Pike County Democrat, Volume 18, Number 52, Petersburg, Pike County, 17 May 1888 — Page 4
Mm f SOUTHERN ELECTIONS. •rat Victory. One of the staple Republican cries Is that the South maintained its solid k 17 (gitoit the Republican party b> eMK there is not a free and fair vote In that section. They assume that the number of colored Totes in a Southern State represents the number of the Republican votes, and that a relatively light vote is indicative of a suppression of Republican votes. Ur.'Vest, in the United States Senate recently, showed, by comparison of the vote with the whole voting population in a number of specially-selected Southern and Northern States, taking in the whole range from the lowest to the highest percentage of vote to voting population. the Southern States chosen outranked. one by one. the Northern Stales witb which comparisons were instituted. As Mr. Vest explained, the comparison was not wholly fair, but it was in keeping with the Republican line of argument. Comparing the general average of the vote in Northern and in Southern States, and jthere is an excess in favor of the former of about six per cent. The, fullness or want thereof of the vote in any State, be it Northern or Southern, depends upon the earnestness with which the political contests in such State arc waged. Michigan was more hotly contested in 1884 than in 1880, and the Vote in comparison to I population was therefore relatively larger in 1881. Ohio has a voting population but little in excess of that of Illinois, yet the popular vote of the 1 former was 110,000 larger than that of the latter in 1884. and there has been as great or greater disparity at every election in recent years. According to the Republican theory, as applied to the South, this would indicate a terrible suppression of Democratic votes in Illinois. It simply indicates, however,
that Illinois has not boon in recent years canvassed from end to end with .* - ‘ the vigor and persistence that have been shown in Ohio. The recent election in Louisiana is noteworthy as having brought out by far the largest vote ever polled in the State. H fullness of vote i? representative of freedom and fairness, it was exceptionally free and fair.. The vote is from 60,000 to 70.000 heavier than it was in the Presidential election of 1884. and 40.000 to 6O1OOO heavier than that cast at the election for Governor in April.four years ago. The Democratic vote in the State is nearly, if not fully, twice tliat given for Cleveland. and 80.000 to 414000 more than M< Enery polled fur Governor in April. 1884. The Republican vote in a number of parishes is heavier than it was ineither April or November. 1884. and the aggregate in the State will be as large as at either election. The greater fullness resulted in an increase of the Democratic majority frotu 16.000 for Cleveland to 80.1)00 for Nieholls. One of the parishes most conspicuous for the increase in vote was that of Orleans, containing the city of New Orleans. The rote of this parish for •President in 1881 was: Cleveland. 14.336; Blaine, 6,828. The New York Tribune is authority for the statement that the election in New Orleans was absolutely tree and fair. There was an exciting contest for municipal officers, which had the effect of bringing out a vote nearly twice as great as ’that cast in November. 1881. There Was the greatest vigilance on both sides. What was the result of this full, free and fair vote? Warmoth receifed 4,500 more votes than were \ .. polled for Blaine, but the total of Nicholls was 14,000 in excess of that for Cleveland, and his majority of , nearly 17,000 is larger by nearly 3,000 than the entire vote cast for Cleveland in the parish. A full vote, it will thus be seen, is even less conducive to Republican happiness than a light one. — Jktrctt I'rte Press.
