Daily News, Volume 2, Number 36, Franklin, Johnson County, 30 September 1880 — Page 2
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DAILY sNEWS
E. P. BBAUCHAMP, Editor tad Proprleto?
Publication Office, corner Fifth and Main Streets
Bniered at the Po«t Office at Terre Hante, Indiana, as second-class muter.
THURSDAY, 8EPT. 30, 1880,
FOR PRESIDENT
0
UNITED STATES,
JAMES A. GARFIELD.
FOR VICE PRESIDENT,
•CHESTER ^llRTHUR.
STATE TICKET.
For Governor,
ALBERT O. PORTER, "•For Lieutenant Governor, J: THOMAS HANNA.
For Secretary of State,* EMANUEL R. HAWK. For Auditor of State, EDWARD H. WOLFE, For Treasurer of State,
ROSWELL 8. HILL,
*Y "HP'or Attorney General, *r I DANIEL P. BALDWIN. I, For Judge* of 8npreme Court^ tfYRON K. E£LtdT/Third District? WILLIAM A. WOODS, Fifth District
1*1
For Clerk Supreme Court,. DANIEL ROYSK. For Reporter Supreme Court,
.........,..vLPBAKCI8 m. DICE, .• rt '.-w*. For Superintendent Public Instruction,
JOH|f M. BLOSS.
For Congress,
ROBERT B. F. PEIRCE.
Vigo County Ticket.
For Clerk,
MERRILL N. SMITH, For TrearfSror,
Mi CENTENARY A. RAY. For Sheriff. JACKSON 8TEPP.
For Commissioner, Third District, JOHN DEBAUN. For Coroner.
DR. JAMES T. LAUGHEAD. For Senator, FRA5TC1S V. BICIIOWSKY.
For Representatives, TILLTAM H. MELRATH. DICK T. MORGAN.
For Surveyor,
GEORGE HARRIS.
THE NEWS «AS THE LARGEST DAILY CIRCULATION IN THE CITY. 1 1
WHY THE SOUTH IS SOLID FOR HANCOCK. Consider what Lee a%d Jack/ton would do were they alive. THESE ARE THE SAME PRINCIPLES FOR WHICH THE7 FOUGHT FOUR TEARS. Remember the men who poured fourth their life-blood on Virginia's noil, and do not abandon them now. Remember that npon your tote depend* the mccen» of the Democratic ticket.—[Wade Hampton, at Staunton, Va. July 26.
THE Benders have been captured again.
IT is flftjd that the burned Dulcigno.
Albanians have
GEEOO thinks the Democrats will not get one Greenback
vo^e-
ABOUT three hundred delegates were in •attendance at the national reunion of prisoners ql war at Indianapolis yester day.
LET our Republican brethren show the Democrats of this city what is "taeant by Torchlight politics on the night of the 6\h of October.
ROME officers went to arr»iat some illicit distillers in Alabama a few nights ago, when the members of a church that was near, turned out armed and routed the officers. \I|
—The Nationals had a little blow out at the wigwam last night. Gregg their candidate for governor arrived to late to fulfill his engagements and audience of about 150 or 300 was addressed by local speakers*
A MINER deserted his wife in Wisconsin and she found him In, a Colorado town and chased him out Into the hills. The miners were so greatly pleased with her grit that they bought a boarding house for her and regkfd her as the heroine of the day.',
WK sincerly ask everybody to prepare to spend the afternoon of sixth of October at the Wigwam. We an well aware that the Wigwam will not hold more than one twenty-fifth part of the people who will be here on that day, but there will be sufficient accomodations for everybody.
Now that Conkling had such a monster demonstration at Warren* Ohio, let our citiRen^endefvor to surpass Uiem Ito the mafftifk^eiice ot numbers and accommodations, If the crowd should be a6 large that Court Park would not accommodate them, have speaker* In readiness to command the skirmish lines and show our Democratic friends what a Republican meeting means. ., 11'
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,.*• YKSTKROAY was commenced at Indianapolis a reunion of Union prisoners of war. We don'taec why the Union prisoners of war of Vigo County could not have a reunion th«f* are many men in this vicinity who suffered in Libby and
Andersonville, Ami we can not think of a note enjoyable affair than for these men to call a reunion and make Ha profitable aid enjoyable occasion.
