Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 31, Number 38, Jasper, Dubois County, 7 June 1889 — Page 4
JASPER COURIER
FRIDAY JUXE 7, 1889 I Kettle at the rWftWt Jasper Indian, for treetleaiea lltroaRh the mall ein4.U Hiltr.l TARIFF UISFOllM MEETING JASPER, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12th, Hon. M. W. Let, Secretary of the Indiana Tariff Reform League, will adddres the people of Dubois countv, at the Court-house, on June 12th, at 3 o'clock p. in. The people, irrespective of parly, are invited to be present, as the National platforms of each party pledge it to a reform of the tarifT. and the object is to organize men of all parties into a League, to assure these pledges Mug carried out, by cither party which may be in power. COUNTY SUPERINTENDENT. Mr. Geo. IS. Wilaen Elected. The twelve Township Trustee of Dn
bois county mat, with the County Auditor swept to destruction and death with their as Chairman, as a Board of Education.ihrniaia. which wore Ummad together in
with closed doors as the law direct, on Monday, to select a County Superin tendent to succeed Prof. A. M. Sweeney, who has served the county so long that it was hard for some to believe that he would not be chosen again notwithstanding his declination. There was considerable interest manifested by the teacher of the county generally, and by a few others, and tome effective electioneering indulged in. The contest, before the Board met, had narrowed down to two caudidalea, Itev. Sampson Cox, of Jefferson townshin, an excellent teacher, and leading minister in the Christian church, and Mr, George U. Wilson, of Jasper, also one of the leading and rising teachers of the couuty. and for aix year p to last Fall, the County Surveyor. Each aspirant was well qualified by education and experience for the position, and each are good Democrats, of course. The first ballot resulted in a vote of aix for Wilson, five for Cox. and one blank. The second ballot resulted ia a tie vote each one receiving six. The vote of the townships was said lo be as follows: For Wilson -Boone. Balnbrldgs, Marlon, Jackson, Ferdinand and Cass. For Cox-Columbia, Harbieoe, Maditoo, Hall, Jefferson and Patoke. As the law in such a case make it the doty of the County Auditor to cast the deciding vote, Mr. (iramelspacher voted for Mr. Wilson, and he was chosen. We predict he will make a satisfactory Superintendent, as hi experience will lead him to cut off those whose papers show they are incompetent under the law. At present it is known several hold licenses who could not obtain them in another county, and it ia generally thought sympathy and "peculiar circumstances" bee favored them as long as profitable for the edneationil in tares ts of the eonnty. So be it. We congratulate Mr. Wilson on his ucces.
a,,. .Vr:!1- " r 0 .refl inf,,,BIeraI people say it is the body of Miss Ida
n , ... . . r Vir i..-T Vfc. "nf or irje eurp us in me ireasury in conI ST "W m fr P""101,18' H !?f ,rUTi,lb"7PUirp?? 10 l! all just pensions, and to doit promptly, Whether our' next pension appropriation bill snail he increased from eighty to ninety millions, or from eighty to one hundred and sixty million dollars. The surplus can take care of itself; and those who need pension cannot." This has the merit of being honest, and iinleae Congress interferes we may be sure that Tanner will pension every nan who saw a flag or Heard a drum heat during the war. Evaasville Courier. . An exchange, well posted on the subject, remarks: "Bury the croaker out In the woods, in a beautiful hole In the around, where the bumble bee bumbles, the wood pecker pecks, and the straddle bug straddles; he is no good to the city or push, too unpractical, stingy and dead, but he waul the whole earth and all the erust, and the star that shine over his head. Then hustle bin