Pike County Democrat, Volume 14, Number 12, Petersburg, Pike County, 3 August 1883 — Page 2
omn'.Vi, or inV. <i>ixvv Wm. P. KNIGHT, Editor and NjrietorJ , SUorjvl at t*i“ l*>stottW at WstmUnesf, lor transmission tkrott&K , mntur.l or srjtsv'kwr**>\v * * No i»apor\*>nt out of tho county unless jiaift In 1 thane*. , Persons Kln<t»ug in n rlhrS <5? V t\ R, with 5B.-.15, \ ill receive th<* free for on* war. Jfigjlmiki■ Cttditty lh*ni nr+ttt i-W 'mt/rat circalatloti t)j' any 1h i'iic Conntyk/ Advertiser# will ‘MijAv a nott* <#_/* /art/ » |‘«id lr afttati* ** >> » vv.llm thirty ilays t |»Ut nMtitn the year’ If |'akt littdt of yC&f
'i ho folbm iii&.ajrtV lawsfaid dovv n by this l> nitvul states ihtvernment lor the prMt>ctk>n of *dcwKpapeisl <; i v k ka I’ukss not io &. I. SulsAcriltcFs w ho tto not giro express Viol ice to- the coc/mry tti*** ttr&Silbn** xv>**»5ng to >»nt.iuue their siitaeriptioii. rXTU*. AKKK VK AGKS ARK VAltH ?. If s«hscHlK>t*M *»ph*r .tins k^mfibuaiirc ih‘*ir iH'riodicrtiS, the pknbsdVr* uiav prtivth'Ate the»n until all .••rival'ages hit: p*Tu. 4 VOf AUK KHSeoNStULK ONTth YOO jwy TP . vT. If subscribers, neglect j*i‘ th \ Ve their i#*ri»>d4ie^lfl frbiw the ••Xtec.t'o which ti^ev **■ ■* directed, ihoy itre responsible un*d ^cy • !tb> their hills, and enter them dtscmiimwmiMOVTN^: i. If subscribers nnwe to other places wit km I •*»:or»ni»»g tlje publisher, ami the papers are sent i * the former direction; thev are held resiHmstl- ' I NTRNTION W F R .VI f-. J. The courtk have decried that refusim-. to ■ take per ic'd M:\ls from the otli.-eor removing and Vaviiv-t them nnmllevl for,.is piima facie evi-dence-of intentional fraud. AHl tVSCKtUKK PKPINKD. f>. Anfctpersons who receives a newspijter and makes n.-e *>f it, whether he hasbrdervd It or ix-.t, is held m* law £ sut'jjAt ii>ei*.1 VN!> KIN ALLY, 0 t • I f suiterit»ers pay in advance, fhey arc -eumd lo^rive notice to the publisher at the end • « I their time, if they do not wish to conlimte aking it; otherwise tIn? publisher is authorized lo send it on and the sultscriber will be rtssponsimc until an express notice, with payment of all arreaiv. is eteut to the publisher. , 'till1'. t. VTI-^f POSTAL i.\W. tdie latest podal lnw decision is to the effect rial publishers of ;icwsp.T|K*rs ean, under the law. arrest any maivfor fraud who takes a par rt'fuses to pay for il. Under this law it :i dangerous trick for a man to nl’ow his subscription account to run on from six months to a year and a half, unpaid, and then tell the p.\<t master to mark it “refused, or seikl the ediim- a iKistal card to discontinue the piiper.” Nepotism seeing to ho getting homefb^ng of a grip on* the National AdYninislralion. Every member of the Cabinet has some relatives ondbe pay roll. ' ■ 1.ast week'a Miami Indian, a pure blooded sou of ihe forest, living near Tent, was married to a white girl. The only ease of the kind recorded in IBdinmj. Ptsosetjers for <>ur eiuning State Fair are very bright and the Managers are sanguine -that the exhibition will lie, in every wav. the most stieeesstiil ever held by the Association*.J.jiJU Tiik names of W. S. lioltn