Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 28 May 1891 — Page 2
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THE Arizona Legislature has passec a law providing that a reward of $20( shall be paid for every Indian killed while carrying arms. The Atlanta Constitution protests that "this simply encourages murder. Few Indians can resist the temptation tc carry guns and pistols. Under tht "present law, designing white men will make Indians presents of cheaj firearms and then murder them in order to get the reward."
THE following instructions, giver to a jury in a recent libel suit at Jefferson ville, Ind., by Judge Ferguson, seem to us to be about right and fail •to both sides:
If the jury are satisfied from th evidence that the published state ment, as set forth in the complaint, is true, in such case the plaintiff is not entitled to recover anything, and tbe verdict should be -for the defendant but if the statement is found to be untrue, and it appears that the plaintiff has been actually injured thereby, then the plaintiff is entitled to such an amount as will fully compensate tor the injury done to him caused by such publication. If the plaintiff has not sustained an actual injury by the publication, then hchas nothing to be compensated for, and should recover only nominal damages.
It is the easiest thing in the world to assign to a rich man many millions more than he has indeed, it is usually the case, but when he dies and /his property is inventorized, thene is a
THE
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Published by MONTGOMERY.
iFIELD.
foot up, in the penitentiary 'is, 44,000 male felons and 1,80( /{'—entirely too many womex' ^oo few men.
ing the money. The British Parliar ment has just taken a different view, and in revoking a large number oi licenses has expressly provided for return of their price.
new immigration law came in
to force at the beginning of the month of April, just ended. Very important work has been done under it during the month. The inspection of immigrants has been more thorough than it ever was before, and a good many of those who were found to be undesirable have been debarred. At first the superintendent was over-cautious about sending back some of the steerage passengers who were legal, ly prohibited from landing, and several of the steamship companies tried to shirk their duty of taking them back but Mr. Weber has recently acted with decision in enforcing the law and the companies have learned that it will be enforced. All the paities concerned are gaining knowledge by experience. During the first fortright of the month the in-, spectors laid hands on very few undesirables, but during the present week they have been able to discover as many as ten or twenty of them almost every day, among them being criminals, paupers and incurables. The Secretary of the Treasury is now taking an interest in the enforcement of the immigration law, and Assistant Secretary Nettleton has been here this week, holding conference on the subject with Superintendent Weber. ihe law must be enforced.—K. Y, £iul 9
REPUBLICAN. THE NEW THIRD PARTY.
INDIANA
fearful slaughter among
the seven or eight figures which have been used to state his worldly possessions. A short time since John Plankington, of Milwaukee, died with reputed wealth of $10,000,000. He was at one time a partner of P. D. Armour, and was then reputed to bo the wealthier man. He had been tferifty and prosperous all his life, had met with no reverses. On the contrary, all his trades hac] turned out well. When his will was admitted to probate, his property was inventoried at $1,600,000. That is a great deal of money, but it is six times less than $10,000,000. It i:i possible that were the property o\ most men whose fortunes are put ai tens of millions inventoried at the price for which it would sell in two or three years, there would be a similar shrinkage. But it pleases a lot of alleged reformers to remark on platforms that two hundred men o\\ the bulk of wealth in the United States.
Union National Conference Cincinnati.
All doubt was dispell 1 as to the formaI tion of a new party when Ignatius Donnelly, of Minnesota, Chairman of theCoinmittee on Resolutions, with a dignity be-
E tendency of American court! fitting his words, announced that the comis hold that when a saloon-keepei ™ittee
had
become a unit for starting a
.. ii third party in the Nation without another
paj say $250 for license to sell li jnstant's delay. It was marvelous to see quor for a year the license is not the effect on delegates and spectators contract and may be revoked at an] alike. Fatigue and foreboding quarrels time within the year without refund vanished as if struck by lightning. Breathless and hushed, the listening hundreds waited as Donnelly continued earnestly: "We think we have performed a work that will affect the politics of this country for the next fifty years." That was enough.
The audience could contain itself no longer, but, with dynamite force exploded in a terrific thunder of applause.
