Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 1 November 1883 — Page 4
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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER !, 1883.
THE White House ia being refurnished and fixed over this year to an extent hitherto unknown in its history. Over $25,000 will be so expended this time, and the amount so used by the present administration will amount, for the four years, to fully one hundred thousand dollars. This is wasteful extravagance, and leads to the belief that somebody is making a great deal of money out of this useless work. Of course it is a very public house and everybody goes there, but it is also true that only three or four rooms are so used and too much money is being devoted to this purpose. Let the thing be stopped.
MAJOBS. R. CKCMBATJGH, collector of internal revenue for the second Kentucky district, seems to be a person in some respects resembling our own absent but not forgotten fjreign missionary friend Beauchamp. Crumb augh was as internal revenue collector and he wanted to be Secretary of the Navy, just as Beau champ, who was consul at Cologne, wanted to be Minister to Belgium. Beauchamp wrote letters and so did Crumbaugh, both for the purpose of advancing their ambition. Beauchamp was wrecked on some orthographical rocks and not only failed to reach Belgium but lost Cologne.. Crumbaugh used official envelopes for his private correspondence and. though at the trial of his cause in court was acquitted, stands in some danger of losing his collectorship.
ST. LOUIS is in a ferment over the police question. They have the metropolitan police system there. The Governor appoints police commissioners and they appoint the police. The people complain that the police is being organized for the protection of a gamblers ring. Meetings have been held and the demand made upon the Governor that he jemove the commissioners. He refuses to tlo it and affairs are in an awful muddle. The root of the evil lies in the fact that in an unfortunate hour the people of St. Louis permitted the management of local affairB to be taken from their own hands and lodged in the executive of the State. Now the politics of the State must be revolutionized to remedy a local evil. It is an absurd and outrageous system and one which the people should get rid of at once. The people of St. Louis should manage their own affairs. The lesson is an instructive one to us in Indiana. We have embarked on the same obnoxions metropolitan police system in two cities of our State. Let that false step be retraced at the earliest possible moment.
THE suit of Hallet Kilbourne against John G. Thompson, ex-Sergeant-at-arms of the House of Representatives, is in progress at Washington. Senator Voorhees is one of the counsel for Kilbourne. Kilbourne was a real estate agent in Washington. An investigating commit* tee of the house, which was engaged in ferreting out some official rascality during the [administration of Grant, when pretty much everything about the capital of the country was rotton to the core, needed Kilbourne as a witness and de. sired to have an inspection of his books. By order of the house, Thompson, who was then scrgeant-at-arms, placed him in confinement ia one of the committee rooms in the basement of the capitol. He was there for a week or so, lived like a prince, received his iriends and had a royal good time. Finally.h? was released without presenting hip books. He then brought suit and recovered .a judgment for $100,000. This, was 6et aside by the judg6 because it was excessive and he is now suing for a still larger aum, with a pretty good prospect, too, of getting it.
THE United States Senate, as at present constituted, is in a number of respects a peculiar body. In no particular is it so strongly marked as for its thixstiness. Not only for its thirstiness, tut for the singular turn that peculiarity takes, as shown by the accounts of the secretary of that body. The latest report of the acting secretary of the Senate contains the following purchases: Jane 1—For 10 cases Apollinaris, 500 cjfs $ 75 00 Jane 8—For 10 cases Apollinaris, 500 qts 75 00 Jane 13—For 10 cases Apollinaris, 500 qts 75 00 June 16—ior 9 cases Apollinaris, 500 qts 6' 50 Jane 20—For 5 cases Apollinaris, 600 qts 87 60 Jane 21—For 6 cases Apollinaris, 500 qts June 26-Fer'lO cases'ApolUHaris," *6o6'qts°
one 28—For 10 cases Apoliinaris, 500qts°
Total
•SZ
524 00
In the month covered by these extraordinary purchases, the Senate may have been, but probably was not, session twenty days. The sessions were from five to eight hours. -Taking it for grant«d that the water was all consumed, which doubtless was the fact, and that the senate was full, which was not the fact by several, each senator consumed an average of six gallons of Apollinaris water each day the Senate was in session, or about a gallon an hour, ana kept it up' day alter day for a whole month.
