Daily News, Volume 2, Number 126, Franklin, Johnson County, 15 January 1881 — Page 3
k)f
tTUl)A\
fIan
S
I
A VIA in
$*•
r//£ bbqksn Bka.%
K.
Ha&m,
tit
1
Harm?*
w«pd«riO|r
iSII
roro soon to be redoubled in a grand .•est of death and desolation throughHut the cities and towns of the Mbsi#ippi Valley, and mil along the thoroughrants (as yet hardly explored), to the Ihores or the Pacific. Tho extreme rnstern limit of the white settlements il* was the States of Missouri, Iowa ami the Territory of Mihnesota, Beyond that there lay a
Id, over live hundred whites. What sw there were included missionaries among the Delaware# and Shawneee, WyandotUMI, I'ottownttoMies, Senecas, iOsagea, and Indi*n agents with their asIffistanu and servants at the various "lagenckM, The Fawneee were still a 'formidable tribe. The wigwams of the of the
Sioux and Uto hunting Comanches line*! the PI issouri and their tributary streams for
rundr«ds
of miles in what is now the
chest and most productive agricultural ons of Kansan, Nebraska, Iowa, Dakota, with its population of more than two millions.
The people of the frontier States 'were in that happiest of all earthly conditions without wealth, without poverty~~a community of small farmers and traders. There were then no la* towns. 8u Louis was a place of 56.C
Chicago was of leas Importance than Saertunento or Omaha now, and Kansas City contained a few log huts and some Boo jopuUtiou. The National census, oorn piet©«i a vaar later, gave Iowa leas than £00,000 and Minnesota tot 6,000 white inhabitant*. Twenty miles out from Couneil Bluffs and forty from Independence bnught the hunter to the buffalo range. Beyond that toward the setting sun stretched a limitprairie far on and on into what was en supposed to to a desert**' *®d to marked on the maps, but what is now proved to he a very* fertile part of the continent, sioptnggmdnally onward toward the Black lull* and the Hocky i^nge, where it is watered by mnomer» aUe clear, cold streams from, the heights of everlasting snow. Through this unexplored wilderness lay m»« routes (for there were several) of the grand army of California pioneers that assembled along the banks oi the Miseourl frtm eatrtv in March to late In ftlay, IS49. They represented all class**, all States and Nations, all trades, isaltitigs and professions bat not all age*. Out of everv hundred it would have been hard to pick one man over forty and to every five hundred men therm waa hardly one woman. There were young fellows of twenty, fresh from college ytong lawyers pung tioctor*. yowng nrmcher*, young lauraners, young lavai:Soaie were
wago&s by pair*, %*m* q« some mounted »»**». p*»w or bon««, with an extra animal to pack the mmmm fnwfefewii? «nd aome few were hokf and hardy enough to untiernke tho idv«nt«» af^ unking to the rifte lor ttolr awp, ea. One of th«M latter, Irishman. «^hri«ig» pack toavy to ktlitd mn!e bi.
In a rrsi* «i i*r itoo-
:»wTTrow at fet*
IW
.v.-,
I \r *V "P Y1TO* i!t^«een on tlie r&wl near tto fink of III It N toe Humboldt. cutiine the throat of a 1 li Ji* X-i K«/ I mirud horss© and feeding himself upon choice bis* of the carcaa*. The paa-isg-e from. the Mfe-ogri to" the Sacramemo occupied iraiu oac hundred t*» one hundred and thirty day*. General!* the provtelott was made tor but ninety daya, and this mfstato causod scarcity of ^pplief, The cholera fol towed the trail, as plague pursues tto piilftiflttf to Jitmm*, and the
opm ""„t3SuSto •er«*» f*« 9*«r wfeoH
t&« homts-retnmitut
4
{."
ti«l
10
wander iqr.
iaakt«n, with a fa*rn4ike fc«, to«rar4 MM f«rm-
.'o*kenLifca* ttiB .««,«».
'ihi* Dvx-tgt
31 ir iwH pta««
tttfimm
t* Imi ttee tall«mm tail «wJ *t»t
i*
tint
iim
wtolp-px-nap-
Mi—a, k, itet&m, tnitorv*t»
bin ami mit# «tKrr«fffcs» broke** l»wr*.
-A,
Jtfot&***»•
m)RTr-5i?rB.
