Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 27 May 1880 — Page 4
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AZETTE
OS. 23 aad 25, Fifth eett Terre Haute.
/TGRANT ORGAN ON GRANT The St. Louis Globe-Democrat is for Grant. It is very much for him. It is more for him than for all the other candidates together and multiplied by two In its i86ue for yesterday it says para.! graphically:
Grant's got 'em. The Grant movement is booming. Grant and Sherman will be the ticket as sure as shooting.
r»f
Boys, you'd better aU come in now, and make this thing unanimous. The tow-line has done so much preliminary pulling that the final pull at Chicago will be a very trifling matter.
It the private opinion* of Gen. Grant that a tow-line in good order is worth naif a dozen bar'ls for Presidential purposes.
Now let John Sherman s.ty he will transfer hit votes to Grant and accept the Vice Presidency, and there need be no Convention at Chicago.
Alabame boosts the boom by Jot only instructing her delegates for Grant, but authorizing the delegation to supply the places of all who refuse to obey the instructions.
The political Appemattox is over, and Gen. Grant has won the victory, of course. The opposing forces under Generals Farwell ancl Hesing were allowed to retain their slung-shots and brassknuckles, 60 as to be able to resume their ordinary pursuits on their return to Chicago.
The roll-call at Chicago will begin with Alabama, to which the response •Will be, "twenty votes for U. S. Grant." Next will come Arknansas, to which the response will be, "twelve votes for U. S. Grant." This will be sufficient to start the enthusiasm lor the old commander and to put him through on the first ballot. This is the programme.
WHITE WIKGKD peace once more Ireigns triumphant in the bosom of the city Democracy.
,' Rev. Darwood preached the second 'of his sermons on the "Mistakes oflnger8oU" at the Asbury M. E. Church last night. A report of what he said •will be found in this issue of the Gazette. {Some facts were presented which the ungodly can ponder with profit.
LOUISIANA chooses her delegates to the Chicago convention to-day and Colorado hers to-morrow. Both it is claimed will instruct fos Grant. In this way 32 votes will be added to the Grant column, which is already
407
or
28
more
than enough to nominate. The action of the convention is already determined.
THE Indiana correspondent of the Courier-Journal" lias the following to sky concerning the Gray, Landers fight for the Democratic nomination for Gover
nor: The big counties of Wayne and Tippecanoe hold conventions to-morrow to appoint delegates to the state convention. There has been a stiff fight in those counties for several weeks between the friends of Gray and Landers. Colouel Gray claims Wayne county and Mr. Landers claims Tippecanoe, and thinks he will get halt of Wayne. Gray has some hopes of securing half of the Tippecanoe county delegation. It is rather mixed. But if Col. Gray carries Wayne county and divides the delegation from Tippecanoe county it will be a serious set-back for Landers. Until recently Tippecanoe county was conceded to Ladders, as it is his meat and stood by him maniully in the convention of
1876.
The friends of Landers in this city are jubilant to-day and talk confidently of toe nomination of their favor ite. On the clher hand the friends of Gray who come into the city are equally as sanguine. The. fight for the nomination from now on un il the convention will be interesting and exciting. I still regard the chances in favor of Gray, but the Indianapolis ring is stretching out its hands and making its influence felt, and Landers may be nominated. The danger to Gray is now in the over-con^ fidence of his friends. Confidence is a good thing to have, but too much of it is dangerous. Two-thirds of the counties in the state will come to the convention uninstructed, and consequently the big fight 'for the nomination will take 'place in the Indianapolis votes the day and ^ht before the convention. Then wMl the* Indianapolis and .Landers men get in their work, and if the Gray delegates are not stalwarts they knay be captured.
-J'-JSI-"' 7W
-t
^IMFWSR A* W*V
THE EASTERN QUESTIONIt has now become apparent even to the most insensible defender of the Beaconsfield policy that the peace which he secured at Berlin was an utter failure. The Balkan peninsula has been a broad battle-field ever since the adjournment of the Berlin Congress. Where regularly organized armiep were not contending for conquest, the strong was warring on the weak, the idle and vicious on the industrious and innocent, the Turk on the Christian. The treaty of Berlin, as time has proved, has been but a temporary expedient, holding the final adjustment of the most vital questions in abeyance at the expense of social order and human life. It merely checked the total destruction of Turkey, arresting the work of reconstruction and adding a few- more years to Moslem rule in Europe. No sooner had the Russian army withdrawn to the northward of the Balkans than fanaticism became the sole arbiter of justice, and robbery and murder pursued their crimes open and unmasked. Nor has the Mohammedan enjoyed perfect security in countries over which the Christian holds sway. In Bulgaria he has suffered atrocities similar to those which he inflicted on the Christians living *outh of the Balkans.
