Democratic Sentinel, Volume 20, Number 27, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 July 1896 — Page 1
VOLUMF XX
Addisor Pabkison President GEC.K. lIOLIiINOSWOBTH, VicePresildent. Emmet ]Hollingsworth, Cashier. THE BANK OF EESaciJsLAEE, IND. Directors: Addison Parkison, James T. Randle, John M. Wasson, Geo. K. Hollingsworth and Emmet L. Hollingswerth. This bank ie prepared to transact a general Banking Business. Interest allowed on time deposits. Money loaned and good notes bought at current rates of interest. A share of your patronage is solicited. s*” At the old stand of the Citizens’ State Bank John Makeever, Jay Williams, President, Cashier. Farmers’ Hank, Rensselaeb, - - - Indiana. Receive Deposits, Buy and Sell Exchange . Collections made and promptly icmitted. Pioneer meat hirketT] BEEF, Pork, Veal, Mutton, Sausage, Balogna, etc , sold in quantitie sto suit purchasers at the LOWEST PEICES.— None but the best stock slaughtered. Everybody is invited to oall. THE HIGHEST PEICES PAID FOE Crood Cattle, J.J. EIGLESBACH. Proprietor.
Tb Indianapolis Daily and Weekly Sen! inelcirculation has reached immense proportions by its thorough service in reoaiving all the latest news all over the State and from its dispatohes from foreign countries. Every reader in Indiana should take a State paper, and that The Sentinel. LARGEST CIRCULATION Of any Newspaper 11 TIE STATE. TEBMB OF SUBSCRIPTION. Daily one year - - $6.0 Weekly one year - 1.0 The Weekly Edition Has 12 PAGES! SUBSCRIBE NOW And make all remittances to The IHDIANAPOLIS) SENTINEL CO; Indianapolis, Ind. This paper will be furnished with the weekly edition of The Indiana State Sentinel for $2 00. .A.. J. KNIGHT, Painter —AED — Paper Hanger. ISTOnly the Best work done. SATISFACTION GUAR ANT'D! Shop on Cornelia Street, Rear of Nossler’s Model. trsvctm g a^ d BUILDING Estimates Furnished Pp 'Short Notipe. COX BROS, S 9" Shop on Cullen Street, Northwest of Makeever House. Rensselaer, Ind. I
“Improvement ttte Order op the aoe," BTIHAHIi TTY great progress in mechanical art J Many Improvements Heretofore Overlookei b 7 Other THE FIRST CONSIDERATION. ' J llu ? tr “ ted Catft l°g n ? the SMITH PREMIER TYPEWRITER CO., Mailed on Application. 1 4 Monroe Street, Chioagc.
The Democratic Sentinel.
iIFKED ltCfll, T. 1. IcCBT, X. E. HOrtHS, Prusidoot. Cashier. iss't Cashier. A.. McCoy & Co.’s EENSSELAEE, «. - 'IND. The Oldest Ban! in Jasper County ESTABLISHED 1854. Transacts a General Banking Bu ness, Buys Notes and Loans Money on Lcng or Short Time on Personal or Estate Security. Fair and Liberal Treatment is Promised to All. Foreign Exchange Bought and Solo Interest Paid on Time Deposits YOUR PATRONAGE IS SOLeCITED. Having Valuable Papers May Deposit Them for Safe Keeping.' 4 * L* A• BUST WICK, , ENGINEER AND SURVEYOR,. Maps and Blue Prints OF mm ii mum. LAND DRAINAGE, Map Work and Platting a Specialty, Rensselaer Ind. Office in Odd Fellow’s Temple.
G . I*. KAHLER, EENSSELAEE, INDIANA, Bluknitlusg, Ira-Sung, Wagon-Making. * 3 nlent.ion given to repairing Msc 8 DcatingCastinar! in Iron ur Br»i •
J. W. HOETON, Oentist, Li 1 I I I 1 1 _ All diseases of Teeth and Gums carefully treated. Filling and Crowns a spe oialty. *9" Office over Post-Office, Rensselaer Indiana.
