Daily News, Volume 2, Number 30, Franklin, Johnson County, 23 September 1880 — Page 2
•u
fti
3
I
1
DAILFNEWS
E. P. BEAUCHAMP, Editor ud Proprietor.
Publication Office, corner Fifth and Main 8treets
Severed at the Post Office at Terre Hante, Indiana, second-class matter.
THURSDAY, SEPT. 28, 1880.
FOR PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES,
JAMES
A. GARFIELD.
POR VICE PRESIDENT,
CHESTER A. ARTHUR.
STATE TICKET.
For Governor,
ALBERT G. POSTER. For Lieutenant Governor, THOMAS HANNA.
For Secretary of State, EMANUEL R. HAWN. For Auditor of State, EDWARD H. WOLFE, 1 For Treasurer of State,
ROSWELL S. HILL, For Attorney General, DANIEL P. BALDWIN^ For Judges of Supreme Court, BYRON K. ELLIOT, Third District. WILLIAM A. WOODS, Fifth District.
For Clerk Supreme Conrt, DANIEL ROY8E. For Reporter Supreme Court,
FRANCIS M. DICE,
For Superintendent Public Instruction, JOHN BLOS8.
For Congress,
ROBERT B. F. PBIRCE.
Vigo County Ticket.
For Clerk,'
MERRILL N. SMITH. For Treasurer, CENTENARY A. RAY,
For Sheriff,
JACKSON STEPP.
jTor ComatlsslonervThird District, JOHN DEBAUN. For Coroner,
DR. JAMES T. LAUGHKAD. For Senator, FRANCI8 V. BICHOWSKY. fnr
Representatives,
WILLIAM H. MELRATH. WICK T. MORGAN. For Surveyor.
GEORGE HARRIS.
THE NEWS HAS THE LARGEST DAILY CIRCULATION IN THE CITY.
WHY THE SOUTH 18 SOLID FOB HANCOCK* m*mw»
Consider what Lee and Jackson would do were they alive. THESE ARE THE SAME PRINCIPLES FOR WHICH THEY FOUGHT FOUR TEARS. Remember the men who poured fourth their life-blood on Virginia'* soil, and do Hot abandon them now. Remember that npon your vote depends the success of the Democratic ticket.—[Wade Hampton, at Staunton, Va. July 86.
GET ready for the ballot. trrrrT" TUB 12th of October draweth near.
EVERYBODY should get rjeady to hear Conkling on the 8th.
JESSE GRANT and Miss Lizzie Chapman of San Francisco, were married last night.
REMEMBER the prosperity for the last twenty years, when you cast your yote.
THE steamships Frisia and Scythia brought $1,881,000 in gold to Hew York, yesterday. ntjyf .J
THE Greenbackors fe^ld a convention in Massachusetts. There were 400 delegates present, among whom was one Woman.
SENATOR Conkling's appointments are as follows Richmond, Oct 4 Lafayette, Oct, 6', Indianapolis, Oct. 7 Terre Haute, Oct. 8.
SOLON QUASH was honored with a telegram from Dennis Kearney, yesterday, urging a straight fight and no fusion ie Maine.
A RELIGIOUS newspaper, "Star in the WesV-estabttehcd mora than fifty pars agp in th« |oiutan% of whjjA Mpearea soma ti the Arst4 poems bf Xlice and Pheebe Gary, has been compelled to suspend.
SOKE I^NTL'&PTOHEDS tfanuln* sea serpent six "feel long. In the deep waters of Deharo Straights, on the Pacific Coast. It has a heavy mane, a head like a panther's and along sharp tail* It photographed and the body will be placed in alcohol and sent to Ottawa for classflcation. ft JJJJJU-JJ. ~S» IM
Tnn» is what the jolly Plaisted wouldbe Governor of Maine, said when he was nominated: "I accept this nomination because I believe that I stand in full accord with the Greenback party. I a® utterly opposed to the system which Kould trim tte cutpenty of Ik* txwtfrytoe *fm*4 but**—* system that would HHr in forcing the nose of the people to the grindstone."
