Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 15 June 1882 — Page 4
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Subscriptions and Arrearages.
Tbe attention of all person* receiving the Gazette la directed to tbe laws relating to newHpapers and subscribers which we publish herewith. There are, however on tbe Gazette's list of subscriber*, it is to be hoped, no persons who will not promptly respond to our just and lawful request for money due, as apt forth in what follows: 1. Subscriber* who do not give express notice to the contrary, are considered wishing to continue their subscription. 2. If subscribers order the discontinuance of their periodicals, the publishers may continue to send them until all arrearages are paid 3. If subscribers neglect or refuse to take their periodicals from the office to which they are directed, they are held responsible until they have settled their bills, and ordered them discontinued. 4. If subscribers move to other places without informing the publishers, and the papers are sent to the former direction, they are held responsible. 6. The courts have decided that "refusing to take periodicals from the office, or removing and leaving them uncalled for, is prima fade evidence of intentional fraud.' 5. Any person tvho receives a newspaper and makes use of it, whether he has ordered it or not, is held In law to be a subscriber. 7. If subscribers pay in advance, they are bound to give notice to the publisher, at the end
Of their time, if they do not wish to continne taking it otherwise the publisher is authorised to send it on, and the [subscribers will be responsible until an express noticc, with payment of all arrears is sent to the publisher.
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 beet weekly paper printed in Western Indiana. Ii you are taking any paper now compare this with it and see which you like best for home and telegraphic news. If this paper pleasea 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 an honest man who would not cheat an editor, apd 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 ON 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 EVENING GAZETTE. Of all the papers printed on Saturday afternoon in Terre Haute, it is the only one which
ha3
the telegraphic
dispatches and it has thos&ot the Western Associated Press which give all the latest news, the |markets, congressional proceedings, foreign intelligence and everything up to the hour ot going to press. Besides this its local news is iresh and right up to date. It is the paper for you to buy wlvn you are in the city if ^ou want the news. Try it aud see if this is not ao.
THIS Ohio Democratic State convention will be held at Columbus July 20.
DESPITE her marriage, the popular inteiest in Sarah Bernhardt has rapidly de. clined.
THK NEW YOHK Herald predicts a Democratic majorty in Ohio at the October election, of thirty-live thousand. The Democrats will be satisfied with seventy thousand.
THE Repression act is making very slow progress in the House of Commons. There arc more than two hundred amendments on the noticc paper. There is an expectation of a conflict between tbe Parnellites and the government,
NOMINATION by the Chicago Tribune: "For Speaker of the Forty-eighth Congress, James G. Blaine." That would be a labor-saving arrangement, for Blaine could do the work that Eeifei and Robeson now divide between them. eg ————•—•—I*'
NINE "leading Independents" came together the other day in Atlanta and determined to postpone their mass convention indefinitely and thus it is that another promising Malionb movement has dissolved into air—inter thin air»
PRESIDENT ARTHUR made a few appointments from the special friends of uarfield daring the first few weeks of his Administration, but no such appointments are made these days, and no special friend of Garfield who is in office is safe over sight, the Philadelphia Times thinks.
BY the election of last week the Democrats lose the legislature of Orngaa and a Senator to succeed Grover. Bat that lots will bo made up and more than made up in other States. The Democrats will certainly have the next House of Bepresentalives and probably tbe Senate. David Davis will be gotten rid of anyway •nd that is something.
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Terre Haute, Ind.« a» »econd«(,(|aM mail matter.1
RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION:
Dally, 16 cents pec -week, tj& cents per -lontta, 17.80 per year Weekly $1^0 year
THURSDAY. JUNE 15, 1882.
LAWS RELATING TO NEWSPAPER
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THE Cine j,natj Gazette declares that the Ohio Republican platform heartily indorf^ tjje
Sunday liquor law, and that
'.his point there was no division in the convention. On the other hand, the Cin* cinnati Commercial says the platform does not indorse the Smith closing law. Wise fellows, the builders of that platform.
THE county ticket nominated by the Republicans on Saturday, though it has some good men on the list, is not, taken as a whole, a strong one, and can and will be beaten this fall. Election day, however, is four months distant and it is not our pleasure or our purpose to devote four months to a discussion of local politics. Sufficient unto the day is ttye evil thereof.
