Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 31, Number 48, Jasper, Dubois County, 16 August 1889 — Page 1
WeehUi GtWief
JASPER, INDIANA, FRIDAY, AUGUST 16, 1889. NO. 48. VOL.31.
rOtlilUei VKY FRIDAY, AT JAHrH, aunOI COUNTY, INDIANA. Y CLKMKNT DOAXE. OFFICE. Ix Countm Buildino on IfuT Sixth Street. PRICK or gimSCKIVTIOK.
dingle Subscription, for 52 Noe., $160 For six months, : : : : : w
RATRH ADVKRT?8ICIH.
iPnriiar.10llnMorUMtlwMk.$100 , Each subsequent insertion, 76 isem
TO BUSINESS INVESTORS. Come to Jan per.
To honest, industrious men, or men of
capital, seeking a location to estauiisn
themselves in uusmes, we wmn whisper that Jasper presents superior ludtiRemeHtB.
It in a town of about l.tOO inhabitants,
surrounded by a fine agricultural
tot Ike CeurUr.
Protection fr American Labor? The laborer U worthy of his hire, Give to every one M just due,
Do unto ' II others " you would, That they should do uuto you.
The laborer Is worthy of his hire, Thou shall live by the sweat
brow,
of thy
country, which ships annually hundreds jjlgt waaKOod old time living precept,
good cotutuou sense, even
of cars of agricultural products con
LPmionilv fiiilmifstence is cheat).
. ' . . .. ... - r
is under lain wihi a nne qnain
l-lilnr.lr coal, eas v ni hied by drill
And 'lis
HOW.
rate.
,L - 'inv inin Ativof the til 1 1 A sui rounding it.
Longer advertisements ai u mm lhe veh c0 from
- xvrs AFnn urmitrr ui " ' ,.. -
v '""v ThnS these mmee i.
are the' term for transient advertisements.a reasonable deduction will be made to regular advertisers. Notices of appointment of adnilnlstriors and legal notices of like character to be paid in advance. AJJKOnSCIKO CANDIDATES.
For Township Ofllcers, each $1 00
...... i!a.e?t Plrr.iilt. or State. OOi
p UI s -t v .
delivered anywhere inj
INTERESTING INFORMATION.
Wby should there be class and distinc lions?
Are the rich of better clay than tbe
. IIUUI 4
the tnwn l Ally renin lon,.mi i pc- -rtul ' rou w,0 WOrk le.st for HtIhk,
... Iu h. court ... . , " ,,f. Vco,V.B ii I.xrf Vt .IL a ton. ...
Ii Is surrounded by a tine bnoy or tlmlier. of all kinds indigenous to the
DENTISTRY!
It-. 13- A. MOBBY, RESIDENT DENTIST,
rpR5BERS tali prf.lHl t ll fllna "T
work fa Ike 1NUI line. na prnmiw" y n" -
t.M atlcnvwa. M put wefK V"
an4 all work rrHte4. '
er
R. M. MILBTJRN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, JASPER, 1KB.
II.L PRACTHJK IN THB COOtTS Of DUBOIS
AND ADJOIMNii COU.VTIKS.
OFFICK-tlp SUlra aver Peat OSlee. Marh Mh,
A. J. HONEYCUTT, ATTORNKY AT LAW, JASPER, IND.
Q ?.TTl.ttK"T af Rt.ti., Raar4lanklp'an4 Criltc
ftrrtCK Kat HMterPMkHeanMr.ln th
Mr. Kruy Klork. AfH l1
ATTORNEY AND COUKSELOR AT LAW
JAIPIl. INDIANA.
PKICK aver Jahn Traslrr's m44Ur hn-
W. A. TRAYLOR. W. . HUNTER
TR4 VLtlA MliiHTKK,
attorneys at JLaw,
JasrER, Indiana,
rvTILL arat ! the Co aria ef Ptfcafa
it taccaaBUCi, rtriKinriHinrH pfiaw hi
etlRa.