THE NEW CHIEF JUSTICE. ” A M»n «f Whom the Country, at trail aa Mia Carty, May froai The greatest prixe of the legal profession. the richest jewel in the crown of piofessional labors, has been # ,rs. awarded. and justly awarded. to onr . distinguished townsman. Melville \V. Fuller. A more fitting selection, or ^ one thaT would better command the respect of the bar ami the country, the President could not make. Rich iu the acquirements essential H to the judicial character. Mr. Fuller) alsd possesses the firm and-just mind and the courage necessary to him who would worthily till the seat made illustrious by Jay and Ellsworth, by „ Marshall and Taney. ^ A lawyer in the rery front rank of his profession, thoroughly versed in the wide and varied learning of American law. he is also a scholar, and a ripe and good one. The law is a jealous mistress, and exacts from her devotees the most unwearying allegiance. yet while giving this mistress ali her due, Mr. Fuller has found time to . stray atjtiraes in tbs alluring fields of literature, and to cultivate and widen hi* miad by liberal studies. This has. indeed, made him all the better law- • ycr, and will make him all the better judge. Few of his predecessors have been more excellently equipped in these respects. As his practice for many year* has been qpn fined largely to the Federal courts, he possesses all that special knowledge in Federal provedure which his immediate predecessor did not have < when he took his seat on the bench. He has, too. • profound knowledge of constitutional law, gained from a study of the fathers of the constitution and — from the bast expositions of the Federal courts. Reared politically in the sehonl of Jefferson, be is a strict con- - - structionists. and in accord with that theory of government, the foundation of 'true Democracy, which insists on the largest personal liberty commensurate with justice to alL He believes that this is better promoted by the local governments than by the central power. He understands the just relations of the people to the States ami to the National Government, and holds that the States are as indestructible as the Union. Thus he will hold with even hahd the scales of jnstire on ail . high constitutional questions. The Democracy of the Union are to be congratulate.! upon this wise appointment. It gives the promise that their equal voice wilt have weight in the Amphictyonic council of the Nation. — fTWrnj • UtraltL » -The Republicans needn't worry ■■■ about the President's “shocking inconsistency.” The President has merely said that he regretted the absence of a law limiting a President to a single term. He can not a law. and while none ex* he has ho right to resist a popular his continuance in the
I TARIFF EXTORTION.
Starting with the fcdKftitttxi fact that tit* average tariff tax on imports it not less than it per eent« and thattb| list, according to UM report of the Secretary of the Treasury in 1885, comprises 4,183 articles, let the intelligent voter consider, as he looks around his home, what part of the list interests him. Be can sit by his kitcheu fire and find the following which have drawn money from his pocket nnd the tax on each'. Toe tree ta the stoke..,.4} Pots and kelMes.... St Copper anA bran ateatfll .... ..... «S Crockery commonest kind.......;.......-.. M Glassware. cheapest kind........ «S TaSM cailery and spoon* . . .. «s Pickled or salted ttsb .1. .. *5 Salt „. .. m BaUpetro.M.Ill Vinegar..... as noun.. » Rice.,.1M Fore gn frail. a* Carpet, if uisde of druggets . ..... .a..... 14 Carpet, If inade of taperlrj.,,,.. « FuruUUre ... ... .... Si Wall paper Window rWrtaias ............ *1 Icookiag-glass ....... SI Men s Mstktag of wool..... St Woolen hooerj- and nnderontru .. TS Cotton ditto.•. ..wit 4t Woolea hat* aad trap* ... ....... .. Ti Woolen snawis ....... S8>4 Wife's MacktUkarcs# .. ..... Si Giore*........... ... SI Blankets...... .... T> Alpnta dresses..-... .-— *9 Any olher woolen dresses . TJ Brass p ns .... .. ** Bcissors. radars, hair tin. steel pins.4i PenhB.Ye*. .SO No Needles I ik, paper ....e Castile soap..,...S> Bpson salts ... » Insert powder.. *1 Salad oil.. .. ... *1 W ndow glass, commonest kind..,... St Paint, white lead. . SI Brieka . SJ Snoot thread....... ... SO Bags aad bagging for grain.. ♦> C»mhsand brushes ....................... to Alpaca umbo-l as ...SO Any Iran or steel, average of....