Daily News, Volume 1, Number 112, Franklin, Johnson County, 29 June 1880 — Page 3

j*

S*

,,JILI1.fei

1

TUESDAY. JUNE 29. 1880.

Eailroab (Eime Sable.

HAItROAD TIME TABLE.

fnll|l

CHICAGO & EASTERN ILLINOIS. (LeuVfc for North) Hand Chicago Ex 7:50 a yi Danville Acc .... 8:10 pin •."Nashville and Chicago Ex 10:50 (Arrive from North) Tern Haute Acc 11:10am Chicago and Terre Ifthito Ex. .• 5:90 •sChfcago and Nashville Ex 4:20 a

ILLINOIS MIDLAND RAILWAY. (Leave for Northwest)

Peoria Mall and Ex 7:07 a Decatur Passenger $ :07 (Arrive from Northwest) Peoria Mall and Ex 0:00 pm Indianapolis Passenger 12:50

T. H, & SOUTHEASTERN. (toWprthington. [Depdt, Main and FirstSts.] (Leave for Southeast) 7:00 a Accommodation 1 (Arrive from Southeast)

Accommodation 8:00 INDIANAPOLIS «fc ST. LOUIS. I Depot, SlxjJ* and Tippecanoe Stal (I^ ttVo f^ing Eswt) I •csFew York Express 1 tSS a Indianapolis and Mat toon Acc 8:46 am Day Express 8 :10pm '(Arrive from East.) Day Express 10:52 am •csNow York Express .L ..... 1530 a Indianapolis and .Mnttoon Acc.... 6:85 ni (Leave going Went.) I *cNcw York Ex 1:88 a

Day Ex 10:54 am iwllauapolis and Mattoon Acc..: 6:87 am (Arrive from West) «c*New York Kx 1 23 a ...Indianapolis and Mattoon Acc :44 a "Day Ex 3:08

IA WEEK In your own town, and no capital risked. You citn glvo the business a trial without expense, The beat opportunity ever offered for those irUling, to work. Yon ilioirld try nothing «lse, until you sec for yourself what yon can do at tbu business we offer., No room tpjpipjain b«ro,: Ynu call devote all yotir time 6r o'nry your spare u3iuo to the busintii*, aud maku gruat- pay for -avery hour that you work. Women make an much aa men, Semi for special prlvate|tertni«ajd partkuJari^which Wv mail fjeo. |5.00f,ont#t Jree. Ifirt't complain of ijiard wlfllo ygj||nv$Mich aitwuicv Aildru^f H, UALLB-W'

-JaTia. MaW.

A

GENT8

WANTED

A

HAMLIX ROANS Ovarii.

'Jason&quarter

40tirr« WANTKO t*

Ivtry

li

[CArefnlljr borrected to date.J

Union Depot—Tenth and Chestnut Sta., to all trains cxcept I. & St. L-, T».H- A 8. K. (to Worth fngton), ana freight*. Ttele, fl*e minutes faster than Terre Hante tfme.

explanation

•Erery day.

rktouckcb masks.

or

All

other trains daily except S*fi

day. tPftrlor can dally, except Snnaar. Sleepingcaw. cRecliningcbaircar. Union Depot time which is five minutes fatter than cityilme.

VAN'DALIA LINE (Leave going East)

«*Fa»t Line. 1:40am Mail and Acc 3:40 pm *#+DayEx 3:06 pm Mail and Acc 7:00 a

(Arrive from East)

•sPaciflc Ex

1:25 a

Mail Train 9:55 a •-tFas-t Ex 8 06 Indianapolis Acc 7:00 pm (Leave going West) '^Pacific Ex .. 1:32 am Mall Train 10 08am •#Faet Ex 8:10 (Arrive from West) •sFaet Line 1:32 a Mail and Acc 8-50 a •aDay Ex 2:45 pm

TEItKE UAL'TE & LOGANSPORT, LogansporS Dlv, of Vand&lla.

(Leave for Northeast)

Mail Train fl :80 am Mixed Train 4:00 (Arrive from Northeast) Mail Train

Mixed Train

for the heat and faat-aell-

lug pictorial Ui»«ka and Uihlea. Prices reduced

83

per cent. National Puhusmino Co..

Philadelphia, Pa. 108ml.

TCTFTT"

Ito.ut

|)n/d

t^p/ani's-qtiartef

yeata huya orte. Beft cabinet or Parlor (irgana In the World winners of highest distinction at errryworld'a fair for thirteen years. Prices *51, *57,

Rn(l «l~

m^nth or

upward. CluaTogtiea free.

