Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 24, Number 10, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 2 September 1893 — Page 7

BRAVE BOYS IN BLUE.

|$!LL0HAVE A GRAND JUDILEE AT, IN DIANAPOLIS. ••lilt

The Tttent^HMvcnth Katlonitl Encampmerit vf the Grand Army—A Week of Beunion* and Parade* Open* Sept. 4—Indiana Heroes.

Westward the stars of everything take their way In 1308, and that is the principal reason why the bid of a western city captared the prise of the annual encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic. Leaving pat of account Washington, which la considered central and pnt in a special claim in 1892, the veterans hare pitched their reunion tenia west of the Ohio river eight times within one decade and only twice east of it, this notwithstanding the fact that one-half the volunteers, hailed "3*4

1

0. WKIBSEirr, COMM AXDKK IN CHIEF OF THE 0. A. B. from states east of the Ohio and that over 'three-eighths of the membership of the Grand Army IteH hi this territory. But even if it were deemed time to call a halt on western monopoly the year of the Columbian exposition wiiM not a good one to begin OM. The World's fair magnet would have proved stronger than logic or sentiment.

Every one of the faithful is supposed to be booked for Chicago, and the possessor of the fair would carry off the honor of having a great reunion anyway. In choosing a camp located with reference to the star attraction of the season, so near and yet so ^far, the national council of administration achieved a bit of masterly strategy. The encampment will stand on its own legs at

Indianapolis, yet draw Chicago pilgrims to its bivouacs by the tens of thousands. But the Hoosier capital has other olaims to the honor of an encampment than the mere fact of being the nearest central city to Chicago no£ recently favored. It is the chief city of a state that sent nearly 200,000 meu to tho war, a quota equal to 67,4 per cent of her military population. But one state beat that record—Kansas with her 69 per cent, Indiana polls was the largest loyal city near the border ami was only about 100 miles from the northern limits of the bloody fighting ground of the west, which ran through northern Kentucky. Troops movfrom tho north and east to the seat of war in the west made their last halt at Indianapolis before crossing the hostile ^ground. On tho return the wounded, the furloughed and the columns transferred to eastern battlefields found at Indianapolis a welcome that for hospitality and friend 'tness reminded them ofnome. Soldiers of he cast remember the generous sympathy

WUllamsport on tho great Northern /entral route and of Philadelphia on the [New York and Washington line. In the west Indianapolis gave without stint and bever grew weary while the tramp, tramp, Jitjimp, of marching battalions echoed &-sough the streets.

Many crack regiments of the state were ^rrned nt Indianapolis and sent to-distant lea, where they vied with the flower of $io nation iu gallant deeds of arms. The ilty waa surrounded with camps, the life of iverything was military, and even the noise Ad bustle, tho pomp and circumstance, atandlag tho grand reunion of 100,000 com* hides in 1808 will be only a repetition of lie daily sights and sounds of the four 'jars of war in 1861-5. The mammoth jWracks for 33,000 comrades, tho. school* loms and halls turned into bivouacs, tho irate homes opened to old neighbors and ilitlng friends and acquaintances, will be thing new in Indianapolis, except that ow they herald a jubilee in the days of .jaee, whereas then they marked a pause fi the inexorable march of war. But there i|ll be broken, gap tug ranks in the Grand Ifmy line, whose tale Is told in part jfty monument inscribed to the sons of Htdlana who fell in- battle. Twenty-six fiousand the martyrs numbered from In* yuft alone, and the aubscriptiona to the Btnd from all classes and from all sections TOpregatlng 8350,000 showed that appreciate of the heroes Is not dead. To have the test state soldier** monument in the coun-

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GOUXKRS AVT JUULOR5' MOmftfXHT AT rrotAXAPOLm. if- an ambition to be exp«&fd in people I have never *h«*i the old war enthusi i, and tho 965 feet of *hali and statue ,t tower so grandly above Monument ijp will be hani to b#atv Rich**- state* ht do it If had tlw? spirit of Indiana of their million* poorer em* would bops be gl«d to Sf Uwy had the cash. ho Indian*, boys ware noted fighters on £h« great battlefield*. Hteywmapk& a$«etm«B» of pfeysl -1 and •stjoogli ..«£ Mnsr--v f*st and termed tf stalwssrt Hoe*- !9,« ihs fkU wntrtny6 i-'" aeitett, killed on tht 2«id, iS per«**»t rf total aarollmeftt*fatar-Hrd*