Taa Louisville CWiWrniuri knows what Indiana needs when it »aya: "Let Kentucky do her duty, and there Is no
danper
about the result io Indiana." No, we should thick Kentucky should do her duty—«he generally doea—and oar 8a pretne Court had this duty in tkw when the atnendmcnta wero o?erniled. ,1,^7
The Democrats of this county will se« that the border itreMem of Clark Couaty "do Their duty." and the only remedy thai the Republicans will hare is to do thair duty at the polls.
BULL-DOZIKG.
In oar elections for the past few years, Terre Haute has been cursed by a lot of Democratic ward bummers, who congre-
and childreu, they are thus made to vote
suojeci is expnen.
forced
utes at Large, on page 1,073, sections 5,506, 5,507, and reads as follows: "§5506. Every person who. by any unlawful means, hinders, delays, prevents or obstructs, or combines, or confederates with others to hinder, delay, prevent, or obstruct any citizen from doing any act required to be done to qualify him to vote, or from voting at any election in any State, Territory, district, county, city, parish, township, school district, municipality, or other territorial subdivision, shall be fined not less than five hundred dollars, or be imprisoned not less than one month, nor more than one year, or be punished by both such fine and imprisonment. "§5507. Every person who prevents, hinders, controls or intimidates another from exercising the right of suffrage, to whom the right is guaranteed by the Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States* by means of bribery or threats of depriving such person of employment or occupation, or of ejecting such person from a rented house, lands or other property, or by threats of refusing to renew leases or contracts for labor, or oy threats of violence to himself' or family, shall be punished as provided, in the preceeding section."
We do not know of a State in the Union that needs such careful watching as the State of Indiana, in election matters and especially in Vigo County will the Democratic party endeavor to over ride every principle of law and attempt to carry their ends by bull-dozing. So we trust our Republican friends will be on the watch.and uphold the majesty of the law.
How much prettier will these young ladies be In three or four years if they keep up their accustomed romp, with
the fresh air. Brisk up, and throw away
J*e,
I,
ttason to doubt.
Now we have got it. The Journal's Ottawa (On t.) special says that Mayor tytith. of the Mounted Police, has se cured Sitting Bull far three year*, for a company of C«eadians. who propose Peking a tour of the United States and Canada with. him. begfonin* the* lat of January, He will appear in a border life
THE celebration at the emancipatictt nu generally observed by the colored
IMM6
4W^^¥J-^«?5»rifesStS®#
ticket by threatening to deprive them tions delicate as the faintest tint is to the of their situations, and rather than gowelding rose-,and ... .. H.ittor fnr thoir wives the 1«« refined and beautiful that they do without bread and butter for their wives
against their will. not'appreciated—that ladies with really The law of the United States on this good
subiect is explicit and strictly to the reward
hearts
wit
point, and we earnestly call upon every a shawl gracefully and bandy cornpligood citizen to see that, the law is cn-
ments
in our cctoing elections. That law would not condescend to look upon the was enacted in the years 1873'75, and worthier man, who feels lor them a reverwill be found in the United States Stat- ence so great that his every glancejs wor-
I Si
HEALTH.
Terre Haute, so far this season, nas been unusually healthy. It was feared that the overflowing of ilie riyer bottoms so late last spring, and the consequent amount of stagnant water that has stood in ponds west of the city all summer, would tend to produce' a vast amount of malarial diseases, ahd jfrobably breed an epid imic. But it is now almost safe to say that the dangerous era has closed, as the cool nights and days will serve to check those influences, and that our city will pass safely through another heated term without the serious ravages that might have occurred t» health and prosperity. NotWithstanding the general good health of our people, there has been a great many deaths during the past twelve months but the majority of them have been old jpersons and very young children,—two periods of life that offer particular attraction to that gaunt destroyer. 'Our city generally has been kept in a very fair sanitary condition, so that in a great measure we may attribute the mortality of the lower classes that inhabit the dens and slums of iniquity, to persorial uncleanliness ahd not to any special natural results. Then, again, he soil of our city and surrounding country is porous, rendering it difficult for germs of disease to remain active very long Again, our young ladies and gentlemen for the past year have enthused good fresh blood into their systems by plenty of out-door exercise. We see nearly every day two or three young ladies of perhaps fifteen years of age, pellmulling through our streets on horseback,, tyith their cheeks glowing in health, and ikying the foundation for physical itrengtb and robust physiques. Pure air and out door exercises have always been regarded the enemies of death.