W*mmrUMMm TT«»*• »f (fc» Piwtl C**m~ of lit* TS*ir IW.I"* tHuic'r
V-HiM* It« "1'**«+r M«r+y—C*l*i»lnr. 'itiLK th« real Argonauts of 104S w&ntl<fruig among the hilb and Hica that !ut»k the Western slope of hktrra N« vjvia, armed with pan, tun and but«her-knift«, testing the 1 and eapahiiities of the gold the mmn ot the discovery was I on ifei way to the Eastern two mute* simuitAneouslr. It frontier of Missouri and I
York and Boston which waa in late auiuttm of 181*?. line first re-repe.'itt-dly confirmed and en-uj-oifli, threw the whole country the wildest excitement, in the of N»?w York and the extreme »-rn Stat OH the fever waa hottest yf?nr
]4 i(j
W tir .. .! b**t arrival# were as early as July. 1 to IT I main bod»- came in f.-om the loth to the
*mong ibn
twnww.www I i,5fh of Tb»*y all headed for Sutter's tort (smsrtiuuenta). liut dur-i iag the winter and *jrin£ preceding! 1 hfsf.r ebuio^f the diwwrms in 'Dip-1
til40
jHiLEthf real Argonauts of IMH
hilb and
r» tin: by the Mormon scouts and roving hthtrn ab HJ». the SAME time that ves--ailing round Cape Horn took it to
He worked
kte'wmf foot to after a^rcmmibuing In mhtrnk returned ton Westtnm «sfey, wfe^e he b*c*tm an Aldvni»att and a ca^ia
gt&vm
of its
victims «wi UtpiK mile* on tin* highway. There was no tiujv»
I tcmb'r.'NPs* mi tin* u\ .n nev wepw
grass Ifn* asifcte-b gb. I tnjrlini »i hfc#te, wltlios}?• stone or ejS^ aw «t«ar» I i«a, ***«.: and\bii«i^Bi» iiBijf com© aon Hoy o'w th fear of tto p^st^ene#* fewfiwl'vivwr* ol the trails with all po^iuie p*ed. &Um aggregate of the grand army has been variejtaly est boated at frota S%W t« 80,W. The latter uutu-
I tor j*erU^ps neuro^i the mark* Ihe
rado Vnw had extended frt»m Colo-1
mo %loaz
,j
Ameriei|n.
Mmimnm
fica that futnk the w«st«rn slope of jr^j. .rar{ ai Woatvert'^va (now
am
spring
wsi in some other re
ts the m»«t remarkable year of the cnt ertturv. It fonnu France a 'public wtUi a IionrtDarte* President popular efeetioa. All (Jennany wm armwl rev«It againut kingtsraft. Um^ary wa in reMHon againnfe the •u^tririn Bm{oi' r. There was revolt lmbardy a^a'n^t th! Austrian y(tko
Nand !'a\«ttuo ^ain?»t the |sr the two Sicilies. The ieople the rulers of Tuscany, Modttna
I'artna to grant Constitution*. RE WIM rank revolution in trejUmd li(?r the Icifd of Smith O'Brien, |U:he!l and Meagher. The Chartist# Ire seriously moving in England for fivorsal suffrage. Fieroe war raged
Northern Italy between the Italians 4nd Austria and the ynnr opened with n-m clouds, social and political, vini.
i*t
mining.
all over tho Old World., Cholera, day a^art, to* which a single old cow Rat frightful rontributloa of Asia to witsvharnessed, drove up tothe trading•lodern Europe, more terrible thau the i,o«t in the neighborhood. A slouchy4«cient plague, was raging on the eon- took ng "J?ikeV wjisJ.be driver, J» the Hnent and advancing toward America, enrfoas craft «at a very plain-looking frhenf the terrors it inspired In and sadly-dajfletcd woman, holdhag in her lap An infant child, in less than
c?™*.
