Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 9 October 1884 — Page 4
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k- .' & -. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 9 I884 W
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'•^•••'--yi'i-y:: Ann nna aomea Rev. Robert Oollyer, .-formerly ot Chicago but now oi New t* Yerk cit, whtre be easily ranks in the l"" forefronto(tlic great ministers of the .•* metropolis, announces his determination J' $ to vote against Blaine. He has always
|!jw v«s a Jiehonest and untruthful man and
A will "liave none of him." Indeed it is if *'^:^difflcuU to see how any minister of the I| gospeljcan conpcientiously support for iT -Hhe greatest office in the country a man .convicted out of his own mouth of disv, Jhonesty aod untruthfulness. Read the proofs of this in lo-day'B
v\^w
GAZETTE.
SPEAKING
at Columbus, O, last night
Blaine said: "When the Republican party came in•'40 power by the election ol 1860 the total ^wealth of the state of Ohio was a little Vover $1,100,000,000. Twenty years from that time, in 1880, it was $8,200,000,030." ^'1 All Uis glorification of ptetended pros y,!ijerity was within a few miles of the
Hocking Valley mining region where Wide-spread discontent exists, where men «re out of work or working on greatly oeducod wages, where mines are closed 4tnd men and women and children are suffering for the necessities oi life. If, as il^fjlie saye, ttie wealth ot the state has trebled
In twenty years it has witnessed no infi's ere iee in ttie material means of the wage work rs. The pr»flis of their labor have .utj othi hands. Thev have toiled ^bat the lruits of tbeir labor has gone to "pile up the wealth in the hanas of a few ii of the sort with whom speaker plaint was as thick as thieves are said to «, and has not benefitted the men of
Ausole. Nothing could have better iljstrated the evili of the system Mr. Jlaine champions than the notorious •condition oi affairs now existing in Ohio. Wealth has trebled but It has gone into the hands of a favored few, while the miserable million have seen their resources diminish. The train of palace cars in which Mr. Blaine travels as a dead bead—no, not aa a dead head either, (or they will make it up off of the people with usurious interest if they win the flght—that gorgeous train may impress •Mr. Blaine with the wealth of the country, but he forgets that only a favored f-w travel in that way. A great many do not travel at all or else they walk. Jast now in the great Hocking Valley min:ng region they are not traveling much. The} have not the money for that sort ot thing. They are trying to £et breaf*, and not always succeeding.
A DEFENSE OF BLAINE. For several days past the
GAZETTE
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has called upon the
Mail, which professes neutrality but preaches Republicanism just before every 'election. It makes no answer. 3 The plain fact of the business is that bines G. Blaine's skirts must be cleared of these charges or he must be withdrawn from the race or he mint lose the support and the vote oi ui. reputable Republicans. This is a man. that cannot be .avoided. It must nut full in the face. Terre Haute ba uidreds (f Republicans whom this pa, respects and honors—It has huadreda men of character and reputation gocd citizens, men of honesty and truth, law-abiding men, who can be depended upon to support and uphold the law, who are active and -earnest in all good works. This paper does not propose let these meu stultify their records and place themselves et a disadvantage in future contests with the dishonest and untruthful for their suppression by now supporting for the highest offloe iu the land a man convicted out of his own mouth of dishonesty and untruthlulnes?. A pretty picture these gentlemen will pres'.ni next year, if they aupport Blaine this year, when they Unite with other good citizens in condemning and seeking to punish dish 'hesty and alsehood! Next year and in all the years to come Itdiaua will be governed
Ay law it will have courts and j*ils and ^penitentiaries and tUesa instrumentalities will be used to punish men who violate 'trusts, who swear to untruths. It has and will have Su diy schools a.ni churches to teach moral ty. But it shall not now glorify a mm who happens to &ave a nomination for an exalted office when that man and his frauds can u»i -defend hi* character against charges ot the sort now printed avaiutt Janus G.
But a dtfouse of Buine is made, and it Is made by Dick T.. Morgan, candidate on the Republioaa ccunty ticxet tor state v.'/ senator. He heads the Republican \c county ticket end as such Republican /|7 4eader bis opinions are entitled to esp~ hi cial weight. They may be said to be ai |.„ official and an authoritive enswer, a .^.^the best that caa be made. He says:
?.}, "The Democratic newspapers and noli' teal speakers are becoming despra'. k-* xhey oannot make a fight upon princi11-.
