Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 6 November 1879 — Page 4
ft.
§He JgeeUg §*zette'
The DAILY GAZETTE is published ••ery afternoon except Sunday, '.and sold by the carrier at 30c. per fortnight, by mail. $8 00 per year $4.00 for six months, $2.00 for three months. IBS WEEKLY (GAZETTE is issued •ery Thursday, and contains all the «t matter of the six daily issues. .AJC WEEKLY GAZETTE is the largest pa? sr printed in Terre Hau#, and is sold for: One copy per year, $1.60: six months, 76c three months, 40c. All subscriptions must be paid in advance. Ho paper discontinued until all arrearages are paid, unless at 11m option of the proprietors. A failure to notify a disovntinuance at the end of the year will be considered anew engagement.
Address all letters: 0 WM. C. BALL Ac CO..
GAZETTE. Terre Haute,
THURSDAY, N0VEH3ER 6. 1879.
IN the D^ATH of Joseph Hooker the country lofes one ot the heroes of. the civil war. As brave as a lion, and as gentle as a child he did his duty and h® whole duty on every occasion. The turf covers no more gallant soldier or worthier man.
ZACIIABIAH CHANDLER, Senator irom Michigan, died at Chicago Saturday morning. Au account of the death was published in the GAZETTE lor iSatday,ahd additional paVticulars will be ioundin the telegraphic columns for today. Deceased was a person of whecn the GAJZ«FS'E in no way approved. If he were alive and we had oocasion to commentKon his actions or his utterances it would 4e in terms of severe criticism, as ^we havet often done before. InJ^s such criticism^ we -should at least»be sincere. Wecaa pay no trib ute to'«his memory whicii would not falsify our former utterances and belie our pre&ent beiief. Sinoe, liowever, notlumg but good should be said ®f the dead,"vwe hold our peace. He n»y have been«better man than we supposed him to be and we hope he was.
Isr *a recent issue the New 8fork Nation criticises a speech ol Secretary Sherman made in his canvass ot that sta'e. It saps: A J. "Mr. Sherman's account of -the actual condition of the Sbuth is so extraordinary in a public officer, part ot the Federal Administration, and bound by his very paciUon to kngw the essential untruthfulnsss of his reprebentations, that it cal's Jor the severest censure. *.At a time when the crop, which is pejliorly associated with negro labor, is annually on the increase beyond the production of the palmiest days' Of slavery} the^frecretary of the Treasury dares to say .that "whole communities" at the South "are slowly decaying in all the elements that would tend to make them prosperous and happy.-' Mr. Boutwell himself, looking out of his car window, would hardly have returned from the South with such a report as ttot.
Mr. Sherman has not lately been iioutb, except into Kentucky., where he was wery careful, the other lay, not to indulge in talk like this, or to -allege that a controlling minority in some of the Southern Slates has reduced the body of the ntgroes at the South to a condition but little better than that of •lavety." This language might have passed in the days when outcages*. were1 manufactured for political purposes, but it is ridiculous now.
