Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 27, Number 45, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 8 May 1897 — Page 1

S4

*&

VOL. 27-JiO. 43.

ON THE QUI VIVE.

The only simon-pure, none-genuine un-less-the-name-is-blown-in-the-bottle "fa rmer governor" this state has^vcr had, was down from Clinton this week, indulging in his reassuring hand shake, and giving breadth and body to his senatorial boom. Claude Matthews is about as clever a man as there is in politics in this state, and he would make a good representative of the |tate, if she has Democratic representative* in the senate—providing he ever gets there. He may some time, but it is like the promised land, far, far away. If the Democrats control the next legislature, ancfSenatorTurpie isn't a candidate for reelection the next United States senator will come from the state of Terre Haute, and the first Jetterof bis name is John E. Lamb. If there was ever any doubt about this, Mr. Lamb removed it, when he sold his property in the Fourth ward, and built him a new house just over the boundary line in the First ward, which has more office holders and politicians and statesmen than any other in the city. In this ward resides a judge of one of our courts, the next revenue collector, the county clerk and one of his deputies, the county treasurer, the city treasurer, the president of the state league of Republican clubs, a member of the Republican state executive committee, the postmaster, revenue employes and others too numerous to mention. It is said that this was one of the principal reasons for Mr Lamb's change of residence. After he completed the removal it was settled, as effectually as if the party caucus had been held in his favor, that he will be the next United States Senator from Iudiana if his party is successful in next year's elections. When Claude Matthews hears of this, no doubt he will stop abruptly the harvesting of his sweet potatoe crop, let his onion and radish fields go to the dogs, and have a sale of farm machinery and farm, and move into the First ward. Then he may stand some show. Otherwise not.

Notices were sent out this morning by the Terre Haute Haute house company, inviting bids for the erection of the new opera house at Seventh and Cherry streets, and it is thought that this practically settles the question as to whether or not we are to have a place of amusement during the coining season. Fourteen invitations were sent out, including a number of foreign «s well as the home contractors. In the notice the right is reserved to reject any or all bids, and there is a possibility that the bids may be so high that others will be invited. The officers of the company who have been prominent in the effort to secure ft nqw hoaafcjjl^inffiuM^ tttht Ihere w'ffi hi*'nothing but. smooth sailing for the rest of the time. The money is assured on favorable terms, and with the demand there is for the construction of such a building it hardly seems possible that there should be anything turn up to knock tlie project In the head. President I jams said this week that the house would certainly be built, and ready for occupancy by the first, of October. Bids have been received for the control of the house when completed, and as soon as the contract has been awarded for the erection of the house, the directors will consider these bids. It. has seemed strange that a city like Terre Ilaute should have been for a whole season without a suitable theater, but if it results in the erection of a modern, ground-floor theater building the loss of the season will have had its effect. There seems no reason on earth why a company composed of such energetic. business men as are interested in the Terre Haute house should not be able to secure the money to put up the new theater, and if a few of them could have had their way then4 would have been none of this dilatory action that has put the work off so long. It seems to be well under way now. and if nothing unforseen occurs we will have a handsome new theater by the first or middle of next

H?toher.

If the senate confirms the appointment of Frank K. Hen jainin as post master under the new dispensation, (is it should, in time, he will take his ofliee on the 1Mb of May. next Saturday. The commission of Postmaster Dunham expires at midnight on the rjth inst and according t.i that the new post master should take his office on the day following, but according to a ruling of the department changes in such offices are to be made either on the 1st or the l.Mh of the month.

THE ELKS' MINSTRELS.

•»uecoHt«ful Performances by These lever Knterminer!* nt Harrison Park Tills Week.

The Elks gave two minstrel performances it Harrison Park Casiuo on Thursday :utd Friday nights, attractiug large audiences. The programme w»vs given as published in The Mail last week, with the addition of the Heaton-Curtis quartette, tnd a couple of song and dance artists from Chicago, who were in the ity on their way to the Nsdivillo exposition. and were added to she programme on the night of the first performance.

The performance admitted by all to lie the best amateur minstrel show ever given here, and it was as free from drags and waits as a professional show could have iwii One of the reason* for this was that

W. Mabare, the wwran profes­

sional. and an Elk himself, looked after the sta«.\ and kept everything on the move The first part went with snap, the end men. first edition. Frank Buckingham and Will Hamilton, getting off a number of original oke*. the former making a bit

r^{

with bis own song, "A dollar am a mighty handy thing." The second edition end men, Dwight Allen, a newcomer here, and Billy Parrott, also made a great impression, the former'ssong. "My Onliest One," making the hit of the first part. The other songs were rendered by Arthur Goldsmith, Will Katzenbach and Ellsworth Cook, of Shelbyville, who is a brother of Mrs. E. E. South, and a minstrel man of long experience. He has a wonderful soprano voice, which was heard to advantage in the choruses, as well as in his solo.