I SEND! f FOR OUR ♦ : Fail | | Catalogue ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ —the finest we have ♦ ♦ yet published — ♦ 100 pages, pro- ♦ J fusely illustrated. T + It will tell you all J + about the new + ♦ Fall and Winter + ♦ Styles in Men’s and ♦ X Boy’s Clothing, ♦ J Hats, Furnishing T Goods, Shoes and Ladies’ Cloaks. % and'Will be sent X ♦ free of charge. ♦ X THE HUB, I 4 The World's Largest Clothing store, & Slat# and Jackson St., ♦ CHICAGO. ♦ ♦ ♦
RENSSELAEB JASPER COUNTY. INDIANA FRIDAY. JULY 10 1896
Si*«* P. Thom m, D»rii J. Thonpsou, Attomey-at-Law. Notary Public. Thompson Ac Hrotliei* EENSSELAER, INDIANA. *9" Practice in all the Courts. MABION L. SPITLEE, Collector and Abstractor. *9” We devote paiticular attention to paying taxes, sellin.gand leasing lands. James W. Houtliit, Attornoj-at-Law and Jotarj Public. S 9" Office front room, up-stairs, over LaEue Bro’B Grocery store, Eensselaer Indiana. Halpli W . iMai*shall, ATTORNEY- AT-L AW, Practices in Jasper, Newton and adjoining counties. Especial attention given to settlement of Decedent’s Es< tates, Collections, Conveyances, Justices' Cases, etc. Office over Chicago Bargain Store, Eensselaer, Indiana. Charles E. Mills, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, | ", Eensselaer, Indiana. Pensions, Collections and Beal Estate. Abstraots carefully prepared. Titles examined. *9"Farm loans negotiated at lowest rates. Office up stairs over Citizens’ Bank. li*a w. Yeoman, Attornoy-at-Law, Beal Estate and Collecting Agent, Eemington, : : : Indiana. I. B. Washburn. E. C. English. ~W asslibax-n &. English Physicians & Surgeons Renuelaer , Ind. Dr. Washburn will give special ettention to diseases of Eye, Ear, Nose Throat and Chronic Diseases. Dr. English will give special attention to surgery iu all departments, and General Medicines. Office in Leopold’s Corner Blook, over Ellis & Murray’s. Telephone 48. W WHartsell, JYI. X)., iUonidopatliic Physician & Surgeon. Eensselaer, Ind. O’ Chronio Diseases a Specialty. Office in Makeover's New Block.
A. MILLS, AX, D., Physician & Surgeon. Office in Williams-Stockton Block. Eensselaer, Indiana. Telephone No. 29. T. X*. WRIGHT, Undertaker a embalmeß Kknsrklabr, - . INDIC”1 Maps of the Town of Bonsaelaer and of Jasper coudty, for sale at Long’s Drug Store
A STRANGE LAND.
