Daily News, Volume 1, Number 128, Franklin, Johnson County, 17 July 1880 — Page 2

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DAILY NEWS

E. P. BE A UCHAMP, Editor and Proprietor.

Publication Office, corner Fifth and Main Street*

Entered at the Post Office at Terre Haute, TmUnn.. as sccond-class mutter.

SATURDAY, JULY 17. 1880.

FOR PRESIDENT

UNITED STATES,

JAMES A. GARFIELD.

FOR VICE PRESIDENT,

CHESTER A. ARTHUR.

STATE TICKET.

For Governor,

ALBERT G. PORTER. For Lieutenant Governor, THOMAS I1ANNA.

For Secretary of State, EMANUEL R. HAWN. For Auditor of State, EDWARD H. WOLFE, For Treasurer of State,

ROSWELL 8. HILL, For Attorney General, DANIEL P. BALDWIN, Forjudge* of Supreme Court, BYRON* K. ELLIOT, Third District. WILLIAM A. WOODS, Fifth District.

For CJcrk Supreme Court, DANIEL ROYSE. For Reporter Supreme Conrt,

FRANCIS M. DICE,

For Superintendent Public Instruction, JOHN M. BLOSS.

For Congress,

ROBERT B. F. PEIRCE.

Vigo County Ticket.

For Clerk,

MERRILL N. SMITH. For Treasurer, CENTENARY A. RAY.

For Sheriff,

JACKSON STEPP.

For Commissioner, Third District, JOHN DEBAUN. For Coroner,

DR. JAMES T. LAUGHEAD. For Senator, FRANCIS V. BICHOWSKY.

For Representatives, WILLIAM II. MELRATH. DICK T. MORGAN.

For Surveyor,

GEORGE HARRIS.

LB I

Mil. TILDEN says he is relieved to know that by the nomination of Hancock he (Tilden) is spared the burdens of four years of administration. Undo Samuel should not feel that way. The country would have spared him all that without a word of complaint.

HANCOCK and English. No more "blo6dy shirt" campaigns by the Republicans. No "bloody shirt' campaign. No Republican victory this fall. At the elections the country must be free.—

Gazette. s,

Yes, the country ought to be free at the elections, and citizens ought to bo free to run for office, if they desired to, also.

We would be glad to hear the

Gazette

on the Dallas county, Alabama, question. Wonder if there is any bloody shirt there? Of course the greatest possible amount of freedom prevails in that locality—Democratic freedom.

UNQBATEFUL OFFICERS.

Some of our local officers are very ungrateful for services rendered by a paper contributing of its tune and means to their success. This is experienced almost every day by all parties. Tho candidate thinks that the paper and those connected with it are splendid so long as ho is a candidate, but when he has becomes an "officer." and that through the influence of the newspapers, he no longer is tho same agreeable and most amiable gent. Spot such chaps. We already have on our list such a man.

THE SOUTH CAROLINA PLAN. A member of the British Parliament has recently published a volume in which he records his impressions of the American system of giving expression to popular sentiment at elections. lie spent much time in the South, and was startled by the frankness of the leading Democrats of South Carolina and other States in admitting the use of tissue ballots and the practice of other frauds at the elections of 1878. He found uo one to deny that tissue ballots had been used in the interest of the Democratic party, but many to excuse and defend their use. He dwells on this feature of the American political sys tern with the delight of a man who has made a discovery that' will demonstrate tho superiority of the English plan of giving voice to popular sentiment.

Tho Stxc of our Groat Lakes. The latest measurements of our fresh water sens are as follows:

The greatest length of Lake Snjjerior is mile* its greatest breadth is 160 miles mean depth, 688 feet elevation, 027 feet area, $2,000 square miles.

The greatest length of Lake Michigan is SCO miles its greatest breadth, 108 miles mean dopth, 600 feet elevation, 50f feet, area, 23,000 square miles.

The greatest length of Lake Huron is 200 miles its greatest breadth is 169 miles mean depth, 600 feet elevation, -M feet, area, 20,000 square miles.

The greatest length of Lake Erie is 250 miles its greatest breadth is SO miles: its mean depth is 84 feet elevation, 555 feet area, 6,000 square miles.

The greatest length of Lake Ontario is 180 miles its greatest breadth, 65 miles its mean depth is 500 feet elevation, 261 feet area, 6,000 square miles.