in and Thomas It. Cobb are spoken of now in conne'etion with the speakership.of ? the next House of Representatives. I’hey are both noble Romans and competent. The “straight" Republicans of Yirtrliiia have reorganised. Coiigress- , /nan Desendorf has been ehosi if chairman of the State Central Committee and that body has endorsed Jantes C. Rhiine for the ,i'residency. A a'K'Axa military encampment will lie held at Indianapolis from August i'o to i!) inclusive, (b n. Hancock has rtamed live United States oilicers to act as judges of the drills to take place during the time. It will he a huge •hlair, and citizens fond of seeing gala gatherings and fine evolutions should remember the time and make arrangements to !»e piescnti
Ihkrk is intirli tiisvussiou now as t > wha^ sljall be (liftto with the surplus revenue of the government. The occassion for such discussion ought not to exist. .No more revenue should he collected than is sufficient to meet the legitimate needs of government. The surplus should ho left in the pockets of the people. And tints it wjf'l be after the Democrats get full cot^rpl of the federal maehinerv. Ji . . IV .(Mother holuinn of litis paper an open letter Is Vepeblishod, written by Hon. \V. K Fishback, of In lutuapolis, addressed to Hon. Stanton J. lV-elle, member of Congress, 'from that district, The letter is the production of a Hepublicau, and published in a }ivptiolican paper. There arc some curious statistics in the letter that arc Worthy of consideration. Tint theory that low tariff works a hardship on labor, receives a severe Mow at the hands of the writer. Bead the letter carefully, ami then form your own conclusions. ' 6 *"■" -1 J _ 1 UK tariff is forth* protect Ion f American in'tiistries,anil cannot bedispenee ^with.—[I'reas. The stoek of argument on the tarill question from a UepuUicau standpoint must he w-yll nigh exhausted it the above is a fair sample of what remains. Grant now that the tariff is for the protection of American industries, yet as a Democrat we are moved to ask Iiro. Gladish what class oi American industries art' protected by the tariff, and what per cent, of the general industries of the country are advanced thereby. Three-fourths ot the industrious army whose sweat and toil have given America a place at the head of Nations, are farmers, A re t hey in any way protected by the tariff? Ot the remaining one-fourth seventy-flve per Vent, are merchant t and professional mep. What protection or benefits are secured to thorn by the tariff? Be honest for one tinpe in your life and tell the readers of the Press the plain Unvarnished truth. 8a y to them that when you write ftt1»e tariff is for the protection of America a industries’' that you mean by that that ten per cent of American Industries are fenced about by laws, legislated into fortunes, and that the el fort a of ninety per cent, of our populat ion are taxed to build up those tortures. ’fell them that the Republican >pti rty assists t$ye manufacturers to put :til laborers in chains for their proflit because those same trtannfacttirers (t4ti tribute largely to the Republican campaign fund.