N'UratMmth v- 5 i&6 mmmm,

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rolls, and 199 of them were killed. The Nineteenth fonghtin all the battles of the famous "Iron Brigade of the West," in the First and fifth corps of the Army of the Potomac. The "Iron Brigade" scored a death roil in battle higher in proportion to Its numbers than any brigade in the Union army. The Twenty-seventh Indiana, belonging to Williams' division of the Twelfth corps, lost 167 men killed on the field, in its numerous battles, and its total enrollment was but 1,101. Two of the noted fighting brigades of the Army of the Cumberland included Indianians in their columns. Steedman's brigade of Sheridan's division had the Twenty-second Indiana, and ita list of 15S killed was the second highest in the command. Willich's brigade of Wood's division had the Thirty-second Indiana. Tha Thirty-second lost 171 killed in action, and that, with one exception, waa the highest in the brigade.

Six Hoosler regiments besides those already named were distinguished for the terrible losses incurred in battle. Their killed was more than 10 percent of the number enrolled, and the fighting ranks never include all the men on paper. The following are the six regiments which make np the list of 10 crack organizations that won renown for the state: The Sixth, belonging to Wood's division, Fourth corps, Army of the Cumberland total enrollment, 1,001 kilfed, 125 percentage, 114. The Fourteenth Indiana, French's division, Second corps, Army of the Potomac number on the rolls, 1,134 killed, ISO percentage, 18.2. Twentieth regiment of Birney's division, Third corps, Army of the Potomac men borne on the rolls, 1,403 killed, 201 percentage, 14.3. Stanley division. Fourth corps, Army of the Cumberland, was honored with two regiments in the gallant phalanx—the Thirtieth, of 1,196 braves, which lost 187 killed in battle, 12.1 per cent of its enrollment and the Thirty-sixth, which numbered 1,118 men and lost 113 of them, or 10.1 per cent killed on the field. The Fortieth Indiana lost in killed precisely 10 percent of the number enrolled.* It served in Sheridan's division of Fourth corps, Army of the Cumberland, and mustered 1,478 men. Ita killed numbered 148.

It is like measuring the blood of heroes by mathematical rules to dwell upon these calculations, but it is a good thing to quote hard facta sometimes. In this case it leads up to the very natural queries: Where were these losses incurred? In what glorious battles, in what desperate charges, were the ranks of the stalwart Indianians tithed a of war? uga with McCook and Rossean, and at Mission Ridge and on the bloody march to Atlanta with Htizen and Wood, the dead of the Sixth regiment foil in scores. The Fourteenth was at Antietam along the "Bloody Lane" and at Marye's Heights with French and Kimball. It was at Chanoellorstflle with Carrol and Gibbon and with them at Gettysburg, going to the rescue of Rickett'a battery on Cemetery Hill when the "Louisiana tigers" were amcng the guns and limbers, bayoneting drivers and cannoneers. It was with them at the Wilderness and Spottsylvania, led by the gallant Colonel John Coons, who fell in the "Bloody Angle." Colonel Coons spurred his horn close to the breastworks and calmly emptied his revolver into the ranks of Confederates swarming on the other side,

tenth and upward to appease the god of At Shiloh, Stone River and Chlckamat

GENERAL LKW WALLACE.

Tho Ninet^nth of the "Iron Brigfido" was everywhere where there was desperate fighting after it joined the Army of the Potomac. It lost Major Isaao M. May and 62 men killed at Manassas, Lieutenant Colonel A. O. Baohman and 41 men killed on the field at Antietam, 41 men in Reynolds' battle at Gettysburg, and at the Wilderness Colonel Samuel J. Williams and 81 men killed.

The Twentieth lost 80 killed in front of Riohmond in 1632, nine killed at Manassas, where its first colonel, William L. Brown, met the coveted fate of the true soldier. At Gettysburg Colonel John Wheeler and 45 men were sacrificed, and in the Wilderness and Petersburg campaign the regiment lost 90 men killed and tor the third time waa robbed of its colonel by a pitiless bullet. Colonel Meikel was killed at Potereburg.