Bfen Work by Lantern Light in’the Gardens of Madeira. The hills of tlhe Island of Madeira are cultivated from (base to summit, some of the finest vineyards and gar* dens being 2,000 or even 3,000 feet above the sea, writes Fanny B. Ward. The mountains, too, axe terraced to the very 1/ke a succession of steps. Most of these are natural terraces, three or four feet apart and from thirty to forty feet wide, and the people have walled them and planted thereon their grapevines, sweet potatoes, and sugar cane. There are hundreds of these terraces on our route between the shore and mountain (tops, some of them thousands of feet above the sea. We pass peasants at work In their poor little patches on the narrow shelves and marvel at the amount of labor and daily climbing necessary to such small results. So few and scant are the level spaces on this side of the island that even the thrashing floors are terraced platforms, often overhanging precipices. Up and down these fearful declivities men and women travel all day, bearing heavy loads on their heads, and always at a walk more rapid, more graceful and apparently easy than one often sees on the level roads of other countries. Each carries a stout staff, and sings as he or she trots merrily along. It Is a common thing to see men groping about their gardens with hoes and lanterns at midnight. One of the main Irrigating conduits is drawn from the cataract of Rabacal, where has been accomplished one of the most daring engineering feats of the age, The waterfall Is on the north side of the island, away up in the mountains, In a narrow gorge, and (has a sheer descent of 1,000 feet During most of the year it is a rather meager stream, slipping lazily down the side of the cliff. The ridge which here divides the northern and southern slopes of the central Sierras Is only about 1,400 feet thick, and a native engineer conceived the bold project pf tunneling through It, catching the waterfall in Its descent and making it flow to the north side where it is most needed. To accomplish this undertaking it was necessary for the workmen to lower themselves over the precipice, and thus, suspended in the air by ropes, 600 feet from the top and 400 feet from the bottom, pursue their perilous task, constantly drenched by the Ice-cold cataract. When blasting, the unrecorded heroes swung themselves to one side on the fearful face of the crag and held on I*7 fI,U7 i>uah Ofprojection tbul their Hands until the explosion had taken place. Several Wen were killed before the work was completed. At last a trench was excavated In the hard rock of the cliff, by which means part of the waterfall was intercepted and conducted to the tunnel bored through the mountain and thus reduced to service.
•‘A FIRM ADHERENCE TO CORRECT PRINCIPLES.”
Books and papers were formerly sold •nly at stalls, hence the dealers were called stationer*. Goal mining is pejrlmg one party of miners In the Yukon better than gold mining paid them. London’s common council has applications from 1.8U2 cricket clubs for the use of the 227 grounds at Its disposal. Cayenne convicts’ are escaping ia bands of 10, 15 and 20. Though many are recaptured or perish, some get back to France. Polk County, Missouri, business people are booming their own favored locality by having printed on their envelopes they send through the malls the legend: “The land of the redcheeked children.” One curious effect of bicycling in Bngland Is tbe elimination of chaperons out of doors. Young women, who would not have dreamed of riding horseback unattended by a groom, now go wherever they please alone on their bicycles. A remarkable quartet «f persons were the only guests at the Stewart House, Island Pond, Vt, on a resent Sunday. One of the guests was a doctor, one a clergyman, one a dealer In undertakers’ supplies, and the fourth a dealer In gravestones. A time-honored prerogative, of which no one exactly knows the origin, is enjoyed by the natives of the Spanish village of Espinosa, who, for centuries, have possessed the eurious monopoly of watching ever the clumbers of the ruler of Spain. A medical play by a doctor called “Hypnotic Suggestion; or, a Woman’s Vengeance,” was recently performed at an Odessa theater, the actors and the orchestra being all doctors, and the audience convalescent patient! let out of the hospitals for the occasion. The children at Bethlehem are told by their mothers that on Christmas e\e a choir of angels always sings above the place where Christ was born. Travelers say that on this evening scores and sometimes hundreds of children may be seen In the open air, looking up Into the sky, waiting to hear the angels sing.
Vengeance has no foresight.— Napoleon. A light wife doth make a heavy husband.— Shakspea re. O wind, if winter comes, can spring be Car behind I—Shelley. None but direct villains are mpabta of gratitude.—Pope. I love victory, but I love not triumph. —Mme. Swetchlne. Vices are as well contrary to themselves as to virtue.—Fuller. The useful and the beautiful are never separated.—Periander. A word spoken in season, at tbs right moment, is the mother of agam— Gariy le. The act of worship is among aU cesatlon Indigenous and peculiar to rwuL— Melville. A victory is twice itself when the achiever bringß home full numbers.— Shakspeare. Fear the boisterous savage of passion less than the sedately grinning viOala. —La voter. Gall him wise whose actions, words and steps are all a clear because to a dear why.—La rater. Parley and surrender mean the aanes thing where virtue ie concerned.—Mme. de Mainteuon. A willing heart adds feather to tbe heel, and makes the down a winged Mercury.—Joanna BaiDte. The morning of life Is like the dawn es day—full of purity, of imaginary, aau harmony.—Chateaubriand. Every green herb, from tbe lotus to the darnel, is rich with delicate aids to help Incurious man.—Tupper. When a man has no longer any conception of exoellenee above Ms own, bis voyage is done, he is dead.— Beecher. AU men, if they work not as In a great taskmaster's eye, will work wrong, work unhappily for themselves and you.—Carlyle.
