Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 March 1894 — Page 4
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THE BANNER TIMES, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA. THURSDAY, MARCH. I, 1891.
B. F. «JOSL»IN audios the Hljfhest tirade Bra/.il Bloek
And tin* Best Pittsburjrh and Anthracite. (Tail yard opposite Vandal la freight ofllee.
ELEPHANTS (\RED ink. If you have a house for sale or rent, ami It is proving an “elephant on your hands. “ let us look after It. WeTl sell it or let it. as you wish. If there’s a possible eustomer in town. Rivet that fact in your mind, then cull and we’ll clinch it. J. A/, f HURLBY, Insurance, Real Estate, and Loan. . . .
Second Floor, First National Bank Building 1-ly
CITY DIRECTORY. CITY OFFICERS. Mayor. Charles B. Case Treasurer Frank E. Landes Clerk James M. Hurley Marshall William R. Starr Engineer Arthur Throop I Attorney Thomas T. Moore | See. Board of Health. ..Eugene Hawkins M. I) ] rOlTSICILMKN. 1st Ward... Thomas Ahrams,.) L. Handel ind Geo. K. Blake, James Bridges i :trd ’’ John Riley, John H. Miller Street (Commissioner J. D.Cutler Fire Chief Geo. B. Cooper A. Brockway. ) Mrs. Mary Birch, >School Trustees. D. L. Anderson, I K. A. Ogg, Superintendent of city schools.
A LUST TREASlt; Sllll'
By CHARLES B. LEWIS <M. QUAD). ICops right, ]Kt<3, by diaries B. lipwis.] On the night of the 10th of .Inly. I860, tho English stoanitT Badger, which had run tho blockade at Charleston no loss than tivo tunes, crept in through the outside lino and was proceeding up the harbor when discovered by the Federal hlockader fatskill. A hot tiro was innnediately opened on her, and in her efforts to get away she ran on a shoal and was set on tire and abandoned. The second shot from the blockader passed through the steamer's tipper works, and some of the splinters knocked overboard a sailor named Henry Lee. Half an hour later we on the Catskill picked this man up as he was floating about the bay. That ho should have survived even 10 minutes aftergo-
rOHEST HII.I. CEMETERY
OltS.
.1 S. McClary
John < '.Browning J. K. Langdon
H.S. Kenick Jamrs Dai
E.
nines Buggy
E. Li. Black, A. <>. LiK’kridgc*. Meeting first Wcdncsda> niglil
‘ J. S. McClary’s offlcc.
HO A HI) OF DIRECT* Pres V Pres
Sec
Treus .Supt
each month
SECRK I’ SO< IKTIES. I. O. O. F. GREENCASTLE U>D(1E NO Bruce Frazier N. G I*. M. Hanna... See Meeting nights, every Wednesday. Hall, in Jerome Allen’s Block, 3rd floor. PUTNAM LODGE NO. 45. John A Michael .N G E. T. < haffee. Meeting nights, every Tuesday. Hall in Central National Bank block,3rd floor. CASTLE CANTON NO 30, I». M. J. A. Michael (’apt Chas Meikel. Beo Fii*st md third Monday nights of each month. D. OF R. NO. 10ft. Mrs. John Merry weather N. G i». B. Ba Iger. Set* Meeting nights. cv<'ry 2nd ami 4tli Monday of each month. Hall in uentral Nat. Bank building, 3rd floor. OKKBNCASTLE IX)D(>E 2123 G. U. O. OF O. F. W m. H artwood N. G H. 1.. Bryan .P.S Meets first and third Mondays. MASONIC. EASTERN STAR. Mrs. Hickson —W. M Mrs. Dr. Hawkins Sec First Wednesday night of each mouth. GREENCASTLE CHAPTER R. A. M. NO 21. H. 8. Kenick H.P H. >. Beals Sec i Second Wednesday night of each month. B. UK LODGE F. AND A. M. Jesse Richardson W. M H. S. Heals See Third Wednesday night of each mouth. COMMAXDERY. W. 11. I! Cullen E.C J. Mel). Hays See Fourth Wednesday night of each month. KOGAN LODGE, NO. 19. F. A A. M, H. L. Bryan W. M i. W. ( un Meets second and fourth Tuesdays. WHITE LILY CHAPTER, NO. 3, O. E. S. Mrs. M. Florence Miles W M Mrs. M. A. Teister Sec I Meets second ami fourth Mondays.
