Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 13, Number 8, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 19 August 1882 — Page 4
THE MAIL
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
P. S. WESTFALL,
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
TERHE HAUTE, AUG. 19, 1882
PROHIBITION.
It is one of the curious things of history how certain great questions are .suddenly thrust into public notice at particular timed. There will be awhile when people complain that there are no issues before the country, and that the struggles of the parties is simply for the office*. Then all at once some question of great importance springs into notice, -and all along the line a hot tight is pre?lpitat*l. Yet it is not clear where the question come from or how it happened to come just when it did.
The prohibition ofintoxicating liquors is such a question now. All through the West and Northwest it is the overshadowing element in politics in one form or another. There is, it is true, -much difference in the form in which the question presents itself. The sentiment in Home States is very much more Advanced than it is in others. In Ohio, for instance, the Republicans only stand for a tax and Sunday closing law, which the Deriifwrats oppose. In Indiana the Democrats oppose prohibition and the Republicans only go so far as to say that they want the question submitted to a vole of lho people. In Missouri the sentiment in favor of prohibition is so strong that the Democrats refused, in their Slate ronvention, to take ground against it, though a great pressure was made to havo them do so. Kansas has prohibition and Iowa lias adopted a prohibitory amendment to theconstitution. Kentucky in 1874 adopted a local option law by virtue of which the sale of liquor is prohibited in more than four hundred communities iu the State. In Maine, where there has been prohibition for a long time, both parties are in favor of it. In other States the question.of prohibition, In a preliminary or advanced stage, in one of the issue* of the day.
What does all tills mean?" the St. Louis lobe-Democrat asks, and answers the question by saying "There Is a tremendous popular force at work here which bus been making rapii headway, and if matters go on as they are going now, the United States will be in time virtually a prohibition nation."
sex a ton iia mi isox. Quite a sensation occurred at the Ma\rlon county Republican convention, at \lndianapolls, last Saturday. Senator
Harrison was presiding as chairman, and luring some preliminary spoech-niak-\ig, a stranger arose in the gallery, and a graceful little speech, said that he
Illinois Republican, and that his
political brethren in that Stato desired to have the chairman of that convention for their presidential standard-bearer in 18*1. A sceno of wild onthuslasm followed. When at length the chairman was accorded a hearing, ho replied iu a humorous way that ho had not as yet heard the least humming of the presidential bee in his bonuot, and after havobserved the distressing etlects of the presidential fever on several pronation Indiana Democrats, he had nodesire to catch the dlseasn.
It may be true that Hon. Harrison has not heard the presidential beo buzzing alwMit his bonnet, but if ho has not, others have. There was a faiut sound of it at the Chicago convention in 1SS0, and, according to the Cincinnati Commercial, a boom came near selling in for him then. it he is much more prominently Iwfore the country now than he was then. His one He-wlon's work in tho United Slates Senate, brief as il has been, lias served to bring him into conspicuous notice tliroii«houf the country, and juanv others liesides the stranger from Illinois have INHMI sizing him for presidential timber. It require* little foresight to perceive that (ien. llanison is likely to be one of the foremost candidates lieforw the next national convention, as is Mr. McDonald before thoconvention of his party. Should it so happen that these gentlemen should coufrout each other on the presidential tickets of 18l, there would boa campaign of remarkable pyrotechnics in Indutua. ________________
THK New York Tribuuo is moved to commeud the courage and straightforward urns of the Indimta Republicans on the bothersome liquor question. It says: "The temperance question came up. and the Democrats, as nsnal. had played with it as a «»jt of demagogues and tricksters. There were the liquor dealers I* pleased and the temperHiicd Democrats to be placated, aud the Deuwratic Con ventien, a«usual, tried to satisfy both. Of course it failed, and earnest general contempt i»u1es. On Wednesday the Republicans were called upon to meet tie s.-»mequ»vj«ttnn. Without hesitation or a liissenttTig voice they resolved to have the question submitted to the }eopie at spcoia! election, and to I sbid« by and enforce the result of their decision."