The eyes of birds that fly by night are generally about double the sine of day birds. “AH birds court in the spring,” says Olive Thorne Miller, “although it has been discovered by recent Investigations that the majority of them keep the same mates for Hfe. Nevertheless, when that season comes around each year the male bird goes through the same demonstrations and makes every effort to charm his spouse anew." A Frenchman has invented a recording attachment for the piano, for the use of composers, by which each key, when struck, leaves a mark on a strip of slowly-moving paper. By means of this contrivance improvised music may be transcribed and fleeting Ideas caught that, perhaps, it would be Impossible for the composer to recall and commit to paper. Prof. Ira Remsen describes (ip go), ence) a curious case of the accumulation of ms,rsh gas under ice. A nupy skaters were on a large orttfHaal lake covered with Ice. in places white spots were noticed in the ice suggesting air bubbles. A hole was bored in the ice and a match applied. The titin jet of flame buret up and the gas was found to be marsh gas formed by the decomposition of organic matter at the bottom of the lake. Prof. Remsen suggests that Bbating ponds illuminated by natural gas are among the yisalbH ttfttf the future.
ODDS AND ENDS.
MULTUM IN PARVO.
POPULAR SCIENCE.
Church IMreetory. PRESBYTERIAN. Rxv. M. R. Paradis, Pastor. Sabbath School, 9 SO a. m. Public Worahip, 10:45 ». m. Junior Endeavor, 3:00 p.xn. Y. P. 8. 0. E., G:Sop.;m. Public Worahip, 7:30 p. m. Prayer Meeting, Thnreday, 7:30 p. m. METHODIST EPISCOPAL. Bav. E. D. Uttbr, Paetor. Sabbath Sohool, 9:30 a. m. Public Worship, 10:45 a. m. Olaas Meeting, 11:45 a. m. o-pworth League, Junior, 2:30 p. m. Epworth League, Senior, 6:30 p. m. Pnblio Worahip, 7:30 p. m. Epworth League, Tueeday, 7:80 p. m. Prayer Meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p. m. CHBIBTIAN. Exv. J. H. Brady, Paetor. Bible Sohool, 9:30 a! m. Pnblio Worship, 11:45 a, m. Junior Endeavor, 2:30 p. m. Y. P. 8. 0. E., 6:30 p. m. Pnblio Worehip, 7,30 p. m. Prayer Meeting, Thursday, 7:30 p. m.
DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
For .President, WILLIAM J. BRYAN, Of Nab'.'afeka. For Vioe-Preßident, SEWELL, Oi. Maine. State Ticket. Governor—B F. SHIVELT. Lieut.-Gov.—JOHN 0. LAWLEIt. Appellate Judges, FiTst Diatriot-EDWIN TAILOR. Seoond “ FBANK E. GAVIN. Third • THEODOBE DAVIS. Fourth * OBLANDO LOTZ. Fifth “ GEOBGE E. BOSS. Btate Secretary- S. M. BALBTON. State Auditor -JOS. T. FANNING. State Treas’rer-MOBG. CHANDLER. Att’y General-J. G. MorUTT. Sup. Court Rep.-HENRY WABRUM. Supt. Pub. Inst.—W. B. SINCLAIR. State Statistician—O. H. DOWNEY. Democratic County Ticket. Trsasurer—AMMON BEASLEY. Reoorder—JUDßON J. HUNT. Sheriff-FBANK FISHEB. Surveyor-ELWOOD SPBIGGS. Ooroner-DB. POTHIUBJE. Commissioner, Ist Dial. Wm. COOPER. ‘ 2d • JNO. STILLMAN.
