Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 25, Number 4, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 21 July 1894 — Page 4
•j
JI
THE MAIL
SfSSgiS
A PAPKR FOR THE PEOPLE,
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, 82.00 a YKAK.
A. C. DUDDLESTON.
DUDDLESTON
F. J. PXEPKN BRISK.
PIEPENBRINK,
PROPRIETORS
PUBLICATION OFFICE.
NOR. 20 and 22 South Fiftb Street, Printing House Hquare. The Mail 1B sold iu the city by 250 newsboys and all newsdealers, and by agent* in 30 surrounding towns.
Entered at the Postofflce at Terre Haute, IntL, a* second-class matter.
TERRE HAUTE, IND., JULY 21, 1894
As between doing or dying the Senators evidently prefer to die.
A BASE bail piayer bad bis cheek bone broken in a row in Philadelphia this week. A professional ball player whose cheek can be affected by anything is a novelty nowadays.
A TREASURY expert estimates that the possible revenue to be derived from the income tax will range from $12,000,000 to 130,000,000 yearly, with the chances In favor of the former, at least while the law is new—that is, If it ever becomes a law.
PULLMAN'S general manager gets a salary of $15,000 a year. That's nearly forty-two dollars a day, or seven cents for every minute in a working day of ten hours. Nobody has heard of him being cut down in order to meet competition and keep the men at work.
THE Republicans of the Tenth congressional district iu this state are so anxious to get a congressman this fall that they have nominated a candidate from each of two wairiug factions. While they are fighting each other the Democrats of oourse will elect their congressman.
IT is to be hoped that the congressional fight in this district will not reach the fevered state that has been attained in the Illinois district adjoining us on the west. They are writing poetry over there, dedicated to the rival candidates, and it is resulting in the voters being driven to the wooits.
THE tariff confreres have agreed to disagree. If they had done that last December tbere would not be so many hungry, despairing uien In the country to-day, there would be inore happy homes, and the country would now be prosperous. Alas! for the costly experiment of trying to fill a square holo with around peg!
WHILE crippling the rallwa corporations by their strikes, the strikers were injuring themselves. The Switchmen's Unlou. went up this week as a direct re* ii •—of the Pullman strike. It had been in a bad way as a result of the defalcation of the treasurer, but would have been able to pull through had its members not been thrown out of work.
CONGRESSMAN CONN, of the Thirteenth Indiana district, has declined the unanimous renmnination given him oy the Democrats, wild In 11 Irting with the Populists. He probably thinks the Populists will blow more horns this fall than the Democrats, and as he is in the horn making business he wants to be in position to do business with them.
WHAT has become of the reported investigation by the United States grand jury at Chicago of the alleged conspiracy of the railroad managers' association to run no mall trains until they had won the great Ntrlke? It didn't take the jury very long to return Indictments against Debs, Howard, et al., but it seems slow work to Investigate the other ft llows.
TUB newspapers that have beeu preaching to the poor people for years that the rich men were robbing them have a great t^eal to answer for In these days, when discontent is prevalent In the land. And the very same newspapers are advocating the dungeon for the people who listened to their preaching. If the taught are sent there the teachers should join them.
UNCLK SAM is a pretty big man to tackle, looking for trouble. Our standing army numbers but 25,000 men, but the militia of the several states aggregates 112,000 men that are subject to the President's orders in an emergency, and can be called into service at a moment's notice. An army of 157,(100 men properly officered and equipped would make a nasty fight when the rights of the country are assailed.
"THIS Riot Act, or What I Think of the Senate Tariff Bill," is the latest publication from President Cleveland's pen. It is written in his well known style, aud expresses an opinion of the Senate majority not altogether pleasing to them. When the conference report comes up tn the Senate we will hear what these Senators think of what they oall "presidential Interference." For "thoughts that breathe and words that burn" see the Congressional Record for ihe next tew days.
TRK corporation magnate* are all talking In
favor of
arbitration now, but they
are heartily opposed to compulsory «rbl» tration, as it would "assail the rights of oapltal." The kind of arbitration they want is that which would enforce a reduction in the wa«e« of their workmen, and forbid a raise. Arbitration between Individuals is always possible, but arbitration between men on the one hand
and soulless corporations on the other will never be possible as an universal rule unless enforced by law.