Besides the Apollinaris wpter there
was a variety of otherj fluids, different kinds of wine, and a liberal 'supply of good old whisky, and so on.
It is a wonder there was a senator alive when the session'ended. That they were to a man hale and hearty proves that in this respect, as well as others, our Senate is a remarkable body of men.
THE CIVIL RIGHTS BILL. In dealing with the decision of the Civil Rights cases by the Supreme Court, Democrats should pause long enough to remember that this decision, so strongly adverse to a large element of the Repub lican party, was given by a gentleman who fairly earned the title of Aliunde Joe. He earned that title by his vote in the eight-te-eeven commission that counted Tilden and Hendricks out in 1880, after the people had fairly and honestly elected them. Aliunde Joe went out of the way ot law and precedent to inquire into the election in certain states No good lawyer in any party but knew that law and precedent were violated in the investigation which Aliunde Joe entered into on the strength of Chandlers telegram to "claim Florida and Louisiana and Hayes election."
It is this same gentleman who i3 just at this juncture so smitten with a keen sense of law and justice-as to make a decision and to write an opinion which on its face seems greatly prejudicial to the dominant element in hie party—the element that holds the balance of power for Republicanism and that constitutes its majorities in the few states in which it still has majorities.
V. -t"
There is ample ro6&~for grave Suspicion of Mr. Bradley and his opinion on the Civil Rights bill. Thus it may be that Joe had in his mind's eye the possibility of bringing the colored American again into partisan politics. A prolonged wail that all the legal protection heretofore offered to the colored man is now destroyed by this decision, might have an effect to bring back into the Republican party the men who left it in the lead of Greeley and Phillips, Hoadly and Trumball, and the thousand of able abolitionists who have long ceased to act with the Republican organization.
Aliunde Joe may have incidentally contemplated the possibility of sowing dissension in Democratic ranks ly raising a question that might bejdifferently treated in the Northern and Southern states of the "Union. Democrats in the south were never in love with the Civil Rights Bill. They have suffered much legal persecution,pecuniaryloss and general hu miliation through its unjust aud partisan workings. It served the colored citizen no good purpose. It was designed to engender hatred between the two races in the South in order (that the colored man might oever affiliate politically with his Democratic neighbors and fellow citizens, has been an odious measure in the South and southern Democrats will not look kindly upon efforts to revive it. From this view it will bd readily seen that if the Democracy of the North take up th'e Civil Rights Bill in a spirit of championship, they will find themselves immediately at issue with Democrats in the South.
Republican politicians have worn out the bloody-shirt business. The voters are now aware that the Union armies were about equally composed of Democrats and Republicans. Officers and soldiers of the Union armies are in every political canvass in the ranks of the Democratic party. Even tariff is now too well understood to serve Republican politicians for a rallying cry. They are casting about for a new watchword when up comes Aliunde Joe at the right time and remands the colored man to what he supposes is a state bordering upon the slavery that he endured.
This may not be devised for the pubHcan.war-cr* for 1884, but we compelled to conclude that it has all ear-marks of a political trick.
Reare the
As has often been urged, the severest and strictest temperance lectures are given, not by professional orators, or by prohibition statutes, but by the. inexorable laws of social economy. A man given over to drink is not a valuable man to any community. Employers will not have him nor hire him, and he passes down and out. But even the man who indulges in drink to any noticeable extent is becoming marked for disgrace. Between the man who "drinks" habitually, even though he be not a drunkard, and the man who is not in the fiabit of drinking, the piudent employer is taking the sober man. He will not run the risk, especially when the work is skillful, requiring nerve ana a cool head, of intrusting it to drinking men. Locomotive engineers, for example, are held more and more every year to a stricter standard of sobriety.
