Daily News, Volume 2, Number 28, Franklin, Johnson County, 21 September 1880 — Page 2

1

DAILY NEWS

S. P. BEATTCHAMP, Editor and Proprietor.5

Publication Office, corner Fifth and Main Streets ._=_T Entered at th« Post Office at Terre Hante, Indiana*, as second-tlaas m*tter.

TUESDAY, SEPT. 21, 1880.

FDR PRESIDENT m&m, UNITED STATES,

^AMEH AJ (MKFIELD. FOR VICE FHK8IDENT, CHESTER A. ARTHUR. .. tr 3S «y STATE TICKET.^1

For Governor,

Ji

ALBERT (S. PORTER. For Ltentenant Governor, THOMAS HAN!?A, S-

For Secretary of State, .-KMAXUELJL. IIAWN..,_ Foe Auditor of State, „»t, ... .EDVahi* JI. W|,FK,

For Treasurer of State, in fl. For Attorney General,

DANIEL P. BALDWIN, For Judges of Supreme Court, BYRON K. ELLIOT, Third District. WILLIAM A. WOODS, FJfth District.

For Clerk Supreme Court, DANIEL ROYSE. For Reporter Supreme Court, fRAJTCIS 14- DIC®, r*|"

For

Foi? OongresB,

ttOBEkT B. F. PELRCE.

Vigo County Ticket.

For Clerk,

MERRILL N. SMITH. For Treaf^tfrtV CENTENARY A, RAY. 1

!ForiSherM

JACKSON

For Commissioner, Third District, JOHN DEBAUN. For Coroner,

DR. JAMES T. LAUGHEAD.

For Representatives TILLIAM n. MELRATH. DICK T. MORGAN.

For Surveyor,

GBORGK HARRIS.

THE NEWS HAS THE LARGEST

DAILY' C^RCtfLATlON iff tHE1 CITT.

BJULL

"why" THE SOUTH 18 gdi,E&* WflTHQUf*

•irn

°ff

-v.

Consider tokat X^6,an^ Jackson would do were they alive. THESE ARE THE SAME PRimiPtES ^FQR yHIGH THEt: FOUGHT F0VR TJBARS: Remember the men who poured fourth their life-blood on Virginia's^, and do Hot abandon them now. Remember that npon your vote depends the success ofJhe D#trtoeratic ticket.—[Wade Hampton, "at Staunton, Vai Juty 26.

HtuitT HondraWi Hftrrij |F^wc!ett, the British Postmaster General, wm ^isit Uie United States this jfall. 'I

WIFA.T icall dpath ifl but the opening, Qf tUcgolilctt gates .04 cy(prlas0ng joy. ^lAM Itngersoll.^'

ON

Sunday afternoon McVlcker's theatctrMas crbvrtfcd wltli kn intelligent audU ence to J^ear Col. Ingersoll in his lecture,

f^Whi^must'i^o

PH.

hi^v tt| rp sfnt^fe fh$

wlwrthe )c

"lust as they they

THE

|j -5

.. 1-4- fir' A fitOMrNRN^ la\Vy^f %f lliamfeburg, Ohio, named Loe^rumbagU, was shot and killed at Dayton yesterday \f George W. Ware. Ware claims to have found Brum baugh In improper relations with his wife.

AT Moniicello, Illinois, yesterday, Mrs. M, Ila/.Kard, wife "of a prominent merchant, gave birth to Ave ckildren. Four were boya. Only two are living. We don't know whether any of them got away or not: TtiC mother is doing well.

the French Premier,

ba^d^lAredjhat the eMie|t^»JLqf

80lv'

InillilJr^M Prenyl jnwfclk Was for MIt haspleh FP11!1

or

jfich haMrfoSl -np, and

no 8urpr|^f|^t

De

FrejwnetIhfts

down W

it gays that the danger Is afoot box, as well as outside ¥ol ^Ij^imia^aonc bnt I state vorrr bnf none but pt have anything to do .jfliAffl^nt no venal »r l4Wl&s-

nwr

Iuh«^We want honest men Pbe hoodwinked. And we jrHiot« out of the bo*

majority ^e,law of

tue land, which we will all

^ey*v

Indiana correspondent OR the New York HfrtiM admits that Peirce has the Inside track in this Oongiwskmal race. He says there 4s a possibility ofc the withdrawal of Bayliss Hanaa, democi*c candidate In the Tern Haufcfc district, aflU the substitution of O. P. Davis* for whom th« district waa speciaWy formed. If nominated, Davis could be elected, but at the case uuw stands, Captain Peirce. rv publican, has the Inside track over Hauaa If the trade should be consummated, it uol Hkelv that Ore|«, national greenback candidate for Governor, he openly withdrawn, but quietly «&mtehed at the polls.