-4J AU t npare. .. « The list might bo extended, but enough are given to furnish food for thought If this heavy burden were necessary to support the Government no patriotic citisen would object to the tax thus imposed, but the truth is it is not necessary. Uy the maintenance of this tariff money is being drawn from the people that is not needed and can not be used. The injustice of such a system is too evident to need discussion, and the suggestion that the injustice be done away with and the taxes reduced to the actual needs of the Government is the cause of all the howiiug about free trade and dangers to American industries There is still a greater injustice in that the tariff does Hot bear equally upon the people. The Democratic policy is to readjust the tariff so that the bunion may fait tipou the luxuries of life aud not upon the necessities, and the idea is equally abhorrent to the protectionists. r-hall the tariff be reformed and taxation reduced to the necessities of Ihe Government. honestly and economically administered, is all the tariff issue there is before the country to-day. This is to be the issue in the next campaign. We ask every man to consider it fairly and to read for himself. —Manchester (.V. U.) Union. . - EXCHANGE OPINIONS, -In an aguish State like Indiana it is an unusual thing for a man to get the shake.— H\ <J1 Gresham. —-Mr. Sherman is nearing the top •f Pisgah and catching another glimpse of the Promised Land. So great a man as Moses had a similar experience. j yet never got there. ——Judge Gresham has many active friends, but his name is not a magnetic one with which to rally that great j multitude of political what-are-we-here-fors that control the action of his 1 party.—Chicago Herald. -Senator Spooner shakes the bloody shirt in the Senate, while Judge Kelley pleads for free whisky in the House. After next November we will briar and see less of these twin relics of Republicanism.—St Louis Republican. ——It is in this year 1888 that John Sherman and his followers of Ohio propose their “key-note” of sectionalism'’ —And the fact serhus to exhibit his conspicuous lack of those qualities which constitu e progressive leadership. — Springfield Republican. -It is folly for Republicans to shut their eyes to the true meaning of the mugwump revolt in 1884, It represented a sentiment demanding personal uprightness and trustworthiness in candidates, which is alive to-dav. I and politicians are blind if they Jgnore 1 it—Chicago Hew* (Mu//.). -The Democrats are willing in deference to the Republican Senate to . admit Dakota as a whole and thus give the railroads and the trusts two more Senators, but are not willing to divide the Territory so as to give them four more. They hare too much power'in the Senate already.—Sf. Louts Past-Dispatch. -Rhode Island has been famous, or infauions, for bribery in elections for many years. But it is a new thing, and really interesting, to have the only influential .'Republican paper in the State bringing the guilt of bribery home to the doors of the bribers and making some of the most influential citizens of Rhode Island appear to honest men as persons out of place so long as they are outside of the penitentiary— Workington Post. • ——The Republican plan about Southern elections is very simple. It is this: L Attempt to induce the voters of a State to abandon their principles by appeals to their selfish interests. 1 When the State refuses to be bribed, adheres to its principles and stands by those who have promoted self-government against carpetbag plunderers, to complain of the result as “ treason to the principles of liberty and of the subversion of the rights of a large class of citizens by means that every civilized man musl look on with indignation aad horror.” X Y. Star. \
Ingalls' Ungraceful Retreat. Senator Ingalls consumed considerable of the time of the United States Senate while, with many a snap and a snarl, he re rented from his charge j that Generals McClellan and Hancock were allies of the Confederacy. He polled himself ont of the fix he had got’ himself into by declaring that his charge against the two Generals was meant in a political sense. He modified his sneer at McClellan's military loyalty while reiterating it ! against his personal disposition towards Lincoln’s Administration. He tried to make a ealogy of Hancock's military fame atone for his former attack against his personal allegiance, bat coupled it with as disengenions s misrepresentation of Hancock's conduct during the campaign of 1880 at even the ultra-bilious Senator from Kansas ever ottered. Perhaps, when Mr. Ingall's, sees how his retraction strikes the public mind, he will conclude that, when a man makes a foci of himself, the bam way ont of th« scrape is to let the public forget it.0l*wo Sem (fid.).