Several large manufacturing establishments in Connecticut have adopted the rule that their workmen shall not frequent drinking-places nor indulge In intoxicating liquors. To the remon. stranc.cy}fgome oi the workingmen against this rule, the employers declared that in their business ite work ot the drinking men wa¬ worth as much as tLat of the abstainers, and a majority'of the employes acquiesced in the rule as wholesome and necessary. The custom s'
spreading from one establishment to another, and is a natural corrective of an evil which brings its own penalty. "It a mamvill not work, neither shall he eat," has long been recognized as a 'itimate social enactment and"if a man will drink hoshall not work," is becoming to be another law that enforces itself.
HERETOFORE the Sandwich Islands have objected to the immigration of Chinamen, but all restrictions have been removed. On what ground a Sandwich Islander, whose grandfather was a cannibal, claimed superiority to a Chinaman is a little difficult to determine. Perhaps hs felt that the best missionary blood of the world flowed in his veins, having gotten there by the regular digestive process.
C. W. Smiley, of Washington, D. C., recently read a paper on carp before the American Association. He said he had some years ago imported from Germany thirty or forty pairs of this fi9h. They were placed in breeding ponds in Washington, and have increased manyfold, the number spawned this year being 400, 000. The carp is natuially a warm water fish, and in the waters of tht Southern States grows with astonishing rapidity, and to great size. They will also do well in the cold water of the Nortii, even in Minnesota. Nearly every State and county in the United Stales has a fish commission, and they are all propagating carjj. It has also been taken up as a private speculation, and carp are sold for breeding purposes as high as $5 per pair.
The carp roots about iu the mud for aliment, and much resembles poultry in its manner of getting food. Carp aged three years ire often found to weigh twelve or fifteen pounds, and again in weight of four pounds has been observed in a carp in one year. The carp is sluggish while trout, bass, and other lively tish frisk about, and do not fatten so fast as the carp. Experiments have shown that female carp spawn at the age of one year in southern waters, at two years in colder waters, and in the extreme northern waters of the United States at three years. Other fish, turtles, muskrats, snakes, and even birds, eat yeung carp. A bird sh,ot in Washington recently had in its stomach the heads of seventy-nine young carp. The United States Fish Commissioner recently sent out requests for information about carp experimented with in this country most of the replies placing the carp on an equality with trout, bass, and shad as a food fish, while a few classed them with pike, and a very few said they had a muddy taste. The carp is the best pond fish yet known, and in a very small pond will thrive well, so that families may easily have their own fish garden if they have enough water to make a permanent pond. The carp is a very hardy fish for shipment, requiring little water to keep alive in. The United States Fish Commission is giving away carp, sending them by express to any: ^poitit, the» leceiveff-T paying express charges. The fish will thrive on table refuse and almost anything edible. Carp can be kept in winter in tub in the cellar, the water requiring to be kept fresh. Care should be taken to keep poisonous substances out of the carp pounds, and too much food should not be thrown in. In cooking earp, thorough cleansing is needed and frying should be done in hot pans and hot crease.
As to the economics of tli*s subject, Mr. Smiley said that fish culture was more and more becoming a part of the farmer's occupation, and thought that, not very long in the future, most of the farmers of the c^ntrv would have little fish ponds in their door yards, both as method of obtaining food and as an ornament to the homestead.
TWmE HAWFE WEEKLY ©A&STE&:
THE GERMAN CARP.
Fl£K80iiAL.i
Joseph Fi3her with four stores under his management is called the Merchant Prince oi'ibe Prairie City by his l'riends.
S. Latin, lormerly of Riley township this couuty, has moved to Clay county in the vicinity of Howesville, where he has rented a farm.