OUB own Isaac P. Gray Is never satisfied unless he Is in a row of some sort. The consnl general at the City of Mexico started the report last winter that Isaac P. had gotten himself in disfavor with the Mexican government by favoring an American lottery company that was seeking a charter there. He Is retaliating by having charges preferred agalcst the consul general, and there promises to be a diplomatic row of large proportions. Tbe Hoosier diplomat is never so happy ss when stirring up a muss of one kind or another.
THE builders of the new warship Minneapolis, the Cramps, received a bonus of $400,000 for the speed developed over the contract speed. Tbe new vessel made an average speed of 23.05 knots, or a little over twenty-soven miles an hour, which makes her the fastest warship afloat. A vessel of the character and dimensions of the Minneapolis, that can rush through the water with a speed equal to that of an express train, is very nearly the triumph of naval engineering, and can well be named the "naval Nancy Hanks."
MEMBERS of .the labor organizations who believed in tbe Pullman boycott and a general sympathetic strike of all organized labor, are very bitter now in their denunciation of Gompers, Arthur, Sargent, Clark, and other leaders who advised against such a move, but they will bring themselves to acknowledge ere long that when such men meet railroad managers to argue disputed wage or other questions affecting employes' interests directly, they rarely come off second best. And tbe leader who can carry the points for his men is a safe man to tie to in the long run.
POOR Gresham! Instead of despising him, Republicans as well as Democrats are beginning to pity the man who can never open his mouth without putting his foot in it, and never "takes his pen In band" officially but that he commits a diplomatic blunder. In his official capacity ht has notified the Japanese government that "the United States views with regret the levying of an unjust war by Japan upon a weak and defenseless nation like Corea." ThlB is considered a grave breach of diplomatic etiquette and may lead to complieations with Japan. As an example of how the state department should not be conducted, (Jresbam is a bright and shining success.
EDITOR MORSS, of the Democratic state organ, the Sentinel, who got the biggest plum dished out to Indiana editors, the consul generalship to Paris, has once more set his foot on his native heath and brought his whiskers with him. There is urgent need of his presence at home, as the Sentinel has been, during the strike trouble, indulging in talk that would shame Herr Most. The president has been condemned for ordering federal troops out, the federal jndiciary has been abused, and altogether tbere has been a merry time. Mr. Morss will doubtless read a lecture to somebody on the Sentinel, and somebody will be out of a job. In fact If he wants to keep solid witfi tbe president he will probably have to do it to hold his job.
UTAH will be the forty-fifth state in the Union, the president having signed the bill admitting her to statehood. The law will not take effect however until after expiration of the present congress. The population of Utah will entitle her to one congressman, but this one and her two senators will give her weight in the national legislature at least equal to her population. The present delegate in oongress is a Democrat but no one oan prophecy the politics of the man who will first be entitled to a vote in that body, as political lines change swiftly in times like these. The area of Utah is 84,970 square miles, nearly equal to that of Pennsylvania and Ohio, but it is largely a territory of high table-lands and mountains, the cultivable portion being confined to the valleys which are susceptible of Irrigation.
THE money that has been used during the past ten years to pay dividends on the watered stocks of railroad coi porations—fictitious values—would cover the total cost of the property destroyed in the recent strike, and pay the wages of all the men implicated iu that trouble— and doubtless leave enough to pay a dividend on the Pullman stock. Nine out of ten of the railroad companies that have gone into the hands of the receivers have been forced to that step because it was impossible to pay enormous salaries to officers with high-sounding titles, hire men at reasonable wages, and pay dividends on these watered stocks. And ten out of every ten could pay dividends on the actual values Invested, pay the same enormous official salaries, better wages to the men, and still Increase the sinking funds. But they didn't do that, and that Is all the more reason why the government should restrict the power of such corporations.
