Newspaper Page Text
VOL. X.
ODR LATEST DISPATCHES.
The Happenings ol a Day Chronicled in
Brief and Concise Paragraphs
And Containing tlie Gist of the Slews
From AH Parts of the World.
The official yellow fever report of
Brunswick Friday, shows forty-two
new eases and two deaths. This is
the highest number of cases yet re¬
reported in one day
The United States man-of-war Mohi¬
can arrived at Port Townsend, Wash.,
from Behring sea Friday night with
five officers and seventeen men sick
with grip. The Mohican put in for re¬
pairs.
One of the most, disastrous fires which
has raged in Detroit, Mich., for many
years occurred Saturday evening on
Champlain street, a whole block of
business buildings on that street be¬
tween Brush and Beaudien being com¬
pletely swept awav. Loss estimated
at $200,000.
Uriah Miller a prominent attorney
and politician of Memphis, Tenn,. and
one of the charter members of the
Tennessee Club, had his name strick¬
en from the roll of practicing attor¬
neys Saturday in the circuit court.
The charge was a failure to turn over
certain money, collected for a client.
A Memphis dispatch says: A killing
frost in this section Saturday night
did groat injury to crops and vegeta¬
tion. The late crop will be cut short
20 per cent and in the lowlands, tho
top crop will be a failure. The frost
seems to have been general throughout
the Missisiippi valley.
A special from Vicksburg, Miss.,
says : Cotton and other tender vege¬
tation in the lowlands were nipped by
frost Sunday morning in this portion
of Mississippi, and heavy frosts are re¬
ported in northern Lousiana, where a
much lower temperature is recorded.
With drought and other causes the
damage will be great.
A London dispatch of Friday says:
A mysterious epidemic of diarrhoea
prevails in the Greenwich work-house.
Over 150 of the inmates are affected.
Two inmates of the Greenwich work
house are already dead and others are
in a dangerous condition. The symp
tons arc in many respects similar to
cholera.
An unknown steamer was run down
and sunk in Boston harbor Friday
night, and many persons who were on
board were drowned, the vessel sink¬
ing so rapidly- that it was impossible
to rescue them. The accident was
caused by the inability of the officers
of the respective crafts to see any dis¬
tance ahead, because of a he avy fog.
The New York Evening Post says
that the Valkyrie will be laid up on
this side of the Atlantic for the winter.
Discussion of the result of the race
was very warm Saturday. Yatchmen
were very decided in opinions about
the true results of the yatch’s great
race in its bearing on the old contro¬
versy between kneel and centerboard
Bursting water dams in the territory
of Tepuca, Mexico, have caused great
loss of life on several haciendas.
Twenty-four persons are known to be
drowned. At Santa Inez, in the state
of Oxaca, the town was inundated and
the town hall and many other build¬
ings were swept away. There were
similar disasters in other towns.
During the week ending October
14th 2,121,794 people paid to see the
World’s fair. It was the banner week
of the exposition thus far, and far ex¬
ceeded tbe attendance for alike period
of any international fair ever he d. Of
this number Chicago day contributed
over 700,000, a greater crowd,perhaps,
than ever before congregated within
an enclosure.
The Kentucky and Indiana bridge
property at Louisville, Ky., bonded
for $2,000,000, and owned entirely by
Louisville parties, passed into the
hands of a receiver Saturday. De¬
fault of interest in the first and
second mortgage bonds, amounting to
$40,000, made this step necessary.
Judge Barr, of the federal court, ap¬
pointed John McLeod receiver.
The big schooner Minnehaha was
beached at Stark, ten miles north of
Onekama, Mich., at noon Saturday to
save her from foundering in deep wa¬
ter. The seas soon overwhelmed the
wreck and drove the crew into the
rigging. Before the arrival of the
life-saving crews from Manistee and
Frankfort, the schooner went to pieces,
and six of the crew drowned.
A Columbia, S. C., dispatch of Fri¬
day says: Judge Gary has followed
Judge Hudson’s lead and quashed in¬
dictments against several person, for
selling liquor. His action is on the
same ground announced by Judge
Hudson. Judge Gary is entirely in
sympathy with the Tillman adminis¬
tration, having been one of the gov¬
ernor’s right-hand men in the cam¬
paign.