and built with his U> which he took Were first ruarJfn ftoss Elizabeth CcsrBuxfi savs of her brother s wifci ‘ loanees finra* jiets better than any on« I «Vbr saw. It floes not matter what they are, she lores them all.” AmswoKTB R. Srorropri. the Librarian of Congress, who is noted for his wonderi ful memory, i« nearly sixty-three years cad. He is of slight physique, dark complex- : ioned, with iron-gray whiskers. He has i held his present position for almost a quarter of a century. A nose prominent society girls of Wash- ! iagton who litaro become nuns withiu a comparatively recent |>eriod we Miss FdM-> fief, daughter of Rear Admiral Febigcrj Miss Constant Edgar-, Colonel Bonaparte's stejwiaugtator: Miss Eertiia Go roll; daughter of a former Cera-jn Minister! and Miss Sands, daugh ter of Rcar-Adniiral Stands Tne illustrims Mono Alboni says that, in all hei* Career, she never fared art audience without being scared half out of her wits. Even nflvr. having long retired from the public stage, though with her voice still as perfect as ever, she says she can i.ot stand up to sing before a tioten friend-, n her own parlor without a fit of nervoa* trembling. Rev. Axtoixette Bnnvrx 15i.tcitr.-ri_. new lives in Elizabeth, N. J. Just how oU she i* none of bet1 fri»a«i» sA?m td kikivr. but hef street, motherly face will keep Iter youn"-tookin;t for a generation yet. Stic was the first woman in this cduntrv to prepare for artd regularly enter upon the ministry, add loves to be called the “mother of the women pieachers" Aimxiwii (j hauls Bell, of telephone j fame, was a penniless boy in Edinburg twenty-five i-ears ago. He is now forty years old, and is described as a handsome man of modest demeanor. He came to this country in ISTi and has a beautiful borne in Washington. His wife is a deaf mute, but she and hor husband converse’ just ns well as other people, for he understands every movement of her lips, its she does of his. Ex-Qovekmmi Sisl'el T. Husnu, of Montano, is said to be one of the jolliest politicians and million sires in Washington. His life reads like a romance. Many, years ago be started-out a poor boy. with nothiiig but pluck, energy an t a well-balanced mind. Lika I'iiarro. he dreamed that there was iia Kt Dorado, and he found it in Montano. There were few in the Territory that could throw the lasso, ndc and shoot better than cool-headed, daring young Hauser. lx 1X83 Jenny Lind in Edinburgh visited amusk- seller’s in Print-.' street. The attendant. a young man, asked her if she hod ever heard Jenny Lind. The singer repin'd in th-> affirmative, and hers-if asked ifAio had heard the " Swedish nightingale.” Tile replied that the very high price of the'tickets kept then far beyond hi-, inebme. She asked him to play an accompaniment to the song which she held in her hand. He did so. and at 'the close tho singer saying: " Sow you have heard Jenny Lind,” walked OUt ■" ir A Wvsatxr.tox correspondent of a Chicago .neivapsper writes that back of the Logan h1 -us ' in Was hington is a ten-acre lot, lying idle. It is platted in lots, but only one comer of Iti-k-lds any revenue to the owner. This corner, which is less than a quarter of an acre, is directly back of Mrs. Logan's yard, where she has a flower garden. A gentleman who visited Mrs. Logan was invited to walk out among the flowers An they strolled about she pointed over to the other plat of ground and said: “There is my vegetable garden.” “Does the land belong with this properly!” asked her cyatpan ion. " No,” she replied, “ 1 rent it. 1pay fiitecn dollars a year rent for it to Senator Job n Sherman.”