IIammnand Oboan Co, IW TremontStreet.,

ana upWi

Boston 40 .twist Fourteenth Street.. (U^jkpn ^onare) New Totk 850 Wabash AVenti

HOW TO pm in th«

TEU8 ths nrn

Farmsr

should

V^KX.

bavs a

copy.

899

860 PsfM.

1'Vfeffl'* 83V cfc»A

MAN WOMAN'S

fSSBenSeSBSSt H*prolue»irn.

Rl««mtly prlnJ»a ana

hiosw«m«

Vila at ilatiL Tathara aad Motbara, Tonaf ad Maidan* bujr tt. read

II,

VWI7

and aludv

IU Bxr

E E I S

Jsks Dollar

pany's

Maa

X.EJO "W EZROSriE!^

KEEPS THE

THIS CITY

.vthl! esn'lje

tyr-n#

NO. 416 M.klN STREET.

The Bankrupt Store, at 326 lain street, north side, solicits he attention of the ladies and their examination of the

Counter, whore they can

no doubt be suited.

11

Hie Singer Manufacturing

Com­

trade in 1879 amounted

over $25,000,000. and threef&oxths of all the sewing machines sold in the world during ,jiat year were G-ENUIiSrE SXNGER make.

I Tb«.JUMlo&,of the Repablican Partj Hot Ended. The trdssion of the National Rew6bBcan party is not jet tilled, It should not aie until it is tilled. It most secure td the colored people of the South equal political rights with white men. It most see. tp it that the amendments tp the Coojrtitulion resulting from the civil war shall be as honestly observe# and enforced in South Carolina, Geor and Louisiana as they are in Massachusetts, New York and Pennsylvania.

The election of a Democratic President next November would endanger all that the country has gained upon the score of liberality, union and the rights of man. It would cause a reaction similar to that which took place in England after the death of the Commonwealth and the restoration of Charles 1L The Democratic party, by means of its "Solid South," alreadVdominate8 both houses of Congress. This poorer has made it aggressive, and, in thought at least, us obstinate in defense of the principles which led it into rebellion as it was in 1861. Jefferson Davis and Robert Toombs, when they disdainfully shook the dust from their garments ana

J[uit

1:15 5:00 j)

•f

TERRE HAUTE A EVANSVILLE. (Leave for Booth) *»NaahvJlle Ex 4^0im fExtorcss S:10pm Freight and Act 5:00a (Arrive from South) ,+Eastern Ex 2:50 pm •etTjicaico Ex 10:45 Freight and Acc 5:00

the Senate to prepare for a conflict or the destruction of the Union, repre sented precisely the same ideas which are now being propagated by Lamar, Singleton, Vest, of Missouri and Butler, of South Carolina. They have never acknowledged anything like a change of heart in the South, and their votes against the use of Federal protection of tne negroes' right of suffrage are in fact so many defiances of the power of the United States Government to make good the guarantees solemnly given by tne Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth amendments. That they will dare to attempt the restoration of African slavery in its old form we do not believe. That would be a palpable insalt to the spirit of the age, which all civilized Nations would resent. But there can be substantial slavery without the old form, and this they will not hesitate to enforce by means of local le lation and non-interference of the eral Government and Courts. Given to them both Houses of Congress and the Presidential office, what is to stay them from pensioning the Confederate on an equality with the Union soldiersP From legalizing hundreds of millions of bogus claims for the loss of property by .their own acts of treason? From crippling and remolding the Federal District and Circuit Courts, and even the Supreme Court itself? And, from filling all the four-score thousand offioes of the Republic with Confederate Generals, Colonels. Captains, Lieutenants and privates? To assert that these ate merely imaginary perils is to assume that human nature has radically changed to accommodate itself to the situation. But we know that human nature does not so chnnge. Revenge, oflice, power, are as sweet to the beaten hosts of Democratic traitors as the same passions were to the legions of Marius and Sulla, or to the monarchical and -aristocratic ghouls who exhumed the bones of Cromwell and arined the cruel Jeffreys with autlioriLy to destroy every Englishman who had opposed the tyranny oi Charles I. and the treason of his dnrk-hearted Prime Minister, Strafford. It will not be safe to trust the Governmentto the hands of a party so insidious in design, so jealous of State- right, so thoroughly sectional, so bold and unrepentant, not to say proud, of it's crimes, and so eager to compensate. the South fc¥ its loaves by rebellioh. it 'Will be tiia| ejsqu£h tw jonlitllb jn thfe Democratic party .'hall have ceased to be controlled by the Confederate soldiers and statesmen, and after the South shall hav«? ceased to boast that it' i$ solid against those who would not permit its demagogues to destroy the Union and "sit down" on the Constitution. It is idle' lo talk about the checks a«d balances of Northern Union Demo-: crats. The polioy of the Democratic jf is and always vrill be regulated dfclnto'd*Tfy'fho Southern* Senators

am and Representatives in Congress. „Of thet forty-^n^^fimocrats -jiow In-t^e Senate^'tweutv-three are Southern, and of tiie one huudred" and forty-seven Democratic Representatives eighty-six are front the same States. Nearly all of these took a 'hind vrtth the Confederacy, and hold precisely the same views now they did In 1861. What respeot they have for the Federal Constitution, itfij^laws regnlati, ppntuw rigitsof! citizWLs ol fiie CfiM Stated may feadily