09et mi rlaorKiitoftaa W.CBaTtM' Wfrtal
BRUNO IUETTXII,
iTTORNIT AT L1W
And Notary Public, Jasfki, Iidusa,
rtetl In all lit Caarta ef Paal aM
W Perry eaaitUe. Indiana. JanS, 1874,
CLEMENT DOANE
attorney at Law
JA8PKR, IND.
"fTTIT.t practice In tbe Casrta ef Dtfcel eewrtf.
TV attend ralthlaUr ta Vaaine. eMrntttd to mm
SWct In the "Ooarl.r" bIM!.Weet Main Street.
GENERAL STORE Mrs. C. HOCHGESANG Cer. 13th and North Main St.( JASPER, INDIANA, All KKCKI VKD HRK SIIXMKR STOCK OF DRY-GOODS, GROCERIES, I.AOIK.H SNOK8. NOTIONS. e Walen ha olTera te the pBbKc t a VF.RT SMALT, rROflT, and lnTlte an In.pectton ef her geo4a and price j MBCAintrypradnreorallkliMl.takeiilnKXRIfAXnK ATTHK BKSTMARKKT TRICK, F0R000M.
May 11. 'S-1y. GKCILIA MtlCMOKSANO.
latil nit .
Ptoka river skirts the souin ana east
dee of the town, and furnishes a never
fAiliutr supply of water lor Rianuracto
AM RiunirT its banks, uoon sou wamr
nhminpd In abundance tor domestic
see any place in the town at a depth of
from 20 to 10 feet.
A line oua ity of enort miilciinir gray
sand-sione li quarried near the town. This stone has demonstrated lis excell. ence by standing good for over 50 years
the severe test ot ireezes ann maws in tbe pier of abridge across I 'at oka river.
House patterns oi goon nrics are iw vered at 5 to $5 50 per 1,000, and small-
Quantities at a slight advance, ana
building lumber, rough, at IS per 1,000
feet; surfaced and seasoned at fJOto $30
per 1.000, as to quality.
The community is a liberal ana intent
sent one: with hanneome ana com mo
ious Catholic ana Meinoaist cnurcnes,
and good public schools, and citizen,
without exception, heartily welcome all
new business enterprises.
It is the northern terminous or the asner and Evansville division of the
E. Ai St. L. Ity. and has three trains each
way per day.
The town has la manufacturing: estab
lishments using steam power, embracing
! steam flour mills, S planing mills,
aw mills. 1 spoke factory. 1 stave and
xhingle factory, 1 furniture factory,
brewery, 1 machine shop, 4 wagon
iHciorica, and - brick-yards, which did a
business last year aggregating over
275,000. It has three large well-stocked
try geeds and general stores, and
-mailer ones. 4 grocery stores, none of
them extensive. 4 cnnfeclionaries. 3 shoe
bona, a arnod photograph gallery, St book
toren, 2 drug slore, 4 hotels. 2 printing iflVes. 1 slate bank, 3 livery stables, and pyeral oilier branches of business, all
doing well, nud 2 building associations of 100,000 and $50,000 capital respect
ively. To persons who are sppking an investment lor rapital in manufacturing enterprises of anv kind, and have skill and in
dustry to apply to Ihelr huslncss, Jasper
presents rare inducements, ann ner cm r.ens will extend a hearty welcome.
Among the branches of business which
ought to be established here and would certainly pay. are a woolen mill, a small
foundry, a large fruit connery, a good butter, and cheese dairy, a tiling factory,
a handle factory, a good broom factory, a good pottery, a general produce dealer, who would pay cash for farm produce
of all kinds In any quantity: another
flour mill might possibly be made to pay.
also, as over 50,000 bushels of wheat
were shinned from Jasper last
year which it seems to us might
have been made into flour here with
profit, and the manufactured products
shipped. It 1" probable, too, that a mer chant with sufficient capital to carry i
good stock of any single line of goods,
would be able by his larger assortment
of that line, and consequent lower purchases, to secure enoueh trade from the
general stores abounding in the country
to make it profitable bnt this would be an experiment, while the others may be
counted as certainties. At all events, if
you are seeking a location, come and be
one ortia.