A sensational feature of the proceedings following Donnelly's announcement camc after the platform proper had been adopted. A California man was the individual that nearly rivaled the classic youth of ancient renown who fired the Ephcsian dome. The Californian's name was G. W. Miller, and he was a Prohibitionist from the summit of his steeply brushed hair to the very bottom of liis boot heels. Apparently, nothing on earth could disconcert that Californian. Over a thousand thoroughly enraged and disgusted brawny grangers and mechanics turned on him as if they would tear him limb from limb,but he refused to budge an inch. He worked his jaw? without ceasing, though every syllable he uttered was- lost in the hurri cane of jeers and contumely. The Cali fornian wanted to thrust before the con. vention a resolution pledging the new party to the prohibition cause. The convention emphatically did not want to sub mit to any such process, But it had to. The nerve and grit of one man against a thousand carried the day and the people's party, before it was an hour old, was forced to go on record upon the youngWesterner'sresolution. The convention, however, instantly took its revenge. Like a vicious young colt, it kicked the resolution into kingdom come with a sickening suddenness and v-igor that must have surprised even Mr. Miller himself, though he managed somehow not to betray the fact. To-night it was reported that many members of the National Reform organization, headed by President W. W. .Jones, of Illinois, had withdrawn from the party because of the defeat of the resolution.
Possibly the picture that will be longest remembered by those who witnessed it will be that of the pertinacious Californian, but the unequaled display of enthusiasm by the big gathering at the joining of the blue and the gray with the black in the person of an ex-Union soldier, a Texan exrebel and the leader of the Colored Farmers Alliance. The significance of the incident was little, if any, marred by the fact that the third of the trio was of pure Caucasian blood. Ail through the rapidly succeeding hours the sceues and incidents from the first moment were of the most absorb)n nature.
The name of the new party, the "People's Party of the United States," elicited a magnificent outburst of applause, and as each plank was read the cheering was renewed so frequently that the great hall seemed to reverberate continuously. A resolution recommending universal suffrage to favorable consideration met with a rather chilly reception, but the one de .nanding the payment of pensions on a gold basis was roundly cheered. At this juncture a delegate objected that the platonn was one-sided for the Farmers' Alliance, but he met with little encouragement, and Mr. Schilling declared that the convention was here for harmony and for the new "Declaration of Independence.'' He annornced that the pension plank was left to the soldier member on the committee, with an inquiry whether it was satisfactory, and on his acquiescence it was adopted unanimously.
Mr. Davis, of Texas, a lank six-footer, in a light suit, who had electrified the convention after Donnelly's speech by a long, weird whoop of exultation, was conducted to the platform, and, to the intense delight of the convention, repeated the unearthly Indian-like thrill. Then he announced himself as an ex-confederate, and declared himself for the platform—every plank and resolution. An extraordinary spectacle followed. Mr. Wadsworth, of Indiana,an ex-Union soldier, rushed up to ox Confederate Davis, in full view of the convention, and the two one-time mortal foes grasped hands.
R. VV. Humphrey, of Texas, organizer of the Colored Alliance, which numbers over half a million members, seized with the inspiration of the moment, suddenly joined the ex-soldiers, and, amid a perfect cyclone of enthusiasm, a delegate moved the adoption of the platform as read. The convention went wild and the delegates amounted tables and chairs, shouting and yelling like Comanches. A portion of the convention, in thunderous chorus, sang, to the tune, "Good-bye, My Lover, Goodbye," the words: "Good-bye, Old Parties, Good-bye," and then the "Doxology."
In the forest of flags and State banners that had been gathered with their bearers around the trio, a Kansas man on the shoulders of two colleagues standing on chairs raised the Kansas banner and held it aloft just above all others. The tumult surpassing in its remarkable suddenness and vigor anything that had previously taken place in the convention, lasted fully
1
a quarter of an hour, till it ceased from the sheer exhaustion of the delegates. THE PLATFORM.
First—That in view of the great social, industrial and economical revolution now dawning upon the civilized world, and the new and living issues confronting the American people, wo believe that the time has arrived for a crystallization of the political reform forces of our country and the formation of what should be known as the People's party of the United States of America.