DOIl'iGS OF THE DAY. A Sluts (Mich.) girll te said to haye proposed to thirteen young men since leap year began. A roue* officer of Lis Angeles. Cat, carries a lasso and it ably assists him to perform his duty. An Erie County (N. Y.) physician issued a certificate stating that the cause of a little girl's death was “ in ft rotation of the The INwrl 1 lotiled with Tree*. Heury Villard planted thousands of trees along the line of the Northern Pacific railway in Dakota. Although those trees hare beta neglected since Mr. VU* lard see nrl ins connection with the road, most of them hare survived the storms and drought, and hare a firm hold on mother earth. If care were taken iin planting, the treeless regions might be domed w.th fo-oa*.« i 1 tw?aty-flve years The Blues. This is a synonym for that gloomv, hairrassed condition of the mind which has its origin in dyspepsia All the ugly spirits that, undeir the name of the “ blues.' ‘-blue devils,” “megrims” and “ mulligrubs” tar events the dyspeptic almost ceaselessly, vanish when attacked with Hostetlers Stomach Bitters, that, moreover, annihilates biliousness, constipation, chills and fever, kidney complaints and nervousness Warm from the river Styx should he good material for mucilage and manufactIx another column of this issue will be found an entirely new and novel specimen of attractive advertising. It is one of the newtest ever placed in our paper and we mlTre ir readers will bo well repaid for examining the scrrosrn MisplaT letters in the advertisement of Prickly Ash Bitters. A goon many women who have married dry-goods clerks have got two yards of lUasion as a premium.—Pitfatatpk L’Amiei*. THE MARKETS. Nxvr Yoas. May 14,1988. CATTLE—Native Steen.I 4 45 ft* 5 55 COTTON—Middling. U 10 FLOUR—Good to Choice. 4 45 a 5 10 WHEAT—No.* Red ... »TH» 1 <*► CORN—No. t. M A «' OATS—Western Mixed. XT ft 49 FORK—Moss isew)..... 15 00 ft 15 43 ST. LOUIS. COTOW- Middling___ PSt^t *H BEEVES—Good loCtioice ... 4 30 ft 4 75 Fair la Medium.... *75 ft 4 40 HOGS—Commoa lo Select.... 4 0) fi Mi SHEEP—Pair to Choice. 5 2d ft 5 30 FLOCK—Invests. 4*5 d 4 So XXX to Choice . *50 A *45 WHEAT—No. * Red Winter . »Hi* »> CORN—No. * Mixed. 53 ft 5*>«| OATS—Sol t. 4 * RYE—No. *... . 82 ,t 03 TOBACCO-Log*. 9® ft 8 60 Leaf-Medium.... (09 15 15 .0 HAY-Choice Timothy.. 14 30 «» IT «> BUTTER—Choice Dairy. PORK—Standard ifeaa’ <1 BACON - (Tear Rib. 85*w *Y LARD—PlimeSteam . 7* ft TK WOOL—Fair lo Choice. a « (4 CHICAGO. CATTLE—Shipping.. 5® HOOS-Good to Choice........ 5 SHEEP—(Seed to Choice. 5 00 FLOUR—'Winter, ... it <w v it w ... » u * •O'*® It »). 14 05 ft 14 73 -Winter___ id Patents..—. A 55 ’—No. 2 Spring_fete » WHEAT CORN—No 2. OATS—No. 2 White. FORK—New Mess... KANSAS CITY. »<tf S4<* M 15 ft M au HOGS—Soles at. WHEAT—No. *.. OATS—Nik t.B CORN—No. T.. a® 4® 4® 5 45 NEW ORLEANS. HH* H » CORN-White ■BSP :::ri *S \ PORK—New Mem. . ft 14 BACON—(Tear Rib. . ‘ COTTON—Middling. .. LOUISVILLE. WHEAT—No. 2 Red.. CORN—No. 8 Mixed...... OATS—N* 3k a Mixed 5H* 5 00 •7
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Ml OT*r tha world If JOB Mid SOLDIERS" TEXAS tAm&RffiSrS SSS Addma.<;ODL.K V A rORTEK.Dmllal.Tu> PlSOS CURE FOR CONSUMPTION siooto$3oofjr™A raw fmrmlmh tfceir on horats Ud «»»• tkafr wh ml* ttma to tbabciinraa. 8para»iiaBBtiany>a prodtnaty ■■■ ployed e-ee. A few ncueiH la towaa awl eltiea. s. r. jnutsaj aco, laia i •rftntal—.----—--s--_ p*T- Otttliifrce. Stark NCRSXKi*s,Louisiu»*«Mo. mtmiii nos tEARITELEIRAPHY**1^1* L Good ritutkca. MSI chottco ever offered- Ad J- V. BROW».Mgr.,a«liliv.MM WHEN WRITING TH APVERTIRER* If LEASH •Cato that }M m« tie Adwrtl—wt to ttoftv A. H. £, &_ U8T
HAMMER
To Houaekfooero and yqrwfri.-It Is important that the Soda 70a use ehonld be White and Pure same aa all similar substance* used for food. To insure obtaining only the “Arm <k Hammer * brand Soda. b.;y it m -pound or ha f pound’' cartoons, which bear our name and trade-mark, as inferior goods are sometimes substituted forth* “Arm k Hammer ’ brand when bought in bulk. Parties using Powder should remember that its sole rising property consists of bi
carbonate of soda. On teaaoooufulof the 'Arm A Hammer" brand of Soda mixed villi sow* milk equal* four teaspoonfule of tbe bee* Baking Powder, laeing twenty time* ite co*C healthier, became I* doea not contain any injurious substances, such as alum, terra alba etc., of which man J Baking Powder* are made, Dairrmen and Fanners should us* owlTtlx -Ann A Hammer'* brand for cleaning and kiepin* Milk Pans Sweet ana dean.