1

W kno

from the single fact that South Carolina, Louisiana, Florida and Mississippi, with honest,. J^epublk&a^ majorities ranging from 10,000 to 40.000, have but one Senator (Bruce, of Mississippi.) and not one Representative in Congress, and that every Southern State has a Democratic Governor who either took part as an officer in,the Confederate army, or to the extent of hla ability lent aid and comfort to thafc arruy. If they go these lengths without controlling tne Presidency, what would they not do with that office in the hands of cne of their Northern creatures? California was true to he Union and the o&nse of

tial election. She canriot AflftoM to fail now. She has every thing to lose or to risk by it, and nothing to gain. She will declare for Garfield and Arthur by as great a majority as she gave Lincoln and Hamlin, if she is wise for whoever Cincinnati presents it is not more certain that the sun will rise to morrow than that the Confederate "brigadiers" in the Senate and House will rule hvrn, «nd introi the policy of his administration.—Ban

Fm\ri$co Chronicle.

What the Uemoernts Have Accomplished. The pending contest before the people must pnxee«l upon principle^ or what passos for pruiciple. upon political difterenees moro or less real. ujon the party record as it is eaUed—thati^ttpon what the parties have done and upon what they j»mpo«c to do In respect to histori. nl ^u-^ttons the Democmts have little to say lor thvmsflve^. They wicd to jxmt with pride" to their niausgemcnt of affair-s for a score or two of years mom or Hess, it would he datsffemit for them to invite attention to itn* past in this w» just now. If we ge back a quarter of & ceuturv to the events which led to the war. of fifteen or twenty years to the tin&e of th* w*»f

*-v

tuu aw uuu grvuim wiucn vue» wuuiu risely choose for a politidil battle fie ld-, "he Republicans could desire nothing etter than snch a reviews ap ana

enaii not una gfouM whi«f they w5uia wise! The better than snch the revival of- questioifs aa of passions which it would involve, weucome down. lp the period of readjustment whli^jpcceedfdkthe War Wl ahidl see thstl^Ieai^cSI|«J^wly^Dd with great reluctance adapted. themselves to .the changes which were brought aboutiy the_war. Thefr spirit and their methods were not such as to gain the confidence of „the people and so to seetfre the power to effect that restoration of the Union for which they professed!? li?ely desirfe. In respect to the rehabilitation of the Southern States, for which they asserted the greatest Concern, they have accomplished nothing. They have rather hindered than helped the process. The right to regulate its own local GovernmetlW without Federal iuterfer^noe is something for which the South is under no obligation what^^r'to the Democratic party.,. It beto guaranteed and maintained by the Republican Admin ifctratibn of Presideiw ^Diyes. XTie most olanslble objectitm fo this. peaceful policy has rested upon the1 tfireatefling attitude of the Democratic party, founded ae it is upon a solid Soiith and •eekiag for only forty-seven Electoral votes outside of the late Confederacy to give it absolutes power.

Oftmintr down *tul later, ana exam* ing the history of the Democratic party since -It regained control of both branches

at

Congress we do hot find that the case of the Demoerato is much better. Within, that recent time wh&tbavR they done,even in a narrow and sectional dense in respect to this very Southern question? How hive the late Confed erate States, whose bidding the Democratic party has (lone for *nore than a generation, pjroffred hi ithis. Qoti^ressional restoratioh? The Democrats have not given self-governmentto these States.: As has just been said^ this work has been done by a Republican Administration. When the Democrats met in extra session they found ho troops to be removed front State Capitols they found no Governors and Legislatures not chosen by the people but ibfiittilained by Federal force- They maido loud promises indeed to sweep certain Republican rlegislation from the statute booKs but all tne sound and fury soon resolved itself into an effort to repeal the laws relating to Federal elections—laws which applied and were intended to applv by no means

Th

South alone.