The mechanic and laborer pay taxes,
On bis implements, his homestead ml nil.
While the millionaire clips off bis cou
pons.
And is not taxed oh bis income at all.
Tbe miner pays tax on his output, On his living, his clothing, and all, While the trust man lives in luxury, Aud fears not the tax gatherer's call.
The merchant, clerk, laborer and plow
man, Miner, teamster, servant and all,
Pay tax on their necessary living,
While incomes are not taxed at all.
The printer, the preacher and the doctor,
The toilers, bo ID toe great anu me
small.
Pay tax on their necessary living,
But bond clippers are not taxea ai an
Tbe rich manufacturer and trust mas,
Has his tariff protection and all,
While the poor American lahorer,
Gets, just no protection at an.
How long, oh I nation of tollers.
Will you submit to this unjut thrall t
You produce the wealth or he nation,
llut you get a more pittance with all
II. The laborer la worthy of his hire, We want no drones in our hive,
Every one should earn an honest living, . ...a a .a . .
In order that ne may nouesuy mrtve
ANTONY BAH HAStLOCATIU) Is JASPKK Ml OPENED A BOOTandSHOESHOP! On the lauth Side of Public Square). hi tek tnr Mm ail til ffri; 8w iiTOIUji
rn UtHm all who want Srt.elwk aNMW.Ie irWe
Indiana Patents.
Tbe following patents were granted
for the week ending Aug. 6th. 1869. re
ported expressly for thfs paper by Jos.
If. Hunter, solicitor or American and Foreign Patents, Washington, D. C. :
W. L. Colin, Bloomlngport, potato
nUnter and seed drill: W. 11. Cunning
ham. Frankfort, clay working machine;
T. W. Eversole, (iarrett, soldering iron ; J. H. Ferguson, Kokomo, running gear for vehicles : II. G. Griffith Indianapolis,
1ntrn: A. E. Heath. CovlHgtOH. Car
coupling; M. It. More, Indianapolis, sand molding machine; J. P. Nichols, Marios, exerclaing machine ; L. R. f lakea. Vlnmlso. lamp burner: C. A.
Olcott, North Vernon, lawn mower; Samuel Smoker, Gehen, broadcast seed eowcr. If Is Dream Wm a Failure.
Savanna Newt.
A gentleman living in Baxley recently
dreamed that In a certain hole under a
ainmn he would find a fur collar which
kavd been stolen from his house. He
visited tbe field, found the stump, and placing hie hand In the hole, felt a furry
substance, pulled it out and dropped
All men are horn free and equal.
A birthright, received from our
All men are but dust and allies,
When laid beneath the cold sod.
God
Tbe carpenter, the shoemaker and black-
siimh, Are titXrjd on their living and their bread, While the rich man, with income exempted. For the tax gatherer has no dread.
The bone and sinew of our country,
Wealth poducere, and laborer all, Pay tax on their product and their liv But rich incomes are not taxed at all.
The poor man's humble cottage,
ilia home, his living and his all, Pay tax for his glorious country, But big incomes are not taxed at all. Tbe blue bloods of uppertendom, Anglo-maniacs, dudes, and ail, Who cannot earn an honest living, Look with ecora upon toilers all. Thar Hvai In Itixurv and glorr.
Snend thousauds iu vice, great and
small.
While they begrudge tho honest laborer,
His hard earned pittance witu all.
The wealth earner's wife and children,
May suffer for the necessaries of lif
While the rich protectionist aud trust
man. Squanders thousands in luxurious life.
The trust men have private detectives,
To protect them in limes or strue, And the poor American laborer, Is abet down in sight of his wife. How long, oh ! army of voters.
Will you submit to this unjust thrall? The producers aud laborers pay the
taxes.
But blood suckers are not taxed at all.
"Ned Kamblkr. '
ApneintmeMt f Sctteel Teackers
Hantinibtirg Argui.
