Pike County Democrat, Volume 19, Number 31, Petersburg, Pike County, 20 December 1888 — Page 2
SD KYRBY THURSDAY. EDITOBIAL NOTES. Study the politic* of this country liar the next four rear*, letting politicHi prejudice take no pert, and you will know better how to rote. And still tfce newspapers have hot decided on who will be tlie cabinet. L Wonder if liarrison desires they 'should attend to his business. An act of bad faith on the part of a sUte.ur municipal corporation, like [poison In the blood, will transmit its irse to succeeding generations. iroughout the whole web of nasi existence we trace the golden > of ibutnau progress toward the {her and better estate. Wa should do nothing inconsistent with the spit it and genius of our institutions. dVe should do nothing lor ruwmge, but everything for-the present anti future. C’onqkkss is grinding away, hut vilj do but little Ibis Winter. Jt is id that the Senate bill will die in > hands of its originators; thst is, the tariff bill. the Tub mailer »r having an exorbitantly high tax on every article made jti this oountry gives the monopolists t,a great chance to combine against the \-.-oiituiucr. Ir there be one thing upon this .earth fott mankind lore and admire J*tler than auother.it is a brave man ; r* man who dares to look the devil in the face and tell him ha is a devil. art Tuk future is bursting wit it sensaIons, and all, newspaper men exeepte alert with interest. The tvi journalist is utterly without entases. jleitas the nit admirumlum o perfection, takes tidal waves and rth<|uakes as a matter of course, and when they fail, makes them out straw. i I iTut ltepublicans boast that they re iu for twentr rrars. They will juiei the porthwestern territories; |i«t will give them four year* more; that time Canada will be ripe, iu»1 it is now whispered that a licnie is alrcadv afoot to purchase pominion, and that the ap|K>inl- . of Sherman as Secretary <>t will be fraught with this mean
The Winslow New* is no more, material has been purchased by Young,who ha* started a paper the Pike County leader, lie excuse ii* if we predict that he Hi *'hardly aomply with the full meaning of the term “leader.’’ Mr. Young i» a young man of promising ability. Winslow should give him a support, as br tuat means only paper be a success- He will accept our good opinion of the excellency ot the first paper’he oul. Mr. Young, here is or red beaters do not belong to^Hus . The Kuightfr£iL>fc3nor rethein, although mauyof them managed to gel into theoiganiat members. Tlicy should i>e by the whole people, and to return to their uativc couuif they can not be American*, toy are responsible for the bloodshed and destruction ol property during »ttike* in large cities. They want do live on somebody else‘a earning*, y not only di»grac4 honest labor, they endanger the Nation. n Member* and Senatieated the leading of- the met* with studied indifference or listo it with sneers. Tlie key note of the tiuurc, say the Democrat*. A proleutiou* bulk^if emptiness, say the Kepiihtlcaas. Alas for tlie moral, menial, political obscuration of professional politico! The hope of the coup try is amateur politic*, in the aeaae of those wlio pursue it for love and not for gaiu. If these canuot prevail, consolidation and despotism, now on the horizon, will have a walk.orer.
Prepakatio.n* fur the Inaugural jrertitnony on the 4th of March next, »going on. An lit meme c.-owd is Itpeclcd. The Kepublicau* tv ill •re no pains to give their President , brave send ofl’. The inaugural ball rill bn held in the covered court ot Pension Building. Triumphal arches will spau Pennsylvania Avenue. Fire works will eniblazon the night. Forty thousand people will beak-k or exhausted next moruing. And then wjll come the wrestle for jtppea. I and pirn, needle* sad pins; ttned your trouble bes'ius. Ievtaj. empire Is a graud The Isthmian Olnal euvlll be heard trout this ConJUTith Ua head at the north p feet in tbe tropics, and Its open, the country onght to i good health in spite or the lough i submitted for its digestion. *1 progress anil prosper- ; quite aa much tr»m main a* from political Is* as annex Canada, i it oat of tbe handt oi und lumber pirates, i name let ns give these rope, unless it be of iriiti a National railto Sitka and a tuntUkcuce jto £am*chatB ready for excursion!.