}.
I
^w|' jherits that mild form of restraint called splendid physiques and dignified address, imprisonment for life. It is a shame for glowing cheeks and bright eyes, than ^omen to be lectured on their manners.
J5k«t»rv waters —callow and weak It is a bitter shame that they heed it. Do their sedentary sisters,-callow ana wean,
Vfan and depressed. that need restraint. Do not wish to dance I The same could be said of our young the Prince unsought feel differently. t|en. When you can get away from your Be sure you confer honor. Carry yourself
duU care and you will add years to ypW ^ce. He loses a large means of grace when
and enjoyment to this world. he is obliged to account her a being to be tt&ined in propriety. A man's ideal is hot OCR Democratic friend are havihjfa wotuaded when a woman foils in worthy great deal to say about the coldness of wisdom but if in grace, in tact, senti-
n.
promln^nrcftmong th?
i*
Bashful Men.
We never saw a bashful mail who tos not the soul of honor. Though such may
blush
eate at the polls and attempt to bull doze ders awkwardly, uuable to throw forth with and frighteh men to vote ticket, or not vote at all. Others attempt to intimidate men to vote thtf Democratic
and stammei, and shrug their shoul-
are fine touches in their character which time will mellow aiid bring outy percep-
nQtfl0Wvritll theiinpetaG8i
^y
O
We are
fthe8tream-
astonished that such men are
and cultivated intellects will
the gallant
Sir Musteclno Brainless
smiles and attention because he can
^th Persian elegancy, while they
ship. The man who is bashfti 1 in the presence of ladies is their defender when the loose tongue of the slaaderer would defame them it is not he who boasts of conquests or dares to talk of feelings that exist in the imagination alone his cheeks will flush with resentment, his eyes will flash with anger to hear the name of woman coupled with a coarse oath yet he who would die to defend them is least honored by the female sex. "Who ever heard of a bashful libertine? The anomaly is never seen. Ease and elegance are his requisites upon his lips sits flattery, ready to pay court to blue eyes and black he is never nonplussed he never blushes. For glance he is in rapture for a word he Would professedly lay down his life. Yet: it is he who fills dens 'With wrecks of female purityit is he who profanes the holy name of mother desolates the' shrine where domestic happiness is throned ruins the hearts that trust in him pollutes the very breath he breathes and all under the mask of a polished gentleman. Ladies, a word in your ear. Have you lovers, and would you possess a worthy husband Choose him whose delicacy of deportment, whose sense of yours, leads him to stand aloof, while others stand around you. If he blushes, stammers even, at your own approach, consider them as so many sigus of his exalted opinion of your sex. If he is retiring and modest, let hot & thousand fortunes weigh him down in the balance for depend upon it, with him your life will be happier with poverty than with many aaother.surrounded by the splendor of peace. —Home Circle.
iO Wheat, Clover and Sheep.
In Great Britain the average yield of wheat is twenty-six bushels per acre against thirteen bushels in the United States. Wheat is no longer a profitable Crop in many parts of this country where the yield was very large within the memory of men who are still young. The soil of England has been cropped as niany centuries as ours has decades, and is increasing instead of diminishing in fertility. The English have rendered continued wheat production practicable by combining this industry With growing clover and raising sheep. It is likely that we must adopt this practice or give up raising wheat except on new land, and our supply Of virgin'soil will soou be exhausted. Clover returns to the surface soil much more than it takes from it. It derives much of its sustenance from the air. Its groWth is wonderfully increased by an application of land plaster, whicli costs very little. The production of clover improves the soil mechanically as well as chemically. Its roots penetrate the subsoil deeper than any plbw or harrow. Its foliage shades the soil and keeps it moist during very hot weather. There is no better food for sheep than clover. Sheep while feeding on clover leave their droppings scattered about where they will manure the soil to the best advantage. Winter wheat sown on a clover sod enriched by the manure of sheep will produce a vigorous growth, and ordinarily affords good pasture during several months. Where winters are mild Wh&atmay be eaten"off by sheep without injury to the crop. In fact, the yield of grain is often increased by flowing sheep to feed on the foliage during a portion of the winter months.
A True Lady.