Evening Post (Ind.)

to the

Democrats did not

succeed even in repealing these and the mere attempt* to repeal, them curred signal rebtike in overwhelming Democratic defeats throughout the North. At last this attack upon the election laws dwindled to' a mere change in the method of appointing election officers. The leaders whoa little more than a year ago wiere.breathing fire and slaughter against Supervisors and Deputy Marshals, in the closing hours of the late session mildly announced that they did not desire to disturb these officers in the enforcement of the election laws, but only wished to have them named by the courts from both parties. This Is the sum of the work tor the South which the Democrats have done since they took charge, of affairs in Congress^ udy of histor^tihSn, even history a year olu, much less his-

It is not by the study: of histo year ol tory twenty years bid, that the Demoenty |s can mflbke out a :fair case^l^ei irinflKof WhAt iftey have doBle^Hrey*' must fall back upon what thev intend to do. Promises do not count lotmuch in a Presidential canvass, especially When they suggest afl tilffavorable bemparison with performance.,—

N. ^Y.

What Vice-President Wheeler Thinks of tfarfMl'd'and utr. At a recent ratiX Malone, N. Y.7^VteeiJ fipokfelitkU,thus Jan Uie RepuWte*# of

Ion meeting at idont WJa^eler hW^pinf^Ti of atta fctftf hopes

a Rep^bl|,^ ^tii^h:In November: Thu 1 jiitf-dr*wn-ont contest at CUJcafo hna been most trtrttftil ta results. In he fottletncnt of eirory. pretlmlaary to the oomplcto brfriuib-ftton of thoCort vent Ion tho rlMht trluMpbM| KxoM^uir ljiJrtrtifcewenfiotfcBf ^mitldb jfoocjJat.t4,fciw!|8 wfc Il». publionn piirty hiu organ button, lt« nvnk nnfl tllo, sponklng rtlroctljr thmugh their CongTesi*-

iotes for tho hlghtsf oTO6*S of the Hopubllo. A* when the natohiJr'Mnt(*plie» Is narly *m\ lndon with eloctrlcitr, tho thunderstorm. ftttd af! (iftlm find Wvlfrri-rtit-iiif, so the politicnl thuudor»tornii fix Ghicwo liti soittorod tho surfchargod clouae which •tne^ lte-4lsfwpUoQ^r^*tho^ln^?t|»eh-follows Htiindd-tweHlwio'u^^a our-fcHdorn man tow.'rlng high In capacity, Impn^gnalile In charno-

\^AsfoiH7 wt,ki W^LiicjWT'uir+«^HitA«i& nroHfd land will not rt-oognUf his numc

.tins .lUBlltted

lOk-tU the0h*ract*i5Ucs Mr. inrneld. !s

iV

hp

the

clllicent, frulttul. soryice, to the Uepublican For the last thlrtr year* much

fot

-w

ha.^ been spont in tho public service. In that tiniod 1 have oobw ttwn»-w iw--yntne »ith the le.idlng men ot the coun rr. or the twe!f« veiaririiave ICSTowtf Mr.Tarfield -natofj-. Put KHif.VAtfriwe Ixavedaily aat oge.herupon the Committee of Appropriations of tho Hm»tff RepPW»ent*Ove.-«.

And

I sa» have jusr

to speak intcUigcnUy. I say that Vhich I.have p^or of snv ian. cprtrtaly In

.tins .lUBtinefl

to speax

!ihna

wL-

the p^«r pf *i

publ'c Iife4 afrdifran. cprWIaly in ttm later nay* of the rteputmc, has hid more oujth aln:ng for it? hlehott oihoe than Mr. ijrrrfftft. With priorgyis #ee in the I^gislHturo •f )ito, he has *w been for eighteen oontinoous years a nivmtK-r of the National'House 4

KMfmiitdtiv«M)wn«litabt

on tho

4th of

March next, be would—bat lug been Iccted by iit' tinsn tnous rote of iheKepoblicjms of the ogis! tore of h's States-have pone to the ted tatSenate hnd not the people called dim to the higher position. Arttl in that

SubI-

ilon 4 her® make the confldasit pred.cfion re will

Ik

installed on the 4th day of March

next. It is my good fortune also to know well General Arthur, the nominee for the Vicef\e?idonoy. In unMillted character and in ilcvotkjn to tho^rinfttjlps of the Republican psirty.no man ^wvnpUatfon .*urp.i«HS nim. Xo man has cowtribuffed more of time etsd. means to Kdva e« the just interests of the ixtrty than he.*j