Mrs. H. O. Boatwick visited her son, L. A., in Rensselar, this week, left thia morning for her home, in Batavia, N. Y a wreck on the Monon prevented the attend* anco of a number of our people at Lafayette on the 4th First new wheat on t£te Reusselaer market last Wedneaday, at 50 cents per bushel The Marklanna menageri at Bt. Louis was a half horse affair, the animal aggregation composing it so com' iletely under control of the pro* inetor that even a small “free and inlimited” Dear dance could not je produced Miss Louella McCoy has gone to Indiana Mineral Springs for treatment of rheumatism Rev.G. W. Payne, Frankfort, will preach at Bose Bud church next Sunday at 10 a. m and 3p. m. Afternoon subject : “What it is to be a Christian.”— Come one, come all, and near the gospel pleached in its purity.... ....Omar 0. Bitchey and wife, Anderson. Ind., are visiting relatives and friends in Rensselaer and vicinity Sherifl Hanley now occupies his new, residence.. Jake Eiglesbach ie being rested for rheumatism at Indiana Mineral Springs Gravel roads are being favorably considered by citizens of Union township Services at Presbyterian church next Sunday at tbe usual hours Next Mono day Rev. aad Mrs. Paradis will start on their usual vaoation for a few weeks. For four Sundays, it is expected there will be no services. On the fifth Su day Rev. W. F. Bischoff, the well known evangelist will occupy the pulpit, and following Sabbaths until Mr. P. re
tarns A chap named Mulligan was arrested Saturday morning about 3 o’clock as a suspicious character. Saturday afternoon Justice Morgan bound him over to the circuit court in the sum of SSOO Monday last Mrs. H, W. Porter returned to Rensselaer, from the Presbyterian Hospital, Chicago, returned to her home, in Rensselaer, much improved in health A. Reishling, of near Lee, is running an oil wagon m Rensselaer. ‘Barney’ Woodsworth has also started up in the same business........ Evert Now* els, wife and ohild, of Colorado, have taken np residence in Rensselaer.... ...,John Sayler is putting up a new residence on his farm a short distanoe east of this place # .Miss Edyth Kelley, Springfield, Ohio, is visiting relatives in Rensselaer Wash.
Lead Me To the Rock That Is Higher Than I.
—Sixty-first Psalm, 2d verse.
BY FANNIE.
Ob, Father! when cloudsgrow dark oversea , And the world aeema friendless and drear; When friends that I cherished and lov< d havo flrtd To othera that fairer appear— Oh amile through the olouda from Thy home in the ► ky, And Lead to the Book that ia Higher than I. hangs o’er like a oanopy And thorns Rtrew the pathway of life; When dark rolling wave* ’most shatter the bark With heaving, tnmultnons strife— Safe guide me through all with Thy kind watohlng eye, And Lead to the Book that is Higher than I. And oh, when the swift-winged messenger oomes To bear me from sorrow away, May my soul in peaoe asoend to its home. Deprived of its tenement olay, To the land of pure bliss, beyond the bright sky, And rest on the Book that is Higher than I, Lewistown, Pa., 185 G.
JOHN W. DUVALL, One of the oldest residents of Rensselaer, was born in Darke oouDtv, Ohio, January 9th, 1827, and after a protracted illness ditd at his home iu this city, Tuesday, July 7th, 1896, aged 69 years, 6 months and 10 days. He became a resident of Rensselaer in 1842, and was engager*, in the livery business, for many years prior to tht* railroad era oonduoting regular passenger and freight lines between this and neighboring towns. Married IlebeocaA. Anderson iu 1850. She died in W 57, and in 1868 married Elizabeth Kenton, who survives him. Funeral services were conducted by Rev. R. D, Uttter, under direction of Prairie Lodge F. <fc A. M. and Iroquois Lodge I. O. O. F., Thursday afternoon at 2:HO. Interment in Weston cemete.y.
