Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 35, Number 16, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 October 1902 — Page 3
REAL PROSPERITY
Indiana Farmers. Are Now Enjoying It. v SOME STATISTICS ON PRICES Show That the Purchasing Power of an Average Crop Is Far Greater Today Than It Has Ever Been Before. Indiana Democratic newspapers are engaged in trying to make the Indiana farmer believe that while he may be enjoying some “fictitious prosperity” in the selling price of his products, he is paying for it in increased prices for the articles he consumes. It is alleged that agricultural implements are being sold at a greater price abroad than at home. That argument was industriously used from 1888 to 1892, and then came an administration Democratic in every branch, with a Democratic tariff law. While the farmer failed to secure agricultural implements at the “export price” so industriously exploited in Democratic campaign documents of the early ’9o’s, he did get a taste of tariff reform prices when he came to sell the products of his farm. Inquiry of one of the leading hardware merchants of Indianapolis reveal B facts which form the basis for the following table of comparative prices on Standard agricultural implements: lo9ri. 1902. Buckeye Reaper 8100 to 8125. 8100 to 125. Buckeye Mower 40 40 Moline Farm Wagon ... bi 62 Oliver Chilled Plow ... 13 U
Corn Cultivator. . 25 2s . Hoosier W heal Drill.. . lu to 10 50 to 55. In other words, this total bill of implements would have cost an Indiana farmer in 1896, $277; in 1902, $290. In 1896 it would have cost him 500 bushels of wheat, in 1902, with more wheat to pay with, he can buy the lot for 382 bushels; in 1890 it would have taken 1,385 bushels of corn in an even trade for the outfit, in 1902, 518 bushels buy it, and the farmers of Indiana have the corn. In 1896 the purchase price, expressed in oats, was 2,308 bushels, in 1902 it is 764 bushels. In 1896 it would have taken four horses and $37 besides to buy the lot, in 1902 three horses of equal quality would buy the implements and the farmer would have $lO coming to him. In 1896 the Indiana farmer would have had to sell eleven steers of average weight, and borrow two dollars, in order to secure the implements; in 1902 the farmer would have to dispose of only eight steers of equal weight and quality, and then would get S3O “to boot.” In 189 S the farmer who wanted the outfit would have had to drive forty-six hogs of average weight to the scales, and then would have owed one dollar; now twenty-three bogs of the same weight and quality would not only represent the value of-the outfit, but the farmer would have $9 coming to him. One of the leading clothing merchants of Indianapolis says: “You may safely make the statement that clothing today is cheaper, quality considered, than it has ever bedh.” A leading shoe merchant says; “If anything, shoes are a shade lower in price than they were in 1896.” Dry goods are a shade higher, the average increase in price being, however, less than 10 per cent. General hardware is no higher than in 1896; nails and wire are about the same; stoves^have increased about 10 per cent in price. When it is remembered that where prices have been increased they represent, in very few cases, more than the increase in wages paid to operatives, neither the operatives or the farmers whose products they .buy are likely ti find in this cause of complaint.
An Independent Paper’s Tribute to State Institutional Management.
in view of the platform declaration of the Indiana reorganized Democracy that the state's penal and benevolent institutions have been ’prostituted'to partisan ends ' by the present state administration, the following paragraph from the independent Indianapolis News of Sept. 10th is of interest: • "The opening of the new hospital for the sick insane at the Central Hospital for the Insane last night Ja an event It justifies the appropriation by the legislature that made it possible. and it is another illustration of the breadth and efficiency of Dr. Edenbarter's management.. Some time ago this able superintendent established a pathological laboratory that put this institution in the front rank of similar Institutions. With the opening of the hospital to which the sick can be removed from the regular wards, another Important step forward is taken. We have made great progress in our state in the care of our public Institutions. We have abandoned forever, we believe; the idea of making political spoils of these Institutions, and are beginning to awaken to the need of making them models of their kind.”
Biff the Boodlers.