These nomination^ are th* trumpet to situoraon all the w&iidertng tribes of the KepuWiiaa partj- to its rCJ^ptende»it ^fardard. In this .Aid, au3picio«S lHur lot us» tiU renew our feattv tn the oi*anll*« ion in whose Replug she inssts a-^ desttnr of th*eountry STIOC^FEFUL IN the oemins-l*r»w" ifectfoa, and th»only Hk'toeoi which 1 ». sturbpil the jWTC.ir thn**ten-"t the unit Uie ft.»iioa will cea^o tnlviSn jor.tu^ Z-'- aJSM' iment to fo{tb- now Rv-n will render a anitssl S. *i rrVi when reinforewi ..yaans? N&- n? IVmocxpcy. ThH f? Stest pr^rt Wi

wa

a Aw c»a?end. a-».l

arwlnrtte" o: Gaafeld and

Aiiwr

plifttjre oum-^9 to Wr full s!(«re fts vfening lt. Ant we of the silver bat:* take cr'-tl care to be foun-i upon the outp v:*» w!"b tbc yoitnger mew uf the party in scco in* th ~!trty to «tT?«*areal". by O'fon.5' '-rstionof •r.y. humanity and «x«tfted government.

-The ariatafcwt afcthe !tamng%fl[ 46 far h*v*been made by theiJamocrati^ and ltis to be hoped the* iiepttbliaa&i will aHow th4m' a monopoly that hn«vh^ls. So eagev were the D^ttbcrate to Ifijtire the R«p«)Hcftn osirididat^ ft^ Presidents that' 'tinl^aded tibon him at ^nee aH. tHe l^u^tidh^' ^at had eter Sefen against hitn. The attinltjttittoti thuitr Should have lasted thtb^ighthe cathjiilgn.was all expeaded ih w&t was VHiefed to b? a forftviaahld brpadside. In: the, first week at tiie. campai^i the, DemoCrtktss have saiaalithey can say against (Grarfield, aod for lack of damaging material are publishing stories rathei to. his, ^credit than otherwise. In other words, they have burned, all their^ powder .before the real b&t^e has opeiiedlv and with no other effect than to arouse the resentment of Republicans against' their old oppbnants of, the Democratic-party.)

Another- mistake has. been made by the attempted eom^Jtaftoii5of the opposition fti Maine, in 6ae Demfttthitae or fusion tteket This plan: Wa# tried in. Iowa some years ago and filled. In 1877 the RepubMcan candidate for Governor in Iowa received 121,516 Votes j-' the Greenback -candidate 34*347 the Democratic, 78,995, the Prohibition, 10,545. Startled by the fact that the combined Democratic, Greenback and Prohibition rote exceeded the Republican vote in stalwart Iowa, the oppotrition leaders conceived the idea of defeat'mg the. Republicans by running one ticket against them in 1878. The result wad that the Republican candidate for Secretary of State had a majority of 9,457 over the fusion candidate. The experiment was so unsatisfactory in holding- Green backers aloof from the Republican party that* in 1879, the opposition managers returned to the old plan of putting two tickets in the field, only to be buried under a Republican majority over all of 28,828. .^

In 1878 and 1879 the opposition manager^ in Maine put two tickets ih the field, with the idea of weakening the Republican ticket so much ks to throw the election into the .Legislature. The attempt of 1878 having increased the Republican vote in 1879 from 56,518 to 68,766, while the fusion vote showed no increase at all, the policy of keeping two tickets in the field h#s "been abandoned, and the fusiouists will concentrate this year on one State ticket. The Green backers of Republican antecedents will now have" no excuse for not acting with their old party, and' at the election in September jilaine will, by giving a large. Republican majority over all opposition, increase the impetus of the movement that is to engulf the Democracy in November.

While the Democrats of the-E&sthaye been deluded by the promise that lies in combinations, the Democt'Sts of other States ha^e, intheii ovq£-con(ijlence, gone to the other extreme in their conn temptuous treatment,jof_the Hooting vole. Given a choice .between Republicanism and undiluted Democracy, fhatiy of the exper!mental third1party m^n Can bnly ^etrtr'u to the Republican pdt'ty.

A favorite saying among tire dilettant of. politics fo^ several modtjis has b6eli that there \v.ts now so liitleMin'er6tic6 'ih the pr!dt#ipte# 'tf thv1'jx'retlt parties that tho tfesue BePftrtie largevy W question of-mcn or canrHdat*!*. As if to disturb theimby.cile^elf-coiuplacency o£^ueh men, the Denwcrats in, Congress, by their act«» iu tb^ tifpjufyhvfas of tlie session, cMied 'itttoution/'to the T^We,,difference in ., ^ud}im'jntal prui|ciples pf Uie ttvoT.par^i^s, tMid gavo opportunity to the President to write a veto message mores jeffX-.t iyetiu the present'state ot public ffeelini' 'than a cafefully preparedcamptiign d( icutnent. On ofie side is the'party tlhat prbs^rved tiiei Union battling Vor thb in^^rltf of t^h^ Nation and- -resisting—encroachm-nts u^on-Natlortttl kitthcirit^^db the dthUr aiders 4he portyvthabairBnt 18o.!pidcos«onj the State-nghts or secession^isiuei enough to raise agaift~ihe.. oUMlag and

idlers of politics are so stupid as notftt* ftttftithfl

tkia

rg"

print.