We see that our good sister. Miss Ida Robinson, oi that spicy little paper, the Fairmount Local, edits a paper and makes hair switches. This is a peculiar addition to a print shop.—[Clinton Herald.
Mr and Mrs. Parker Mil!igan are expected bsck from Kansas this week and will be ihe guests ot friends here and will celtbrate the 25th anniversary of their marriage.
Hon. Win. Mack is to bs complimented tor the dignity and decorum with which he has conducted the Circuit Court ihe past lew days during the proa:ess of ihe Markia incest case.
Newtou Rogers, the surviving partner of the firm of Snapp & Rogers, proposes to sell out the establishment. It is a first class chance for some one waiting to engage in the business to get a good outtit.
Miss Maiy Perkins, sister of John Perkins, arrived in the city yesterday. Her home has been at Plymouth, Eng. land, and she has come here to live with her brother. She came across the ocean on the steamer Circassian of the Allen line, arriving ot Quebec and coming thence by way of Chicago to Terre Haute. She reports the voyage as having been a rough one. On the Circas-
downe, and she was a witness ot the I ovation tendered him on his arrival.
ii§i88
A Narrsw Escape From Friday'! Daily.
At a-quarter before one o'clock this morning tbe fire alarm was turned in calling out the department to the old female college barn in tbe lot just opposite tbe new St. Anthony's hospital on south Fifth street. Tbe barn was on the lot included in the late purchase by Mr. Hulman, and retained by him. It was very old and a perfect tinder box and made a great blaze. Considering the fierceness of the flames and the character of the house it is remarkable that the department was able to Bave anything of it. The frame still stands but is of little value. The winds blew strong from the northwest and cinders were scattered thickly all over the hospital roof immediately opposite. Some of these cinders were as large|as walnuts. Men were promptly put on tbe roofs of the three large buildings to stamp out the fire and watch things and a second alarm was turned in for the fire engine as it was found difficult for a time to throw water to tbe tops of tbe latter buildings. The engine was placed, over one of the cisterns in tte yard and tbe roofs were kept soaked. Though showers of blazing cinders fell on tbem no loss whatever resulted. The loss in the old barn will amount to several hundred dollars, mostly to its contents. The cause of tbe fire is not known but it is supposed to have been fired by incendiaries or tramps.
ANOTHER BARN BURNED.
Night before last about eight o'clock the barn of R. H. Cochran, at Centerville, caught on fire and was entirely destroyed. Two mules aud a horse, which were in the barn at the time the flames were discovered were got out. About foriy bushels of wheat, some corn and hay were burned with-the barn. The cause is thought to be incendiary.
THE RIVER.
It Is at a Standstill Here—Rising at Newport. The Wabash was at a standstill at 3 :J5 this afternoon, showing about sixteen feet, four inches on the Main Btreet bridge pier. For awhile this morning it rose a quarter of ac inch an hour. Old river men do not think it will rise much more A large portion of the low bottom land is inundated, which will cause considerable loss.
4
RISING AT NEWPORT. NEWPORT, IND.. Oct. 30th.
Special
to the
GAZETTE:
The river is running out in the low bottoms since morning, and is still rising, Farmers are considerably alarmed, but fear no great ovei flow, big Vermillion at Eugene is falling.
S. B. DAVIS.
A Loss Prevented.
Many lose their beauty from the hair falling or fading. Parker's Hair Balsam supplies necessary nourishment, precents falling and grayness Ind is an elegant dressing.
DISEASE CURED
Without Medicine
A. Valuable Discovery for supplying fMagnetism to the Human System. Klectrisity and Magnetism utilized as never before for Healing tbe Slek.
THE MAGNETIOK APPLIANCE GO'S
Magnetic Kidney Belt!