The* Twcnty-second left its first dead at Pea Ridge, Chaplin Hills (PerryvUle) olaimed tho next dole, and a heavy one it was, for 57 meu went down to rise no more, led in death, as in life, by the gallant Colonel Keith, who was killed as he cheered on the line with his waving sword.

Tha Twenty-aeventh left 81 dead at Cedar Mountain, 41 at Antietam, 83'at Chanceilotaville and 40 at Gettysburg. In those four battles, all fought within the space of months, the regiment lost 80S killed and wounded and only 11 missing.

The Thirtieth met ita baptism of fire at Shiloh on tht second day and lost its colonel, Slon S. Base, with 26 men. At Stone River 40 gallant follows paid the penalty of battle csounwa, and again at Chick&m&uga and lofty Kenesaw other fearless ones creased to the eternal bivouac. The dead of the Thirty-sixth lie between Bowlett's Station, Ry., in 1861 and Atlanta in 18&£ Shiloh haaSO, StoneRtasr 2S, Chickamauga Hand tta Atlanta battles 42. Thel^ tieth kft 80 heroes upon U» slopes of ^Mission Ridge and 8? tmder the rocky walls of Kenesaw. A slmpl& toochof imagination mokes those figures eloquent.

The veterans of all the armias when they stand in Manument efade be6x« tha gxand but slteut memorial set up by geninsand art U* glorify the 86,000btacom whose graves stretch front the Atlantic shore* to the banks of the Miss^ssip^ will k» beyond thegHtt^ngpsgeautryof today and bearfc«o Mother aoonds than the of the hour. Th«sy rill remember hw IadlAni*a» stood in the uncoiiqasarable mnks at Shiloh, how they fftcssi thegusaat P«ttyrttleaod (bught undisma^od at Stoae Rim. They will Wiethe ag^n the smoke of Mis* lien RWife y,nd drfckacaaaga*

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burg «1(N* Which t!*«

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ol. tlMJ^e who flowed ttw£r

lace at Donelson, Shiloh and Monbcacyv with Jeff C. Davis from Donelson to Atlanta by the sea with Kimball at Kern* town, Antietam and Fredericksburg? with Meredith at Gettysburg with Wagner at Stone River, Chickamanga, Atlanta with Hovey, J. J. Reynolds, Graft and Foster with Colgrove, Harrison, Hancall and Harrow with Coburn, Wilder, Benton and Scribner with Grose, Hanson, Veatch and Cameron in ail the battles of the coast and the gulf, in Virginia, tha Carolines, Tennessee and Georgia, wherever .heroes led heroes on the fire swept field of battle. Many of these are living and will be at Indianapolis to welcome their old followers.

Another feature of the encampment that will recall old days mil be the demonstration by Indiana veterans. The survivors of 134 war regiments will re-form the old ranks and unfurl the tattered battleflags they carried in the field and pass in review before Commander in Chief Weissert and an array of distinguished guests. The survivors average about 100 to each regiment, and that means a column of 15,000 old soldiers touching elbows as they did in the war. After the parade the regiments will hold reunion campfires and bring to life the scenes of auld lang syne with hearty toast and song.

Reunions are more than half the life of all old soldier meetings. As the men grow older they grow mellow and sentimental The pictures of childhood are effaced, the idols of youth are broken, but those of young manhood remain. To most old soldiers the war was the biggest thing in their lives, and with them talking over war days means something. History keeps the subject alive and warms their pulses with the old fire. They would risk life today jnst to shake hands with comrades who risked life with them in some battle charge that the poets and orators of today are forever touching up in new colors. The Indianapo

TOT KEARSARGE WAHSHXP.

lis committee, which is not strictly a vet eran body, but an offshoot from the Commercial club, hit the thing exactly when they laid out an extensive programme of reunions. Two days and nights out of four are wholly given up to formal gatherings of old comrades having some tie closer than the broad one of fraternity. The informal reunions will go on all the week and reach over/for another week at Chicago.

If nothing occurs to mar the occasion, the twenty-seventh encampment is oertain to be the grandest of the series. Many causes are contributing to the result, among them the untiring energy and marvelous capacity of the Indianapolis managers, the enthusi-, asm of the western veterans, particularly those of Indiana and the contiguous belt of states, Ohio on the east and Illinois, Iowa, Missouri and Kansas on the west, and the associated attraction at the World's fair. The west is the land of big things and Is not behind in the size of its Grand Army following The fraternity originated in the west, and the west started out in the lead' in point of influence and has kept its end more than level. At the first encampment in Indianapolis in 1866 t£e west paturny hod a majority of the delegates, but al tpe second encampment in Philadelphia it also had the lead. Indiana, Illinois and Ohio alone sent Ane-balf the delegates. A western veteran. General John A. Logan of Illinois, was commander in chief and held the office two terms.