JAMES H. RICE, candidate before the Democratic state convention for the nomination as Auditor of State, was in the city to-day. Mr. Rice has done yeoman's service for the party as secretary of the state committee and comes as near having earned the nomination lor the office with whieh bis name is connected as any man ever did by work for the party. He is an active, enterprising, go-ahead specimen of manhood, is Mr. Rice, and would make a splendid race aud a good auditor.
THE latest disgraceful Read juster development in Virginia is the fact that a New York banknote engraving company contributed five thousand dollars to the campaign fund of the Mahoneites, on condition that it should have the contract to print the new bonds. A. lower bid having been received, the Auditor endeavor, ed to prevent the bidder getting the contract by charging him with offering a bribe This is a specimen of the ugly developments taking place in connection with the sweet-scented gang of so-called reformers who now control the destines of old Virginia, and who yell so lustily for "a free ballot and a faircount."
THE failure of seeds to grow dnring the cold season proves that a higher temperature is necessary for their germination, and it is a very natural supposition that the best results are to be obtained when the heat has been raised to as high a degree as posible without destroying the seeds. Prof. II. Baillon shows that this is far from being the case with all seeds. In an experiment repeated several times he has obtained a much more rapid growth from almond and walnut seeds kept at a temperature varying during the twenty-four hours from 41 to 50 degrees Fahrenheit than in a house heated to 59 to 77 degrees. Furthermore, the plants started in the warm house were earlier arrested in their develop, ment than those from the cool house. A further study of this subject might lead to valuable results in showing the most favorable tempalure for hot-house for the various kinds of seeds, and in pointing out the plants which cannot be profitably foj-qed in hot-houses.
ROBESON, who from abject poverty became lich during the Grant regime, is the leader of the Republican party in the House of Representatives. Dorsey, who to-day is undergoing a criminal trial for swindling the Government, is Secretary of the Republican National Committee and he has not been asked, much less compelled to resign. Now comes General E. B. Babcock, the notorious private secretary of President Grant and the agent of the whisky ring. He is being urged for the position of Engineer Commissioner of the District of Columbia, and petitions for his appointment are now being signed in Washington by the Stalwarts all. No one need be surprised at this, nor at his getting the place he is after. He is, in spite of his moral iniquities, just as is Robeson and Donrey, a member ot that Republican party which stole the Presidcucy, carried Indiana with the abundant use of Doreey's "soap," and shamelessly avowed that it BO carried it that boughf Mahone at the price of the dishonor involved in repudiation, and has debauched the Civil Servicc and corrupts pretty nearly all things. If that claim is not strong enough he has one mbch weightier. For years he has been the intimate friend of General Grant, who stuck to him through thick and thin during the whisky-ring disclosures, and who when he was brought to tbe bar of justice, interfered and rescued him from the penitentiary and the punishment he so richly deserved. His narrow escape prison fiid not prevent Grant from retaining him as his secretary, and,when an opportuninty was offered, appointing him to a lucrative position. In short, he is both a Stalwart and very near and dear to him who is looked upon' hy them all as the incarnation of Stalwartism. Why should not Babcock have his reward for his faithfulness to his old chief? One by one the Old crowd are stealing back agaib. There should be no discrimination made against the man who was once the depository of the secrets of tbe White House, and who coulfl tellaome awkward things if he had a mind to. Such a man should not be long kept out in the cold, lest he grow hungry and angry. If he should be driven to talk there would be a good deal of dynamite in what he might say. Let him be provided for, by all means.
THK finest wines and liquon to be bad are at L. P. Mooninger's, 519 Main.
THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKL uAZETTE.
i* FSllBOHAL- Hi
Judge A. B. Carlton's name lias been suggested to tbe President as one of the Utah commission.
Judge C. F. McNutt and son Finley returned this morning from Annapolis Finley McNutt will go on duty on the 30 inst. on the ship Alliande.
Horace G. Pugh. who once was a paymaster in the United States Navy, has received a package of South American cigars all the way from a sailor friend at Montevedio.
Col- Ingersoll has written to Eu gone V. Gebs declining with thanks annomitation to be present and address the protherhood of Locomotive Firemen convention which meets in tbe city in September.
Finley A McNutt, of Indiana, graduated with this year's class at the Naval Academy, Annapolis. He stood 13, in a class of thirty-seven. He will return home to-morrow with his lather, Judge McNutt.