unil tn

comprehend ^^"nificance^ Since the ftb'Mihatiofi of i1, Prcsiden-

avoid "mlstafceS. The org schemes in,thp diffjife^t seem to

contunphvic^je,j»wW£pHBiH

.'ind har­

monious action of the factions in the late eontest, lu^dpajh^ejii^ioa^pns point to an alert and agj revive campaign {M Xhfc lpiLtt rtiie RtpGliTfcans,

every mistake made by the Democrats. a It

W0H

THE LIVER, THE BOWEL*f ami tbeKIDMEYS.

Thskeirreat or**B» »Wrtiip n#Mir*j deknFom of the aystem. If Uicy work well, bewtti will be perfect: Jf

they

bccome clogged,

dreadful diM'Ayc? nre fare to follow witb TERBBLr SlimRIHB. BlliottxiiMui, 1frt4*fkc, ?y*p«p*i*, Jfl»ndice,

Cob*1Ipatlos

and Pllw, oirfctfi-,

Kef C«rmpIaiatm Gnrel, DUbete*,

Sediment In the ITriae, Jtllkf or KApy rine or Shea•tatle him Mn, are developed becanse h^b^d ti poitoned with the namor* Uu&t @ttwla have wen expelled naturally.

KIDNEY-WORT W

•seaaasBag^^wwij

Why eoffsr longer from the torment of an aching back

JL1

Why bear auch ctlatraaa from constlDation and Pifaa Why be ao fearful because o« 31*ordered urine

Kowner-Wqktwin canst*. Try apack-!

One Package i»atesi«lx qaartaof JledWae. rw

Dr*t#*

DAILY NEWS

A CITY CIRCULATION TlUf OF iilLt

PUftMSHED W tHE CITT, AND HJtS THE ADVANTAGE 0VER OTHERS OF A ,DAltr.

BUSINESS 3SOJN, ,' Should Jote This Fact» 'i AlsOj the T^act that THE NEWS Circulates. Largely ahioug-, and is the Friend of the WORK EipnEX—the men who PATRONIZE HOME INSTITUTIONS.

1

„vADVERTISERS

/Calland see t^s. We "Will give you iteasonabie Bates, and G-uarr ahtee Satisfaction.

M, Hv SGUDBER,

038 MAlk STREET. .-*

vi^7

CHEAPEST AND

IN TH^ CITY,

W. P. HOCTOR,

AND GAS FITTER.

All woVk done in the best fetyle. Office under ]'..,

PRAIRIE CITY BANK.

South Sixth.Street. f»

RANK RATT,

:f Importer and Dealer in v. it

Italian Marble and Granite

'Statteyv Tases,

25

n^TERBE HAUTE, IND.

i'4 Jii

t!

THE VERY LATEST.

A

Mi

TWO KEVOLUTMPRM

SCo. tape?.,

TSo

ladjuf^neat pf fly for 8ty fl»«|

Ffref-cl4?B ^n-. i-Veryn reppecu The onll ryplh it ta a iid, prices

PH^ET. FIRET^CLA^S

N.A

T-

c&»ntry plneM fn' the wc

[orld

^hkh 'aejivfert Bhect

",fo

without tapes. Send

or 7uft deaeHptlofi, sfcie4

A LEE,

tj,], iSole Weitorn Agents,

ILLIisTOXS

'Sehfwi

*««.«• 5£/f.£/*r

pos. fnMsi vpo* ka*i*g

1

tt.

Price.

frrri.fi CO., iiZfOftat, (TO Hal t-ws pjA' Birfhftfi. Tt.

}iiij

*200-308 Ct ASS ST CHICAGO

,'~

•J yd

'-—RAILWAY.

Terre Sairte, Decatur & Peoria short.fciNE.:"

Trains kare Terre Haiiteiy

Peoria Through Expr^KS,..».. .7^)7 rf.tn Decatftr Passenger, ..... 1 4:07 p.m Trains arrive at Tetre Haute: Peoria Through Express. ., 0^2 p.m Drritnr Passenger,.............. 1 :t0p.'i«

P4«MM»jg«r

e*

-Sfc'lll 4nd thi»io he the jnkkc»t and

loate Froih Terre HanUi toafl point* !n tho "Sorth- Qnstke#t eoff»e«ion mad* *t PeopUHf with O.. B. & Q,. T., P. ifc W„ and tLLJb

ItAint

tor

Ml V., IA W W BtiriincU»n. Qjuncy. Keokuk, Omaha land I to ftm* *n4

*Jid IfiSv. ^si.urre.iri?l fitMl thi« the tr.)«t

'i. iM*rott«

tttFpDitiu

44.