The western ideas of the nature of the new order prevailed in that encampment and were stamped upon the rules and the ritual to remain until this day. The west iKslieved that s-~.ecy and fraternity should be fundamental principles. To these has been added the tue of charity, and the two sections live up to it, each in its own way. Counting dollars, theeast might come out ahead in a competitive showing,but that means that the older communities have more resources and more distress. The west has none very poor and no overplus to make free with. Yet comrades never come to grief without finding oat^that "fraternity means something" in the way of ready help. It also means something in public life, in business relations and in social alliances. The veteran brotherhood in the west is almost another Masonic order, and the grand rally at Indianapolis will give afresh boom to its popularity and influence. G. K. LENOX.

The moat popular Indiana soldiers surviving today are Generals Harrison and Lew Wallace. Harrison's career in the army was wrought out on afield comparatively obscure until his elevation in public life carried his record up with him. Lew Wallace put aside the sword for tha pen, but it was a brilliant sword, and a mightier pea replaced it. Wallace was unkindly dealt With by fortune, yet he bears no grudge against the army. His home is near Indianapolis, and he is aa active member of the encampment committee. The gallant fight made by Wallaoa at Monocacy Junction, Md., in 1864 helped to save Washingten from capture by Early's raiders, and it isa mooted question whether it did not turn the tide in favor of the Union. Early's troops were delayed «day and were roughly handled. They arrived in front of Washington limp and sore, and bafote they were ready to attack re-mforoementa had marched into the works surrounding the capital, and Early abandoned theenterprise.

Kansas City will invite the comrades to eaUarooftdin 18M. Missouri had the encampment aeven years before that dote, and there is tack In odd number*. Here is the list since the St. Louis encampmant of 1887: Odium bus, O., 1888 Milwaukee, 1889 Boston, 1880 Detroit, 1891 Washington, 1N& Indianapolis, 180&

The managera of the encampment lmild wiaely ln setting np a fall sized modal of the Camoosold cruiser Kearsarge to interest. army men. There is nothing like a fighting ship to oktclt the admiration of the earowri, and soldiers are not different Cram thfrgeneral ran in caring for the tbinns the] know lea8* aboutr Tbe K«u*arge is a dear old antiquated hulk, and if Uncle Sam won*t donate her entirely to mmmam purposes the next best thing at tlte*» w*r gatherings Is a '"counterfeit presentment*" The veteraa tars will be on baod in full force and will crcWft on full sail toeallghten the JjUKl!nbS)«r* on the mysteries of deck and reheat*e:tfce otHBttoi* with thaAIabttiaa.

Ijfee victor* to eucampment will be

trnsk* wtM be eseefedi t# .ftocommiodase cswtdthatputaic aa appe^ranoa, Mmkt w||l.b®»«ppli«d «tS3^£srfe*» by«a»w« tha 8M8B6R$tt* OdlSWM^Ik'

COAXING FOR INFORMATION.

B«portorIal Intensity CUIited to A fcagT® In Gathcrlng A reporter called at the home of one Cage to learn some facts regarding an accident that had happened that morning. He softly ascended the stone steps, pulled the doorbell lightly and did not forget to take off his bat when he stepped over the threshold. In a low voice Mad with a mild manner he ventured to ask if that was where Mr. Cage lived and if he had not been concerned in a yachting aeddent that morning. A correspondingly unpretentious affirmative reply was vouchsafed on the part of the genteel lady of29 who had presented herself at the door. "I do not know much about theaccident, only it was an awful thing. They were out boating, and I do declare I don't see how they ever escaped, and do you know""Well, would you mind calling Mr. Cage? Pd like to see him. I believe he was one of the principals, waa he not?" queried the reporter. "Ob, yes. I will call him."

