticket via the Union Pacific, or address J. H. JUNE, Trav Pass. Agent, Union Pacific Railroad Co., room 9, Jackson Place, Indianapolis, Ind. d&w 11-1] tf
Homereekers' Excursions via tlie Wabash. On tlie dates of-DecemberO and 20 '98, round trip tickets will be sold via the WabaBh to certain points in Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Idaho, Oklahoma, Kansas, Louisiana. Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico, North and South Dakota, Texas, Utah and Wvoming. Tickets good returning twen-ty-one days from date of sale. Rate, one first class limited fare plus 82 for the round trip. For information aB to rates, routes, stop-over privileges,etc cs»ll on or address, TKOS. FOLLEN,
Pass. Agent, Lafayette, Ind.
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