CJreek and ttan«rto"*ii Greek, I
inueb a lost |»laoe as liabyloa or SinoTeh) and ilAngto.vti, now known sm» FlaecrrlHe. Thete towns or e.t^ps &re directly on the line of rouU fiora Car-1 soa Valley to Sscramento. and thou-1 •«ands of the grand anuv stopped and tried their fortdnes thore^
I rh«r» was no organized »:-ivtl C*overn 1 uient on the American ptan till tho Mth ot November, IHil.f. when Peter ii. I Burnett was ejected Covemor and John
Mel)« Mill Lieutenant-Governor, Amoiig the Arsronattts chivalrous re^p»otfof woman was earrietl to the utmost extremity, and often to the ludicrous as a single instance will explain. In the spring and summer of ltfdO some two hundred miner*, nearly all Americans, were working on one of the many dry creeks" In the foot-hiUs, fortylive to UUy miles-to the eastward of the Sacramento valley- They were doing msll," tliat is. those who worked fnithfully ten or eleven hoops a day wore making from $Mi to iiO* out of which they had to pay cjcpcuaes—say tliree to /our dollars a day-rfor wear and tfear of tx)is, clothes, board, medieinea. etc. every miner in those times willing his own shirts and underclotlu ing, which were oi gray, blue or red flannel. They lived in cabinsby groups oft« (i«, threesMfoar* and Uvea., One
lifteen minutes a c«?owd of fifty or sixty voung men collected about tho cart. Most of them had. not sceq a woman for six months. Eager inquiries wore showered upon the strangers,. What are you going to doP'1 "Where are frOmr1 Will you not stop here? you will we will build you a house, furnish It, set you up with a supply ard
Ifou
terra itmgnm
vt
known
Missouri Terriuiry^ and the InTerritory" south of it. Between ^Utc linos of Iowa and Missouri ami the sky Mountains there were not, all
grub, and all dome and boan your hotuw," The oflfeir was accepted, with snoh rude thanks as honest ignorance vn masterIn less than six months after this, event
Pike," his wifb and baby departed from that camp on a stage aud six, and in fine style, with a purse $8,000. They returned to the Western States, and "wore never sgain hoard of by their benefactors. The slightest insult to a woman was resented on the spot with-
camps or the out reganl to her character, education lattc, Arkansas, or condition 'Itm man who clieflled a itt was
womab in his board or wash bil trsatel as a thief and driven camp as a pariah. There are unrecorded deeds of mercy and Charity done in those early days, the simple truth of which would shame all dramatic effort. Mr. and Mrs. were among the early arrivals by the Panama route. They had opportunities of doing well at San Francisco and Stockton out the husband had started for the mines." and, like thousands of others, to could not be satis tied short of eeelng them. He possessed tto Instincts, education and manners of a gentleman. Tto wife, a delicate, warm-hearted, intelligent I very motherly little New Kn-
glandan
ito wamt%
ot
woman, was in all respects fit to ct the friend and companion of such a ma®. They brought their only child a girl of five or six vears, as beautiful as a fawn, and the life of the family circle, which was poon enlarged bi physically tin
boarders. Mr. able to work in the mlneis. Mrs. cheerfully supported him in his illness (Panama* fever), hoping for his ultimate recovery, which never cara«. Within a month or six weeks after his arrival he died, and the Argonauts kindly and tenderly laid hi# away in his eternal rest. Tto bravehearted wife attended to her duties as w»ual, until one morning little Ella's flushed cheek and predion Indicated that she, too, wanted on the other side of the river. Night and day the mother hung over the fading form of her darling, alternately hoping, fearing, despairing. And night and day tto Argonauts gathered about to cheer, comfort, assist and encourage. At last the supreme hour came, and the sweet tittle sower that had delighted and hnmantoad the rough nature# of so many homeless. chiSlea# and wifeless men dosed its leave* and Med away Into a memory. With little Etta's death tto light of life perished from the eye* ami heart of tto mother. Her otter tonelines* and melancholy w»» sadder than death itself. She *a* !«4t la destitute drcumstAnce*. The mln divined as much, and in iests than 9 fc night after tto borhU of tto child tto widiwed meO&m waa started *m tor wav back to tor New England tome w*& $1,000 and a through ticket In tor perse. Thfcr is tot oee biMaa^e of tho«i»»ds. Tto ids npon toswsvoienoe wftre fret|tte»a and alwava pressing, tot tto Ar-
toiurta with eonld #iow wttb all
of a Odftaral* twtiwor
W
It haii abroad with the brand of
gone
popular uidorsetnent that them i* for literature in lite annals and traditions of early life in this State nothing worth contributing but humor of the broadest and lowest type. This is a grave uiisju lsptnent of the case and no man familiar with the inser life of thwe iimea will anient to ii. There WM, to be euro, a humorous and a ridiculous, mocking side to it but by eomitarlson with the sorioos, earnest, dramatic side, it in a* the laughing rill tc the ratijhtv river. Kvery camp, b.tr, ravine, wiiU*h has rosterxslfy helped to swenKhu "rol* time of gold produced here since January 10, 1$48, ha* been the scene or' a tragedy, and no considerable, oivili»ed State has ever, in so short a time, viehlod as large a harvest of blighted bop^id broken heartak crushed ambition* and fam^y tietHmvered aa this. Our humor, like that of the "Fool," in King Lear, in the main derives its inspiration from calamity, and has a touch of the grim mockery of a grinning skeleton. The •'North American Pie-Biter," who,is the hero of Mark Twain's inimitable "Jumping FrogM story, if the truth be told ot him, bad a history as sad a* the cry a wounded curlew.