Dr. J. P. Worrrll will leave the cify next Saturday. He will sail trom New York on the 24th of June on tbe steamer Ethiopia, of the Anchor line. It is the purpose of Dr. Worrell to lie gone six or eight mom ns, pirbaps a year.
John Wesley Holden, formerly a resident of Lost Oretk township, but who went with his family to Independence, Montgomery county, Kausas, to live, died shortly after reaching there. Hie family will" continue to reside in Kansas.
THE PUBLIC SCHOOL LIBRARY.
How Everybody Can Have a Catalogue of the Books.
From Haturuay's Daily.
In the GAZETTE of to-day is printed a partial list of books in tbe Public School Library.lt is our purpose each Saturday to prim a list of this kind until every book in the library shall have been printed. It is a double list, alphabetically arranged and eiving the books by titles and also by authors. Each new purchase will be similarly printed. These lists give the alcove in the library and the numbev ot the book according to the comprehensive scheme which has been adopted and which will sufUcc to cover the books in the library should it ever have a million books. From this printed list the librarian will make up the catalogue of the library by pasting them in a scrap book. It will be as good and as complete a catalogue a& could be printed at great expense, can be pasted and kept up to date all the time and will cost, abso.utely nothing but a scrap book, some mucilage and little time. But the two or three catalogues lor '.lie library are not all that should be made from these printed lists. Five hundred families ought to make and maintain a catalogue of this kind. All tbe outlay required will bo a good sized scrap-book, some mucilage or fl'or paste and a pair of scissors. Cut out every Saturday from your paper the list of books printed and then paste them in your book. Our advice to you is to cut these lists out first and lay them aside in an envelope, say for a month, until ail the books now on hand have been printed. Then go up to the library, see how the librarian is fixing her catalogues and go and do likewise. But begin by cutting out this list to day and lay it away. Do not imagine that it will be printed again, for it will not be, or that you can get a GAZETTE a week or a month or a year after they are printed, for you can not do anything ot the kind. Save it now and start this catalogue and you will have a book of your own the value of which will increase each year. Then, when at any time you want to know if the library has a given book, look in your own catalogue and sec and save yourself the trouble of going to the library. And if you want to know something on a given subject the catalogue will show you just what the library has on that suject. Let u& again urge it upon you to cut thi3 list out of your paper and to lay it aside. Surely that is no trouble. Do this for the next month, for afresh list will be in the paper every Saturday, and then, having the material all in hand, you can see about getting. youf scrap book.
Pierson Township.
To the Editor of the Gazette: The agitators of the stock law question held a meeting at the town house on Saturday, June 10'h. There were S3i»e thirty or forty present. The meeting was conspicuous for the absence of those favoring ajmorestringent law, there'being but four or five that expressed themselves as favoring any change. As the meeting was called in favor of the stock law, they would not allow tbe negative side of the question to be discussed. The consequence was that some who came there undecided went away with their sympathies changed in favor of the anti-stock law men. Immediately after tbe adjournment of their meeting* the anti-stock law men called a meeting, put Stephen Stark in tbe chair, appointed a committee to circulate a remonstrance and adjourned to meet the last Saturday in July, when it is hoped there will be a general turn out for the free discussion of both sides of the question J. A. KITTLE.
Pimento, Vigo County, Ind.
The surest method of overcoming those feelings of lasstitude 1 indecision, which cling to the most active people at times, is to use Liebi^ Malt Extract, the1 tonic and invigorating principles of which fortify the system against the establishment ot such impre»icos4
Han Ian and Ross.
WixNErao, June 14.—Hanlan has asked Ross to postpone the race two wteks. Ross refuses to remain under training so long and fixes July 3rd. It is .believed here that Hanlan's illness is a scheme to s&ct betting.
THE tollowing commandenes of Knights Templar have accepted invitations to attend the forthcoming militia encampment and give exhibition drills: Oolumbus Commandary, No. 14, of Columbus, Ind., Frankfort Commandery, No. 29, of Frankfort, and St. John Commandery, No. 24, of Logsnsport.
anni-
Davis,
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him a sort of surprise party and presented him with an elegant arm chair.
THE HEXT FAIR.-
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Handsome Premium lists Now Oat for the Hext Agricultural Fair.
