Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 February 1895 — Page 4

VHE BANNER TIMES, GBEENCASTLE, INDIANA, WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 1.°.. 18M:').

piFiKiiEin^lgCK, ^ PLUG TOsiACGO

%

m

Consumers ofchewinj tobacco who are willing to paij a little more than the price charged [or the ordinanj trade tobaccos, will find this brand superior to all others BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.

B. F. .JOSbIN

4 ee the Iii)rlie8t Grade Brazil Bloc*

PERSONAE OPINIONS. THE PRESIDENT WARMLY INDORSED AND SEVERELY CONDEMNED. \ lews of Congrenstnr!) Warner am! Champ Clark “A ?.!an of Destiny**--Opinion* of Ilous. W. .1. Bryan ami »Ierry Simpfton. Ideas of a So ( ailed “Cuckoo.** | Special C ’orrespondt nee.) Washington, l'\ b 7. — Wlmt bind of a ninii is Urovcr CMcvt'lnnd anyhow? In what shape will he coiuooutof theprespat struggle, and how will he rank in history? It scums (piito strange that those questions should bo asked in the middle of a president’s second term, when the public has had six years of his administration to Judge from, and yet there has been no time, not even when tie was a candidate the tirst time, that the first lias been asked so persistently and received so many widely and 1 might say wildly contradictory answers. “It is just Cleveland’s luck,” says General Grosvenor, “for his most hitter enemies to put themselves in tiie wrong When all the country was down on him and many patriots were cursing his Hawaii,'VQ policy, the Chicago trouble came on, and ins action was indorsed by his severest critics. “ And when 1 circulate among the statesmen 1 find it hard to locate one who does not warmly indorse some feature of his administration, while most of them severely condemn something else, hut it also seems to be “Cleveland’s luc 1 .” tliat they are as far apart as the pole, in rticir reasons

for condemnation A View of Pinanoe*

"Why should 1 take the trouble to make up my mind about Grover Cleveland?" said fclon John DeWitt Warner. “1 did not make him and am not re-

»ncl the llest IMttsbinvh anil Anthracite. Coa yard opposite Vandalia freight otfice.

HAVE I

Done my duty to my family? Made them safe from the pangs of want? M ide arrangements to meet all my debts? Provided a future home for my children? Provided means to educate my children? Provided against the cold chanty of the world? Provided for old age? Provided for long sickness? Provided for death? Provided for funeral expenses? Insured my life! If Not, You should insure at once with J M. HEKLEY. over First National Bank

LUE.T&K&

'Biie E3alvorntcio

Can supply you with better BREAD

Than you can make yourself

and CHEAPER.

Get one of nis tickets and you will al-.il gel a llreail Box when the ticket

is all punched out.

TWO LOAVES OF BREAD

for five cents.

IKON LM I’K, CLUMBERS bl’I'IM.IES I’lI’E FI ITINGS, BRASS GOODS. Good stock on band. Repairing done

promptly. Give us a call,

Greencastle -Foundry & Machine Co.

JUNES F. FEE, INSURANCE AGENT,

PENSION : ATTORNEY

AND

NOTARY PUBLIC.

Pension Vouchers, Deeds and Mortgages, Correctly and expeditiously ex-

ecuted.

Ofile.^;!' C'eMtlal Bunk Building. Greencastle, Ind.

Low

f

HO, FOR MaRDi GH-Ab.

Kato Koimd Trip Ticket* 01

February 14 to 18.

Th* ('ii cinnud, ilnmiltoii and

fun r. ilioil will pi i on <;tle from Febr i t'V IH !o "J 1, inclU'ive hm rate ion t’ln ti> ki-Ic between stations ami V w Oileans, with a ivturii iiiuil of

M .rch t’ll.

T,,e splendor of King Hex. in his impe dal sway in the ( resceat City during Ine eni'nival days, is too well know n la need any extemled untiee liere. hill all wh lake advantage -if the low rates

wdl be sure of a pleasant trip.

