Pike County Democrat, Volume 18, Number 2, Petersburg, Pike County, 26 May 1887 — Page 4

A SONG FOB PEACE. rOrtetoaLl

MIGHT T Mb b«t«Nl IM I 1 mR t»y Rrtsr* pub Ikit crystal down. AbMr rich ablpa by lc«l •( field and WbUe »u thy hl«k* way* «i»« *• with bees. 1

■ ft m* Aad roof* by mouat art ***• 1 A>< iUai Mut Mn with thy but* t«bow» Amt yield* im awlce a'en such alight note* aa That I am of the* makes me letU« hold In queaUca of thy welfare: e e» that thou Pm oa to attor peace this aong l foW In lower! art thy beloved baaaer now. Art ta/tho tribute oa thy pricelee. moldThe (olden du»t of each elalahere » brow. Plueh roue* aad Blade your tear* with their Fetch popple* that are the loot furrowa ot Bring dal etc* meek featured, aad BoleU blpe. all pure aa bahc-ejae whea they -1*10111! at Briag tpathea uf the apple, art bluebell* to toll A knell that la tngmae* abara each green Bring mayflowcr* with daw la each white waxen bowl. • Art ptnka and doburoum* just breaking In Bring orchla aad tulip* and honeyed foxglove From haunt* where the ivy and columbine weep. Bring acftly all bloaaon)* that honey bee* lote. Art gariand the grarea where our gallant boy* alerp. Let children with !ltafg*r* undabbled of blood Bear wreath* to each barrow ineloung dear doit; - Bring aweet* from the garden and frond* from Uie wood, "While age gather* wtrtom and aword* gather real. A moment turn back to the day* that are dead And mark the long Une* aa they manbdl art With wine brewed fa battle the aeclloo* are And Order teema Mat la the loud cannon * „ crash. ] But the motive la nature la greater than men. For link* la the chain have been anappod la To be hurled by *trong Jualtce together again. And la tear* and la btoodahed the rtveu made fut. For whea Earth awuag out from It* gtmbala of die . On tavtaible cable* to roll round the aun. Waa It* mlaalon not Man. aad Lon the atrong •Ire. With Life to he fertred aa the cycle* were ruaf Aye, deed* are the hainmen that taahioa the race, '* And Barth la the anvil whereon PurpoM lay* The rnda of all caoae* aad amlte* with a mace That weld* Into girder* the gold of th* day*. The vaat human fragment* mu*! glow ere they weld. 1 Be hot with red rage aad th* aagtlah of heat. And hard on the anvil cf Furpoar be held Kre alma ahall be os* and the aenaona bo Lot the tear* of that time have lamed Into pharia; The gall of iBerve War haa but |beaten out Oood; O’er the bfaa and the gr»y now our banner unfurl*. For rule*’* »weet dower blouomed out af their Mood. The tgrep of th* section* together la »trife, lake the smiling together of Uod'a mighty Smote dr* round the world and a thrill Brough all Ufa, Aad bud* of fair freedom broke forth In far A1I wrought at God * pnrpoae, then let u» forgive. 1a l.tbprty, sunbeam* nnr whole kingdom Uergfuar* borfl freemen, here Justice shall Hv*. Forget In the glory and (realties* of this Then southward strong North, with flowers In Cnat kioka of glad freeunr with lore in your eye*. And northward aweet South, warm heart of all Look n prayer of fond peace fcr *U the broad kktaa; For our* t* th* queen of *11 realm* 'neath the •pa. The garden of Eden, the bride of the world; Her* Worth become sovereign, here Freedom , was won. Then keep their dag high art forever unfurled.