off to the place of the dead, and bury him deep in the ground ; he's no use to ns here, get him out of the way, and make room for the! man that is sound." j A Black Snake in the Malls. ! The mall clerk on the Burlington and Council Bluff division of the "Q" was treated to a scare a few days ago, While the train waa going at the rate of thirty miles an hour a black anake forty-two Inches long crawled out of a mail-bag and showed tight. It was prornptlr dispatched, The reptile had come from a pasteboard box. The box was addressed to Miss Smith, California, Ia.,ind was nailed in Kansas. KrPraotical tests this season in pot series at Evansville, Louisville asd HuntJngburgh have demonstrated bevond Suestion that the potters' clay around aeper is of a superior quality-making the very best of ware. A pottery here could obtain this clay at a nominal expense, and as labor and taxes are both low It would seem such an enterprise eotild be made profitable in Jasper. Our citizens , too, would give it a liberal encouragement. Who'll atari a pottery ? Utl ..... wnen ine itev. Mr. townsevd. a young colored preacher, waa sworn in the other day as chief of a division in the Indian hnrean, be waa at onoe given a thirty days' have of absence with full pay. Hfs predecessor, Gen. Coit of uonnecticut, who had not been absent from his desk an honr since the first of January, was not granted a single day's leave of absence. This sort of thing ap. pears to be what TIakkisok means when m uikt or civil service reform,
TEN TIIOUSAXD KILLKD ! Tfc $4lMit KmnU ef Carelene Kver Ktsewa in America, The most terrihU d I teeter aver known to happen any locality In the United St ate i, occurred oh Friday last, in the valley of the ConemiMtich river, In Pennsylvania, sweeping out of exitenna tlit city of, Johnstown, with 12.000 lihaliltnutj), and half a dozen ether ilourishint; towni in the valleyo' from l.eoo to 2 O00 population each. Many persons werf able to escape to the hills, but it ia estimated that at least 10 000 human being were drowned, and 25,000,000 worth o properly destroyed. It appear there wae a large artificial lake, three miles long, two mile wide, and in place 100 eet deep, formerly uscil
i'h a reservoir forth Pennsylvania cuial. hut for yean past belonging to a Pituburg FUhingand Boating Club, silUAted up an oft hoot from the valley, about 300 feet holier than JohuUowN. The artiticial dam which held the water in place, had been raised much higher since the Boating Club owned it, and although it was 90 feet in diameter at the base and 15 feet on top, has for year been considered unsafe whenever raine tilled the lake near full, and the people in the valley hare experienced numbers of (right from being warned that it was about to burst, until when told of the danger on Friday but few paid heed to it uutii too late to escape. The dam burat and the water rushed madly down the valley, in a wall thirty feet high, carrying desolation and des truction with it. Entire famine were the bed of the river, with millions of feel of lumber, thousand of saw logs, numbers of bridges, 27 locomotive swept oil' of railroad tracks, and hundreds of cars, in one appalling drift, 50 feet deep and over a mile long, while the three and four story brick houses in the business street of Johnstown for it entire length, of over a mile, wereswept entirely away, and the cellars filled up with debris covering dead boili- by the hundreds. No such scene has ever been witnessed in America before. Many heart-rending incidents are published in the daily papers, which each morning for a week have had columns adding to the ever re vealing and increasing horrors, and as the bodies are dug out of the mud by the hundreds, publishing the names of such as are identified. "A spring wagon came slowly from the mine in what was once Cambria.