I\Vs r-wwish rascality even vi'fergy. if, 'Mthjit W«4r owu rank', j Ttd* ts'fhovwi Klf the Wyrdict of the jiify-. itjlk" iA .Nashville. Marnfc f> fourth* imbfaiing State en'U'iiVfV Si 'l^esseo, has been found j!n8tj’ -and wHteiml to twowtV vests tiit|nisott'AlffnA %tfd ft titnvetjual to ttie of the embezzlement. This luqn^Aediw « State wherein the name of SVifi ♦» 'oaeeeti and among men with Viiiotu the Kx-tivasurer was ietey V>a.p'Nh»r, lint that is the Democratic wav Wfilding tilings. If a man issVtoVv h to be a ra*cak punish him, ho maMer w he his father was or tvfe he himce.f is. The Star ltoute defendants were greater criminals than t’o\k, but they escaped. The difference . wttsf Ihyrsev juni ltrady were ; le.uWrs of the Bcpublican party and ! tiifi trial took place under a Repltbli- | can administration-. Torn the rascals out*
ftvV the urotvcttoikof American in- [ *tiXAr&te, nml caimut p^lisjH'nscti with. Then, ; as a balance of this* surplus copies £1*0111 the tax t tm amt tobaec*** in Us various forms, the question iMuucK up: Which is the beet policy—to rettuee the tax on tl*oA<* .-erticVs Which an* not nee**t*Uiet* ami cut off this n»miw of a surplus, or these taxes amt divide among the Slates the surplus aecrt»i*£ from tW*iu, ami thereby lessen by more than one-half the present tax? We Wiovt* the latter will be the )popular thing to ito.—[t*n*ss. Mr. Oikulish lias got tariff autl roveutte mixed. If he will devote a little time to the study of these questions, he ean guide his scissors more intelligently. There is no la riff on whiskey and tobacco. There is « revenue tax and the DemeVi'ViUe party is not proposing to disturb it. It is also in favor of putting the tariff on luxuries and not on the necessities. Whv not put it this way: "Which is the best policy—to retime the tariff on salt, woolen goods and other necessities, and cut off this .source of a surplus, or continue these taxes and divide among the States the surplus aci'f.iitig from them ?*’ The Democrats say, reduce the tariff and leave the surplus in tl.e pockets of tile people. The Republican Party Must’ Go. [New York Sun.] The Star route defendants were Republicans'. They were prosecuted l>y a Republican Administration,‘tried by ti Republican Judge, and acquitted | by a Republican jury, lint the coun- | try has seen greater crimes not only condoned but approved by the party which has held continued possession of the Government for twenty-two years. The seanda’s of Grantism did not I weaken the hold of the President on Ids party. The Treasury riug, the Navy Ring, the 1’ost Office Ring, the Army Ring, the Indian Ring, the Land Ring, the Pension Ring, the Printing Ring, the Whiskey Ring, the Washington Uiitg, All flourished under Grant, and some of their villainies were traced quite to the door of the White House itself. Babcock was indicted, when private secretary of the President, for complicity in the Whisi key Ring'. Gen. Grant saved him ! from thepenittmtiary by direct Exo- ! cutive interference. Black Friday was one of the incidents of Republican misrul -. Credit Mobilicr was an illustration of it. The Freedman’s Bank was robbed and gutted by Republican philanthropists, who shed tears over the sufferings of the colored brother and stole the savings of his wife and children. The San Domingo job was whitewashed by conspicuous Republicans. Republicans looted the Navy. The Emma Mine exposure, the corrupt Venezuelan Commission, the fraudulent Mexican claims, the plunder of Indian tribes, the speculations in public loans, and the collusion in) the departments with outside thieves swell the Republican record. When a Republican Congress passed the salary grab and the back pay steal, they only kept time to the quickstep and robbery, with Secor Robeson's marine baud furnishing the music. And alter indignant public opinion compelled a retreat from that barefaced scheme of spoliation, the doubled salary of the President was preserved as a special compliment to Grant. Thejobbers, the ringstefs, the pi tin* derers,the adventurers, and the thieves wh > infested the Wh’t ‘ House demanded a third term for Grant Thirdterm conspiracy failed only bt cause the party feared a crushing defeat if the experiment was tried. Great corporations are now controlling legislation on many matters in which they are interested. They have corrupted and packed courts, and they keep Republican sentinels posted along the avenues leading to