THE RSBEL CLAIMS LETTER. It seems that Hancock's letter on the rebel claims has awakened the people of the North as to what cairn be expedited should the Democrats get ihe next administration. An exchange says that "An effort has been made by the adherents to the Democratic party to hi ugh the idea paying Southern claims out of existence and sneer at the suggestion that the South would make afresh demand for the payment of vast claims arising from the war. Republicans knew tin animus of the Southern claim hunter: and also what obedient servants the Northern Democrats are when Southern Democrats make demands hence stated the question in its full aspect, and showed the danger arising in this respect, should the Democratic party succeed.
It is pow evident that Democratic leaders in the North understood the force of the charge made by Republicans and made various efforts to get an expression out of their candidates to meet the case, Hancock has come to the scratch at last, like Tilden did four years since
If there were nothing in the c-ase would filden or Hancock have deemed it worth their while to answer the matter in public letters? There is danger in having these claims forced on the country for payment, and the effort on the part of weak-minded persons to snear at the idea wjll neither refute the matter, nor give security to the country. The very letter of General Hancock is the best evidence that can be adduced to prove that there is sometfiing in this affair, else why would he honor it with a letter, stating what he will do regarding these claims, in tht event he is elected. Would not this be simple foolishness, were all these claims barred by the constitutional amendment, as the simple minded orators and papers of that party so often proclaimed during this campaign? it
Then, what a commentary on parlies is this Hancock letter. Who asks a question of the Republican party on this subject? Who expects a letter trom Gen. Garfield stating that if elected lie will veto all rebel war claims? Yet this Democratic party has to make promises and pledge on all sides that they will do.no devilment when they get full control of the government. What sane man, knowing the history of the two parties, will hesitfttg to say which party should be trusted? It's a bad sign when a party has to promise that it will behave itself and not do this or tliit piece of nonsense when trusted with power. Is it not the part of wisdom to hold on to the one that can be trusted and which need not make •pledges? "*vh 4
SPEAKING of the strong circumstances of the English manufacturers sending money here for the Democratic campaign fund in the interest of,free traders, we can give what a leading cigar man said when requested to sign a call of business men's meeting at Indianapolis yesterdey as told by the Journal. Said he "Yes, sir, I'll sign that mighty quick. I don't want any change in the present financial policy of tho government, and especially not in the tariff. A repeal of the tariff duty on tobaeco would utterly ruin the cigar business, and throw thousands of u.en out of employment."
How do the National platforms stand on this-question. The Chicago platform demands "that the duties levied for the purpose of rev enue should so discriminate as to favor American labor.'' The Cincinnati platform demands "a\ariff for revenue only.'', The former means protection to American industry, the latter means free trade. The former means high wages, the latter means competition with European cheap labor. The former means steady employment for workingmen, the latter means the closing of half the manufactories in tho country, and half time in all the rest.
IT NAS been generally understood that English and Landers have both refused to contribute very largely to the Democratic campaign fund, yet, nevertheless, the Democrats of Indiana are spending money as if they, .owned and had opened the public treasury to the greedy and the hungry unwashed. If has been a query to us where this money was procured, but it now generally known that the Brills)*, free traders aud all the large manufacturers of England have contributed largely to the Democratic campaign fund, in order that the Democratic party may be successful, and protective tariff destroyed, and the Democratic doetrineof fres trade opened to their commerce.
It this is true, and we have no doubt that it Is, how can the laboring men cast their votes with a party that would coaleuance such proceedings. Destroy our protective tariff, and the laboring men are reduced to an almost bread and water condition.
IT is stated^that six native Hindoos, of high caste and great influence among their compatriots, are at present at Constantinople, the guest of the'Sult&n, who is greatly given to private councils with them, the Grand Vizier and' the other Ministers assisting. The rumor is that these Asiatic emissaries have visited Constantinople tvconfer with his Ottoman Majesty as to the feasibility of an ftlliiuice of all Islam in Europe and Asia against the aggressions of Christendom, aa marked oat in the Berlin tueaty.-^ \l
M.