Then rarland each |m«, ami remember esc* BMC To breath it with reverence up into the air. That •lienee may never Bow .jeer their f-vne, ^ That eater b« Bear and their cooehea be fair. Vor thee* are the eeal> of oar (iwataew aad The arks that the Corraaala ever dull bold Of heart* that paid Mood leal freedom ahould Whoae deed* are now Jewel*, whoae aehev art Bold. 'Alta Miltok Kerb. DECORATION DAY. A runortU-FostlvrU, Greeted with Smiles aad Tears.

story Is told of an Englishman of rank who. bring asked why he* did not risit America* replied that be was waiting for Ameririiu to 8ton rol.

tbrating. Said he: •• Ameri# Is never free from excitement. She is perpetually uuvalUng a statue, erecting a , monument, miring a purse for somebody. When she is not doing these things she is celebrating either Thanksgiving Day. Fourth of July or Washington's Birthday. She never has a period of repose, i^ich an Englishman requires, and I prefer to stay at home.” An unconsqjous tribute to America lay In bis words; for although the quick and mobile blood of our young Nation lores excitement for its own sake, yet ,t r its chief motive for these multiplex celebrations, which so offend the phlegm matic Englishman, is ever love, gratitude or patriotism. All of these emotions combine to make Decoration, or Memorial Day. as it it now more beautifully named, the Roly-Day of America. It Is the day of fays which, as a Nation, we honor. Ihe enthusiasm, the Joy and gratitude, which that day'swell the National heart to hunting are mitpeied by a grief which, though subdued by time, becomes pregnant with the approach of each Memorial Day. ‘ No monument to the dead heroes, though heaven-sweeping in grandenr, though bearing the impress oI genius and carved with the chisel of inspiration itself, oould so simply, so effectually, so sublimely, keep them la memory as does this solemn funeral festival at which all the emotions of the human heart are swept j by undying memory. w As an .Soli an harp responds to the wind with n burst of roournfnl melody, no do our hearts, at this, time, stirred by association, stirred by the sympathy which binds together the greet brotherhood of the bereaved, end. more then all, moved by the old yet ever new story of the martyrdom of the dead soldier, an do cur hearts giro forth a mournful, yet reset and exalted, tribute to the memory of the dead. A year ago tears fell over the same graves, hearts throbbed at the same recitals which are heard on every JlMMifal Daj. A jf m tf will * ■ • '

be Dm nne Tb# quick responsive American heart, while it threbe, Will venerate Memorial Day With an incenie of sighs sad MM> M<tow they w icfuj nab All tlka Mr deaA" The name of him who Ml* * soldier'* grave is holy to us now. He who left home, wile or parents, rushing brave* ly. buoyantly and unquestioningly to the call of his country, has borne the pang* of martyrdom and shall he not, too, bear the glory of it!* “I say unto you, no man can do more than this-' that he lay down his lift for a friend." Down from the great Teacher of the world caiue echoing these words which place the soldier among the great of the earth: he lari down his life tor home and country—he hath done what he could. It does not seen* h quarter of a century sinoe they whose names confront Us on marble tablets were among us, tired with the earnestness and valor of patriotism. Though not remembered with th% rancor of Oldt those days will never he tor gotten. Babes yet unborn Will, lor generations, bo told the thrilling story of those years. The women and children who stayed at home waiting, With white lips and palpitating hearts, for news from th* Must of war—these are the one* Upon whose hearts are engraved memories whieh arc indelible, ami whieh shall flow in the life-blood of their children's children. Oh those* days of waiting sad wishing) Have they ever, can they ever, be pictured graphically euotigbf The rushing about of troops—the recruiting offices, with thoir constant excitement, the preparations of supplies by willing hands, the letters full of cheer from