bail “Kan* a degree that a uumber or people,then citizens of this county, hied themselves to Western Held* “to grow up with the couutry." Many took "Texas'’ fever and went to I be Lone Star Slate. Other levers have been had. ana other places have been sought by citizens the majority of whom would have been much more prosperous had they stared in Indiana. The man who goes from Southern Indiana expecting to hud a belter place on the earth will be disappointed. The temperature of Indiana never gets so low as to cause any serious trouble from extreme cold, and uever so high as to cause trouble from heat, notwithstanding the rumors of the extremes of heat and cold so taisclv spoken of by certain persons that seldom know what they talk about, There has never lieeu a year in Southern Indiana wheu die people did uot produce more than they coiisumed, so fruitful it the (country. It is positively among the j best wheat growing countries, aud is < (lie best corn and general produce } country iu the world, no doubt. Tbit ’ part of Indiana has the advantage of almost any country hi the world. ; There akc few countries in the world that will grow cotton, corn, wheat, ! and tobacco, and product! them all in 1 pa>ing <juau’.it!es,yet that is what can ! be grown in Southern Indiana. It < produces tbe Southern crops and the | Northern crops, and also the crops of ; East and West, showing the noul sc use of going from hero with the exJ peclaiiou of finding a better or even | < as good a country tor line tanner especially. Where the producer can thrive, so can ineu of all occupations. All in all, there is no reason for leaving Southern India.ta. On fhe conI irary, the person who can get hold of j [good property at the rates for which jit sells in this part of the country is j very fortunate. Farm laud can be bought iu this (I’ikc) county at the rate of eight to tweiilv-flve dollars 1 |»er acre—the very best laud in the world! Tlic reason why the demand : for this good land has not placed a higher price upou it is that Southern Indiana has been overlooked by the people who have been pushing the | "Western Empire,” almost all parlies : setting a heart on some spot farther j j west. Again, the country has not; j beeu pro|terlv advertised. The re-! j sources of this country and the pro-j ductiveness of the soil has not beeu ! properly laid before the people of the j East at the opportune times. If tbe resties* and weary of home will once learn wlist a glorious country tins is, and go to work in earnest, bolding last that which they have., a new era of prosperity will lie inaugurated.
Oar Improvement. Quite a few. among them ilie Pros, have «ome objection to the recent' proceeding* Of the, Town Hoard. We are glad to know that the oft repeated •uggeatious oi the Demo: k.vT, that i well* and cisterns aliould be put iu and mean* of fighting lirqhe provid- j ! ed, have been followed by the Board: | not beeauae the Democrat suggested j : it, ha* it bee» done, but because the | idea ia right. Such provisions are the initial ateps toward'-fcsyfinTng' avlli ~k**W*itiStirst hud auch a ; provision as the Town Board here are preparing, then they got gas works, theu electric light. The Town Board proposes to take these things as the people can stand it—(he most . needed first, and then the improve* i ments us the town improve*. Wc arc not quite ready lor gas. for water j works, nor for electric light, though we ran, in less than five years have; | them all, if the citizens will t.akc the proper steps toward ioduciug nnnii-! gration. In order to do this,we must I have more rWyoatl* and mnnulaotories, aud ineiiof capital, to make (hi* | town a grain aud pork and beef buyj iug town to draw the custom of the; wonderfully great agricultural dis- , trids that surround this town. Make this town ot use to the people and the ‘ ’people will make it grow—any one j can see that. |
Acxnlihg t« the latest newspaper) directories the total issue of dally j j newspaper* in the United State* for the year 1888 \va« 1,481,844,000. Oil i this number The Indiana State Scu- j j tine! printed 1,724,41*) copies—a larg-. ! or number than any weekly (taper in j i this section of the country. During 1 | ISS9 it will probably reach a much ' • larger figure, and iu order to show a j Just appreciation of the support given : I The Sentinel, the Editor ha* offered a [ prize of $50 to the person who sends I | to The Sentinel office, before Jiuu-j [ ary 1, 1889, the host “guess” oil Presi- j ,dent Harrison'*cabinet. Each guess , i must be. accompanied by the sum of one dollar for which The Sunday Sen-! linel will be mailed (postage prepaid) j to any address, for the term of sis! month*; or The Indiana State Sentinel will be mailed (postage prepaid) to any address tor, the term of one year. Here is a splendid opportunity for Agents. An energetic solicitor can make from $2.50 to $5.00 per day if he work* hard. Xo better! inducement could be offered than the prize of $50 which it is proposed to pay to Hie person making the best guess on President-elect lUmaon’s cabinet. AgenU can largely increase tbeir subscription lists before the holidays tf they would only go to work. The cost of Christina* present* cam be! paid on^of tbeir earning* during the\ next j To temporize with your health in-1 stead of promptly using Laxador, 1* j not indicative of much thoughtful- j ness. Laxador is sold by all drug-j giata. Uanv of our young married people don't know what a blessiug Dr. Bail'* i Baby Syrup is until the youngster is >Wc to \reir by the hour. t "~-\7 - - 'JL , “
