Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 29, Number 10, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 3 September 1898 — Page 3
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National History.
[Special Correspondence.]
I M. E. INGALLS. tion of hostilities, with every assurance of ultimate and satisfactory peace, it cannot but partake largely of the nature of a grand peaco jubilee. The city authorities have recognized this, and with the citizens' committee are preparing to mako it in reality a peace demonstration. Mayor Tafel has issued a proclamation setting apart Thursday, Sept. 8, as tho day to be given over strictly to a peace jubilee. On that day will occur tho civic and industrial parade, which will bo participated in by all leading firms of this city and which will be historic in the nature of the floats which will comprise apart of the procession. The evening has been set apart for an immense flroworks display, and this display also will bo of a character to indicate tho celebration of the return of peaco.
President McKinley has stated to friends in Washington that with tho signing of the protocol he beKeved ho saw bis way clear to attending the Cincinnati encampment.. With his presence to inspire thero is no predicting to what extent tho demonstration will go. Tho local committees, however, believe that scones will be witnessed in Cincinnati oncntnpmcnt week that are unparalleled in tho history of tho country.
Tho citizens' committee, headed by Hon. M. 15. Ingalls as president and William B. Melish executivo director, is preparing to entertain tho largest company of visitors that ever attended any encampment, unloss it be the one at Washington. Conservative estimates place the number of veterans and their friends who will come to Cincinnati now that peace has beeu declared at 800,000. Tho committee on halls and meeting places has assigned more than 800 regimental aud other organizations to halls for reunions during encampment week. This is nearly double tho number cared for at Buffalo, and indicates very clearly the increased attendance which may be looked for here.
Now that tho encampment is so near few details of what may be expected by visitors will bo of interest.
All within that immense territory embraced in the Central Traffic association and Southeastern Passenger association districts will enjoy a rate of 1 cent per mile to aud from tho encampment. From tho remaining portions of tho country a rate of 1$ cent per mile will prevail to the boundaries of the territory above mentioned, and from there to Cincinnati tho 1 cent per mile rate will be allowed. On arrival at Cincinnati tho visitors will find unusual arrangements for the care and transfer of baggage. Those having engaged quarters at hotels will find guides and bureaus of information at all depots, so that there will be no difficulty in locating their stopping places. The same ia true of those who have engaged quarters in private houses. Those not already provide! will be directed to a large storeroom on Fourth street, where the citizens' headquarters will be located and where they will be speedily assigned to desirable stopping places. All hotels are under contract to charge no more than their regular rates, which range from $1 to $5 pes- day. The maximt* charge permitted in private quarters ta $1 per day fear lodging only and |1.*0 for lodging and three meals. The committee on private accommodations has at this time quarters for 10.000 more persons than have applied up to date, and the offer of accommodations in private houses does not diminish.
The ambition of the local committer is to maJke the Cincinnati encampment out of the ordinary. To illustrate to what extent this is influencing everybody the work of the committees on puUlo comfort, medical corpa and entertainment will be cited.
.JSsi, jilfiSBI
BIG PEACE JUBILEE.
HAPPY CHARACTER OF THE GRAND ARMY ENCAMPMENT.
Cincinnati Ready to Receive Fifty Thousand Veteran* of the Former War.
Scene, of Entbu.hum Unparalleled I* the civil war.
CINCINNATI, Aug. 30.—The near ap-
proach of the thirty-second annual en- duty wherever there are crowds. In adcampmeut of the Grand Army of the Republic, to be held in this city Sept. 5 to 10, is evidenced everywhere. A throng of busy workmen are putting up beautiful arches along the line of march over which it is expected that 50,000 veterans of the war of the rebellion will march on Sept. 7, building grand stands, laying out Camp Sherman, where the veterans are to camp in true military style repairing streets and doing the .hundred and one other things that are needed to make the encampment a complete success.
The encampment of 1898 will have a significance not enjoyed by any other one. Following, as it does, so closely the signing of the protocol and the cessa-
contribute to the comfort of their bodies. These places of rest will all be plainly designated by banners that may be seen from a distance.