For tiekets and full inforuuili->u, appL to your neare-t C. II. dt D. ticket

a.-ellt

HI.KI 1’KK AM> KEOLINING CHAIR CAN. I lie < iiirtimati. Ilaniilton ami Dayton r iilroad has add-d am-lber new «?hi for life hmetit of their ( imdiinati and ' .l.c-K-,>n\iile 11 n i-l. This --ar is one of the latesi <‘onil>inatioii sleeping ami eha'r ears ever built by any enmpany in i lie world. ■ii: l w ill •prove a w-1 .one additi-.n to their already |>er.ect s^p.

viee

d liis new ea will leave Cincinnati at 7 :dn l-. m.. arriving at 1 mln-nup-di • at! in:.'»r». ami Jacksonville, III., at 7:Bi|

a. in.

Tl-i-train is one of the favorites out of ('imdiinnii. aii‘l w ith the new equip in- 1 ' t will move doidilv acceptable to J the travelinsr pohlie.

I

Mo—on t-.v- iirsioiis Snath.

Op March 5. April 2 and Al'dl ltd tbe Motion route will >ell hiMnesi-ekers' tickets to various point* in Alabama. Georsria. Kentueky. I.oiiisia a. Mi-si—ippi, North and South Oaf,>|j *. Tennessee. Virginia and Florida at rate «>f one fare for the round

HON. CIIAMI* CLARK.

sponsible for him. No—that’s not quite correct. I did help make him what he is, and in a general way 1 approve his acta Tile great fault I find with him— in fact, the only fault—is that ho is so slow on this great issna He ought at the very start to have gone right at the real evil of the situation—the treasury notes—and recommended their payment and cancellation at once. Perhaps I ought not to blamo him for not doing what all our public men have been afraid to do. but the right thing to do is so plain that he ought to have seen it and proceeded to do it at the start. Now, the gist of it is just this: Our notes are out, and they are demand notes, and we are whining because people present them for payment. Why shouldn't they? They have a perfect right to, and our immediate duty is to pay them This country is aide to pay all it owes a hundred times over, and in the best money there is, and just as soon as we say so positively and go to doing it we shall

have all the gold we want. ”

"Will Cleveland he indorsed?” said Champ Clark. “Why, tiie Republicans have already indorsed him. They still grumble about his Hawaiian policy, but they have indorsed pretty near everything else that be lias personally engineered—the repeal of the Sherman law, the troops at Chicago, the war on silver and the struggle to hand over our currency to the banks. An to the Wilson bill, • they -m v turned down Senator Washburn, who voted against it, and put in liis placu I hat “Cute’’ Nelson, who | won PI nave wAuvl fur it -ml did vote | tor the Mills bill, and, it tliat isn'ii li-e j -trougest kind of an indorsement, overDay- | Haul your dictionary Furthermore, they nave virtually promised not to repeal it, and we know their majority in the next senate will stick to that. Oh, yes, Cleveland is indorsed, but just the same the people suffer, and the money power has

got us by the ears ” Ono Kind of Analysig.

These are but specimena Every answer runs it into finance. It is first Cleveland and the gold reserve, then the gold reserve and Cleveland, and though tiie talk may begin with ouch words as justice, honor and Hawaii it always ends with dollars One fact at least is certain about Grover Cleveland. Those who hold him a cheap charlatan or mere political accident are wilder, if possible, than those who esteem him the incarnation of financial wisdom and all the civic virtues Extremists on most issues are wild, but none more so than the.-e Accidents do not run all oneway for 'J'J years. A man does not begin at the bottom of the hill and slide to the

top by accident

We have in this country a large and rather unpleasant class of people whose favorite method of analyzing a success, especially a political success, is something like this: “There is really nothing in tiuu He happened to make a big strike because circumstance* favored him, and then the people thought ho could succeed at anything. He palled the wires just right, ’ etc. Such language about a man who became in rapid successlou sheriff of a great county, mayor of a great city, governor of the greatest state and president of the na-

trtp. Tickets good returning twenty

days irom date of sal'-. For particu-I tion, was defeated, remained a private l -* rail q t n J. A. Michael, Agt. ._ | --ittvj-n fonr years and then was re-eleot-

ed by an amazing majority almost justifies a writ do lunatico for the speaker. The silverites make no such mistake, and it is one of the interesting facts of the situation that they of all men should accord him high praise. “Unquestionably a very able man,” says Mr. Bryan of Nebraskr., “but he cannot escape the influence of Ids New York environ-

ment. ’’