WHY SHOULD WE CHANGE. The DemoCTatic^arty|»tiir^«n»r8 ffi a change.1 Th)|r hoist Itfeir j|anii8reian yell at tl^freat vietgfr in^laine. p«^

cjal viqto^y, without fZP*Bg into the df tails of

our

tails of our

financial condition. What lias

A -»V« A HI

the last jsoar.that the people should want 9 changer "The Tlephb!i6*in administration in control of the finances of the United States for this one year found the Treasury full andjsvere compelled to use some of the surplus in^onWr to s^ve fiiterest, the nation had been 'i&'hnk, laden with theTcost of putting down a Democratic rebellion, and paid, the previous year. $60,000,000 in pensions to its wounded defenders, and to the wMoWs and orphans of those who died to save its life. The Secretary of the Treasury adyertised that he would purchase the "bonds* of the government each week indefinitely,^and the weekly purchases have extended oVer several months. The bonds paiA interest at «5 and 6 per cent, but their value was depressed by the fact, that this interest would soon cease. It was the 8th of September when the last weekly purchase was made, and $2,500,000 was secured by paying a premium of four dollars and seventy cents per one hundr3d dollars for the 6 per cent bonds, and a premium of. two dollars and seventy-two cents per hundred dollars for the tper cent bonds. On the same day the 4 per cent bonds of the government were quoted at a premiuni pf two dollars and half per one hundred.

And yet Mr. Trumbull, with the other Democratic orators, insists that the country demands "a change," and FrtatilUin Landers, the man whom that part^ has selected to govern Indiana, saysr that "when Hancock is elected the Democrats will put the government back where1 it was in the good old times of '60."

Let the business men. who best understand the force of these things, study these figures, and reflect whether t|iey want "a change"—a change tb "the good old times of *60." Hundreds 6t ixiiTlions of 4 per cent! bonds are bn the' Inarket at a premium of 10}4

Per

THE New York Deffldfcracy are not dwelling together as lovitigly as doves, A The Herald says thaf tlie 'diffittultiqs in the way of btfecting fl settlen^ertt bet^eten the two kings' OF tllb 'Hemochtcy'a!ppear to be increasing. The Tammkttjr mittec on Organization niet tod tire Comp-. trottSsr read a letter Milbh1 liis htfd ret^ly^ from Mr. Maurice J. Pbwter,' Hfcting on| be« half of IBe ~l[rvlngnffaTT committeej a^Tj pointed touring about'li union on cotjniy' ndmihations.

1

that committee to inform you and yotif associates on the similar committee ^rom thd democratic organisation at Tamniany Hall of the desire of our committee tw meet you on the 17th qinst at the Westminster Hotel in joirit conference, that he had an interview witli you. and you expressed an. opinion that your committee could not? conveniently meet us before the 26th instf After a general interchange ofviews our committee resolved un#ni mously that it was their sense that: any postponement of the joint conference beyond Monday next was unnecessary, and inexpedient, and we were instructed to inform you and your committe. We, therefoh?, respectfully and cordiall^j invite your committee to meet us in joint session at four o'clock P. M., on Monday, September 90, 1880, at the Wesfcmin&fer Hotel." r».' it

Tills letter wns read in the Tammany meeting and the Comptroller made'ij few remarks in connection with itjf 'Hfejsaid tharit wag"in«j ihar irr had told| the Irving HaU *d^iri66rats that it woujd bd Impossible for Tamtrian'y to he Wp»wir ui any further cohferences tintll'feftfei- the grand demonstration tit the 28d Iri^t! hM come off. He sWff adheWtl to Vhls bpm: ion. Tammany Viw In thb act of] pret paring for its grand parade and meeting, and Alf the members w'btild fbfr tlw: next few days be busfl^ engaged fti 't^akfh^ preparations for the 8^fcpbttfet#ati6n.