Mr,£herman asserts that "no Republic cani speech, pointing out the errors and wron(sof the laws devised by the ruling class, could be made in these Southern •tates without danger of life or liberty." This is not true but if it were, we should like to a»k him whether freedom o^ speech iftltkely to be promoted south Mason and Dixon's |ine by reckless and extravagant declamation north of it concerning Southern society?" ..._
T11E T. 11. & W. ROAD. Less thau two miles of unlaid track now remains on the extension of the Terre Haute and Worthington Road. Of the fourteen miles between Clay City and Worthiag&on, the whole distance has been completed, except the small portion we haye mentioned. And as the track was laid it was #reH balasted, »-o that rtisftfte authorities set to work to-"ferret in as good fix almost as an old road., Bv 'Saturday the road will be conipftted, sand on that day the first jrain will through1 to the terminus. This work has been done ^quietly. No stir has been made jiere About it. But it has beer, prosecuted with- energy and is ,#v approaching completion. What i« more to the effect is that it is an exceedingly important Actor in the business developement of Terre Uaute. A rich country, the trade from wihich has hitherto goae away from Terre Hame, lis ,r.ow made tributary to it. At Worthington connection is made with the Iftdianapo lis, Vincennes & Cairo road. The whole length oS Cbe road is now forty-
V--V
ST",®'
four miles, and it ends at a town and a railroad station, instead of in the woods, as it did when the ingenious gentlemen who projected the enterprise left it to the charities of an unfeeling world. A very sensible change will be made in the running of the passenger train. In&tcad of going down in the morning from this place and coming back in the afternoon, it will leave here in the afternoon, stop at Worthington all night and come here in the morning. This will not be as pleasant as the old way to the train men who live in Terre Haute, and do not relish the idea of being away from their families of nights, but to the traveling public it will be very much more convenient The bulk of the travel is necessarily' made up of people coming up from points on the road to Terre Haute to do their trading. They can now come up in the morning, be here several hours, and then return, without staying- all night. Unless we are greatly mistaken, hundreds of people will come here to do their shopping, and good trade will be, too, for our meichants. Another great advantage to the people on this road, and we feel liki congratulating them an their good for tune, lies in the fact that they will now be granted their earnest petition and be given each day their daily GAZETTE. If they are not forgiven their trespasses, after that it will not be oar fault.
THE NEW YORK ELECTIOtN. One very excellent feature of the.-elec-tion in New. Yoafl: City, yesterday, v*as the defeat of Tammany and 6uc :ess to the anti-Tammany County ticket. With the loss«ftf these officers and the patronage attached to them, Tammany will be shoern of a large part of its strength, which has always been attributable to the cohesive power of public plunder. The dissolution of Tammany Hall, or itsTeorganization without John Kelley and under purer and better management may be expected in the near futuse. He has forfeited his right to be called a Democrat, and with his downfall«the party will be in position to carry the State. The vote cast for the! remainder of the Democratic State ticket testifies to this fact. It* mLst not be forgotten that the Republican scratching1 extended no farther than Cornell. They voted for the remainder of the Republican ticket- with one exception. The Republican state ticket therefore received the full vole of the party, and the relative strength of the two parties may be judged by thai vote. Had those Republicans who scratched Cornell the nerve to vote for Robinson, which they do not seem to have done, being content with the exertion of only half their power to accomplish a purpose which they thought desirable, it is probable that Mr. Robinson would have been elected. His defeat indicates nothing with refere ce to the political complexion of the ^tate. He drew votes which the party cannot ex pect in future contests, and met with opposition which will not exist next year. It means tha*. Kelly, out of spite, drew more Democratic votes away from him than his excellent record as Governor attracted to him frone the ranks of the opposition. This is the whole significance.
But on the state ticket below Governor party lines were closely drawn and the whole strength of the opposing parties was exerted. Judged by this standard New York is Democratic and her thirty#v$ electoral votes may be counted upon to- head the column which, a year frcm now,' will give the presidency to a Democrat. With New York and Indiana certain, or as* nearly certain as anything ^in 'politics can be said to be, the prospects for a Democratic triumph next year may be said to be in a salubrious condition. It must not be forgotten that returning 'boards no longer exist, except as a malodorous recolleftion, and that J. Madt* son Wells and his confreres will not decide the next contest.