In the olio, Frank Buckingham and Albert Einecke gave a musical turn that showed them to be possessed of unusual talent in this direction, and they were followed in order by a drill by sixteen memberr of the lodge, dressed in the attractive uniforms worn at Cincipnati last year. Dwight Allen in a monologue which suggested George Wilson,a song and dance by six members of the lodge, a wonderful boy soprano. Master Bryson Overholt, of Pana, Ills., a protege of Ellsworth Cook, and Miss Ida Melville Mrs. (S M. Young, Jr.,) in her original and unique specialty, "One Little Jay," in which she made such a hit in New York last season, in which she was assisted by Geo. W. Mabare. The performance closed with an afterpiece burlesquing the Bradley Martin ball. It was the work of Will Hamilton, and had many laughable features. Will Hamilton had a clever make-up-resembling Mark Hanna, while Will Parrott also had a good make up of an Irish edition of Mrs. B. M. J. E. McDermott, of the new bicycle company, had a 'part as Ole Oleson, and he developed a Scandanavian dialect that showed he had made a study of it. Ed Westfall as the Yellow Kid and Jim McGrew as his best girl. Liz, Bud Braman as Svengali to Ross Bronson's Trilby made hits. Col. E. E. South appeared as the veritable "Little Egypt," who made such a sensation in New York recently where she danced as nature made her before a party of swells. The portly colonel had on a few more clothes than Egypt, but he put them principally in yellow in order to advertise the Big Four. Any time the Colonel forgets to advertise the Big Four—well, he doesn't. Wes Hauck played Uncle Tom to six-foot two Charley Earley's little Eva, while Cam Buntln looked Topsey to perfection, and Frank Buckingham acted his old part in the "Texas Steer" of the man who wanted to be minister to

Dahomey, and

wound up in Washington by taking a place as spittoon cleaner.J The Elks will make some $400 or #500 on theiftwo performances, which is considered very good for the popular prices that prevailed. The money is to be used in attending the Minneapolis meeting of the grand lodge of the order iu July. A prize ^tp.beodgred fv

J-he bw^riliwi lodge in

the parade, and a movement is on foot to put the drill given herte in the street parade there.

A large party of Elks from Vincennes came up to attend last nigth's performance, and at its close asocial session was given at the lodge rooms over McKeen's bank.

A very interesting souvenir of the occasion was given out in the shape of a handsome programme, containing in a group the officers of the lodge photo graphed, followed by series of portraits of many of the individual members.

HARRISON PARK CASINO.

The ltcjjulur season Opens Tomorrow Nliflit An Interesting BUI.

The Casino should prove a most popular resort this summer, and the amusement loving public will welcome the glad tidings, that after months of waiting we are to have a few months of high-olass entertainment.

Every night next week Shelton's big company of vaudeville entertainers will be one of the great features of the programme Then the wonderful "Magniscope" with all the attractive and realistic, animated pictures, which have caused such a pronounced sensation at the Schiller theater, Chicago, will le exhibited here for the first time. The grand prize "cake walk" and fancy dress ball of the colored "400," in which the very best ot the colored local talent, will compete, will be most unique and novel.

Thus it will be seen that the management has been most liberal in presenting such a list of novelties for the patrons of the Casino to-morrow night. At the grand concert the entire great company of entertainers will appear, and the "Magniscope" will be seen for the first time. Prices, 5c, 10c. -Jttc and arte.

Defying Mutrtmealal Superstitions. A bride so far defied superstition as to be married on the 13th of last May. She had also thirteen tiny bridesmaids, had thirteen carriages and tbirteen-days' honeymoon.

Another unsnperstitious maiden became engaged on the 13th of a certain month, and has fixed on the first Friday in May as her wedding morning.

Several May brides have testified to the happiness of their married lives, and one woman declared that although she became engaged on a Friday, fixed on the unlucky day as the one set apart in each week for the lovers* walk, got married on a Friday, had thirteen guests at the wedding-table, and set up housekeeping in May, she has never had a moment's serious nnhappiness in all her eight years of married life.