STROT an immense amount of rain has fallen in Sen Antonio, Texas, that the people are greatly frightened, and one of them, ft wealthy Pole, has art about build ing an ark. He Saya thai the Lord HAS appeared to him announcing that the world is to be shortly drowned out
and that he belter get ready-
again,
Ingersoll on Intemperance. Intemperance cuts down youth in iri& vigor, manhood iu its strength,.and «ge in its weakness. It breake thte Ifat/ioV a. heart, bereaves the doting mother, ex*tinguishes natural affections, erases conjugal love, blots filial attachments,, blights parental Tiope, and Tinrif^own mourning age iu sorrow to the grave, m^kes wives, widows children, orphatofcf fathers fiends, and all of therajjaupers and beggers. It feeds rheumatism, arouses gout welcomes epidemics, invites cholera, imports pestilence, and'embraces consumption. It covers the land with idleness and crime. It fills your jails, supplies your almshouses, aiid demands your asylums. It engenders controvert sies, fosters quarrels, and cherishes .riot. It crowds your penitentiaries, and furnishes victims for the scaffolds. It is the blood of the gambler,,the element of the burglar,the prop of the highwayman, and the support of a midnight incendiary. It countenances the liar, respects the thief, esteems the blasphemer It violates obligations, reverences fraud, andhonoas infamy. It hates love, sborns virtue, a* glanders innocence. Incites the father to butcher his helpless offspring and the child Jo grind the parental age. It burns up men, consumes women, detests life, curses God and hates heaven. It suborns witnesses, nurses perfidy, defiles the jury box and judicial ermine. It bribes votes, disqualifies Voters, corrupts elections, pollutes
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institutions, and endangers government. It degrades the citizens, debases the legislature, dishonors the statesman, and disarms the patriot. It brings'sHame, not honor terror, not safety despair, not* hope misery, not happiness and with the maevolence of a fiend, it calmly surveys its frightful desolation, and unsatiated with havoc, it kills peace, poisons felicity, ruins morals, blights confidence, slays reputation, and wipes out national honor, then curses the world and laughs at its ruin. It-does that and more—it murders the soul. It is the sum of all crimes, the mother of all. abominations, the devil's best friend and God's worst enemy.
Harried vs. Single.
THJ^M
Those who are in the habit of. lqoking on a state of single blessedness as the most conducive to health and happiness, ind who exemplify their faith in their opinion by living in celibacy,' will find 3ome fruitful themes for study in the results of the rcsearches^of the French saVant, Dr. Bertfllon. A*fter having' studied the morality statistics of every country of Europe, he comes to the conelur si on that marriage is productive of health, long life and morality, and is, so to speak, a limited insurance against disease, crime and suicide. According to liis finding, a bachelor of twenty-five has not a better prospect for life than a married man of forty-five and among widowers of from twenty-five to thirty the rate of mortality is as great as among
married men of from fifty-five to sixty, the French bills of mortality, he shows that while the annual death rate among married men between twenty and twenty-five years of age is rather under 10 per 1,000, bachelors of that age die at the rate of 16, and widowers at the rate of 19 per 1,000. With advanced life the difference goes on increasing. With regard to crime, Dr. Bertillon asserts, that offences against tne person are 10 per cent, less, and against property 45 per cent, less among married men than among unmarried. The difference is still more remarkable among women, amounting to 250 per cent. The nttinber of suicides is at the rate of 628 per million for widowers, and 273 per million for bachelors, atid 246 per million for married men.' In the face of the above statistics we strongly advise bachelors and maidens, and—we were going to say widows, but of course they do not need advice on this subject—to get married without delay.