the front, the Waiting for the dreaded 'newspaper after the battle, when the long lists of killed, wounded and mining were devoured with wide-eyed Mid expectant horror, the dull, cold anguish, only to be outlived by rear*, which came when a loved name was found in these fatal list*. Will the children of those days ever forget these things, .or their children after them? Even at this day, who can hear the melancholy music uf the life and drum without recalling the soldier's funeral, the muffled drum, the dead march, the brave hero coffined in his uniform; dead, perhaps, with a bullet in his breast, white leading an assault, or, sadder still, dead among strangers, far from home, sfter long dsvs of suffering. The pat hot of it is enough to soften hearts of adamant Faintly, faintly, did the robe of sable, the vail of crape, express the unspeakable woe which, black and crushing, fell upon happy hearta in th«*e troublous times. Many reminders of the old war days are nbout me. Occasionally one may sec upon some old man, who Is perhaps proud of it, an army overcoat with its long, dangling skirt of blue, its cap a;id government brass buttons. That coat is sacred as the mantle of Elijah, and he who can view that honored garment unmoved Is callous, indeed, Nearly every home in the land has its souvenir of the wsr, rendered precious by the memory of its possessor. Reverently and lovingly as were the Lares and Penates of old. are these relies enshrined ip places of houor and pointed tm with tender pride. Sometime)! it is a sword of the newly-fledged young officer; sometimes a canteen, a knapsack or a Uttered flag. Or perhaps a pnrtrait of a “boy. in blue'’ hangs over Ac fire-place, amf 'the visitor iin the household must hear the story of his brave young life told in tearful reverence by those who ’loved hint. With such reminders as these in half of the homes of oar land, think yon that Memorial Day will ever become an empty name? Think you t hits’ graves, and O, how many there are! will lie left ungarianded on this day? Think yoti the time enn come when the soldier's grave will not be hallo west ground? No; as tiod and the Right Uvelh. No! Rather do we wish that these frail ephemeral blossoms. sweet ns they, are delicate, might defy the la**s of nature and. glorifiad by their mission of marking a soldier's grave, might bloopi forever; im^nortellest, un shrivelled, unfaded, undying, sending up a perpetual perfume emblematic of the unselfish, undaunted patriotism of a soldier's heart The most pathetic feature of Memorial Day, however, is not the hanging of wreaths and emblems upon the lofty monuments which mark the rest-iug-places of those known apd honored in- life. It is the decoration of the nameless grave which shows the real beauty of the custom. Dead hero! deprived of a resting-place near those of your kindred, defrauded by fate of even n name upon your foot-stone, to-day you are remembered with ’reverence and gratitude. The fairest, sweetest flowers rest upon you. God knows who it is beneath the tnrf, and we know yon by th v glorious name of Soldier. Though withered flowers are ever on your grave, and each season of bloom brings a fresh coronet to mark the spot, the grave is, though nameless, cherished and honored by the Nation among its most precious possessions. The custom of marking the graves of the departed ts prehistoric. Everything which love can’ devise has, in different periods, and by different ns

ANSWUBfl HU COVXTKr’S CALL. flion;, been employed to beautify and do honor to the tomb. There is a beautiful legend of ancient Greece— that land of beautiful customs—that a little child having died, its grief-dis-tracted nurse carried to its grave a bucket containing its favorite toys. Site placed it upon the grave, coveringit with a slab that its contents might not be disturbed. It happened that the lmcket was placed directly upon an acan thus root—that classic plant the ray name of which suggests beauties of sculpture and architecture. When spring came the acanthus began to grow, H wound about the bucket, gait laptiling it on all aides. A great sculptor panned that way and new H, Its beauty suggested to hiu) m kies, apg fes worked out from D

the fatnons Corinthian capital whMh\ has immortalised the acanthus. The' manner in which we decorate eur ghare* will suggest nothing to the acil^MitWllo the poet; the philosopher, the every-day hnntafc being with a heart in his bosom-, iU Suggestions are beedtitUi as the more material ones which lire in marble. To the poet Longfellow, the nameless grave has not

IfAMiS OVER THE FIR'E-PLAOE. appealed in vain. Thu following beautiful sonnet express** the intensity of feeling which Uy In his loyal heart End which Is echoed to-day by thousand*: 7*\A soldier of tbs tjaloa muttered «##** VJIs the las cflpttoa oh ah uakhbwu «ttw At N«*port New* be»lde the ualt-eea ware. Samel*** add dateless; senUael or acout, 81mA down Ib aklrtaiih or disastrous root Of battle, when the loud artillery drays It* iRih wod*es throe*# the trials of brave And so,inter. battalions, ttonniu* the redoubt. 7%ou uakaown hero, steeple* by the sea. Ha thy loryottoo (rare! with tenet shame I feel ay poises best, my forehead bora When I remember thou hast iflreo tor Be I than thou hadtt. thy life, -thy very a And 1 oaa *tre thee within* IS Win hi." fcAiUit 8. Pratt k NAVAL SLUNG-SHOT. deed la Wwwla* l’p Xartw. American inventive genius has produced some startling results, btit it never took n more daring flight than that of adopting the slung-shot at naval warfare. A plan llor attack on Ihe high seas Is really in existence, the motlet being on exhibition in the rooms of the Naval Committee Of the House, and I* seriously approved by many tthle eHirers here, which is practically the sinking of an iron-ciad with a dynamite slung-shot. It is isanentiaUr an