No sooirer was the work of the Berlin diplomatists announced to the world than Roumania commenced arming to resist the recession of Bessarabia and to secure possession of Bukowina and a part of Transylvania Bosnia and Herzegovina took the field to oppose the designs of Austria, and the Albanian league was formed to defend Albania against Greece and Montenegro. And since Austria has conquered her provinces, that she might reform them, Italia Irridentia has clamored tor Trieste and the Trientine, Hungary has been in a chronic state of disaffection and discontent at the prospect of being overwhelmed by Panslavism. and the Germanic element of the empire has longed for a union with the fatherland. Thus every attempt to carry out the provisions of the treaty has only developed the hopelessness of the task. Every effort at its enforcement only discovers some new difficulty that it has created—brings to the surface some new ethnical problem for solution. It has changed simple questions to complex, imported Asiatic politics into Europe, blended heterogeneous races, imposed burdensome and useless responsibilities* exacted impossible reforms, let loose religious fanaticism and pitted race agains* race and creed against creed. The questions whose settlement it deferred are now troubling cabinets and ministers. The Armenian question, the Greek questian, the Albanian question, and the questian of constitutional reform and Turkish finance are all crowding for adjustment. For some time after the ad journment of the Berlin congress, the inherent^vitality and recurperative power of the Ottoman empire were talked of. It was announced that nothing but prudent management was needed to disentangle its financial camplications: that a scheme ofconstitutional government which it was' the unshaken purpose of the sultan to cary out, would invigorate and educate the people and that Eng lish council and experience would assist to solve the difficult problems of Ana olian politics. The world has waited for a verification of these assurances',' but instead of mending, ffairs have grown steadily worse, and ow Turkey is a bankrupt concern about to be put in the hands of a receive. The Greek question, raised to importanca by the present condition of affairs in Albania, is the most pressing. From the Berlin congress Greece got nothing but good wishes. Beaconsfield was the advocate of the porte, and through his effort the rectification of the Greek frontier was made a recommendation rather than }, if 4 '^condition* Several attemps have since been made to carry into effect the recommendations of the congress, but without avail. Turkey would not move and England, treating her as a responsible goyernment, has patiently waited for the promised se ttlement.
But Greece believes she received something more than a promise of settlement at the Berlin congress. In the thirteenth protocol to the treaty is contained an agreement between herself and Turkey for the rectification of her north, em bouftdary, and in the twenty-fourth art icle of the treaty'itself the powers offer their "good service" to see that the agreement is carried out. So the powers are indirectly pledged to the union of the Hellenic race, for this what is meant by the "rectification of the northern boundary." Besides the prom i?e given by the Berlin diplomatists, Greece believes she has another warranty from the powers for the settlement
ave her consent to the condition, and the powers have since waited, acting on the absurd supposition that Turkey was capable of performing an act of justice and wisdom,' But the result? of the recent English election have shaped thing9 so that this question must receive imme diate attention.
Earl Granville, at his first official reception, stated that England would support the Greek claim to the utmost, and doubtless, it is this statement that he caused the disturbance in Albania. The settlement of the Greek and Montenegrin claims,—for Montengro, as well as Greece, claims a portion of Albanian territory—will nearly destroy Albania and, if recent reperts be true, Albania has taken arms and proclaimed not only a determination to defend her present! bounderies, but also her independences This brings the Greek question to the front. K" tl -abit
01
her northern bjundary. While the strug gle between Turkey and Russia wa going on, the Thesalonians revolted formed a providonal government and proclaimed their union with Greece. A Greek army crossed the- border to give them support and prevent masta. ere which, it was feared, would follow their rebellion. This army was withdrawn at the request of the powers, bat with the understanding (hat Thessaly Epirus and Macedonia should be separated from Turkey. Turkey, at the time
Turxey is unable to force the Albanians into submission. In her best days she had gieat difficulty in conquering this race of hfftdy mountaineers. II history ever affords an instance of the slow approach of death upon a nation, Turkey offers an example of it. It is in articulo mortis, and its possessions are in the hands of an administrator. But who wil finally own them is difficult to determine, Austria is waiting, expectant, but the Liberal government of England stands in her way, In a recent article Gladstone said, "It is the determination of Europe thai Russia shall not annex Constantinople subject I presume, to the conditions that the powers most interested in preventing dangerous aggrandizment from that quarter shall assume the responsibilities of their position, instead o^ flinching from them as they did on one great occasion. It may, however, be a black and evil day for Europe,' should Austria be tempted to make the wil 1 attempt. Perhaps it might even b^ said that such an attempt, and such an attempt alone might result in throwing Constantinople into the hands of Russia." However, it may be safely affirmed that the eastern question" is again open, foi* settlement.