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v: iiiVU-ni !. (I fj'-f •!•!»ft Amen! 1. Its origin Amen is a Hebrew word, of Hebrew origin. Prior to the time oi Christ, it was found in no other language but the Hebrew. Pagans did not^nakc use of it in their idol-worship. But with he introduction of Christianity, it has found its way into the language of all nations who have received the Christian aa well as their religion. In the ireek, Latin, German and English tongues, it is the sanie in orthography, signification, and with v6ry slight detiations also in pronunciation It has been left untranslated, and has been transferred from the .Hebrew just as it is found there, because there cannot be found in any language only one word that expresses its precise and complete meaning. 2..Its sense: Luther, in his Snail Catechism defines it thus: "Amen, Amen—that is. Yea, it shall be so." Cruden says of it: "Amen in Hebrew signifies true, faithful, certain." It is used in ttie ehd of every prayer, in testimony of an earnest wish, desire or assurance to' be heard Amen, be it so, so' shall it be." Webster says "Amen, as a noun, signifies truth, firmness, trust, confidence as a verb, to conform, establish, verify as an adjective, firm, stable." In English, after the Oriental manner, it is used at the beginning, but more generally at the end, of declarations and prayers, in the sense of be it firm be it established." All vhese declarations agree in making Amen to rhean "verily, be it so, so shall true, certain, be it so, so shall it be. Some ancient forms of ritual have rendered it into English, viz: "So mote it be," It is used in address by man to his Maker, a^d by Him to us, and w, cbrdingly, as used by either, differa somewhat in application, as must be evident. For man asks favors, and God bestows them God makes promisee, and man pleads them. When man says Amen, he claims the Divine assurance* when God says Amen* He confirms it.
,V A',"'
Household Hint*
If twoorthree bottJescf ammonia, left onstopped, are p&t in prominent place* in a room, all insects will sooty le%ve.
Keep the house as clear as possible Hf ,-ntB. If they will not enter the trap sit for tliem, fcrp a little oil of rhodium ih Ihe traps, wilt attract them.
If all stee* tin ware well rubbedt with bid ana oen with common tuilacked lime be*ore being put away, it Wilt never rtwt. This Is also thfe best plan to resnovc runt.
To k«ep a lawn fresh and green, put on frequently a alight sprinkling of salt or bone dak, or any good fertilizer. When the soil, is soft run the nailer over it: it improves the appearance. ITie a|V plication of a I\iie gnnmd gyji^uin alsb ftelps it. Eat above all ftse th« mowing machine frequently.
Pouring Oil on'Troubled Raters. ANew York paper says: Pouriiig oil on 'troubled waters is generally regarded by s^a captains monk asa fincfeniimeut than as practieal liint to be ^.nerved in time or danger, but as far twick as 1770, aJDutcli East Indian trader claimedto Tiave "Been saved "TroSi" "sli wreck* |On a tr^u herous ^eef,.by ppjiring a jar rff olive oil on the sed. Later, another instance is rocoyded. iij^which
va
ve^el
liaving been wrecked in a luirricaneva cask of lamp oil, which was kept, in a small boat, became broken, and so quieted the sea in the immediate vicinity, that most of the crew succeeded in getting to an island near by.
Captain Jar man, of the ship Romsdal, 3tated to a reporter, that although he had long known of the wonderful effects of oil poirted upon a rough sea, yet he had never put his knowledge into practical use until the/last voyage. The subject having been recalled to his mind lately by a little article in one of the seaman's tracts, he determined to test the recipe. He caused to be made two canvas sacks, shaped like a bottle, each having the capacity of about three gallons of oil. These he filled with common lamp oil. Soon after, in the middle of the Atlantic, he encountered a violent hurricane with terrible seas, which lasted about twenty hours. The waves broke over the stern awd threatened to swamp the vessel. Remembering his oil, he punctured the canvas bags. and caused pne to be towed over each' quarter^ The effect, he said, was magical. The waves, although remaining at the same height, no longer broke over the stem several yard$ around, where the oil had spread on the water, there was apparently a calm. The ship was thus relieved from the tremendous shocks of heavy seas breaking over her, and the danger was considerably lessened. Captain Jarman thinks that the use of pil in ease '6f a ship hove to in a storm, yvould be a very good thing. He jays that although .this was the first time lie had ever tried the experiment, it was not novel by any means. He had known cases in which crews liad escaped from vessels when it would have been impossible to lower a boat without its being swamped, except that oil was thrown over the ship's side and the sea. thus .sufficiently calmed to allow the: boat to be lowered without danger He has also seen whaling vessels lying quietly, while c^ar by other vessels were tossed aboi:.. The whaling vessels were so thoroughly saturated with oil':thatr the water remained calm all about them. He says that the method is so simple and so inexpensive that he intends to have oil bags always ready for use hereafter.