in it on a board and covered by amudilvjUp, up and up rose the water, and now
cloth were Ihe remains of Editor C. T, be family were forced to the top story, Schubert of Ihe Johnstown Free Press, a.The rooms were very low, and the heads
German. Editor Schubert was one of'of the most popular and well-known Germans in the city. Thursday lie had Rent his three sons to Conemaugbhorough, and Friday afternoon he aud his wife and six other children called at Mr. Gribble'e residence. They noticed the rise of the water, but not until the flood from the burst dam washed the city did ttiev anticipate danger. All fled from the first to the second floor. Then, as the water rose, they went into the attic and Mr. Schubert hastily prepared a raft upon which all embarked. Jusi aa the rati reached the bridge a heavy piece df timber raised from the water and swept the editor beneath the surface. The rafi then glided through aud all the rest were rescued. Mr. Schubert's remains were found beneath a pile of broken limbers, His coffin was carried to hi widow and children at the house of a friend in Morrellvllle. Thecornseof a beautiful voung woman lay in the extemporized morgue. Fischer, a prominent young lady of j0hnsto wn. St. Marie's German catholic church - tands a quarter of a mile below the iipIi. i1., .aiifl .ra n.n,u.. ,,, tll. I - - iP,T -- - O ; side it ia filled with mixed, broken benches and ruined images. In it were found the mangled bodv of P. Eldridge ami several others. The distance to St. Columbus catholic church is half a rnile.i Ihe streets to it are tilled with broken houses, and people ia those that were left standing were busy shoveling ruud from the first floors. The scene at St. Columbia church was awlul. Forty or fifty bodies had been carried into it audi laid on the muddy seats. laying in a row in this church were five children from two to six years old. No one had identified them this after noon. Their little curls were matted with mud. Their nostrils were filled with sand, anil their eyes often com pletely covered. No one had come to wash away the dirt from their tiny faces nor the blood slain from the awful cuts and bruises. Where are their Barents ? Five hundred tents arrived from Ohio Monday night, in charge of AdiutantGent. Axlitie, and have been put up on tne nui-sice, aud are now occupied by (amines. All along the banks la amass of drifted clay that has settled down with the fall ing waters, and beneath it are many bodies. That this is the case was shown by aninoident that occurred lo our parly One of the party saw what looked like a piece of fur sticking above the surface It was thought to be a dog. but when it was kicked a hand and arm was knocked out. The party then threw bank the clay aud uncovered the body of a tine looking woman about 30 vears old. She was well dressed. The body wae washed off as well as possible and left on a board. A little further along the body of an old arrav-halred man was found on the bank of the creek ha r in ins water. 7 .... . . Three similar finds were made in a distance of less than a hundred yards. As soon as possible) a fereo of men will be out to work uncovering mis ciay, wnen it ia expected that hundreds of bodies will be unearthed. In one place in Ihe burning drift, in plain sight from the bank above, can be seen the bodies of two men and a woman, half-covered by the side ef a building that bis fallen on them and crushed them. Superintendent Morgan, of the Cam brla Iron Company, who is regarded as an exceptionally lovel-beaded man, returned to-day from a tour of the entire flooded district. He declared that only about 15,000 persons are now alive, where 20,000 lived and b4 their beiug before the flood.
Xtit a hmi was wrecks I Her a life loat In tit- CnnenHugh Valley until the lake rolled down un u. The flood was receding," said Abraham Gil more to-day. Ills brother, W. J. (ill wore, was also preeent. Behind them, waiting to be coffined, lay W. J. Gilntore' family. The holy of his wife, with her head burned off, the trunk of his oldest boy, the body of his daughter, the feel of hU two youugest children and pert of the legs of his niece, the (laughter ol Samuel Fails, who had been visiting at his house, and the body of his mother-in-law, Mrs. David Proper. The suiitary question is becoming a serious one to the oilier down stream a well as here. The water (hat washes among these decaying bodies goes down to the imluceut through which (he people of Pittsburg and Allegheny get their drinking water. It's horrible to think of." The fnrc" of the flood can he eatlmaleri by the fact that it carried three oars a mile and a half, and (lie lender of an engine, weighing twelve tons, was carried, fourteen miles down the river. A team of horses which were standing on Main st. .just before the flood, were found a mile mihI a quarter below the town yesterday. James P. McCanagh had a terrible experience in the water, lie saw his wife was safe on the land, and thought his only daughter, aged twenty-one, waa saved, but just as he was making for the shore, - a e a