That is the way the situation look* to *eofde outside of Indiana, and white general disposition to admire •-'flitforward dealing is remains to be will bs tin ed •m jr.
the ,at for
THK unveiling of the statue of great Irish agitator, Daniel O'Connell Dublin on Tuesday, was the occasion an immense display of Irish enthi asm, the crowd being estimated to number 100,000. But even this immense course of people was not equal to O' Connell's eloquence somet drew together to listen to his powerful arraignments of English oppression sn misrule. One of these crowds numbered it is said, a quarter of a million of pie. Never did appeals fire the heart Irish patriotism like those which r~ from the lips of Daniel O'Connell. was the idolized leader, and his fiery el quence gave hope to many of his lowers that he would head an revolution to free his country from English yoke. But in this they disappointed. When the government forbade the holding of one of his meetings, gaud the crisis was rea O'Connell addressed a letter to his pie advising them to obey the authorities and the meeting was not held. But bis action caused many of his followers to lose faith in him, especially among the vounger men, and he never afterward had the same influence which be wielded before.
peo of
came He ofol-
armed the were ment great
reached, peo-
Mas. LATHKoi*, adaugbter of Nathaniel Hawthorne, denies in a vigorous letter that a novel entitled "I)r. Grimshaw's Secret," has been found among the papers of her father, as has beeu announced. She says that a fragmentary sketch, vaguely introducing some of the features assigned to the promised publication, constitutes the only foundation for the rumor. It does not indeed appear very credible that Hawthorne should have written an entire t.nd complete novel without his wife or any other member of his family knowing anything of it. The explanation was Hawthorne's hand writing was so bad as to be almost undecipherable, and that the manuscript thus escaped discovery as to its real nature. But this is also denied by bis daughter who eays his writing was quite legible.
IT is thought that William Wallace, of Indianapolis, will be selected for the chairmanship of the Republican State Central Committee. Mr. Wallace is a lawyer by profession, and is a brother of Hon. Lew Wallaee, our present Minister to Turkey. He is a man of very solid character and stainless integrity, and is iu every way worthy to be pitted against Hon. Jos. E. McDonald, who has been placed at the head of tho Democratic committee. The selection of such men to manage the party machinery, oil either side, ought to mean that the coming campaign is to be conductod on honorable and manly principles. The people will certainly hope that this promise may be fulfilled.
THK crops are short In England this year. Tho reports from the New England States aro bad also, the Summer there having been protty much a duplicate of ours of last year. On the other hand, generally throughout the West tho crops have been tine, and will furnish an abundant surplus for the people of less fortunate districts. The farmers of the West will also bo assured good prices for their products, and, taking all togother, they have groat cause for thaukfulnes*.
FISH culture is making some progress in the State. In Kosciusko county one gentleman has a pond well stocked with carp. Some of the fish are two and a half years old, and weigh from three to four pounds each. Another one has a pond covering nearly an aero which is stocked with branch trout procured from Scth Green's hatching house. Other citizens of that county are also preparing to establish ponds of a similar kind. The mutter should and no doubt eventually will le taken in hand very generally throughout the State.
THK Washington clerks from Virginia tiud themselves mulcted to the extent of seven per cent, going to "my dear Hubbell," and five to Senator Hahone, for the Virginia campaign. On a salary of $900 this makes a total assessment of
The country will ba glad when a better system jof carrying ou the political machinery than this forcible tithing of government employes is discovered and adopted. It certainly is not the right thing and ought to be abolished.
JJL
1
A STATU prohibition camp-meeting will begin at Bloomlngton, III., Aug. 28, to continue one week. Among those expected to be pr&sent are Miss Frances Willard, of Chicago United States Senator James Wilson, and Mrs. Ross, of Iowa Helper, the South Carolina orator and writer the Hon, D. H. Harts, of liOgati county, the prohibition candidate for Congress, snd others. Mrs. Rufwrfonl B. IUycs has been invited to be present.
THKRK will breaking away from party lines on both sides in the approaching State campaign. Hon. John R. East, of Bloomington. and Dr. T. W. F. Ciarrish, of Seymour, submission Democrats have repudiated the platform of their party, and will work for the success of the Republican cause. How far the defection will extend in each party will N? an interesting subject for study after the election in November.
IT
would have grieved Uuite^u tobave known how quickly his natue has disappeared from the newspapers. Not two months since his execution, and his name is seldom seen in public prints or beard in conversation.
THKRK Is to be a national convention of prohibitionLsts in Chicago, on the 22d, 23d and 34lb of August, It is exppeted that nearly every State in the
mm
TERKE HAUTE SATuAT EY'-figTING- MAIL
||AFTER comparing views together, the Western distillers, at their meeting in Chicago, resolved that they were in favor of enforcing the Sunday laws, asking no special privileges for their business, and also that, while opposed to prohibition, on the ground that it is not so efficient as a good license law, they were opposed to arraying themselves against either of the great political parties, and favored leaving each member at liberty to cast his ballot according to the dictates of his own conscience. All th«s has a very different sound from the enunciation of the anti-prohibition league of Indiana, made on last Monday in this city. As to whidi of the two platforms of the liquor men is most deserving of the approval of the people, the latter will have an opportunity to express themselves at the ballot-box.