After this, ft fig for superstition!

It seems thai ears are decidedly oat of fashion for women in Paris, except for hearing purpose)#, as the hair i* drawn to cover them so completely thai there Is no trace of their existence left.

ABOUT WOMEN.

How many of us resolve to do some particularly good or noble act "when we get time?" We rush on from day to day promising ourselves the fulfillment of honest intention, yet the time slips by and we never seem to find that opportunity for good that is always just a wee bit ahead of us in the future. "When I get time," says the young mother, "I will train Jamie to be more courteous." "When I get time," says the growing daughter, "I will relieve mother of some of her burdens." "When I get time," says the wife, "I will read and dress up and try to make myself more congenial to my husband."

Alas, so few of us find the time. Jamie goes on growing more and more unbearable every day, and when at last he has grown beyond the training limit, and his mother sorrowfully recognizes th« fact that he is a boor whom nobody can tolerate, she wishes with all her heart that she had taken the time to mend his ways when the one moral stitch would have done more good than the nine taken when the hole in his manners was beyond repair.

The daughter hasn't the time to help her mother. She means well she often worries as she sees the dear person growing more and more feeble, but it is not until that mother has exchanged time for eternity that she realizes all she could have done if she had only taken a few minutes from the selfish "routine of her own existence and applied them to lessening the labor in another's. So with the wife—she hasn't the time to fix up, she hasn't the time to keep herself well informed, and when the husband naturally wanders to fields more congenial she rebukes herself for not having stolen a few moments from her other home duties to give to the first and foremost exactions of her domestic life. We haven't the time to do so much that would not only benefit ourselves, but others as well yet we have the time to enter into a dozen and more enterprises and schemes that, like boomerangs, return to injure us.

The conventional costume of the wellbred widow possesses every known quality of unhygienic, non-esthetic and costly dress. Proper exercise while she is mourning is out of the question. Seclusion is secured in ways less barbarous perhaps than inducing deformity of the feet, yet our occidental mourning customs effectually keep women within doors. The heart of the stoutest warrior might quail within him if a quiet stroll required the wearing of two crepe veils, each six feet long, one veil to be worn over the face and the other |^han|^own the

More than this, the materials and dyes In use iu the fashioning of mourning materials are often of a very poisonous nature. Not less injurious are the minute loose particles of poisonous crepe.

Gloomy garments, darkened rooms, all1 the subdued life of a house of mourning lower the vitality and reduce the quantity of domestic ozone.

The charming young widow in her costume of unveiled crepe is a figure that henceforth will be but seldom seen. While she is doing her best to restore her ruined complexion, build up her demolished vitality and regain something of the beauty she has lost she is succeeded by the sensible woman who wears light mourning for a few weeks or months simply for the purpose of self-protection, and then tries to brighten and lighten her garb as effectually as she may.

Girls, as many of you will have to make your way in life alone—and all of you ought to be able to help others fight its battles—do not wait until you are flung off by disaster, and your mother and father are dead, and all the resources of your family have been scattered, but uow, while in a good home and environed by prosperity, learn how to do some kind of work that the world must have as long as the world stands. Turn your attention from the embroidering of fine slippers, of which there is a surplus, and make a useful article. Expend the time in which you adorn a cigar case in learning how to make a good, honest loaf of bread. Turn your attentions from the making of flimsy nothings to the manufacture of important somethings.

In discussing the bicycle girl and her enhusiasm a recent writer says: "But there are others of quite a different ,stamp. There is many a sly 'puss' on a bicycle— many a girl who finds it impossible to stick to any party of which she may be one. or to keep up with the pace of the majority, however moderate it may be—who always manages to be last, but not alone—oh. no, not alone. More free from the now nearly obsolete chaperon here than elsewhere, she can flirt to her heart's content as she and her companion ramble at a gentle pace along the level, and walk up everything that can be called a hill. She would never bicycle at all if she had to go alone she looks on it as a tiresome and tiring way of getting over the ground, but it is a means to an end, that end being a pleasant tete-a-tete with a nice young man. and If the two lose their party altogether, why, a punctured tire, a forgotten pump, a screw loose somewhere, can always do duty as an excuse. *A lost shoe' used to account for much in hunting days, and a 'puncture' now does yeoman service at a pinch. And if belated, it Is quite romantic to ride by moonlight, or by the rays of those small lanterns that make one feel quite adventurous the moment they are lighted-"'

What a dneary, desolate existence is life endured without companionship! And

sMMsm

I:

TEBBE HAUTE, ISTD., SATURDAY EVENING, MAY 8, 1897. TWENTY-SEVENTil YEAR.

without .ove in the hearts of- the man and woman who together build a home, there can be no genuine companionship. Life must resolve itself into a sham, and its daily duties must link themselves into a lengthening chain that drags the soul into untold depths of disappointment and regret.