All Premiums Will be Paid in Full-
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The premium lists for the next Fair have been issued from the press of Moore & Lassen and are a succees in all respects, both considered typographically anil in the extent of the premiums offered.
In their card to the public tbe Directors pay: The Directors herewith present a list of premiums for competition in all branches ot industry, and urge the people of Vigo and surrounding counties to bring the products of their skill and industry. Some five thousand dollars is offered in premiums, besides a fine lot of special premiums by tbe business men af the city.
Tbe rules have been so changed that an animal or article can compete for as many premiums as the owner wishes.
Ten per cent, entry fee will be charged OD all entries except tbe special premiums, and all premiums will be paid in full.
In the speed ring five entries will be required. Many new and special attractions this year, not in premium list.
The grounds are convenient, well arranged, with a plentiful supply of shade"and cool water.
There will be races each afternoon at 2 o'clock. The forenoon will be devoted to exhibition and examination of animals and articles.
All articles must lie promptly placed on exhibition and cannot be removed until Saturday.
Railroads and express companies centering at Terre Haute and connecting lines will return stock free.
TIIR SPECIAL PREMIUMS.
The special premium list this year is unusually large. OTHER FA1BS.
The book contains a list of twenty- five tares in other counties. Those in which wc are most interested here are:
Indiana State Fair—Indianapolis, September 25 to October 2 Alexander Heron, Secretary.
Bridgeton Union Agricultural Society —Bridgeton, August 28 to September 2. Dempsy Seybo'd, Secretary.
Parke County Agricultural Society— Rockville, August 21 to TO David H. Webb, Secretary.
Green County Agricultural Society— Linton, October 2 to 7. P. scuuliz, Secretary.
Knox County Agricultural Society— Vincennes, October 9 to 14 Gerard Reiter, Secretary.
Worthington Farmers' and Merchants' Fair—Worthington, September 12 to 10. W. H. H. Welch, Secretary.
CONGRESS. J*
SENATE—Vcaterday.
Brown's resolution to supply each Senator with a $1,200 clerk was "lost yeas 20 nays, 28.
Plumb, Dawes and Cockrell were made conferees on the District appropriation bill.
Blair made a speech in favor of the proposed appropriation in aid of public schools.
The Japanese indemnity bill was considered in Committee of the Whole, and Morrill's amendment ordering the destruction of bonds in which the fund was invested prevailed—ye&s, 27 nays, 23.
The conclusion of the committee not to pay Japan the accumulated interest which the indemnity bad earned was reiterated in the Senate—25 to 23.
The Bill passed—yeas, 35 nays 13. The bill, as passed' authorizes and directs the President to pay the Government of Japan $785,000 fin legal coin, tnrough the United States Minister to Japan, and directs all the bonds now owned or controlled by the State Depaitment and designated in Department reports, as the "Japanese Indemnity Fund" to be cancellcd and destroyed. Section 2 directs the Secretary of the Treasury to pay from the Treasury $140,000 as prize money to the officers and crews of the United States ship Wyoming and steamer Takeing, or their legal representatives, for services in the straits of Shimmoseki, in 1863 and 1864, no payment to be made to the assignee of any mariner, but to tbe mariner himself, his legal representatives or his or their duly authorised attorney. Adjourned.
HOUSE—Yesterday.
The executive, legislative and judicial appropriation bill was taken up and Townshend, of Illinois, made a vigorous speech against tbe system of political assessments and offered an amendment declaring the demand or receipt of such assessments a misdemeanor, but his amendment was ruled out on a point of order. Several other amendments of similar import were ruled out in like manner and the consideration of the bill was left incomplete. «n
The Imprisoned Love.
Notice has already been made in these columns ot the arrest by Marshal Kidd of one Wm Love on suspicion of being the Wm. Love wanted in Pennsylvania for a murder committed in 1875. The Marshal notified the authorities and this morning received the following telegram:
GIRARDSVILLE, PA., Jnne 14,1882. Man will start to-day. WM. G. GWXTBBB. Gwyther is a brother to the murdered man and has been using all his efforts to catch the guilty party. The requisition was made out last April, but for several months before that Marshal Kidd has been watching Love, who has been working as a coal miner in one of the mines at Clay City. He is a Scotchman, has a hard look and is thought to be a Mollie Maguire. He bears all the marks of the man in question and if he isn't the wanted it won't be the fault of his general appearance, as he answers tbe description to a dot nt
Messrs. Charles S. Bennett, Carlin Thompson and David Myeia, of Riley, bought a Three Rivers Vibrator. They are now fixed to do the best threshing ever done here.