Ilepeated investigations have shown that tin; great ledgers of the Treasury have been mutilated, that balances involving many millions of dollars have been forced, that erasures and in-ter-polatqd figures exist by thousands and that books of account have disappeared. The Presidency was stolen in 1876, and some of the beneficiaries ot that crime are most conspieiaus in pretending (3 deplore llte failure of justice in the Star route eases. Tito party that applauded the Great Fraud which carried Hayes into the White House and Sherman into the Treasury, and appropriated all the proceeds of the crime, did not scruple, four years later, to support a candidate whose wholo public career was stained with jobbery. The men who committed the crimes in tins long catalogue, or their creatures and 4-epresoutatives, arc still in ofliec. They hold the tort, and resist all intrusion. They know how to turn aside dangerous investigation. They sound the alarm at the first ni * preach of the enemy. They mount guard by day and by night over the records. They know itow the Navy Department was filed four times within a few woeks. There is no possibility of reform, or of purification of the public service, while this condition of things exists. All t he essays and rules of Katun, Gregory, and Thoman are worth no more for that purpose thau the chattering of so many monkeys in a menagerie. All other issues sink into insignificance when compared with the magnitude of this question. First Of all, the country must have a change of party, the iufusion of now blood into the management of public aflairs, trad clean hands in every branch of the public service. Murk damaging testimony against the sparrow has come to hand. In Bermuda the English sparrows have nearly destroyed the native ml and blue birds, and now the people peti- ; tio'n for action to have Iho little pests | removedt
2 THE TAEirr. *lK*haitni>olii* News. Hoffi St.VSW J, PkcUiK^IF Full rth «f Judy dispatches from tiavillage ofSitecdok. N. II., were f*ttying. The owner* of certain infant industries in the village of Sttncook have recently imported by the Inman Line of steamers several hundred Swedes. who are described in the despatches as ‘paiqK-rs and Jailbirds/ These‘panjiers and Jailbirds’ were brought to this country to take the phice of the American workman for whose protection certain tariff laws ; have been enacted. These . ‘paupers and Jailbirds’ sniffing the Fourth of July breezes, and not content with the Very low wages paid them by the owners of the high protected industries, began fo leave the Tillage of Snneoek, turning their faces westward. When, io! tin ir taskmasters seized them, kept them imprisoned and drove them to their work as the black men were driveu to thefane and cotton tields before the War. By some means word reached the Swedish minister at Washington, and he lias been inquir
ing i»v wna* am norm ms country - men were treated in this fashion, and the explanation is given that the paupers and Jailbirds, bought more food and clothing than their wages enabled them to pay for, and that their im<prisoninent was a ready method adopted by the protected manutactuvers to proteet the village storeket pers who;had 'neon selling goods to the ‘paupers and Jailbifdsv When you go to Washington in December you will probably hear Senator Morrill argue that the' owners of the “Snneook miaul. industries need more protection, so that American laborers shall not be reduced to starvation wages by eompetition with foreign pauper labor." Another interesting fact has c< me to light. The town of Liverpool, O., is the seat of a great eroek-ery-wSre industry. By a recent law you raised the tariff on the,articles made there. The increase was demanded and granted in behalf of American workmen. The owners of the Crockery