A Variety of I'rai*e. “Cleveland is, ” says Mr. Sayers of Texas, “a man of distinct and wonderful personality, of very great ability. All the chances are in favor of his ranking high in history.” Several southern silver men say: “Cleveland is certainly a man of destiny. ” “Despite Ids many faults, he is the greatest personality of the times. ” “It reminds me of Jackson and the nullification times Just after Now England had exhausted her store of vituperative eloquence on him she suddenly went wild in his praise, gave him the grandest ovation of his career, and her big college capped the climax by making hiin a doctor of divinity.” “It is a case,” says Mr. Money of Mississippi, “where we admire a man who is nobly wrong more than one who is meanly right ” Many Republicans are equally strong in indorsement of his honesty and good intention, while they condemn almost every feature of his policy. Mr. McCall of Massachusetts sums np opinion on that side thus: “He is an honest man, with plenty of backbone, and anxious to do right, but not qualified by experience or native ability to point a way out of this trouble. ” Even the Populists are coming to believe in his honest intentions, but as they consider all New Yorkers and New Englanders raving lunatics on the money question they of course regard the president us the boss inouumaniac of the lot. They sum it up like this: “When a man says that silver has depreciated one-half while gold has stood still, it is conclusive proof that on that subject lie is incapable of reasoning and ought to have a guardian, and, as Cleveland believes that, we purpose to keep him nu: der guardianship as far as our power goes and not let him do any more harm than we can help. ” Jerry Simpson says: “The ono thing I particularly like about the president's message is this: It puts the alternative plainly while the national hank men in this Iionse and everywhere else are trying to dodgo it. Every sensible man must see that if the gold basis is to be maintained our currency inu- t be con traoted one-half, and we must sell our surplus produce at less than present prices. The farmers see it plain enough, and I believe those eastern goldbngssee it, too, but they won’t admit it. Tiie president sees it and blurts out the truth like an honest man, and by so doing lie has rendered the country a great service. The sooner we bring this tiling to an acute crisis the better. So the present situation just exactly suits me. ” The Tent of Time. After all these contradictions and half indorsements it may interest the reader to have the opinion of one who is recognized as a "cuckoo” of the unmixed breed. Hon. Josiah Patterson of the Memphis district has been from the start an unwavering supporter of every : policy of the president from the Hawaiian performance and repeal of the Sherman silver law down to the proposal to retire the $498,000,000 of greenbacks and treasury notes and issue fnOO.OOO.000 in bonds specifically made payable in gold. Ho says: “There is not a particle of doubt that Cleveland will rank in American history with the foremost of onr presidents, and the very reasons they bring to the contrary are to my mind the strongest reasons for taking this view It is first to be remembered I that the policy which bears the test of time is seldom or never the policy which accords with the passion of the hour. If you doubt that, consider that our presidents who were most violently assailed while in office have, with possibly one or two exceptions, been those whoso fame has steadily grown since thhir retirement. Washington may be counted as i an exception to general rules, as the : popularity he brought over from the j Revolution carried him through, but the opposition denounced his attitude toward France even* more viciously than they have tliat of Cleveland in Hawaii or any other foreign country The llnvo preB,atuxs li-u- J’y lived \c .tovn?* ) and tumult were Jefferson, Jackson and Lincoln. Jefferson was repeatedly ttiroatenen with death, and even t 1 '., vligions people wore bitter against him. j The life of Jackson was attempted once, if not twice, and he was otiee assaulted. Liucolu was constantly threatened and | finally assassinated. It is too soon to compare Cleveland with any of his predecessors, and I only cite these instances to show that current criticism | furnishes no guide whatever to the 1 judgment of honest men when cool re- i flection takes the place of present pas- I siou The Hawaiian policy was simply the rigid rule of honesty in individual affairs carried into international affairs, and history will so record it. “As to this money business, it is, as Mr Warner says, a plain ease. We should simply declare positively that we will pay our debts in honest money and go at it, and then we shall have gold enough. Our people—1 mean now in the south—will sell from this on 0,000,000 bales of cotton yearly to the gold nations, and I, for one, am determined that they never shall be subjected to a disadvantage in tiie exchange. It is like it was with the resumption of specie payments—the people suffered for years In the foolish dread of it, but when they made up their mind and went at it resolutely tiie trouble soon vanished, and prices rose above what they had liecn for weary years, lAid business immediately became active. It will undoubtedly bo so again when we act with reason. It is not the 5 per cent of gold tliat is lacking—wa have abundance and can get plenty more. It is the 95 per cent of confidence. Business is and must be doue largely on that confidence, or credit. Mr. Cleveland sees it plainly, and there is no fear but history will . fullv mstifv him. “ J. H. Beaxill