he saw her ami went to rescue, iter, ne succeeded in gelling within about ten feet of land, when the girl said : "Goodbye, father!" and expired in his arras before he reached the shore. A pretty, pale, little woman told part of her sad story to-day, as she nervously clasped aud unclasped her hands and cried in a unlet heart-breaking way. Years ago in ihe Virginia vallev, some where near Winchester, she met ami loved a hard working, intelligent engineer, named Fenn. They were mar ried some eight veara ago. and came to Johnstown, where they had a neat comfortable home. Fenn made good wages ; their several children were always well clad, and their mother lived with her life concentrated upon them. On the afternoon flood Fenn went to the butcher's, and passed out of this short history into the waters. When Ihe flood came into the Fenn house the mother gathered her children in the parlor and told them not to be airaid, as God was there and would guard them. Up came the torrent, and they went to the second floor, and again the little mother talked of hope and bade them be of good cheer, for papa would come soon in a boat ami take tnem away. the mother and cli children were heat iog against ihe ceiling. 'Mamma," said the eldest child, a girl, "would not it be better to go outside aud die in the open air?" "Yes, dear," said the mother "we'll make a raft and all go down together." She fought her own and her children's way to the w'ndow and opened it. She caught a piece of plank and on it put the eldest child, with a heavy kiss and a "God bless you." Then she let It float away in the darkness and the roar of the waves. Six times waa thete frail harks freighted with precious cargoes and argosies of pious trust. The children were frightened, but obedience was part of their creed, and they made but little protest. Now came the turn of Ihe last child. Bessie, the four-year-old. One can fancy what it meant. The. last and dearest. There was scarcely a breathing space in the roc re now, and if haste whs not used death would come there at
Snv-'ouce. To a broad plank Bessie was
tasteneu securely aim was oieseeu as nan been the others. "1 loved them all, Oh, I loved them all," said the mother, hut I had two kisses from Bessie, for she waa Tom's favorite and was Mich a good child. She pot her arms about my neck and said You know you said God would tike care of me always, mamma. Will He taka care of me now?" I told her He would and she need not fear, and then she was carried awav. 'I hth not afraid, mamma, she called out and 1 heard ner, although I could not see her, and that's all. excent that the roof was torn oil and I floated ofl on it. and some Italians saved me atKernvllle, sixteen miles from here." "And the children, did they all escape ?" "We have lound two of them, dead Bessie and George, and there is not a intiknti Hessia's lace. and. oh. I am so tired. Thev're all gone, every one, and eight of them, and I am going horns to Virginia after all these years to rssi am try to think." This is only one mother of the bun dreds. onlv one of the multitude. In all thbf desolation some villains in human form are found who robbed the dead, and try to despoil the living o hat little the rush or water leu tnem Several lynchings have taken place, but now that it is thought order ia restored it ia said there will be no further out rages. The generosity of the people of Ihe United Sl'ilea is being bown to the suf ferers, aud clothing, food and money are being sent as fast aa it can be collected A great deal will be needed, as many of the men were at work and bad no chance to escape the flood, while many women and children were warned, and ebiainer safety on the hills, so that there are probably 20,000 helpless women and children, living in tents, who saved noth ing but the clothes they wore, and whose husbands, fathers and brothers are dead Piesident Harrison presided at a relle meeting in Washington, City on Tuesday night, and made a sympathetic speech calling for aid. .Over 1 10.000 was raised m. . na a ai mat meeting, rue I'resiusat an nouticed that Jacksonville, Fla,, which two years ago received such generous aid wiiru stricken wnh yellow fever, hat through its Mayor, forwarded him $2, 000 to aid the Johnstown sufferers. The country generally is responding nobly. B. F Blessing, of Knox eounty, has contracted with William N. Whitley, of Springfield, U., for 300,000 feet or ash, hickory and sycamore lumber, for building Whitley reapers, Blessing gets tlO, 000 for the lumber delivered at Spring field. For Uent. A residence In Jasper f four rooms Apply Coukikk Ottee,