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS. EAGLE LODGE NO. Hi. Wii. . M. Brown.. C David Hughes Sec Every Friday night on 3rd floor over Thus. 1 Abt'Klns wtoe**. itKhEM aSTLL liiVir»iOA t . it. W B. Btan < apt R.Strattrtii Sec First Monday night of each month.
A.O. U. W.
COLLEGE CITY LODGE NO. 9. loiin Denton - M. W A. B. Phillips Sec Second and 4th Thursdays of each month. DEGREE OF HONOR. MiB I- Rigert ( ,ol M Li'iiit (im« k .... Sit; First and third Fridays of each month. )Iall on 3rd floor City Hail Block.
BED MEN.
OTOE TRIBE NO. 140.
Jacob Kiefer.
Thus. Sage Every Monday night.
City Hull Block.
W>X ' LOTUS COUNCILNO. 329. W. (J. Overstreet . R Chas. Landes sec Second and fourth Thursdavs of each mouth Meet in G. A. R. Hall.
G. A. K.
GREENC ASTLE POST NO. 11.
A M. Maxon C L. P. t liapin \ it. Wm. H. Burki • • \i
Mond i> e\ • ninH at i i elm k. Hal
corner Vine and Washington streets. 2nd
floor.
WOMAN’S RELIEF CORPS. Mice R ( banin Pres Louise Jacobs $<»(> Meetings every second and fourth .Monday hi 2 p. iu. ti. A. K. Hall
Sac hern
Set Hall on 3rd floor
*
HE FLOATED AWAY. ing overboard was a wonderful thing, for bis left arm was broken, and he received internal injuries which caused his death fonr days later. He was only a common steamboat hand, having no education, bat a very intelligent man in conversation. At his request 1 wrote some letters for him, and when he knew that he must die he told me the story of his life, only a part of which has to do with this story. In tho year 1858 the India clipper ' ship Rising Sun left Melbourne for Lon- | don, having under her hatches one of the most valuable cargoes ever carried by a sailing vessel. It consisted of wool, tallow, skin., and wines. In the treas- j ure room were deposited four consign- I ments of crude gold amounting in value i to (850,000. In addition, there were over 30 gold miners among the passengers who had made their fortunes and were going home to England to enjoy ; themselves. These men deposited with the pursers an average of (10,000 each, | making considerably over (1,000,000 in ! all. You may wonder that such a large 1 treasure was sent aboard of a sailing ship, and that all should bo intrusted to one ship. At that date a clipper ship | was preferred to a steamer, and the | bankers and brokers at Melbourne were ansious to get rid of the treasure on j hand as quickly as possible. To mis-, the opportunity of sending by the Rising Sun might mean a delay of three or
four weeks.
On the day the ship was tosail an old hag of a woman known to most residents of the city as a fortune teller met the captain in the town and asked him for alius. Ho brusquely refused her, and she cursed him. his ship, passengers and treasure. She followed him for two blocks, predicting storm, mutiny, murder and disaster, and was finally arrested by the police. Her curses and predictions had nothing to do with what befell the ship and her people of course, but to this day the people of | Melbourne remember them in conjnnc- ! tion. Hud the captain given her (100 | it would have made no difference with fate. The ship sailed at the hour ad- j vertised, ran to the sonth until clear of j the peninsula, and then set her course I to the west to cross the vast expanse of | the Indian ocean. She bad a crew uf oj i men and a passenger list of over 60, and for many long days everything went well with her. One-third of her run to the cape had been made when nhe one day encountered a French brig which had been dismasted and abandoned and was driving about with the wind and wave. The mate was sent to overhaul her, tint found no living thing aboard The crew of the brig must have been stricken with a plague, and after a few deaths the survivors abandoned her. The mate reported a peculiar odor from cabin anti fo’castle, but no weight was given it until he fell sick. The captain was taken ill the same day, having precisely the same symptoms, and inside
reach the coast ot India. They In.ii the chart of the Indian ocean spread out before them, and it seemed as if they had but to steer in a certain direction to reach a certain point. They figured that they were to the north ot St. Paul, but as a matter of faet they were hundreds of miles to the south of it, and it was their drifting down toward the ice belt which probably abated and exterminat-
ed the plague.