TBE MS DESCENDED
And ,the Floods Came and the Winds Blew
And Beat Upon the Bailroad Tracks and Bridget and They Fell Because Nothing Could With-
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stand the Storm—^Terrible Aooidents. jr I JV'
Xi \l RAILROAD NEWS
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POO UK S RUN.
The bridge just east of Union depot has just broke down loaded with people to see the rushing water. Seven or more drowned. The stream is very high. Weather warm. Indications for more rain. *x!s
"ME F? A ST. L.
The I. &.St. L. trains from the East are several hours late, caused by washout at Eagle creek, a few miles from Indianapolis.
INCREASED EARNINGS.
In the month ending May 31, the Evansville & Terre Haute road earned $63,371, an increase of $7,803 over earnings May, 1881.
AT PLAINFIELD.
The Vandalia was also annoyed by a washout about fourteen feet wide and twelve feet deep at Plainfield. The track has been cribbed up and trains are passing over all right this afternoon.
N. A. Warwick, passenger agent of the Missouri Pacific at Indianapolis, and Col. Thomas Esse*, land commissioner of the Iron Mountain railway, Little Hock, Arkansas, were in the city yesterday. By the Associated Press.
INDIANAPOLIS, une 14—We were visited by a very severe thunder storm last night. Rain fell alii night and at times in sheets, three inches falling. This morning at seven o'clock Pogues Run commenced rising rapidly ana in two hours had flooded that portion of the city east of the Union Depot along the railroad track northeast up Pennsylvania, Delaware and Alabama streets as far as Maryland and nortbeast to Washington streets. Tbe cellars of wholesale houses on south Meridian south of Georgia are rapidly filling up. While a party of fifteen or twenty were standing on a platform over Pogues Run connected to the old warehouse belonging to the Union Ry. Co., it gave way, precipitating the entire crowd into the water. Some of them were rescued, others passed through the culvert under the Union Depot and were rescued below, while others, it is supposed, were drowned. It is not definitely known how many were on the platform nor who they were, consequently it is impossible at this time to determine how many were lost.
THE Maine Republicans areja general set of believers in patornal goverenment. They like the protective tariff and want more of it. Recognizing the fact that we have no shipping interest whatever, they do not ask that the cause of tbe utter decline of that once flourishing branch of our national industries be removed. They do not ask, as they ought, that our ship builders and ship owners be released from the burdens of a protective tariff on all the materials which enter into the construction, maintenance of a ship. On the contrary they ask that the government enlarge the scope of its protective policy and clap on the shoulders of the unprotected farmers and business men the burden of sustaining the ship building interests. The Maine Republicans cry aloud for subsidies for ship builders and want the government to pay ten prices for carrying the mails in order that a business which, from artificial causes alone has been made non-paying, shall become lucrative. We of the West might as well draw the line there, and refuse to have any more loads packed on our already overburdened shoulders.
T+day's News Notes.:
ByTe egraph to the OAEXTTK. The Brussels elections have increased the Liberal majority from fourteen to eighteen.
Tbe 8t. Louis and Ban Francisco road has declared a dividend of 9% per cent, on the first preferred.
Alexander Khert, in charge of the United States coal fleet at Cairo, 111., was drowned this morning.
The body of George R. Conlv, of the Kellogg company, who was drowned in. Stafford lakej N. FT., was found' thfo morning.
Dr. Hedges, of Newbure, N. Y., is on trial to.day at Poughkeepsie, for defraud* ing one Weed, out of $160,000 at draw poker. During the trial Weed swore he lost $450,000 at faro in one hour, Hedges being one of the dealers.
Announceement is made in the GAZETTE of the candidacy of W. Beauchamp for county commissioner from the Third district, subject the decision of the Democratic nominating convention. Mr. Beauchamp has been a resident of Prairie Creek township for the past fif. teen years previous to which he lived i» Prairieton. He is one of prominent and influential citizens of Prairie Creek Township, and has been a Democrat who has done much valuable work tor tbe party in times past He is a fanner now, bat in bis early manhood was a school teacher. He is amply qualified tm perform the duties of babe elected.