1

! WKHSTIIR’S INTERNATIONA L

fi

i 1 Abrea.

{ ' A Gp’anJ EJutaf 'r.

SnHr o^ m „ DICTION A RY

Succetwor of th e

** Unabriilgvd.” Standard of the ! > U. S. tinv t I'rint- i; injc Office, tbeU.8. Supreme Court and of nearly all the

Schoolbooks.

Warmly commended by every State Superintendent of Schools, and other Educators almost without number. A College President writes: “For “ rase with which the eye tlnds the “ word sought, for neeuracy of definition, for effective methods in indi- “ eating pronunciation, for terse yet “comprehensive statements of facts, “and for practical uso as a working ‘‘dictionary,* Webster’s International’ “ excels any other single volume.** Tbo One' Great Standard Authority t So writes lion. I). J. Brewer, Justice V. 8.

Supreme Court-

G. S: C. MERRIAM TO., I'uTdishcrs, SpringGelel, Mass., U.&.A. ay Send to the publishers for free pemphlet. u.r* l>o not buy cheap reprints of am u*nt editions. V t'V****%**%***%%%*%%**%*%%%%v*%%%4 I

family, and I

to get it. Undoubtedly il is the

I presume we have used over one hundred bottles of Piso's Cure for Consumption in my am continually advising others

Best Cons'll Medicine

I ever used.—"W Dec. 29, 1894.

C. Miltenberoer, Clarion, Pa.., —I sell Piso’s Cure for Consump-

tion, and never have any rrm,. , ,

£

laints.—E. Shorey, Postmaster, horey .Kansas, Dec. 21st, 1894.

The Best Cough Syrup. 1 Tastes Good Use m tune. I Sold by Druggists. |__ 33ZSS23iIZI33|l|l

REMEMBER THAT

g. m

Will supply the people with flrstclasGROCERIES at the lowest living prices. 1 also keep a full line of Glasswaie and Qiieensware. Decorated Din ner Sets, owls and I’itehers, and Tin ware of all kinds. Salt by the barrel. I keep a line line of To let Soaps. All kinds of Fruits, Nuts and < andies fm Holiday Trade. I.u>i but not least, will give with every box of Maseott's Bsk ing Powder—prire 25 cents—a child, quadruple silver -et, embossed knife fork and spoon. Just the tiling. J. W. Moore, . Siile Square. Abram'* OM Srnn11 44-3m

CITY DIRECTORY. C ITY OFFICKH8.

day or. frcamirer Clerk Marshal Engineer Attorney *ee. Hoard ol ID allli.