The First Stove-pipe Hat. Yes, son, you are correct. The first time vou'weaf a stove-pipe hat everybody looks at you. Not, as you vainly imagine** because you aria the first young man who ever wore a stove-pipe hat, but because it is .apparent even to the old blind man who sits in the back pew, without any cushion in, away back under the gallery where the poor have, the gospel preached at them, that it is .the first time you ever wore a hat of that.description." Your old father claps one on the back of his head, puts his hands into his pockets, holds up his head and walks off down the street in a gale of wind and never thiiiks of his hat. But. you, son, you pull yours on at the most graceful angle it can hf poised, and you go teetering along, both nands ready to fly at the hat at the slightest provocation^ the ghostliest phantom of a {uff of wind. You don't look comfortable, son." Your hat is always trying to come off you bump it against everything you pass you rub it the wrong way when you try to brush the dust it when you carry it in your hand up the aisle, everybody smiles, because you first hold it by the brim and. let the crown tip gracefully, over your arm by the time you have hit three or four worshippers in the head with it, you changeand turn it under your arm and try to carry it that way witliout touching it, you pnt a woman's eye out with your elbow. Then when you sit down, you put the hat down on the floor, setting it on the brim a fatal mistake. And then before the sermon is half through, you put your feet on it three times. But never mind you have to learn sometime. Only don't imagine that people never saw any thing of the kind before, bea us ha A in a so if you are only ftveHFeet three inches high,1 don't thiivkftf liat thi^e^ feet five inches high improves your appearance, or makes you look taller. Because it doesn't. It makes you look as though you clerked in a 8eccond-hand clothing Store, but it doesn't mkke you look taller. By and bye when you have worn a high lu.t two or three years, you will wear it so culturally that it will become you. But the first time—oh, mv son, my son I
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The Baltimore Oriole.
The Baltimore oriole^ in his brilliant coat of orange, vermilion and black* gifted with remarkably clear, loud aha liquid song, is an industrious, Wei 1-be-haved and welcome exponent of sunny, perspective hours. Coming to us in May jfrom Mexico and Central America, he is hailed aqd known variouj^y at^, the "Hang Nest," ''Eire-bird" and "Golden *fiobin." Hie pendulous nest, from which he derives one of these appellations, is a well-known fabric, and is usually seen suspended from the swaying terminal wings of the, graceful elm, high in the air and far from danger. It is sometimes hung in the willow and maple trees, and is no uncommon ornament Ut the tbllage of the' Btreets in the large it
As an^ jndnatridus mechanic and skilfil ^ngtne^r, this bird dfsnlays remarkabl^! iivgehmtv iii the faorication and jplScetheftt of lis home, and makes available alny^ any kind Of material in its ^building. stripping of fin« bark, shreds of niilkweed stems, the thistles, down of the preceding year, twine, thread, horse hairs and yarn, all enter ingeniously Into TW composition and are woven atid interlaid with it nicety and j»gertuity that would shame the fitigers of a
modern Penelope. The whole
jttruetnre i^ of pett^lle or purselike f«mn, and sdj^endM from twf or three conUngehtJerial and drooping twigs.by as many firm guys or supiJorta Of twme, Narrow at the orifice, fiest gra!nally enlarges toward the bottocn, and is comfortauiy and coxily lined with down, fine {mfegeg, Withered Bow and hair. Here, during thfe Weary houre of irncnbation. in storm and Stttwhine, cheered and fed Iy S her brilliAat^haed lover, toy bwly tvingstin berjetiid hammock and silently feat lovingly broods over from fbur to «ix ovoid pledges of love, of a bluish white, bearing dark spots and lines.
Chemistry.
Chentfstry is tlie science of the world ami of the future—whatever may be said in praise of civil engineering to the contra^ Thf bridge viiich takes the engineer years uj»oi» years to construct, the chemist can in so many 'sixtieths of a ii 1 re
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to at
Chemistry has given us tlie baloon it has put in our hands gunpowder, nitro-? glycerine, dynamite,
and,
above all, ful-
minale of gold, an explosive S6 "terrible* .tliab if'inn ounce of it le.lcft. in a stoppered- -bottle ifca grr.inp falling among themselves by their own weight will create a convulsion sufficient to lay all London in ruins. It has given us poisons so ^pbtle that, were wen to. einplc^y j,such means of warfare, we coutd liul in a bal•loon over the camp of the enemy and drop a shell, the bursting of which would kill eyery,human being within a mils of it&¥ange. 4 f,
Then, t^o, chemistry has given us disinfectants. -To the'chemists we dwe carbolic acid, chloride of lime, and permagnate. of potash. Chemists have taught us to disinfect our sewers and drains, to ventilate our houses, to burn gas instead of oil, and to light our streets with what is more powerfb/ than gas itself-r-the electric light. It is to chemistry, indeed, that we owe almost all the comforts of everyday life.