industry at Liverpool have adopted it method of dealing with their dissatisfied employes which is said to work well. Their laborers are required to rent tenements owned by the monopoly, which are occupied as long as the workman remain in the employ of the proprietors. When the workmen ask for higher wages they are promptly ejected from the tenements to make room for cheaper workman. So, when it was settled that t>« tariff would be increased, the patriotic owners of the protected industry discharge their workmen, drove them from their homes, and supplied their places with cheap foreign laborers imported for the purpose. The protectionists are opposed to theories, hut are hungry lor fuels. Let them chew this Snneook and Liverpool business. It serves to illustrate tht| patriotism of the monopolists who clamor for protection in the name of “The American System,"' and is worth thinking about by statesmen who allow themselves to be humbugged by false pretenses. Suppose it should turn out to he the fact, after all, that in the principle protected industries of this country our workmen get less pay for the same work than is paid to workmen in the same industries in free trade England. 1 quote tVom the, published address of Mr. Thomas (i. Shearman, delivered at Detroit in Jiin^dast the following. “According to the returns published by Mr. secretary Frelinghuyson, the average annual wagcirof ail men, women amt children employed ia English cotton mills a. 0*251, they working tifty-six hours a week. The annual average wages of the same class of work people in our American cotton mills were in is?<e only Softkey working an average of at least sixty-thy hours a week. As their wages were reduced 2u per cent, long ago (since lt$0) the result is that during the last year tlui cotton operatives in England have been working only fifty-six hours a week for $231 a year. Thus in one of the largest and most highly protected manuXatures in this country the rate or wages is 22 per cent, lower than in England, the hours of labor is IS per cent, longer, and the cost of living is 20 per cent, more.” Th(5 special reports of Mr. Secretary Evarts in 1879, and of Mr. Secretary Blaine in 1881 show that in nearly every department of industry in America, workmen get less wages for a given amount of work than English workmen do. Our workmen work more hours, work faster, and during a year will produce nearly double what an English workman product's. Mr. Shearman says: The census slows that the average production of American workmen in 18X0 was $1,000 per heart, iliiile the average production of English workmen was only $?X0 pill- heart. Wages are uot on an average 25 per cent, higher hero than in England, anti therefore American labor producing 100 per cent, more is practically at least 50 per cent, cheaper than English. Xa\v, when American workmen come to understand that tariff laws are procured to increase profits only, ami that all talk about paying them increased,wages is in the face of the facts, and is simply for the purpose of catching their votes, they will kick as vigorously as the Iowa farmer who objected to being taxed to support an osjrteh farm, or to drain a swamp on Skunk Creek for the culture of rice. < \V. P. FiSllBACK.
Bough On Ita Party. * Harper’s Weekly lias boon recognized for many years as the leading paper in the ltepublicnn party. On all leading questions it lias been quoted by the press of the country as authority. It has taken the lead'on all national issues, and when its editors were unable to find language strong enough to express their idea, they have ealled upon the artist to “draw it strong,” and for years past the Weekly has been a political illustrated paper, and its cartoons iiave been favorably commented upon by the press of its party, and several)’ criticised by the opposite party. It would seem from a recent number of the Weekly that its editors have had quite enough of the party and that the country needs a change of administration. In a recent editorial the Weekly has this to say about its party: “The llepubllcan party Is smirched with the whisky ring