Jonathan Birch John Gilmore .ooin-.s M. Hurley William K. Star* Arthui Throop Th •mm* T. Moore

.Kugcne Hawkins M. I)

J. MERKLE THE TAILOR lo lii* old stand above the West«rn I ni i Telegraph <ifflee. All of >on who wish tailoi ing done bring it in an\ time during th A ook. No work done on Sunday. MlwmK cash All work left over days ex’ra chart' v7-8rn

ONLY $20 ONLY BIG FOUR MILEAGE! Accepted for pa^s^^re t»\ Q C DIFFERENT TRANS- O JC OU PORTATION COMPN’s OU Me sure and ouy a “litir Four" ticket. You will save lime and money. The following "Tr>iii-<|>ortatl<>n Companies" will accept “Hit; four" MileUBO: Baltimore & ' Milo. (for throuirli passa/e between Indianapolis and Louisville.) Dai 11 more and I ihio'Sout ii west, rn. (Lor throiiah pas-aire hrtween Indianapolis ami Louisville.) Chesapeake A Ohio. For through piiHsairc between Cincinnati and Washington, I). C, Chicago A Eastern Illinois, bet. Danville and Chicago. Cincinnati. Hamilton & Dayton. Cincinnati, .lackso & Mack naw. i incinnali, Lebanon A Northern. Cleveland. Canton A Sou hern, i levelund. I anal n A Win e ing. < li velandi ButFalo Transit ». I oltitnbus. Hoi king Vall.-y.V Toledo. Colpnibus. Sandusky & Hocking. D . ,4 Union. Dnv’nllA , v ' hind Steam Navigation Co I'vnnsvlll'; 4 Terre Haute. Goodrich Fine steamers, II Inois C' n,r 'd. between Kankakee and tndiiuuipod®. Decatur A Western. Louisville* Lvaiisvnle A St. Louis Consoli dated. Louisville, N ew Mhanv A < Mongo N. w York. ‘ htcago A -I Ismls. Peoria D.’oDtnr A Evansville. Peoria"A -Pekin Union. St. louts \pon A err,• Haute, st Louis Terminal Railway. Toledo A i ibid Central. Toledo, st. I o l| fa A Kansas City. Wheeling A Dike Erie. OM v t Ill's AND IKANsFEK COMPANIES: Cleveland Transfer Co. Cineinnati Railroad On nihus Line. Columbus, O.. Transfer. Davl'm Transfer t o. frank lllrd's Transfer Co.. Indianapolis. I'armrlrf* Transfer < o , ('hien o. Venneman's City Transfer Co.. Evansville. D. li. 'I vnri <. Gon'l Pass. A Tleket Agt. K O. Mo< okmiur. Passenger Traffic Mgr. Ill , FOUR ROUTE, < Inciiinati.

imagination fools our pocket books once in a while. For instance many people imagine it is impossible to buy a piano—good, honest, tirst cbi-s piano— for less r.iiiHt $100, or $000; ih d’s just w bore iheir imagination fools them. \ As mi example look at the piano in niv j shot win low. a STU Y V ESA NT th.-il I

sell for

^330.00 (’H’ 4 ''. or I'nr Jf*25 nmn* In ipnntM v piiv- j in* nis of *l<>. KKniniiu* ii uarefullv. j rri t i«-i 11 \ : ><•« iis si/«*; 4 Ii Bin hi^h. | Ihiuble miceml cone, pure rich tone, Frnr'h repent mg act inn, Jire year a nuar- j ontecrl. If a prt*rlt*ss piano phn »m! in ! lilt* I'rarh id’ t}i»* people at a popular! prioe. < ertaihlv the siool and a >earfj and a year’s free Inning en with (he j piano, spe /!ig Intrt/ain Goads are go- > inir lik** hoteak« >. Siill *ome h It. Call in and inspect them, e>pceia!ly th line

of Organs.

F. C. Nevvhouse, Successor to K. Marquis.

Travel Is best accommodated in the Through Pullman Buffet Sleeping Cars rteming over the lines of the LouisvUe & Nashville Railroad.