Dr. J. C. Ctilbertson has charge of the medical corps. He has surrounded himself whb 300 of the most prominent practicing physicians of the city, and a number of these were surgeons during
These 300 will give their
time and services to the encampment. They will be uniformed, provided with special medicine bags and will be on
dition every school building in which veterans are quartered will be visited at least once a day by one of these physicians, and a certain number will be detailed to make the rounds of Camp Sherman every morning. An unusual feature of the encampment is the fact that the rank and file of the Grand Army aro to have practically the same participation that the delegates will. The committee has had printed 50,000 coupon books. Each coupon is good for admission to a place of amusement These coupon books will be distributee by each department adjutant, and the plan is to see that every veteran get? one. These admit free to the lagoon, Chester part, art museum, Rookwooci pottery and other places and are good for admission to all theaters, the baseball park, zoological gardens and for rt trip to Coney Island at half regular rate. So elaborate is the series of entertainments arranged that it is almost bewildering. At the lagooG will bft presented in addition to the regular attractions a sham battle every evening representing Dewey's victory at Manila. At Chester park there will special entertainments every afternoon and evening under the auspices of tho citizens' committee. At the zoological gardens there will be concerts and general entertainments in addition to thu regular attractions. At Fort Thomas ft refreshment teut will be maintained in which any veteran will be given lunch free of charge. At Coney Island special entertainments will be given.
Three campfires have been arranged to be given in Music hall on Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, at which many prominent speakers are expected, including President McKinley-ex-President Harrison, some of the members of President McKinley's cabinet Senator Foraker and others.
There will be three parades during the week as follows.: Naval veterans and ex-prisoners of war on Tuesday, Colonel M. L. Hawkins of this city, grand marshal parade of the veteran* on Wednesday, reviewed by President McKinley, Commander In Chief Gobi'i and others, General Andrew Hickei looper, grand marshal the civic and industrial parade on Thursday, Colour! Amor Smith, grand marshal.
The fireworks display on Thursday evening will be given simultaneously at three different points—on the river at the public landing, in Eden park and at Camp Sherman. Precisely the same display will be given at each place. Tbe delegates and distinguished visiton will witness those on the river from the decks of the Coney Island steamer, Inland Queen.
An article of this kind would not b«? complete without further reference t*-i Camp Sherman. Located in the outskirts of tho city, adjoining Chester park, oue of the most popular pleasure resorts of the city, it has beeu pronounced by committees sent here from other cities to seourp quarters tbe mofrt desirable camping spot on which the veterans have ever been placed. It is now being laid out in streets, and will have a teut capacity of 8)000 veterans but tho camp is as level as a floor and capable of very considerable extension, so that if tho present camp is not sufficient it will be enlarged. Camp Sherman is between tho C., H. aud D. and Erie railroads on the west aud the B. &. O. S-W. and Big Four lines on the east. Three lines of street railways also reach the camp, 60 that it is no trouble to get into the heart of the city in a very short space of time. The veterans will be provided with bunks, raised 16 inches above the floor, aud mattresses. They will be fed in the big clubhouse at Chester park, and the bill of fare, which has been contracted for by the citizens' committee at 25 cents a meal, furnishes a tempting menu to the old soldiers. Wherever practicable, the posts coming into the city from the lines of road mentioned will be stopped and allowed to disembark at the camp without coming into the city. More old sol-
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Every vacant storeroom in the down town districts and all ehurchrooms! tions, eta, is under conttact to bo will be converted into homelike places pleted Sq*. S, so that ^the visitOT who wherein veterans or their wives and' daughter? may stop with the assurance of finding plenty of chair*, table* reading matter, ioe water aud even cots to
HARRISON" STATCK.
diers have been provided for in school buildings than at Camp Sherman. Thir-ty-one of the largest school buildings at the city will be filled to overflowing with old veterans during encampment week, and the same studious care has beeu exercised to provide for tile comfort of these as of the ones who stop at Oamp Sherman. Fully £5,000 veterans have engaged quarters tn school buildings.