—Snn Fmncisco OalL
1&50 the County of Kl Dorado more than a hundred millions of the I contained a greater population thau healthiest, handsomest and most sinI Han Francisco or Saeraiucuto, nine-
tenths ot it being' emra/ed at piacer
The Culture of Chestuut Tr ies.
TUB Columbus (O.)
ew
people in the'world. In some lo-
1
c-—5
calitics fn Italy and Spain, iu Eastern Europe and Western Asia, the crop is equal in importance to the wheat crop in Ohio. The wood of tho chestnut is handsome and easily worked, and tuny be profitably employed in manufacturing ami for other purposes to a much larger extent than it is present.
Une great advantage possessed by this tree over most others is that it will thrive and grow to a great size on very poor land. Its native home is barren soil. Chestnut trees one hundred feet in height and from three to seven feej* in diameter can yet be found, tho Journal saj-s, on the hilltops of Southern Ohio, growing in soil which cannot, be made to produce tlve bushels of corn to the acre, and where oak, hickory and other trees are mere dwarfs,
The best way to secure a chestnut I plantation is to plant the nuts in the place where it is desired the trees shall grow. The chestnut" does not bear transplanting easily* aud many failures have followed the attempt of Western farthers to set out forests of transplanted trees. This is of small consequence, however, as under favorable circumstances bearing trees twenty-five, feet in height can be obtained from the seed in live or six years. The nuts should be planted as soon as possible after they are gathered. They should be only half buried in the ground, and then.lightly covered,with leaves or litter —a score or more being piauted for everv tree desired, to ensure success.
It would be an excellent'plan if farmetv boys and girls could ne interested in the Culture of these valuable trees. Put the enterprise in their hands, and
Ft
romise them a share in the proceeds, will be an incentive to watchful" ness and Industry, and as good as a deposit in the savings bank to their account
In medio tuUssimm ibis.
Wnvs the eenstis-taker, wishing to eomplimeat, said of a citfctea: Ah, sir, jtji'vt a wife of handredf tto *ady frahlwd a rolltnx-pin and sailed in on imn M^iag: "lt«o villam. I told jroo I was only ttartf-iw. Do»'t jots dare to pot it down as 100!"
My CNmhI W
Wbyancywi wont of aorta, neve* aWc to tell folks thai
THE MAKKKTS. frac *ew l»rk. ***W 14,-KLO»R- V«HM J«I* is £iui!« Mnd wntant, t3 s-» 1•$ TO: coin-i.
«itn,
Ctfipt*, 4J,0(X» ti ml! iwilil prlw-!
Stale Journal
waxes eloquent in praise of the chestnut tree, as a valuable one to cultivate both for its timber and its fruit. The latter, as it points out, is the principal
in the food (in the form of chestnut bread), of
Of
ft
mi soot
!.!*«• vt hc*t *««, |0 ift ?S|, fl i» r«»a»fc
A* frf"
|l UJ No. S
t*4. i-1
«J«. St ?t. C»ra~M«
Mil'- Nc. *",{
'. .iWNst
white *t«trrn
..
.r
The Pig QttMion.
SHALL the pig of the future be a spherical package of "animate lard," without any meat to speak of. or preferably a "razor-back" type, with bristles anil vertebne, a modicum of touffh mtisclo. with scarcely enough of the oleagiuous to grease the griddle? It may not to wise to run to porcine extremes.