It was suggested hf' seV^sriU' iiiieintiers of the committed that a fcub-fcommitjte "be appointed to present th^ iuMtki In

4%e

proper light to Irving Hall, and this suggestion was concurred in,tHm

6te«

1!«»

promptly bnwaed mini enemies of the Sauth. Th« '*eriWotiker*' 19*0 *.pmnme* in this community to a*wr* tc opff through

RtpuMtetnioto*, *k»«M bt mtomtf Mth H4**k We can spare all such, andWoiild caution such as these who think of coming^uth to to keep away ['^Southern Democrat," i* Memphis Amla*ehe.

11 1

Theg {RtpnUimn*) keep

toefcMKta. amd*ent ¥&** omm, «r 9** out Ttw whole kHtn«etoe nmd end iafamotts aad. pd»ott& —I'

rbmorrtiF in Memphis

KEARNEY STILL LIVES

There was a big time on the Sand Lots a f^v da|SFago. There were three political m^tfngs in full blast at the same ^"Democratic, Greenback er$ and

time

,?

Nationafjriencfe get £ad ,jpd %»t W geajfheyiWs, the Demojratie wing being crucify' thfe Democrats'becaAse th^claimi

aggjste(l a

the victory. Our National friends say it is ^struiu placed, within twentheir" victory and that!t*HTffF?Wly1"a'ffflM- y.^ve fcet

financial condition. WHat nas gearnCy's pd jtical career. He was as(ligReptiblican partyttoirc, eved duiiug ^tcd by A. M~'Heslen. "who. during his

—.I

1 nf rt vi «.

THE

ceni now.

Ih tfee •tfootniumtttSonJjti'.1'

Pbwbr sa^.thkt^'At1 a'!bd6tin^ Coiiimittd.e if' 'twekt^fyurr,«lpjJo1#r^ by the dem0Crlitic'! W^aniiiattoii of the {city and eoiint^of York whlfeh ^0^ At Irving HaW, ex-Senator Norton,' from! the sub-committee

1

previously selected by

t,rass $ukiO'Donnell. had

0

the Greenback stand, and

'erttfcrtainted life listers with areview of

by A. M. Ileslep,

remKrftsV^^as* iwtcrrupted oy Patrick Keelfe, wio questioned the veracitj- of the speaker, and was- immediately arrested by the Police in attendance. ii •Denis Kearney addressed the Greenback faction, and after referring to the close proximity of the other stand, said: "We have got to arm, ourselves and come here and fight for free speech. I call on you, one and all, to frown down this bull­

dozing.

Come here armed and prepared

to upset his'stand and smash their heads. This is ah issue between crystalized ignorance and education. I want you to come here next Sunday, prepared to defend yourselves. This bulldozing must be stopped—and remember, that all the bulldozers are cowards."

i, THE RB-UNION. To-day the re union of the soldiers of Indiana commences at Camp Morton, Indianapolis.

This re union is not in any sense a political dodge, but is a social gathering of the men who left, their homes in stormy years of war to preserve our nation. The spirit of politics will not enter into, the spirit of this gathering" Democratic soldier, Gree'nback soldiers and "Republican soldiers will meet on the same level, and will recall, around the peaceful camp fires 'the incidents' of the war of the Great Rebellion. We are glad these re-unions are becoming s6 popular. They serve to enthufee a genuine spirit of good fellowship/and brotherhood, and we would be sorry to think that any political spirit •jvould enter to mar the social pleasures of our old soldiers,

following is front a Democratic

member of Congress: "HOUSE

OF

jTwo

hundred and forty thousand 8 ^pt|rrc^t. bonds only could be sold at'a'discount jpf 27 per cent, then. ,,

REPRESENTATIVES,

WASHINGTON,

"DEAR

D. C., April 23, 1880.

Snt—Your favor was duly re­

ceived. Mwonld MOST CHEERFULLY INTRODUCE AND URGE the passage of a bill, such ns you suggest, but WITH THE PRESENT DEMOCRATIC HOUSE PENSION BILLS DO NOT HAVE j^Ubpt FAVOR.

1

"E.

W.