AFTKR much delay, and at a time when it seems a bluff, Attorney General Olney has brought his much-talked of suit against the Southern Pacific and allied roads, to dissolve the trust which enables them practically to restrain trade and commerce between the states traversed by their lines* If the suit is successful It will affect every railroad in the country, and will make every corporation now a part of tbe Southern pacific Cto. operate under a separate and distinct management, and render void all monopoly of freight and passenger traffic- The attorney general has for many years been the trusted adviser of railroad corporations, counseling such combinations as he now seeks to break
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING
llsll
and It remains to be Been whether or not the work will be prosecuted with the vigor necessary to bring relief. The Southern Pacific system, has by its lobby so shaped legislation that it absolutely has been master of the railroad situation in the country dependent on It, and tbe people will hail with delight any court proceedings that tend to curtail its powers and privileges, especially if the proceedings are made in good faith. The attorney general has been heretofore retained on the otherside, and with his knowledge of corporation and their methods should be able to make a bard fight against a combination of men and money that has controlled legislatures, courts, and all the machinery of the law. If he succeeds the people will call him blessed, and if he falls—well, they will think it is a bluff.
COLORADO air is said to produce lightness of the head in newcomers until they become acclimated, and if the quoted remarks credited to Rev. Myron W. Reed, who went from Indiana to Denver, are really his utterances, he is having a hard time getting acclimated. In a speech at Denver on Sunday he indulged in tbe following blasphemous language, prefaced by tbe statement that he himself is an anarchist: "Jesus Christ was not only an anarchist, but was killed by the representatives of tbe law, the churoh and the state, for daring to practice humanity. Jesus Christ was an anarchist and a socialist, but I never read of Him being a deputy sheriff (cheers)." This la fine language to come from a man whose mission In life is supposed to be to advocate peace on earth and good will to mankind. This talk, which is in line with some of Reed's previous speeches, Indicates that he is more than a mere crank, that he 1s crazy. %i:
ONE man who made himself unusually prominent in the effort to seoure arbitration in tbe Pullman trouble was Mayor Pingree, of Detroit, who telegraphed to mayors all over the country to co-operate with him to urge George M. Pullman to arbitrate. Pingree is head of tbe Pingree A Smith shoe companv In Detroit, and it seems has bad trouble with his own employes. In 1886, when his employes were on a strike, and an effort was being made to seoure arbitration, his firm wrote to tbe Michigan Commissioner of Labor that "whatever the loss is, we prefer it rather than allow outside parties to run our business." It makes a great difference as to whose ox is being gored, and what was good for Pingree's firm does not appear to have met his approval when carried out by Mr. Pullman. The fact that Pingree is a candidate for governor may have had something to do with his change of opinion. It gave him a chance to secure some free advertising as a public philanthropist, and he oould not ignore it.
IT has been discovered that the Rev. Geo. D. Heron, who fills the chair of "applied Christianity" in the congregational college at Grinnel, Iowa, and whose recent speech at the commencement exercises at the Nebraska University, made such a sensation, was formerly a printer's "devil" in our neighboring town of Sullivan many years ago. The reverend gentleman tried to convince the Nebraska students that Coxeyism was the highest type of American oitizenship, that our officials were reeking with corruption, that our courts are fountains of anarchy, that our ohurohes are doing more harm than good and that the buying and selling of land was a greater crime than those committed in our worst gambling hells, but Governor Crounse, who followed him, in his ad dress read a lesson to the preaoher, who instead of "applying" Christianity to the present condition of affairs seems to be advocating a mild form of anarchy. When preachers become agitators, their usefulness in their chosen profession is at end, no matter how prominent they may be as so-called "advanced thinkers."
THE present indications are that the failure of the House and Seuate committees to agree in conference on the tariff measure will result in there being no tariff legislation enacted. If Congress will then adjourn, business will revive in a remarkable manner. Western merchants who have been East buying goods report that the markets are bare. The home manufacturer, fearing changes in the tariff, has been manufacturing only as much as he can sell, while the importers have been holding back for the passage of a bill that will greatly reduce the duties. When once It Is assured that there will be no tariff legislation against the home industries, at least for anothor year, and possibly for three, manufacturers oan aflbrd to go ahead with the production of goods, give employment to men to consume the manufactured products, and the country will again prosper. It will take a long time to recover from the depression of the past year, but a patient who Is recovering from a serious illness, though but slowly, is more hopeful and ambitious, more capable of helping himself, than one who Is steadily growing worse \s
AN admirer of the Populist Senator Allen, of Nebraska, in one of the July magazines had this to say of the sew statesman: "Long before the year 1900, we believe that tbe people of Nebraska will have discovered that their Populist senator stands in pure patriotism, natural dignity, honest manhood and intellectual power ae far above the perplexing and ili-defined bounds that mark the present limits of party programmes, that they will acquire a genuine pride in him as a public man of tbe first rank, intent upon the performance of duty and guided by a broad intelligence and fixed habit of unshrinking application to the task in hand." The magastne had hard-
MATT.,
ly been placed on sale before this "public man of first rank" had created a sensation In Washington by filling himself up with Senatorial "tea" and Indulging in a public brawl with a barkeeper who refused to show him the whereabouts of another senator whom he desired to whip. Allen denies the story told of him, but his denial is weak, and is not borne out by the facts. If this is a fair sample of "pure patriotism" and "natural dignity" it would seem that we want less of these qualities in our statesmen.