"Wildness is a thing which girls ctumot afford. Delicacy is a thing which cannot be lc»t or found. No art can restore to the grape its bloom. Familiarity, without confidence, Without
regard,
is destructive to all
thut makes woman exalting and ennobling. It is the first duty of a woman to be a lady, (jtood breeding is good sense. Bad matters in a woman is immorality. Awkward Qess may be ineradicable. Bash faIn ess is Constitutional. Ignorance of etiquette ie the' result" of circujnstanicee.. All can be qondoned afod not banish then or women from the amenities of their kind. But selfpossessed, unshrinking and aggressive coarseness of demeanor- may be reckoned sis a state's prison offense, and certainly
Do
9^Qtiaient of mAn
not have impulses
ttent, 121 delicacy, in kinanes,she would be
Senator Conkling towards Garfield. We wanting, h® receives an inward hurt. Would ask them to read these words SmtSio*. ^hich Conkling said to a friend about! 'M'h (Jarfleld: b' "Some service with him in rtiathematical "anomaly, a^scientific mon-
feadin.« men in public life, and that prom hair tickled to death inen«Thc has n^inudned ever since in all the collisions between individuals and esoort1# preaomption, parties. That he is competent to the du- ^alf killed W a hairpin scratching b« t$esbefore him, there seems t© me no neck,whileallofher— twohalmore— was still alive, well and absurd. Girls, drop all theae hyperbolical nonseosicalities that disfig^yenr dAily walk and ootiU'ersation, and be aa and lovable^
America's J^idiustrial Supremacy. "frery war, even a victorious war, is a national calamity." So writes the Count Yon Moltke, Germany's most successful warrior. And he might have added: To be constantly preparing for war is a national calamity but little inferior to actual warfare. Ill 1879, Europe expended for military and naval purposes something near $300,000,000, and did no fighting. This great burden fwas borne chiefly by eight powers, as follows: Russia, $173,740,000 Great Britain, $153,510,000 Prance, $128,520,000 Germany, $101,626,000 AustroHungary, $53,074,000 Italy, $44,030,000 Spain, $28,560,000 Turkey, $23,800,000.
This profitless squandering of money— which the over taxed producershave to furnish—is unfortunately not the whole of the blood tax upon Europe in times of peace. The national debts of Europe, due almost: entirely to past wars and preparations for future conflicts, amount to more than twenty billion dollars, the interest of which the producers have to meet. About eighteen billions of debt stand against the eight powers above named.
In commenting upon these facts, the Scientific American says that the United States comprise about the same area as the great states of Europe combined, and already have nearly one-fifth as many inhabitants. In all probability children now born may live to see United America equal in population to all Europe. From our. continental position, any great aggressive war in America by American men is altogether impossible, and the prospect of great civil war is, we are happy to believe, not less remote. Our strength is rapidly becoming so great —if it is not already so—that no foreign nations are likely to assail us and the aversion of our people to foreign entanglements is likely to keep us from offensive foreign wars.'
f*1-
The nSthral ad^&ntages of America for diversified and prosperous industries are certainly not less than those enjoyed by Europe and our people are quite as capable as those of Europe of making the most of their industrial opportunities. The problem of industrial supremacy is, therefore, not hard to solve. The single advantage we enjoy in being free from the terrible war-burdeu.pf Europe, even in times of peace, and our practical exemption from risk of foreign wars, cannot fail to maintain us in our position as the most prosperous people in the world. ^TL
How a Woman Reads.
Somebody says that one who will Watch a woman read a newspaper will get some new ideas of the characteristics of the gentle sex. She takes it up hurriedly, and begins to sCan it over rapidly, as though she was hunting up some particular thing but she is not. She is merely taking in the Obscure paragraphs, which, she half believes, were put in the out-of-the-way places for the sake of keeping her from seeing them.
As she finishes each one her countenance brightens with the comfortable reflection that die has outwitted the editor and the whole race of men, for she cherishes a vague belief that newspapers are the enemy of her sex, and editors her chief oppressors. She never reads the head-lines, and the huge telegraph heads she never sees. She is greedy for local news, and devours it with the keenest relish. Marriages and deaths are always interesting reading to her, and advertisements are exciting and stimulating. She cares but little for printed jokes, unless they reflect ridicule upon the men, and then she delights in them and never forgets them. "She pays particulnr attention to anything enclosed in quotation marks, and considers it rather better authority than anything first-handed.