ONE OF JOHN CHINAMAN'S ANTICS. San .Francisco, among its other peculiaritie«,.Burnber8 this additional feature. Every little while a person is mysteriouely «hot on the street, or a bullet clashes through a window, or hits a horse, or falls on the &treet. As a rule no sound of a pistol sh.rt is heard when these accidents occur. Natally this sort of thing was not to be quietly endured and/ so out
At last
he cause of this phenomenon. tliey have about come to the conclusion that it is attributable to one of the vaga. ries of the Chinese intellect. It is of course to be understood that the statements of Californians implicating Chinamen in the fperpetration of offenses against the law arc to he accepted with many grains o£ alio waneei -»for the average inhabitant of the Pacific coast is as prone to attribute all deviltry to the hated Chinaman as the average citizen with a screw loose in his mental machinery isto ascribe every trick not instantly explicable to the doings of this spirits. But in this case the evidence seems to be tolerably clear. John Chinaman, it seems, delights in noise
Hik, &mmf ir. *.nkr
TEE TEERE HAUiE "VfEEkLt
This might fcrred!' from
naturally be inthe fact* that
he is the inventor, ar.6 to this day the principal maker of those infernal struments of torture *tt®wn as fire crack era. John delights tfgtols. When he is enthusiastic Uj® ftoise of a pistol is a relief to his surr Aatged feelings, tfnder the influence of (good news, therefore* John mounts to "fhe roof Of his house pistol in I AD1, and discharges tha* weap©n in thj/air. Not exactly know ing that t' Je«ien»part of the cartridge is a nece jfcwry feature of it, or at any rate not cerinrg anything about it, he pops away 'into space. Perhaps he think the "biS!et may penetrate the azure vault .above 4*3 head .perhaps be thinks it r»i/oy •tarl Harmlessly tothe ground but fke moU likely hypothesis of' alf is tha fce doesn't c»r«, a continental what dc it* become of it so he experiences.the gRatification of bearing the kounti. Fif?d irom there altitudes the ball flies far, arid die sound is hushed in the roar of the stieetsi&nd its last faint echo has died awaybefore the catastrophe of a broken window or a hit individual calls public attention to the fact that "the times are out of joint." Having discovered the causc Californians are cudgelling their brains for a remedy, which does not seem altogether easy of attainment.
THE ISSUES IN NEW YORK. flside from the disgraceful fight on Governor Robinson mide by John Kelley who, to accomplish his nefarious purpose, united with Cornell, the contest between Democrats and Republicans Avas a typ one and illustrates well the radical difference between the two organizations. It was a local election pure and simple for state and county officers. No Senator is to be elected by the Legislature and no Congressmen were chosen. The Democrats, true to the traditions of the party and in strict accordance with the logic of their doctrine, proceeded to make—and did make—the fight on local issues. At the basis of their belief is the fundamental doctrine of the constitution that all powers not expressly conferred on the general government by the constitution are reserved to the states. They believe ir.: local self-government: that the states should regulate their own private affairs and counties their*, with out let or hinderance from the general government. They believe that the people of any State can regulate its own internal affairs belter than Congress or any other central power at Washington. What is more they believe that those things nearest home are most precious and deserve tke most attention, and that since a Governor and state and county officers manage those things nearest and most important it is of supreme concern to them that they should be worthy and well qualified. Jealousi therefore, of federal interference with local elections, and believing in the vital importance of home concerns, they fought a state fighi on state issues and did not propose to elect local officers on the question of whether or not the South was managing its local affairs salisfactor* ily. They kept in nind the history of the man who made a fortune by attending to his own business. They said that sines a County Clerk in New York cily had nothing in the world to do with managing the local affairs at Yazoo, Mississipi, they could not see the propriety of making his views in relation to that distant question of casuistry a touch stone to test his capacity for managing the business he was to be chosen to conduct. They said that Governor Robinson had broken up a corrupt canal ring and Other rings that were robbing New York, not Mississippi that he had placed the penitentiaries of New York, not Mississippi, on a paying basis that he had le duced the expenses of conducting the charitable institutions of New York, not Mississippi that he had paid debts of
New York, not Mississippi that he had greatly reduced the taxes which they in New York, and not the people of Mississippi, were compelled to pay. They said his record in the inanagemeqt of those affairs over which he had exercised and was to exercise control, and not his views on questions with which in the very nature of the case he could have nothing to do, ought to decide the merits Of the case. They said it would be supremely loolish for them, after the fierceness of their opposition to all inter feri ncc in their affairs by federal officials elected on federal issues, to throw away the fruit* of tuch opposition by voluntarily making outside questions the basis for the election of local officers. All the way through they fought in this fashion. And a gallant and true fight it was, in strict accordance with the tradi tions and doctrines of the party. We hope to see all fights made by the party conducted on this plan and we know we shall deserve victory even when wc do not secure it.