But, on the other hand, the possibilities of chemistry are almost too terrible to be contemplated. As the science at present stands, any student can, if have access to a well stored laborator carry awav in a pill box matter sufficient to lay a city in ruins, or to poison the whole community of its inhabitants. The chemist can convert water into ice in the center of a red hot crucible. He can construct a shell the size of a cricket ball wjiieh will explode the moment it touches water, and overwhelm in flames a hostile fleet. Indeed, the chemist reduces the world to its original and primal elements. For him, even naore than the engineer, nothing is impossible.'And vet his pcower, vast as it. is, is limited, lie can more easily destroy than construct. He can take life, but he cannot give it. He can level the city with the! plain, but he cannot build it again. He) can [create prussic acid, but ho is igno-, rant of its antidote. He is like the fisherman who rashly opened the vessel scaled with the ring of Suleiman Ben Daoud. The forces at his control are beyond his command the powers he can evoke he cannot lay: It is the old tory,.of Cornelius and Agrippa—those v/ho trifle with nature's secrets do so the"..'peri!. y-! "Hold the Fort."
Everybody sings "Hold the Fort," but fevr know the origin of the remarkable sor ^. The Chicago Inter-Ocean ^ives the foli :7There was -a, iort at Altoona, about eighteen in :es from Kenesaw Mountain, which was being badly pressed by the Confederate forces. When Sherman reached Kenesaw he signaled to Altodna, which was commanded by General Corse, 'Hold the fort, for 1 am coming.' The message was seen and read by the men at the fort,.and as arer ply was necessary, General Corse ordered a young officer standing near to send the reply—"Wave the answer back to Sherman that we hold the fort." It was easy to order, but while the rebel bullets were flying thick and fast several members of the signal corps declined to .signal, until General Corse was impatient, when the young officer referred to above grasped the flag, mounted the dangerous post, and 'waved the answer back to Sherman. That yming man was Jamas W. McKeuzie, of Hampton, Iowa, and the war records mention the brave and cool act lor which he was promoted."
When a bank fsuls in China they cut off the heads of the bankers and throw them in a corner with the remainder of the assets. As a consequence, there hat been no bank failures in that country foi five hundred years. There is no tellinj how much would be saved' to poor de positor?, widows, and orphans, in ihif •onntry, if a similar plan should b«' dopte'd. '-'y*
The Darwinian maxim that the heaviest and finest seeds tend tot produce the finest plants has found support in the observations and tests «i:ido by Mr. A. S. Wilson on turnip seeds. Large seeds gave a product of two pounds seven otuices per-see'd, against two pounds one and one-fodrth ounces in the case of. small ..seeds.. •'•f- '.Hi
Brazil and the South American republiics receive eighty-one per cent, of their foreign goods from western Europe, and only fifteen per cent, from the United
Germany nave had the advantage on account of their long credits, frequent iteam cou.n-.r.r. ?nticn nnd low freights.
—It is computed that in the year 1877 there! were ten million cows kept for dairy purposes in this countiy, which, at $45 per head, Were worth $450,000,000. The land needed for their support represents $900,000,000 more, and the capital invested in teams, dairy implements, eh -,. $100,000,000 making a grand total of $1,4 460,000,000 invested this single indti^ trv. & ill I
Democratic County Ticket,
W si li
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For Cl»t"k
1
THOMA8 A. ANDEKSOX
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,, For Treasurer, 1 DAVID M. WALLACE,
?iW:
|"'VoVsiK^ir: -LOUIS 1IAY.
For Coroner!,
riENHY ElflCKXHAKHT.
For Gommissfoaer, 'third DiPtrict|
KENVTON BLEDSOE.