THE views taken by prominent liquor men respecting the prohibition movement differ considerably.
At
a meeting
of distillers held in Cincinnati the other day, Henry B. Millor,of Springfield, 111,, sail he was not going to change his politics on account of any temperance legislation. The reason he gave was as follows "If we array the liquor interest against the Republican party then the Republican part can say to us when we as* anything of them We are under
110
obliga
tion to you.' If I keep to my party, then I can go to it and use my in tluence against temperance and prohibitory legislation, butifl leave it because I don't like the attitude of the party on the question,then the party can say: 'You left us, and now we don't care for you g» to the Democrats.'
Mr. Miller was discussing the question simply from a business standpoint, and it must be confessed there is some force in bis way of presenting the matter.
COMMENTING on the profits realized in Colorado by tho companies engaged in buying, selling, and raising cattle, the Denver Tribune predicts that the stockraising business will, in a few years, be in the bands of large corporations, which will secure excessive ranges, and control the price of beet. Tho Tribune says: "A fair estimate of the cost of raising a beef in this State would be about $8, and sold for $40 shows a very pretty profit in four years." This monopolizing of all kinds ol business bv great, moneyed corporations is an evil of already monstrous and continually increasing proportions, and one of these days, "we, the people," will take it by the throat and choke it to death. It is one of the coming lights of the near future. ___________
IT costs thecity of Middletown, Conn., in legal and official fees, $36 to seize half a pint of illicit whisky, and more to destroy it as required by law. The local press wants' to know what chance the town will have of escaping bankruptcy, should it become necessary to confiscate a few barrels of liquor.—Ohio Press.
Nearly two years ago, in Missouri, a man drank half a pint of liquor, and got it out of tho way. Then, when raving drunk, he outraged a girl so that her life was despairod of, and his crime, committed while under the influence of half a pint of liquor, cost tho taxpayers of the county where he resided, over $7,000 total. Better have paid $42 for the destruction of that half pint of whisky, than to pay $7,000 in atonement for its effects. ____________
THE inquiries of "A Reader" aire thus answered in the New York Graphic: "To prevent yourself from walking in your sleep, padlock your ankle to the bedpost and throw the key over into the corner. You can easily drag the bed to the corner and secure the key, when you awake, though you cannot do so while you are asleep. As to the habit of biting your elbows, which you have con traded, nothing but time and patient endeavor can overcome it.
An USE OFTilETERM PROFESSOR. Hawkeye. A man swims further than any otfier man—professor a man cuts corns and cures bunions for a living—professor: he waltzes three hours without resting —professor plays the fiddle and imparts to others the diabolical art —professor walks a slack rope stretched across the street—professor goes without eating twenty days—professor sings in the choir—professor teaches a brass band—professor cures warts— professor plays billiards for a living--
forms
irofessor: trains dogs—professor: persome clever tricks of sleight of hand—professor does anything in the world except teach, and Knows less of books and schools than he does of Heaven—professor.
STAB RING HIS COAT COLLAR. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Some years ago a story came from Paris that a criminal condemned tt death had been executed in a novel way and without blood letting. The culprit was blindfolded and laid upon a marble slab after being informed that he was to be bled to death. A needle was used with which to prick his arm, and as the point touched him drops of warm water were sprinkled so that they ran down his side, and to the condemned it appeared that he was bleeding to death, in a little while the experiment proved successful, snd the man expired, such was the force of imagination. A case somewhat resembling this was brought to the notice of police officer Jones the other day. As he passed the Vandalia building, tie saw a man lyiug ou bis back in the entrance. The stringer's hands were crossed upon bis breast, and his lees were close together. As Jones afterward said,"Ho looked every inch a corpse." The face was bloodless. The eyas were closed as though in death. The handle or a jackknife protruded from a point between the collar and the jugular rein. The blade was hidden. Jones jumped to the conclusion of suicide. He took hold of the knlfls and drew it out of its resting place. The Made was unsullied. Being arou~M, •be man said be had attempted said 1 Instead of wounding him-Mjf, he merely stabbed the collar of his coat. Then befell that be was dying. Visions of father, mother, and home passed through his mind, be said, only for a moment, and then be became uneonadou*. He was perhaps just entering the spirit land when Jones called him b&k.