THE legal fight in the cases against the leaders of the American Railway Union for conspiracy promises to be bitterly contested, and will raise questions of law never before argued before an United States court. One of these peints is as to whether an injunction can lie against the commission of a crime for which the criminal code has provided a punishment. With the injunction proceedings set for a bearing on Monday, it wouid seem that the government lawyers in bringing contempt proceedings against Debs, Howard and others were a trifle over-zealous, and evinced a disposition to persecute rather than prosecute. A little of this zeal displayed in prosecuting other violators of the Interstate commerce law would free the average mind of the suspicion that the Upited States courts are going into the railroading business in another form, that oi "railroading" the labor leaders into the penitentiary. Mr. Debs, in choosing to go to jail rather than furnish bond, disclaimed all intention of posing as a martyr, but the Chicago newspapers, which are clamoring for his blood as a traitor to his country, accuse him of taking this step simply to gain sympathy. These same newspapers, acting as a self-constituted judge and jury, would have had him hanged higher than Haman long before this, but fortunately for himself he is not to be tried in tbe newspapers, but before a jury of his peers.
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that eontains Mercury,
as meroury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when entering it through the mucous surfaces. Suoh articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to tbe good you cm possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains no meroury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood nnd mucous surfaces of the
Bystem.
On the above dates excursion tickets will be on sale at all stations on the Chicago fc Eastern Illinois R. R. to
Eiser's for fresh Candies.
JULY 21 1894.
In buying Hall's
Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It IR taken internally, and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney fe Co.,
Testimonials free.
#®~Sold by Druggists, price 75c. per bottle. If you want a carriage build up your own town and buy it of the Terre Haute Carriage and Buggy Co.
Don't fail to call at 641 Main street if you want anything in the form of musio at your own prices.
EiBer's for Cream Soda.,
The only complete line of Boys' Outing Shirts can be found at Schluer & Foulkes'.
EXCURSIONS TO MICHIGAN.
August 14th and Sept. 18th.
AVer's
poiDts
in Miohigan at one fare for the round trip, good to return 20 days from date of sale. Stopover allowed. Inquire of any C. fc E. I. R. R. agent, for other information, or of Charles L. Stone, Gen'l Pass. & Ticket Agent, Chicago.
Men's Tan Shoes reduced from $5.00 to $2.75 $4.50 Shoe reduced to $2 50.
W. A. ROBEKTS, 529 Wabash Ayenue.
For Hollow Brick, Drain Tile, Sewer Pipe, Lime and Cement, go to Reiman & Steeg Co., 901-903 Main street
C. C. Smith's Sons Co., carry complete lines of old fashioned band made tinware that is made just as good as can be made.
Give our work a trial and you will be well pleased. Terre Haute Laundry Co.
Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder World's Pair Highest Award.
Sunday Dinner.
Spring Lamb, Steer Beef, Sweet Breads,. Pig Pork, .. Tenderloins, Spare Ribs,
Beef Tenderloins.
C. H. EHRMANN, Fourth and Ohio. Clean Meat Market. Telephone 220.
The only laundry In the city that gives you your choice of high polish, domestic or soft finish.
NEW METHOD LACXDRT Co., 725 Main Street.
Garden Hosei
W ~r
in Great variety
can be found at FINKBINER fe DUENWEG*S. The best grades at tbe most reasonable prices.
Eiser's for Ginger Ale.