swindles, and the Belknap swindles, and the Star Haute swindles, and the salary grab, and the third term plot, ami a myriad ether similar Jots and thefts and crimes. The argument will be that no reform is possible, until such a party is turned out, and that it can he turned out only by putting in th$ Democratic party. That such » plian is shrewd and promising is mulenialilei” The language is pretty strong, and if it had em mated from a Democratic editor, would bo regarded ds political buncombe. The Weekly having been an organ of the party so long, certainly ought lo know whereof it ajlinns, and judging from the paragraph quoted, a'change is needed.
'mUMm Tte My BIG SHOW Swing is -—w-0»Wlfc£. ^JCKIBIT AT*.-.-:-WASHINGTON, Friday, August 10th. Arran foments have mads to run an excursion at extremely low rates oto the nevr railroad. ENORMOUS RAILROAD SHOWS low ALk VNi riS in OMK . _ VAST and OOLOSS AL EXHIBITION i, #1 * • —
NO OTHER SHOW HAS ONE OF THESE FEATURES ! HERDS OF ASIATIC ELEPHANTS Vv A PROVE OF 6 I R A F fTT MME A FRICAN ELEPHANTS/ , V A WHOLE FLOCK OF OSTRICHES THE OIILY WOOLY ELEPHANT//N&Va FIVE TON RHINOCEROS A SCORE OF LION FIVE BENGAL TI6ERS A SCHOOL t)F SEA LIONS/$/o| AM RWAS.mPERFORmNeZEB~RA8 A blu1; nose MAwoRiypy f 11111)111111 VXthe only uqn sla7eb BRAZILIAN TAMINQiy^y VXhURE B0RIH.A8 Two HORNED HORSE S/^V -* v\aFBICAM ELAIID8 KANCIAROOS fjs/10 OTHER SHOW liS THEM lv£\. p n I OB bears
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Troupe of AerlallstsX^A^wc EXHIBIT Turn free Y>aV24 Breat LEAPER3 8C0RESofACR0BATs\&\ TA ah *>*tda»ic /^/Troupes of 8YMNAST3 8TIUK BICYCLE TROUPEVA" /^/Prof.WHITE S DOS CIRCUS ePIEMIgH EQUESTRIENNEiM\ * AsVrheCAROH FRENCH FAMILY HOST 60RSE0US PA6EAWT^\ A A?/3 MILES OP STREET DISPLAY 88 C/fS^S OF A N IN At &S&\y VA THOUSAND MEN AMD HORSES THE CARNIVAL OF VENICE BEVIVElK /A 8UTTEBIH6 ROYAL "nARCH SLISTENINS^ITH SOLD AND SIIVErV/a THOUSAND COSTLY BAVHEHS THE FEATURE OF ALjJFlEATURES! A* PAIR OF LIVING HIPPOPOTAMI^ MALE dt FEMALE notwithstanding ihn Enormous E.rpenso attending so oast an Exhibition,, tio admission is not morn than small Sbowsjohargo.}
“OLD RELIABLE” RED DRUG STORE!! BERGEN & ADAMS, -DEALEliS INDRUG'S, MEDICINES, PADTTS, OILS, -VAMJISHES-»-DYE STUFF. FISHIN8 TACKLE, STATIONERY, SCHOOL BOOKS, TOILET ARTICLES,Cigars & Chewing Tobacco, -Wall i^apciX-j Eto., E!to.MA IN STREET, PETE USB ITRG, I NO. laoc-rmacttaMBCgvi C. A. BERGER . & BRO., mm merohakt tailors. LATE STYLES GF.STS FURHISHIKG GOODS. Potersbuvj?,. *r °* Indiana,
GROCERIES, TOBACCO AND QOEENSWARE!! The undersigned would *ty lo the people of l’iko county that they have opened a Grocery fs.ore, on Main Street, between 4 E. Montgomery’* Store and the City Drug- Store, and have a good supply of Coffee, Tea, Sugar, Soap, Oat Meal, Sam* Ksaut, Beans, Peas, jn endless variety of Came d Goods* Cigars add Tobacco, a full line of Quegio ware, Wood and Willow ware, In Fact Everytmugkept ^ Firstelass Grocery Store Which they are selling Very 1 or for easlt, of -exchanging for all kinds of country produce. They want. Hides, Feathers, Purs, Eggs, Butter, Bags) &e,, for which the highest price in goods will be paid. A11 they ask is one Until, feeling eoiiildont that they can please all. BilderhacK & ElJsener.
JOHN HAMMt>Nl>. CLARENCE PARKER. FitiM.)HAMMOND & PARKER, J——Successors to Win. Hawthorn, Eoalara in ——<- Dry Goods, Groceries, Bo|)ts and Shoes, Motions, GLASSWAES & QUEEUTSWAHE. You are Earnestly Invited to Call and See Us Wfi ars disMest that fu Caa .Please You. hotli in duality and l'rice.
jveet Cider, Lemonade, Nuts aud Confeotioneiv, Call at JACOB A. KIEFER’S. rnmmmsm* m : »
-THE PLACE TO BUY "W ATGTT^i JEWELRY & SILVERWARE IV. -IS A'l *T K O 3NT*®, f 05 Wain St, Washington, Irid. _Uo keeps the largest stock and tiuest assortment in the city ami sells at prices not touched by any other house. Isaac t. White-, |L V EKEH’K H.BCKTOX M.VHSH AL C. WHITE. ESTABLISHED, 1850. KELLES & WHITE, WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS -AJY2> JiKA&EHS y—Paints, Oils, Dye Stuffs, Window Glass and SXJStGICAL No. 105 Main Street, Evansville, Indiana.