American men, a drain grappic ai close quarters, with no spectacular effects, no comet-like shells or torpedo water-spouts/ It is the latest modification of General Berdan's tivstem. The recent experiment in Europe, where It toon 1.900 pounds of dynamite to shatter a] twenty-inch armor-plate when exploded two Ifcx-t beneath the water’s surface, and the failure of a Whitehead torpedo to disable a pin-boat when lashed to its side and exploded, have shaken the faith of the officers in the efficiency of torpedoes when exploded near the water lino. More than that, the nets now used seem to offer an impenetrable bar to the surface torpedo, as shown by their failure in the great trial at. Ban try bay two years ago. A few days ago the department received from Wliitehead a refusal to compete in a prospective trial here, saying: "I do not pretend to conquer the nets." General Berdan's idea is to strike at the bottom of the ship where there is no armor and where the explosive is confined by the pressure of the water. He builds a light, uuaraiored cruiser of 150 feet length and sixteen feet draft. Men and machinery are all below the water line, and the enemy’s ironclad may blare away all she wants to as the swift cruiser creeps up on her. Pointing ofer the side of the Berdan cruiser, amidships and to the reair. are a number of, breech-loading guns that can be inclined at any angle from the horisontal to perpendicularly downward. In the pins are placed shells containing three or four hundred pounds of pin cotton. A wire cable, or “snubbing cord/’ extend* from the shell out of the mouth of the pi a and along the side ojf the cruiser to the bows, where it is so fastened ai to swing freely. The cruiser steams rapidly up to the big ironclad, preferably in the night, but even in broad daylight, regardless of an occasional shot that may tear through her upper works. Sh^ pushes through the nets, anil when the twenty-live-foot spar projecting from her bows fonches the ironclad; the engine is automatically reversed and some rocket material in'tbe back of: the dynamite shell Ignited. The shell! drops from the muzzle of the gun, which is pointed downward, and plows down through the water on the circumference of a circle whose radius is the lenph of its snubbing-eord and whose center is the bow erf the cruiser. When actual contact between the cruiser and iron-clad occur the shock is rvlievsd by an atmospheric buffer. The shell comes up on 'the bottom of the iron-clad like a slungshot Con the head of a belated way-farer. and something is apt to be smashed. Aa there are a number of these guns and shells on-each cruiser they may be filed at different angles from the perpendicular, and will strik at diffeient points along the bottom of the ironclad. Thit is rcgaided an an important point, as with the cellular ships now built It is doubtful if one torpedo, however powerful, can sink a big iron-clad. If the iron-clad sends out torpedo boats agaihg| the cruiser, they will be met by improved Fish torpedoes operated from the latter. The- ciruisers would cost about 9100,003 apiece, and if they fulfill the expectations of the officers and inventor they would seem to solve the problem of the “cheep defense of nations."—Watkington Uor. Ckicaqa Herald. Inclined to Bn Neighborly. He was n bright, talkative boy of eight, or nine, and, he ra ng the doorbell of a house cm Brush street the other day and asked to see the lady of the house. He was admitted, and when she came into the parlor he said: “I belong to the family who Just moved in next door." “Yea.” “We want to be neighborly. Are you going to call on raa?" “Why—why, child. 1 don’t know.” “Y ou’d better came. Then she can come over to sen job. She’s a great woman to talk, and she'll show you the place where she had ik felon on her hand. Ton want to be neighborly.