Mr. J. II. nehiens. Sr., trustee of
Patoka township, has mde the follow
ing appointments of teachers for tbe Tar
ious schools in this townsnip:
Number 1-Chas. R. Miller, " 9-Willa Hretz, " 3 Flora Leighton, " 4-Kinma Cooper, " I Mary Eckert, 8 E. E. Hilsmeyer, 4i 7 Augusta Zoeller, " 8-Mike Seldel.
Schools will open 23rd of September.
A Desperate Game.
fraencer Btnrat.
The agent of Van Antwerp, Bragg
HRInTHMaUwhwtrt.clwMt9t1e'8Mtiance, puiiwi H nu uiun.u -.7 , .. , WiPk. stated Ihat M;aMH,.kec..r!nt.t hag Since CO.i WHO WM Z?lilmnmw
anraiKm ma irime- Ani m. """","""'. U.n fumlrat Ma the ClO hSS he Wore OU t"7 -.-
CWwt wtJI e
w hitve
far wrk
Twenty Questions AWMt Kail-
wayn and Electricity AHHweresi. ScrlbneV's Magazine originated the
following very interesting method ef
imparting userul inrnrmation: ABOUT RAILWAYS.
1. How many wiles of railway lathe
United States?
2. How much have they'enat?
3. How many people are employed
by them? 4 What is the fastest time made by a train? 5. What is the cost or a high-class eii'htwhrel passenger locomotive? 0. What 1 the longest mileage oper
ated by a single system?
7. What I tbe cost of a palace sleep-
ng car."
8. What Is the longest railway bridge
span in the United Mates r
" . . . ... . a a
9. What is the highest raiiroaa oriage
ii the United States?
10 Who built the first locomotive in
lhe United Stales?
11. What road carries the largest num
ber of passengers?
12. What is the average daily earnings
of an American locomotive?
13. What is the longest American rail
way tunnel f
14 What is the average cost or con
structing a mile of railroad?
1 . Where and when was tbe first
sleeping car used ?
16. What are (he chances or ratal ac
cident in railway travel?
17. What line of railway extends fur
thest East and West?
IB. How long does a steel rait last, with
average wear?
19 What road carries the largest num
ber of consumers?
30. What la the fastest time made be-
tween Jersey City and San Francisco?
ANSWERS.
1. 150,600 miles; about half tbe mile
age of the world.
a. $9,000,000,000. 3. More than l.OO'.OOO.
4. 422 6-10 miles in 7 hours, 23 min
utes (443 minutes ;) one mile being made in 41 1129 seconds, on the West Shore
lUHroad, New lork.
5. About 8.500.
6. Atchison. Topeka and Santa Fe
system, about 8.000 miles.
7. About aio.uuu or jr.mru u "vesu
billed."
8. Cantilever span ia Poughkecpeie
hriil ir-e. 548 feet.
9. Kinzua Viaduct, on the Erie road
305 feel high. 10. Peter Cooper,
11. Manhattan Elevated Railroad, New
York ; 6U5 000 a day, or 191,2S.OOO year
'TIS. About 1 100.
13. Hoonac Tunnel, on the Fitchbarg
Railway, (ii miles.)
14. At the present time about asu.wu
la. Upon tbe Cumberland Valley IWU
road ol Pennsylvania; from 1836 to 1838
16 Cue killed in ten million fiiatis
tics show more are killed by falling out
of windows than in railway accidents.
17. Canadian Pacific Railway, ruuuiug
from Quebec to the i'eciric Ucean
18 About eighteen years.
18. Illinois Cuntral, 4.828,328, In 1817
20. 3 days, 7 hours, 39 minutes anil
seconds. Special theatrical, June, 187G
ABOUT ELECTRICITY.
1. How strong a current is used to
send a message over an Atlantic cable?
2. What is the longest distance over
which conversation by telephone is daily
maiHlaiaed ?
