Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 8 June 1882 — Page 4
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W. fc. BALL ft CO *1
Entered m$ tlM» Po«t-OfIic« at Terre Haatt, InA.. a» «eoon4^lM« mail aiatter.1
RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION
Daily, Ifi cents per week, 66 cents per "xonth.rJO per year Weekly $1JS0 year
ANY person receiving this paper who is not a subscriber may understand that it is sent to him by the publishers as a sample copy. They invite your inspection of it, confident that it is the beat week, ly paper printed in Western Indiana. If you are taking any paper now compare this with it and see which yoc like best for home and telegraphic news. If this paper pleases you/and fifty-two numbers every, bit as good are issued each year send us your name as a subscriber or cal, and have your name enrolled. There will, we think, be found in this issue of the -GAZETTE, and in it every week, so far as that goes, matter of interest to the farmers of Vigo county which no other paper, 'even attempts to collect and print. If money is scarce now, but you will be all right after harvest, call at the office, and if you look like au honest man who would J" not cheat an editor, &pd you probably would not, as he has a thousand chances in a lifetime to make it red hot for you if you do, you can have it lor a month or two OR credit until you can then pay for a year. The subscription price is only •$1.50 per year or less than 3 cents a copy.
When in the city buy of any newsboy on the street a copy of the DAILY EVEKISO GA/ETTE. Of all the papers printed on Saturday afternoon in Terre Haute, it is the only one which has the telegraphic •dispatches and it has those of the Western
Associated Press which give all the latest news, theimarkets, congressional pro--ceedings, foreign intelligence and everything up to the hour of going to press. ,, .Besides this its local news is iresh and ,i *right up to date. It is the paper for you "*~to buy "wli^n you are in the city if you .want the news. .Try it and secifthiaiq
MFLOTSO.
ft'
WILL THEY RESIGN
In the case of Hunt, the bank robber, ^on whose forfeited recognizance suit has "been brought in the Circuit Court, a most ^singular state of tacts has been developed.
Ia the first place, the bond itself i9 a most "slipshod and indifferent affair. Had the »pable gentlemen whom the people of Vigo ^-county, after much solicitation on their part, selected to manage the Criminal
Court, tried their best or worst they could not, it seems upon investigation, .have made a document so open to SUQ'^cessful objection.
Some foreknowledge of the blundering incapacity of the Criminal Court must have made Messrs. Hunt and Simmons and their local representatives teel the *, sovereign contempt they have all along exhibited for that court and the documents issuing from it. It can even be ^Ishown, it is intimated, that this defectt^ ive bond was not even made, as it purv*f sports to have been, in open court, but was fired .up between.time, when the court was not actually in session and done in
Hhe Clerk's office or on the sidewalk, It is isaid, if occasion demanded, as it will not, Hhat escape from the obligation of the ,„"ibond could be lound through that loophole. i- v-* v*
And this, mind you, is tho way busi!]|ne3S was done in an important case in ®which the public was greatly interested,
And where self-respect and a dccent rei'igard for the obligation ot their oaths of .•office ought to have made them and possibly aid make them extra particular.
Bat a mo|t remarkable discovery was madc in the trial of the Hunt case yes|4tcnlayV "Prosecuting Attorney Blue, who Julias acted arid is p.cting in these cases fjffwith vigor and ability, brought his suit f/^on a transcript furnished him by the
County Clerk. Reference has been made to that transcript several times in the GAZETTE. Tn the trial the attorneys for
'jtbc defense impeached the transcript, paying that it was not an accurate copy Aofthe iecord. The record was then proMM* duced, and it appeared that the defense was right and that the transcript and r« record did not agTee. But this is not the most peculiar feature of the~caae. "The 'transcript read as the record ought to be JP^and not as It unfortunately was. In one tt **vital place the bond of Hunt, as it appears on the record, beside its general informal ty, has the word Slm-
i.m6na
where Hunt ought to be. "A referenoe to the court report will show this I more folly.