BRAND SODA
lOOPTkKiHT, BKT- i
CATARRH IN THE HEAD. OF THE obstruction of the Dull, henry h<-adachc. discharge* fallingfl-om_ the heed into the throat, sometimes profuse, waterv^ and scrid. at sod putrid: others, thick, tenacious, raucous, purulent. the eyes arewenk; there is ring.ng in t he eaor coo shins to clear the throat. expectoration of offensive mstter. together with scabs from ulcers: the Tok» is changed and has a anasal twans": the breath is offensive: smell and taste impaired; these Is a sensation of duab:«ss. with mental dn» ' ‘ ‘ ‘ I ‘ .. ~ of the sion. a hackios coush and i debility. Only i __r to be present in any one case. _of caws annually, without manifesting half of the above symptoms, result in consumption, and end in tbe stare. Mo disease is so common, more deceptive and “ understood, or more unsuccessfully treated by ] * Qiiin Sere Treatkit. catarrh is. in If yon would re move an evil, grtic af «* root. As the prelwposmg or real cause or the majority of casts, some impuri ty, or otherwise faulty if the system, in attempting to chiff aim must be directed to the reword! of (but cause. The mo* we are of this odious disease, and we treat successfully thousands of cases annually at the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgial Institute, tbe same do we realise tbe importance of eosnUnSsr wtth tbe use of a local. heaBng appfc y and beating application, a film ongh of btood-deoiuS^ and tonic m tdicii In curing catarrh and ad tbe various diseases with hich it k so frequently complicated, at throat. tarrhal deafness. \ I blood, scrofulous a- • ful powers and virtues of Dr. Pierce s Golden Medical Discovery cannot be too strongly extolled. It I
effect u|K>n the lining u^uibnirK1* or toe nmsu ana wurr the natural SSSoo Of their foIBcta nod _ _if the dise«acd and thickened mem brine, ir It to it* natural, thin, delicate. ■AWtoW-blood-purifier. it is unsurpassed. As those d&stasa ditiont, As a Mood-punner, itjs unsmysaeq. a which ewnplicnte catarrh are diseases oi the linin* mucous membrane*":* of the blood, it will readily be seen why this medklne is so well calculated to cure them. | ttetoSSyiBSiD^S^iSSStemSyft^agl all oooparison the best preparation ever incensed. It is mUd and pleasant to use. producin* no smart in# or r»h. amd containing no strong, irritating, or cuuattc drug, or other poison. TbSnebjedy .ton e-ovra-ful antiiepthJ. “to nanies so many cases of catarrh, thus aaordin# gnat eomior. to itBfer from this disease. ) so i i who atd Periuuieit Cures. Is, The Golden Medical Dtscgrery la tte mfmg ‘helpmate-of Dr.8a*e'sCatarrh Remedy. It materially tat restoring b> n II (Of the i rarrejS healthy condition, i It is ejected in this Both I»r. Pierce’s Gcrft Catarrh Remedy are soldhy r ft is ] _ _ SXZ&o $Lt _ A arrphte Treatise an Catarrh. #tnng raluahto hint* as to SS33a' MS M«‘" Street, BmriiA II. T.