The wholesale prosecution of official boodlers in St. Louts cannot but be gratifying to the whole country. Of late years there has been a growing tendency to resent official corrupt inn And this tendency will continue to grow, for when the people once posses<the vantage ground they will not easily relinquish it. The day of the grafter In municipal politics Is surely waning.—Terre Haute Tribune.
To Exchange Modern three flat brick building in Chicago rent >6O per month. Waited. 4 ' Stock of merchandise and furniture. Want farm or ranch Will assume. Brick business property and and opera house rents $35 per month Want land.' 120 acres fine land. Want hardware. 160 acres improved land Want drugs. 160 acres fine land will trade equity for town property Rensselaer prefered 11 acres joining town good ouildings, black soil, lots of fruit. Will exchange for property in Rensselaer or for land. G. F. Meters, wtf Kniman, Ind.
From Prairie Schooner Limited. Send two-cent stamp for copy of special edition of illustrated article from the July Review of Reviews, dealing with the history and development of the northwest and of -the Chicago & Northwestern R’y and the only double track line be tween Chicago and the MissourRiver. A H. Waggener, 22 Fifth Ave., Chicago, 111. If you have headacnes don’t experiment with alleged cures Buy Krause’s Headache Capsules which willjcure any headache in half an honr. no matter what causes it. Price 25c, sold by A. F. Long.
DON’T VOTE AGAINST YOURSELF
There are not enough Democrats in Indiana to carry the state. To do so they must have help from Republican sources—not active help, but the kind of help the Republican who stays at home and depends upon his neighbors to do his duty for him will give them. Don’t be a Republican member of the Democratic- Aid society, as every Republican stay at home will be. No man can escape voting one way or the other on Tuesday, Nov. 4. The . citizen who stays at home Just casts a half vote against himself.
THE FIRST OF THE ROORBACKS
The following dispatch appeared In the Indianapolis News on Sept. 26 under the heading “The Coal Trust Protected —The Dingley Tariff Act Has Killed the Importation of Anthracite:” Washington, Sept. 26.—According to the bureau of statistics, only one ton of anthracite coal was imported into the United States during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1901. Since the Dingley act —levying a duty of 67 cents a ton on coal—passed, there has only been a total of 6,609 tons imported. Under the Wilson bill there was a total of 149,748 tons imported in the year 1896 alone. The Wilson tariff on coal was 40 cents, which was increased 27 cents by the Republican congress. It, therefore, seems that the coal trust has constdeTahle protection from the Dingley tariff bill.” Persons informed as to the schedules Of the .Dingley tariff law know that there is not a cent of tariff on anthracite coal, a statement of fact easily corroborated by any one who will read the law, yet an effort is here made to show that protection caused the coal strike and the high price of anthracite. It Is fortunate that the great Pennsylvania strike has to do with an Industry entirely unprotected. It disposes entirely of the fake issue of tariff reform as a method of trust busting. The demagogues were able in 1892 to make thousands believe that protection caused the Homestead strike, because there was a tdriff on steel. But here is a ease in which tneir sophistries answer themselves.
Democratic newspapers, led by the state organ, continue to deny that the Republicans assumed control of the fiscal affairs of Indiana in 1895. Beginning with January, 1895, the Indiana legislature, ths revenue raising and revenue appropriating power, was Republican in both branches. Beginning with the same date the state finance board, which has In hand all payments on the state debt, was centrolied by Republicans, the vote standing two to one. The claim that this is not control of fiscal affairs Is as well founded as most of the arguments In defense of the record of Democratic leadership on the state debt. « a
Don’t be a Wheel-Stopper.
» The last national. success of the Democratic party stopped the wheels of industry. Do yon want to repeat the experience? Shelbyville Republican.