Now that primarily is an efror of the XJlerk. He made up the record and he jeught to have made it up right. His second error was in making a transcript at variance with the record. It is cerMainly a very humiliating thing for the jpeople of this county to discover that (he I 1-,records of the Criminal CoOft an kept and copied so loosely as this was. And if they are kept this way in a case where /, the public was so greatly interested and 4 where so much has been said and where the clerk was presumably taking especial
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pains, what eavexns and abysses of infrnr fovcstijfltion^ mafcty,.and. erro* must, yawn iu the mul- Jodge,§gott heard maMty and erro* ijiustyawn iu the «mulSvlitade of cases^o which the attention^ a busy public has net beeti directed
But these records are read or are rappoeed to be read and certainly ought to be read in the court- before they are «i|n*d It is the duty of the Judge to see to it that they are right and we presume the t« criminal prosecutor might betray a far off interest in the matter without offend
,*ltf
ing the people who employed him, at Ma^ ^KWVCT he solicitation, let it not be forgotti^j.^oi attend tobusin ess and sua mat ttre fltale js not kicked about and out of her own courts by every vile criminal that is caught and placed in jail.
This error of the record having been discovered the case will be sent back to the Criminal Court for correction and it will be found, in all human probability, that His now too late to mend this fatal and inexcusable blunder. But even that waa corrected the Hunt case as well as the Simmon's case could both be kicked out of court for another blunder of which more particular mention will be made hereafter.
The truth of His, and this case demonstrates it,* we have no Criminal Court. Vigo county and her people are at the mercy of whomsoever may choose to break the law. We can arrest theta, to be sore. But being arrested they can, under the law, give bond. And our Criminal Court does not, neither its judge, its prosecutor nor the deputy clerk who keeps the record, know, according to the shameful evidence c£ this case, how to make and record a bond on which a successful suit can be brought. We say they do not know how because in this case, on which the eye of the public has rested from the first and iu which, it is presumed, 1f they ever tfy to, they tried to do their duty, they have failed so la mentably and inexcusably as to make this community, and its laws a by-word and mockery. They could do nothing so pleasing to the people of this community, as to resign frdm offices the duties of which they have demonstrated their inability or unwillingness to perform,
TUB HUNT BOND CASE. The Hunt bond case which occupied the attention of Judge Scott most of the day Monday presented some interesting new facts. In the first place, after Prosecutor Blue bad read the transcript of the record of the bond prepared for him, an attorney for the defense offered to show, and apparently did show that the transcript was not a correct copy of the proceedings of the Criminal Court in that particular case a« entered upon the official record of thef court and signed by .the judge of the airt. Thomas B. Xontj. This is where the conflict occurred. The transcript showed that Charles F. Hunt, one of the bank robbers, had given bond with Thomas W. Harper and Saudford C. Davis as sureties. The record showed nothing of the sort. The record showed that Benjamin Simmons (or whatever may be his nsme) gave both bonds that is, that, by an error of somebody's making, where the name of Benjamin Simmons occurred that of Charles P. Hunt should appear, and that therefore so far as the robber Hunt was concerned he never gave a bond and his sureties were no more, and in fact not as much, liable for his technical default than the judge of the court himself, who permitted or suffered the error to creep into his record when he should have employed his time in fortifying it against attacks which he and everybody else knew would be forthcoming.
Then there is another exasperating error in the proceedings. Judge Long was sick when the indictments against the robbers were returned into court. In that case of course a special judge had to be appointed for the occasion, and Judge Long tent up word to Kichard Dunnigan, an attorney at law, asking him to open court for him. We do not know what the custom of 1 he judges of this county has been regarding the appointment of special judges, but the.Supreme Court of this stale as late as the 1st ot April last (by a striking coincidence the decision was rendered OD the very day the' error in the Criminal Court was made) held that iu a criminal ,«uit an oral appointment as special judge Wks illegal and all proceedings taken while a Judge so appointed occupied the bencti wero nugatory atfd of no account whatever. Now, it appears, that acting on the request of Judge Long, Mr. Richard Dunnigan did open court and did receive the indictments returned by the grand jufy against the robbett, Hunt and Simmons* and did fix their bonds, Judge Long subsequently defaulting botli of them and tinging himself the record of the proceedings taken while Mr. Rich,ard Dun nigan was on tie bench. So that while tlid cHisens of Vigo county pay a court to transact their business they at the sanm time pay aeourt to make or allow half dozen errors to creep into a case—an important one, too, by the way—which, pMviding we had a court that would attend to ita business, would have enriched *he school fund the handsome sum jot ww. •. •.