the election day then is no the laws should be of going out on paying men to Tote. E elections and in ig them which ed as wrong, or rather, there am some omissions in the laws that eliould he immediately looked into. In short, the laws are uot sufficiently inclusive- There are gaps left down for bribery everywhere. The government desires not that cliaiacter and competency should be a scarcity, and it also presupposes that an officer should possess them both, and therefore sets a price on official work above that which the same officer com Id make at some of the ordinary av iations in the same lime. This is not done to *otfer a premium on office seeking. It is done to induce meu of competency and character to hold office. This no doubt is good political ecoaemy, and is good public policy, bur the governis defeated in its purposes by of politics—bribery meat the corruption coming up in every shape imaginable. The goreruineni lightly says to the taxpayers: “your public servants must possess competency and character/' and, to get such meu to accept office, proposes to pay them a salary such as will justify them to turn aside troni their ordinary avocations for awhile anil become public servants, accept a public trust. But here comes a man who says he will do the work of the office for half the salary; and, the tax payor, perhaps igmraut of his disqualifications, votes for him out of this pecuniary consideration. Such is bribery, and is not good public policy, for it puts meu in ogice without competency or character. It is therefore, dangerous aud ought to be unlawful. Men who will cotuc into office in this way arc not. as a rule, meu who will be safe. Such men are generally such as default. It is safe to sav that bank defaulters aud defaulters in all branches of business and ill kinds ot public trusts are just such men as would resort to such bribery. There is also auother soil of inen who are dangerous, and who also come into office—not as bribers, but a* bribed caadulates. They are I the tnen who are put to unnecessary] expenses in securing their own election*. A man in a county like Pike or Gibson is put tip by his partr for, say Treasurer. The campaign committee assess him six hundred dollars .: aud, because his opponent is spending money too, uever failing to lend this niau a dollar, fb buy a coat for that niau, or make auother a present of a tine dog—or the Lord knows; what—so that by the time the campaign closes from one to two thousand dollars is gone, lie is defeated ; and, tp make hack what he has lost, he goes to work at snue honest avocation. a thing the lieet for most men j The other man is, of course, elected, lie qualities, taken possession of the office, ruined lituucially. lie soon finds that the salary will make him a i living ami leave a vary few hundred! dollars alter the term expires. , ire sees that,at the end of the time for which he is elected,he will be a poorer man than he was when Jut^'bocame a candidate. Tlyts'u ho led to devise tnuns.jju’igaiii what he halost. --|-f,~he have money in his trust, he will use it to his own advantage: and, if lie be a man given to weakness under tetnptatiou, or in the least in competent, he will default. Then we may sav of this also, that the assessments for campaign purposes causes many a failure in office. It is therefore had public policy, and. there should be a law against it. To he continually assessing canidates for| campaign purposes is one of the most1 corrupting things of which men are guilty. It is right and pr. per for a reasonable assessment to be made, but when those assessment* are made] twenty-fold larger ithan will pay the ] legitimate campaign expeuses, there must he something wrong. It is! plain to everyone that the money thus I raised is for corruption. A great deal of money is needed in conducting a campaign ; but, wheu, as slated ! by the liuiiauapolis Journal, a party | spends two hundred and fifty thousand dollars in a si ate like Indiana ^ within Ie»s than tire days of the dec- j tion day, (lie mouey could have been j sjient for no other purposo than for j buying votes. The accumulation of | such a fund ought to be prevented by ] law. Assessing candidates above a j Sitiiuatc amount ought to be* a j me. If used be it would be better j tbat the laiy preventi lie organisation ot campaign committees. It is no i longer necessary for men to talk of iliere being any purttv in elections. They are carried hv the dishonest use j of mouey. The Democrats in Pike county, having no more taw than they ! have, would do well to organize for the purpose of preventing crime in elections. Let them keep themselves dear of crime; and, whenever the ] Grand Jury fails to hud a man guilty of crime, lot them go Iwfore a Justice ] of the Peace end nuke affidavits] against these corrupt hell hounds who ] have made honesty in elections next j to impossible.