DisfinH Ul ;*lcvl •-> r\ CN.VV. .Su-SoN-ViLL , Ky., PVV, JR —Mrs. Milton Ramey of Lyon county met with a terrible death from the effects of being attacked and gored by a c'»v s’to wamilkiug. The animal, winch had been j considered gentle, bouanie enraged from some unknown cans. 1 , and, turning sud- I deuly o i the womiin. knocked her down j and, ripping open her abdomen, com pletely dise doweled her. Mrs. Ra | mey’s cries for help brought her hits . baud to tier rescue, but not in time to save her life. Snow l»i *outh Carolina. Columbia, Feb. 13.—The snowstorm which commenced Monday morning is still raging, with only a- few hours intermission. It is 10 inches de“p on the dead k ve.l and is »wo or three feet deep in drifts, something unknown in tins section of South Carolina heretofore. Khi*riff'’rt Son Initiated, Mount Stf.blino, Kv., Feb. 18.—The grand jury has returned an indictment against Charles S. Ledd, son of the sheriff of the county, charging him with being a party in the lynching of Tom Blair. This makes the third person indicted. Flub n Ham tged. Buffalo, Feb. 13.—Fire in the wholesale fish warehouse of James H. Dormer damaged the building and contents to the extent of sjtf.jJKlO; insurance, .i.5,0(10. The origin o< the fire is not known. Rill Cook O^tn Forty-fly* War*. Fort Smith, Ark., Feb. 13—Bill Cook, the outlaw, was sentenced yesterday in the United States court to 45 years in the penitentiary at Albany, N. Y. Moderation. Too much of Joy is sorrowful. So cares must needs abound. Th« vine that bears too many flowers Will trail upon the ground. —Alice Cary.

0 R I D A A N I)

This line runs double daily (morning and evening departure) trains from Cincinnati, Louisville, Evansville, and St. Louis to the principal Southern cities. This line affords two routes to points in the Southwest, via Memphis and via New Orleans. This line has double daily sleeping car service to Jacksonville, nnd the only through line of Sleepers to Tbouiasville and Tampa. This line has three daily trains to points in the Southeast. the passenger cipupmetit tf this lice is not exctlicd in the South.

T H

E G

U

L. F n V

0

A

COUNOIDMKN. i ,Ht Ward... Tin trims AbramB. I. B. Handel ; ind Edmund I'ei kins, Juinen Iirid|f<>8 Jrd ’’ John KHey. John K. Miller StreetComutiBHlotii-r J. D.Cutler Km Chief Geo. B. Cooper i A. Bruckwtt> . ) >lis. Mary Itireh, > School Trustees. ; ij. L. Audersou, j i. A. OtfK, Superintendent of Ity Schools. SOKK8T HILL CIM1.TBKY HOARD OF IHKECT*

0118.

J - 8. McClary Pres lohn < .Browning v Pres J. k. Bang-don Sen H. 8. Heniek Treas I hiiuh Dagjfy 8uDt B. E. Blaek, A. O. Lookridfre. Meeting IliHt Wednenday niKht each month ] t J. S. Met Ian ’s 'tfflee. SK( KKT S()< IKTIKS.

i. o. o. K

OHKKNCAHTLK LODOK NO 348. '■ G L. M Hiinm. Meeting nigliiH, every Wednesday. Hull' in .erome Allen’s Hlock. ili-d floor. ’

PCTNaM l.OIlliK NO 45.

John Kellar n a

a. b. Phillips

Meeting nixliis. every Toesdi*vi Itiili in

eiitral Htlonal Dank liloek.Brd floor CASTUt CANTON No :i<l. C. M. " J. A. Michael

'has Me.kel . ... .'.V Hisi and third Monday niaiits of each

uonth.