There is another point ^The record Has changed, so Deputy Clerk P. B. O'Keilly said Monday, some time after the proceeding^ were had. They changed, he said, by him and on the orders of the Judge. This is a case that
Judge ^pott heard Prosecutor. Blue and thf&fiiiitl aiyl, (Anting that the case |fas an important One ab& he, wouldE look up tnll^be •jtUthorities he coftld *find, ad joun^M|i%ctuse indefinitely1.'
THB Republican ^Congressional Convention for this, the 8th "district, meets to-morrow at Crawfordsville. Their work being completed their candidate
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THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTJS.
if1t^^ld
?be'itTi.1f
once enter upon Ms canvass. Under circumstances, thedistrict moreover being a large one territorially and being pretty heavily Republiccan at the last election, it weald seem to be not only desirable bat the part of wisdom and prudence for the Democrats to make haste in selecting their candidate and starting him over the district We can not afford to give the Republicans the advantageof a month or two longer canvass thsn we have, but ought as soon as possible to hold our convention, select our candidate and enter him for the race. Though the district went heavily Republican the last time there is every reason ta feel encouraged at the present prospect i. There is not only a fighting chance for carrying the district but the most flattering prnepect. All we need is unity and prudence, and the first thing to be done is to arrange for an early convention. Thatjs of the highest, importance
One of Nature's noblemen was the Baron Justus von Liebig, who died in 1873, at the age of 70, beloved by his fellow Germans and reverd by his servants of two continenis, and who little needed the title which the Grand Duke of HessDarmstadt coufered upon him in recog. nition of his ditinguished scientific ser vices. The great chemist devoted a large part of his life to researches in the fields of food and medicine, and while adding to the world's store of scientific knowledge, kept constantly in view the wants of suffering humanity. His heart was|full of sunshine, and the spirit of the true philantropby inspired this work. It is to him that world is .indebted for the first attempt to concentrate the nourishing properties of food in a cheap and simple form, and bis famous Extract of Beef was the practical result of his labors. Thv subject of fermentation, however, interested him still more deeply: and the discovery 1hat the active ptincipal of malt, by which the starch of the grain is converted into sugar, bears the close resemblance in its eaect8 to that contained in the digestive juices led to the prepreation of his Malt Extract, the virtues of whioh as Cbnic asd restorative have long Bince becnjrecognfcied by the most em inent physicians on both sides of the Atlantic, as well as by the public. In cases of debility, nervous depression, enfeebled constition and female weakness' it will be found of incalculabel value.
A Majority For Peirce.
The townships of Clay county held their conventions on Saturday last to se lect delegates to the congressional conven tion of the Eighth district, which meets in Crawfordsville on Thursday next. So far as heard from definitely, five of the townships sent open and avowed Peirce men, Van Buren, which has four votes, instructing for Peirce. This gives Peirce fifty assured votes, a majority of the oonveauon. .ge®|~u
A JMSW CANDIDATE.
A private dispatch received in this city from Crawsfordsville this morning says: Hon. Michael White haa consented to be a candidate for Concress before the Republican convention to be held in this city next Thursday. Half of the delegates ot' this (MaD*g6mery) fcouhty Have pleged him their support.
Hon. Michael White was elected member df Congress from the Crawfordsville and Lafayette District in 1876-8. He is a good canvasser and ran ahead of the Republican ticket *'He may cause R. B. F. Peirce some trouble before he
fooks
rets through, although at this writing it very much as if Peirce had a sure thing of it.
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A SWIMMING SCHOOL i'H .r.
An Amusement Especially Adapted Summer Wants- It will be Open to Ladies. wmivl
to
The ArUsion WcU SwiinnMng School arraug^ments are now complete cxcept tli8 dressing rooms, and it is expccted that these will be done iu a day or two, and the pool will be ready for bathiDgon Friday, possibly a day before.
Mr. Conant (ells the GAZETTE that the ladies will be admitted to the pool. It haU not yet been decided whether both sexes win be adhiftted in bathing suits ta, swim at the same time as at the seashore, Or whether separate hours will be set a3ide for the sexes. I «,
To Ptorthern Saaiaer RssortsChicago to Waukesha, several trains daily. This is the new direct Waakesha
linel Try it. It is the best. ^Chicago to Milwaakee,
route. Chicago to Si Paul, two fast trains daily.
Chicago to Ifadison, four trains daily. Chicago Gb Madiaoa.via Milwaukee and Waukesha.