A nun who has practiced medicine for 40yean, ought lo Ituow salt front sugar; read what he say*. Toledo, Ohio., Jan. 10, 1887.’ Messrs. F. J. Cheney & Co.—Gentlemen :—1 havedteen in the general practice of medicine lot most 40 years, and would say that in ill rav practice and exiterience, have never seen s preparation that 1 could prescribe with as much confidence of success as I can Hall's Catarrh Cute, manufactured by you. Have prescribed it a great many times and its effect is wouderful, and would say in concludou that I have yet to find a case of Catarrh that it would not cure, if hey would take it according to direction*. Yours Truly, L. L. GOKSCC M, M. D. Office, SIS Summit St. We will give $100 for anv case o1 Jatarrh that can not bet cured with Hall's Catarrh Cure Taken jnter*a!!y. ‘.J.CllKNKY & CO..Pro[>*.,Toleda,0. 75c, Bp-Sokl by Druggists,
At the close of the war, the Republican party gave the negroes the right of suffrage that they could the better keep themselves lu power, and without considering the constitutionality ot the matter, they passed the civil rights bill to hold the negre vote in j the South. The Republican party, [ in order to carry the elections, passed 1 a law whereby they could have an | army of United States Marshals at the polls and carry the elections at all hasatds. Iu the 46th Congress, they saw that the Democrats by the then recent elections, had a majority in the lower House, and in order to hare control of legislation, they instituted what is known as the test oath peuding contest, aud contested the scats of nine members, they swore in the defeated Republicans and kept the Democrats out to the end of the term. The Democrats submitted. In 1876, when Tihleu aud ileudricks had car- | ried the election by over a quarter of] a million majority, cue Republican, j tbe president ot the Senate pro tern-1 |H>re, gave the Democrats to understand that he intruded to opeu just such certificates of election as would elect the fraud. Hays, and that he intended to declare Hayes elected, law | or no law. The Democrats again sub-; initted. Thus one determined Re- J publican defeated nearly five million | Democrats and compelled them to j submit to a commission. In the Ohio | Legislature was another example of J Republican usurpation when they j have the power. They refused to let the Democrats who had certificates of j electron take there seats until they | proved that they were elected by olh- ] er evidence than these certificates, j Democrat*, strange to say, submitol1 as usual. A Republican savs: “Have j we the physical and numerical pow- j er to turn the Democrats out? We will settle law questions afterwards.” A Democrat says: “la lhaj law ?” “Is | it legal Can we afford to doit?" Vet they too often do snbmitt. And now after carrying many districts in W. Va. by voting negresses dressed in men's clot lies, the Republicans propose to unseal such Democrats as Judge Parrett and put in his place a man for whom the greatest fraud and absolute crime# were committed in order to secure hts election. Will ihe Democrats submit? I,et them hunt, their evidence, aud, if necessary, put the criminals iu the ]>eutteutiary. A Republican who is posted in what his party has done and is willing to do, will never cry fraud at anyone. As Judge Parrett was elected by fairer means than Harrison or any Republican. it is but justice to him and j the Democratic party that he have j his seat. Let every Democrat in the first district sec that rot hi tig is left undone to = vindicate the rights Ot a man who is elected from this district. It we are rightly informed, and thei whole truth comes to the surface, the I Petersburg precinct could hate been thrown out, and every Democratic j candidate in Pike county thereby dc-; dared legally elected- When the Re-j publicans commence casting out frauds, they will have several beams I to cast out of their owu eye*. We do not make these statements to stir up j any political excItemeni^bgt-sdWpiV j to call^atteiyl*enrttr~plaiii facts that t jyfeiTjrosded Republicans do not deny. !
BERSONS will feel real rick, ami yet receive no sympathy from their friends amply because by strong endeavor they drag themselves about, and accomplish their usual daily tasks. Miserable headaches, swollen limbs, aching joints, . indigestion, constant fatigue cause physical distress and anxiety of mind. Don’t let mind and body continue to suffer. Dn. Gvysott’s Yklxow Dock asdSabsap.uucutis just the remedy you need. It enriches the blood, strengthens the urinary and digestive organs, causes a regularity of bodily functions, removes every indication Of impure blood disease from a pimple to a cancerous humour, annihilates pain, infuses new life into every part, and is vastly superior to all other general restoratives. Give it a trial if you don’t feel well. Do not delay. It costs early one dollar.