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They have nothing to fight for. T!u-1 vsWhole stock in trade has been ebuse up«.
I
:1a®1*
-0k&
GAZETTE
has
printed in parallel columns the proofs nrnished by B'aine's speeches in Congress and by his letters to Fisher and Fisher's to him, all matters of record and beyond dispute, that he is a dishonest and an untruthful man. Deeming these matters of the highest possible importance the
the Republican party, its leadera and its standard bearers, Blaine end Logan."
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been a Republican but he regards Blaine
Is it possible that the Republican per. ty or any considerable portion of it regards the honfsty end truthfulness of their candidate for the highest office as nothing or as nothing involving principle A dishonest and an untruthful man is a proper occupant of the White House is he, and a fi^snccessor of Washington and Jefferson end Lincoln?
Proceeding further Mr. Morgan, Re publican candidate for state senator, says: "They (the Democrats) try to make the people believe that James G. Biaine is wanting in personal integrity—that he is a liar and dishonest." "Try, do they! Well, it looks very much as if the matter was proven when Mr. Blaine, saying one thing in Congress about large money transactions is confronted by his own letters showing just the opposite. But of course Mr. Morgan does not expect people to take the assertion of his quoted above as settling the matter. He proceeds to give proof that James G. Blaine, telling two stories abort the same thing, tells the truth both times. That is a pretty knotty problem. It is apparently as difficult as the successful running of two trains in opposite dsrections over the same piece of siogle railroad track at the same time. Well, what is bis solution Hear him: "These charges are not new—they have been before the people for years. Since they were made, Mr. Blaine has been hi noted by his own State by being electtd United States Senator."
He clinches this conclusive argument with the aaded tact that he has also held a cabinet pobttion and that Maine went Republican last month. What a refreshing argument this is, to be sure He conclude!) as follows: "Let the Democratic organs go on in their infamous course of libeling the good name of the Republican candidate. True they can not prevent bis election, but they can satisfy their depraved appetites tor slander and abuse." i.
And so it is slander and abuse. Let ns see. On the 24tb of April, 1876, James G. Blaine, addressing Congress iand calling his countrymen into his confidence end on God to witness the truth of what he uttered, made this statement "I never had any transactions of any kind with Thoma^A Scott concerning bonds of the Little Rock and Fort Smith road, or the bonds of any other railroad, or any business in any way connected with railroads, directly or indirectly, immediately or remotely."
But Mr. Blaine on the 20th ot January, 1871, wrote a letter to Warren Fisher in Boston. Tte letter is in Blaine's own hand-writing, signed by himself and ad mittecl because it can not be denied. In that lett he said "I have this moment written to Mr. Caldwell suggesting, that, in case I oan arrange a meeting in this city, next week with Col. Thomas A. Scott, to come on here. I have some reason for believing that a very advantage: us arrangement may be made for taking, say, $300,000. I will telegraph Mr. Caldwell by Tuesday evening if I can arrange the meeting, and I wish him to hold himself in readiness for the journey. Your letter is this moment received, you ask my advice. Let me have an accurate and reliable statement of your financial condition and I can do something, I feel very sanguine, with Thomas A. Scott."
But this is not all. A letter of Fisher's to Blaine on the same subject is preserved. It bears date of Nov. 10, 1871 and among other things says: "I know but little of your obligations to deliver bonds to others: but taking into account the $100,000 bonds vou sola to Tom Scott and the amount of money you received on the Eastern contracts, our relative positions financially io the Little Rock and Fort Smith railroad bear a wide contrast." "If this does not prove James lilaine te be both dishonest and untruthful then language has lost its meaning. Mr. Morgan must answer these things again, or better, from his position at the head of the Republican county ticket, demand the withdrawal of a presidential candidate whose record, as sworn by his own utterances, is infinitely discreditable.
WITHIK
the past week the growth ol
sentiment in tuvor of Cleveland has been very marked. The main cause of this is the slowly but surely deepening conviction that Mr. Blain* is not the kind of a m&n who ought to be honored with the highest office in the nation. Thousands of Republican voters have read the evidence against him which his own letters contain, and have been waiting and hoping that some explanation of it would be given by his advocates which would enable conscientious men to support him. bat saca explanation has been given or an iv S el re in bvc-'Oie very weary of supporting a can didfttf of whom they are at heurt a-hamed, and if they c*n find uo arguments with which to defend him against the slings sad arrows of a jubilant opposition, they will give up the strangle and go over to the other side. Talk about the grand old party and the tariff doss not meet the demands at a situation like this, and we judge from the depressed air ot the Blaine organs that they are beginning to realize as much. The worst of it for them is that they have no other ammunition in store, and can get none.