Second—That we most heartily indorse the demands of tho platforms as adopted
vMP?M
at
Fifteen Hundred Farmers' Alliance and Other Delegates Gather in Political Council—The Proceedings.
at St. Louis in 1889 Ocala, Fla., in ,1890, and Omaha, Neb., in 1891, by the industrial organizations there represented,summarized as follows: .4* (a)—The right to make and issue money is a sovereign power to be maintained by the people for the common benefit, hence we demand the abolition of national banks as banks of issue, and as a substitute for national bank notes we demand that legal tender treasury notes be issued in sufficient volume to transact the business oi the country on a cash basis, without damage or especial advantage to any class or calling, such notes to be legal-tender in payment of all debts, public and private, and such notes, when demanded by the people, shall be loaned to them at not more that 2 per cent, per annum upon non-per-ishable products, as indicated in the subtreasury plan and also upon real estate, with proper limitation upon the quantity of land and amount of money. (b)—We demand the free and unlimited coinage of silver. (c)—We demand the passage of laws prohibiting alien ownership of land and that Congress take prompt action to devise some plan to obtain all lands now owned by alien and foreign syndicates, and that all land held by railroads and other corporations in excess of such as is actually used and needed by them, be reclaimed by the Government and held for actual settlers only. (d)—Believing in the doctrine of cqua rights to all and special privileges to none, we demand that taxation, national, State or municipal, shall not be used to build up one interest or class at the expense of another. (e)-We demand that all revenues—National, State or county—shall be limited tq the necessary expenses of the Government economically and honestly administered. (f)—We demand a just and equitable system of graduated tax on income. (g)—We demand the most rigid, honest and just national control and supervision of the means of public communication and transportation, and if this control and supervision does not remove the abuses now existing, we demand the Government ownership of such means of communication and transportation. (h)—We demand the election of President, Vico President and United States Senators by a direct vote of the people.
Third—That we urge united action of all progressive organizations in attending the conference called for Feb. 22,1892, by six of the leading reform organizations.
Fourth—That a national central committee be appointed by this conference, to be composed of a chairman, to be selected by this body, and three members from each State represented, to be named by each State delegation.
Fifth—That this central committee shall represent this body, attend the national conference on Feb. 22, 185)2, and if possible unite with that and all other reform ororganizations there assembled. If no satisfactory arrangement can bo effected, this committee shall call a national convention not later than June 1, 1892, for the purpose of nominating candidatesjbr President and yice-president.
Sixth—That the members of the central committee for each State where there is no independent political organization, conduct an active system of political agitation in their respective States.
AN INSANE MOTHER'S CRIME.
Slie Hangs Herself and Four Children.
Mrs. Christian Pederson, a Danish wo man, and four children, aged from three tr ten, were found hanging in the cellar a their house, three miles northwest of Har lan, Iowa, on the 24th. It is thought they had been hanging since Wednesday night the 20th inst. The husband was sent the insane asylum about a week ago, and this series of murders and suicides show that his wife should have accompanied him, as she must have been violently insane, _______________
What is known as the Merritt conspiracy law, being a codification of the common lav.* on the subject of conspiracy to commit crime, the passage of which was the result of the anarchist riots in Chicago has been repealed by the Illinois House.
THE MARKETS.
Toledo Detroit
INDIANAPOLIS, May 27. 1991. GRIAN.
Wheat. I Corn.
Indianapolis.. Chicago
Oats.
Rye.
2 r'd 1 03 1 w68 3 r'd 99 lyetVJ 2 r'd 101 64yt
Cincinnati
St. Louis
1 w58 51
2 r'd 106
67
56 51
2 r'd 1 02
50
New York
2 r'd 1 15 111
78
Baltimore
67 /,
73
Philadelphia.
59
2 r'd 1 It
76
58
Clover Seed 4 20
1 03
51
1 wh 1 03 1 07
Minneapolis..
53
CATTLE.
Fancy export steers |5 40@5 8.' Good to choice shippers 4 75(a)5 21 Fair to medium shippers 4 00@4 5( Common shippers 3 40(g3 8£ Feeders, 900 to 1,100 lbs 3 60@4 1C Stockers, 500 to 800 lbs 2 75(^3 4C Heavy export heifers 4 4(Kg5 0( Good to choice butcher heifers. 3 5i)(a4 0C Fair to medium butcher heifers 3 00(a)3 3£ Light, thin heifers 2 25@2 11 Heavv export cowe 4 00(a4 5C Good to choice butcher cows... 3 40(3)3 71 Fair to medium butcher cows.. 2 90@3 21 Common old cows 1 50®2 5C Veals, common to choice 3 00@4 5( Bulls, common to medium 2 2502 5( Bulls, good to choice 2 75(§3 5( Milkers, good to choice 12 00@22 0( Milkers, common to medium.. .27 00^37 0(
HOG 8.