Chicage to Sparta, two express trains daily: Chicago to Green Bay, three' niins daily
Chicago to Menash^twaesv^M ^hios
Chicago to Green Lake, two trains daily. No other road runs to Green Lake. Chicago to Lake Mills. No other road runs there.
This is the only line to Devil's Lake, Wisconsin. This is the only line from Chicago to Lake Genera.
Chicago to all Northern Resorts, many trains daily. All of the above are yia Chicago & North-Western. of Chicago, .. .. it has pallor Cars north of Chicago.
It alnQe runs Dining Cars north of Chicago'. Go through Chicago when going north.
All ticket agents can sell you excursion tickets via the Chicago & North-Western Railway.
It is the Pioneer Tourist Route, and is the bestw Try this near Waakesha line. Itisthe shortest. I
A I N TKFEFTX nXtfttc A? srtrre XASTKKW.'The annual meethrg of the atockhoid"ersof the T. H. &b. E. railroad was held last night at the Company's office, Terre Haute House, and the following directors elected for the ensuing year: W. B. Tuell, H. Hulman, John S. Beach, William G. Jen ekes, Alphonso Shaw, William M. Tuell and B.Y. Marshall. Following this was a meeting of the directors at which W. B. Tuell was elected president John 8. Beach, treasurer Geo. Atberton, superintendent, and B. V. Marshall, secretary. The report of business, for the past year was satisfactory to the stockholders. 7
ITS STAR STILl ASCENDING, j! In a recent call upon Mr. W. H. McAllister, 20G Front street, general agent for the sale of the Star Chewing Tobacco, he thus spoke to one of our reporters: "I was tortured with pain from acute rheumatism, and cared not whether I lived or died. I tried St. Jacobs Oil—just two applications of which entirely cured me." —[San Francisco (Cal.) Call.
Ex-Sanitary Commissioner Rufus K. Hireman, of New Orleans, was cured of a severe attack.of rheumatism by St. Jacobs Oil, so we see by an item in the Columbus (Ga.) Enquirer-Sun.
I -f\$ Telephone to Marshall.
We are now connected by telephone with Marshall, 111. Terre Haute is the grand central exchange for the whole circuit, as she is the grand central depot of supplies for all these towns.
BEST
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AX ACCIDENT.
The seuth-bound passenger train on the Evansville and Terre Haute, when approaching Vincennes on Saturday, ran into a mule. Tne train boy, Jesse Baker, of Danville, 111., swung himself out of the side of the car to see the collision, when he was struck on the head by the target of a switch. His skull was crushed, and the fall broke his leg at the knee. His death 13 momentarily expected. i-r .4 7~ TT*» I. 1
WASHINGTON- -f 11 GUITEAU'S CASE. L.FAL
This morniug Reed, counsel for Guiteau, appeared before Judge Wylie, of the criminal court, and asked to have the record corrected in the case of his client, particularly as to the count in the indictment alleging that the late President died in the District of Columbia. He stated he had other motions in view which necessitated a clear record. Judge Wylie denied the motion. He did not question the power ot the court to correct its record but it was not tor him, sitting in another term and having no personal knowledge of the record, to undertake to amend it. A general verdict was based upon good counts in the indictment, though in passing sentence shutting its eyes to vicious counts.
I-X
The Brazil Connection.
It is exceedingly" desirable that Terre Haute form telephonic connection with Brazil. A line is now being run from Indianapolis to Greencastle, and if Terre Haute is not caught napping it will be extended to Brazil, and thus direct away from us the trade which naturally belongs here. The Telephone Company will build the line if it receives the proper encouragement in subscriptions, wnich they will pay in service over the line.
THE Forty-fitth Annual Council of the Diocese of Indiana will meet at St. Paul's Cathedral, Indianapolis, to-morrow evening. The delegates trom St. Stephen's Parish will be the rector, and Messrs. George C. Duyv Lewis B. Martin, John S. Beach and H. 0. Nevitt.
shall begih hall give siolc
IN the near future I course of lectures in which I shal the essentials of Anatomy, Pnysiology and Hygiene also the Diagnosis and Prognosis of all difficult and dangerous diseases. All will be copiously illustrated by the best Anatomical and Physiological drawings colored to nature, by Anatomical charts, and by fniniature paintings illuminated by the camera obscura and stereopticon with oxy-hydrogen or electric light. Dispensary and Clinic No. 415J£ Ohio street. Consultation free. B. F. TOMLIX, M. D.