THE thing which is said to popularize Grant with "the gang" is that, while heis not dishonest himself he is afflicted with a constitutional inability to distinguish a thief from an honest man. He always gets indignant, too, when anybody attempts to point out the difference, and this has a tendency to endear him to the people who can't interpret the revenue laws.—[St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
The assumption of Grant's personal honesty does not seem to be warranted by the record. His connection with the Fish-Gould-Corbin-Black-Friday business was never explained so as to be compatible with the theory of his person-
LAST night nearly every Republican Councilman seems to have had a candi date for every office in the gift of the Council. If only they had secured con trol of that body .what a gay and festive assemblage a Republican caucus would have been to be sure There would haye been no weeping and wailing and gnash ing of teeth among the unregenerafe, disappointed ones. Oh no The birde would haye sung in the cherry trees and the Wabash would ha\e flowed placidly and peacefully to the bosom to the gulf.
I. N. KESTER, a member from this county of the last Legislature, desires the GAZETTIS to correct the impression that he is a candidate for re-election to the Legislature. He is not a candidate for the Legislature, but is a candidate for the State Senate, and will be presented before the Democrat'C nominating con vAntion for that purpose.
IF the friends of the Hon. Mr. Blank who receiyed votes for every position from a member of the Police Board down to Market Master, could have united on him for some one office he might to-day be' drawing a salary from the City of Terre Haute. His friends scattered too much and he fell as fell Lucifer from Heaven to hades.
ast Friday this young lady students of Vassar College, paid a visit to West Point and were shown the sights about that training school for snobs by the cadets. Astronomically speaking Venu* and Mars were In conjunction.
SKY]
1
^4 II
to six la as potent as eight to
seven.
Ji-. ,^...-pwuw,i, "y
CV NM*R-
THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
and
EVKRY Democrat in the City County has been placed under great obli egations to Mayor Havens for his admira ble and judicious conduct, during the late unpleasantness. On his firm s8 and ... courage the disruption ot the Democratic party depended. He was equal to the occasion, and saved the party from being broken down in the City. From a full and accurate knowledge cf the facts we have no hesitancy in saying that Mayor Havens, and the gentlemen of the Coun cil, Frisz, Beauchamp, Clutter, Reagan and Grace, have been in full anH complete accord, and if there is any future trouble in the party that not one ol these Democrats will be to blame for it, a they were not in the least at fault about the late differences.
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DAVID DAVIS hss attempted to start a bcorn by writing a long letter to one C. H. Browning, a friend living at Quincy, 111. In his letter, which is a reply to one addressed to him by Mr. Browning, he discusses briefly and, for that matter, correctly several great pubquestions. Amtng them are the questions of "Peace in the Union," '"Cen tralization," "the Third Term." "Grea* Corporations/.' "Civil Service," "Subsidies," "Public Lands," "Revision of Tariff," "the Public Debt," "Economy" and
Elections." As already stated the position of
Senator
Davis is sound, by
which we mean, what is the same thing that it is Democratic. But the GAZETTE does not take much stcck in the Davis boom. The Democracy owes him a very decided debt of ingratitude. Had his ambition not led him to^accept the position of Senator from Illinois, and had he retained his better place on the supreme bench he would have been the fifteenth man of the electoral commission instead of Bradley. And it is only reasonable to suppose that, in that event the commission would have discovered that it had the power to go behind the work of the Returning Board3 and right great wrong. Had that been done Tilden would have been declared elected President. Davis was needed in the supreme court which has bccome al most solidly Repub!isan by his retirement. He was not needed in the Senate and has done little or nothing to distinguish himself there. His ambitiou to be President cannot be and ought not to be gratified. rmot
S GRANT'S CANDIDACY'. Several days ago readers of the GAZETTE will remember seeing in the telegraphic columns of this paper an article telegraphed in advance of its publication in the Galena Gazette, touching Grant's candidacy. The editor was understood as being a personal friend of Grapt and was supposed to be inspired. For fear our {readers may have forgotton its exact wording and purport we copy it as follows
An item has been going the rounds of the press, asserting thai George W. Childs, cf the Philadelphia Ledger, had stated that Gen. Grant would order his name withdrawn from the contest at the National convention in Chicago. Neither George W. Childs nor any one else has authority for making each sti assertion. Gen. Grant's name has never gone before the public as a candidate for the Presidency by any word or act ot his Own, and he most certainly will not order his name withdrawn. A very large class of the American people have chosen to make him their candidate, and if the Republican National convention at Chicago sees fit to tender him the nomination he will not decline. This we know to be a fact, and we publish it because it is well that the Republican? of the country should cease to hold the matter in doubt."