GO V. CL AYE LAND AND FOREIGN-
BORN CITIZENS.
There has been muoh said, and much too that was exceedingly foolish, about Mr. TUaine's iLclination to a vigorous for
TTTK TERSE HAUTE
eign policy, and especially his
firmness
These are the views of a statesman expressed with dignity and decision. They are worth more than pages of generalities and demagogism. They are the utterances of a clear mind which perceives the right, and they leave no doubt that that right should be maintained at any cost. Mayor Cleveland brushed away the obscurities which It to* thrown round questions of state. "We have a right to say, aod we do S9J, that more suspicion without examination or trial is not sufficient to justify the long imprisonment ot a\itizen of Ameiica. Other nations may permit their citizens to be thus imprisoned. Ours will not" The man who speaks thus unequivocally means what he says, and men rely upon him With the United States navy restored, as it is propobed by the Democratic party to restore it, ut,der the presidency of Grover Cleveland, American citizens would feel a security they have not felt in recent years, and which they cannot rationally feel under Republican rule.
IRE PUBLIC DOMAIN. One of the monster evils of the last quarter of a century in this country ha« been the way in which the public lands have teen squandered. Millions of acres have been given away to tbe railroad corporations. Each of tbe Pacific railroads—the Union, the Central, the Northern, the Southern and the Texas Pacific—lies been given an imperial slice of the public domain. Dozens more have been subsidized by gifts of land made by Congnss. Amcng these is the Fort Smith and Little Rock road. This land these roads own. Part is sold but much of it will remain in tbe term of great landed estates in single hands—estates which from their size will shame the great holdings of English landlords in Ireland, out of which has grown so'much trouble in these late years and whioh must be remedied to save aa inevitable and impending conflict.
England's evil system, for it is an evil of gigantic proportions that a tew hundreds should own all the land and the millions should be landless, is the out growth of the feudal system of the middle ages. We are rapidly approaching it though purchased legislation. Few of the ublea certain to be experienced from it have as yet ccme about because there is still land for all. But even now some trouble is upon us. In these far western states wealth purchases scats in the senate and in congress. How else coukl sn ignorant boor ot the Tabor stripe get to the senate. What else but his money recommended Dwight M. Babin, from Minnesota, to the senate, or Sharoa, or a dozen others that might be mentioned. Our splendid empire of the west is patsing into the heads ot the railroads and from them to a few, and the real workers of that region a hundred yeais hence will be in the condition of the people of Ireland who sever get ahaad, however hard they work, hut
4- Li Si*,' "T
in resisting all wrongs perpetrated en that never visit their estates except to pass foreign.born citizens. Those whose nterest in this subject has caused them to pey particular attention to the action of the government will remember that during Mr. Blaine's incumbency of the state department the people ot the United States believed tbey had special reason to complain of the manner in which Irish-American citizens were treated by Great Britain. They were held in prison without charges being preferred and were denied speedy and fair trial.. At that time Gov. Cleveland was mayor of Buffalo. He.was not an aspirant for national honors and wa? not posing for effect. In that city, however, as in others, the wrongs endured by American citizens and the dilatory mode of* dealing with the subject by the government moved the public to action and protest. At a meeting called to consider the matters of complaint and to give expression to the views of the people on the vita) subject oi the treatment of American citizens in foreign lands, Major Cleveland said. "It needed not the statute which ia now the law of the land, declaring that "all naturalized citizens while in foreign lands are entitled to and shall receive from this government the same protection of person and property wnich is accorded to native-born citisens,' to VOKC the policy of our nation. "In all lands where the semblance liberty is preserved the right of a person arrested to a speedy accusation and tiial is or ought to be a fundamental law as it is a rale of civilization. "At any rate, we hold it to be so, and this is one ot the rights which we undertake to guarantee to any native born or naturalized citizen of ours, whether he be imprisoned by order ol the Czar of Russia or under the pretext of a law administered for the benefit ot the landed aristocracy of England. "We do not claim to make laws for ofher countries, but we do insist that whatsoever those laws may be, they shall, in the interests of human1freedom and the rights of mankind, so far as they involve the liberty of our citizens, be speedily administered. We have a right to say, and do say, that mere suspicion with out examination or trial ia not sufficient to justify the long imprisonment of a oitizen ot America. Other nations may permit their citizens to be thus imprisoned. Ours will not And this in effeet hss been solemnly declared by statute. "We have met here to-night to consider this subject and to inquire into the cause and the reasons and tae Justice of the imprisonment of certain of our fol low citizens now held io British prisons without the semblance of a trial or legal examination. Our law declares that the government shall act in such cases. But the people are the creators of the govern ment."