ISSUE IS JOINED
Leaders of Indiana Reorganized De* mocracy Demand Revenue Tariff. PROPOSE TO DESTROY PROTECTION And Return to the Industrial Conditions Prevailing Under the Last Low Tariff Administrations—Cogent Reasons Why Indiana Voters Will Prefer to Let Well Enough Alone. "We • • ♦ demand that tariff duties shall be levied for the purposes of revenue Only." The pronouncement of the Indiana Democratic state platform above quoted again brings to the front in Indiana the Issue of protection. It will be noted that It is not a mere modification of schedules that is proposed, but an absolute abolition of protection as a legislative policy, something not even attempted by the framers of the Wilson-Gorman tariff law. Instead of admitting free or at a low rate of duty, such articles as sugar, tea and coffee, not produced in this country or produced in sufficient quantity to supply the demand, a “tariff for revenue only," Indiscriminately laid on -all-arti-cles entering into American consumption is .seriously proposed. It will be remembered that the only step toward a tariff-for-revenue law of which this generation knows anything, produced ruin but not revenue. It occasioned an annual deficit, and President Cleveland was compelled, in time of peace, to sell bonds to the ’ amount of $262,000,000, which, with Interest to the time of maturity, will cost the country a half billion dollars. It was predicted that the Dingley law would fail as a revenue producer. Its efficiency has been amply demonstrated. It has yielded an annual average of more than $215,000,000, as against an annual average of something over $162,000,000 under the law it displaced on the statute books. For the fiscal year 1902 the surplus was more than
180,000,000, after war taxes amounting to 1100,000,000 had been repealed. Such a treasury surplus has been accumulated that It has been possible to wipe out all the wgr taxes without anyone fearing the operations of the "endless chain” which worried President Cleveland and the country six years ago. Employment and Wages. | Three million men were out of employment in this country according to ■ Sampel Gompera, president of the American Federation of Labor, during the low-tariff period it is proposed to bring back. In Indiana the unemployed numbered fully 150,000. The loss to the workingmen in wages throughout the United States aggregated nearly two billion dollars a year, fully nine billion dollars in five years—which is more than all the gold and silver in the world. The statistics of the Massachusetts bureau of labor, a typical manufacturing state, show that during the past four years employment has Increased twice as fast as population. and wages twice as fast as emi ployment; if the comparison was with 11894, 1895 or 1896, the figures would bt I far more eloquent.. These are the conI ditions which inspire the leadership ’ of reorganized Democracy in this state to call for a return to the state of ' affairs existing under the last Clevei land administration. Prosperity of the Farmer. The Orange Judd Farmer truthfully declared in October, 1901, that "the most pros?erous yeas rhTheliTstory Gt the American farmer is drawing to a close.” Yet it , was a year of short crops. The statistics of the department of agriculture show that in 1896 ’ our last low-tariff year, a year of good ; crops, the Total value of the products of tb« American farm was 000; in 1901, our last protection year, a year of short crops, the total value of American farm products wa5182.885,5 ,, 0,0‘X'. That va|ue of llvp stock increased from M,426/’OO/'OO in 1896 to J2,681.b0 ‘in 19-L The aggregate increase arnoimfs to two billion dollars. not including the increase in value of lands, which would add, billions 'radre. It may be added that 1901 was not an exceptional year. It was j the fifth year of steadily improving ’ agricultural conditions. The statistics for 13 2 will show that the upward trend has continued, with increased momcnttftn. up to thia time. . The Orange Judd Farmer, a conservative farm journal without politics, was led to remark, in commenting on the figures for 19>?i: "All history affords 'no precedent for so remarkable a transformation.” Yet the reorganized Indiana Democracy calmly proposes, as an ample "remedy” for existing conditions the utter overthrow of protec- ! tlon. That it would change conditions ■is certain; that it would change them ( otherwise than infinitely for the worse. no one with a memory long enough to ’stretch back to 1896 believes. Other Contrasted Conditions. Since 1894 savings bank deposits in ; this country have increased more than j a billion dollars, and they are growing at the rate of 82o0.0G0.(M<0 a year. Th* premiums fald to insurance companies I show an Increase of* f400.«*4,0* 0 > i year a# compared with the only low- ' Tariff period of" which this gene is Hen I knows anything. Our exports are nearly double what they were in 1895. and during the five years of the XX nr ley law the balance of trade in o* r bustneos dealings with the world