The Republicans^ Were equally true to their ideas. Thty believe in increasing the jurisdiction of the general government. They think the Nation, with a a big N, is of superlative importance and that States and local affairs are of email concern. They favor federal inference in local elections and when they can not secure it they do the next lie#
thing for them and make1 Sght on national Issues. Cornell was commended to the voters of New York as a man who ought to be elected instead of Robinson, because he is opposed to the lebel brigadiers in Congress, because he is in a raee over Liarksdale's shooting of Dixon, because be wants Grant president again, and because of other issues equally pertinent to the proper expenditure of New
York money, and the management of New York affairs. The fight was a good one, and we are proud of the Democratic party for its positions I
TATTOOING A GIRL'S LEG.
A CINCINNATI DRUMMER'S MAO PRANK, From the Cincinnati Inquirer. $ A letter from a responsible party in Hagerstown, Ind., tells the following odd story: A few days -since a 'gentleman' came to town, representing himself as a 'druggist drummer' from Cincinnatti., He was of good appearance and had a gentlemanly address, and in consequence he was not very long in establishing himself in the good graces of our fast young ladies. (Right here let »ne say that we have some of the fastest girls in Hagerstown that there are in all Indiana.) Mr. ©rugggist' fastened on one of these characters mentioned, and, playing the role of lover, in a remarkably short time completely won her confidence, Reoentlv—very recently—while the twarn wvre out together, and while the ladv wa^ under the influence of wine, which 'ye drummer' had persuaded her to take, the latter, who is somewhat of an artist in the tattooing, got the consent of the lady to ornament her'leg with his name. The name of the gentleman we withhold—not out of resDect l'cr him bat tor the house he is doing business for. Not o.ily did the tellow prick his name into the fair skin Of the lady, but he also decorated the limb with a number of vulgar caricatures which some time in the future Will undoubtedly cause her unbounded shame and remorse. The limb is in rather a critical condition, owing to cold caught while the operation was being performed or from poison infused in her blood by thctolors iised, and ii will be snrprising if the decorated girl does not suffer weeks of pain and anguish before her teg is in dancing order again."1*
A RAILWAY RITUAL.
From the Burlington Hawkeye. BRAKEXAK. '-With cheerJnl eyes I look around—' ,-f
PASSKNOBBS (Chorus). What isth.s oiiy which we see? '.What is this station we have found?
f*
BRIKEHAK.
This here is Gales-burg you-hear— me? SECOND BRAKKMAN. VS fbh&nge cars for the town of Peery,
For Qulncy and Kansas Clt-ecl kiwTtaU train goes right on to Aurory,. Mendots, Piano, Kewanee,
FIHSr BRAKKMAX.
"I'OU have neartwo hundred miles yet to ride:PAS8BNGKRS
1
We're homeward bonnd, homewari bound. 43RAKEMAN. 'Tea will fret tired and hungry beside
CHORUS AS BEFORE.
»you bet your boots, bot yonr beoti. BHAKEMAN. Listen, ob, ft rangers ol all tribes and nations, This tram won't stop at ~ud' more dining stations, Go in the dining earthen for your rations
PASSENGERS (Chorua
Lend ns a dollar, lend us a dollar. SECOND BBAKSMAN. YI •Hit up in your seat), the eonilnetcr 'comes:
Kit t. TA8SKKOIHS (ChorUB)i He does, byjlminy crickets! CONDUCTOR. 1 haven't mueh time at this end of tie line, ^f Sa yon want to be sharp witli your rickets. .CHORUS (all together) "What-tlme does the train—" "Oh, say co yoo know—"
MJe
tins the right train—" "la the fart "Ain't we running too fast?" "Ain't this train awful stow?" '•Do we-make a connec—" "Are there?"
ENTER BRAKEUAN. on your hat and grab your valite, rryethlnkyou can make it, say? no? .The train don't-step, bnt we'll slow np
Jf you want to jump off at Pla-no! INTER DRCIKO CAR CONDUCTOR.