liirlye BeMHtle. Not having seen anything in yeur paper from here for some time, we venture to offer few items, bttt as we are very new in the business, our r easier will please bear with tie. Mr. A. J. Hubbard has returned from Mew Albany, where she has been visiting friends. Mr. J. W Meloy is visiting friend and relatives near Marietta. A suit of replevin occurred between Poley Hanks and Marion Main, over a half gallon tin bucket aud a bed-spread Poley got there. The Blrdseye Hardwood Mill is once more humming away : it will he in full blast in about two week. far, the heading saw is all (hat is running. Dr. F. Gnbbel has moved into whal I' known as the Hubbe house, and J Smith, our new shoemaker, has moved in the Gohbel house. Mr. Smith seem to lies No. one workman. . Philip Under, of Si. Meinrad, waa here during the week, We suppose he wai here on a collecting tour. John C. Smith has moved to New Albany, where his wife has bought property, and she expects to keep millinery goods. We have noticed no "ad." in Huntingburg News for Ed, Bullingtou here lately, We can account for this great mishap only by supposing that our bearded Sister Phoebe" has failed to get shaved
ately. Koerner and Zlmmer invoiced their stock last week, and Ziinrecr ia now sole proprietor. It is rumored that Koerner will go in the timber nusiness Mrs. r arver and Miss Mauil rarver are visiting friends and relatives at New Albany. It is said they will remain there three or four weeks. The Koerner families were suddenly called to the death-bed of their father, in Franklin Co., Ind. The cause of his death has not been learned. The people of Kirdseye extend their sympathy to the afflicted families. The death of J. N. Edwards lasl Saturday was rather a sudden affair, lie was operated on by Dr McMsihan, of Huntughurg, but it was too late. Ihe re mains were interred in the Itirdseye Cemetery, by E. It. Ilawn Post, a great concourse of people following. Mr. Edwards leaves a wife and four small children, who have, the heart-felt sympathy of every one here. HIXT. Wfcea Bafe tu stole, we ass CsMaria, Whea aba waa a OMM, aM erfcd for Caatoriav, Whea aha baoaawa Mia, aba chug t Caatoria, Wbas ssm aad CUMraa, aba gafa tttaaa Caatotia, Hillham Happenings. Plenty of rain. Farmers are busy keeping the weeds and sprouts from getting the start of their corn since the rainy weather. Miss Stella Whitfinghill has retarned home from Mitchel, where she baa been attending school. Mr. Simmons has sold his buggy, but he said he would have a aew one by Sunday. Fannie. Mr. Will Milbura a going to attend the Normal at Jaener. Success to yen, Mr. MUhnrn. Married, at the residence of the bride's mother, on last Saturday night, at one nVlork. Miss Lucv Alexander to Mr. Thos. Nicholson. We wish them sue cess through life. Frank was in town Thursday morn nir (mini? lo the decoration at Kllsworlh, Knrd.la had nromipd lo go ir .Nora would, and Nora said she would go if Sonhia would, but on being defeated at this place he went up the lane to get M in C. But Will having his time neat there, he said he did not want to go to Ihe decoration noway, so tie would go home. Don't get discouraged, Frank; try again; but look oul Old Maid watching you. Mr. It. Drake came to Ihe mill Sunday, and when the miller told him he did not grind on Sunday, he said he just come to see if Steda had come. Boom! Boon! Our town now hae three dry goods stores, two drug stores, two blacksmith shops, mill, stave factory, spoke yard, church house, and a man go ing to mill on a sled I While our town is u such a boom why not invite so ate ompany to bore for gas. Old Maw.
Save Your Hair BY a timely use of Ajrer's Hah Vter. This preparation has no equal mm a dressing. It keeps the scalp cleaa, coel, awl healthy, and preserves tlie celer, fallaese, and beauty of the hair. "1 waa rapidly becoming bald and gray; but after using two or three bottles ot Acer's Hair Vigor my hair grew thick and glossy and the Original color was restored." Jttlvia Aldrkb, Canaan Centre, N. H. "Some time ago I lost all my hair fa consequonce of measles. Alter due waiting, no new growth apiwsrad. I then used Ayer's IXaix Vigor and. say hair grew Thick tad Strong. It has apparently eome to stay. The Vigor is evidently a jrreAt aid to nature." -J. B. WUliwsM, riores vitle, Texas. HI have used Ayer's Hair Vleor fee the past tour or Ave years and fled it a most satisfactory dressing for the hair. It is all I could desire, be in harnalaes. eansins; the hair to retain lie natural color, and requiring but a small quantity to render the hair easy to arraege." Mrs, M. A. Bailey, u Charles street, Haverhill, Matte. " I have been mine Ayer's Tfalr VIeoe for several years, and Iwllcve that it has eatiaed my hair to retain Its natural eoIor."-Mrs. II. J. Kin, Dealer hi Dry Goods, Ac, Bishopvllle, Md. Iyer's Hair Vigor, ratrAMB ar f Or. J. 0, Ayer V Ce., Lewes', Meet, gtgfuv, Wof fBaaaaaneAfl auaaal VfesBaaSksL. Wvoj fj avnfJRjewew awsnst vaTWRMffws ArrllM,MM-lr.