A special from Pulaski,Tenn., states
that The Commercial Bank and
Trust company of that city closed
its doors Saturday morning,
having made an assignment.
John T. Allen, vice president, and
Thomas E. Daly, a director of the
The Banner-Messenger.
BUCHANAN, HARALSON COUNTY, GA„ THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19. 189 a.
bank, are the assignees, Deposits
arc about 840,000 and it is thought
depositors will be paid in full. Tho
county had a large amount of deposits
in the bank.
Patrick Walsh, president of the
Augusta exposition and national com¬
missioner from Georgia to the world’s
Columbian exposition, invited the
national commission in session there to
attend the exposition in Augusta, which
opens November 14th and continues
until December 14th. Commissioner
Walsh’s proffer of a lull measure of
proverbial southern hospitality was
Well received and accepted with com¬
plimentary remarks in behalf of tho
national commission by Commissioners
Roaoho, McLows and McDonald.
AT THE NATIONAL CAPITAL.
Affairs ol Government anil Routine ol
Hie House anil Senate Discusses!.
Jiotes of Interest Concerning the Peo¬
ple ami Their General Welfare.
Lovick Pierce, of Columbus, Ga,,
was on Wednesday appointed chief
clerk of tho bureau of education.
Unfavorable to Atlanta.
Acting Secretary of the Trasury
Curtis has written a letter to the chair¬
man of the wavs and means committee
reporting against a subtreasury at At¬
lanta. Mr. Curtis, however, shows by his
letter that he does not understand the
objectof therequest. He seems to think
the subtreasury is wanted for Atlanta
only, when it is requested for the ben¬
efit of the entire southeast. The entire
Georgia delegation will appear before
the ways and means committee to urge
that the bill introduced by Colonel
Livingston be reported to the house.
Members of the delegation will also
explain the situation more thoroughly
to Mr. Curtis and Secretary Carlisle.
They believe the report of Mr. Curtis
will be reversed and that congress will
provide for a sub-treasury at Atlanta.
('ailing on the President.'
Several unconditional repeal senators
called upon the president Saturday
morning and expressed the opinion
that a compromise could be had. They
wanted to know if he had ever given it
out that he would be willing to agree
to a compromise. He replied, as he
has always replied to the former ques¬
tions of this character, that he stood
upon his message. In that he adviBed
unconditional repeal, and he still de¬
sired it. Tho senators who are op
posed to unconditional repeal still con¬
trol the situation. They can control
it for weeks and months. It is not
probable that the two factions of the
senate will be able to meet upon neutral
ground for several days to come. The
night sessions have led to too much
bad feelings for the senators to recover
quickly. Saturday they were wider
apart than they have been during the
past week.
Mr. Cleveland’s Promise*
At the cabinet meeting Friday after
complete discussion of all the phrases
of the senate situation, a compromise
proposition was agreed on to be otter¬
ed by one of the repeal senators. It
includes, as did the Harris amendment,
provision of the silver seignorage in
treasury, amounting to $53,000,000,
and thereafter, the purchase of 3,000,
000 ounces, until 90,000,000 ounces
have been purchased. This would
carry the purchase of silver
over the expiration of Mr. Cleveland,
a condition the silver men insist upon.
To meet the demands of the east a
proposition for the issue of $100,000,
000 of 3 per cent bonds is included.
There is still a question whether a pro¬
viso for the repeal of the tax on state
banks and the redemption of notes of
all classes below $5 shall be added.
This is the administration’s compro¬
mise proposition.
COMMENDING THEIR SENATORS
Citizens of Memphis Hold a Meeting
in Defense of Silver.
Following on the heels of the recent
action of the joint meeting of the
Merchants’ and Cotton exchange at
Memphis that condemned acrimo¬
niously Senators Bate and Harris, of
Tennessee, for their attitude on the
silver bill, now in the senate, a largely
attended mass meeting of leading citi¬
zens of Memphis and Shelby county
was held Thursday night to discuss the
silver question.
After lengthy speeches a committee,
consisting of ex-Congressman Casey
Young, Col. M. C. Galloway, E. W.
Carmack, Holmes Cummins, Thomas
Holmes, H. D. Greer and J. J. Du
puy, was appointed, who submitted
lengthy resolutions eulogistically en¬
dorsing the senators named and com¬
mending them for their faithfulness
and firmness in defense of silver.