If you dont nibble something, why, yon can') travel far Don't stop to dress, but come just as yon are: Dinner now is ready in the new,dining oar.
COme, bristle tip and eat. CBOSIC8OFPA8WNGERS. Yum*e-dlddi*% nm-e-dlddle, yum. yum, yum, YuDi-c-dlddie, ame •diddle, yum, yum, vom. Yauiediddle, uia*« diddle, yum. ju», yum.
Yum,yum, ynm. vum. yum!
Great Eastern Fast Freight Line.
The new anil short raute to and from Boa* ton Portland, Montreal, Buffalo, Sew York and*all points in Canada, New England, and tae nortnest.operating Via. the 'Chicago Lake Huron. Grand Trunk \ot Canada), Brie and Ceutrai railroads, and| their connexions east and west.
THROUGH CARS-NO TRANSFER. This line' is equipped .with new and larg ears, especially adapted tothe afaipaiFnt eJ aRAln from all points ia Indiana and 11. jnois. and the.southwest. For in format loi »npl/ to A. B. SOUTHARD,
N
the MISCELLANEOUS Mr.
(Chorus).
ADVERTISEMENT
uticura
Blood and Skin Humors.
Cutic»ra Remedies .for the Treatment of Blood and Skin and Scalp llnmors. When of Bciofulons. Cancerous, of Syphilitic orig.n tbe Cutlcura Resolvent is tne principal remedy, and if there are at tbe same time Ulcers, Sores or other External Affections, then the Cuticura. assisted by tbe Jnticura Soap, must be used externally. It the disease is otthettkin and Scalp, the.princlpal remedy will then be the Cuticura, with the Cuticura Soap, and such use of the Resolvent as is suggested by the following conditions: In all Skin and Scalp Diseases, when the Skin is hotand dry, tbe blood feverish, the liver torpid, the bowels constipated, or when the virus of Scrofula or|poison of Mercury Is known to lurk in tne system, or when the Constitution has been shattered by Malarial and Anti-Periodic Fevers and Debilitating Diseases, always take the Resolvent while using the Cuticnra. A cure thus made will be permanent and satisfactory.
Eczoma Rodent.
T!ie|C«tlc«ra ReaseSllee Swcceed where Csmaltatlsa 4 'Physicians Fall, *U"* r.-
Meserc. WEEKS A POTTER: Uentlemen.—I have suffered over thirteen year* with skin diseases .in my hands aud limbs, causing constant irritation, depriving me of rest anu attention totbusiness.
I sought many remedies here and elsewhere, also nse ef Sulphur Baths, without permanent cure.
Last May a physician called my disease Eczema ttodont.—spots appeared on my hands, bead, ana face, eyes became much inflamed and irranuiated, causing at l«ngth impaired sight.
Internal and external remedies were prescribed by a leading physician for six months, was then introduced to another, and a consultation of several leading physicians was had, when a definite plan was decided upon, but all to no purpose.
After iollowlng advice for four months without any permanent cure, I bought two bottles ot Cuticura Resolvent, two boxes of Cuticura, and some Soap, and can testify with great pleasure ti the effeot they have bad In my case, in eight days being nearly cured.
The physicians pronounce 1 my cuse the mott aggravated one that has ever oomennder their experience ami practice. recommend aud highly indorse the Cuticura Remedies. Yours truly,
cOUJNflr
M9K
ous
General Agent. Indianapolis.
TOXICA TD CONTRACTORS. City Engineer's Office, Terre.Uaute, Oct., S4th, 1879.
Seated* proposals will be! received by the Common Council of tbe city of Terre Uaute, Indiana, at'lts .rernlar meeting, Tuesday evening, Nov. 4th, 1879, for paring the unfinished sidewalks with brick on both sides of Third street, between Poplar and Farrington streets, in aceordance with speclficathas on file at this o®ce.
The couaeil reserves the right to reject any aad all bids. Lids to be accompanied with a brad signed by two disinterested Sureties.