The columns in whicn the editor airs his opinions, in leaded hifalutin, she rarely reads. Views are of no importance in her estimation, but facts are everything. She generally reads the poetry. She doesn't always care for it, but she makes a practice of reading it, because she thinks she ought to. She reads stories and paragraphs indiscriminately, and believes every one of them. Finally, after she has read all she intends to, she lays the paper down with an air of disappointment, and a half contemptuous gesture, which says very plainly that she thinks all newspapers miserable failures, but is certain that if she had a chance she could make the only perfect newspaper the world has ever seen.
3lOn-sense
toward woman is rever-
sensible as you am pretty
To keep niee steel wttrk brigbt rad^ ftom rust, after it hca be*at filad n»d burnished, dis*»lre ten waiadear griJasof ma^ tie, five parts campborTttiMta gtmins tntd*i*c,and fire parts ^emi/ln a quantity of aieohol, and apply the mnSA without heat. Theartieieeitrcsted with this vttrniah will not only be preserred ftom ruat, hat their metallic laater will not he in the iinst iffmirint Trr nryirmrli tn ilsnipi^—
i1
i',- The Noonday Hour.,' The human system, taking in all its parts, is a very wonderful self-governing, and at the same time^ dependent machine. In drder to keep the machine in good running drdert—and we are using the word machine i£ the highest sense—it must have food and rest AU experiments that have been tried to test the results of the absence of fbod upon the animal systdin have been endedj if carried to their fullest extent, in the Bame mannjer with that so often quoted exent itf horse keeping, in which, as reby the owner: "Just as I got him so he could get alobg on one straw a day he wed." The system will assert it« demands for food is the severe pangs of hunger, and the laek of rest will make itself known in
1 voluntary sleep. Out of these necesties of the case. there has' grown the oomcustom of "taking a nooning" of am hour or so in the middle of the day^ in Which the system is replenished with food, and the nerves and museles refreshed by a period of inactivity. A Spanish-Americaa town is in the mid-day as quiet as one in New England on the sabbath. One from tiie North in visiting sttch countries is apt to look upon the people as indolent, but he soon falls in with the custom, and finds that the siesta, as the noon-day nap is called, and which Is taken by the richest and pborest alike, is not a manifestation of laziness, a mere habit, but a wise compliance Tfith the demands of the climate. The head of the ftmily finds rest in the new®, paper, and is refreshed with the knowledge of the doing* of the greatest men and active World beyond the boundaries ofhis farm. In t$e hour dividing the labors of the forenoon jQ|na those of the afternoon he acquires a fiinri of information that keeps him abreast with the world and alive to the importance of his own calling. A little time thus taken ftom the toils of the day refreshes and strengthens the man sod makes the whole life fhller, and, therefore, noble and better, pt« noon hoar should not be a time of though tiess inactivity, bat of intelligently•leauon.
IA quantity of flour was exposed by a French experimenter toa jUMWre of three hundred tons, reducing it to oa fourth its Original bulk. A portion of it was then placed *n cans andraealed, the same bring dime with some uhpreased flour. A year afterward the cans were opened, when the ittjxeestf fiour was found to be spoiled, WhUethe preawd wa# in exoelieot prater-
Wonders of Temperature- M: ne Every one kiftws there is no such separate existence as '"cold." Cold is only an absenceofheat hence, when we require great cold, we must use some body which is demanding large quantities of heat. Every solid, to become a liquid, absorbs a large amount of heat this heat (called .latent heat) is so pre-occupied in keeping the body in a liquid state that it .can do nothing else, and refuses to have any effect on a thermometer placed in it. Just so with steam. Although the temperature of the steam as it issues from the spout of the kettle is just the same as that of the water, yet We know that, weight for weight, the steam contains more than five times the heat which is in the water. If, then, we require for any purpose a low temperature, we must force some solid to become a fluid, or some fluid to become a vapor.