Unselfishness may exist, and it may be cultivated to a large degree. But a woman dare not count upon a lifelong devotion and ministry which knows no return from her who, before God, has promised to love her husband.

No length of purse nor beauty of dress nor Bocial power can make up to a woman for the loss of her own self-respect and for the loss of her husband's good opinion. And, to a good woman who chooses for her husband one whom she pretends to love and yet does not, there must ensue the loss of the sense of right, and this loss means daily sorrow, or else conscience becomes dethroned and 'flshness masters the life.

No warning word be too strong in its teaching upon thN object. "Better, indeed, the dinner of herbs with love," for human experience but repeats itself, and the only oil that can be poured upon the troubled waters of human experience is that of genuine affection. "L^ve knows no burdens," but is glad to lift the weight of anxiety and to strive for the increase of joy in those who welcome her to their hearts and homes. In sickness and in health her ministry is present, to soothe pain or to intensify pleasure. And in her presence companionship is uninterrupted. But, while a girl is unwise and wrong to marry a man whom she does not love, she is not necessarily either wise or right to marry a man simply because she loves him. For there is a perversity in woman that often shows itself in sympathy for an unworthy or an incompetent man. A girl is often utterly unacquainted with the character of the man who wins her sympathy, her encouragement. her love. Oftentimes she is so hopelessly blinded that she does not see the man as he is, but as she fancies him to be. So it is that noble women are often married to ignoble men.

Would it not be wise for a girl to test the character of the man whom she chooses to be her accepted lover by the principles which she applies to her own life?

Would this application of principles be inconsistent with love of the true sort Is he true Has he the highest aims Is he controlled by the right

If girls would live up to the best principles they know, men would quickly feel themselves to be in the presence of superior souls Those who felt themselves •away' frtjm such a preseuce as the darkness before the light of day. Women should guard their associations aud choose ouly the best, even when being chosen.

MODERN PHILOSOPHY.

A domestic wife is a blessing, but not if she is too domestic. When a woman says no she wants you to insist on her saying yes.

A wife is willing to be obedient, but she hates to be considered a slave. A man will always respect a woman if he sees that she respects herself.

With a woman, her soul should always be at least as well clad as her body. If a married woman commences as a slave, she will never regain her freedom.

Even when a woman is in love she never forgets to see that her hat is on straight. A great many women transfer to their baby the love they once had for their husbands.

A woman who is a good cook can always retain the respect of her husband, if not his love.

A woman should not be afraid to die. Why just think: It relieves her of the marriage tie.

The reward of being a woman's best friend is that you are privileged to abuse her other friends to her.

A girl of 26. whose father orders her around as if she were 10 is about to change bosses by getting married.

When a man under 80 years of age has tan cents' worth of business he makes ninety cents' worth of fuss.

The real sincere women are those whose prayers at night in a cold room are sever abbreviated by the condition of the thermometer.

A woman should be chary with her kisses and caresses, even to her husband. We get tired of canvas-back duck if we get it every day.

Occasionally a woman earns a little money "of her own," but does a man ever hare any money that is "his own" in the stme sense?

The world doesn't monopolize the "good fellows." There are men in churches who are regarded with admiration because of their generosity, whose wives never own a dime of their own.

A number of women got together recently and began telling about the number of proposals of marriage they had received. It developed that only one woman present had had as many as two, and she had been married twice.

Licensed to Wed.

Or

ftoopitiff&mer and Laerenna E. Mcid. 8. Barry and Matte Burjre CrookAnders r-1 Id •. TV,lis. ... re McK and Annie M. Huffn:

Far siu 4-

Alt* c. Early and Minnie B. Gilbert. ntjr Jty and Maud- lilckltn. Ji..: '-"rip-- j.jwl Mollle M. 1 ng. Wra. W. Worsbjun and Maitte C. wicker.

PEOPLE AND

Sfe

THIN(TS

The Cretan's year contains 138 holidays, devoted to shooting at. Turks or other religious observances, as he construes them.