Some of the speeches were especial¬
ly bitter in their denunciation of Pres¬
ident Cleveland, who was character¬
ized as a slave driver, cracking his
whip over the backs of the senators
and representatives in congress. The
meeting was composed almost exclu¬
sively of democrats.
Ohio, Illinois and Missouri have
eonstitutional provisions prohibiting
state banks of issue.
"
SOUTHERN NEWS ITEMS,
The Drift of Her Progress and Pros¬
perity Briefly Noted,
Happenings of Interest Portrayed In
Pithy Paragraphs.
For the 24 hours ending Thursday
noon the Bruswick board of health re¬
ported eighteen new cases of yellow
fever.
The Manchester cotton mills, about
three miles west of Fort Worth, Tex.,
burned Thursday morning. Loss
about $300,000.
Thirty-five new cases of yellow fe¬
ver and two deaths was the official re¬
port of the Brunswick board of health
for the, twenty-four hours ending at
noon Tuesday.
Hon. M. T. Bryan, of Tennessee,
was unanimously re-elected president
of the Southern Interstate Immigra¬
tion Association hv the convention at
Chicago Thursday.
No new cases of yellow fever were
reported at Jesup, Ga., Wednesday,
and no change has occurred in affairs
since last report. All the sick are im¬
proving as raj,idly as can be expected.
President Hurt, of the Atlanta, Ga.,
Consolidated Street Railway company,
has announced a reduction of twenty
per cent for conductors and motormen
to go into effect the first, of November.
The rednetion will only be temporary.
The trial in the habeas corpus pro¬
ceedings in the case of the six soldiers
imprisoned for lynching Miner Rich¬
ard Drummond, was concluded in the
in the criminal court at Knoxville,
Tenn., Thursday and Judge Sneed re¬
served his decision.
The Supreme court of North Caro¬
lina has decided a case under the usu¬
ry act, holding thut if a greater rate
than the legal one of eight per cent is
charged all interest- is forfeited and
any payments made are to be credited
upon the principal.
A Memphis, Tenn., dispatch says:
An electric car, on the Memphis and
Raleigh Springs railroad came in col¬
lision with a cow, was thrown down an
embankment and wrecked eight miles
from passengers? Memphis Wednesday "night.
Four were injured. Some
are in a critical condition.
A Raleigh dispatch of Thursday
says: The rolls of ex-confederate pen¬
sioners in North Carolina have been
completed by State Auditor Furman.
There are 2,035 male pensioners and
3,904 widows of soldiers, Wilkes
county leads in number of pensioners,
having 146. Nine counties have over
100 each.
Mr. J. Allen Smith, president of the
First National bank, of Abbeville, S.
C., will present Abbeville with a $15,
000 opera house at once. The brick
and other building material have al¬
ready been hauled to the grounds.
The building will he three stories
high. The. plans show that, it will be
something handsome for a town of
4,000 inhabitants.
The 70th animal session of the Hol
stoii conference of the Methodist Epis¬
copal church south, whose territory
embraces East Tennessee, southwest
Virginia and north Georgia met at
Knoxville, Tenn., Wednesday morn¬
ing, for a week’s session, Bishop W.
W. Duncan, of South Carolina, pre¬
siding. Three hundred and fifty min¬
isters and delegates are in attendance.
A Middlesborough, Ky., dispatch
says: Middlesborongh’s water works
were placed in the hands of a receiver
Wednesday, James A. Chapman being
named. The works were built in
boom times at a cost of half a million
dollars, but the slow growth of the
town and the failure of the steel plant
to run, caused the waterworks to be
run at a loss. The liabilities are un¬
known.
The North Carolina department of
agriculture lias made its October crop
report based on the information given
by its 1,000 correspondents. The per¬
centage of the condition of the crop
are given as follows: Cotton, 70; rice
81; peanuts, 87; corn, 84; tobacci
76. This is the last report of th
year. The upland corn crop is fim
The cotton crop larger is than that
last year.
Twelve People Killed.
The second greatest accident in the
history of the Michigan Central rail¬
road occurred at Jackson, Mich., Fri¬
day morning within 100 yards of the
place where fourteen years ago to a
day the Pacific express crashed into u
freight engine, eighteen people being
killed. This disaster has for a record
twelve dead, five probably fatally in¬
jured and fourteen others more or less
seriously hurt. An excursion train,
originating at Oswego, N. I., was
standing on the track at Jackson sta¬
tion, when a second special laden also
with excursionists from the east,
crashed into it from the rear and tele¬
scoped the last three cars of the Oswe¬
go special with the above result.