With a view to determining for a certainty whethier or not it was absolutely to be depended on the editor of the Chicago News telegraphed to his brother of the Galena Gazette inquiring if the above article might be considered authoritative. To that dispatch the following reply was received. 3
GALENA, 111., May
24.—Editor
go Daily News: In answer to your query, I will state that the article published to-day in my paper, the Galena Gazette, stating that Gen. Grant would not withdraw at Chicago, is authoritative.
$100,000
J. B. BROWN.
•aval*!
THE OLD FLfAG AND AN AP4 im PROPRIATION. ^,^v If Terre Haute, does not get an appropriation for a U.S. public building this session the fault will rest with Senator Voorhees. Other .cities, for instance Fort Wayne and New Albany, in this state Columbus, O., apd Peoria, 111,, have been more fortnnate owing to the vigilence and persistence of their representatives and senators. This city might have fared equally well had an equal interest been manifested. Representative Hostetler.offered a bill in the House on Saturday providing for an appropriation of
for the purpose. This ought
to have been done months ago. It is too late now we fear.—[Express. Little or no hope WAS entertained by those most active in agitating the matter and? who sent the petition to Washington that the appropriation would be secured this sessioir. It,was sent to Washington after all the biil* for that apurpose which could well get through had been introduced. In a letter to Mr. James M. Allen, the originator of the petition, Senator Voorhees announced this patent fact. 1^ Terre Haute does get the appropriation next Session and it will, it will be through the efforts of Senator Voorhees whose most marked characteristic is the activity with which he labors for his friends, personal, political, town and State. Secretary Thompson is also noted for the same peculiarity, and it is a good one.
Uie
Council
original spiritf and that it now stands by the side of that cradle in which its infancy was rocked that it stretches forth its arms with vigor over the friends who gather round it, and that, thoagh has no intention of doing so at the present writing, it will fall, if fall it must, amid the proudest monuments of its own glory and on the very spot of its origin, oopla.
••'A SITTING DOWN.
Hon. H. B. Payne, the Democratic possibility as a Presidential candidate, is now talked of as a Congressional candidate from the Ohio district, in which he lives, We would call thai letting him down with a force sufficient to break the strongest iolitical ambition.—[Express.
That is not so great a letting down as in the case of Hartranft, who was Governor of Pennsylvania, and a candidate for President before the Cincinnati Republican convention, four years ago. He received the support of his own state
Sr
3 3
His
on the first and subsequent] r. termofofficeasGovenor have* and haveng failed to getth 3 nomination he became ani the Philadelphia postmastershif failed to get that he would a iI have taken "a consulship to some warm climate" or an old pair of breeches.
y.red dal
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Sha: Terre Haute, Mav
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fancy
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Its
atedly
TERRE HAUTE MARKETS. ,/
•yt
27, 1880.
W 6RAIN AND FLOUR. IO CASH RETAIL PRICES. WHEAT—1.00 fults $1.00101.05 med, FLOUR—Common,
$6.25
$5.50
6,50
lamily
patent
$7.5
o.
CORN—35c yellow
38c
O A S
white.
RYE—45c per bushel. HAY—Baled, $iS.oo per ton loose on wagon,
$13 10^15 00
fair
20c
Oolong,
per ton.
BKAN—70c per cwt. POP CORN—Choice,
30c
Mocha,
50
to
per peck
t? titi'l 1
HHOCERES
CASH RETAIL PRICES.
COFFEES—Laguira*and,Golden Rio choicest,
25c
per lb Old Gov. Java,
Prime Rios, Maricabo,
75c
8c
30c:
25c
good,
20Cts
35c.,
to
15.