CTHE INDIANS )> KNOWING the value of wild ! cherry bark, used to, in olden j times, prepare it in their primitive way «a a cere for coughs and colds. The careful manner, however, in which Dr. AVistak’s Balsam or AA'ild Chkbbt is prepared, make* it a much superior remedy, and far more effective. Its remarkable curative virtue is felt at once. The lungs grow stronger, the soreness begins to heal, expectoration aft breathing more easy, irritation of the bronchial tabes accompanied by tickling or choking eemsations producing a tendency to cough pasaes away, and the consumptive noon finds himself on the right path toward complete recovery and robust good health. I CURE FITS! Wtoa I aay Craa I do not mean aeraly to ■toll them lor • time, and then bare them re* (am ac*u> 1 *sas A RADICAL, CURE. 1 hiSa aada the dtaaaae o*
If your dog triple the kidneys iking constipation. ' of the poisons xi. Then the sufferer >d. “Not yet;" but blood purified, and the c kidney troubles, and Pal' h its tonic, purifying, at >eys, making it almost >. If your hopes of cut ad; it gives perfect he* Sold by WELLS, s Celery laxative fallible it have not
sirn cub Make i Geo. E, King's Gr erv Store the pi ace to bnv goods in e grocery liuc. Mere lie finds the be of CT^irLa, TK7 axe, LEMONS, GRANGES, AND FRUITS OF al: KINDS.
EVERYBC DY t Can Find at this Store TURK EYS. CHICKENS, DUCKS, RABBITS, SQUIB IJE S, QUi LS, 0 STER8, Amt Everything good eat. Cigars and Fine Tobacco's. Butter and Eggs Wan d. Glassware and Qju msware. Call for Christinas Goods. GEO- E. SIB h
Madam? See what 15 cents will d" ft It will bring you a sample copy of tJwdey’s 4sd|'» Bowk, which will telfyou bow to Let the teal-skin saciiue, the silk dress, I"w K«ld watch and cottage organ and other vn’ yialdes j without a dollart icrthlng tor Godey.” the best family tnagozirje In America. * , Kor 1SS9 It will contain: Fashions in colors , fashions *.n black and white, latest from . Europe Original novelties in needle work snd embrolnery Latest nud most popular music. Plans for the house yon want to ouild. Directions for decorating vour home. Cookery and household help. Every Latlv Her Own Dressmaker who subscribes to Godey’s Lady’s Rook. The coupon which you will find in each, number entitles you to your own selection of any cut paper pattern illustrated In Godey's Lady’s Book. Your 15 cent sample copy will contain one of these coupons. Godev’s SLOO a year. j In clubs with the Democrat fci.75 for both. • j 5* |
Mar BILLMEYE a ft MONTGOMREY RE AT THEIDLE stand: WITJ A FULL LINE OF \ : Hardware i id Bnilding Material, Jflnre they fop ) m-33t all their old castomers.
The Bea iful Engraving of the G ebrated Picture The Eorse Fair ! ( >B( 3inniK«), BYB )S ABON2ETJ&. TO EYEPY NF SUBSCRIBER OR RENEWAL — —FOR THEWEEKLY ( LOBE-DEMOCRAT ' BN PAGES -OH E TTE^.23ONLY 3 .00 PER YEAR. Posi masters or Newadi direct tc the GLOBE Send for Sample Cop; lera will receive jour subscription, or tteinit PBUTTINO 00., ST. LOTUS.
loos-mrnra, shoe- eaot, tzlesbapet, rsmsrsziF, etc. mrA d< wires to better It or her condition in life, should write for 1 9 Catalogue of the BRY ANT & S RATTON No. 406 THE > 8TBIIT, LOUISVILLE. KV.