The length ot all five is 1,265 miles, covering an area upward of 137,000 square miles

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was so much

d*c

Ui%c

once.—ITaiekeye.

subscriber to a Nebraska paper possible out of it, with as little work as wanted to know why the paper was so

IMPROVEMENT OF THE WABASH. The improvement of the Wabash river so that it will be navigable all the months of the year, is now attracting much atten tion. There is one thing, which every day becomes more and more apparent and that is, we must have cheaper trans portation for many of the vast products of this valley. There must be an easier and cheaper mode by which many of the heavier articles which are produced from the soil, can find their way to the seaboard and foreign markets. In a great many cases time is not so essential as price, and if cheaper channels can be found by which the large mass of our products can be moved, it would be great ly to the advantage of the producers.

Can the Wabash river be made navigable all the year, up to this point, or to Lafayette? A survey was made some years ago, and tho decission was that it could. .If it can be made navigable, by slack water dams being erected at the proper points, then it should be done at an early day. The rapid improvement of the country demands this should be done.

The truth is, the railroad facilities are even now unable to move the entire products of this valley, in time to meet the market demands, from other countries, and the price charged, often leave but a small margin to the producer. There should be a competitor to the railroads, and water navigation is the only one possible.

An.important auxiliary to making the Wabash river navigable all the year, is thought to be by a canal from the lakes to some point intersecting the river, and thus furnishing a supply of water, as well as making navigation secure north as well as stouth. These are all questions of the greatest moment to this section of the country, and we hope in a few days to have the proper data in our hands to give to the readers of the NEWS much infor nation on this subject.

After a nundred years or more o» cnuy money-getting, perhaps the nation trill" be rich enough, or wise enough, to intermit, the ceaseless struggle after wealth, and take time to enjoy itself. Oar standards have been so isralftr that we have not enough appreciated the coarse of those whose philosophy of life consists in getting all the pure enjoyment

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damp* and the editor cruelly responded have done many wonderfbl works, bat that he supposed it was Jx^aoae

there

on it. thingB easy.

compatible witfi independence. We

I have not mastered ,lhe act of .taking

I

STOKES BE80BT8.

Yes, daughter, you should go somewhere during the summer. You cannot stay at home during warm weather and live. To-be-sure, your mother, who hasn't been out of town since she was married, can stand it, but then she is oldfashioned, and doesn't *know any better and besides, she has fun enough doing the washing and ironing. By au means, go. Get a linen duster and a basket, and go at

Perhaps there is no greater humbug than persons living in this parallel of lati tude, to leave It during the summer months and go to what is termed fashion able and cooler resorts. There is node gree of latitude on the globe more healthgiving and delightful than the one in which this people reside. There is hardly any place, where there is less heat or oppressive weather than here, and yet great numbers of our people every year, leave their pleasant homes, .put everything into trunks, and off to some other and far less congenial climate, place themselves and their children into cramped rooms, swelter and roast for a few uncomfortable weeks, and then return, to find out they could have been much more comfortable at home.

This is all an infatuation all a notion all a humbug. There is hardly a week of uncomfortable weather in this parallel during the summer, and when it is hot here, it is hot at all the watering places on the continent. If the heated term is not exactly the same time all over the continent, we venture the assertion that there are just as many hot days at any of the fashionable watering resorts during the summer months as at Terre Haute. And we venture the other assertion, that nine of the ten who leave this city during the summer for these resorts would ejoy bet ter health and be more comfortable if they would stay at home.

There is no time during the whtflc year when people should so certainly be at home as during the heated term. If the house is aired at the proper time, and kept closed when it should be, the rooms can be kept comfortable and healthy during the hottest days we ever have here, and the children particularly, can be kept happier and healthier. There are no worse examples placed before children, and especially girls, than the examples which surround them at fashionable watering places.

These resorts are generally crowded with fast men and women women and men who live and thrive in the sunshine of the excess of fashionable life. No one single common sense, domestic or economical idea is ever taught or learned at a fashionable watering place. The mothers who generally congregate there are fool ifeh, and the daughters grow up to discount their mothers one hundred per ccnt. Of course no one ever expects any thing but individual recklessness and personal wortlilessness from a boy who spends all his summers at fashionable resorts. He grows to manhood under the influence of such surroundings, with a dislike for everything which is useful and contempt for all that will soil the beauty of his hands, or tarnish the unsoiled cleanliness of his clothes. In the great world of thought or action he is a minus quantity, and before be reaches half his allotted number of years, he fills a grave or lives as a pauper or a drone.