SAYINGS AND DOINGS.
Idleness is worse than hard work to those who are unaccustomed to it. A Pittsburg firm is turning out glass slabs for use on furniture, in lieu of marble.
A druggist at Elkhart killed the rector's little child by putting up morphine for quinine.
The New York Clipper mourns because Eve did not tell the serpent "Not this Eve, some other Eve."
An Iowa paper says that if beer is not intoxicating there is no use drinking it. One might as well waste time drinking water.
A cake is to be publicly presented at Lancaster, Pa.,
to
the fisherman or hunt
er who tells the most original and picturesque lie. Lucy Hooper says that a Frenchman delights to pound a horse, caress a dog, and be polite to females. On the whole she prefers Americans.
The Boston Post want some genius to invent a coat-tail flirtation. Just watch a tramp getting away from a dog, and you'll see something very like one. "A reputashun," says Josh Billings, "once broken may possibly be repaired, but the world will alwus keep tbeir eyes on the spot where the krack was."
The Supreme Court of Iowa rules that a police officer is guilty of manslaughter i-f he strikes a prisoner a fatal blow with a club, to defeat an attempt to escape, unless the officer has reason to believe that he is in danger of great bodily barm or loss of life.
A brakeman on tho Cincinnati Southern railway refused to allow the colored wife of a clergymen to ride in the ladies' car. They rede on another line, but sued the objecting company and were offered §1,000 as an apology. The apology was accepted.
The editor of the Norfolk, Va., Landmark, who has responded to several calls to the field of honor, advocates the passage of au act of the assembly, commanding each sheriff to conduct each duel at short range, and k#ep it up until a latal ending is secured.
Mayor Harrison recommends that the streets of Chicago be narrowed. He urges that this would not only be a saving in the cost of paving, but also in the lessened cost cf keeping the streets in repair and cloaning them. This is certainly an original argument in behalf of narrow roadways.
Mention is made ofjtho fact that a colored man died Monday in Wilkesbarre on whose life at onetime death-rattle insurance companies had $200,000. but he out-lived them all. In Harrisburg yet lives an ancient colored man on whose life there was $110,000. and bo can get around very lively yet.
rTlie spiritualists have already begun to make Longfellow talk tho awfulest grammar and the most unspeakably infamous doggerel thai ever made a live man shudder. Being dead wo suppose be can stand it, but it does seem as though his heirs, executors, administrators and assigns ought to black up and hang some of the mediums.
The business of New York barber shops is greatly interfered with by peripatetic barbers, who get a run of regular customers and visit their houses at specified times, shaving and combing them there at so much per month. Besides being a convenience, it tickles the vanity of the customers, who, in a private barber, imagine that they keep a valet.
DRESS FASHIONS FOR NEXT A Clara Bell's Letter.
It is said that next fall there will be a return to dresses made of only one material that combination costumes arc to he abandoned. The tendency has been in that direction for several seasons. That is to say, there have been vigorous efforts on the part of those who used to create fashions to bring about the wearing of such costumes, but up to this lime there has been only a moderate amount of success attending the revival of onematerial suits. Of course, such dresses will always lie worn to a greater or less extent, no matter how great the popularity of the composite costumes. Traveling dresses, fatigue, busiuess and utility suits should always be of a single kind of stuff. It Is predicted, too, that the wearing of embroidery is only just begun. Next fall and winter will be emphatically embroiderev seasons. In adaition to real hand embroidery, merchants say that heavy importations will be made of machine-embroidered goods, and of brocaded stuffs that resemble embroidery in the most marvelous manner. It need not be feared however, that plain dresses will not be wearable next fall. Rich plain stuffs never go entirely out of vogue. To get back againt to the hotel, I saw some pretty moniTng-gowns, made in the latest fancy of full skirts, shirred, tucked, puffed, embroidered, or lace-trim mod. A ribbon-belt confined the fullness in frout at the waist line, but the demi-trained back usually fell loosely in walteau folds from the shoulder to'the tucked or ruffled bottom of the skirt. Natty shirred and ribbon-trim-med pockets and sleeves finished such gowns. ___________
MA UDE GRANGER. I/ai*vil!e Argw.