The only complete line of Boys' Outing Shirts can be found at Schluer & Foulkes'.
•/PBI7FX*
PILLS'
PRIZE MEDAL! AT WORLDSI
Received
Highest Awards
LL\*FIR
AT
THE,£2SfP WS
World's Fair
^PRIZE* THE BEST
MEDAL WORLDS
Family
PHYSIC
REMOVAL
From 815 Wafyash Aye. To 905 Wabash Ave.
Full line of Mantels, Stoves and Tinware. A lso prepared to do Tin and Slate Koofing, Galvanized Iron Cornice and Furnace Work complete
John Manion
TELEPHONE 290.
SPECIAL LOW RATES
Big Four Route
For Following Meetings:
League of American Wheelmen, Denver, August 13-18. Knights of Pythias, Washington, D. C., In August.
G. A. R. at Pittsburgh, September 10-15. Ask nearest agent for date of sale, return limit, routes, train service, etc.
E. E. SOUTH, Gen. Agt.
Take Your Annual
And every other Bath at the
Magnetic Artesian At the Foot of Walnut St.
We have the best Water Baths in the world. Russian Shampoo, Vapor, Shower, Hot and Cold Baths. Large bath tubs. Every room Is entirely separated, heated and ventilated to suit the bathers.
ADRIAN A. BBBCHKR. PRANK A. KELLKY BEECHER & KELLEY, LAW OFFICE Southwest corner Fourth and Ohio streets.
Notary in Office.
Coates College.
Tenth Year opens Sept. 12th, 1894.
Beautiful and healthful location. Complete college course,- classical and literary also
S[usic
reparatorv and optional. Special classes in ana Languages. Finely equipped grmnasiun with director from the Sargent Harvard Hemenway Gy naslu of Cambridge, Mass. Family home life unsurpassed. Address,
RET. JOHN MASON DUNCAN, PRES.,
TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA.
UVDHATIQM NUTSR KE.LisD. Greatest,book 11 irflu iluffl out. Tulls aU about tbis wonderful subject. Whntever your views are on Hypnotism, you will And this book of great, value. Published price, 50 cents. Sent free, transportation prepaid, if you remit 25 cents for suDScription to Homes and Hearths, the elegant household monthly. Address HOMES AND HEARTHS, PUBLISHING CO., New York.
STREET
IMPROVEMENT FINAL ESTIMATE.
Notice is hereby given that the final estimate report of the cost of the improvement of sidewalks on Fourteenth street from Wabash avenue to Poplar street was on the 17th day of July, 1801, referred to the committee on streets and alleys,«ndany person aggrieved by such estimate may appear before said committee, on the 8 day of August 1894. at the office of the city civil engineer in said city, and make objections thereto, which objections will be reported by said committee to thecommon council of the city of Terre Haute at the next regular meeting of said council after the said committee shall conclude the hearing npon said objections, at which time objectors and all persons Interested may be heard in reference to such objections before the conncil. CHAS. H. GOODWIN,
NOTICE
City Clerk.
TO CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS.
Notice is hereby given that sealed proposals will be received by the common council of the city of Terre Haute, at Its next regular meeting, August 7th, ISM, for the construction of a tower for drying fire hose. AH bids to be in accordance with the plans and specifications on file tn the office of the city enclneer. Each bid to be accompanied with a bond in the sum or two hundred dollars (1200) liquidated damages that the successful bidder will enter into contract within Ave days.
The conncil reserves the right to reject any or all bids. Br orte, of Ih. common co^„wl
City Clerk.
gtlnuon, Stimson AH logins, Attorneys. ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE. Notice I* hereby given that the under-
Notice Is nereoy given inai me uauur- »ec. is inw oruiaance»ui«i aimed. administrator with the will annexed and after Its pansage and publication of the estate of Simeon F. Strole, deceased, Adopted by tbe common council
one miie ana one-uwi Goshen, tn Fayette township, Vigo county, on Fritiay, Anguft 27th, IBM, the follow! n~
crib, growing crop, household farnl-
old and new
tare and various sundrJe*. TERMS OF SAL*.—All sum* under five dollars All turns of five dollars and over without Interest .if paid at maturity, otherwise with six per cent from date. Five per cent, discount for each. g«2« to commence atfio'clock fcm.