3. What is the fastest time made by en
llep.trie railway
4. How many miles or submarine eeie
are there in operation t
t. What is tbe maximum power gen
eratad bv an electric motor?
i. How is a break in submarine cable
located ?
7. How many miles of telegraph wire
In operation iu the nitea states t
8. How many message can be trans
mined over a wire at one time?
9. How is telegraphing from a moving
train accomplished?
10. What are the most widely eepa
rated points between which it is pose hie to send a telegram?
II. How many miles of telephone
wire in operation in tbe U. b.r
12. What is the greatest candle power of arc light need in a lighthouse ? 13. Uow many persons in the United
Stares are engaged in business depend Inar aolelv on electricity?
14. How long doe it take to transmit a message from San Fiaacieco to Hong
Kong? in. What Is the fastest time made
an operator sending messages by Morse
system r
l. How many telephones are in nse
in the United States?
17. What war vessel has the most com
nlAta. electrical plant ?
18. What is the average cost, per mile
nfa Trmsat antic submarine cable t
19. How many miles of electric rail
way are there ia operation in the United
States? an. What strength of current is dan
gerous to human life?
answers.
1. Thirty cells of battery only. Eqna
ia ftn Vnlfa.
2. About 750 miles from Pertiand, Maine, to Buffalo, N. Y. I. Two miles a minute by a small experimental car. 30 miles an hour en street railway system. 4 Over 100.000 miles, er enough to girdle the earth four times. " a M.a.aa.lAaaiai lama
6. 76 Horse power. Mperimwma m
6, By measuring the electrlcit) need'
ed to charge the remaining unbroken
part. 7. Over a million, or enough to encir
cle the globe forty times.
8. Four, by the quadrupiex system in dally use.
9. Through a clrenit from the car roof Inducing a current in the wire on poles along the track. 1 . British Columbia and New Zealand, via America and Europe. 11. More than 170,000 over which 1,-
955 000 messages are sent daily.
1:1. Two million, in lighthouse Houstholm, Denmark.
13. Estimated. 250.000. 14. About 15 minutes. Via
York, Canso, Penzance, Aden, Bombay, Madras. Penaug and Singapore.
15. About forty-two words minute. 16. About 300,000. 17. United States Man ef War, saa itffa "
sa
18. About tl 00. 19. About 400 miles, aud much
under construction.
mSS and 1IH)3.
The New York Tribune seems te alarmed at the tariff outlook. In a
cent issue it said: "True friends of the protective eettey have special occasion just now te eon
eider carefully tbe sources of their newer and their recent victory. A change of 8,000 votes out of over eleven millfoee cast lent fall would have elected a democratic president and vice-president, a democratic senator from Delaware, mak
ing the senate a tie with tbe viee-preei-
dent's casting vote controlling, and a
democratic majority in nw un. xnv protective system gained its great vie-
New ,ory DV tne Pwer of certain arguments
over ine voiw ui m wuriing jwf""! and it is not wise to forget what those
arguments were."
The "certain arguments" to which the
Tribune refers are doubtless of the kind
which Beniamin Harrison addressed to
the now starving miners of Clay county when they were brought here to "pay their respects" to him last summer.
Similar arguments were addreessd to
per
"Chi-
more
Jam" To his surprise the lady chne oi u.ouu votes out or i over sieve. iw up her hands and exclaimed, Mon would have reversed the result. aciouVa Dios, que no tengo espusn This is to say, as the New ork Times lericano!" which being translated is. put it, that if in every ll.OOOmen there
a a j av t A. f
in Tsnri Vnita I r denandin largelv on lhe silKworKers oi new jersey, toe iron20. 500 volte, but depending largely on k r of Pennsylvania aud the cottonivsical conditions. I .. , s-..iu... .n r .k.