•» OT a jA- JLJP 3Ft y ---bjividat in»- - . r" MEN’S FURNISHING GOODS!! --THKXATKST STV l.lZfi IKNECKWEAR, UNDERWEAR, HOSIERY -JIAMiKHJSCUIJSt'S, S ( S1‘ Shirts, Coliars, Cuffs, Etc., at Lowest Prices!! -- BHIR.TS MADE to ORDER, Satisfaction Guaranteed in Style and Finish. ST. OL'OJiGH HOTEL, - ™ ~~~ EVANSVILLE, IXD. G. L. BAILEY & COMP’KY, -tt hblesalc (tiul Retail Heatup's in--—" Agricultural Implements, Seeds, Etc., £Ito« STUDEBASEE WAGONS, ■ * --- . . __ * , ’ -COOK’S li UGGIES,McCORMICK TWINE BINDERS, —SrPKIUOH IJKII.I.8,THOMAS HAY W* 5 Are iSpeoiaities. G. L. BAILEY & COMPANY, —SJSl'OMt ST., UJteLk’H MX.OCK,Vincsnmes, • . . Xndiai.a.
RILLMEYER & YOUNG,
A COMPLETE LINE OF FARMING IMPLEMENTS s E~1 .PI ®Wl Q o ^ g-« k ™ g—1 < U- ^ Q<| P? i f n THE MCCORMICK TWIlfE * BINDER, DROPPER, SELF RAKE AND MOWER
EVERY ONE of the 141 SIZES n mui jrmr a. Written Guarantee FINISH, BEAUTY. ECONOMY DURABILITY A BOMTBBBBiE.
r •^-I'KAl.r.KS ISI SOOTS A2T3 SB OSS -t'f'jitl) &•., nrtrr retcvsbunr, - - - - r«f*«».». k _ Thor prepared.' tu manufacture the finest sewed r.tlf «r the eominoa kip l*H>t at S!Iivo and let live” prices. Tteiv work rceomnumdsr Itself; their stork, the best in the market. Kxtra tiito pntehinit done by a new method. See that Vottr sbics are iu good order. A supply of the best .inality of t-aatern work kept eonssantly in stock. Prices tow. Collin. ' ^ Osborn Bros.
GREAT BARGAINS!! ALL KINDS; FURNITURE ATA eomaimaim of Profarida of *«4, Peruvian Bark attd Phosp!mnui» * paiataMc /am. J’or 1 mV9*" 41 ******&”**»- J RSrv.J.A.TOWinB», Industry, Hi.: snyi l;— “I cor aider it 7 a moat estcelleat reiredy tor the debilitated vital forces. , TOMB Writes: PURIFIES ironvh trial of the I take pleasure it I have been yS &HZ] Winslow Furniture & Undertaking Establishment 1 have recently purchased the Furniture Establishment of '! homas & Ellis aild connected therewith the Undertaking- business, and a in now to offer great inducements to all buyers* COFFINS ANB CASKETS MIMED AT ALL TIES. ling- confident that I can sell furniture as cheap any dealer in Pike county, I vespeetfnlly«sobcshare of public patronage, 57 ours truly, KT. 'W3H[I1I3VlCJa.3\r.