HAN NI HAIL HAMUti Hx-tooe-Freoidoat HaatliUal Hamlin, toys ton Boston 'Mato, U not n aiSnrtf 3mNL Ibltt^iehumr stack to Us hss4» Hs ttvee plainly, anosta itsttoustr. Ob every pulHlie occasion on which he ha it plainly ths favorite, il . not bt sb orsrosst Re walks. miles' at a stfcetoh with toe alacrity of a hoy; last fair s •VonsUtationsL” Bo is in ths Hints of the poor sod smoking sn eld T. D. <t JTith the hood of toe Hn , knoWs erery isif every body knows him. On too load of the lumberman he is often soon mounted, chatting merrily with the driser, who is so proud of his companionship that he wilt talk about it for years after* ward. He never forgets a face and rarely a name) and generally can tell yon more ot our inmlly History than yea know melt. HU chief relaxation is in fisht ini. He eUployi toe old-fashioned angle* worm tor bait, nod discards i ‘ _„_ all the new* fingled appliances tor enpturing the Sony tribe. He in exceedingly gay in the ballroom. At the legislative -Oumon last winter he participated la every dance down en the order, end then wont home in the morning with the prettiest girl oe the doer. He* KUetsg Was IhtrSdneOdt ¥h* story r»nli that kissing was intro* dncea tntd England by Rosens, the dedjfhterdi Hengist, the Baxcn. At d banquet Which Was gived by ths British mdaOrell in boner of his slims, the Prid* isss, after pressing the brimming honker to her Ups, saluted the astonished end delighted Vortlgern with n little Use, aft»r the manner of her own people. ike 6hler PnrpeOe of BaUreads. One of the brightest ornaments of Hr all street remarked recently: “Railroads ora not made to carry freight and passengers; their purpose is to barter bonds." According to Henry v. Poor too railroads at this country cany tS,000.000,000 of watered capital.

A WATCHMAKER'S FAME. P. 8. Bartlett was on* of toe original foramen in the pioneer Waltham factory, and hi s name was adopted as a trade-mark and has been running as ; such very nearly thirty yearn. At the lowest calculation 600.000 Bartlett watches hare been made and sold. The exact figures are not at hand, bnt this Is about its near as can be estimated. The Bartlett Watch is unquestionably one of the most: popular watches ever made. It ranks almost as high as the adjusted “Appleton, Tracy St Co.,” and is. in fact, constructed on the same model. The patI ent regulator Bartlett is full jeweled, has a compensating balance fitted with the Waltham patent Breguet hair- : spring, which is hardened and turn- ! perad In form ab as never to Change its curve, and is very closely regulated. It is made for any kind or silver or gold cases. Tits latest Improvement in the Bartlett watch is in the open-face style to wind and set without ever opening' the case, the winding as well as toe hand-setting being done by tire crown only. Unlike the arrangements in other watches thiis Bartlett han d-set is in the neck of the esse, so that itdoes not at all complicate the movement. Upward of 2,000 of them have been purchased by the British Government during the past Win years and are used on the state railways in India. For the same purpose the colonial authorities of New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia have large orders in hand. Through these excellent timekeepers P. S. Bartlett's name is known in all civilised countries.—N. Y. Jewelers' Weekly. i Cavan The washer-woman who dally I wrings men’s bosoms. Barnaul said “.The American People like to be humbugged.” This may be true in the line of entertainment, bat not where life is at stake. A man with consumption, or any lingering disease, looking Death in the faoe and neeking to evade nis awful yrasp, does not like to be trifled with. Bo . with confident*! we place before our resil- ' era Nature’s great remedy. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, a sure relief for < that long train of diseases resulting from impure blood, such as Consumption, , Chronic Nasal Catarrh, Liver Commaint, Kidney Disorder, Dyspepsia, Sick Beadache, Scrofula and General Debility. Timetried and thoroughly tested, it stands wittiout an equal I Any druggist. Litoji pitchers have trig ears, while base-taafi pitchers have big arms aad Pas souls* sad f« Shi's full of pel*. Shs's rsmly Bod sail Mndin TUs thorn c * _erlifa Is I, fretful wife— I wonder what wUl mend hart Try Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Proscription, Ten to one, your wife is cross and fretful because she Is sick and suffering, and can not control her nervousness when things go wrong. Make a healthy woman of her and the chaooes are you will make n cheerful and pleasant one. “ Favorite Prescription” is the onjy remedy for 'roman’s peculiar admen to, told by druggists, under n positive guarantee from toe manufacturers, that it wiili give sftisfact on in every ease, or money will be refundei. Bee guai> an tee on bott le wrapper. La-go botUett •L Six for IB,