OF tne ana rnnus oi me souinwest ana
west in 1880, 3,631,381 acres are now re¬
deemed to agriculture and grazing bj
irrigation, but for every acre irrigated toucl:
there are 247 still unblessed by the
of the water drawn from the mountain
bights.
A STORM ON THE COAST.
1 Repetition of (lie Disasters of August
27tli Apprehended.
A Savannah special says: The West
Indian storm which reached here
Thursday morning and has been blow¬
ing a gale of forty to sixty mileB an
hour all day continued to increase in
fury, but up to dark had not done any
very great damage right in the city.
The storm was reported at Titusville,
Fla., Wednesday night and then had
a slightly northwest direction.
The City of Augusta, which left New
York Wednesday, will meet the storm
off the North Carolina coast in about
the same latitude that the Savannah
was struck by the last storm. There
are eighten vessels in the Tybee roads
and at quarantine, and the chances are
that if the gale continues they will all
be wrecked, as in the case of the last
blow. All the vessels in port are seek¬
ing places of refuge.
FEARS FOR THE SEA ISLANDS.
No reports have been heard from
any of the sea islands, but the pros¬
pect is that the storm will undo all
that has been done for them, in the
way of shelter and that they will be as
bad or worse off than they were be¬
fore. No reports of any fatalities have
yet been received.
SEVERE AT JACKSONVILLE.
The gale at Jacksonville is said to
, lavo . een ., le \,ors , ,, ley , ave , at ,
““.•“'i. Jyril&S
damage th.te hmnotj.t been learned,
A Charleston special of Thursday
night says: The West Indian going" cyclone
lis on us. The wires are down
to the southward and there is trouble
to the northward. At this writing the
wind is blowing in great gusts at from
forty to forty-five miles an hour. No
damage has been done except the
wrecking of telephone and electric
light wires.
Three tides have been banked up,
and at midnight it is expected, unless
the wind shiftB around to the south¬
west, that the eastern, southern and
western portions of the city will be
under water. Neither of the Clyde
steamers due Thursday have arrived.
At this hour it looks like a repetition
of the cyclone of August.
THE COTTON CROP.
Official Report of the Department of
Agriculture.
The report of the statistical divis
ion of the department of agriculture
at Washington makes cotton show a
decline of 2.7 points from the Septem
her condition, which was 73.4, as
against 70.7 for this month. The con
dition of cotton in the month of June
was 85.0, declining to 82.7 in July
ancl to 80.4 in August, losing from
that time to the present 9.7 points.
The retrogressive tendency has been
persistent during the season. Reports
from the most fertile parts of the cot
ton belt are far from hopeful. The
Texas crop of 1892 and >98 was about
31 per cent, of the entire crop of the
country, and the October report of this
department of 1892 showed a condition
of 77 per cent, as against 65 per cent, for
1893. The percentages of the states
are: Virginia, 93; North Carolina,
76; South Carolina, 62; Georgia, 76;
Florida, 84 ; Alabama, 76; Mississippi,
73; Louisiana, 71; Texas, 65; Aikan
sas, 71; Tennessee, 59.
The October condition in the states
of Virginia and North Carolina is the
same as that of September, T >hi'a Texas
has gained two points. Reports from
the eight remaining states indicate
declines in condition from 1 to 10
points. The state averages for Sep¬
tember were: Virginia, 93; Nort-.
Carolina, 76; South Carolina, 63;
Georgia, 77; Florida,85; Alabama, 78;
Mississippi, 78; Louisiana, 81; Texas,
63 ; Arkansas, 80; Tennessee, 66.
The causes of deterioration in condi¬
tion are the same as those reported in
the department report. The weather
conditions have not been favorable.
Protracted and prevalent drought, ex¬
cessive moisture in some places and
various insect enemies of the plant
have all contributed toward producing
the low conditions reported. A favor¬
able autumn is the only hope of im¬
provement. The weather conditions
are favorable to successful picking in
most parts.
______
The Wires Down.