Bidders names to he endorsed upon the outside of the envelopes containing the bids. Bv order of the OoM**«on Co*oeil.
7
QBO. «. SIMPSON,
•4. City Engineer.
II. DRAKE,
Agent Harper & Bros'. Publications. Clifford St., and Woodward Ave., Detroit, Mich., Jan. 21, 1879.1* 4 •1
Salt Rheiua
On race* Head, and Parte of Body dead Covered with Seahs and Sarea.
Messrs. WEEKS A POTTER,—I commenced to use your Cuticura last .July. Have only usea one larse and ont small box, an one bottln ef the besolvent. My l*ce and head and some parts of my hody were almost raw. Mv bead was cover el with scabs and sores, and my suffering was fearful. 1 hid tried everything I had heard of in the East aba West. Sly vase was considered a very bad one. One very tkiiful physician said he would rather not treat it. and some of them thibK now Ian only cured tempor arily. I think not, tor I have not a particle of Salt Rheum about me, and my case is considered won'ierfnl. My case has been the means of sellings grest many of your Cuticura Kerne-'ies in tbi* part of the .xmntry. ttesuectfully yours,
MRS 8. E. WH1PP1«K.
Decatur, Mieh.. Nov. 17.1W8..
C'UTLCCBA, Curie UK A BLSOLVE&r. aud CUTICURA SDAP, are prepared by WKEES
A POTTER, Chemlsu and Druggists 880 Washington Atieet, Boston, and are for sale by all iruggists. Price ot CUTICURA, small noxes, SO cents: large boxes, $1. RESOLVENT, |l per bottle. CUTICUHA SOAP. 29 tents per cake, mall. 80 cents three cakes 76 centB.
No other remedci in tbe world can so jnlckly assuage tbe most violent paroxysms of Pain. They distribute throughout the nerv*
svsfem a gentle and continuous current
of
Electricity, which InBtnniiy abnihllates Fain, vitalizes Weua au' 1 Paralyzed P*rt8, Cutes aore Lu^gs, PaHititltlon of the Heart, Painful Ki.imye, Liver Conplaint. Rheumatism, Neuralgia, and Sciatica. Get the genuine.
No. 11,590. The State of Indiana, Vigo County, in the Vigo Circuit Court, at its November term, 1879. yEtna Life
Insurance Company, vs. Thomas High, Hester High, Mark M. High, Harriet High, Mary Kessler, Simern Kcssler, Tilman Cammatyk, et al in 4 Be it known that on the' 30th day of October, 1879, said plaintiff filed an affida vit in due form, slowing that said Mark M. High, Mary Kessler, Simeon Ke«8* ler andT ilman Cammack, are non-resi-dents of the state of Indiana. Said nonresident defends nts are hereby notified of the pendency of said action against them, and that the same will »tand for trial on the 39th day of December, 1879, bting at the November term ot said court in the year 1879.
Atlesi: JOHN K. IJUKKAN, Clerk. C. E jHosford, AUy for PlYff.
ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE Notice is hereby given that on Saturday, the 15th day ol
giv November, 1879,
2 o'clock r. M., I will offer at public sale the following real estate, in Vigo County, State ot I.idiana, lo-wit: A tract of land commencing at the south east corner of the northeasv quarter of the south east quarter of section six (6), town ten (10), range nine (9) west-ranning thence west twenty-four (24) rods and twelve (12) fret, thence north nineteen arid one halt (19M)
rot*s»
mence ea'.t fifty-one
(51) rods and twelve (12) |8't, thence south nineteen and' one-half 89% ro U, thence east twenty-stven (27) rods to thegla-e of beginning. In all about six ard one-half acres.
TERMS OF S»AUI: X)ne third
J3)
cash, the balance in two tqual payments at MX and twelve months, the pu'rchaMT to give notes with approved security and beatingS ptr cent interest.
JOHN R. CUPP*,
Administrator cf the estate of Thompson B. Cupps, deceased. C. T. BURTON Attorney.
Farmers Attention!