Win
POWDER Absolutely Pure. Tbh xwicr navar Tiriaa. A Marvtl f r)ty. "Irtnglh and wholeoiufii. More rfoaoailaal thtn ili'onUnNrr kinds, and rinr.ut be mM la coMpatHle 1la thtmultlladt of tow tri, bert writs! alata or phiMptiate Mwilr ra. Mi mljr in rant. KOVAL BAKING roWIMCK CO., IBS Walt St., M. T. March ai.lSSS m. Notice to Hlrs of Petition twKell Ileal Estate. STATE OF INDIANA, i ss. Dubois County, CIRCUIT COURT. VTOTICK is herein- given that Alber li H. Stewart. Administrator with will annexed of the estate of William Maban. deceased, has filed his petition to sell the real estate of the decedent, as directed by the will; and that said petition will be heard at the next term of the Circuit Court of said county. Iunatz Eckekt, Clerk C. C. Dubois couuty. John L. Brktz, Attorney. June 7lh. lt89 -3w. Notice to 11 t irs of PutltioM to fccli Ueal Eatate. STATE OF INDIANA, Dubois Countt, $ CIRCUIT .'COURT. NOTICE is hereby given that Thoma Wade. Administrator do bonis Ron of the estate of William Pinkston. de ceased, has filed his petition lo seU the real estate of the decedent, his personal beine insufficient to pay hi$ debts ; end that said petition will be heard at Ihe next term of the Circuit Uourt or seiu couuty. JGNATZ rCKKRT, L-I6I K C.C , Dubois County. John T BKvrrz. Attorney. May 31, 1839 3w SPRING STOCK AT Jno.lkler's IF YOU WANT NICE 1,18 HT HAKKKH. WAfJOM HAKXKW), flaw MAKNKHS. muggy urnosKs, m oOV WHII'S, Bit IWtl.KH, Ktc. Or anylhliicrlatt ImMf HarSM Makrr'a liar Mmli-fS lor MHmuirr nutHI. anw la tavr timetKt It atRICDUCED KATKM, mt .J Oil IV TROXLER, COKNKK r MAIN avarf ?th KTKKKTS. A,r.,l..U. JASPERalRD OSl Tut Cliffl h HslmT UUiDB IK Dross Goods -AND MEN'S CLOTHING! The latfwaa mt the uraann flmli m frstocke with WJNTKK CiOOOH, mara than the aaaal trad will raaMa mn t sell. I Mail ttUpaa r them. Therefore 1 HAVK CUT OKK MT I'KO FITS. Mil begin thaa early t make prieea thaC will awake them go. Come and set a bercaln, If yeu want any kind of WINTER COOOR FOR CAIH. JOSEPH BUCHART, WF4rrMh Street, JASPER, IND. X. B. The hlaheat price, la traa.'altowe for Mil Itlarfa r COUNTItY I'KOItUCK. Chi rac HOOTS ami HHllKS, MATS a CAVU, In treat variety, CHKA1. GET YOUJBCOAL CHEAP ! MAT. ECKERT, Dealer in Coal Is bow ready to deliver the BEST COAL mined ia Southern Indiana, from his nine three-quarters ef a mile North-west of Jasper. A lower tela thaa either or the other mines are working. Order-, left at the Store of M. A. HermerMlieim Jfc Co. will receive Prompt attention . Sep. t, NEW BftICK YARD BRICK FOR SALE ! John Gier, jr., hae taken cbartje ef a hrlck-yard at the North ltd of Jasper, and now has for sale, in any anaatity desired, brick of all qualities, lie asks the neonle of Dubois eoaatv for their castom, and will make mvorahle terms on heeee patterns. JOHN GEIER, J. Btihg yont Ja wtr k.