All kinds of serviceable harness.
trains
•K
'i
^^Explanation,
To Vie Business Aisociatic of iKe Pliysitians of Terre Haute. Whereas, It has been reported that my charges are much greater than the usual fees charged in the city. I take this oiv portunity to state that through the kindness of a medical gentleman of this city I have a copy of the established fees. My books are as all times open to inspection. Tou will find that my charges have never exceeded the usual fees, and generally been much less.
B. F. ToxLift, M. D.
WKBSTHB
says "Nonparel" means
"having no equal," Md such is Foss & Schneider's "NonpiWl" Export Lager.
BBJ& the notice of the Danville races, commencing Tuesday, July 4th. Two thousand six hundred dollars are offered in purses.
9
"Dr. Lindsey's Blood Searcher," by purifying the system, softens the skin and beautifies the complexion, just try it.
There is no use talking! Blood Searcher" is taking the curing all blood diseases.
boslnes now Mfore Ike pub lie. You can raake money faster at work tor as than at anything else capital not We will start yoo. $12 a day and
wholeime
fe
"Lindse lead
y*i foi
-z5
Biliousness, constipation, or headache Is the sign of disordered liver. "Sellers' Liver Pills" always care. 25 cents a box.
LITTLE MISS ANNA TBUKBLOOD who attends Sugar Grove school bouse has written some Quite clever verses about the family's pet, a littlh girl baby, which are crowded out of the GAZETTE for wan of space.
For dizziness, headache, pain in the biliousness and fever and ague, use only "Sellers' Liver Pilla." ti'
Ui
wards made at home by the industrious iris wanted ^very-
needed. Men, women, boys sod $}i where to work for us. Vow is the time. You can work in spare time only or giv^
Soarat
to the business. Yoa can,
ve home and do the work. No other business will pay von nearly as well. No one falls to m»ke enormous pay by enraging at onee. Costly oatnt and terms frw. Money made fast, easily and honorably. Address Turx A Co., Augusta, Maine.
I HAVB aright to say consumption is curable, because I have cured it. And so with catarrh or ozoena, fistula and piles and opium habit, also lupus and cancers also the whole range of scToftftous diseases as eczems, scald-head, old sore throat, sore and weak eyes, rheumatism and nearly all cases of heart disease. I cure nine out of ten cases ot fits or epilepsy, and Brights disease of the kidneys. I know these assertions will be discredited by physicians who have made no special study of these diseases. But, nevertheless, I can prove them true. Consultation free.
B. F. TOMHN, M. D.
DAVIS SWING CHURN
—B*S®
AMD CHXAMtflT!
no Inside fixtures, shrug *tsideupjiasl« e»lre»im»do.T ewMtt Batter] •ery Churn *n wuxantea. One Chora at wnolessle whete we have DO •gents. Send Postal far circulars. Agents wanted. VBUMT FAM MACMK CI*
Bellows Falls. Vt
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DANVILLE JOCKEY
.«• -o
—AUD— -,f
TROTTING AMIM
Read the program carefully and see what a jolly time will take place in :0 ti£
DANVILLE ILLINOIS.
,*!C
July 4, 5, and 0, 1882
Jt'j |2,O06,CO iy
.FJBST DAY—Tuesday Jnly 4. First Qace. 3:00 Trot—Purse |200. Its, 100 2d, $50 taO 4th,J'J0.
Second Race. 2:22Trot or Pace—Purse $300. 1st, |250 2i, 31*5 3d, $75 4tli, «60. Third Race. 2:50 Puce.—Purae $150. 1st, »7& 2d, $40 8d, $2u: 4th, $15.
Fourth Kace. Running. Mite and Repeat Purse »160. 1st, $15 2d, $60 3d, $15. SECOND DAY—Wednejjdaj, July 5^|
Fifth Race. 2:S5 Pace—Purse $200. 1st', $100 3d, 900 8(1, 4th, $20. Sixth Race. 2*^8 Trot—Puise $30*. 1st, $U0 2d, $57 3d, $45 4th, *30.
Seventh Ilu:e. Kuumng, One-half Mile, 2 iu 3. Purse $100. 1st. *60 2d, $30 3d,
$10.
TICIRU DAY-Thursday, July 6.