J. F. KOED L,
wliose grocery is situated on the corner of First and Ohio streets, is supplied wi ... ust the goods you want and he s-t.s hem on terms to please you. He as ALT MEAT,
TAPLE GROCERIES, FAMCY SRSCERIES QUECNSWARE,
and a general liieof desirable good. Cash paid forGO.'Ptty produce.
MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISEMENTS
.|Tke Kentucky State Lstttry SIMMONS A DICKINSON, JMuiager*.
Has during its its existence paid more money in Prizes than any Lottery, Do-' mestic or Foreign, whose tickets' are" sold in this country. No drawings have, eyer been postponed even for a single day, and prizes have always been cashed without deduction on presentai01, 1,
THE NEXT DRAWINGTikes Plies
NOV. 16.
SCHEME:
\i price ot ti5,coo i« :....:.^J...ti5.co9' 1 iTueot s.ooo 5 coo 1 Prlio of 2.600 lv 1 Priaeof 1.500 is 1,000 lPrUeof 1,500 is 1.800
Prizes of l.COO are 6,000 6 Prizes of 500 arc '.1,500 SO Prizes of 350 are 6,000 100Pmesof so are....... 6,000 800 Prizes of 20 are 4.0C0 600 Prizes of 10 are 6,000 1,000 Prizes of 6 are...~.~ 5,000 27 Aproximation Prizes am'tlng to 2,700 1,861 Prizes amounting to ,....$69,700
'Tickets)
wil K\i r'Mf .* "t ti-t.. .. .. Club rates upon application. Address all orders ti
Or
1
VILLlAnsONIsOO.' Broadway. New Tork.
M. J. SICUJIOND (Jsriaf isa, Kf.
LUtof drawings published in the New for Herald, Sun, Staas Zeltung, Philadelphia Heeord, Philadelphia Sundav niapateta. and Leuisviile Comtasroial. All out-ot-town ticket holders are mailed a copy of the official list as soon at received.
The next following drawing Novr mber SOs 187®. |.ff ft S IK I .. .. .f .' -.5
Wanted at onoe, good,rellalls agento ia every town. Address s« above.
fkxt
A
N. B.—As we ran short of Itlckets in the last two drawings, and consequently were unable toUll all of our out*of-town orders, we would respectfully request our patrons to send In their favors at their earliest poeslHe convenlenoe.
IMPORTANT Announcemen
Life Agpttranee.
The Equitable Life Assurance So ie-, ty of the United States makes the following announcement to the public:
The dissatisfaction which prevail throughout the community with regard to onerous conditions contained in life assurance contracts and the iudicia'decisions based thereon, together with
the public endorsement of the liberal usages of this Society, 'as shown by its largely increased business, ohas led the management eerionsly to consider whether the contract .could not be simplified and certain conditions erased therefrom
which have been the subject of rr.uch criticism and nmcottception. After a careful examination of the ex perience ot some of the best 'companies in Great Britain, wha have showr. a
greater liberality than has been custom* ary in this country, this Society feels justified in adopting a 'form of contract in which the following important concessions are Jmadc to policyholders throughout tffe United States: 1. Policies will be made incontestable.
after three years from their date. 2 Each ordinary policy will provide for a definite surrender value in paid-up I assurance in ca«e the policy is forfeited
after three years from its date. "[fi 3^lEach Tontine policy will eontam a definite surrender value in cash ir case of withdrawal a'^ the erd of t«e^ Tontine periods 4. The contract will be concisely and clearly expressed, containing only such provisions as are necessary to protect the policyholders*- *.$ nvrh MS 5. The above $0n«di«!Ons %ill hefiafter inure to the benefit 6( all policies already issued and in force after ttyree ., years from tkeir dates respectively.
Cent Counter
Every Xave Kercsaat saouia keep pace wita tbe times, bv putting In Cheap Counters. I have the largest and only complete stock in the West.
Fries* Bottom
g^FPr iee List and Older Sheet!free Application.
c.ac.uin*aToir,
4S 47Jaeksaa Street.
CHICAGO.