It has becom() almost

impossible to get consideration of such a bill at all, and when considered its chance of parsing the House is very remote, and THE REBEL* GENERAL' WHO IS AT •TETE HEAD OF THE PENSION COMMITTEE IN THE' I SENATE IS STILL 1M50RE*' 'AVERSE TO ALLOWING ANY SUCH BILLS TO PASS. It would not be:atall probable, therefore, that the bill 'will.be got through. I will confer with your brother,. If he thinks, there, is anything in the matter I will cordially act in the rnatter. --uf •^,.1 .• w''"Verytmly-

F. E. BELTZIIOOVER.

bcRRt'DKN, Esq."

The gentleman denies the above, but it has been proved on him. Jr. .J

The North, to be sure, sent

us somo.money [during the yellow l'eyer epidemic], but we scorn the imputation bt beggary."'uTh£ North returned hit a little of the money it stole from tis during thfi war,—[''Southern Democrat," in Menphis Avalanche.

As for the negroes, let them amuse them sefaes, if they uiU* by noting the Radical ticket.

WE

HAVE THE COUNT.

We have a thousand good and true men whose:brave,baUots will be found equal to those of 5,000 vile. Radicals.—[" Southern Ddmovratin Memphis Avalanche.

R^v. Joseph dook rtills Niagara a "dateless roar." He might call Coraftney a dateless, rower, too.^: ffht t,r.-u-r,s •»iT~ tWhy is paper money more valuable than gold When you put it ia your pocket you

"Jack, what relation are you to that old l^iitlemah I sa^ you With this morning?1' •fOh, not .much he's married to mj, grandmother's only daughter.

More,^h»n thirty-three professional baseball pWerS are without engagements. Call fiiis r^ttirning prosperity Oh, the irony 'the world! ^i^rftrickliftving been told that Dr. Peters had found an asteroid, remarked: ^Bedad, he jmav Jh^ve his asteroid, but as 'or *neself oi breftif a horse tei" ride." beautiful answer was given by a little Scotch eh When her elass was eiamined. she replied tot^e. question, ^Wha|.i«ip^ "WWt"'a wee^ and dinna weary." !,A man who bogak to read a paragraph abont the future of artificial diatflomts fiie btber day, dashed the paper down, saying he hai enough of those blasted g^ca puzzjes.

irl5umigieap

ttf

v| m.

White meh vsho drtrr barixc hire n*» ReptMici**«tkoidd be

year, the Detroit Free Sa pmileged 1o go down

tsm* aftar lO o'elodc atid ihtmt up her husawl read him a leetp-* on larks and .othesbuda."

Bather-cold snap, ranuuked the fox, a* life put nis foot in the steel trap. We shall* have an open spring, was all that the per vouchsafed, as he approached the animal.'

Jt CJenBan tost hia wiie,«d the riext xreek iaarried again^, and his new wife askM mm to take her out riding. He repli^l

MYoo

®f?tr

"l agrt* that it mQ m* do to be tomtmnwi okovidntte* b* bmt** **& er+ty man mk* eo«nU, or rtpmenlt thorn ttmni tn theertutturratio* to git* r*pr* nWion i# th* Bt&toroi fm*m# kit totefmM** Ac plea**. m*4 em Am* c+it*t*d j**t ke m*t* «ne«aJ GrattV« X«tler to ^neral t*gk*.

Sink I ride out mid anodder

ttmi&bsosooQ alter thedeath ofminefritof gome CTKIEtry editor, who found difficulty thf ^requirmento of all hai ad^ vertisers* said ^They probably will na« f^ve time to get Cleopatra's needle ashore h«* t*»fbr*adTertijw*rni beglaio ^ovxel wbcritaUl be sA the top of :m

reward Saving hem" i^fer^dl tear 4 fyhme to Avkaaaaw, the Arkaaaaa Travtl-, «r it* marhine t^ wqri^ wigTOU|»doot «he- foUowing m, 3* ~J'

to

M01IctayOpM*loyilwm myftOM•

V'V" 1

The Main Issue.