Lee related that the survivors got along pretty well for a week after settling on a plan. Then came a terrible storm which wrecked the ship aloft, and at the end of three days drove her ashore on a wild and desolate island. It was night when she struck. She tramped heavily on a reef, was carried over it by a monster wave which swept her decks, and was finally beached on the island. Lee with others was swept overboard by tho big wave, hut he alone was carried to the beach alive, and he was so bruised and battered and exhausted that it was hours before he could move about. When morning came, he knew that he had been cast on an island. The dead bodies of three of his comrades were lying on the beach, but the others he never saw. In breaking off the reef the ship had swung around and driven ashore stern first. An unusually high tide, together with wind and wave, had floated her over a ledge of rock into a small cove, and she had been left there as in a dock basin, badly battered in every portion of her hull, but still holding together. At low tide the water in the cove was only two feet deep. Lee had no idea of the name or location of the island, which had plenty of fresh water, but no foliage beyond a few bushes, and no soil except hero and there in small spots. He lived there for six months, and then being almost insane over the solitary life he constructed a raft and floated away to the north. His chances of lieing picked up were not one in ten thousand, but ot the fourth day he was sighted and rescued by the English whaling ship John Bull, which landed him at the cape four months later, whence he got a ship to England. When Lee was picked up, he told a cock and bull story of being washed overboard from an American merchantman, and of reaching tho island on a piece of wreckage. The captain told him the island was one of the Christmas group, which numbers 14 large and small islands. The main island is named Kerguelen, and at present has a population of about 4,000. When Lee told the captain of the whaler a false story, he was thinking of the treasure left behind him on the island. The whaler carried a large crew, and he did not propose to divide wth so many. Tho man simply kept his mouth shut aliont the whole affair, and when lie finally reached England no one knew that he had ever seen the lost clipper. Ho thought it would be an easy matter to get a craft to go for the treas
I
Those who did not see
was captnrrdott Wilmington while trying to run the blockade in the last days, and she was fitted out for the voyage at Charleston. We engaged 13 negro sailors for tho voyage, making with cook and steward a crew of SOtnen. We took on board shovels, picks, axes, jackscrews, powder and fuse and whatever we might need in cleaning out thehulk, together with lumber to build us a house ashore, and we cleared for Sydney at the custom house. The six of us had put in every dollar we could raise, and there was just (133 in tho common purse when we set sail from Charleston bar. All of ns believed in the treasure, however, and were happy and enthusiastic at getting away. The details of tlia* '.ong voyage would not interest you. Our first and only stop was at Cape Town, and we remained there only three days. One day. months after leaving Charleston, tho island of
Kerguelen rose out of the water before . i -i
us. We passed lietween it and Solitary HOITICS \\ here the} c .ill Visit
island, coasted around Cape Challenger their fireside,
into Royal sound, and finally brought up in a sheltered bay on the nerth side of the sound. From thence, starting out in tho morning soon after sunrise, we ran around to 1 ho east coast of Christmas island in the yawl, and a few minutes before dinner we landed on the spot described by Lee, and our eyes rested on tho big hulk of the wrecked clipper. We raised a cheer, but there was no heartiness iu it. Wo bad found the wreck and believed it untouched, but the sight of that battered hull, gray’ and weather beaten and rotting away, was like coming upon the skeleton of a human being on the great plains. Wo stood contemplating it for several minutes, and then clambered aboard. The birds had visited the wreck, but not another living thing had touched her decks since Lee left the island. A storm had cut out the beach half a mile above and filled in just there, and the wreck now lay 50 leet above high tide, and the basin iu which she rested was quite dry. This lieing the windward side of the island. with no harbor for tho bark, wo spent two days looking for a sheltered spot. We found it in tho sound, two miles away overland and about 10 by water. We spent a day constructing a fairly good road, to go and come by, and tin the next, having a slight breeze ami no sea, we ran the bark around and got our lumber and other stuff ashore. When the batk returned to her haven, we made her secure and left only the cook,steward anti one white man aboard. We built a shanty behind the rocks with our lumber, and lour or five days
Something Worthy of Note.