Common Rio 12)^
The above quotations are ten coffee. "t ROASTED— Chexe Rio,i. Javas
35c.
oc
1
$tto
[a
TEAS—Imperial,
50c, 75^
Gunpowdt
$1.25. RICE—North Carolina, 10c. STARCH—6c. Corn,
15
to
20
to i2)^c Gloss, 12%. HOMINY—Hudnut's,
St lbs lor
30c
per lb.
Silver
3c
per lb or
Maizone,
gritz,
20c
3c
per box
SUGARS—Brown, extra C,
,$1 Molasses
10
lbs,
50
and
75c
Maple, $1.20. White-Coffee A,"
per gallon
9
pdunds $1
Granulated 8}£ pounds for $1 pulverized orciushed,
8
pounds for
leans,
$1
10
to
12
New Or
pounds, for $1.
MOLASSES—Drips.
75
CABBAGE—10c to
Chica
b?st syrup
75 60c sugar house, 50c, rejhum 50c per gallon,:::. .,
5:.t
GARDEN PRODUCE.
15c
per head.-
1
ONIONS—75c per peck. POTATOES—Peach blows
40
cents
per bushel. NEW POTATOES—60c per peck. ONIONS—3 bunches for 10c.
RADISHES—3c a bunch. PIE PLANT—3c a bunch.LETTUCE—3 bunches for 10c. ASPARAGUS—5c a bunch.
LEMONS—30c to
COCOANUTS—75c perdoz. RAISINS—15c per lb choice layer aoc per lb.
FIGS—Layers,25c kegs,
FILBERTS 20c BRAZILS— aoc. DATES—Golden
15c,
fine French,
PECANS-—Louisiana and, tas,
western,
15c. ..
J- DAIRY AND POULTRY. CASH RETAIL PRICES. HONEY—New
per doz dressed,
2
capiece.
SEEDS—Clover,
F£
REPUBLICANS who labored under the impression that discord and disunion had wounded the City Council Democracy that strife and blind ambition had hawked at and torn it that folly and madness and uneasiness uqder sahgary and necessary restraint had succeeded in destroying that Council's harmony by which alone its control of the city patronage was made rare, will be glad to learn from a perusal of
report
to-dajfr iGAJSBTT* that where
in
the
De
mocracy of Terre Haute raised its first voice, and where its youth was nurtured and sustained, there it still lives, in the strength of its manhood aad full of the
20
15
to
California,
20c
25c
per lb:
per lb.
CHEESE—New York dairy, ao«| EGGS— retail 10c. POULTRY---Choice spring (live} $1,50 to $d 00per doz old,
$2.00
to
$2.25
$2,00to 2.50
retail
per doz.
"*"i}
MICELLANEOUS. I
A O W to 6 HIDES—Green slaughter hides, 9c Green'salt, 9^c dry flint,
$4 50 $5 00
timothy, $300. WOOL—Tubbed, 30® 35c unwashed ed 25@27c.
CANDLES—Tallow, star, per pound 20 cents.
COAL OIL—Per gallon,
25
GOOD CLOTHING WOOL—21 to 23 cents per lb. GOOD COMBING WOOL—23 to, 25 cents per lb, tub wash wo oc to 33c per lb. ol. 3
DRY FRIOTS*
California dried pleaches, aoc. Dried peaches, good halves, iec. I choice halfs, 12%. '. quarters,
8r
1
peel,rj'aoc1
Dried apples, iec to 20c." Dried prunes, Turki*h,to«f French, 15(0
TAKE NOTlCifi—Regifi ered Letters and? Money Orders can be sent through tbe Malls to the Ualersigned as form «rly.
The Keatuclty State Lottery ComP*uy ts drawn tn pur an arte 3 of an actoJ the General Assembly of theStM of Kentucky. Tbe next drawing takes plat'* in public at Covington, Hy., on Wednesday71«
JUNE 16th J880.
LIST OF P&lZKSr
1 l'riz* o» 120,000 is 930,00 1 Prize of 4,SCO Is 4,600 1 Prize of 3,000 is. 2,000 5 Prizes of 1,»00 are 5,000 5 Prizes cf 500-are ...» 3,500 90 Prizes of 250 are...._ ... 5,000 ISO Prises of 60 are 5 000 200 Prizes of 80 are 4,o00 500 Prizes of 10 are 0,000 ,1000- Prizes of 5 are 5,000 27 Approximation prizes am't t«... 3,700 1,869 Prizos amounting to... $00,800
TICKETS SI.
Club rates upon application.