’ T ■ r- —. ..'j. .7, - . J- ■ amounts to three billion dollars. In the four -years 1893, 1894, 1896 and 1896, we exported $200,000,600 more gold than we Imported; in the four yearslß97/3898. 1899 and 1900 we imported $200,000,000 more than we exported. The gold holdings of the United States at this time aggregate $550,000,000 —more gold than was ever held by the treasury before in the history of the country. The liabilities of failing firms in 1893, 1894, 1895 and 1896 averaged $229,000,000 a year; for the four years ending with 1901 they averaged only about one-balf as much, despite the great increase in the number of business undertakings. The amount of money in the United States per capita has increased from $25.62 in 1896 to $31.98 in 1902; the amount tn circulation per capita has Increased during the same period from $21.44 to $28.02; the per capita payment of interest on the public debt per year has been decreased since 1896 from 49 cents to 38 cents; the exports per capita increased from $12.29 to $lB.Bl. As indicating the general prosperity of the people, it may be npted that the postal revenues have increased from $1.17 per capita to $1.44 per capita—and there is no better index of general business conditions. To the statement that the cost of living has increased in proportion with the growth of individual incomes, it may be answered that the savings bank deposits of $200,000,00 a year, the $400,000,000 annual payments in life insurance premiums, and the unprecedented discharge of mortgages on the homes of the workers in city and country indicate very clearly to the contrary. Monuments to Protective Policy. Within the past four years the giant strides of the United States toward supremacy not only in some, but all the markets of the world, has become a subject not only of comment, but of alarm, in every European country. And well may they envy this nation, with our two billions of money iti circulation, our annual business transactions of thirty billions, our annual favorable balance of trade of six hundred millions, its annual agricultural output of .eight billions, our annual bank clearings of one hundred billions. our annual manufactures of fifteen billions, our life insurance of thirteen billions, our national bank deposits of three billions, our savings bank and loan association deposits of three billions, our wealth of one hundred billions, and our net debt of less than a billion, which, alone among the great nations of the world, we are paying off. It has been remarked that with only 5 per cent of the world’s population and 7 per cent of its area, we are about equal industrially to half the remainder of mankind. Here are some interesting figures along this line, presented, by Senator Gallinger in a recent speech: We equal or surpass all the jrest of the world In corn, cotton, eggs, petroleum, leather products, copper and forest products. Of the following we produce twothirds as much as the rest of the world: Coal, pig iron, steel, and threefifths of the total food and agricultural products and manufactures. We produce one-half as much as the rest of the world in silver, iron ore, fish; one-third as much in gold, wheat, oats, hay, butter and cheese; onefourth as much In hops and beer; onefifth to one-tenth as much in barley and wool. We consume, reckoned in value, ( twice as much corn as all the rest of of the world combined, one-fifth as much wheat, one third as much oats, one-third as much cottpn, one-fifth as much wool, one-third as much sugar, one-half as much fish, nearly as much coffee, one-fourth as much tea, about three-fifths as much meat —all food and" agricultural products. We have‘one-third as much wealth as all the rest of the world, one-third as much gold,-one-flfth as much silver, one-tenth as many sheep, one-third as . many cows, as much forest area, two-1 thirds the railroad tfilleage, or. fount- • ing total track, about as much as all J ’he resit of the world combined. We; have twice as much insurance In, force, cne-half as mr.'h savings bank j deposits, we spend two-thirds as much | for education, -w hav« cue-fourth the spindles in operation, nearly onefourth as h shipping, one-fourth as many exports, about one-tenth as much revenue and expenditures, and lees than one-thirtle’h as much debt. Letting Well Enough Alone. It seems that we have a good deal at stake. Is the country sick enough to require the attention of the legislative quacks who brought it to 'b ath's door so short a time ago that every man in Indiana old enough to vote remembers the results with disgust? Indiana is ready for no backward step. The sentiment of her people, farmers and manufacturers, capitalists and wage-earners, is in accord with the intelligent and patriotic dr laration of the Republkan state ’r/fbfm on the tariff question, which h ; , fqp lows: We adhere to the policy of protection. Under it our industries have developed and the opporunities of labor have been inoreased and wages maintained at a higher rate than wpuld have been otherwise possible. We favor the extension of our markets through carefully guarded reciprocity arrangements noth ether countries wherever it can be done without "interrupting our home production." While vie favor such modification of thrift seffedoles as frem-4»mo-to t»ms are required by changing conditions, we insist that ouch changes shall be made in line w th the fundamental I principle of protection.