A nephew of the King of Siam is a military cadet at Woolwich, England, and one of his sons, who is preparing to enter the British navy at .Greenwich, has won his way to the heart of the English by his skill as a foot-ball player.

Of the sixty-two men who have served as mayor of New York since 1665 William L. Strong is the only one to celebrate his 70th birthday in office. He looks ten years younger, and but for his gout he would be one of the most active men in the city.

In a New Jersey church on a recent Sunday the pastor delivered the sermon, a phonograph serving as his proxy in the rest of the service. It rendered a violin solo, read a psalm in au eloquent manner, led in prayer, sang a hymn, and pronounced the benediction.

President McKinley is now riding a white horse, and if he would wear a cocked hat he would look very much like Napoleon, but he insists upon wearing a silk hat and a frock coat made of black broadcloth, which gives him a clerical instead of military appearance.

The late Postmaster General Von Stephan, of,Germany, was the inventor of postal cards and the founder of the Universal Postal Union. Lord Ampthill once said that he was almost the only example in Germany of a self-made man rising to a high position in the government.

An alarm clock is not usually an object of affection, but one set at 4 a. m. saved the life of a whole family in New York last week. When it sounded the head of the family was inclined to swear, then he smelled smoke, and found retreat by the stairway cut off. Every one in the house was rescued by fire ladders.

Military men claim to have made the curious discovery that the most powerful modern guns do not send a shot through an embankment of sand 30 feet thick. The projectile, following the line of least resist ance, curves upward through the sand aud is rendered harmless. If the theory is confirmed coast defense will be cheap and easy.

Capt. William J. Clark, the latest survivor of the John, Brown raiders in Kansas, died in Hobart, Delaware county, last week. He was born in 1840, and when 18 years old he went to Kansas, where he served with John Brown. In 1862 Capt. Clark went out with the 144th New York regiment, was promoted to lieutenant, and for a time had command of Company I qf

.that.

Switzerland is not addicted to giving away franchises. In the permit for a railway to the top of the Jungfrau the Swiss Legislature requires $*20,000 to erect an observatory on the summit, and $200 a month to pay for weather reports and other scientific work. The fare is fixed, and the government reserves the right to buy out the company after a certain number of years. A passenger pays $8 and the ascent will be made in 100 minutes.

Col. Jessie E. Peyton, popularly known as "the Father of Centennials," died last week at his home in«New Jersey. He received his nickname on account of being the orignator of some of the greatest celebrations of historical events in this country. The Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia in 1876, which he projected as far back as 1865: the celebration of Bunker Hill, Yorktown and the adoption of the Constitution, were all conceived by him. His latest scheme was to have in 1000 a celebration in Jerusalem of the birth of Christ by all Christian nations. Colonel Peyton was born in Kentucky, fought in the war and -has been interested in politics and public events all his lift.

TIRED MOTHERS.

A little elbow leans upon your knee. Your tired knee that has so much to 1 ear A child's dear eyes are looking lovingly

From underneath a thatch of tangled hair. You feel the loving, trustful, tender touch Of warm, moist fingers holding yours so tight You do not prize this blessing overmuch.

You are almost too tired to pray to-night.

Yet It is blessedness. A year ago I did not feel it as I do to-day. We are too dull and thankless, and too slow,

To catch the sunshine ere it flits away. And now it seems surpassing strange to me, That while I bore the badge of motherhood, I did not kiss more oft and tenderly

The little child who brought me only good. I wonder so that mothers ever fret At little children clinging to their gown Or that the footprints, when the days are wet.

Are ever black enough to make them frown. If I could find a little muddy boot.

Or cap or jacket on my chamber floor. If I could kiss a rosy, restless foot.

And bear it patter in my home once more If I could mend a broken cart to-day, To-morrow make a kite to reach the sky There is fto woman in God's world could say

She was more blissfully content than I. Bat, oh I the dainty pillow next my own Is never rocopied by a shining head My singing birrlllng from nest has flown

My little boy I o*ed to ku- Is dead.

ABOUT CLOVES.

Don"t attempt to clean gloves yourself. For a trifling sum you can get it done by an expert, who will do it very much better and save yon so much trouble.

Don't wear cleaned glove* without airing them thoroughly. There is always more or less odor clinging to them.

Don't wear a glove that hi too smalt It

r* ••-,

Mail.

Si?

distorts the hand, spoils its shape and deceives no one. for a glove too small is perceptible at'a glance. Besides, thestraiuon the kid soon bursts them out: they do not last nearly so long.