For full particulars and orders .address .. It. UPINGTON,*
599
4
Broadway, New York.
Or I M. J. RICHMOND, Covington, Ky.
List of drawings published in the New York Herald, Sun, Staats Zeitung, 1 Philadelphia Record, Philadelphia Sunday Dispatch, Pittsburgn Dispatch and Louisville Commercial, All out ol town ticket holders are mailed a copy of the official list as soon as received.
The next following Drawing, july 2t
N. B.—The Kentucky Sfcute Lottery Company has no agonta in Canada. All persons HOllcitlng orders lrom there fey circulars are swindlers.
UNFERMENTED
MALT BITTERS
Tosne
MADU
MALT AND HOPS
00D AND ME"rcrXE.—Preparotf with, out for mentation from Cauarllan Barley and Malt and Hops, Malt Blttors are warranted mote Nourishing, Strengthening, Vitalizing, aud Purifying hy reason of tbeir richness in *onfe and Macule 1'roduclng Material than all other forms of malt or mcdlcine, and free from the objections urged against malt liquors. For feeble digestion, sick headache, constipation,inactive etomaoh and liver, deep-seated coughs, consumption, weakness of the kidneys and urinary organs, emaciation, mental ant) physical debility, ulcerative weakneises of females, exhaustion of nursing mothers and the aged, they are truly marvelous.
Malt Bitters combine a Food and a Medicine in the most perfect form yet devised, and commend themselves to the weak, convalescent, overworked, debilitated, neryons, sleepless, and melancholy, as the purest, safest, and most powerful restorative ia aasdicine.
1
IMPORTEDIFRINT.j 1
50c
per doz.
ORANGES—35 to
50c
per doz.
PEARS—California,
5c
to 10c apiece.
Ask for Malt Bitters prepared by tbe Malt Bitters Company, and see that every bottle bears the Trade Mark Label, duly signed and enclosed In wave lines as seen in cut.
Malt Bitters are for sale by all Druggists.
Illinois Midland Railway.
The Terre Haute, Decatur and Peoria Short Line. TRAINS LEAVE TJCRRE HAUTE.' No.
2
25c.
ALMONDS—Per lb,
African zoc
ENGLISH WALNUTS—25c per lb. CANDIES—Mixed common,
30
Peoria Through Ex
No.
4
3
35c
to
40c.
20c
to
50c
sticks
2*
.r lb
^BANANNAS—$3.ooto$5.oc bunch retail
50c
a dozen.
7:07
a
Decatur passenger
4:07
pm
TRAIXS ARRIVE TERRS HAUTE. No. Peoria Through Ex 9:33 No.
Decatur Passenger 1:10 Passengers will find this to be the quickest and best route from Terre Haute to all points in the Northwest. Quick connection made at Peoria at
3:50
p. m.
with C. B. & Q^T. P, &. W. and A. I. & P. trains for Burlington, Ouincy, Keokuk, Omaha, Rock Island and all points in Iowa and Nebraska. Emigrants and land hunters will find this the most desirable route for points
:n
,v'.
Kansas,
Colorado and Nebraska. Special excur sions to Kansas are run every month via this line, in connection with the Chicago & Alton Ry. Excursionists are carried thi ough to Kansas City in elegant reclining chair cars without extra charge. Ifynu are going Westor Northwest, write to the undersigned for rates and any information vou. desire. We oflef you the decided advantages of quicker time, lower rates, and belter accommodations than can be had elsewhere. A-. E. SHRADER,
Traffic Manager,
Terre Haute, Ind'
Dr. Lascellft's English
E
Remedy,
If
13c
to
14c.
anlike tbemaoy so-called pre-
I I paratlons for this disorder which only relieve while used by tbe patient, cores permanently, end has been endorsed in this rvspect
Hole
tux
the past
20 yesrs by the leading medical authorties in Earone. Ho charge made to rive it aifaJr teft,ssDr. Lasoellesundertaksstosend each •uttering applicant* JTjtiSJfi paca*ge on tbeir forwarding rame and Post Office address to als
Agents for the U. 8. and Canada,
Messrs. Sloeasa A Co., No. 4 Cedar St.. New York.
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT OF ADMINISTRATOR. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed administrator of the estate ot Mary E. Welch, late of Vigo county, deceased. Said estate is supposed to be solvent.
JAMES E, MCGREW, Administrator.
Plow Shoes
and boots, and the best home-made boots nd shoes, at Bogeman's, No. 118 south aourth street.