For Sb*i»atnr,
—I. Jfc-KBRTKK,
FOr Hep wt*! t?t(i vc*,
DAVID X. TAYI»R, JAMES WHITMK:K.
liwS
Sn^inc$s Dirccljb^
(AI, THOMAS."
OPTICIAN AND JEWEJ (529 Main street, Terre Haute.'
iki
.Headquarters CHinmercial Traveh^
fe JUSTICE HOUSE,.
t" JUHX .11 IKK. I'ropr. .i
4^* Northwest Corner .Main and Moriilian st.-
I BRAZIL. IND."
^ttovncns. at taut,
^IcLEAN & SELDOMRIDGE, I v'-r Attorneys at Law, 420 Main Street. Terre Haute. Ind l-sTlI S. C. DAVIS, S. B. DAVIS^ Not.L
A IS & A IS
c. V."E MC3sr"CjTa. Attorney at Law, tW 322, Ohio Street. Terre Haute. Ind.
S4.. It. FELSENT'FIAl,, ri .'" ATTORNEY AT LAW. Ohio Street, Terre Haute, Ind.
CARLTON & LAME
i' A'lTOHNEVS AT LAW,
Corner of Fourth and Ohio, Tern* I la.'
BUFF & BEECHER,
StttV
RR':« ,1.ATTORNEYS AT IAV, Terre Haute. Ind.
"-ALL ORDERS
PROM'PTIiY FILLE! •AT
N. B.—The Iii^host mnrlu'.t (irlcu In cii^li, tir 01.. own make ol icooiis cxciuuitfi'd for wool.
Terre Haute Banner.'
Till 1 KLY
9
Attorneys at Law, South Sixth Street, over Posted Terre Haute, Ind.
A.'.--J-.1' K: EL E Attorney at Law, 7 "Third*Street, between Main and Ohio.,
E S
nealcr in Wool and MamifiK'tiU'cr of
Clothes, Cassi
111
ores.
Tweeds, Flannels,
Jeans, Blanket^
Stocking Yarns,
(Jarlina:
and Spinning.
^5
AND
W15KKLV. „,•••»•
Office 21 8onth Fifth Street. P. GFKOEUEU, Propriotor,
CITY OF TEUU1S MAUTE.
English and G-ermai* Job Printin Exccnttid In tho bc«t niannor.
Morton Post, No.
DBL'ALLTMENT OF INHIANA. .TERRE HAUTE HeftUquarlHr* South Tliiru
RcgnlnriiificllnjjKftrft and 'thlr Thuri«diiy cvonlnjfH. cucli month ^BTHcadfiiK Koom open over ftvoniiip.
ComradcM viettliijr the city wi alwiiyH he njnd(! wclcoini'. W. B. MrLEAN, ComMr -JAV Adj't. (»Ko.
PLANKTT, 1'.
(£. M.
atllcadqtiRrteru
:t W E S I
CARPENTER AND BUILDER.
Hr i%
laiiiifnr:Mirer of pruaKickc'i)
Patent Refrij eralors, Cor. Ninth and Hycnmorr St*.. 1 TEUUIC IIAl'TE INlS.
twri SEWINO MACHINES.
Buys a Bipv'aK, with loose ance wheel, and* lenf and drawers of A. Van Sant A
+ion, 628 Main Street. This is a Machin. of the Hineer form lut greatly improved." and inuchiincrttian the finger Company Machine of Corresponding style, l^ease, examine it.
Buys the No. v, White with en« LL I 'ea'^
l,,c^ )ind
fine drawer*,
tl/t/v A ^rent many have been wild in tliin i-ommunitv at f4o.W.
(h Ci f" Buys anew Remington with end leaf, and two drawers, a very tl/C/v/ finely finished, splendid working? machine. "f
(FT A Huysalipht running Domestic t)41lt,ie
crs,
ma'.*»
•hirierf, wM.h end leaf and draw" r: nt-
& A CZ Buy a new No, 8 Wheeler & WilSf n. wilti end and book leaf.. 7^ and three drawers.
The Van Sant* arc general dealers and keep all the really valuable *ewin*r ma chines in stock, which they sell cheap for eauir, ffood notes or prompt monthly pay
ment*. They also keep needle* aud pattx ami make a sprscialty of repairing.
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