ICE-CREAM PU
fl ll : at jjjTRAWBERRIE X ONSATOBDAB and SMAB JOSEPH JOHN ! OrrOHITK THR INDIANA HOTEL, will have lee-Cream a, ;Mrawbrtlr every Kalureiy mM MuNtlay during the aHti. Ma haaflttedMpa alee imrlor where IhiIIt. mu4 geHtUwiFH will lie pulltely aerved. SPECIAL IRMNGEMENTS MADE Hm PARTIES. PICNICS at FAMII.IKH KUPl'l iwr i.u lee-Cream Strawberries, n aherthotlae. He hae alae Jaet received frnui f!hinuv. . Marge aeeertwtewt ef NullMi,adrrum Luulevltle a atwek ef Te whleh he Invite PURMO ATTKN'TIOK JOSEPH JOIIX. Hay IB, last-if. .IAMKI. INI). JAMES MEANS $4 SHOE JAMES MEANS S3 SHOE ar te Tear Keeei. 1 JAMB MKAMS SM ffHOR ha khi earf etyiuh. It flu Hkea elaur, aed I KKOtTIKKj i BV-KMailt"W-I In aeraettr aaiy tec rt umt a worn, js will aaiMfy ue bmk rthUoe. 4AMX8MKANS SJS eHOC w eetoietely the y ooa or iu pne wgkb ha aver tece placed laaarraly on U rkrt M weien QBraouny MeQBaMMrcu Before J. BtZAXB eV CO., Bewtea. ffMI ttae she SEBASTIAN KUEBLER. K!-rury IS, 1SH 3w. JASPER LIVERY SALE STABLE! KUNKEL& ECKSTEIN! HAVtWI enreliaaad Jaip r l.lrtry S'aWt, faretakr4 It with ana Hack. aa4 art prtpart4 to aUe4 ta etl calls eeae thaaj. Brtpeolal attention alven te earn meretal traelera wiehina te visit neinte In the eetintry. Aerll 37, sa.-tr. BRICK FOR SALE! A. HOCHGESANG t BROTHER, vt take the yard foraitriy kaatby their tatt er, tad . A t - I V u . nvnm. Will now ne prrfarm iff jnriu.ii inn nnn v BKICK la aey qaaetlty detlred, at Iht YARD ON THE TROY ROAD. raHltlarattntlefiwlllt.epaliltofilllnsaFnU.HOCS Wl WILL Alio CONTRACT fr nVlLDUiG ee4 rOKKISN ALL MATKKIAU. laT'GriT'e mm ft, Ostll. A. HOCMOKSANO BKOTHB JaeaM. 'Se-ly. NEW HARNESS SHOP OM MILL STKKKT, orPOSITE THB COKN MILL, JASPER, IIVO. LniM TroxIr HAS aae4 aet a MARJCKSS SHOP and fllkll a hare ef palronare, an ha SELM rHK.AI FOK CASH. ALL WORK OUAHANTKFDTO 01 VK fATIS KACTIOJf. Alar?etoekor HARNESS, SADDLES. In tact, yon will nl everyililiifj aieally krpt In a FIRSTCLASS SHOP to ealect from, ajfjrnwa't aak for eredlt, hat please give AptU li isss-ly. LOUll TROXLER. DENTISTRY I Ir. 13. -A.. 3IOS13Y. RESIDENT DENTIST, IRIGIAIHD, - - - INJJ. TltSDRRS hi er.fheal farrUei te alt eeHlPa aey work In the dental line, and prowlae te alve H M eatwaUa. aM M.U wet ,XM$
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