Soott, sr., is quite ill W. C. Martinie, recently of Vermillion county, 111., has located in lienpselaei........ Miss Good, of Chicago, is visiting her aunt, Mrs. John Makeever, at this place.... ... .The work of demolishing the old court house is progressing rapidly Farewell services to tht ‘Old Ooqrt, were held in the court room Wednesday evening, under the auspices of the Woman’s Relief Corps, who charged a small fee, the proceeds to be devoted to oharitable purposes.— iddresses by S. P. Thompson, M. . j. Spitler, Judge Hammond, J. A. Burnham, B. R. Faris, M F. Chilcote, R. W . Marshall, and recitations by Misses Gail Wasson and ikiith Marshall were highly eDter' ;aining and well received. 8. P. Thompson’s remarks were of a I'emimscent character and will be given space next week On another page will be found some of the proceedings <4 the Democratic National Convenl|ife. The next President was plaoed in nomination, and on going to press it is announced that Sewell, ot Maine, has received the nomination for Vice President. A winning ticket, sure.
Don’t s for Mothers.
Don’t nag. ’ Don't be too severe. Don't break foot promises. _ Don’t neglect your husband for tbs baby. Don’t spoil the children by ovmMndslgeace. Doa't talk about the children in their hearing. Don't forget that yon were once a child yourself. Don't forget that your friends can hardly be expected to share your own absorbing Interest In your Infanta. Don’t claim that the children Inherited all their bad qualities from thedbr father and all their good ones from you. Dont forget that every child should be entitled to a happy childhood, that in later life you may not have tbe power or privilege of making It happy or guarding It from unhappiness.
A Frost-Fighting Machine.
A fog-making and front-fighting afciae has been Invented Mid need with ■oeoeea in the orchards about Ban Jose, Oah Fvowt la the orchardlst’s moat dreaded enemy, and heretofore when, one has been expected all available help has keen kept busy maintaining brush ttres about the orchards and vineyards. The machine is a furnace on a sled. Around the side* and on the top of the furnace is $ wire netting. Into which W packed straw and other material that will hold moisture. The sled ni«» earries a water tank, and the packing about the furnace Is very wet. The fire Is fed with brush and the smoke distributed from a number of chimneys. With the smoke and steaxu a fog Is produced which envelopes the orchard, keeping up the temperature and warding off fmat
NUMBER 27
HISTORIOAL.
I* the light of history Napoleon m, becomes a curious phenomenon. Bui bis morose Idealism pro red to Pnnog the greatest misfortune that ever vimlted It. Until 18S8 that country wan surrounded by nothing but Inonnse (joentlal neighbors. At the downfall of Napoleon it touched elbows with two powers of magnitude. To the hurt of his reign Napoleon nourished thn illusion that at Magenta and Sol ferine he had procured for France a mighty and a faithful friend. The phrase, “Driving a ooach and six through an act of Parliament,” eeouw in the “Memoirs of Ireland," published anonymously In 1718, but ootnnxmly at. trlbuted to Oldmlxon. In speaking of Stephen Rice, who was made Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer by Tamil IL In 1688, and was removed by Wittlam lIL in 1880, Oldmlxon say»< “lie distinguished himself by his inveteracy against the Protestant interest and the settlement of Ireland, having been often heard to say before be was ‘that he would drive a ooach and she horses through the Act of Settlement/” This date (oiroa 1886) is at least a ceu» tury earlier than the date popularly) assigned to the origin of the phrase. Coltsfoot, or the leaves of the lettuce, being Bllghtly n&roetlc, would form a harmless make believe for the good folk who persuade themselves thsy could not sleep a wink were deprived of their evening comfort. AgSS ago both Greeks and Romans, aooord* ing to Dioscorides and Pliny, found comfort in smoking through a reed os Pipe the dried leaves of coltsfoot, which relieved them of old coughs and dlfficult breathing. We can picture the legionary in Britain’s bleak atmosphere, while pacing tho Roman wall, trying to console himself in bis lonely) vtgli with the vapor from his "elphhh pipe,” fragments of which have been found among the ruins of those early) memorials to the Scots’ persistent determination to travel southward. And as to the lettuce, it has been famous since the ttme of Galen (Claudius Gar lenus), who asserts that he found reHes from sleeplessness by taking it at night.