A Farm for you California The Santa IVwill take you there any day in September or October for only $33 from Chicago or $25 from Kansas City. Corresponding rates from East gen-erally--tickets good in tourist sleepers or obair cars— enjoyable ride on the shortest, quickest, pleasantest line. Also one fare, plus $2, round trip to Great Southwest, first and third Tuesdays, September, October. Exceptional opportunities for homeseekers in magnificent San Joaquin Valley. Money making investments. Write to Gen. Pass, office, A. T. & S. F. R’y, Chicago, for California land folders. -Cheap Excursions--
Oil Lands For Sale. 200 scree, all or part, in the Jasper county, Indiana, oil field. It ie in section 28, town 31 north and range 5 west, and lies of a mile north of Asphaltum. It is not improved. Not leased. No trade will betaken. I have no agent. Address the owner. . Charles Foley, wtf Danville, In A cold to-day meads ron sumption tomorrow. Consumption is more ofjru caused by a neglected cold than any other way—it is poor judgment to buy a cornmen cough syrup when it is so easy to get Dr. Geo. Leininger’s Kor-mal-de-hyde Cough Cure the best cough remedy in the world for all serious and stubborn coughs and colds. It never fails* Sold at 25c on a guarantee by A. F. Long. Tu Double Track to the Missouri River. The Chicago and north-Western R’y is the only double track line between Chicago and the Mi souri River. Four trains a day Chicago to Omaha, three daily trains to the Pacific Coast end two trains per day Chicago to Denver, with' through Pullman sei vice to points in lowa, Nebraska, Dakotas and to The Black Hills. Send stamp for booklet “Only Double Track Road Chicago to Missouri River” to < A. H. Waggener, < _ 22 Fifth Avenue. < • • Chicago, 111.
Homs Seekers Cheap Excursion to the Wts and North-West. via Chicago & North-Western R’y from Chicago, Jane 17, July 1-15, Auguet 5-19, September 2 16 and October 7 and 21. Exceptionally low rates to a large number of points in Northern Wisconsin, Michigan, North-western lowa, Western Minnesota, Nebraska, North and South Dakota. Better owna farm. Start now. Send 2cent stamp to W. B. Kniskern, 22 Fifth Avenue, Chicago, for copy oj - the “North-Western Homeseeker.” Apply to your nearest ticket agent, or A. H. Waggener, 22 Fifth avenue. Chicago, LI
Cure Your Catarrh N )iv. V. Van Dorn : 2011 Avenue B. Biriringhanj, Ala . writes; “j hav»s had catarrh in on* of -tli—> worst forms for 20 years, and .t - .- ng Dr Gey Leipiriger’s 1 ir-mal.tl - - h) I* InhaDr for two -la' * ; eel ►qj’ir-’-1 v Hfjfi »>**lj<*v»* * v ’t* t.’fxn tinned ure I will get cm-d ” So d at 50 cents on a gnerant-e - y A F Long. AMERICA'S BEST Editorially Fearless. Consistently Republican N<-w» fr"tt al) 'rf tt» world—v>< H wrtt-t«-n, oryinal U, urtx-I** «a> ti.» hotr.r mw br*k» work aU/ut tl- faru, ar.-l garoec. The Weekly Inter Ocean. A-***- Pm—. ♦he«*>re ta>graj t.;- ' f N<w York tap and rat»» the New Y-.rk Wcrort—rrnr.,l* fr-m ih* . YEAR-ONE-DOLUR v -;le.r 'fc>' ffBR- M-h 14K >a<—. tb« WEEKLY INTER <XEAN one y»ar.lXta laj-n t<t ——sl9o—
. Land Land Land. J * * We bare4o,ooo of land in tracts from4o to 700 acres, choicest Indiana farms in Whitley, Koscuisko, Lagrange, Noble and Elkhart counties. Corn lands, wheat land and grass lands, we offer for sale or trade on easy terms from 1 to 15 years time, only small payments required. * We have several farms in the choicest farming region of Indiana kuown as the How Patch in Lagrange county. We take pleasure in showing lands to any prospective purchaser. We are the oldest as well as largest Real Estate dealers in northern Indiana Write or cull for discription circular of farms, information cheerfully given. Banking House of Sol Mier Co., Ligonier, Ind. C J. Dean, Rensselaer, Ind. Agt.