neiir

She was gone several minutes before the sound of footsteps down the stairs announced the eomihg of some one. It was Mr. Cage, and Ike entered directly into the room where the newsgatherer sat, "Are you the man who wanted to see me? If so, I can tell yoa right now that you'll not get a bit of news regarding the aeddent from me, and you might as well hot ask a word about it. I am firmly set in that decision, and you need not'try on' any of your schemes for getting news. Us people have to suffer untold injustice at the hands of you newspaper men, and yon fellows get entirely'?-— "Everybody I have seen on the street today speaks of your undaunted bravery and coolheadedness in that time of great periy broke in the reporter, "and you oertainly deserve the most hearty congratulations, and I for one wish to congratulateyou as you most honestly deserve." "Yes, that waa a pretty hard pull I toade —•pretty tough, that—don't care about ever trying it over. Too much salt water forme. But, as I was saying, you reporters try to get hold of many things that are none of your business, and somebody has to suffer for it. No, I shall not give you one" "Now, Mr. Gilbert tells me that if it had not been for you some eight lives would have been lost right there. That I call an almost unprecedented record and"-— "You see, tha way of that was, when the boat heeled over on her lee rail I had to fairly fight those follows to keep them in their right senses. There wasn't really much danger just then, although there had been two people drowned right there only three weeks before. You remember where that was. It was just about midway between Crage's and the West Boston bridge —just above where the'old ironclad used to lie. We had just gone out for a little sail that morhing, and theire wasn't a boat on the river when that squall struck us. I don't know what we would have done if a boatkeeper hadn't come down to his float $nd seen us. That must have been about 5:80 o'clock. Still, as I was saying awhile ago, I'm not seeking notoriety, and you can't get anything about the accident out of me. No, sir not one thing." "No, no, of course not, if you do not want to give anything out. But I was just thinking how grateful those eight persons must be, since they must know that they owe their lives to you. And those eight names you just named over are the identical ones, are they? Why I am well acquainted with two of them. They don't live a great ways from me." "Yes, they are the identical ones, and I wouldn't be surprised it they did feel a little grateful like to me, for I tell you things looked like a close call there for a bit just before the cat rig came up. Wo had been over well on to 14 minutes. Suppose the papers ili be apt to get some inkling of the aeddent after awhile, but you can't get anything about it out of me now, for I'm not seeking notoriety. Perhaps they know something about it down at the station—don't know, though." "Yes would have been glad to have some notes regarding the affair directly from you, since you were the principal, but if you will not give out any Information thai that settles it. .Good morning, Mr. Cage."

And the reporter, closing the door softly, started off down thestone steps and around the neighboring corner.

And the mild mannered reporter with the low voice chuckled to himself, "Guess they're worth a column and a half. "-Boaton Herald. ,r

'"S A Suggestion.

^^The office boy was slow, very alow, to ceitch on tothe less agreeable tasks of his office, and he did not always have the floor swept as neatly aa it might have been or the furniture as carefully dusted. His employer was good uatured, however, aad tried to teach him by gentle means. The other morning ho came in, and the place was untidy. "Frank," he said to the boy aa he nodded at some papers under the desk, "when you aad such things as that on the flow, don't they suggest something to you f" "Yea, sir," replied Frank affably, "What, Frankf" •"That some careless person hae been around the desk," said Frank, and he got the bounce from the careless parson on the spot.—Detroit Free Press.

The Cliotco of Weapon*.

It was Paul de Cassagnac who wrote to Victor Noin "lam the offended party. I have the ohoicc of weapons. I choose the French grammar. You are dead."

The Carter Medlolne Co. Otia an lajaac* tloa Against Sabetltatlons. The Chemist end Druggist, London, Eng.

Iu the High Court of Justice, Chanoery Divlaion Royal Courts of Juatloe, Saturday, A«ag. 5th, 1883. Before Sir. Justico Roomer. The Garter Medicine Company v» Knight.

A PHABJtACEtrtlCA£» CBUHtWT at B«th, Bomeraetshire, England, named Joeeph Knight, has had an injunction made against him restraining him from aelling any "Little Liver Pills" not made by them* The evidence adduced, satisfied the Judge that In one case be had en jeavored to pasa off aa Carter's, pills he had bought from a London wholesale house.

DO YOU EAT PIE?

f?--iraQ,TUY—

PIE IH FIVE MINUTES."