LT GAZETTE.
(whose earnings go to enrich a favored tew
•one idle days in hunting. With the bitter experience of Ireland before us we are marching straight ahead into the same condition and have done it through the vanality of Congress.
Efforts have been made to put a stop to it and the committee on public lands of the present Congress, cf which Congress man Cobb, of Vincennes, is chairman and Wn. 8. Holman a member is making valiant efforts, to recover to the government several millions of acres ot forfeited land grants to railroads. And the roads are trying to hold on to the gifts they got from the government without fulfilling the conditions on which those gifts were granted.
It will be a serious blow to the efforts of the present Congress and to future Congrosses to save tbe people this portion of squandered lands if James G. Blaine elected president. There can be no sort of doubt about this- Mr. Blaine when speaker of the House cf Representatives, the third office in the government, used all his power, and successfully too, to restore to the Little Bock and Fort Smith railroad a land grant which ought never to have been made aud which it had forfeited by failure to build the road in acooidance with the conditions of the grant. This is not a matter of conjecture or aecusation. lt is a matter proved beyond the possibility of cavil or mistake proved by tbe letters of Mr. Blaine asking tor nnd securing stocks and bonds in tha road because as speaker he bad so ruled as to make them valuable at the expense of the government. A pretty time the people will have of it trying to foice future congresses, always more or less reluctant to do hat is right, to undo the wrongs of its predecessors in the matter of these grants to railroads, if we elect to the presidency and place all tbe power and patronage of that gieat office in the hands of a man who, as speaker, left uo stone upturned to help along the very sort ot legislation we are now most anxious*to hinder. If as speaker Mr. Blaine could cast heavy anchors to the windwsrd, as he described his efforts ia helping his friends out of tbe pockets ot the people, how much heavier anchors could he heave to the windward from tbe White House to check the course of tbe ship of state in its voyage.
No, James G. Blaine must be beaten. If he is not the country might as well abandon all efforts to stop the railroad kiqgs and monopolists from taking possession of the whole of our western empire. ^nd when they gtt it all, and it quadruples and quintupldb in value, as great estates do whens very few live in splendor off ot them and the many worke.s who made them valuable live poorly, instead of all living well, then Mr. Bla .ne can make another tour over the country and congratulate the people on the great national prosperity, as he is doing now. And the people will try to feel prosperous because the country is three times as rich as it was and forty or fifty men have it all.
Fayette Township Isstitnte The Teachers of Fayette met at New Goshen on Saturday SaDt. 27th, 1884, and organized the Township Institute. The meeting was called to order by H. WCurry, of Sandford School, and on motion of J. F. Hunter Mr. Curry was made permanent chairman for the year. On motion of Trustee Scett, Mrs. Ella Hunter was elected Secretary. The following school officers and teachers were present:
L. D. Scott, Trustee. Teachers H. W Curry, Charles Shirley, Grant Whalen, Ella Whalen, Ella Hunter, Salie Shirley. Flora Ward, Rose Hay, and J. F. Hunter The reguls program was adopted. The following subjects were assigned to the teachers named, to be discufted at our next Institute: Primary reading, Ella: Hunter^ advanced reading, Flora Ward language, Sallie Shirley Teachers preparation, J. F. Hunter Geography, Bose, tlay primary arithmetic, Ella Whalen. The organization of teachers reading circle was deferred until next meeting which is the 3rd Saturday in October at New Gosben. All persons interested in the cause of Education are invited to attend.
H. W.
CURRY,
KILLwoaifsin
MILLIOXS
President.
ELLA HUNTER,
Secretary.
KILD delightful iDTlgorant for delicate Females ii WlUer'i Stuaaash Bitters. Cares costiveness and headacne.
children witn WiMer'i
Bstkn'i Wain Syrnp,
Iteai for Bartenders.