PATENTS, — 'aveats. and Trade-Mark* obtain'd, and ail latent bos met* conducted for ■•derate Pees, tar aln to Opposite V. S. Tatvat tiffleiind w» cun secure patent in less time than hose remote from Washington. Mend model, drawing or photo, with decrlption. We advise iif patentable or not. ree oj charge, Our fees not due till patent is A- Pauphi-kt, “Hon- to Obtain Patents." vith names of actual clients in your Slate, ■ounty.or tuwu, sent free. Address, 0. A. SNOW & CO. )rr. Paths." Optics, 'ar.vsanioto*, P 0 Pe* *>,
Friends, Washerwomen, House keepers, Lend me your cars, and hear me for my cause. /The Soap T come to speak about is the Great Santa Claus. Tis good for eveiy purpose, For which a soap is needed, Ana Joy will bring to every one"? Who has wise counsel heeded ^And spent a nickel, just !:o prove What wonders it will do, To lighten labor, save expen se And make things bright and new. ! \\ Extract fr cxi /V^. SampcS* Satuftt fn Tht Mona fyjtvetKt SeajfS*
» A CLAUS SOAP is the best in the market for washing, scouring, cieautcg, scrubbing, &e. For sale by all grocers at 5c, a cake. '• a. FAJRBANK & CO., Manufacturers, Chicago, 111.
ANGELO HILLMAN, Ins. Afi’ Room 10, CARPENTER BctLDlNG, Petersburg,. Is pi an*. Real Estate Agency. P. W. CHAPPELL, PETERSBURG, - - INDIANA All land, an,!-town property placed In my i hands for sal® wili he advertised free of charge, i Office—Upstairs over City Drug Store LEGAL. Notice to Physicians. IN PURSUANCE of the law establishing a I County Hoard of iVtalth.aml rebutting all physicians and aceouchurs to report to t ho secretary of said Board., I Jterehy reqti , . request a fhll co mpliance with the law in this regard, and all \ licensed physicians and aocouehum are bcfieby notified to addbress their reports and all business pertaining to my office to A. It. BYERS, See P. (. B.R., Petersburg. Pike Co., Ind. SuueriiitendlBnt’s Notice. pc l BUC examination of applicants par i teacher's license will be held on flic lad Saturday of each month as follows; For tli. months of June, -September and March, I at Augusta: for the mouths of July. October,, January and April, at Petersburg; lor tit* mouths of A tig'1st, November, February and May. at Winslow. A certificate of good moral character from some member of the County Board of education must be brought by applicants in tli® county and from County Superintendent by those out of the county. W. B, PIKKI.E, J uue 16,1867. County Sup’t.
SCRIBNER’S MAGAZINE For 1889 The publishers of SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE i aim to make It the most popular anil elite?- j prising of periodicals, while at all times preserving lu high literarywharafcter. 43,000 new readers have been drawn to R during the past sis months by the increp. Wcr7*d*ence of its content* (notably the Hallway articles), and It closes its year with a new Impetus and an assured sucoeas The iJlustraUr.ua will show some now effects, and nothing to make SCRIBNER’S MAGAZINE attractive and Interesting will be neglected. T1IK RAILROAD ARTlCEfeS will be continued by several very striking papers. Illustrated MR. ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON’S serial novel “Tiie Master of Ballontrae,''.wlll nin through the greater part ef the year Begun in .’Vfyrember. A CORRESPONDENCE and collection of manuscript memoirs relating to E. J. Millet and a famous group, of modern FRENCH PAI N TERS will fumishjthe substance of several articles. Illustrated. Many valuable LITERARY ARTICLES will appear; a paper on Walter Beotfs Metiiodsof Work, illustrated tfirom original MSS., a second -Shelf or Old Books ” by Mrs. James T. Fields, and many other articles equally note worthy Illustrated. Articles on ART SUB ! KCTS will he a feature Papers, are arranged to appear by Clareence Cook, E II. Biashfleld, Austin Dobson, and many others Illustrated. FISHING ARTICLES describing sport in the I jest Ashing grounds wHfappear ’ Illustrated. ILLUSTRATED ARTICLES of great variety. touching, upon all manner of subjects, travel, biography, description, etc , wiU appear, but not of the conventional commoiiplace sort. Illustrated. A SPECIAL OFFER to cover last year’s numbers, wulch Ineludetail the RAILWAY ARTICTES, a< follows: A year’s subscription (1889) and the numbers for 1888... , WoO A year’s subserhillon (1888) and the numbers for 1888, bound in cloth, . . ® <* •11.00 a yean Its cents a number. CHARLES SCRIBIER’S SG8S, 743-715 Broadway, New York.