All work now under process, including the arches, grand stands, decora-
arrives oo Sunday or Monday will find Cincinnati in gala attire and folly prepared to entertain her numerous guest*
WolL.FWC*
TEBRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL, SEPTEMBER 3, 1898.
NO WOMAN IS EXEMPT.
Regularity is a matter of importance in every woman's life. Much pain is, however, endured in the belief that it is necessary and not alarming, when in truth it is all wrong and indicates derangement that may cause serious trouble,
Excessive monthly pain itself will •unsettle the nerves and make women old before their time.
The foundation of woman's health is a perfectly normal and regular perI formance of nature's function. The statement we print from Miss GEBI TRTTDE SIKES, of Eldred, Pa., is echoed in every city, town and hamlet in this country. Read what she says:
DEAB MBS. PWTKHAM:—I feel like a new person since following your advice, and think it is my duty to let the I public know the good your remedies have done me. My troubles were painful menstruation and leucorrhoea. I was nervous and had spells of being confused. Before using your remedies
I never had any faith in patent medicines. I now wish to say that I never had anything do me so much good for painful menstruation as Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound also would say that your Sanative Wash has cured me of leucorrhoea. I hope these few words may help suffering women."
The present Mrs. Pinkham's experience in treating female ills is unparalleled, for years she worked side by side with Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, and for sometime past has had sole charge of the correspondence department of her great business, treating by letter as many as a hundred thousand ailing women during a single year.
All suffering women are invited to write freely to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., for advice about their health.
The "Wicked" Lonndale.
At a meeting of the Poor Clergy Relief society in London a story was told of Bishop Waldegrave of Carlisle aud "wicked" Lord Lonsdale. The bishop rode well, and on his going up to Lowther castle Lord Lonsdale admired his horse and his management of it. The bishop pleaded the cause of a clergyman passing rich on £40 a year, whose well educated wife took in tourists' washing to add to their scanty income.
Lord Lonsdale said: "Everybody looks on me as a very sinful man. beyond all possible hope of salvation Yon have spoken to me as a gentleman you have spoken to me like a good servant of the great head of the church you have spoken to me encouragingly about the salvation of even my poor soul you have pleaded tbe cause very nobly for that young clergyman. Here is my checkbook. Put down what you like, and I will sign it."
The bishop said, "No that is a matter between God and you. Lord Lonsdale gave the bishop oheck for £10,000 and afterward twe further checks for £20,000 for pool clergy of the diocese of Carlisle.
The Power of Modern Shi lis.
A 12 inch rifle is 88 feet long, with 4 feet external diameter at the breech, and weighs 48 tons. Its 850 pound shot, driven by a 430 pound charge of brown prismatic powder, leaves the muzzle with a velocity exceeding 1,400 miles per hour aud would reach a target at its effective range of 5}£ miles in 24 seconds, while it would take tbe report of its discharge 27 seconds to traverse the same distance. At a rauge of I 6 miles this shot would perforate 19 inches ol solid steel.
Tho 250pound projoctileof the8 inch rifle will penetrate a foot of armor al the range of a mile. The six 4 inch rapid fire guns within the superstructure eaoh deliver eight 40 pound projectiles in a minute, while the twenty 6 pounders distributed over the vessel can be relied upon to clear an enemy's decks oi to disable torpedo boats by maintaining a tenifie hail of explosive shell, capable of destroyitig any unarmored position. The final offensive resources of the citadel are the four torpedo tubes, each .prepared to launch automatic and dirigible destroyers containing 150 pounds oi gun cotton.—Cbautauquan.
Not Infallible.
Harriet Martineau, tbe English author, was shrewd and practical and had what men are pleased to call a "masculine intellect" But she was not always correct in her deductions, a fact illustrated by the following anecdote, told in her "Memoirs," by Sir Charles Murray, who was then the English consul general in Egypt:
One afternoon we met at the villa oi my old friend, S. W. Larking, on the banks of the Mahamoudieh canal. In the course of our stroll through the garden we came to a small gate, the pattern of which was new to D^iss Martineau, who was walking in front.