A Washington special says: The
West India cyclone and the storm from
the northwest joined issues Friday
morning east and west, and since tele¬
graphic communication has been prac¬
tically at a standstill. After sweeping
over the Florida peninsular Thursday,
the cyclone made its way north
through Georgia, North Carolina and
the Virginias, and i niting with the
storm from the west, somewhere in
Pennsylvania or Ohio, were both dif¬
fused over a wide area, playing havoc
with all means of wire comm unication.
according to me estimates ot 18D3-4
the German navy numbers, inclusive of
midshipmen and cadets, 1,231 officers
and 18,249 men. or a total of 19,480.
The ironclads, floating eighteen material armored consists vessels, of nineteen two
cruiser frigates, nine cruiser corvettes,
eight cruisers, three gunboats, nine dis¬
patch vessels, eleven training ships and
twelve other vessels, making a total,
exclusive of torpedo boats, of ninety-one
vessels of all sort s.__
Everyoody should read the paper and
keep up with the times.
THE GREAT SOUTH AMERICAN
NERVINE TONIC
-AND-
Stomach^Liver Cure
The Most Astonishing Medical Discovery of
the Last One Hundred Years. *
,
It is Pleasant to the Taste as the Sweetest NectarA
It is Safe and Harmless as the Purest Milk.
This wonderful Nervine Tonic has only recently been introduced info
this country by the Great South American Medicine Company, and yet its
peat value as a curative agent has long been known by the native inhab¬
itants of South America, who rely almost wholly upon its great medicinal
powers to cure every form of disease by which they are overtaken.»
This new and valuable South American medicine possesses powers and
qualities completely hitherto solved unknown the problem to the of the medical profession. This medicine has
Complaint, and diseases of the general cure Nervous of Indigestion, System. Dyspepsia, It also Liver
cures all
forms of failing health from whatever cause. It performs this by the Great
Nervine Tonic qualities which it possesses and by its great curative powere
upon the digestive with this organs, the stomach, the liver and the bowels. No remedy
strengthener compares of the life wonderfully forces of the valuable human Nervine body Tonic as a builder and
and as a great renewer of
a broken down constitution. It i3 also of more real permanent value in the
treatment and cure of diseases of the Lungs than any ten consumption rem
fc( ]ie8 ever use( j on this continent. It is a marvelous cure for nervousness
*«-**•»<•* “ cll “5" ■» “°“M ?»* f “* *> ™ ‘1™ P* Nemne Tome alm.at
constantly for the space of two or three years. It will carry them safely
°ver value the to the danger. aged and This. infirm, great strengthener because its great and curative energizing is properties of inestimable wffl
give them of those a new who hold will on life. half It will dozen add bottles ten or fifteen years to the lives of
many use a of the remedy each year.
CURES
Nervousness and
Nervous Prostration,
Nervous Headache and
Sick Headache,
Female Weakness,
All Diseases of Women,
Nervous Chills, *
Nervous Paralysis, Paroxysms and
Nervous Choking
Hot Flashes,
Palpitation Rental Despondency, of the Heart,
sleeplessness, $?“ Vitus Dance,
s
Nervousness Nervousness of Females,
of Old Age,
.Neuralgia,
£ a f ns J n l* 10 Heart,
tains in the Back, i
All these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful Nervine Tonicx
NERVOUS DISEASES.
As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, eo remedy has been able
to compare with the Nervine Tonic, which is very pleasant and harmless jn
all.its effects upon the youngest child or the oldest and most delicateindivfr
" al - Nine-tenths of all the ailments to which the human family M heir, are
dependent on nervous exhaustion and impaired digestion. When there is an
the insufficient brain, spinal supply of nerve and food in the is blood, the result. a general.state Starved of debility like of
marrow nerves nerves,
starved muscles, become strong when the right kind of food is supplied, and
a thousand weaknesses supply and ailments all the disappear by as which the nerves the vital recover. forces As the
nervous system must power of the
body are carried on, it is the first to suffer for want of perfect nutrition.
Ordinary food does not contain a sufficient quantity of the kind of nutriment
necessary to repair For the wear our present becomes mode ot living and labor imposes
upon the nerves. this reason it necessary that a nerve food bo
supplied. This recent production of the South American Continent has been
found, by analysis, to contain the essential elements out of which nerve tissue
is formed. This accounts for its magic power to cure all forms of Bervoua
CKAWFOEDSVILLlt, Inn, Aug. 20, '86.