The Republican party will win in the coming election because it deserves to win So good a cause no other party ever had, nor diii that party ever have so good a cau3.a! as it nas "now in any other oontest. in 1860 it asked that slavery should be restricted. But in all but the name, slavery would be revived and made National, if Southern Democracy should get full sway, lu 1864 we .stood for putting down the rebellion. But the same disloyal spirit and purpose grasp to-day for control of the Government which they tried to destroy, and all that brave men fought for during the war is still at stake. True men of the North know it men of the South who are more candid than cunning say with Wade Hampton that their cause is now the veiy sa*ue for which Lee and Jackson fought. It would have been far better haa secession been made victorious, by the shameful peace which McClellan's friends wanted in 1864, than that the mastery of the whole Union should be given up to the men, the thoughts and the spirit of secession, at the demand of Hancock1^ friends in 1-S80. Yet, strange as it seems, there are men who do not see that Hancoukism is only a thin disguise drawn over lie gray uniform Of rebelism.

What, is the main issue in this contest? Whether the South shall rule,' the South made solid by force and fraud, fired with the same spirit of hate toward the North, and spurred on by keen memories of defeat in war. It tried to rule by means of secession, not meaning to get out of the Union, nor expecting to be resisted, but full of faith that beaten Yankees would soon sue for peace, and consent to such terms as would make Southern ideas dominant forever in the land. The war did not end in that way. The North did not sue for peace, McClellan fash ion, on bended knees.' Now the same South', with no change of ideas or feelings, means to get tne same resets by other methods if it can.

Was there disloyalty in 1861 There is now, and the "same Democrats ar« the disloyal men. What is disloyalty? Resistance*to' law by force. The South has resisted by force, and does resist, every act passed as a means of holding the results of the war. It has 'stamped out negro suffrage with club and shotgun and false counts, until there is no part of the South where a loyal majority of ten to one can get its votes cast or counted. This is not a step toward rebellion it is rebellion. Arms are there, organization, and open defiance of law. No tax can be raised in the South nor any law enforced, for the same lawless Democratic mob which carries elections there also shoots officials, packs juries, and scares or kills witnesses. Look with honest eyes! There is scarcely a pretense that the vote in Alabama was free or that the count was true. This sort of thing, done in one voting district or in one county, is an infamous fraud. Done all over the' South, by concert, with organization, and for the avoWed purpose of defeating the laws, -nullifying the enfranchisement of the negro, and grasping the Government, it is more than fraud it is actual' rebellion.

Go back to 1864, when Lee threaten-1 ed the Capital on one side and McClellan on the other. Suppose it had then been asked: 'Shall the followers of Lee make the next President? Shall they cast for him the solid vote of all the rebel States? Shall they do this in open defiance: pf law? Shall they do it by the murder of 50,000 Union men, by stuffing boxes with tissue-ballots, and by counting! ballots never cast, as many as they need?" Was there a single loyal man: who would then have said ''aye?" How 'is the case changed .by the change of sixteen years in uateP The same men to-day make a boast of their deeds with Lee, strike down any Southern man who was loyal then, and show the same spirit which they showed in arms. The change is only in mode of fighting ind in date. The defiance of law is the same, and the refusal to submit to the will of a majority expressed freely and according to law. The will to rule or ruin is the same. The mean and cowardly proscription, the savage intolerance, the quick resort#to means the basest, the denial of free speech, are all precisely the satn'e as 1861 to 1864. Nothing has changed, unless it be.the devotion of the North to the principles upon which all free government is based.

Had the North backed down in 1864 and elected McClellan, it wpuld have reached the same end that will now be reached by electing Hancock, but would have saved great loss and much disgrace. We shall see in two months whether it means to reach that same end at last, after sixteen years of vain effort to preserve free institutions, its Self-respect and its manhood.—AT.

Tribune. b'JTC&Mft Vfts

44

Y.

Thank God fop a Solid Sooth."

General Grant some years ago, said that the Democratic party might always be depended on to do someabsurd thing, and thus destroy its chances of carrying a National election. The remark is strikingly true,, and the present canvass is another illustration of the fact. Not to speak now of that party's absurd ana kulcidal position upon the currency question, upon the tariff, upon the man on horee'i)aok," et©,, etc., let us refer only to the Solid South feature of this campaign. -J'

1

tils very noticeable at Democratic sitings this year that when the Democratic orator says, The South is solid, and! thank God it is .solid," at once thtf claqu4*