MSS^BSK ARCHITECTS A RIILSERC f| Edition of Scientific American. W JSSS^^SSSSi*^ strictly confidential. TRADE MARKS. roar mark ia not rKalstered in tka **** Mttoys
CSRES WHERE AU ELSE N B*0t Cough Syru^. FISC S CUR The best Cough Medicine is Piso’s Cure tor Consumption. Children take it without objection. By all druggists. S5e.
Eailroad-i-Tizns-i-Tru-EvansTille St Indianapolis BailrosS 9:00 a iu . 10.0*5 a m 10:18 a ni .10:38 a m ... 11:50 a iu Taking Effect Sunday, Oct. 2, '■* UOI.NO north. ' STATIONS. Jio. 10. ’.H-p. Evansville .. “ Somerville . “ Oakland City, “ Petersburg . \rr. Washington. UOOiG BOOTH. STATIONS. N<y. 9. V>ep. Washington.. 1:40 p m “ Petersburg . !:i9pa “ Oakland City. . 3:04 pin “ Somerville .. 8:15pm * Arr. Evansville 4:15 p m ;• No. 31 [southb-bcund freight! arr 12:10 p. in. and No. 32 [north-bopnc t at 1Q:0U a. nt. Trains run daily except Sunday ins with trainsienst and west on t' .. Washington. G. J. Git AM V.' General Paast-ugi v, >* ; - s'tr u, | u: 10 pm ! «.Ur «■ 0 : .9 p Bj «•:>: p.m • 100 9 >a No 0.10 a m I'! a »•; [b v >\ . « st Si*ttl, •nfedftt*.
THE OLD RELIAIU.E O. ' <2z 3^ OHIO ANDbMISSISSir . Popnlur Tknu(h R«ul« an Fast Lin* to til i'f - n - 23 ©.st eSc eat„ A Fast Time, Best ArrommadatioB.^ •< ijv uecttons in t'llw 1 ffOI K DAILY TBtq ^ EACH WAY BETWI C.N Cincinnati, Looisrille and St. m Stopping at Way Points l.ttxvrisut Parlor tars a all Day Train l‘a!a*r KIk)1i( tars It ill JilrktTnlai. 1 i DAT tOlt llES OS ALL TRAIN TRAINS GOING EAST:” Stations. Accom- l)ay Night “ Mitchell.. “ Vine.tin".' •• Olney. “ Fima - “ Odin . ■‘.Sandoval . Shattuc . ArSt. Louis mod'n Exp. Exp T0e,»m TvSp'.li ' • U-uia tSleif l«S7t:.!r> ll'JU'rr,. 12 3Jt- n 28!... *47: 'n 4 *• « Slant ESI »«p. a i 10 Wpio i 1125 pi: I star S49»~. SSSto;. 428..;.. 4»tf 1 44S:ai •Mat Lv St. Louis 623am 800am Shattuc .. S4Sum 933am “ Sandoval... 85Ssm “Odin. . '■>06am 10iOam “ Flora ... lOlStara 1102am “ Oluey.. U02am 1140am “ Vincetsn’a. 1218pm 1232pm Mitchell.. 281pm 241pm “ Seymour . 407pm S46pm a N. Vernon 4 40pm 413pm Ar Cincinnati. 7 37pm «!»pm “ Louisville.. 62‘ipyt 623pm TRAINS GOING W r.v C.'lncinn’ti 6 30am 3 1.3am “ N. Vernon 932atc 1037am “ Seymour .. lOUSaht 1103am “ .. 1118am 1201pm 130pm 210pm Fist K>.pi 83pm 3 33pm 501pm S38pn> 33*pm 4 43pm 430pm 4 52ptu 483pm 500pm 446pm 7 22pm 640pm ‘ ?V J ail iie >im - -U• i t's* VC. ■ Through Sleeping Cnr Aeeomod&d ; Cincinnati, Louisiilto, St. Loni; Washington, Baltimore, lea Philadelphia and nil lutenaedial F*r Emigrants and Dana! seek. ;'. * M.” is the Shorte«l and quiches, provides the best aecomodathms. The O. A M. Is the only line rnnr as ine car of any description betvrcc, NATI and BT. LOUIS. . For reiiabie Information as to rai ; ; tickets, time,etc., apply In person o. : to E. U, BosD.cs Ticket A|rt. O A S! Waauiut - or.toC.O. JONES, District fttisui _ Ohio A Mississippi R’y, Vince mart JOHN F. BARNARD, W. B. SH Prcs'taud Sen. Man. tien. ’- CINCINNATI, O