it may have it brought to their it in their own parlor and by
HOW CAN THIS BE? 1 he Banner ItMKshas made this possible by its readers takin^ advantage of our ofTer below and securing one of our World s Fair in Water Colors. With it the Great Columbian Exposition can he seen again in all its grandeur and beauty. All those wonderful structures which made the White City noted the world over for the beauty of their architectural features can be looked upon and studied at leisure, All the lovely hits of scenery which made the grounds so attractive are reproduced in their natural colors and will again afford enchantment to the beholder. No important feature of the Fair has been left out, and the accurate descriptions which accompany the views, give an excellent and enterta ning history of the GREAT-
EST EVENT of tiie nineteenith century.
of buildings, land scapes and grounds, reproduced in water
Consists of a careful selection scenes about the exposition
colors -twenty-two in all enclosed in a beautiful portfolio or
after our arrival wero ready to begin case forming a lovely and at the same time a safe receptacle
i prize.
for
so rare
NOTHING • I Ikl: • IT • UNDER
SUN.
work on the cargo. The treasure room was first looted. Leo had broken open only one of the iron bound boxes and bad taken none of the contents of that away. We got the purser's safe on deck and over the side and blew it open. There was about (300,000 in gold and Bank of England notes, with a consid-
ure, hut was sorely disappointed. In- erablo quantity of ladies’jewelry. In deed he had no sooner landed in Eng- I a tin box in a locker in the captain's land than he realized that he must keep stateroom wc found £600 in notes ami qniet or he would he overhauled. Tho £350 in gold. This probably belonged insurance companies, the owners of the to him personally. The money and jew Ev<*l*Y ship and the relatives of the lost had J elry in the safe, with the exception of i
given up all hopes, bnt a word from Lee £400 which belonged to the ship, were The next best thing to an actual visit to the World’s Fair would arouse them, and he would lose ticketed with the names of tho owners, • „ • • , . i . . i . , v - • , the treasure and ]>erhap6 get into seri- and the packages were carefully ban- I s ,l 1 examilblflon ot these beautiful \\at(*r CC'lors. No picture ous trouble. He made two or three voy- | died and laid aside by us with a view 1 in black and white can convey the faintest ideaoftherealapages to distant ports, and onihe break- , of forwarding them to the heirs of the pearance made on Midway I’laisance by the brilliantlyaring out of the war in the United States dead if found practicable. . i -r .t . \ . i i j- i -t J .i ., became a blockade runner. This was The ship had been nearly full of wa- ranged links, Aiabs, Indians, and the many other national
his story as he told it to me, and he j ter wheu she drove ashore, hut only the
l he only set of Facsimile Drawings in Water Colors illustrating the World’s Columbian Exposition at Chicago by
the celebrated artist Graham.
Sketch in the Collection is a GEM.
I added that he had never told a human j being of the location of the wreck and the treasure, and lie believed that the bulk still rested in the cove undisturb-
WE SET THE HCI.K ON EIRE,
ed. Unless a party made a landing on that side of the island there was hardly a chance of discovery. He had broken into the treasure room and handled its
Hies to be seen there. The life, the warmth, and the spirit of these pictures make them captivating to both young and old and render them more satisfactory than they could possi-
bly be if they were in plain black and white.
OUR PROPOSITION.
$1.50.
This is the regular retail price of the water colors alone,
and they can not be had anywhere for less.
Call at our office and examine t. BANNER TIMES.
cargo in the lower hold had suffered, and not all of that. We got out thousands of pounds of wool in good condition, together with sufficient tallow, | hides and wine to give our craft a good, j full cargo. Soon after we began work i the bad season set in, and we worked j much of the time in storm and wet. During the three months of our stay we ; got the hark around to the wreck only four times, and then only for a few
t h h^wine dl am!"thebC , We now offer , this Handsome collection of art gems comi means of the host, bnt the wool and pleL* and one inotilh s suliM'i iptnm lot mm Daiia Bawew 1 ?mks
1 hides were carried overland. When we j (qjhad all we dared take, there was enough stuff left to make another expedition j profitable. We had no thought of coming again, however, and on the last day of our stay set the hulk afire and burned eveiything which the flames could \ consume. One day we set sail for the J Cape of Good Hope, and after cno of : the finest voyages a sailor could desire [ dropped anchor at Cape Town to replenish our supplies. Here three of us | took (1,000 each from the treasure and | went ashore to take a steamer for England and from thence home, while the others were to sail the hark straight for New York. We stood on the pier and
FIRE ALARMS.