C^sJorato and

SPECLIL EXCURSIONS TO KANSAS

W8«m *12*17 month *i* lift®, hi e»r*ttectJ«a AMou Ry. rAioaict® tt :S£ (o Kaaxas C"itf

r.

l«^ant rt-clln-

•tig rha*r car« t! extra charge. If jon aire mt& W^tw write to the ender»iir» «d ff- -ties'and any hi/twroatioa you d#pirr. We decided adrant«fe« of oaicker time. Id«r£Trate» aod better aceomniodal Vi? than can be fori e!«r*lf»T»".

A. S. SHBADBH. .4 4 T. APPLEBY. TnUSc Maaager Pm« Agt*

fei

-:Mi

IP 1

£®r?r Cloef

EAST.

Indianapolis and thro'.east... 7 Indianapolis atid stations on Inarana^^*^"~--

JSastern Indiana^ Ghicago aitd NorUisrn Illinois 4.... u,. „.. II SO £«iQern. JKentBdkjri—: »\.. A 3fP Indiaaapolis and thro'.«a*t. Indianapolis and. station* on ^andalia Aalh^Ml.s i: Iojv», Micft'san. Mhua«soiaaud

Wisconsin^ .. ... .»v.. \"'(W .5,:" WEST. feiJtjbniaand thro' west..... Jnn^tionp on vandaliaKE.and

815pm fin Pp sispia

Su L.RR ...:. 430 pm.. 1030 St. Lcrnis and thro"•wept,,..k,. 4^0 pin.. 15P® Marshall and itntioug south on

Die

theDanvulciS'incepnegKii.liSQam.. 2 15p# Peoria and stations on Illinois Midland Railroad .... Stations on Toledo, \Vabath A

ChicsgO Til., (thro' pouch) Danville and stations on E. T. H. & C. RR Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Northern Illinois Chicago. low-

Minnesota. Northern llilnoi LceangpOrt an

II. & Loaansport RR,)

SOUTH.

BTOnrrille. Vincennen and -Princeton FoKBraneh and Sulltvan(thro' ponchee)' Bvanivillo and »t«tioni»on E. &

T. II. KR ETUnsvilli" and stations »n E. & T. H. RR Southern lllinoiR and Western

Kentucky

Southern Illinois and Westt||n Kentucky Worthinnton and station* on

BEST

and 8:30pm. 1 There ure ftve deljvcnes nf.^ua^ per day In tbo bnsin^ss.pnrt aj. 'he c'.ty: at 7:00 and 11 80 a m, 1:00, 2:00 and 4:80 rtv, also a d^lffcry at 8:00 p. m. to such ijttsinc** house* it* doslrc it, whose place of business is: located between 8d and 7tb streets and not tnore than one square from M&ID.

On Sunday, the PoskiOffic® tejopfen fram fltolO o'clock a r».: rd persons desiring their mail cull at the window designated by the nuthbigrtif their carrier. ..

Sdiiday -eolhictiofifr ovct the nuttrc City Is mad betweera4 S*) ai)d 5:J0 m, and again in the buifif ncss pa^f of .the Hty. between 8 and 9 o'clock:

Keceiviug b()xe^ havefbeen, piUccd or ner of Main ft reft to enftble'pewji it io^ail

tli!%i)«vlvts

of the frear

made thereon with a very short walk. The attention of tHu public is to thfi areM dfptjmcq pneh. carrier is oh]to, walk, antTpsHPi tick living a distance,back in karns are earnpstly requited to ])lace boxes in their f¥ont

All the Latest Styles of

SUMMER HATS!

CA3J BE FOL\D AT

S. LOEB St CO.'S,

fi

S v»

.1

4 aepm-

4 90 pm.

490 pm

I

700 am.

Southern Illinoi. St. Lonis ^tid thfo* \vest... St. L«uis sail stations on Vandalia Railroad SU Lout? Sttia Btatloca on I. A

..laoomok

700am.. 490pm 430pm.. 930*»

1

7 00am., &QQ»m

Western HR. we»t of DanVlile ,:... NORTH.

vismW

7 00am.,10 00

pm

700am..10

00 pm

7 00 a ta.. 6 00am

7 00 am.1000 pm

'gam "n OCBl'MtK*

am.. S 18pm am.. 0 00am

45»p lU.. 6 00am GOO a

Stations onIn«uaaapoli!. Decatur A Sprincfii'M RR 7 00 am

Stations on Toledo^ WahiMh &

\Veijtern RR.. east JMaville. 7 00 a m..l0 00spm Northern Ohio, *ortb«rn Indiana, Alietiigau and Canada...