NOTICE. Of Gravel Road Report and Election. L William C. Babcock, Auditor of Jasper County, Indiana, do hereby certify that report of yiewera was filed in my office ior the Board ot County, on October .7th, 1802 as follows: State of Indiana, j Janper County I To the Honorable Board of Commiiudonera of Jasper County The undersigned viewers and engineer duly appointed by the Board at September term 1901, to locate and view certain road* in Hanging Grove Township. Jasper County, Indiana, i wlt ?.. e P ur Pos® of graveling the name, report as follows LOCATION. Hanging Grove Gravel Road commences at the northwest corner of the south wot quarter of section thirty (90), township twenty nine (28) range five (ft) west, and running thence east on the highway on the huff mile line t hrough'sectfon thirty (90), twenty nine (28), twenty eight (28), twenty seven (27). and twenty six (26), to the center of said section twenty six 1261, said townsiiip and range, a distance of 23881 feet. .‘’onoinep'rfnK at the center of section thirty Iw] and running* thence Mouth on the center line of section thirty (301 and thirty one [Bl] a distance of 6801 feet, to the intersection of the highway known as the State Road, thence easterly on the line of said State Road, a distance of 4044 feet to the crossing of the C. I. <t L. railroad tn section thirty two [32] all tn Mid township and range, to be known as one road £ n j r ,< c name *" “th* Hanging Grove Gravel We consider the road bed prepared and ready to receive the gravel. ~ We have estimated that the gravel be twelve Un * eroart to • wtdth No gravel shall be larger than will pass through a six 16] inch ring for the lower, or [6| inches, next to the road bed. The upper six {«] inches shall be free from stone larger than two inches in diameter and whall not contain Band, and may contain clay exceed ten Do] per cent. The gravel ■hall be pUcedon the north side of that j»ortion °f the road running east and west except that portion of the road lying directly we»t of the centerof sect ion twenty eight [2B] for a distance of 2000 feet, where it shall be placed in the center of the grade, and on the west side of the road bed, on the portion running south through the center of section thirty [Bo] and thirty -one [8! 1 to the iatersection of State Road and on said State road it shall be placed on the line of that portion partially graveled. On the .east and west road there shall be placed gravel to the depth of four 14] inches from station oto 81, a ffietanoe of 8100 feet and from station 50 to 88x90, six [6] in -he* of gravel a distance of 880 feet. On the north and south road, from Oto 10x63. a distance of 1083 feet, there shall be placed four 14] inches of gravel, sad from 78x86 to 84x36 a di>-lance of 600 feet, six (fl] inches of gravel and from 88x35 to 100x8ft a distance of IflOO feet, six (OliachM of gravel. „ We ba-eour es’imates on such information a* we have been able to obtain. 4 Total length of road, M 794 feet. 11389 ea.yds. gravel at 00 cents per yd. 810242.00. Average cost per mile 81554.00. SYLVESTER GRAY HENRY GROW, HUGH L. GAMBLE, Viewers. Engineer. Subscrilied anil sworn to before me this 7th day of October 1802. WM'C. BABL’<*’K, Auditor. Notice of Election. Notice is given that the Board of Commissioners "f Jasper County at their n-gular <>ct. -<-ei)cn, IVri, ordered that an > b ' t!on la; held on Tuesday, the 4th Oay of November 1902, at time and nndertbe sum- control as the general '-lection to be held on -aid date, and at the u-nal place of holding elections, jn Hanging r ,r6v« towndifp. inMrit rrTTrnrT-. forTbepaipase — "f voting upon the qui-r’i'.a of building of said gravel roid. Wi’u'-• :ny Land aixlth' - a Los the SEALComrnl -ionert of mid th: ' WM. c Habcock. Auditor of Jasper Conutr Indiana.