Heavy packing and shipping?. .$4 90@5 0C Mixed 4 75(0)4 8: Lights 4 30(g4 8." Heavy roughs 3 75(g4 21 Pigs 3 50@4 2£
SI1EKF.
Good to choice sheep and yearl
.*4 60@5 0(
Fai^to medium sheep and yearl
4 00@4 4( 3 00(^3 7 5 (X
Common sheep and yearlings.. Bucks, head MISCELLANEOUS.
THE NEWS OF THE WEEK.
Onyx has been discovered in Missouri. Minnesota trains have been delayed by caterpillars on the track.
Ex-Attorney General AlphonsoTaftdied on the 21st in California. Mayor Mosby, of Cincinnati has sat down on Sunday base-ball playing.
Margaret Mulhaney, who weighed G5C pounds, died at New York on the 25th. In three sections of Texas, on the 17th inst., hail storms nearly destroyed 24,000 acres of crops.
Two-thirds of the California fruit canning factories have been bought by aB English syndicate.
The 103d annual Presbyterian General Assembly convened at Detroit on the 2ls1 with a very large attendance.
At the Elks' convention at Louisville John L. Sullivan was declared not a mem ber of the order, and ineligible to it.
A chapel car, to be attached to railroad trains, with two missionaries aboard, was dedicated by the Baptists at Cincinnati.
Congressman Houck, of Tennessee, died on the 25th. He took a strong solution ol arsenic by mistake and died soon afterward.
A mob of young farmers strung up a six-teen-year-old boy, near Winterset, la., tc make him confess to cutting a saddle. lie was almost choked to death.
Judge Thayer, of the United States Circuit Court at St. Louis, has decided that trusts cannot compel firms bought out by them to remain out of business.
The city treasurer of Philadelphia, is chargcd with misappropriating §90,000 of city funds. He is also accused of having used £546,000 of the State funds.
Pete Jackson, colored, of Australia,, aru] James Corbett, fought sixty-one rounds al San Francisco on the evening of the 21st. The light was then declared a draw.
There were 254 business failures in thUuited States during the past week, as compared with 237 the previous week and 222 during the corresponding week of IS'.K)
President Harrison has issued a proclamation opening to public settlement about 1,600,000 acres of the land of the Fort Boitholdi Indian reservation, in North Da^ kota.
The deserted wife of Michael Welch, ol Pittsburg, started on foot to reach friends inNanceburg, Ky. Near Portsmouth, G., she gave birth to a child in a ditch by the roadside.
Miss Lucy McKeegan, of St. Louis, died Tuesday from Typhoid fever and want of medical attendance, her parents having resorted to the Christian science treatment to restore her to health.
For fifteen weeks the life of E, IT. Whitney, of Say brook, 111., has been kept up solely by injections. He swallowed carbolic acid by mistake and his stomach was burned out. He will die.
At Coffey ville, Kan., the postoffice was burglarized. About ?500 in stamps and the same amount in cash, all the registered letters and the money-order books were stolen. There is no clew to the robbers.
Judge Van Brunt, of New York, has overruled the demurrer of the New Haven railroad directors to the indictment charg ing them with keeping stoves in their steam cars contrary to the statute. They must now stand trial.
The Hessian fly has made its appearance in the wheat lields near Jacksonville, 111., in great quantities and is causing considerable alarm among the farmers. The hay crop will be a total failure unless rain falls very soon.
The liabilities of the Davis Shoe Company, with manufactories at Richmond. Va., Kennebeunk, Me., and Lynn Mass. are said to exceed 81,000,000. Hon. Joseph Davis, formerly president of the corporation lias made a personal assignment.
The U. S. Supreme Court handed dowr a decision Monday relating to the original package law. In effect the decision declares that the original package law passed bv the last Congress is valid and constitutional, and that it went into effect in all the States where prohibitory saws prevailed without re-enactment by the States of the laws by which they forbade the sale of intoxicating liq, uors within their boundaries, whether imported from other States or not.
.FOREIGN.
The Canadian national debt has doubled in the last twenty years. Baron Hirsch will buy five million acres in Uruguay as a site for the proposed Jewish colony.
In London, Lord Romilly and two servants were smothered to death in a fire in the former's residence.
A conflict between British and Portugese colonists, in which seven Portugese were killed, took place in South Africa. The British loss is unknown.