The confectioners apply this principle in making "ices." The creamy preparation, placed in a metallic vessel, is immersed in broken ice mixed with salt. Now it happens that, for some unknown reason, salt and ice so act upon each other as to cause the ice to liquify, but this it is unable to do unless it has heat: this it abstracts from the cream, which consequently freezes. Two parts of pounded ice mixed with one of common salt can reduce the temperature 36 deg. below the freezing point of water or if, instead of the salt, three parts of crystallized chloride of lime be used, so low a temperature is produced that mercury will freeze. Yet low as we can get the temperature by these "freezing" mixtures, it is nothing to the wonderful degree of intense cold which the vaporization, of som^ liquids can produce.
There is every reason to liclieve that gases are in reality liquids in vapor. Many of them, by being forced into a wrought iron receiver, by means of a forcing pump, can be liquefied. Of course, when the liquid is taUeu out of the receiver, and relieved o. the enormous pressure under which it existed, it immediately endeavors to return to its gaseous state. It is in a tremendous hurry to do this, and, seeing it is unable to become a vapor without it receives a great increase of heat, it commands all the surrounding bodies to deliver up their heat in the most peremptory manner. Lnurtfriug-gas, or nitrous oxide, so condensed' undi a pressure of 450 lbs. on every square inch of the receiver which held the gas, and then liberated, can produce a temperature by its rapid evaporation nearly 200 deg. below the freezing-point of water and, by causing this process to go on under the exhausted receiver of an air-pump, the greatest cold has been produced-nearly 300 deg. below the temperature of ice.
But perhaps a more remarkable fact is this: that it is possible to cahse extremes of temperature to exist iu the closest juxtaposition. If some of the liquefied gas above mentioned be placed iu a red-hot platinum crucible, and then a little water dropped on it, the water will turn into ice. Imagine freezing in a red.hot crucible! nay, even mercury can be made to take the solid state under similar circumstances, and frozen mercury is so cold that when held in the hand it will blister it as though it had been a piece of red-hot iron. The reason that the liquefied gas was not instantly dissipated by the lieat is the same as that which causes a drop of water to dance about on an almost red-hot plate of metal: the drop does not really touch the plate, but is surrounded by an atmosphere of vapor? upon a thin layer of which it rests. An ingenious application of this really wonderful fhet has been long in use in glass-works. The mode of making British plate-glass is to blow a cylinder of glass, then cut it open and spread it out. To make the cylinder even and symmetrical, the glass is blown in a wooden mould, the sides of which are wetted with water the red-hot glass converts this into steam, which keeps the glass from burning the wood, and also from touching the water, which would at once Spoil it, rendering it brittle.
If possible, more wonderful, and indeed, all but incredible, is the finding of ice oyer which a lava-bed has lieen poured centuries ago. The ice was first covered with a layer of cinders, which are bad conductors of heat, then came the molten lava and the ion-conducting power of the ashes proved sufficient to prevent the heat of the lava from melting the ice.
:v,,
1
.nout
The eminent English scientist. Dr. Richardson, says of coffee drinking: "Coffee cannot be takes in excess without producing dyspepsia and irritation, but moderately used it is an invigorating, healthful, and Wholesome drink, bringing a man's best energies into play. The quantity taken, however, must not be large, and should he fljood."* a -i»i*
"^ATTIGCELLANEONS. v\
•J*-r if-
Democratic Cotinty Ticket
ii
ll TIIOMAS A. ANDERSON.
iu
_,'M "«fi
For Clerk,
ih't
!,•
DAVID M. WALLACES
lit# htvf -idi IPor Sheriff,oili ef,'V/ c»
-ii
A
LOLIS HAY. rv f4 it
i* HENRY EHRENHAKDT
•Krlfi
5
1
For Coroner,
,41
DAVID N. TAYLOR.
JAMES WHITLOCK.
llw5
BIJ"5T STOtT21
HATS&iBONNETS
AT EMIL BAUER'S
51?
i'
Wltefo lsd Sitall MUHnery Store HK lsrgest stock sad ieWestprkiM^
€itg JDirectorp.
CAL THOMAS.
OPTICIAN AND JEWELER 629 Main street, Terre Haute.
Headquarters Commercial Travelers.
JUSTICE SOUSE.
JOH\ MOTHER, l»rop'r.
gXorthwost Oirnt-r Main and Meridian ^BRAZIL, IND.
M'"
QVttornetis at l!aiu.