Georgia paper says: (The new drink is called Blaine punch. Two
flaasesmakea
man feel like dancing
'isher's born-pipe." Tbe proper Blaine drink Would be a Little Bock an4 rye. to more doctor's bills to pay for Syphillis and all Venereal Diseases, wilder** s«rsa»arrtlla and F»mh cores all.
Elsqaeat Silesoe.
Albany A gus: The silenee of Mr. Edmunds is a good deal more audible than tbe noise of Hawley or the howling •e°H *fr
die with Scrofula. If tkese
vied ns would use Wilder** Sampari aa* Peiash their lives would be saved. SIM* your address aad I cent stamp to A. T. hlf*, Leelsvil.e, Kytor set ot beautiful picture cards.
A Dry Tim.
Merchant Traveller: The Prohibition party in Kansas has split, each side insisting that it is ths other's treat.
"Tan Lord loves cheerful giver." In all oases where a Tonic is needed (ire W!14*r*s HISMI Bitter*—lt the boss. mar Bound Worms, Tape Worau, Speai •te* mm netting tat WIMtr'iisS Wsrm§n*p.
CAST0RIA
for Infants and Children. ion
Cagtoria promotga and overcomes Flatulency, uonstipation, Soar Stomach, Diarrhoea, and Feverishness. It insures health and natural
sleep, without
"Oasli^jssow^^lsplrt known to me." ""ST AT Aac—a. P., 8t Portland Ave., Brooklyn, N. T.
BLAINE'S TOUR-
A Osy's Travel in a Private Palaec Car' Continuing hia tour in his private palace car Blaine waa received at Wheelins yesterday afternoon. A procesaion waa formed and paraded the atreeta to tbe show ground io front ot tho state houee, where the usual speech was made. The procession then moved acroas the river into Bridgeport, Ohio, to wbich place his private car was taken. A speech was made there and then the train was taken for Canton. Short stopa were made at M%yward, Flushing, Freeart, Ulrichville, New Philadelphia, anal Oover and Massillon. Eeoeptiona numerously attended were had at eaoh of these places. At Canton a torch light procession waa the feature of tbe show and there the party atopped.
Dr. J. E. Dunbir, oculist, of Tern Haute, is in the city snd will remain several days. He can be iound at Dr. Flagg's office, Main street. Dr. Dunbar is very popular here and has already secured considerable patronage.—Vincanes Commercial.
Ose of California's Tragedies. Oakland (Cal.)Times. We iesret that Brother Marshall o! Stuckton Maverick wss guilty of the indiscretion ot loaning his entirely beautiful and manly form to young Tom Williams to prsctice on with nis mauleys. One eye is reported to be ons diet of pork rind, and his massive nose is cracked along the divide. Hard luck Marshall, me boy.
ROUGH ON
Hull."
"Bough on Itch" cures btimors, eruptions, ring-worm, tetter, salt rheum, frosted feet, chilblains.
Tnnfrie. ds ol Con Ctllahan will learn with regret of the death of his little daughter which happened this morning.
BED-BUGS, FLIES.
Flios, roaches, ants, bed-bugs, rata, mice, uophers, chipmunks, cleared out by. "Rough on Bats." loo.
Whati What cures their fevers,
morphine.
The aver-
age depth is about 13 inches. 13
"R0U6H ON PAIN
Cures oolic, cramps, dia: rhoea externally for acbes, pains, sprains, headache, neuralgia, rheumatism,.. For man or beast. 20 and 50c.
1
Killed the Wroni Man.
Courier-Journal: A Western editor has just murdered his foremau, and public fdeliug is very much against him. It is argued that he should have killed his proofreader.
LIFE PRESERVER.
If you are losing your grip on life, try 'Wells' Hoalth Renewer." Goes direct to weak spots.
JVil Farmers, Attention. Take your wheat to Conant and get your flour. The only mill that exchanges.
Flour exchanged for wheat at Conant & Son's mill.
Flour exchanged for wheat at Con»nt fe Sen's mill.
Flour exchanged for wheat at Conant & Son's mill.
Flour exchanged for wheat at Conant & Son's mill.
Flour exchanged for wheat at Coiiant & Son's mill
Farmers, Attention.
Take your wheat to Conant and get your flour. Tbe only mill that ex. changes.
Detferick Hay Press. General western agency snd districting bouse of the Dederick Hay Press at the Terre Haute Mscbiusry Depot, 113 and 115 south Fourth street, Terre Haute, Ind.