CH AS. SCHAEFER, Prop. Mail Street, fttentari Mali This Hotel is a new building and comfortably furnished throu^beid. ^ The traveling mtbgio will find it an excellent place to stop; mhies suppled with the bent the market iUfc*r*W*- Charge* qoat^vuable. SCHAEFER’S HAlJL A targe and eowitaxmta Hull, suitable foe Theatrical Troupes, Concerts, Ac. ^ MEREDITH HOUSE* JAS. MORGAN, Prop. "'■Wa.3tiin.gton, - - Indiana Rest sample mom, fin t-nimnorrial travo'nra l:> the city. Hotel centrally kviteil. Kree buy t * auii irom all passeuger train*. Special rates t > nutterso! thepiicx cot-Nvv l>**t>CRvr. SHERWOOD HOUSE, H. SHERWOOD, Prop. I. A* Frost, Man., T\ 2fru*al» J» Dexter, OUrks Owner I'r^t and Locust streeta, iS-vsbirsvili©. - Indiana* Tfc0 Sherwood is centrally located, first-eltut) i i all its appuinUmmts’ and the be*rt and cheape t htdel in the city. Rales, $2 per day . ST. CHARLES HOTEL Saif square south of ^asMcgt^B, ca IRiaois street. Indlnuatxdls, - - - lmtiuna. Has chained proprietory And been refitted in a manner t > make it comfortable for those who may patroutae it; Rates, fi per day ; Lodging, 5 > cents; Meals,Scents. * Jas. Biley & Co., Props. Also Central Restaurant, under Bate* House. Indiana Horn Ok S^-S-a^tAJfcT, Frop'x.C'’ %1.60 per Ray. |U Hmi#i . j_- ~ i i ”"iT i fcr
jr iitu at,, oot. itaco <s jsunt Location Central* Elegant Rooms* Table Well Supplied! Cincinnati,Ohio FURNITURE! ^ - Smith, 8s Blimey, Suetwwrs to Ki^ort & r»un£v\ iH^ters in All &fi of Fine 8e Plain Fnmtare. wut;4iu»*Kif raii’wjrai me*. f XifKiiT/tKIXU A Xw:» Jieaiwi in BeailinisS-ai .-ill Time*. Attention, Everybody^ NEW Dickson & Corning, ' BLACKSMITHS, ■ —V. ASS ssspAssb SO SO St— All Kinds of Impairing ^Witfr Xtvtfwwv fVsj affit. Ess §Migf Mue a Spsaailyt All Work Warranted. G^ive Us a Call!! SHOPon Sixth Street, between Main anti Poplar, „ i Petersburg - - - Indiana,, Catarrh DIRECTIONS.
are ratiwua in a ic . • •,»> trviituwut afcifire* iv■■; wili ver, Ae.
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Agi'pt*. ^Io to *Jis UtfEf&AI.I# rfeR OOJYDS tV ' :*E ': vP - * AI ^ Vi -': U wherevw ki>t»Y>n, itispHrimj-aJlToVb »* . i • atrontf. BECmiSSr 7.2-A \T0;^w .wVA? y 1 •Sol'! bv Onijrjjhivs* at : - : \ -•( price will ftini;':.' prt<*k:»*.rf. -v!' i :o - taimu^tulUnfiUi ■! tv: i:iU; t» Mia ci?vast f: t l:U f a., okk^o, *v. r.
BEAUT!Fi)tJs| Catalogue jHS FREE ! <5?P
MILLIONS OFTHEM For FLORISTS and AMATEURS. Dutch 3ull*», Jaian Bulba, h'rench Bulba, American.Bulba. Also Pbuita for Grocuhousce and Window Gardena, HIRAM SIBIEUCQ. ^ SEEIWMKH, \ Rochester, N.Y. & Chlaigc^IlL
TUTT’S PILLS Symptoms op a TORPID LIVER. Loss of Appetite, Bowels costive. Beta Ul with a dull sensation in the Pain under the Shoulder ? feeling of having neglected some duty. Weariness, Diaaiuessi fluttering 'atThe lIoartrEota beforethe oyea.YellowBJtin, Headache generally over the right eye! iss, with iitiul dreamt highly Bestlessness, ...» colored Urine, and constipation. ! HITT'S pnhs MO ospootully adapted taf such eases, cue close of fret a such a change of feeling «3 to astonish the sufferer.*^ body te fake era Flesh, Unis fro system la unnriahed. ami Vy tln ir VonleAction on she . *»*-•*"-- ..... nigetaivo Orguus. Stesrulnr Sion). are Yk* ducod. Face Sceuta. 85 SEtwrny Sh, TUTT’S HAIR DYE. OiUY Hair or Whiskfrs changed te a Gr-scsy ttonottiiisDws, iiiirInstamaneorisl*. Sold n oh receipt of M. KCW ■ OPTICS, 33 ai'RBAY ST., KEV CORK.*