FOR-3IEN IS
Warranted
to
Cure—
the following diseases Pain IN the back, hips,
without medicine
•be or limbs, nervous debility, lumbago, general debility, rheumatism, paralysis neuralgia, sciatica, diseases of the kidneys, spinal diseases, torpid liver, gout, seminal emissions, impotency, Asthma, Heart disease, dyspepsia, constipation, Erysipelas, inaigestion, hernia or rupture, catarrh, piles, epilepsy, Dumb Ague, etc
When any debility of the GENERATIVE OltGANS occurs, Cost Vitality, Lack of Nerve force and Vigor, Wasting Weakness and all those diseases of a personal nature, from whatever cause, the continuous stream of Magnetism permeating through the parts must restore them to a healthy action. There is no mistake about this appliance.
irrn
fRVtn nilioo If you are afflicted with 1J illu LdUluir Lame Back, Weakness jitbe Spine, Falling of the Womb, Leucorrhoca, Chronic Inflamation and niceratibn of the Womb, Incidental Hemorrhage or Flooding, Painful, Suppressed and Irregular Menstruation, Barrenness and changa
Life, this is the Beet Appliance and Curative Agent known. For all forms of Female Difficulties it is! unsurpassed
bjr
anything before invented,
both as a curative agent and as a source of power and vitalization. Price of either Belt with Magnetic Insoles, &Q, sent by express 0.0. D., and examinatk allowed, or by mail on receipt of price In ordering send measuro of waist, ana size of shoe. Remittance oan be made in currency, sent in letter at our risk.
The Magneton Garments are adapted to all ages, are worn over the. under clothing, [not next to tbe body like the many Galvanic and Electric Hnmbnga advertised so extensively), and should^be taken off at night. They bold their power forever, and are worn at all seasons of the year.
Send stamp for tbe "New Departure in Medical treatment Without Medicine," with thousands of testimonials. THE MAGNKTION APPLIANCE CO., 218 State Street, Chicago, 111.
Note.—Send one dollar in postage stamps or currency [in letter at our risk] witb size ot shoe usually worn, and try a pair of our Magnetic Insoles, and be convinced of the power residing our othet Magnetic Applicances. Positively no cold feet when they are worn, er monev refunded.
CATARRvi ELYS
mbM&ICHMM BALM
Has gained an4nvlable reputation wherever known isplaciog all oth
preparations. rticl
An article of un"oubted merit. CIRES
CoU In tbe Heai
H*Y- FEVERuqaSr W Apply by the fingers into! the nosti lis. when absorbed, it effectually cleanses the nasal passages ef virus, causing healthy secretions. It allay* inflammation, protects the membranal linings of tbe head from additional colds, completely heals the sores and restores the sense of taste and smell. Beneficial results are realised by a few applications.
A Tboroili Treatment fill Cm
Unequaled for C«l«t In the Head Headache and Deafness, or any HUH of mncousjnembranai irritation. Send for
sian as a ienow passenger was the new circular, uy man. prepaid, aoc a packase. Governor General of Canada, Lord Lans fJufi*
Wm iil
by a11 whole8ale
and
ELY BROTHERS, OWEGO, S.Y,
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
This powder never varies. A marvel of parity, strength and wholesomeness. Mot economical than the ordinary kinds and cannot be sold In competition with the multitude of low test, short weight, alam, or phosphate powders. Sold only in cans.
BOTAL BAKING POWDER Go. 106 Wall Street N. Y.
Grateful-Comforting.
EPPS'S G0C0A
Breakfast.
"By a thorough knowledge ot tbe natural laws whioh govern the operations of digestion and nutrition,' and bya careful application of the fine properties of well sefeoted Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided oui breakfast tables with a delicately flavored leverage which may save us many heavy Joctors' bills. It i8 by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundred of subtle maladies are floating around v. ready to attack wherever there is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal sha by keeping ourselves well fortified with pa blood and a properly nourished frame."— Civil Service Gwzette,
Made simply with boiling water or milk Sold In tins only lb ana lb) by Grocer labeled thus:
lames Epps & Co.Boma®™,°„
London, England.