It Was Nothing Extraordinary. One of the stock of ancient legends relating to the Rock of Gibraltar relates how a young Scotch subaltern was on guard duty with a brother officer, when the latter In visiting tha sentries fell over a precipice and was killed. When the survivor was relieved from doty, he made the usual form, "Nothing extraordinary." a«4 this brought the brigade major down upon him In a rage. "What, when your brother officer on duty with you bos fallen down a precipice 4041 feet high and been killed, yon report nothing extraordinary?” "Weel, sir,’’ replied the Boot, calmly, "I dlna think there’s onyfcbln* extraordinary In it. If he had fiallen down four hander* feet and not been killed—weel, I should bee oa’d ***At extromomr-"
Bn-Urf ten to to SOUTH. On July 6 and 7—20 and 21. August 3 and 4—17, 18. 31 and Sept I—l 4 and 10 Oot. 5 and 0- 1!) and 20, 1896. Homel Seekers’ Excursion Tickets may be sold over the Monon Route to po nts in the following named territory at rate of one first-class standard limited fare (plus $2) Bolling agent to oolleot one fare for the •San #* ri E fro “ P“»*fngors, the addition. 1 *2.00 to bo collected by agent at destination when execut ng tlcke- for return. Territory. All points in Alabama, Florida Georirt* Kentucky (south of and incluifc*Bow ing Green, Nortonville, Livingston and Somerset,) Mis issippi, North Carolina, Houth Carolina, i ennessee (except Memphis, and points withl 38 miles of Mam y/. rgini f followingpoints on 0* 5 °- By- Lynchburg, Williamsburg, Newport News, Norfolk end Richmond also to all points on N. & W RR. north or east of Radford. orm Tickets must be presented to agent at destination to be exeouted for return passage on any T esdayor Friday with'n mnit y n n fr ° m dat ® of Ba i e ’ and r«‘nm trip must commence on suoh date. r „J‘ oket * \° b * B°o<i irom starting point only on date of sale, and t- reqniro continuous passage going tfipto first point in Home-Beekers Exeursi n Territory en t?o U nwUw n * B ?° d then ?° to final deifinaoats 5° ,BR llmlt ot fifteen aays from date of sale, as punched in left L La^ gln «? f 00ntr,ct of ticket by Belling agent. Stop-overs will be granted on going trip on reaching first Home-Seekers’ Excursion point en route within extreme ° f fifteen days. RetumtTckets will be good for continuous passage only from point of destination to original starting point commencing date of exeouFRANK REED, General Passenger Agent
Sunday rates on the Monon: On® fare for round trip. Return ticket must be used same day. Mrs. Wils Porter has been taken to the Presbyterian hospital, Chicago, for a surgical operation. _" r heat 62 to 65; Corn 25i Oa. » a ? s9 00 Rye 80 a 2; Haj? 17 ' 50 —" 1 - j. HOLLISTER & HOPKINS. The new partners, but old millers, are now m fall charge of the Mowels mill,, aßd prepared to do custom grinding promptly, in the. best manner, and all other busi--ness tn their line. Give them & oall. Judge Healy’s is the place for l shoes—Gents', Ladies’ and Child, lien’s. Don’t forget it.