There has been so much talk about Miss Maude Granger recently that the following gossip concerning ner may be of interest: She is believed to have been twice a wife. Her first husband is said to have been a young boatman of Providence, R. I. |*Her second was Alfred Follin, a son of Alfred Follin, who acted as business manager for Lola Monte* daring ber American tour, and who committed suicide during a voyage to tbf Sandwich Islands. Follin, Jr.. was 1 educated for commercial life. He wa# 1 attached to the office of the publisher,
Frank Leslie, who was his uncle by marriage, and became well known as secro1 tary ©f the New York Commission at\ the Centennial Exhibition. The roarriage of Miss Granger and Mr. Follin was an unhappy one, and they are iivirg af&rt.
A LADY WITH SCRUPLES.
MATRIMONY AS DESTRUCTIVE OF ALL, LOVE.
New York Letter.
Entering a distinguished lawyer's suit of offices down town the other'day, I stepped aside at the vision of a most graceful woman of queeuly carriage and radiant beauty, dressed iu elegant simplicity, who swept by diffusing the odor of Parma violets. The sight of such a fair creature, without the semblanceof a litigious look, or weeds of a widow, or heiress just come into an estate, or the dejeption or indifference of a party to a divorce suit, was so unexpected among the matter-of-fact surroundings of a lawyer's office tkat I carried a look of inquiry with tne into the private office of the bead of the firm. "1 see you are impressed," he said, looking up froui his desk, "isn't she a beauty? She is a figure in the most extraordinary case I ever knew. Au Euglish woman of gentle birth, and large fortune, with all the accomplishments that come with refined education and extended travel, a musiciau of classical taste, and a linguist versed in all polite tongues, she is a resolute disciple of fresn love, and at a sacrifice of everything she refuses to allow her paramour, who is my ciieut, to arrange for a divorce with bis first Avife to marry. She says that if she felt the yoke of matrimony about ber neck she would hate her husband, and would never live with him, and if her lover treats their present relations in any other way than a holy union, or maSes them serve as a ground for his first wife to secure a divorce, she will instantly leave him and return to England. My client is the son of a millionaire, is'about twentyseven years old, a handsome, erratic fellow with a dash of genius. When he was a boy of nineteen be was forced intoa marriage with a daughter of a distinguished author and the granddaughof a celebrated jurist, and, hoping to hide her from disgrace, he yielded to the demands of her parents, and was married to her by a Justice of the Peace. He was then a student iu Harvard College. He refused to live with his wife or to see ber again, and, as no event followed to make the disclosure of their marriage necessary, it was kept a secret, and lie went to Europe. He met this beauty there, aud a most romantic attachment sprang up between them. They seemed to love each other with an ideal affection. She was ripely educated, in the full bloom of womanhood, and was ready to devote her life to this but, like George Eliott, she did not believe in marriage,and when she consented to become nis companion through life it was with the distinct understanding that he should never give her a penny, but that she should support herself. She was contented to become a wife to him, or to take his name. She, moreover, objected to passing as bis wife, and while anxious to follow him to any part of the world, she wishes to pay her own expenses, bear her own name, and be wholly independent. Strange to say, her mother, a superior woman, approved to the letter everything she said and did. The young couple began to live as husband and wife on these terms, and now they have a charming little child. They came to this country on the man's businoss.and have a country seat near the city. They occupy different apartments in tho house, and'the servants do not know of their relations, or that the young man is the child's father. Since their return to this country the young man has been served with a complaint iu a limited divorce suit. He is restive under the situation, and is anxious to get rid of his first wife, so as to legitimatize his child by marriage, but his companion is as firm as Gibraltar. Sho says if her lover degrades her by having their relations judicially treated as infidelity to tho first wife she will leave him. Aloreover, if he gives his other wife occasion to secure an absolute divorce she will leave him, and tluit if be gets bis liberty to marry her she will not marry him. If the young man is forced to remain in this dilemma I fear he may lose reason and do harm to himself, for be has a gentleman's feelings of duty and honor toward his child, and does not share his wifo's singular notions about matrimony. 'I know,' she said to me just now,'that I would hate a man who put the yoke of marriage about my neck. I will not bear the burden for any man.' Sho argues most eloquently against marriage—so much in George" Eliot's strain that I can not help associating the two women, and I think she is as pure-minded as any woman I ever met. The case is on the calendar,and I don't know how lam going to settle it.
EATING 1)EA TIL George Francis Train.