THE GEO. WOODS'
Are the finest in TONE, Are the finest in DESIGN, Are the finest in WORKMANSHIPSend for Catalogue With tf nsic Free.
Geo. Woods' Company,
608 Washington Street, outsit, Mass.
BOEGEMAN'S BEST.
Boots and shoes will not fail to please anyone, as they are made of the solidest best material. Get your winter foot wear of him, Fourth street just south of Ohio.
Drain Tile.
I have bought from W. N. Adamson the drain tile factory be has been operating for the past four years in Lost Creek township, six miles southeast of Terre Haute. I propose to fix up so as to increase its capacity,and will be able to fill all orders, whether for small amounts or by the car load, promptly, with firstclass drain tile of all sizes aud a-t ihe' lowest puces. Famera and others nee^ng anything in this line will consult their nterests by calling on meal the factory or addressing me in care of box 1834.
J. A. DAII.BV,
a Terre Aauie, Ind.
REMOVAL.
"i 4
Rogers 6 Co.'sOfficePemovfc
The undereiened h&ve removed their office and lumber yard from the corner of First and Main streets to their factor* on Second and Vine.
ROGEBS & Co.
Call at Dunbar Hardware Co.'s, 504 Main street, Terre Haute, and see the best stock in the city of table and pocket cutlery, carvers and butcher knives, Rogers' triple plated knives, forks and spoon?.
VIGO Woolen Mills are still in the re tail trade, with a number one stock goods ot their own make and a number of pieces that have been cut which we will sell at reduced prices. We are always ready to exchange goods for wooi at net cash prices. t7. R. JEFTERS. Cor. Tenth and Main streets, Terre Haute
BOEGEMAN'S BOOTS
are the best. Try him. Store third door south of Ohio en east side of Fourth. Don't buy till you see his stock.
CLIFF & SON.
Manufacturers of Locomotive, Stationary and Marine Boilers (Tubular and Cylinder Iron Tanks, Smoke Stacks, Ac. Shops on
Firat Street, bet. Walnut ft Paplar Terre Haute, Ind. WRepairlng done In me most snbatanial manner at short notice, and at as low drice as any establishment in the stAta,
New Advertisements,
(«omI Pay f«r A seats. $100 to S200 per montli, made selling our fine Boots aud Bibles. Write to J. C, McCUSDY A CO., Cincinnati, Obio.
N.T
Ely'8 Cream Balm
VUfUM for C«M ia the Head. Cream Balm has gained an enviable repu—* tatlon wherever known displacing all other preparations. Send for circular contain* ing fall information'and reliable testimonials. By mall, prepaid, SO cento a packagestamps received. Sold by all wholesale and retail druggists. ISLY'A CKRAM BALM CO
Owego, New York.
II I WITHOUT A TOUCHER! wsoper's Instantaneous Guide to Keys of Piano and Organ. Price $i. Will teach any Person to play 20 pieces of music in one day. Yon couldn't learn it from a teacher in a month for $30. Try it and be convinced. Sample copy will be mailed to any address on receipt ot 35 cents In stamp*, by HEARNE A CO., Publishers, P. a Box,. 1*87, New York.
BATTLE of the BOOKS.
500,000 VclanfH the choicest literature of the world. 100-page Catalogue free. Lowest prices ever known. Not sold by dealers.. Sent for examination before payment on evidence of good faith. JOHN B. ALDEN, Publisher, 18 Vesey 3D. New York. P. O. Box
12*?.
MADE ON PURPOSE.