Don't buy cheap gloves it is poor economy. The shades are never as new and soft, and you get just the price of wear out of them.

Don't wear suede mousquetaire gloves on the street. They are quite passe, and have been superseded by four-buttoned glace kid.

Don't try to wear suede mousquetaire gloves to match your evening gowu if they are not a perfect match. Tau or white are quite as good form, aud look much better than two shades of one color together.

Don't sew your gloves with silk it cuts the kid, as wilj any needle but the short fine ones that come especially for sewing gloves. Use one of these. If you will look you will see that all gloves are made with cotton.

Don't think a given size will always fit your hand. The same size in different makes runs very differently. Remember, too, when purchasing, that in a good make you can get several lengths of fingers for the same width of hand.

Don't forget to match your gloves to your gown or its trimming, or to have a sharp contrast, such as black or white. The two last-named shades, in four-button glace kid, with heavy stitching on the back, are considered very gpiart on all occasions.

THE SOUND OF LITTLE FEET.

1 listened in the morning For the sound of the little feet That patter'd along In the sunshine.

Over the quiet street For the tones oft ho sweet voice singing Some quaint lov'd strain of old. As I saw the wee hands full of flowers,

And the sunny head crown'd with gold.

I watch'd when the noon was over, And the clock in the tower struck four. As the children came slowly homeward.

The hours of schooltltno o'er And I heard 'mid the ripple of voices The one that my heart lov'd best. And I saw a smile like a Sunbeam

Stray'd out of the glowing west. And now, in the hush of gloaming, I watch and I list again But the little feet como no lunger,

No more do 1 hoar that strain: For the ilow'rs and the tired llttlo child-heart

Are hush'd into slumber sweet. Tbo' I»know that in heaven the angels Hear the sound of the little foot.

Augusta Hancock In the Lady.

Base Ball.

The Terre Hautes have not. covered themselves with glory on their first trip, which began at Washington last Saturday

defeats our team by"

the decisive score of 14 to 8. The weather and condition of the grounds prevented the other games scheduled for Washington from being played, and on Wednesday the team opened at Evansville for three games. All these were lost, by our li-oys, who returned home last night, tired and disgusted. The umpire lost them the games, of course, but their inability to hit or run bases also helped the thing along. With their feet upon their native heath, figuratively speaking, they are expected to make a better showing, as no doubt they will. The team is strong in many respects. and when Pace, the Detroit catcher, who joitis the team here, to-day, gets in working trim, it will be strong in its weakest spot. With two hard hitting outfielders, for which the management, is dickering, the team will be all right, arid able to meet the strongest teams iu the league. The season opens here to-day with a game with Evansville, which was preceded by a parade through the down town streets, headed by the Ringgold band. Mayor ltoss pitched the first ball over the plate, and from that time on it is Imped th.it Evansville will not be in it. The same clubs will play to-morrow and Monday, and will be followed on the I2th, Ulth and 14th by Paducah, and Nashville next Saturday, Sunday and Monday.

Tlie School Knumerntlon. The returns for the school enumeration were made this week, and show that a handsome gain has been made in the city. Last year the returns were very much short of those of the year previous, and as a result the school trustees of the city were compelled to levy an additional tax to cover the delinquency. The increase in the city, will make an addition to the city's proportion of taxes of about $4,000. The following is a list of the returns as made to the county superintendent: im: Fayette Harrison »J'» Honey Greek 376 Linton 4-iI Lost Creek S71 N'evins l.PK Otter Creek Plerson W Prairie Creek Mh Prairleton Riley Sugar Creek.

im.

li'4

440 f»W

1.117

:•&j

5.V) 317 r.:c VSl IH*

444

West Terre Haute 9W Terre Haute 10..V/)

u.m

Total 17.316 Hi.221

The llucnweie Ito«l Itarc, The following officials have been appointed for the Duenweg road race, which will occur next Wednesday, Handicappers, C. Urban, W. Krieten stein and Will Way: referee, W. Denny: judges, Robert Nitche, C. Wyeth and Logan Hughes: timers, Charles Nehf, C. Hunt and Will Bloomer starter, Fred Freers clerk of course. C. C. Wbeatflll: scorer, Silas Lynn :clerk, Jacob Stark. Start at No. 7 engine house, Ninth and Lafayette, to Ft. Harrison road, thence east to Lover's Lane, thence south to Hulman street, thence west to Seventeenth, thence to finish at Poplar and Seventeenth.