"How can poople live who eat dealli Is not meat, fish, game eggs, butter, milk dead Entailed diseases of all living things in creation, added to entailed corruption of mankind, kills off humanity at an average of thirty-three years. Corn, oats, wheat, barley, 3,000 years old, taken from Egyptian mummy in Thebes catacomb will sprout to-day and produce life to man. But will dead pig? calf? sheep? oyster? egg? milk? fish sprout if planted? Death in this ease only produces death.
POWDER a
Absolutely Pure*
Tbtr powder never varie*. A marvel of purity, utrength ami whoteMmenm. Mort economical than Hie ordinary kinds,JUM
cannot be soW in competition with tbe mui
Corsets and Shoulder Braces.
MRS.
DOUGHERTY invites ttoe ladles deaiiltift an eJegant tltttni{COi*et. ni»de Iu .:.y eoSor.or any wn* t*» aoa is. .• your ioeaina*, Vfi #tr*«
SUMMER GOODS
are still in demand.
FALL GOODS
are already called for.
And as usual, we have undeniably the largest stock of either.
In our Silk stock,
Black Silks, Brocades and Velvets
Are in demand,
The supply is very fine aud prices are verv low.
Cashmeres, Shoodahs, Mohairs
In £oloringi frr Fall are oll iro at lo\\\ prieesat present than will be asked later.
WOOLENS.
Fancy Basket and Opera Flannels, Welsh and Saxon in light and medium weights 0-4 Sacking and French Flannels for Suits.
In Notion Stock»
We show New Buttons, Laces, Hosiery, Gloves aud Gimps, Handkerchiefs^ Neckwear,
Hoop Skirts
—and—
Bustles.
H0BERG, ROOT & CO.
Professional Cards.
R. A. H. DEPUY.
117 north Sixth Street, TEltltB HAUTE. EYK AND EAU A SPECIALTY. ,,mTnq 0 to 12 A. HOURS
2 to 6 Vt M.M.
R. ANGELINE L. WILSON
Offers her norvicew
To the Luilles and Children of Torre Haute.
Office and Residence—231 south Seventh Street. Office hours from 1 to 3 p. in.
1. KICUAKDHON. K. W. VAH VAIJ5AH RICHAKDSON & VAN VALZAH
DENTISTS.
OKFICE—Southwest corner Fifth and Main streets, over National State Bank (entrance on Fifth struct, (.'omniunlorttion by Telephone.
BAYLKSS W. 1IANNA WM. II. SI'KNCKK, (i/.l. of 1 lUlloIri) ANNA & Si'ENC'ii li,
ATTOItKLYM AT I,IM. OFFICE: Southwest corner of Third and Ohio Htreels up stall's, Tcrre Haute, Jnd.
Will practice in all Die court* of IIIIM and adjoining counties, and In the federal eourts of Indiana and Illinois. Will give Htrlet attention to collections, examination of lltiea and settlement of estate?.
O. LINCOLN, DEST1NT Offlce, 19i 8 H'xlh, opposite P. O. Kxtrading and artificial teeth KpeciaUieA. AII work warranted. (dAw-tO
AL THOMAS, Optician and Watchmaker For the trade. No. 616 Malu atreet. *l*n of big utu with watch.
R. B. F. TOM LIN'S, liltpennarjr and Kale No. l% Ohio Street,
AT
TEKKE IIAIJTK, INDIANA. Will devote his entire attention to his specialties. Send for paper containing certlflcaies of cure*.
W. BALLEW,
DENTIST,
Office, 42314 over •id conrrrlla»«ry TEKKK liAUTK. IND
On bti :oundln offlce ni*hi aud day.
RGAGG,
mcAir.!t
in
ARTISTS' SUPPLIES.
PICTURES, FRAMED. MOULDINGS.
Picture Framft* Made to Order.
McKecn'* Block, No. 640 Main «treot botweeo 6U and 7th.
HOME INSTITUTION.
THK
Indiana Accident Association
Injure*against all kind* of aocidenU. Weekly Indemnity from 110 to *25. Insumooe In ca*e of death, from 11,000 to 12.300.
All lotftcM promptly and fairly adjuated and
PTb«association
pay* the amount utipaia-
ted in their contrast, and not. like other .nlc*i, the amount of the injured perV, mges. BUKTIN*. I'rerideot.
C. E. FULLER, Vice I'renidenl. ii. F. HAVENS. Secretary. L. B.MARTI5.Treftmrer.
C. liEHSMEYER, Med. D'r.