Oltr KNCASTI.i: KNCA M CM KNT NO. 59. I. .1. lord r P Uhas. It. Melkcl ... ... ^eritie 1 irsl and liiild Thursday*. 0 u BKB H|VK 1.0UGK. NO. 108, I>. H. flrs. . I- K* rr x o U. E. Bin Iyer M'-eiina nlahis., . i-ry Snd and 4th Monday “each'ienih. Hall in cmral Nat. Hank ouildlnx, flrd floor. on iKNCAsri.K uiDOk -.’ISto. n. o.oro k .leromc -inltli \ f) 1 lire- Alston ' " p i Meet* (lr*t and third Mondays.

M soNlr,

MTNKHVA CllAPTKH, NO. 15. O. t. S.

dr*. Ilieks,,n ,,, y *tr . In . H.m kins . . . ... sec

Kir.i Wednesday niirhi of each inoiith UHKKNCASTI.KCIIAPTKH. NO 32 |( a m

Frank H. I anrneis ... "o p .1. Mi*It. nays 'j * s.-eond Wislni -day niirlo Vd Vacil inV.inii ' '

TF M l*I.K UU.OK N.,.47, K. AM) A. M. '

terse ioentodson m u

<■. it. Hu lee 1 lord W, dnesday night of each month " ClIlFtM ys-ri.K eo.yiMANDFHV. NO. It K T

< hrlst.an IMahler ’ K T. „ i. Met). Hay s “

Fnuri h Wednesdav nltrht of each morith

HOOAN miKIK. NO. tfl. p. A A. M

'-W.lHln Meet* aeeond and fourth Tin sdavs WHITE 1,11,Y cnAPTHt. No.:) o V a Mrs. M. Florem e Miles.. yt- .. Mrs. M. A. Telster ™ Meet* aeeond and fourth Miinrlitya ‘

KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS. , KAO'EUIDOE NO. IK.

r. It. ► vans c r>

G. II. Hiilcefat I’annkr Times office] - Every Friday niirhi on .Ird floor ovc

Ahniins store.

... ., ,, OHKBNCASTLE I.IVIstoN p. R. w F.. Starr H. M.Smith C {9 First Monday Iitirhi of each inentli! ’ *

A.n. u. w.

COLT.ROR CITY LODGE NO. 9. Iflcnard 1 hsowuv w . v H I'hlllles Second and 4th Thiiradnvs of i nch month u o . t _. dVOItEE OE IfONOK. Mrs. It. L. Higpri n 1 li fle Marti third Frldava ofeachtnnnth Hu *n»r' floor rity Hull ttlnok. M1

ttFD MFN.

OTOE TRIBE NO. 140. nS; “■ niock/' Mnn,, " v f't'i In wmoron'.

over Thoi

Winter Tourists’Tickets at low round trip rates on sale from about November 1st, good till

May3tst.

Full information cheerfully furnished upon applicailou to . GtO. L. CROSS, N. W. Pass. Agt., Chicago, III. C. P. ATMORE, Gen’l Pass. Agt., Louisville, Ky. xl

Write for description of

THE GULF COASl

ROY A I. ARPANUM. ... t*CTtTS COITNCII. NO. 329. ; Ifonrv MnDzor ........ |c CbH**. Ijfinff«'8. .. gj ” vte<T7r:'g'.Ha /h.' ',;!;,7 h each mon.^ KNIGHTS OK IIGNOR. ,1, . .. VIVSTIC TIK I.OIX1K. M). tCIfl. W A Howe Dictator J — ! : - •- _ G li. .. .. <»•*'> r.'KT.ASi I.r »*A k Kt». li. ! lenry MfPzf*r.. Jntn< s 'I'. Di-nnv N ' w m. II. TuirKt ’ o -M I'.iO M. i.d.iy , ..tong .it iti.lj corner Vm. mid *„*„„,* s., e. V*. Cud ri«»nr. * woman’s hi.i.ilf coups. Bniilga '’..hu’uh.H Prs « >hu I.-Mm lit oh ItMm iifi> Trfti« Meet intrs ever} second and fourth .Monday ai ■-•:3)ip. ni.G. A. It. Hall. . KN Kims <>F MAI CABERS. fiH! KM AH| | '. 1 |. N | vo. H8. A. K. ! n u ii!iig-..... sir Knight t nmmandcr ■ ( hi In nan. ^1 Knight Brcord Ki*«*p(*r B « fvrry Wedni'hday night G. A. K. hall