ptpE.LLg^'''^ VW JHE ORIGINAL ^ Iittle LIVER PILLS PLEAS^U Size or PELLETS. o o o o o o
Yf w y y
SICK HEADACHE, SSrtefci HeVed —*
THOROUGH BUSINESS EOUCRTION. BRY^JKTT & STRATTON. The Louisville Business College, Corner Tiiird and Jefferjon Street?, LomOTil'e, IfENTRASTOiC: NO. 406 THIRD 8THKET. M-Iewa Mini, ftisiis, aortlanfi, TaleppiiS IWsi TrainntFor Catalogs* AiUrt* Collage tm .
MITCHELL’S ACADEMY ANDBUSINESS COLLEGE I Ivans vi lie, Ind., Is a Very Thoro ugh, Practical!Progressive School. Qiv69 Better Advantages than any Like School in Southern Indiana. dock-Keeping and Duainess Forare; Business Calculations amt Correspondence; Praefccal Uranim tr, Short Hand and Tsrp^Wr tin*. Etc . Etc Alt at grently reduced rates. Addrest TP. VC. 214 Main Street, Bet we sa Second and Third, J5VAHSVILLE, DID. R. BERRIDGE A CO., ' (Successors to Woods & Canatsey.) PROPRIETORS OF f Star Livery Feed and Sale Stables, CORNER FIFT3 AND WALNUT STREETS, PETERSBURG. Flret-Claes Barrie, and Safe Sloraea for the pnb'Ic at reasonable prices. Horse, boarded bv the day or week. Give this arm your pacroua re, and yon will receive fair treatment. The well-known hoatier, Au K vros. will be foun 1 always on haqd. H AMMO l<D™E JEWELER GRAND OPPORTUNITY — TO BUY — Watches, Clocks, Jewelry. PRICES ON AIL GOODS CUT DOWN TO THE LOWEST NOTCH TO SUIT TEE HARD TIMES / SAX«£iM P. HAMMOTTO. DRY GOODS. JOHN HAMMOND. N EW GOODS OF 3SVBRY KIND, To which hedirectsattentl.cn li t UUY GOODS are flrst class, and the stook Is large Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes and Notions. Give him a call and yon vrll be convinced the! he ha ?tvia? BARGAINS.on bis entire stock. SOLI l) GOODS AT LOW PKltilS. EUGENE HACK. . ANTON SIMON. —Proprietors of— THE EAGLE BREWERY, VINCENNES, INDIANA, Furnish the Best Article of Beer the Market Affords » AND SOIC1T ORDERS FROM ALL DEALERS BOTTLE OR KEG BEER SUPPLIED TO FAMILIES. On Bale at All Saloons. ISAAC T. WH1TR FEED'S IL BURTON. MARSHAL C. WHITE. KJ3L L.EB. db WHITE, Wholesale Druggists and dealers in Paints, Oils, Dye Stuffs, Window Glass and surgical, instruments. i No. 106 Main Street, - Evansville, Ind.
TECD OSBO RjST BROTHERS a»e itaon4 to their« Sew Building on Mala street, where they hare a large and SsIbe* Boildlng on Maia: splendid hae ot BOOTS AND SHOES, ror lien. Wont. wM Childs We keep and Ummereoa-. brand. Petersburg. Indiana. O. A. BURGER & BRO., FASHIONABLE MERCHANT TAILORS, Petersburg, Indiana, Hut IhMHiUi Mil* Sites itf Ite Goods. «WmI)« or <* M»* r«y Jwet 1 {rt ■< dh iT» iH naa rf)C6$ 8$ yiiv • 2 1 r1 {£! M -