To the Great South American Medicine Co. :
Dear Gents:— I desire to say to you that I
have suffered for many vears with a very Beri
ous disease of the stomach and nerves. I tried
every medicine I could hear of but nothing
dbne vised me any appreciable South good American until I Nerviuo was ad¬
to try your Great
Tonic and Stomach and Liver Cure, and since
surprised using several bottles wonderful of it I must say that I the am
e„t its powers to cure
stomach knew and the general value of nervous this remedy system. I If do, every¬
one able supply the demand. aa you
would not be to
J. A. Hakdee,
Ex-Treas. Montgomery e*.
A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITUS’S DANCE OR CHOREA.
CRAWIOMKvniR, INI)., May had 19,1386. af¬
My daughter, twelve years with old, Chorea been St.
flicted for several months reduced skeleton, or
Vitus's Dance. She was to a
could not walk, could not talk, could not swal¬
low anything but milk. I had to handle her
Uke an infant. Doctor and neighbors gave her
dp. I commenced giving her the South Ameri¬
can Nervine Tonic; the effects were very sur¬
prising. In three days Bhe was rid of tho ner¬
vousness. and completely. rapidly improved. I think Four the bottles South
cured her the grandest remedy
American Nervine ever
discovered, and would recommend it to every¬
one. Mrs. W. S. ENSitlNQES.
State B?SESL of Indiana,
M. to before mo Public. this May
Chas.
INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA.
The Great South American Nervine Tonic
Which we now offer you, is the only Dyspepsia, absolutely and unfailing the remedy ever discov¬
ered for the cure of Indigestion, result disease and debility vast of train the human of symptoms
end horrors which are the ot stom¬
ach. No person can afford Stomach, to pass by because this jewel the of incalculable value who is
effected by disease of the that this is the and experience and testimony of
thousands go to prove There one only one great cure in the
world for this universal destroyer. is no case of unmalignant diseasa
of the stomach which can resist the wonderful curative powers of the South,
American Nervine Tonic.
EVERY BOTTLE WARRANTED.
PRICE: Large Eighteen ounce Bottles, $1.25. Trial Size, 15c.
J. T. COBB & CO.
Agents for Haralson County.
NO. 40.
Broken Constitution,
Debility Indigestion of and Old Age, Dyspepsia,
Heartburn and Sour Stomach,
Weight and Tenderness in Stomach.
Loss of Appetite,
Dizziness Frightful and Dreams, Ringing the Ears,
in
Weakness of Extremities and
Fainting, Impure and Impoverished Blood,
Boils and Carbuncles,
Scrofula, Scrofulous
Consumption Swelling of and Ulcers,
the Lungs,
Catarrh of the Lungs.,
Bronchitis and Chronic Cough,
Liver Complaint,
Chronic Diarrhoea,
Delicate and Scrofulous Children,
Summer of
Mr, Bolomon Bond, a member of tbe Society
of Friends, of Darlington, Ind.. says: "I haya
used twelve bottles of The Great South Ameri¬
can Nervine Tonic and Stomach and Liver care,
and I consider that every bottle did tor me tfna
hundred dollars worth of good, for because I haya
not had a good night's sleep twenty yean
on account of irritation, pain, horrible dream#,
and general nervous prostration, which hail
been caused by chrome indigestion and dys¬
pepsia of the stomach and by a broken down dan
condition of my nervous system. But'now I
lie down and sleep all night as sweetly as a baby,
and I feel like a sound man. I do not thin*
there has ever been a medicine introduced>into
this country which will at all compare with
thia Nervina Tonic as a cure for the stomach.".
Crawfordsviile, I»d., June 22,18R
My daughter, eleven years old, was severely
afflicted with St. Vitus’s Dance or Chorea. VfM
gave her three and one-half bottles of Boout
American Nervine and she is completely IB
stored. I believe it will cure every case of Si.
Vitus's Dance. I have kept it in my family til
two years, In and am sure it Is the greatest reiE
edy the world for Indigestion and Dyspep¬
sia, Health all forms from whatever of Nervous Disorders and Falling
cause.
John T. Mish.
State 0 / Indiana, 1 ,
Montgomery and County, f to ' before
Subscribed sworn me this June
22,1887. Ckas. W. Wright, Public.
Notary