(•fnUJR|jNUKNT
The Great Healing Remedy*
TORIA
OldDrtPttehwr'a CWMws'i Cmplalats?
fjASTORlA
WV Old Dr. Plt«h«r*s remedy ChllrfrAn'a
to
Thc following dispatch was fignt President McKeen this morning by Mr. Hibbard:
%Ipracrtot
H. W. HIBBARD.
for*j*
Children's Complaints*^
JBtptciaUit adapUd to cAUdrtn."
5
Dr. Alex. Robert»op, JO57 3d Av., N. Y.\
'P!tasant, HarmUss and Wonderfully tytcackmt.* Dr. A. J. Own, Ro/erton, Ind*
it as superior to any known rtmsdy.^* Dr. n. A. Archer, 83 Portland Av., Brooklyn* Zastoria is not narootlo. Mothers, Kims and Dootors scree that for Sour-Stomsoht ristnleney. Diarrhoea, and Conatipatlon* nothing is so prompt as old Dr. Pltohsr's-
Oastoria* By aiaimilatinf ths food. Castoria gives robut health and sat* wral slMp.
@nujiJijiikQjT
The Great Healing Remedy* An Infallible care for Rheumatism, Set* tUea, Neuralgia* Wounds, Burn*. Spralrfi, Stiff Joints* ipsfistaod Lameness from any cause.
P.T. Bsrsna, tho great Showman, say* "Among my vut troupe of Equeitrlani, Toamstera, Ilonea, Camels, and Elepbanta, some are alwsys strained, braised, or woandfcd. My Snrgeons end VeterinariefallieaxUhat for essosl* Ities to men and anlmirft,. nothing is so efflcaoious as Centaur Linltaent," 439 Fifth Av., Now York, May 0th, 1875.1
CANCER
INSTITUTE!. Ssta&Ushedtn 1872for tbe onto lot Cancer, Tumors. Uloent laeruuhk and Bkin Diseases*
wilboot tbe ase knife or loes of blood and little
Jenckes &, Mering,
SIIJLIjEMS,
(Successors to R. L. Thompson)
This mill, which is located on the corner of First and Poplar streets, Is one of tbe largest in tbe city, having a capacity of about four hundred barrels a day. Tbe machinery is the best late patents, and the product is tbe finest flour tbat can be made. mSf-Highest cash prft&'iiafd fof*wheat.
PLUMES AND TIPS. Call aad seethe new Plumes apd Tips, all Colors at lowest prices. 26 south Sixth street.
Mrs. Chilton.
For New Millinery goods at lowest prices call on Mrs. Chilton, 26 south Sixth.
LADIES
if you want handsome white and lawn dresses made call on Mrs. Annie Miller, second door south of Postoffice in Mrs. Chilton's millinery store.
New Millinery.
Mrs. Houpt, who recently moved her millimry store to No. 28 south Fourth street, is full of energy, enterprise and push and is doing a driving business. She receives new goods every week and has now an especially fine consignment of the latest and finest goods. Don't buy till you have seen them.
MB. H. W. MEBTON, of Oswego, N. Ywrites: My Wife has been restored to-i perfect health and strength. Bhe suffered many years from indigestion, contolicated with female irregularities. ^never saw her Hps so red and her cheeks so rosyj •tor years.
DSI iii
FAIILKT & ROACH, harness men, 31 Main, have certainly abundant reason toi be proud of tbe stock of lap dusters they have received. Tbe peacock and bird of paradise designs are beautiful. ~rhis firm uses the flhest harness mOunUnjp in town. All kinds of serviceable harvi
Ffret*
1
AT BRAIHTREE, MAPS.
BOSTON, June 14,—A firet Vft south Braintree this morning destroyed the best building in town containing (fee postoffice Grand Army hall, maiflfet, drug store, 'clothing store, cfbb room etc Less, 900,000 partially insured.'
THE GAZETTE calls all the World to witness that the weather bureap, which is mn by a Republican, is famishing so confounded much rain that them is immU nent danger of great damage to the crops. The Democracy points with pride to its weather record and promisee to regulate the weather with an ejre single to tbe welfare of the great agricultural interests, of the West
THE steamer Belgrade will make hoururday to Port Knox and. for the arrosaimditon of
IT trips next bati Vincennes •unionists*