Application, Im Noth •<■ hereby irfy«-n to th* «i' izrm* tit the •Mrs of F ir <»nd of Union town-hip, .Ti-i »?r Cotw)tT > -lndiatia. that th* underdgned i'hXri**-A.-ttnndy. n mile ihhabiiant of the Htat* of Indiana, own* the »-’«• of tw*ptyons ><-ar-,of j.- zxl nu’tal '•huw>-r. iitu! « r-ian n'th'-Ino't of U-corninx ntoxi' an-d. and who ha- l*en a continuon- n-übni of maul town and town-Mfi for more than - tilri-tv day- laat jm-r and who Uin r-pe- • to alt b-irai reiftiir*inent- and <fuabtk-atior»,a nt swl oroj-r air-on to I* entru-ted with thqnor« arid who u>-nd will |>- them fiutiownarand proprietor of mix! lm>it» if lw-*n-e be granted Linn will apply to tin- HtUrd of < omml«wfon«m theConnty ‘ft at th*: r Noti-mUtew-rm i-onimen'ring Nov*ml*r 2 !UW. fora lb-en-e to M-1J anti Kirter-pirittion-. rfn»n-.rtialt and ail other intoxxj-.tiutf ip|r.or* ut x otiaatltie* ttian a unart at a time with the privuegs of allowtftg th* aarne tn o>- drank on the j.rt-mlMa i *<l r * -old ■t'd TJieprwiM k.*atx<n of thA tornl-c- where -axl awpMrmrt <l«—ir»- to londix-t -aid retail liquor i-a one -torr frame Imiidini/ - •uated on lot'rix iff) in block one it) in -aid Town of Fair Oak*, -aid room b*:n;r particulari !r de-orttx-d a» follow-. t< wit Cotnmenrtng al < the north <-*-t corner of -aid lot en id and naninit them * tn, a w«rt--rly direction parallel i with -e-ond -freet thirty < ight -Hu f«—t.then-a in a -antherly direction wirsllel with Hendrtcka -tre-t eight*** i iki rex’. thence in an ’ >a»terlr Alt<-rl!on paraite-l with Flr»t afreet i thirty tight «JWi> feet th-rx-t in a northerly dlr»<ilon ja>rail*i with Kent afreet eighteen I IF) ! fret to th'- fllane of la-gitinin«. Th* -ex! room front* on Kent -treat and has ’ oKe wiMow and one dw.r fronting oh Mid -tr«-*4 and one door and one window in the ►outberly end of -aid room. That the -aid da • w-riW oaf r«F«n i* -etfirst- from any oth-r •r.i.-of -try kind arid ' Trs* tw devkwa for •itnn- to* if or tnuu- of any kind or character • r.d <r>er* are no partition. or partition therw- | m. That the -aid bar room ran h«- -ecurrly ; xxked and admiM-ion tben-tz. at ah ti lltr » preI —nt-d and t- -o erraox-d w.’ii gta-a -nndowa that th* whole of -aid room ».ay be etewad . tfota th*«tre«-t. 7 tWt'Tßf vrH to aih*d for ci idLsmi „ year from th* date of •'TjAnUion ot th* Urenas now h*lq Vy th» appli<ant and the atipbeant will abp aakfoe th* prtr.xweof raJhr r *obec«KM and Hsara 14*or>n*etto« with«rid reta.i Uqu« Lualaew. 'WIM-i.I Ors. IAKdM CHAKMM A UVMDTT