She stopped, and looking at the gate in an attitude of intense admiration lexclaimed:
How truly oriental! What wonderful taste these easterns have in design]" She went on, and as Larking and 1 followed through tbe gate he whispered to me, "I got it oat last week from Birmingham."
Women without children always seem to flock together.
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Southwest Corner ..... Fourth and Olilo Streets
$1 INDIANAPOLIS $1
And Return
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER
Train leaves Sixth street depot 8:00 a. m., returning, leave Indianapolis 6:30 p. m.
$3.70
Cincinnati and Return SEPTEMBER 3d, 4th, 5th and 6th.
VIGO COUNTY G. A. R. BATALLION TRAIN leaves Sixth street depot 1:00 p. m., Monday, September "5th. Everybody invited.
S
ORA D. DAVIS, Attorney for Plaintiff. HERIFF'S SALE.
By virtue of an order of sale issued from the Superior court of Vigo county. Indiana, to me directed and delivered, In favor of Commercial Bank, and against Sarah M. Fleslier. Flavlus J. Flesher, Nancy Flesher, Millard F. Flesher. Amelia A. Flesher, William A. Flesher. Mary E. Flesher. Benjamin T. Flesher. Mary A. Flesher. Isaac N. Flesher. Belle Flesher, avis Iv. Flesher, Maggie Flesher.Charles T. Flesher, Harry L. Flesher, Emma S. Flesher. Mary B. Ware, Cola Ware, Dorothy T. Congrove, Lewis F. Congrove, Dolly M. Kelley and Eugene Ivelley, I am ordered to sell the following described real estate, situated in Vigo county, Indiana, to-wit:
Tho west half of the southwest quarter of fractional section fourteen (14). township ten (10) north of range eloven (11)- west, containing sixty-two and fifty-four one-hundredths (62 54-100) acres more or less, also fractional section fifteen (15), township ten (10) north of range eleven (11) west, containing one hundred and fifteen (115) acres more or less, all in Vigo county, Indiana,*and on Saturday, the lOtli day of September. 1898, between tbe hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. m. of said day. at the north door of the court house, in Terre Haute, I will offer the rents and profits of the above described real estate, together with all privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging, for a term not exceeding seven years, to the highest bidder for cash, and upon failure to realize sum sufficient to satisfy said judgment and costs. I will then and there offer the feesimple in and to said real estate, to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy the same.
This 20t day of August. 1898. LOUIS P. SEEBURGER. Pf. $10.00. Sheriff.
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No one contemplating attending a business college can afford to enter any school until they have visited the Terre Haute Commercial College. For full particulars see August number "Business Pointers."
is a quality some newspapers have lost sight of in these days of "yellow" journalism. They care little for truth and a great deal for temporary sensation. It is not so with THE CHICAGO RECORD. The success of THE RECORD rests upon its reliability. It prints the news—all the news—and tells the truth about it. It is the only American newspaper outside New York city that has its own exclusive dispatch boat service and its own staff correspondents and artists at the front in both hemispheres. It is the best illustrated daily newspaper in the world. Its war news service is unapproachably the best Says the Urbana (111.) Daily Courier:
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Sold by newsdealers everywhere and subscriptions receive! by all postmasters. Address THE CHICAGO RECORD, IS* Madison street, Chicago.
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Machine Works
SAMUEL R. HAMILL
Attorney at Law
Suite 2O2-208 Grand Opera Hoiue BuildingLocal and Long Distance Telephone -113.
Maaofactarers and Dealers in Machinery and Supplies. Repairs a Specialty Eleventh and Sycamore Sts., Terre Haute, Ind.
C. F. WILLIAMS, D. D. S.
DENTAL PARLORS,
Corner Sixth and Main Streets.
TERRE HAOTE. IND.
DR. R. W. VAN VALZAH,
Dentist,
Office, No. 5 South Fifth Street
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