3-1 3- 1 4- 1 5- 1 R-l 3 l 4 2
(’ollogu* ave and Liberty st. Indiana and Hanna. Jackson and Dua^y. Madison and Lihurty. Madison and Walnut. Hanna and (Town. Bloomington and Anderson. ► ^ Seminary and Arlington. t Washington, east of Durham. 7 2 Washington and Locust. 2 3 Howard and (Town. 4 3 Ohio and Main. 5- 3 College ave. and DcMottc alley. t»- 3 Locust and Sycamore. I- 2 -1 Fire out. The police call is one tap then a pause then follow the box nuiuoei COUNTY OKF1CKKS.
and
dco. M. Black. F. M. Glidewetl.
Geo. Hughes
Daniel T. Darnell Daniel S. Hurst
J. F. O’Brien. F. M. Lyon. T. W. McNeff
Wm. Broadstreet. G W. Hence, M. D. J. D. Hart, )
Famuel Farmer v Commissioners.
John S. Newgent)
Auditor
Sheriff
Treasurer
( lerk
Recorder Surveyor
Senool Superintendent
Coroner Assessor
See. Hoard of Health
contents, and he believed that the purs-
<»f lotiYTh'i> -.••.xftr.ici«• acwmiuT;.ikTsr-.Y >.• ^iiT.'-v“,v l -f 1 'rrr;Kvv-?ir.T.r,opkt, -yr*:- ner wl~m««y' 7 wHIi~a‘'tairwniar had been attacked. j considerable jewelry ami much cash. ! she was spoken next day, but that was Lee did not go into particulars about While 1 believed that Leo told me the the end. From that day to this she has the plague, which raged for many days, ! truth from beginning to end 1 felt no n p V er been heard of. The blacks knew bnt he told enough to satisfy any listen- ; richer when ho was dead. The trouble n f the treasure and may have mutinied a Jt*uribUi.«£"te uf nffai s wst Law hi be taw v* ♦b'Onjith. «r- t- t dse-v »» scenic v have existed. The third mate took com- | of the story. My first care was to as- have foundered or burned or been driv- Iik 1 , 1 '- Market wry"utiii! mand. but was not a competent man, certain if such a ship as the Rising Sun j en ashore on the African coast. It is *
and the bounds of discipline were soon broken over by the crew. The passengers suggested this and demanded that, and every day the epidemic claimed new victims. The mate tried to make the island of St. Paul, bnt missed it. When 31 of the passengers and 13 of the crew had died, the latter rose in mutiny and deposed the mate and took general possession. No one could navigate the ship, and she was therefore stripped of her canvas and left to drive about in hopes of being sighted by some sail which would come to her relief. As the doctor was the fifth or sixth victim of the plague, it ran on unchecked until only about a dozen is-ople were left, and nine or ten of them were old sailors. Toward the last the victims were thrown overboard as soon as stricken down, and by and by no fresh eases were reported. There were survivors enough to have worked the ship to tho cape, or to have brought her to the coast of Madagascar, but the idea now was to possess themselves of tho treasure. Of the 30 gold hunters only two were left; of the other passengers only two or three men. They agreed with the sailors on a pro rata division of the wealth, and the nlan was to head to the north and
hail been lost in the year he named. In 25 years since she sailed away from tiie about a month I was satisfied on this rape, and no man can more than guess point. She was supposed to have foun- at Her fate. Was it fated that the sea tiered at sea, and what Lee had stated should have all those lives and that about her cargo waa found to be correct. J treasure, or was the gold accursed, as The chart ol the Indian ocean showed mkny believe? It wm lost and found the island, and I continued to invest!- ] ,, n ,i j^t. but will it ever be found again?
gate until I learned that there was an
English whaler named John Bull. 1 wrote to Messrs. Hurcourt & Sinead, her owners, at Bristol, and they in turn communicated with her captain, who was then on a cruise, and after many months I got a letter from him, written from the Falkland islands, in which ht stated that ho did pick up a sailor floating on a raft at the time and place ■named. The war was about ended when f had secured all my proofs, and then I started out to interest others in the story. Do you remember of reading stray
Way to Break I'p Vive.