One of Those Mistakes Which are More frequent than Profitable. "Why, my child, this is not Benson's Capcine Porous Plaster," said a father to his little daughter, after examining a package she had just brought from the drugstore. "Isn't it. Papa? I'm sorry but 1 asked the man for Benson's—I know I did, and he took the 25 cents you gave me to pay -for1 it witb," exclaimcd tbe child positively. "Maybe the drug man made a mistake." "I'll go 'round myself and see." was the gentleman'scomment, as he donned his coat and bat. "Why didn't you send me Benson's plaster, instead of this cheap and trashy hing?'r
Wny, I thought that would suit you just as well." "Yon thought! you thought! What business had you to think? 1 don't pay you for blinking, but for filling my order," said tbe indignant caller, contemptuously. "There1* take that thing back and give me my Uoney I'll get what I want elsewhere."
M. BOLINGER
Sc
CO..
u, Oppexite tke Market Ilnae, Dealers in Staple and fancy ^hardware, tinware, rape, Twine, Bird Cages, Timothy, Clover and Hungarian Seed, Window Glasfr Sash, Boors, Paints, Oils,' Wire-Ciott Ac Ac. •e^Yon should call and examine oar goodfe. and prices before purchasing elsewhere.
Best quality Barb Fence Wire at Bottom* prices. A full line ditching tools, also stove pip
McKeen Bros*. Mill,
Cor. Tenth and Main Sts,
Is one of the largest and finest mills in tbe State. All the machinery has been recently put in at a cost of twenty-two-thousand dollars, and is of the latest improved pattern.
Tbe flour is the finest that can be made by any process.!
The Highest rash Pricc Paid for Wheat. Try their flour and you will never use the oduct of the old process again.
Free! Cards and Chromos.
We will send free by mail a sample set o£ our large German, French and AmericanChromo Cards, on tinted and gold grounds--* with a price list of over
200
dlflerei.tdee
signs, on receipt of a stamp for postage. W,« will also send free by mall as samples ten* of our beautiful chromos, on receii of ten cec ts to pay for packing and postage also enclose a confidential price list of our large oil chromos. Agents wanted. Address P. GLEASON A Co., 46 Hummer street, Boston. Mass.
"Anakesis"®.W ininfalUbit cure tor Pile*, i-rnce 91, at druggists, at" Wntp^dhj^^ .ej *er,S9x tUejrewYotk.
UFJIIJ
E
taw Yonthfol Imprad«ae«, "-*-ttlto. •ratal and Ph»_
CLIFF & SON,
Manufactures ot
Locomotive, Stationary and Marine BoUara. (Tubular and Cylinder,) Iron Tank*. Smoke Stacks, 6c. Shop on First street, bet. Walnut and Poplarr
Terre Haute, Ipd.
MV*Repalringdone In the most substantial. manner at short notice, and lib*?*! ln4 "aestate. Or-, attended, to
uuuuier suun uuuev, ana price as any establishment in the state. Oraers solicited and punctually
DIPHTHERIA!
JOHNSON'S ANODYNK LINItttNT-wW-i XHltlrely prerent this terrible disease, and will poet-u ,lvely cure nine cases oat of ten. Infonnatlcn that will many lives, seat free by mall. Pon'tdelaya moment. Prevention is better th*n cure. 1.8. JOH» f'CK ft CO., BOSTON, HAS8., formerly SAtfeoiL Ma »*Pl—oi» PunOATIV* Elua make Mwxfeh Mood
KIDDER BROS." WABASH MILLS. Main ttreet and River,.
Highest price for whea'^ 'ad best flourin the west, made by iue .Gray patenti roller.
Boegeman's Boots
are the best. Try him. Store third door south of Ohio on east side of Fourth. Don't boy till yon see his stock.
McMfiCHAN'S PATENT FOR
HITCHING STRAP,
wer»?!Lcheai)est'most convenient and£ best Hitching Strap ever Invented. Sent prepaid on receipt of 50 cents by the pat- -1
entee^nd.so»1?
Manufacturer. Address
W. A. McMacHAy. St. Clalrsville, O IS
BL00MINGT0N LAW SCHOOL.
rrIfw Department of Illinois
Wesleyanfe
University. For circulars address B. BENJAMIN, LL. D., Dean, EloomingfoD,Ill.