A ia who does buuMM on n Urge scale —s coal-dealer. —btf*. Mothers, Overworked Men, sod for all diseases where the tissues ere wasting sw»t from the inability to digest ordinary fowl, or from overvrork of the brain or body. all such should take Scott’s Bmulidon of Pure Cod Liver Oil arith Hfpophcaphit.es. " I used the Kmulsloo on a lady who was delicate, and threatened with Bronchitis, it nut her in snoh good health at.d flesh, that I must say it is tha best Bmalsion f ewr used.”—L. P. Wadmll, M. D., Hugh’s Mil ls, & C WmMf. Runr is Immediate, and n Piao'sBemedjrforOatarrtL fliioants. CATTLE-Xstive THE MARKETS N»w Ton COTTON—Mid< Ilia* ..... — - ito&ote. TU)VIt—Good!-WHEAT-.No. I Red. CORN—No. > OATS-Western Mixed.". ...7. M ' FOBK-Mees (sew). » » ST. LOUIS. OPTION—Mid. Ulnx. ~ a to Choice..... «» «■ __.*» FLOUR—Patents. « » Medium to Straight. <«

Ill Ik another oolamn of thii bane -will bo bund an entirely new and wel specimen id attract! re advertising. JH i» one of die Mint ever placed In ooi taper and are readers will lie roll repaid for the ttrfosapdie lar jetSra In «t Prick -r Ash fetter* m _ _■ o does not IWoof” It >9 a Fleean , . . Elisa Ann Smi li, Of Veniffl..OMo.U,.U«,^U|JJg a 111 Other rememhles Its ilcbIt's a wise child that re? eat ralattre.—Dmmilk Jrtau_ trt *n.*s*rrf~tlaeh^! !dne OoMMBna, Glenn’s Sulphur Soap'; «WcJt Ijnride* the 8 Ida Bill's Hair & Whisker Dj«, B-p)k 6t Btewa SO* Lmbeo, Gallaghor, vmld be a good motto for a postage stamp.

Biliousr bss USoftjftneHaiiiilitjUaacflfo 1 nytf;otttf; ft* bluer Uutf, c*rail»* hreetti. «>«M tongue, tick heade*he.dK»W«llieie,dlt*lBeee8(»dlO» O* **I*»1U make the Tlotlm mlaerable, and d sagreeable t > other*. Boo*** 3er*aperilla comite* the heel enttb'lion* remedies of the yeaetat <i kingdom. 1* inch proportion as to derire their hoi t medicinal e sect* with the least disturbance to she whole system. ThM preparation U *o well ball nee* la IU «(Tecta that It brine* about a healthy action of the iintue htunan organism. restores the nppetlte. an* era* oome* litai ilrwi ieelibg - ... , **l hare taken net quite it bo eofteewd** terse, partlls an* must say It te onec: the beet med leto** for etetac an appetite an* re* sttng the dip setteb organa that I scar heard of." »n 3. H. A. 8Tk( Lkt\ Caaaatota, M. T. Hood's larsiparilhi SoM by all druggists. Hi alxft «. Prepare I only by C. L HOOD A CO- Dowell. alius. Or » Dollar The best and surest Bet: tidy fcw Cnr> bf all dlssaeat euhaed by nay ilinaaaatoitet the Uwer, Kidneys, Stom-.ik Dyspepsia, Sick Headar'ini, < RUioas Complaints and Htnriuof aO k ads yield readily to the heaefctat iaflataieof

It la pleasant to the terte, taaea »1 the system, restores and pies free health It la pairty Vertobla, «t)l eaa*»t tifl to prove heaeddal, both t old aid y.* As a Stood Pariter it It saperior io all Others. Solderernrhew it dl.OOah.ttle. Jr