Lincoln, March I.—In accordance with orders issued by Mayor Wier, every gambling place and disreputable resort here will be closed after today. The police will arrest everyone found in a prohibited resort and enter names correctly. Property owners renting places for prohibited pur|>oses will be punished.
Orchefttra ami t'lwru* .Strike.
Cincinnati. March 1.—For the first time in the history of the Grand 0|>era House an audience was last night dismissed and given hack its money. The
MARKET QUOTATIONS.
Y _.•**' *’ •••»> .p., t.J.
oil Feb. 28. ImlianapoliM.
Wheat — 5R<t54c. Corn—34eg 35c.
Oats-
C \TT!> — Po'.-.e'P':.«J0 hv'yJt' W’STtr
Extra choice shipping and export steers. (4.00(^4.50; good to choice shipping steers, (B.SOtgO.flO; medium to good shipping steers, (3.00(<?3.40; common to fair steers, $4.35ia 475; choice feedings!eers,(3.3r>(ff3..">0; gotsl to choice heifers. ta.on<.r.a.35; fair to medium heifers. (3.50(^2.75; common to light heifers. (3.n0«f3.3r>; good to choice cows, (3.7.>(i{8,00; fair to medium cows,
(8.15«/3.li0.
I loos—Receipts 3,000 head; shipments
1,500 head. Market active.
Good tochoice medium and heavy, (5 15
“Simplest and Best"
THE HRAN KLIN
•w rv es
TYPEWRITER.
VOICE, $60.00.
M5.17',; mixed and heavy packing'(5 i hi ,, Qlftini P. Has fewer part* by half, ? i*wihiiLl • and weigh* ie** by hau. 5.JU, .common lightweights, (5.05<g5.1.,; ! than any ()ther tyl) ‘, )ar ni ^ hlne *
Standard Keyboard—forty keys, print * ’ ‘ ‘ Alt i
items about The Imlian Ocean Treasure ( . hl)rUf) . k , m OIvh „ Htra demand* hack
company in the year 1867?. In spite of all our efforts the newspaper folks got hold of some things, though not enough to betray us. The company was composed of six men. all of whom had served in the Federal navy, and our capital was the prize money ami pay due ua at the close of the war. We bought from the government the bark Racer, which
pav and went didn’t get it.
on u strike when they
Farcical Trial of Corbett, Jac ksonville, March 1.—Champion Jim Corbett is on trial for his part in the recent prizefight. Opinion is that conviction is impossible. In fact, some parts of the proceedings have appeared farcical.
ights, (5.05(g5.15;
pigs, (4 75«/,5.15: roughs, (.'!..Vim5.iki. She El’—Receipts light; shipments none.
.Market dull and slow.
Gtssl to choice lambs, (8,50<23.75; common to medium lambs, (1.55<ft8.86; good tochoice sheen, ([email protected]; fair to medium ■beep. [email protected]; common sheep, $1.25@
1.75; bucks, per head, t3.06(23.00. t'lih ago Grain ami Provision.
WHEAT—May opened 60-60'^e, closed 50'. ■.<■. July opened ffl%o, closed AI;Lc. Corn—May opened 364,c, closed 36'jc.
July opened 37 Gc, closed 37Re.
Oats—May opened 3H'- > c, closed 3B}^c.
July opened 28c,closed 38c.
Fork—Feb. opened (11.05, closed (1103
May opened (12.10, closed (12.03.
LAUD—Fell, opened (7.30, closed (7.10
May opened (7.10, dosed (7.10.
Rills—Feh. oisMied (0.30, closed (6 15.
May opened (0 30, closed (H.33-26.
Closing cash markets: Wheat 57‘jc. corn 34c, oats ^s^sc, pork (11.02, laro
(7.10. riba #6 15.
ing eighty-one characters. Alignment perfect and permanent. Work In sight as soon as written, and so remains. Interchangeable parts. Con-
structed nilBAQI C I eutirely
metal,of UUiIADLLi tno best quality, and by tho most skilled workmen. Lnequaled for manifold and mimeograph work. Carriage locks at end of line, insuring neatness. Type cleaned in five seconds, without soiling the lingers. Handsome in ap-
pearance and character QIJ F F H V
of work. Speed limited Ul ttU I I
only by the skill of tho operutot e^’Send for Catalogne and specimen of work, A FRANKLIN EDUCATIONAL CO.
2BO A 252 Wabash Ave. CHICAGO.