Tenth Race. Novelty Running. Mile and one half—Purfe 150. t2i each quarter. For entry blankh or Information, address, C. hi. DOYLE. L. T.DICKSON,
Secretary.' -'President. iifi was&sb
AT TERRE HAUTE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1
The dig ShowT is Season, ard in Fxttihe Einoett Show EverSe
andlnj apart, aon.ve and hiyon 1 any amu«ernent enterprise oil tlie fucsof the eartl and known as
FAHLKY & ROACH, harness men, 312 Main, have certaisly abundant reason to be proud of the stock of lap dusters they have received. The peacock and bird of paradise designs are beautiful. This firm uses the finest harness mountings in town. Circcus, Memogerie, Theatre, UftJlery of Wax Statuary, U'cyrlc College, Itnssinn Rc
walker, Ariel Btcyc toiler Skaters, Representatives of
Arlel Bicycle ftiders.
-rin.
FEMALE
SNAKC CHARMER.
Ttotirect Healing HemmX?.'
ASTORIA
OMDMIMMA
fASTORlA
Vv Old Dr. Pitcher's remedy I Children's Complaints.
"Stptdallo adapUd to cAUdrtn." I 1 .* AJac- Robertson, MB7 td Av., N.l *Pt4uani, HarmUtt and WontUrfuUy t\Ul *, Dr. A. J. Green, Royerton, ij "IpretcrilM it a* tvptrior to any known rtnudl
Dr. n. A. Archer, 8S Portland Av., BrooklJ
yaitoria is not aareotle. Mothers, Na and Doctors agree that for Sour-Stomi Flatnlenoy, Diarrhoea, and Conatipat nothing is so prompt as old Dr. Piteh^
Castori*. lty assimilating the fb| Castori* sires robast health and 'vinl alsxsp* ,4
@HUIR[NIMEN|
The Great Healing Itemed An Infallible aura for Rheumatism,! ktica. Neuralgia, Wounds, Barns, Sprail 3tlflf Joints, Spavin* and Lameness any cause.
P.T.Barnum, tho great Showman, layi "Among my vast troupe of Equeitrians, Tei stem, Horses, Camels, and Elephants, some always strained, bruised, or wounded. My! geons andVeterinariesall say, that for oas ities to men and animals, nothing iq efficacious as Centaur Lishasat," 438 Fifth Ar., NewTork, May 0th, 1S75.
O W N
SEWING
MACHINE
'gS!?- IS THE BEST It in the rcsnlt of 20 yenrs* experience o.tnotimeALt 1n Sowitiu1 Muchlnofl. it combine
aras, lion
oenlrni, durnhU, and simple. WlirTnntrd Mill itept In repair free for 6 years. Circulars witl fnU descrliitlon w?nt free on mjueat. THitmirolytll best
ription cent tree on request It INsurelytil A a ivlU proreit. llas't fall to MC before you buy MNUPAOTUS*D BT FLOBENC I MACmNK CO..F1 tlEO BENT. 81
WHOUS1LID .Chlcstro, St,
a
W. W. Cole's New Nine Shows Unite
SkattrV,
MUSEUM, ENCYCLOPAEDIA & ASSEMBLY OF NATIONS!
Newly reconstrncled, reorganized and harmoniously consolld in One Vast All-ProducingExhibition Preserving fourfold the attractions claimed by any other tent show in existence, including the following re markaole features:
The Largest Elephant ever eaptured, The Greatest 8now ever organised. 160 almost
Soted
ioal Star Performers, The President aftd Men in Wax. Oapt. Bogardas, the Blondlntl
wing-shot champion, llan Rope walk* Russian Nation.
b» Ausifs-
Mtustu Acta in tit Same
14 acts by Lady Artists, The World's Cha pion Leapers, Bare-back Riders, A herd Performing Elephants. A $60,000 Troup^ Trick Htalllona. An elevated Theatre 8t European Bicycle Experts, A Female Si (Tharrrtw in the Ring, "Ariel," the Man Performing Wild Animals. A Moni Menagerleof R»astand Birds, VX) Speclml of Enormoti* Herpents, and 5000 noveitl freaks snd fenfures not enumerated niaUf I all-in-all.
The Q-reatest and Grandest Show on Earth]
A Balloon Ascension and Japanese Daylight Fireworks every day. The most posing Street Parade Ever Witsessed. ONKTKWKKT WCeali, Si Cel Reserved, Cnsliioned Opera Chairs at a slight advance An up-town Ueketofflcebe opened on the day of Exhibition. Location given hereafter.
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