On
one hand we may not avoid extremes bv breeding off the extremities on the other, the cultivation of legs may prove a legacy of evil. The nose mast long remain a foremost feature, but it should not remain too long. Root, hog, or die" may be a barbarous maxim, yet all corn and no roots tends not to health. and assuredly not to longevity. The dissimilarity of the two types is marked) the one has'more of spirit, the other of grace one the embodiment of restlesshess, the other of inertia the agile 1 tvpe has more of energy and health, the sedentary hog has possi dy more of scrofula. If the latter is not fit to eat, the former is fit fbr nothing else. The pig of the period" should not reaemble an exclamation.point.
It is possible, on the other h&nd, that improvement" may 'be carried too far, sacrificing health to rotundity and accumulation edible leanness to lard. The production of meat, the most in the shortest time, is a law of economic production that most preclude all use of the raxor-back variety, aud tend toward symmetry and centralization. At the tame time, pampering and overfeeding, and breeaihgto excessive fat, contravene in equal degree the name economic law by causing disease, often wholesale detraction. 'The extension of "cholera" is coeval with this improvement Mid overfeeding with corn to the exclusion of grass and the wholesome variety demanded by this omnivoraw animal. Let the breeder have still mmv regard for compactness and symmetry, tot give the animal wide range, good pasture, quick and coostant growth, variety of feed ia fattening, and earlv preparation for tto knife and the resoft will {wove alike satisfactory to pocket and palate-—A'. T. 2HJ-
are wdtt? Ten to
»eit'« all caittsd In tto first pla» bv hafe coastipatkm, wbich aodooH finjliy .«an»ed deaaafed kidaey* aad liver. .Tto Miteceiv l'of«ac»i*»ipatiwilt tto crid*w«d Ividaey-Wort It ako a specific «iai «dy tm a& kidite? and Sver dl«ea«w. Ttoasaads are cored by It etefif Month. Try It at ooce.—Tokdo
ZJ
ii r.: !i. 4—^fKH«d
»»,
4l
4-..!! nngiwiod.' I
NX
5S|i,-: -ir i.«r UI.it*, 3®Ci S» J»» *Tjr Mr a
1
I S I
*i*tcair«.
CHICAMO
Jan.
J3.--PkARWOai«t» hat
fnr»r $500", fair *prt $4 SO extf*. Dull, wt«k -. -I W*M
ui{!ntiQlJt 3U00 good cteound '.ri
riunninatf.
CtfrtKSATl, JftK. 14 Fkmr—Qr*- fanntiv f*ney $S#®p8 00, %h tt-M# lt«l No 3 rsa winter. $t O" uB Corn Strong JJo. 9 mixed, Wi43c. m:n—Fino .No. 2 mixed. 37c v. hii.Jcjr—-Steady S3 10- bi|i —Common. #1" !4 60 Hgbt, fl «i0H W, packing. H9N$0tiO': '*«*«(*. receipt#, htftd »hitui.nle, l.sini'hoail.
inittRnapnllM Ko» !Hnrket,
IxritAXAPot.il, Jantihrr 14.—Live Ifoas— Kirnutr reoelDis, S.WU betd «u!( meats 1,300 ht^d
TERBKKAI TK JI.IBKCT.
Friday, Jan. 14.18^1.
HIDES AND SKIP'S.
iU mete 1 bp L. A. Baruett, 115 8. Fonrth St. reen dee, gr«cn «&3t cured,8V4c, veal I kip 10c dry flint, 12c dry salt. 10c grf«tn H««t hides. 00 pound* and ov?r. Si4c: skin*, 50ct&$l 30 No. I Uutcbora' tttllow,
5 i@iC damajftwi htdjL-i'. Ja ]rlcc, \LEATHEH. Bent, hemlock &%$•££ second s»lao£btcr mjI«, )^i^80c oak eole. tic. rnoPccK.' (Corrected by
JOB. II.
Brings., cor. Fourth and
Chorry Street,)
hotter, choice. 17© do. inferfcrt*, T®l0e. e|s**, fresh, "^c ragt, mixed $3 .'15 per hundrt-d ponndK. fcatljet #. prime. 40c jtlried #ppt'l«, 3i£c ptitatfi**, 70c grtfi salt hides 8V4c dry. lOt^l.^pvlts, 25c# $1 50 ... tallow. $c hay $15 00 per UJH. v.-
ki^s'
Coon, 10c mink, «knnk, lO^tOft: miifikmt, 3Stlt)e opossuan, 8®l0cj ott*r, $3 fl 00. rOUT.ftlY. 1
Hens per doxen, ?2 Hii tiHiMun $l40t plucks. $1 8( gvcHc, §4 40 tarktjyn, per lb, Cc. ,t •, OltA-IK.