Wlmt »•< th«* Murk of in** K To IC«» From th« ISlood hk I inpni it i«‘h. I lip pr-Hin ts i>! cp|' - vNhich Iihvp hppii burnml up in iMving mijrth to thp Kvcry pai tirlr of MoimI »n tilt* Iwaly through In* khliipyr* Hvury thn*p ininiitt*^. ;n H if tlipnp ortrans aiv iiiiahh* to perform tl-oir work fully, sooner or later tin* >t< a tn U pt isi licit. I rhen-fon*. * , S ;i n .Bik” i- ih»* itdicatpH ! hlood it met ly K< r I *\ U m. \V. •I('ih*s. Ask ^ mi. sD ii**^ fo honip | rpf**r»*nri*«. HA* w 1\ i .’!(J-4S ,

t I t-1 r, } H—) 1- 2 4—2 R—2

«

7-2 2- 3 1—8

HKK ALARMS.

Collfgi h\t and l.lhrrty st.

Indiana and Hanna. Jacknon and Daggy. Mndiwon and B B. i i v.

•») and B Im i ty.

Mndlaon ami \\ mmiui. Hanna and ( row n.

Blooming^ n and Anderson. m ininHij and \i bngton. Wa8‘ Ington, rant of Durham. v ab-liMigton and Bouuat.

IB warn and Crown.

<>1 h. and Main.

8 Coll* gi-avi-. and DrMntte alloy.

•»—8 Bocust ami Swan ort*. ^—1—2 Bupuat ami Seminary.

1—2—i Fl it ou»

< <»l N'l Y om< Kits.

Yiimhilm fanc This line ys ill nt

Horn M’tker.’ I xcur.ion. I’l.ei. 1 )''r'|"» 1 o„all.

Ifi".

o. M. Black. M. Hid* wi ll.

tic

’: H .'' ,, (Vnr!:r t -

cokers’ cxein-s (It,s to |ioh t' in the fol- 1 t ''[■ I von.

I*‘Wing state* : ()n F ell Louisiana, \ikae-.-i-, i I ntl'iili Ten itin v. low , -onii. NeLra-ka. \ov llOltiM. S- III h I Li Ola. r. \ sfinia. a il " \ oinii u ; vptil 2 ttiiff 30 io l,i

I 2 In \ i i/ona. I l ailo, I'litiio,,

Auditor Sncrtff Treasurer

(’Is ik

Recorder stirveyoc School Superintendent

oroncr

A ssesror

Sec. Rimrd of.Health

K lenbub.

Win. Hr adstreet, . W Re- oe. M. !)., ( D. Hurl. )

K n -.-is. Mis-j wtnuol I arnier, [commissioners.

, • . . .laineHTulh.lt, V

m■ xts’o. okia 1 ;

- Utt}h Vtf-1

ti Mat. |i 5 ! Mis t'oai- Kxcuridon West.

ilia Floriiltt

Fch. 12 we will an-as. i olorailn

II to Arizona, Arklilalio. Inilian terrl-

Geoigfa. Ki lit llek.V . Mi--I- t||ii South

< atoiiiiH. I'lii-.ie, N'iiginia huiI j torv. Ka >*»*. Loiii*iniiR. Missouri, Ne-

fare for | I'r.i-ka. New Mexico. OkiHhoniH South

Dakota, Texas. Utah. Wyoming, rate one fare plus $2. Return limit twenty days, I F. P. iiuKSTts, Agt.

Louisiana. Laic*, ahont one

roinifl trin. 'Ivventy ihiys limit. For

fiirtin r particular- see J. S. Dowling. Agent.