Is prepared solely for the of «n “ cur or complains which am * all woman tind. It gir tone and str?n*th to the uterine orpins, and larittes. s use of nancy greatly rellerea the pan™ of mother! ood and promoted speedy recorery. iradsisu nature J? safely make the critical ehi' uie from girlhood to womanhood. It Is pleasant t> Uie taste, am I maj.be taken at all times with perf? teafr £S^L^.VsJ;.R,lWe ftfc? correctsdangerouadlaptacem i utaand Inegt la mfS&l&KMt'l Tosfe dl?i.; FOB AU disor: ERS OF IHE Stomach, Liver and Bowels PACIFIC K5

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ROPSY SW TREATED FEIE ntmted arm.; Ud Ittcompl teatkma Dl bie retne<L«s. eottvly kamltas. E5^5^s!S«aaai^ UfetvMt Gits fall hiMcrrofamajmme. :*•,••*. fra* br mill. It too oiMr ml. tea m«t ntara this MT«rtlMIMnt to tt» with 10 < MY postaco. HHMpCy (fits) LH. H. onu ASONft.ia.Os.,Atlanta,da. HARTSHORN’S OracleR°|!e

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THOROUGH BUSINESS EDUCATION. jzuzyajxt & sTft A-Trrorsr. The jLouisville Business College, I3»ia*r Third tad Jaffa rson 8treat*, Louisville, If., CRANCE: WO. -408 THIRD STIttSBiT. Botit-KeepHi. Mm PeMskij, Eiiorfisani, MotI 5 Sul TrainiuE. Tme Cato'Lcjt#,* m AWn. R. BERRIDCE & CO.. I Successors to Woods & Canatsey.) _ PROPRIETORS OF’V X, Star Livery, Feed and Sale Stables, f X CORNER FIFTH AND WALNUT STREETS, PETERSBURG. . I| _ r » \ ■ . , First-Claps Buggies and Safa Horses for the public at reasonable primes. Horace boarded by tbe day or week. Give this linn vour patronage, and yon will receise fair treatment. The well-known hostler, At Eaton, will be found always on hand. 'f F. M. BA3MKS’ FURNITURE STORE! Irm bat opened a t&rga stcjck of New Furniture, all the lalleae styles la 4 : Wsleafe WartraSes, Sofas, (Ms, Birsats, tail Cass, TaBes, Safes. Our poods mre ail new-no old stock to select from. Our Flaea of Jusbieas la ata as Stand, wbcie wc run be lound selling as cheap «a aoy house In the country, e® al N t >•* a full stock of ^ UNDERTAKERS’ SUPPLIES NEW ThltjAn / F. M. BANKS, 1 Petersburg, Ind. DBT GOODS. JOHN HAMMOND. To which He directs attention Hit DRY GOODS are Sret-elaas, and the stock U largo Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes and Notions. Glee him n coll and yon will Inc convinced that he Is giving BARGAIN S on his entire stock. SOLID GOODS AT LOW PRICES.

EUGENE HACK. ANTON SIMON. —Proprietors of— the eagle brewery. VINCENNES, INDIANA, Furnish the Best Article of Beer the Market Affords * AND SOICIT ORDERS FROM ALL DEALERS BOTTLE OR KEG BEER SUPPLIED TO FAMILIES,. On. Sale at All Saloons. ISAAC T. WHITE FRED’K H. BURTON. MARSHAL C. WHITE. HLE3L3J3ESR dk3 WHITE, Wholesale Druggists AXI) DIALERS IX Paints, Oils, By© Stuffs, Window Glass AND STJRC+ICAD INSTRUM13NTS. No. 106 Main Streets - E/anwrtlle, Ind. raw OSBORN BROTHERS | ... ; ; - \?PJ ■ere remored to their elegant Hew. BaUdh^oa. Main street, wheire they hare a large and * BOOTS AND SHOES. ror Me- women and Children. We keep*. U sterea*’ and Emmereon'a brands ’ ot Fine Shoes. i " t Petersburg, Ft. 19, , Indiana.

C. A. BURGER & BRO., . FASHIONABLE MERCHANT TAILORS S»t M Tte iJie Stock Latt Stjte o{ fe fit*, • Consist tnc of ths *e»r b*"* Saltings anil ten Utkii. Perfect Rts end Styles Guaranteed. Prises as lew as Elsewhere. FfTne shirts to I .——