lt
Wheat—Fn It*. JKh: red, $98 Oora bomlny, ®c mixed, 85j?.' t)at, 98.!' ?i?.i 1.IVB STOCK. JV.I '(("orrnctBd by R. P. at twcW Yardp.)'" Stfltjw, heavy wolghts' par mtitnd.Sv^c jfcht, 854c cowhand heifers, pulls'. S)4j^u veafii sheep, 6J%8i4c l»fls^.percwt *SI
1. M-'fM "fki 1 Cjiw f. •, f-jti .aictad aM*W T." T. Af\'Twa'*\-* RfplHIM ™, 3M" tiHvftl I »V**r™
tin mjjr
DYSPEPSIA.
NO.
3
N I
sTwIi.
c«-h. -Febrtump ,• se,-:3liMeb. ,$lC-i .c, Mat Ko. ttdo ST. vrn -Doll wi-«lt rp^". si. .it, fVhrtsary:
W. 8. CLIPT.
CT.
40
Jk. l,j,elsil, UtioK, 5.''i
It is not often th^t^c can call the attention of our readers to as useful a little book as the business dtfeotoni ntid pocket memorandum, published by J. Rippey & Co. Besides being a business directory, it contains a handsome ninp of the Slate, a fist ot counterfeit bank notes, a tiblt of all the gold and silver coins of fill nations, and their vnltn-s in our currency, the late census reports for the State, mid other useful and valuable.statistical matter. The book'is for sale cheap, ut the various book etofes In the city and county.
WM DRETJSICKE,
CARPENTER AND BDttDER.
Mnnuf*ctnrpr ff t)rcn»ickf'»
Patent Refrigerators, Cor. Ninth anil Sytamure Sia., TKIUtE HAUTE INI.
Wo*
d^
The Only Remedy
I THAT ACTS AT THl SAMS TIME OX I THE LIVER, THE BOWELS, and tho KIDNEYS.
Tku1 combined action aim & «vnderftil power to
cttng
all dmatet.
^j^We^icjc?
Beoaunf «Malh*6 tkm great organ* to become doggtd or torpid, and poisotumthnmonart therefore forced into tth+blood that tkovld hs etpeUed naturally.
mR?M»JfSTIPATIOJr,
BlLtOT&SI Ktn!*kT ... MHXAJiSS, FKMA LK WEAK*
Wfl
mPL*!W, CRHUIT FKMALR
XXSMm. JkHJJHftTOCS Bt^KMtsa,
canmnafirf a*##* qf tkm orgmij landrrtfon^g^ir powerUtime I
mnvmu
«rifiek
Liquid
hmimttmS
Why kan alwplwa alffcta I
IT* KWSKY WORT and rfrik* bt I I AasiGI. nu*4r9,*v«UMampo«*4md\ mm 0 »n«i^ri »ffl MMdwii* et»w Waitnan, I \9* of mm prm&rui. ht: witt erttr [, for
fw*.
jnriet, I
ItSA BOBASSSSf BL, txpUtm.
Gr.
iiitf
BILLIARD PARLOR
A N
SAMPLE ROOM.
The Handsomest in _JL
P*- !IA*T*S# IwwTonc Is wrwMnrnUoa of Praloxtd« of Iron. PenifUn Rwt ud Aw Phofr* WUm *lth Amsitte* k* (i# MHIki) and re-rotn-Tvl hyiJwm for IJtt&oVtitaMt
N' a" ',h2c#co $1ia iff. »*ryw« rmtrailM, UntKlnimMivr from reven Md Chrvaie «mil« niid 1 fl »%t at fl MKgvl t» »'•*•*. It •rnrw e*ery puxytm wbent To*«? I* WKOMkfT.
Xa.tr*4 i-i .--J4W I»i K- .. 4»P «Ml itifitn. ....
MwfictmdfeilHE DB. BARTER MEDICINE CO., do. 213 Mali Street, St. Uttis.
sasE1'a ft
A NIT ACT UEERS OF
SASHES, DOORS, BLINDS, ETC,
AND r»" KlJtm IN
umber, Latli, Slilngle?, Giass.* Paints, Oils and Builders' Hardware.
CORNER OF NINTH AND MU1.BENRY STREETS. TERRE HA' TE rNT)
Western IndlniiR.