To celebrate the visit of the Czarewitch to Siberia, an imperial decree has been issued authorising the Siberian governors to remit two-thirds of the sentences and otherwise to ameliorate the condition worthy convicts.
There are five thousand prisoners in Russia awaiting suitable weather for their transportation to Siberia. The prisoners: will be voluntarily accompanied by their wives and families, numbering ten thousand persons.
An extraordinary case of juvenile precocity in crimei 3 reported from Oynne, France. The crirainal, a boy only twelve years old, named Maroe, has confeesd that he enticed a child of only four years into the woods under pretense of gathering flowers for him, and there, pretending to show him a fish in \he river, pushed him in and stoned him each time he came to the surface and attempted to climb up the bank until his exkausted victim was drowned
An Innocibti Bird.
Young Lady—"Tliat parrot you sold me last week doesn't^talk at all.1',. Dealer—"Yes'm .you1 said *you wanted one that wouldn't be a nuisance to the neighbors."—Hew York lyip hi
Mountain KaiWay.
The mountain railway to the summit of Mount Pilatus has basn successfully inaugurated, having an incline twice that of the Righi line, \namely 48 in
Eggs, 13 butter, creamery, 2l@Vc-, dairy, 20c good country, 14c feathers, 35c beeswax, 18@20c wool, 30@35c, unwashed, [100. The ascent of ®»090 feet is acgOcft hens, wc turkeys, 10c, toms, 8c clpvei complished in 1 hour ana 40 minutes. „4.75®5.00J
that anybody will boor bluo, Tobacco wl^en can get tf\e aeruiine
at
If has
it. "There's jorofit and pleasure tor in
OLD
W998S&
WILLIE WILKES.
Is a beautiful glossy black stallion, with smooth limbs, splendid action and is a trotter, five years old this spring. He was bred by W. A. Hanson of Connersville Ind. Was sired by Tom Rogers, Jr., record 2:31 by Tom Rogers 2:20: by George Wilkes, 2:22. First dam Maud H., record 2:34%: by Blue Bull 75
E E W A
Chestnut sorrel 15% hands high, of good bone and fine general appearance, good disposition, neTCi trained but a fast natural trotter. Heroward was sired by Ti andallah (Standard), he by Hambletonian Tranby, No. 3969, sire of 4 in 2:30 list. Hereward's darn though never trained trotted a mile in thre« minutes to a wagon. She was sired by Black Halcorn trial 2:40, he by Grey Halcorn 2nd dam by Goorgi Wallace. The above stallions will make tbe season at the feed and sale barn of Rock & White, Charlottesville, Ind.
WILLIE WILKES, at 820.00 to insure mare in foal. HEREWARD, at $10.00 to insure mare in foal. Persons parting with a mare bred to these horses or betraying them without our consent, forfeits insurance money which immediately becomes due. Ali accidcnts at owners risk. 19tf
S P&
riory equal at the. brice*
It won
whjile, to
HONESTY ToLacco, Louisville^/^n
Doctor Dental Surgery.
Office Corner State and Main Street*.
Residence Corner State and Flippe Streets.
Price* Reasonable.
GREENFIELD, IWDIAKA
J^ABY L.
BRUNER,
M.V.,
Diseases of "Women.
Beeidence, North Pennsylvania SI.,
9REENFIELD INDIANA Sltf
WARREN R, KING,
Dr,
PHYSICIAN ACT) SURGEON. OFFICE—In Gant'» Block, corner Pen® and Main streets. Residence, West Msds street.
GREENFIELD. IJTD.
J. H. BINFORD,
ATTORNKT.AX-UW,
GREENFIELD. IND.
$3800i
A TEAIt
The Cincinnati, Hamilton^ and Dayton Railroad is •he ®nly
4
Line Running Pullman's Perfected, Safety Vestibulcd Trains, with Dining Cars/, between Cincinnati^ Indianapolis and Chicago#
I undrrtakr to hriffn
tench any fairly intelligent person of ithi-i 86*. wlio
CHII
read and write, and who, I
after instruction, will work indiMtrtniiiiy, (llUK how to earn Three Thousand Dollar* VJJ.
Tvfir in thuir own localities,wherever they live.I will al»o furnisl th* situation ori-mp!oyin'iit,nt which you can earn that nmouui. No inoiiev for me union micceaRful as above. Kasily a»d nuii'l-1." learned. I desire but one worker from each district or county. I liavo already taught and provided with employnieiit number, who are making over $8000 a Tear each, ll a tu and SOLID. Full particular*
FREE. Address at orn-i'
K. «. AISLES. Box 480, Ancmta. Mulut',
Chair Cars
•JE on Day Trains and
"wn mtiiwX1*™.".