Biifiesi e ui ananrouuniie east we tv vsat Why She Didn't Went a Yankee along with most other employes of pro11 unbend. tected industries, have been obliged to a . a. a . t t
Clmlaad Plaladealer. BUDfUll te reuueuons in wagns nmnm
A gentleman from Indiana told me the Mrcii 4. U is safe to say mat tneeearoiher day a story about Bayless W. Han-Uuments will not be forgotten by those . .a I n a hnm I la AM aaw Aawam aa H awaaAAUail nASVaVall
as, now u. S. minister to the Argentine
Renubllc. Some months ago at uuenos Jr V m,KU .
Ayres, a rich Spanish banker gave a din- M,l"f l"" ,?nl. "JR" ner to some friends, and Mr. llauua wash.ent which proved effective set fall.
seated on tbe right of the bo.tes. She io wnicn wanamaaer supp.iaa -aw
nqulred as to the health or Mrs llanna, y r"7,Bi . , V9m v . irKo was not present, and asked how potency. Indeed it Is not too much to
children they had. Bayless, not y " " mHr: . . ..fii,.cr ,,,iai, vm-v -el!, turued the scale in the pivotal stats of
thought sh? wanted to know the age of UMn ' New 1 .ork. u..bii.b... a..t a.t.1. i.wtv.iurht. And et. as the Tribune points ont. a
! ... ... -ii, 'i a nrm . .
adam" To i d surprise the miy ' o.vwiei uiu ui um iht-b
thre
Graciou
Thank God, I have not an American nwj wev iuun una wuu iui .
husband l" The next day the SpanMi naa voien tor ine aemocrauc cai.uiu.v-i
banker called on Mr. Hanna and said : ' "unn- rry.,.nB iwnavn
"Yon astonished my wife yesterday macmnery oi mi pnnnat
When you told her yon had forty-eight naye ramainau in ummmmm
children." "Wby, my dear sir," replied rcpuoiicans, insieaa oi gaming pvraa.
the minister, "I thought your wife in- oenoy anu u, f1b.t, quired as to the age of Mrs. Hanna and would have lost the senate; the iower L gave her the forty-eight figure. 1 of making any changes they might agree
ve only four children, and tney are p w "T"
enough." The banker went home and g ven io ine oamocraw ; w wnavry, w . .aa. IlaaA m uaiiaaaT aai h On t laAa aa fvaatBaa ear wnaaea
gave h i wife the beaeht or Judge nan-v c " . ... 1 1 IiT BnulH l affiant kaa ulil vat "
aa's ataisment, out ine siery goi oai . , .TTV ; ZZ ' , t. .
the judge has to stand up and take wc " " 7'. t J ,Zx7.CZ inkaU of kU fr'ends Uts, but for tariff reformers, to bear these jOUea 01 BIS ir.enQB. . WkaJ tk MraakaAaW
Nothing Mere Could be Dene." 0r ig92, if the democratic party proves
President Lincoln had been during true to Us principles ana itieir, . . ... lun antuirlnr nontif rat Ina to diseafn.
our most etermy weamer io wp r r---
camps of the Generals in Virginia, and i here are iens oi 00UMt"u" ") wK3Cs takeiTa violent cold. Mrs. Lincoln was men and farmers in despair, and one day said to Secretary were deceived last fall by l and Stan ton "I do wish you would lock fl promises of monopoly, who will Mr. Lincoln out of the rooms for a week ! nerer be deceived by tnem again. They
He is III enough to be in bed now, and win tow ngm in
suffers agonies with his arm from acute Jfe mem an opportunity io uu , mj rheumatism. I don't know what to do ! keeping fa ith on the Uriff questkm.-
He goes out, aud keeps at work every inuiaaapoua mauai.
moment." . .