Finest and Best a
WINES AM) LHJUOJtS
of all kinds at the bar.
The stock of cigars on tiann is culled from the choicest brands in the market. R. L. Fntsmu.
No. 620, Main street.
MCE FRESH BREAD
AND CRACKERS.
Pw good frtsh bread, eakea, and cily butler, crmcker*. made frc*b every day, call at the northweaftcorner of Foarth and Bagle
76yl THOS. CALLAHAN,
HOP BITTERS
(A Mtattatec* r«C Priu.)
nors, Bt CIH MA?nRAKK, DAXDELION. UMM (V«»Tivt «»T XttncttQcui run or *u, otwt* Bimn
ttm
CURE
THEY
AH Otoeasesef nwSUNMa, BewcM, «.«©4Urla*r uHaarrOrgima, »i» a»4 eafweiaBr
Urer. KM
Cowstalata
IOOO IN COLO.
writ fee paid for a
mm
»in Wtenrt
M»,«R FORAAROTIAC ino*r* W TAJTENOAA f«n4 la then. Aak yfptr
tvr BfspWU*r* ,n5
1 fcftot* jrw *k*9 Twite aa axfcrr.
«i4tfrM0*tt%M!«ar« for
mm "t optwm,
Cilia
OWm,Vie.(X.ht*W
Thle te tte
PRE8ENT1
nl Eagf
W*m ot
»aw
off toot lo« t»
MyOOQ te aw. Yto fttfl^MKcraatodu Ottslajrftee. MW «ea^MB»tef amm UL
TStB
*& i.----..
Pyn»*|wU, Uearral Drblllljr. DU«a«r», Waal of VlUkt.
LOOD
/MRN/C.
-A. R. 1ST -A. R, X)
ATLATUIC
C^Untic
MACHIN SHOP AND
A I N E S O A N O N ".W ii ...| ... JiAjiRffiptTiiiernf Portable' and Stationary laiglnes, Flour, Saw Mill and MINING MACHIN KRV 11 ANGERS W i.I4ki'Sr-SllAFTlN.G, 0PRIGH.T AN I HOIUZuNTAL STEAMjENGINES#t" 6QU K, Sixth Street, Torre Haute, Indiai^a.
™(Ml, all] Oil!"
J. H. WILLIAMS. J. M. CLIFT
CLIFT, WILLIAMS & CO,
Btteincs?} IDtrcciori}.
Al TltOWAM.
OPTICIAN AND JEWELER, 520.Maui street, Tern* Haute.
'AitontttjG at fara,
JIcI/EAN & SELDOMRIDGE, Attorneys at La w, 430 Main Sire, t, Terre Hmitc. Ind.
«*, T»AVH». M. B. Davta. Notary, DAV18 & DAV1H, Attorneyp a4- IAW, i2)^ South Sixth Street, over PostrlHce,
Terre ILiute, Intl.
Pljnsifiiins,
9
1
-ssl
Dr. A, Brake, 5
VETERINARY STTRJE0N\ 0*Fl^^ —84 north Third street, (Carico'# Sti1loa,
Rk: tKitCK 834 North Fifth. Tnail» rvery cUffiic# known to hor»« or cattle at moderate co*t. I(a«
met
and uniform ratccas.
with .argc prautlea
03UY YOUR
HATS & BONNETS
AT, EMIL BAUER'S
Wholesale
#n%
JHRinery flto^
Tb*- «tock »mi lowest prices.
CINCINNATI
AIIEEBULtETH
AUUWEIPA6€4fi COLUMN WCSKLY
FARMERS PAPER
PURE FIRM
try
t«ba«co au»d
uurestica.
torn r»a Ciacrua,
FARM HOME STOCK MARKET* BAR0I* 8HANBE COUMTim
FEARU98 INDEPENDENT RWAliHft K16HTS Aao tmrntmrmM A PWSOOC
ERA MAN ANO
^III&L'Mper rmmsmO
"MCSICM.
IN I»7a.
....
OUR LjitUGRANGERS
v^y
A YEAR
rOR 8AM PUE COPtCS
«. W. FOURTH STXLNTDNNATLA
SSE*
•f atjr Hew In
common mmr
imjmzpi te
pey
«wla#».
rr**l asxt Sv
ft^i.'TsrSafiS]
TVKrl^,«W£ra--«.*