The
Sleeping Cars on Night
Trains
Finest on
between
Cincinnati, Indianapolis Chicago,
St. Louis, Toledo and
a.
Detroit.
Earth.
Chair Car between Cincinnati and
Keokuk.
M. D. jfoODFORD, President & general Manager. 0. MdCORMICK, General Paofengar* Ticket Agent.
3'. li,
...
ROCK & WHITE, Charlottesville, Ind.
if ennsyivania Lines.
1034
Eastward.
11-23-90. PITTSBURGH, PENN'A. For time cards, rates of fare, through tickets, baggage checks and further information regarding the runnlne of trains apply to any Agent of the Pennsylvania Lines.
W. IT.
SCOTT. A(i
KNT,
THOMAS
fc
Indianapolis Division.
Schedule of Passenger Trains-Central Time.
2 II AM| AM *7 20 +9 00 8 4010 38 9 24:11 26 11140 9 551153 ill 59
Westward.
iColnnibns
IT.*5
Urbana Piqua Covington Bradford Jc Gettysburg Greenville Weavers New Madison Wileys New Paris Richmond,... Centreville. Germantown Cambridge City.." Dublin S rawns Lewisville Dunreith Oldens Knights town Charlottsville Cleveland Greenfield P*adelphia Cumberland Irvina ton Intlianapolls.ar
828
1212 12f23 12 32 12*38
Greenfield. Indiana.
This Announcement
Is^for the benefit of the few people who have not yet learned that the
BEST BARGAINS IN
Dry Goods Groceries, Boots, shoes, Hals, Caps, Confectioncry, Etc.,
Are secured at our store. One trial wil3 convince yon that our goods are as low as thoy can be bought* anywhere. See our new line of 5 ct. Calicoes. Thi best that have ever been sold for the money.
It
JONES
J.O.BRANSON,
E
Jew Palestine Druggist
Keeps one of the Best Lines of Drags, Medicines, Paints, Oils Varnishes, Etc., to be found in the county and Prices as low as they can be made.
HIM 10tf
iiVe ftirnifth everything. We nturr you. No risk. 1 ou crni devote xrour spare moment§. or all your time to the work. Ihiniin Sntirely new kad,aiii brings wonderful Miccefl* to every worker. £)eirinner* are earning from $25 to 9?0 periyoek and upwarda* vnd more after a little experience. We can furnish yon the etnrlovmont and teach vou rKHK, No apace to explain here. Full information FUKiC. TRUE CO., AltitSTA, IKAlML liaabULJLUaiAtoM
Cofienmptlon Cured.
An old physician, retired from practice, having had placed in his hands by an EastIndia missionary the formula of a simple vegetable remedy for the speedy and permanent cure of consumption, bronchitis, catarrh, asthma and all throat and lung affections, also a positive and radical enre for nervous debility and all nervous complaints, after having tested its wonderful curative powers in thousands of cases, has felt it his duty to make it known to his suffering fellows. Actuated by this motive and a desire to relieve human suffering, I will send free oi charge, to all who desire it, this reefpo in German, French or English, with full directions for preparing and using. Sent by mail by addressing with stamr, naming this paper, W. A. Noyes, tor, N. Y*
1
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PM
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Nos. 6 and 20 connect at Columbus for Pittsburgh and the East, and at Richmond for Dayton, Xenia and Springfield, and Wo. 1 for Cincinnati.
Trains leave Cambridge Cityat.f7.00 a.nl. and f3.30 p. m. for Rushville, Shelby^!JjRdtfclumbus and intermediate stations. Arrive Cambridge City fl.45and 6-50 P-m* JOSEPH WOOD, E. A. FORD,
General Manager, General Passenger Agent,
,• 1.
v:\,
Wm
-.
1
Powers' Block, Hoch«s lOtf
t-
*1®
lip!®!
•IB
WILLOW BRANCH.
mm
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A CALL.
'can onrnrd nt OUT NEW Mri« of work. rupiiUv and honorably, liv those of eitlu*r vouitgr or old. And in their own local!ti#?i»#wUrrrver tliey live. Any one can do the work. h«ty to Irani.