Abdell'sEvaporal

to xmm* im&m won ,,, PURE, WHOLESOME, DELICIOUS itetter aad Cl»«*p«r than Green Firaita. AJSES: '^ywM^J3^aGcex3a^

BABY AND HIS CAT.

The Unwonted Sight Which Attracted An Eyes on a Crowded Street, ft*"The sidewalk was filled with hurrying people. Three peddlers stood on the curbone with shoelaces, another with candy, another with gold paint Neither looked as if he expected to sell anything. Nobody paid the slightest attention to them. A man without legs came stumping over the sidewalk. People merely hurried out of his way. A man passed, dressed in outlandish garments, advertising a patent medicine. Nobody looked twice at him. An old woman whose tangled gray hairs were blown in the wind shuffled feebly along, and nobody saw her. A pair of Chinese, an Italian woman dressed as for a fete, a negro nearly 7 feet in height, a Turk swaddled in turban and baggy trousers, a drunken woman, a man with locomotor ataxia—all passed within a few minutes, and nobody stopped oven for a moment to look at anybody else, except the beggars, and they were utterly disregarded.

Then appeared from somewhere, as if out of a hole in the ground, a child about 2 years old, ragged and smeared as to its hands with mud and as to its face with traces of bread r.nd molasses, besides plain dirt. Its hair was tousled, and its large blue eyes wtre fixed straight ahead with all that sweet nuconscious iess of childhood written of by poets Iu its hands it carried a gray striped cat. One little fist grabbed the looeo.akia rt. he nape the other grasped it firaiV «v\. ..Ind quarters. Each particular leg v, the cat stuck out straight and rigid. Eac'i claw showed ita shining curve. The cat did not appear to be uncomfortable, and the child was gloriously unconscious of everything but its own baby thoughts. The child was so young that it went unsteadily tottering down the middle of the sidewalk, with the cat held up in front of it like a drum major's staff.

There was not one hurrying wayfarerman or woman—who did not pause and laugh. A number stopped short and followed the child as it staggered along. By the time the baby had traveled half a block it had an escort bf 20 grown persons besides the swarm, of boys. The baby tottered along, its magnificent gravity undisturbed, and when a breathless, bareheaded woman came running t.nd snatched up the young explorer (still holding on bravely to the cat) each person in the crowd looked sheepish and hurried away.—New York Times.

A Choice of Terms.

"I'm sure we shall be on good terms," said the man who had just moved into the neighborhood to the corner grocer. "No doubt of it, sir. Especially," he added as an afterthought, "if the terms are cash."—Detroit Free Press.

After Breakfast.

To purify, vitalize and enrich the blood, and lve nerve, bodily and digestive strength, take food's Barsaparllla. Continue the medicine after every meal for a month or two and you will feel "like a new man." The merit of Hood's Barsaparllla is proven by Its thousands of wonderful cures. Why don't you try it?

Hood's Pills cure constipation. They are the best after-dinner pill and family cathartlo.

MIS. jBLilM HATOM.

HEART DISEASE 20 YEARS.

Dr. Mil— JMfool WMrt, XmI. DBAB Bias: For 90 years I waa troubled with

(ide and back taaat of the time & last I became dropsical. I was vary nervous and nearly worn out. The least excUaaeoi toeld causai mb to

THOUSANDS ERS

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Elkhart, Ind., ins. Mas. Sum* Hates. It is aow ftmryean since I have.taken may aiedicina. Am In better health thaa I have been

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we

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ad by a careful

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DENTIST.

Removed to 671 Main st. Terre Haute, Ind.

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and Plastering:,

Moudy Coffin,

'Tieave oritSh at 151? Pftfilar flNL- VMl South Fifth St., 101 Main 8L, Terra Haute, Ind

All calls'will receive the most careful at* tentlon. Open day and night.

T\B. W. VANVALZAH, X-/ Suooeaaor to RICHARDSON A VAN VALZAH,

IDE31TTXBT.

Offloe—Southwest oorner Fifth and Mala Streets, over Mauonal Mtate ifana (enuanea on Fifth street.

JSAAO BALL, FUNERAL DIRECTOR. Cor. Third and Cherry St*, Terre Haute, lad* Is prepared to execute all orders it his line with neatneaa and dispatsl

Xmbalmlng a Specialty.

PLUMBERS GASFITTERS

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kind* of ladtes apparel to any red. AH work guarsnt*+d leal Iyerft

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