T. J. GRIFFITH
Has^the latest in an! overs e, for ladies, called Pock-: et Overs,' weight one ounce. No. 32 south Fourth st.
The number is on the red star •ver the door.
Tie
Sawing
•"SSL'
When babies ftet and «y hf turns. What cures their oolie, kffla their worms. BstCwtorU. What Sour
cures Constipation, Golds, Indigestion, But Castorta.
Farewell then to Castor Oil and Paregoric,
CINTAUR LimiWKWT—an absolute cure for Rheumatism, Sprains, Burns, Galls, &c. The most Powerfttl and Penetrating Pain-relieving and Healing Remedy known to man,
Hail Caatoriat
mm,
Made Easy.
I0KABCH ZIOBXKISG
3ACEXK2
SEJMT OTST 30 DAT*S*
JgL«^ag briliUnt ootora.
W*. CLirr, J„ H. CLirr.
C.
N .CLIFF
Terre Haute Boiler Works.
CLIFF A CO..
Prop'ra.
Manufacturer! of Locomotive, Stationary and Marine Boiler*, (Tnbnlar and Cylinder) Iroa Canka, Jails, Smoke Stacks, Breeetiing and Sheet iron work.
Shop on first street, between Walnut and Poplar, Terre Haate, lad. •^Repairing promptly attended te.
Farmers, Attention.
Take your wheat to Con ant and get your flour. The only mill that exchanges.
READY.
Blaine and log*] 712 Royal octavo pages 67 pull*pace lllastration*. TIMHSN, CLLV*LA*a»& HINDRICKS 774 Koya: octavo pages 35 full-*.age Illuuratlona.
Beat Term Ever Offered t* Agent*. OUi'FIT FREE and ALL FRKIGHT PAID Address
H. E.
GOOD8PEED A
CO..
NBW YORK
or
CHICAGO.
PRECEPT.
General Election, 1884,
Htato of Indiana, Vigo County,!eB I, Merrill N. Smith, Clerk of the Circuit Court in and foraaid county, certify to the sheriff of said county as follow* to-wit:
That at the General Election to*be held in, tbe seveial counties of said state, and in the several townships of said county on the first Tuesday afUr the Or it Monday in No vember, lt being the 4th day of November, A D. 1884, the voters of said county the preclnctstf holding elections in UIE severatownships of said county vote to e«ect the following officers viz:
NATIONAL.
President and vice president of che United State* through fifteen electors to be voted for' and elected by the voters ot the state oflndlana* •*,
CONGRESSIONAL,
Representative in the congress of the United States of ame lea frtm the Eighth Congressional District of Indian*.
STATS.
Governor of the state, Lieutenant Governor of the state, Secretary of the stile, auditor of state, treasmer of stxte, attorney general of state, superintendent of pabllc instruction, reporter of supreme court, jadge of supreme court.
COWNTT.
And the voters of said county of Vigo al said precincts aforesaid vote foi aid ilee! the following officers viz:
Judge of the Vig Circuit Court Prosecuting Attorney, Treasurer of Vigo onnty, 8h« ff of Viiro county, Coroner of Vljjo county, 8urv0yor of V.go county, Ont Senator in tbe General assembly of &aid state from said county.
Two Representatives in tbe General As sembly ot said state from said county. Commissioners from the First and Second districts of said county.
And yon are hereby commended to give notice of said election in the manner and 'or tne time required fcy law.
Witness my signature and the seal of said court this 4th day of October, 1884.
|SEAL
MCRKILL N. SMITH,
Clerk Vigo Circuit Court.
I, John Cleary, Sheriff of Vigo county' hereby certify that the foregoing is a true, full and complete copy of the original for the above election ana by virtoe ot the sssss I hereby notify tbe qnafdM voters of said ty tomeet ips 1 eountv on Tuesday, tLe 4tb day or Novem
oonnty elections in the several townsbl
at the una! plaoes of holding insala
bar, 1894, 'orthe purpose of electing ths officers therein named. Witness my signature, this 6th day October, 1884.
JopvCLsasT, Sheriff.
Farmers, Attention.
Take ycur wheat to Conant and get your flour. The only mill that exchanges.
W. F. STAPLES,
«r
The popular photographer on Fifth street, will close his gallsry November 1st This is the very lsst chance for yon to get First-Class Photographs for Three Dollars per Dosen. Dont you forget it.