McLEAN & SELDOMRIDGE,
Attorneys at Law,
*?420 Main Street, Terre Haute, Ind. S. V. Davih. S. B. BaVib. Nolan DAVIS & DAVIS,
Attorneys at Law,
2Q}4 South Sixth Street, over Postoffiee Terre Haute, Ind.
A.. J". E! X, Xu 3K Attorney at Law, Thi^S Street, between Main and Ohio. CARLTON & LAMB, 'ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Corner of Fourtli and Ohio, Terre Haute.
IF*. \h/£ CJSTUTT, Attorney at Law} r822, Ohio Street, Terre Haute, Ind.
A. B. FELSENTHAL, ATTORNEY AT LAW. U'
Ohio Street, Terre Haute, Ind.
BUFF & BEECHEB,
ATT0BSEYS AT LAW, V,
Terre Haute. Ind
^lisccllancotie
-U -A-XjXJ O^IDEl^lS
PROMPTLY FILLED
AT
U. R. JEFFER8,
Dealer in Wool aud Manufacturer 0
Cloths, Cassimeres, Tweeds, Flannels, Jeans, Blanket^, Stocking Yarns,
Carding and Spinning.
N. B.—The highest market price in caah, or onr own make ol goods exchanged for wool.
Terre Haute Banner,
TRI-WEBKLY Ann WEEKLY.
Offlc* SI Booth Fifth Strsst.
P. OFROERKR, Proprietor.
THE ONLY GERMAN PAPER IN THE CITY OF TERRE HAUTE.
English and German Job Printing
Executed in the best manner.
ijtygsuian.
DR. A. H. GULMORE,
Eclectic ud Botaaic Physician,
After a stHdy and practice of thirty years, and thirteen years of that time with the Indian* in the vt'ast, haapamaaontly located in the city of Terre Haute. The doctor treats all manner of diseases
ftparmaao The doctor treats all manner
successfully ,he warrants a cure of CAncera, atad all scarvons and lupus formations, without the ttse of the knife, or harsh medicines. Consul ... 1 Thl titfon free. Ofllce, between Second and streets, on Main. Raaidenfle, 818 north Fifth si. will he at office dnring the day. and at residence at night.
S1520
tfce work. You can make
1
For Commissioner, Third District,^ NEWTON BLEDSOE.. ^7
For Senator,
N. KESTER,s^«tpi
Fr»r Representatives,
't
ol
Illrd C°
®. 31. ».
I
Morton Post, No. 1,1
D1 ifaPAiui'Mxn* rr fnfitAitx. I TERRE HAUTE. Headquarters 28H South Third, yr
from
bbnr by devoting your evexjlngs and «t*r« time to t|e business. It costs nothing try tbe bu«in**«. othfng like It for money miking, eyer otteredibeusiness plelurttnt afid' stritny honorable, r, if you want to kaow all litaint the tweet
iEBTOtrSBBBILlTY.
RAT'S «PE(:iri€
1
RegoJar meetings first awl third Thursday evenings, each month, grnuading Room open every
Comrades visiting the citjr wil always be taade Welcome. W. E. McLEAN, COWdr.
JAT CtmiiiNos, AdJ-t. GBO. PLAKOTT, P. Q.M. Office at Headquarters ^.
TOI3000A YEAR, tfrfStdijbrt a day in your own locality. No risk, women do well as men. Many make more than the amount stated above, No one can,, tail to lMfeerBkmef ftfet. Any oht tin do
a.-
50 cent* to an
a
MARkQ,^ la JRA9MMK yltehlnudy, As'aftffttllBg' mre for Semin-
img6umicr«**A sUDteeMeftCNH
__ ftHtof mJLgXI [FNiTAUIA^baaef loiiWTII VAllfll. fo 'ihe
Old s*fe,
toloMattyor
3rv«Il wneaUw W vMf- we 5re ifl ami ttm iff 'ft «cI8c la 1^? Iff #8 n! rti«ck*£t or Six pieiufyti for, |fc, or irni be S dLtrZtbj man onreWlpt of the raobeyb#' jiumfmMK cm*
No. 8 HechMoicM' Block, Dsrrmorr, MwmjMi jiTa in Ti^re Saite and D«l«toUe+ery
3BS»
f'
iHS