Mr. Lincoln waved his long arm at professor Shale r, in an article in tae
the Secretary, saying, "Well, Stanton. North American Review on " me sense
there ought to be one comfort for my f Honor in Americans," points to the poor wife, anyhow the same that the conductor the officers en both sidee dn-
uoor man ieierson had, wnose oniy son rnie the HebeHion. "ins sarprwias;
died. IWd yon ever hear the story? Jpart, perhaps the most surprising feature
Ills friends, family, neighbors, and li that, marvelous contest, was that from
churoh lansented, extolled aud grievedk.a.,IBna; to end there was no ease ia .a a a . S t. T aS I . . . " m 1 f taaaavaataa
over ine ises, ai lue muerai, wnen "u'whlPh an omcer or any graac wwi arson himself arose and said, "My dear ,0 nve gone over to the enemy. Deeer-
friends: We have tbe blessed console- nnB of private soldiers rromone sine to lion ef knowing that everything, was tn8 other were relatively very rare." done that eoukl be done. He was bled Such an experience was never before eo less than twenty-four tiroes in twenty- known in the history of war. 'It was fnyr knura f Rut ba had no strength, it. bma saAaltafaUf nrv feature of our elvll
and had to dial' war that In the worst mischances of lost "Now, I've been wrapped in no less battles end unsuccessful campaigns the than twenty-four pieces of red flannel mfn neVf.r lost their confidence in the and linament since yesterday, and still moral integrity of their chief.' though my wife isn't satifled.M. S. in August luey aometitnes expressed indignation Wide Awake against the stupidity of their leaders. DscprtM Weill. ,ted. A Confederate soldier, just capWells of great depth are expensive. tBrert tnr0ugh the rash oenduct ef hie But the best gee well in the United rrK;rnPntk commander, though weeping States, the Westinghouse, at Pittsburg, at the mischance which bad befallsn him. is 8,000 feet deep aud practically in ex- mRtl,d to help himself to a better (unstable. Deep wells always are fre of mind by a characteristic mot. greatest, steadisst and most certain pro- Ue remtrked: "That 'ere Colenel of duoers. 0nrn was that venturesome he would At Evansville the County Commis- mtkk acr0M Ml 0B rolltl rail for ten loners recently subscribed 11,000 to aid in sinking a well there 1,800 feet deep to a depth of 3000 feet, and the citizens " . . . subscribed tbe balance of the money. Settwel Aelviee. This well is known as the Sinzich welt. Indianapolis News: The manhood of The Decatur County Commissioners QrMt county, spurred quite likely by have contracted for a well at Greensburg (h,g mptr Mnrt the Marion Chronicle, has 1,000 feet deep, to demonstrate if gas rou Uelf j, , Bpptal to law for the can be found. If over $5,000 is expend- DUH.hment of the Infamous eeoundrele ed in this experiment, tbe city of Greens- w0 WBjpnd those women near Marion, burg agrees to pay the excess, provided Not thmi thfl irit movement of the the sum does not exceed 2,500. This )W Dy tg COHrt to summon wltneesee is county and eity aid ia the sum of $7,- MTen'0f the cowardly beasts have fled. MO for one well. ion't hunt bumble bee with e brass -CicldS. band. Let the law be in earnest in this Buiiinc. matter to catch these scoundrels, not Mrs. Melvina Uuff committed suicide tjaJSi off There Is a law specially ( st Lincoln City Sunday morning by for pwnishment of this WhUeeap. 1 shooting heteself with a revolver. Jhe Vhich has well nigh d.gradsd Indi225 iSli X'heaJ. 1 mMrilfh? t7th- le of MlJiiMifpi. Let the :,naitSf. ,BDUS?ioX"ctth -treTptv:. WArC:nees.hecI been seduced nt.Mo the N-ltjto Q
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they will vanish like fonl vepors under the blaze of the sun. They are perpetrated by Ignorant cowards who have as abjeet fear of the law as a hoend bee ef
a whip. Let it be applied. Last Friday, Robert Andersen O. A. It. Poet, first ef tbe kind in tbe Stete aa mastered In inside tbe walla of Foil
wae the mother of an illegitimate child.
She kept her secret from Mr. Huff when they were married and be remained in ignorance of it until a few da s since. Ills wife at the lime was visiting in Perry Connty, and be wrote to her saying he bad learnsd of hsr deception end did not want her te return home f am lniKulUl.tB ttma hajk a Hfl
r.rfaaneail ta effset i recoacillttieB 'Sumpter. Annmberof ee federate vei
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