Source: http://visions.indstate.edu:8888/cdm/search/searchterm/Famous%20Hoosiers/field/all/mode/exact/conn/and/cosuppress/
Timestamp: 2019-04-25 20:10:50+00:00

Document:
Incomplete letter from Theodore Debs, 12/19/1944. Writes that he received a letter from Jane Borland saying that W. P. Borland has been confined to his bed since last July.
Jerry Miller's personal account of what he knows about the "Dreiser Birthplace" in Terre Haute, Indiana. Miller says that the house maintained by the Vigo County Historical Society is not the actual birthplace of Paul Dreiser.
This article discusses famous statesmen and politicians, male and female, from the Wabash Valley. This is the second article in a ten-part series.
This is a letter and photograph from John L. Lewis.
View of a beaded watch fob, the name Debs is beaded on with decorations at each end.
View of an original James Whitcomb Riley manuscript of the poem "Them Flowers" dedicated to Eugene V. Debs by Riley.
View of a white ribbon made to celebrate the day Eugene V. Debs was released from Woodstock Jail. There is a picture of Debs and the words: Chicago's Greeting tendered Eugene V. Debs upon his release from Woodstock jail Friday, November 22, 1895.
View of a wooden box holding four pipes and the accessories that go with them that was owned by Eugene V. Debs. It was kept at the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen's offices in Cleveland until 1969 when it was returned to the museum.
View of a pipe clipper from the box set owned by Eugene V. Debs.
View of a filter for a pipe from the box set owned by Eugene V. Debs.
View of a carved pipe that was part of a box set that belonged to Eugene V. Debs.
View of a pipe which belonged to Eugene V. Debs.
View of a pipe which belonged to Eugene V. Debs. Debs gave the pipe to Charles A. Webster, an employee in the drug store of his brother-in-law Arthur Baur.
View of a pipe which was given to Eugene V. Debs by the Socialist Party of England in 1912. Debs gave it to his brother-in-law Arthur Baur who gave it to Alan Merrill, an employee in his drugstore.
View of a ornate red and gold pipe which belonged to Eugene V. Debs.
View of a carved pipe which belonged to Eugene V. Debs.

References: V. 
 V. 
 V. 
 V. 
 V. 
 V. 
 V. 
 V. 
 V. 
 V. 
 V. 
 V.