00

the platform clap

their handa, ap4 the crowd breaks into a roar of applause A stiunge and saddemnjrspectade, tttxly, in a land of ^«^bpols, of cimroltear and ol boasted Kberty.* «Here pre tfo great parties contending for power. Neither can expect sueoeas exeept as its position, purposes and eondnct oommend it to the fsvot oi ttemoet disoximinataig sad 1n4elligeat of NaSkms. The one party, !thst of Lincoln and 8antner, and Chase *nd Grant, of the great naana and 4eedx af fasterMe epoch, comes before the Atnerksan people with a platform and with pmrpoees Worthy its history and ft* tradttioiis. In tid State and in no»ection I* ft charged that airy Democrat ie lUraled' ties Tight to* vote and

have nis vote lione'stty and fairly counted. How is ii with the other party? The party of Lee and Stonewall Jackson, of Vallandigham and Jefferson Davis, it wtuld appear to the meanest capacity, has little to hope from the brave and. free* people of America, except in keeping in the background as much as possible the infamous features of its past "history aud present altitude. Does it do this^ The late free States 6ast 2?1 Electoral votes. The late rebel aud semi rebel States cast 138. Is it not the plainest dictate of common sensfe that the party which proposes to ^lcceed by the rebdl vote, and which must have forty-seven Northern votes or be beaten, has, at best, a difficult way ^before it, and ueeds to walk warily and discreetly? that its only hppe lies in* not ontHigtaiffthe sentiments and better instincts ot that loyal North which must be called on for those forty-seven votes Yet what has this Democratic party really done? It is not denied that in five of the late rebel States the Republicans have a heavy majority on a fair, free vote, and that if every legal voter in the United States could vote, and have his Yote honestly counted, Garfield wonhf be elected by a popular and electoral vote

fas

reater than that'df Grant in 1868. How this great Republican vote been suppressed? We know the sad story but too well. By means which woultf Wave added another and deeper shade to the darkest story in the annals Of* human crime, by outraging the poor aud trampling upon the weak, by intimidation and robberry and murder, not in exceptional instances, but systematically and with a studied barbarity which extends over years. It has become a system. To this is added fraud and counting-out," equally systematic. Thus is the South made '•solid." It is made solid as Nero made Rome solid, as Hannibal made northern Italy solid, as Alexander made Persia solid, as Alva made the Netherlands solid. But are these the means by which a cause is commended to the friends of the murdered and the despoiled? Is this a means of commanding a cause to the friends of civilization itself, to say nothing of manliness or humanity? Let the now visible drift of the campaign answer.

As the spirit of a brave, free people always rises against outrage and oppression as the spirit of ouv race has never ceased to confront tyranny with a resistance which will not bend as Hampden rose against Charles, and Washington against Georgei III. as the great, free North resented the oloody attempt by the same men and the same party, to trample Kansas in the mire and shame of slavery as all that was best and noblest in our land rose against the crowning outrage of 1861, and held up the hands of Abraham Lincoln through four terrible years, so, now, the mighty North rises to defend the "good old cause"^the cause of humanity.

There is that in this contest which appeals to all that is best and most chivalrous in every man. And, with that fatuity which has so long marked the Democratic party, it hastens, even here, to espouse and identify itself with the colossal villainies of the South, and to make them its own and, in view of a record at which humanity sickens, leaders thank God for a Solid South, and drunken crowds yell approval. It is not a cause like this, defended such means, that has anything td hope in the free Nor th. —Indianapolis Journal.

Teach your child the value of the Sabbath as a day for the spiritual improvement of the mind that on the Sabbath morn the ordinary work of the week should not be resumed if it is possible avoid it that the day should lie parsed in attendance upon religious service of some kind, or exercises that will ienjioble and spiritualize the nature. While rest and re~ fcreatiou may be a part of the day's programme, true philosophy dictates that the spiritual faculties of the nature should he cultivated by setting apart a portion of tfre time for their improvement.

Teach your children those things which they, will need when they becomc men and women. As women they should understand how to cook, how to make a bed, how to preserve cleanliness and order throughout the house, how to ornament their rooms, to renovate and preserve furniture and clothing, how to sing, how to play various games, that they may enliVten the household. They should be taught how to sWim, how to ride, how to drives bow to do business and how to preserve health. The mother should early 'entrust money to the girl, with which to buy articles for the household, that she may know its value.. Think what a man and woman need to' know in order to be healthy, happy, prosperous and successful, and teach them that.

miscellaneous.