700am. ,1000pm

7 00a m. .ISOOmdt 7 00a m..l£00mdt 700 a m..1800mdt 430pm.. 3 80pm ^flCTpm.. 9 30 pm •100 am.. 15 00 mdt 4 80pm.. 600am

T. II. $. S. E. RR. .7 UAtK LINES. a Prnirleton.rrairH'Crt:ck,Gray8 .r'v* ville and Fairbanas,'Tuesday,

Thursday ami Satnrday VOOam.. 700am Ndson, 1ml.. Tuesday and Saturday 130 pm.. 100 pm

The city is divided iuto peven Carrier District# aa follow'n: First DiWrict—Fred Tyler, Carrier.

North side of Alain street, betwoen pth and 7th Ftreetu north from Main to city litnite, including^ to the alley between 7th and 8th and to the alley between 4th and 5th atreets .also, 8tli, 9th ana 10th streets, north of 8d avenu^..,

Skcond District—John KoRHenheimer. Carrier. The M)T:th t«4ik of Main atryet. between 5th and 6th, and all territory between5 Stli and 6V4 streets south to the city limits, including to tl.c ullcy between 3d and 4tli streets and to the Alley between OVs and 7th streets also 7th qtrcet sontu of Deooit)K to city limits.

Third District—James Johnson, Carrier. The south *ide of Main street, from tho river to 5th street, and ail territory west of the alley between 3d 4th streets south to city limits.

Fourthand District—Ge0rg6 A. Ilayward, Carrior. The north side of Main street, from tho river to 5th street, and »1! territory west of the alley between 4th and 6th streets, and north to tho city limits.

Frrm Dwtrtpt—Ffftnlt M. Mills, Carrior. The north side of Main street, from 7th to.the old canal, between fith and 10th streets, and1all territory from the «ll«y between7tliand8th street# east to tho Vaudalia RR., north to 3d-avenue, and ill territory north of the Vattaolia lilt., east of 10th street to city

Sixth Districtlimits.

—Isaac N. Adams, Carrier.

The south bide of Main, between tith iiud 7t!i streets, from th- alley betwoen CtftindTth slreetB, eaft to the old canal, south to Doming, and all territory eaM. I'oplaf and Hou|h tocity limits.

Bevknthon Dimtruistreet

T—LoniW Ba^un^, jr.. Carrier,

fcioutli side of Main street ftotu 7th eaat to city limits, including the nortl^ aide of Main, e^st of oldrannl bed to city limits, ahtl all territory we«,t from **irtth'«trcot. eftt't to city limits from Poplar street on t.he south to. She Vamlaiia RR. track on the north.

Frank Sibler-^n-Hiliary Carrier, whose duty 11 to mrikc extra collection and delivery trips. ftBOpLATIOrtri,'. The mail Is collected from street letterboxes

ihe

hentrs of

83X)

,t Vi

on

Jhoxry, couth on 4th to Walnut atii awith on 1st tp Poplar, nod t)hio tslfeut bciNvt-j-n 1st and every week day between $.30 a«aU.p0a 1 »::j0and 10:80 a m,' betSvtcn t9:^"

Mafn street from 1st to T.'Jfh s(r«eff Tiijrt!ion4th to

rfc

m, l)oLw

oen

ahd2:tlppm,

.tiiis'collection includes to P«»pla^'iitret ohjthte ioutlv and east to I3th,dtid jjofth.to Union Depot} between, v! auil 3 ifkl in, hetwe.i 4:i)0and5 80 m, and betweuii and! O'OO pm. Alloihe^ Hores arc c611t'(:tcd,[froM twice p^-T day, bctwfeett

and 10:00 a ond betwoen

Itw

-4

3

door* oriij

1

promjit delivery I mail, Canricra ara not allowed to wait longur than 30 Rwcougn /or an o^pwer to,® bell, and after waitihgthht long and receiving AO anewdr. bo mwt re tam the mau ft til the next dfr1 livery. Curriers arc obliged to be prompt, and to do their, work quickly, hut un4«r circumataooM to be impolite or diHcourteotf«, arid any each *hohu) reported to the Pout Master. PCTbe immediately Yeported to the Pout sons owning dof at* warned that unleaa they keep them ti during Vhe day. carrier* vrill not oeliiVK tbeir mall, liut ther will oflice.

•-'aj

ip

carriers will nH ... be obliged to call a V: FILBECK, P,

$

-its

rr«

Cor. Fifth & Main stsr

,-u