ALFRED E. STROLE,
Administrator with will annexed.
mm
up
fill
s/
Msisittrt
VvV .• -2
Might well be translated as "Buying yourself rich/' for such fact is really the case. All Summer Goods must go. Nothing reserved. If is to a economy, now is the golden opportunity. See those Wash Dress Patterns consisting of 10 yards for 98c. Parasols and Sun Shades at half price. Stamped Linens at half price. Fans, Mitts, Summer Underwear, all marked down to less than cost. Call and see for yourself.
518-529 WABASH AYENUE.
ANOFJFICE
ORDINANCE ESTABLISHING THE OP SANITARY INSPECTOR. Section 1. Be It ordained by the common council of the city of Torre Ilaute, that the' office of sanitary inspector bo and is hereby established that there be cloctod by the council a competent person to dlschargo the duties of such office, which aro hereinafter mentioned, and such person shall be known as the sanitary Inspector, and ho shall be elected immediately upon the passage and taking effect of this ordinance, and thereafter when other officers elected by the common council are elected, subject to removal at the pleasure of the council.
Sec. 2. Such officer shall be a graduate of a veterinary school, and shall be sufficiently familiar with the use of the microscope and other scientific methods necessary to determine the purity of all articles commonly used as food and drink.
Sec. 8. It shall be the duty of such omcor, when he deems it necessary, or when notified by a citizen, in writing, to inspect free of charge any cattle, sheep, nogs, poultry, fish, game, fruits, vegetables, canned goods, milk and all articles of food and drink oOored or about to be offered for sale, and if any of said articles and any food and drink so inspected shall be found to be unwholesome and unlit for use, to condemn and destroy the same, provided that when livo cattle, sheep, hogs or poultry are Inspecled and condemned, they shall not be destroyed, but tbe owner or anyone else shall not be allowed to sell or offer the same for sale, for food, until after the same shall be pronouueed by tbe Inspector wholesome and lit for ase.
Sec 4. Itshnll be the duty of such officer (o determine the existence of Infectl us or other diseases among animals which may In any way Imperil the life or health of any peraons within the city, and he shall have power to direct what disposition be made of animals so diseased.
See. 5. It shall bo the duty of such offlccr to render medical and surgical treatment to all animals which belong to the city, or for which the city is responsible, the city providing such medicine or appliances as inay be required.
Hec. 8. It shall be the duty of such officer at suitable intervals to Inspect all dairies In oradjacentto the city, and supplying milk and butter to tb« Inhabitants of the city he shall examine the condition of the animals from which such supplies are derived, and the character and quality of food, the cleanliness and fix ure of barns and yards provided for them, and report the same to the board of health.
Sec. 7. In the discharge of his duties he shall co-operate with and be under the control of the board of health, and be invested with the same authority a* one of its members in tbe performance and carrying out the duties of this offlce.
Sec. 8. It shall be the duty of such officer to personally, or through the board of health, from time to time report to the common conncil anything which in his line of duty he may deem of sufficient importance, and whenever the general health and welfare of tbe city may be Involved.
Sec. 9. Any person who Interferes with •och officer while be ii performing his duties, or attempt* to prevent him from performing the same, as are prescribed by this ordinance, shall upon conviction be fined in any sum not less than one dollar nor more than fifty dollars.
Sec. 10. Any person violating any of the provisions of tbl® ordinance shall, on conviction be ftned In any sum aot less than one dollar nor more than fifty dollars.
Sec. 11. The salary of such officer •hall be fllty dollars per month or six hundred dollars per year. ,,
Sec. 12. All ordinances or parts of ordinances of tbe city of Terre Haute being In conflict with any of the provisions of tbis ordinance are hereby repealed.
AAimtp trill M11 at nnblfc AQFI- MTV nf Tftrw* Mftfiin ftt fl. restli&r
it
Sec. 13 This oraidance shall take effect on .. Ill nnuo«i oni1 ntlh1ll«tlnI, of the
JVl/ City Clerk.
LOAN
PUGH & PUGH
Attorneys at Law.
329 1-2 Ohio Street, Terre Haute. After an absence of four years abroad our Mr. Horace C. Pngh la again in the affloe of the above named firm.