Democratic County Tiakpt.

For Clerk,

THOMAS A. ANDERSON.

&or TjwaurerifP *f

.? DAfHI M. #ALLiC*I fit*# mmm For Sheriff,

For Coroner,

HENRY EHRBNHARDT.

1

For Senator, TUFT '1*

.For R^re^nt^vei.^ DAVtrtf. fefLon?

MtimuvtMmuumtCt

1

(tfttg Ultrcctori}.

CAlu THOMAS. 'l

OPTICIAN AND JEWE 639 Main street, T^rrc Hautc. rrrr~—— .. L~•=*

Headquarters Commercial Travel

JUSTICEHOUSE JOHX MOTHER, Prop'r.

Nortliwoft Comer Main and Meridiarr BRAZIL, IND.

McLEAN & SELDOMRIDGE, Attorneys at Law, 420 Main Street, Terre HarUte. In

S.C.DAVIS. 8. B. DAVIS. N. DAVIS & DAVIS.

BUFF & BEECHER ATTORNEYS AT l.AW, Terre Haute. Ind

rtrtf ^li«A«tn»ti. .Uif ««0 tt\ rfec# e*"

English and Ghennan Job Pri "^LJtx^ctiteil in the bC^tt marnei-:

&

^ttomeps at jLaui.

r-

Attorney at Law, Soutli Sixth Street, over Post. Terre Haute, Ind.

E E

Attorney at Law,

Thirfl Street, between Main and Olu

CARLTON & LAM ...... ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Corner of Fourth and Ohio, Terre Ha

F: MC3STUT' Attorney at Law, 832, Ohio Street, Terre Haute, Ind

A. B. FELSENTHAi ATTORNEY AT LAW. Ohio Street, Ten-e Haute, Ind.

.miscellaneous

ALL OBDEK

PROMPTLY FILL1

AT

E E

Dcak't' in Wool and Manufacturer 0

Cloths, Ciissimcres,

Tweeds, Flannels,

Jeans, Blank*

Stocking Yams,

Carding and Spinning

N. B.—The highest market pricc in caph, own make ot (roods exchanged for wool.

Terre Haute Bannt

TjRl-^KKKLy, ANP 1£

Office A. ^aiJonth W^tr

PAP^RJNT RE lIAntE.

]JI)T161Ciail. tcn Moo9 &ntn" tt _?

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After a study and practfce of thirty yet thirteen years of that time with the Indian* went, harpermancjitly located in the cltv of Haute. Tnc doctor treat* all manner of die sncccMfully he warrants a cure of t*'n and all scnrvotis and lttpmi fonnationH, the use of the knif«, or har«h medicine". Co tation free. OtHce, betwecn ikicond and streets, on Main. Rcfldetfc. 318 north Fif Will be at ofllrc during the day. and at fW •t night.

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Morton Tost, No. nXPARTVSNT o* THDIAH. TERRE HAITI lleadqnarterft^N^Jl&^Lh

Regular me«TingilHH»* Thursday e/eningp, S*U|

Jike-wror mon Jnalness pleM«nj.,r

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JAMBS WHITLOCK. !.!$*

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AT EMIL AUEB'S !#a WholeuUe and Retail Millinery 8lore

The largest stock and lowest prioas. ,,{

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-3 Comrade^ vtsitinff* tttf citj "Always be m««IMNfiCoafe. W. E.M«mUSQc«tn

JAT CTWIIL OK. PLAN atH

t6 JBOOO A YBAll/Or i" men

ilUUU make mom stated abovf make mone b%can mal !ev«)U*B yonr

Reader, if yon want to know all about the l. private terms free. Samples worth 16 also

SMStffc£ EL

Maine. 84 eji!a|giiu^

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Shdt, Digram of VrtnoK TretnitoTiTJid •nd many other Diseases that lead,to Insan Oomomptfani and* Pwmator fgrYuU particulars in oar pamphlet, whic to saad free by mail to every one. %W Sieeific Mwicine ia sold by all Drnggists p«t p#kace, or six packages for $6, or seat free by mail on receipt of the money

gold in Terre Haute and by a)) Draggists ev wmw&p-

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