Baleful Planets. ,.r

If tliere is anything in "asfioJqpcal criology," says

Science of Health,

Dr. Knapp has collected a m«Rg

But soon we are to have, for the first time in 2,000 years, all fotir of these planets against us. They will be at their nearest approach to the sun, in or soon after 18S0, so that for a few years, say from 1880 to 1884, the vitality of every living thing, will be put to a severe and trying ordeal. Somfe persons think they see in the signs of the times evidences of the great disasters in the immediate future. The excessive beat, the unexampled cold, the prevalence of flood and disasters at sen, the general failure of the potato crop, the wide-spread chill fever among human beings, and the equal presence of the epizootic among animals, are mentioned as among the premonitions of the rapidly approaching perihelion.

Well, "to be forewarned is to be forearmed." Accidents excepted we know very well that the persons with more vigorous constitutions and more hygienic nabits will have the better chance to survive whatever adverse influences the extraordinary perihelia will occasion. It is well known to physicians that, in all pestilences, plague, typhus, small-pox, cholera, murrain, etc., the intemperate the dissipated, and those whose sanitary conditions were bad furnished the victims.

We do not write to alarm anyohe, nor to make a sensation. We state the facts which all history attests. Readers con judge for themselves what importance to attach to the subject. That tho conjoint perihelion of all lame planets of the solar system, one of which, water, is 1,000 times as large as the earth, must disturb our atmosphere and temperature very considerably is probable that this disturbance must be injurious to health and life is certain and that these periods have heretofore been pestilential, is a matter of record. How much we shall suflcr during the next dozen or fifteen years depends verv much upon how nearly we live a life in accordance with the laws of health.

Names of Countries.

The following countries, it is said, were originally named by-the Phoenicians, the greatest commercial people in the world. The names, in the Phoenician language, signified something chart teristic of the places which they designate.

Europe signifies a country of white complexion so named because the inhabitants were of a lighter complexion than those of Asia and Africa.

Asia signifies between, or in the middle, from the fact that the geographers placed it between Europe and Africa-

Africa signifies the land of corn, or ears. It was celebrated for its abundance of corn, and all sorts of grain.

Siberia signifies thirsty or dry—very characteristic. Spain, a country of rabbits or conies. It was once so infested with these animals that it sued Augustus for an army to destroy them.

Italy, "a country of pitch, from its rielding great quantites of black pitch. Calabria, also, for the same reason.

Gaul, modern France, signifies yellowhaired, as yellow hair characterized its inhabitants!

The English of Caledonia is a high hill. This was a rugged, mountainous province in Scotland.

Hibeniia is utmost, or last habitation for beyond this, westward, the Phoenicians never extended their voyages.

Britain, the country of tin, great quantities being found on it and adjacent islands. The Greeks called it Albion, which signifies in the Phoenician tongue either white or high mountains, from the whiteness of its shores, or the high rocks on the western coast

Corsica signifies a woody place. Sardinia signifies the footsteps of men, which it resembles.

Syracuse, liad savor, so-called from the unwholesome marsh on which it stood. Rhodes, serpents or dragons, which it produced in abundance.

Sicilv, the country of grapes. Seylfa, the whirpool of destruction. JEtua signifies a furnace, or dark, or smoky.

A

wealthy and eccentric husband ana jrife in a Boston suburb keep their only daughter isolated from the world. She is ten years old, and is being literally brought up in a glass cascj her play room, studv and bed room being at the lop of tls 1ior.se, where walls and roof are of glass, the sun-bath being considered necessary to the child's physical and moral health and well being. The mother, formerly a normal teacher, and a great student, is the child's teacher, and, with tuo exception of her daily airing in the handsome grounds ot the place, the little girl never goes ont and rarely sees another child.

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boly life has its voice. It speafcs when the tongue silent, and is either a constant attmction is continual re- .£

r*F£*is

we are

approaching one of the most pestilential periods of the earth's history. Since £he commencement of the Christian era the perihelia of the fonr great planets of the solar system—Jupiter, Uranus, Saturn and Neptune—have not been coincident. But this is about to occur, and in the language of Dr. Knapp, .who has traced the history of the greatest epidemics that have ever afflicted the Lu man race to the perihelia of these planets, there will roon be "lively times for the doctors." The theory is that when one ot more of the large planets is nearest to the sun the temperature and condition of our atmosphere are so disturbed as to cause injurious vicissitudes, terrible rains, prolonged droughts, etc., resulting in the destruction of crops, and pestilence among human beings and domestic animals.

0f

statistical data, all going to show that

Krihelion

data havealways been marked

unusual mortality, and that sickness and death have invariably corresponded with the planets in perihelion at the same time. The revolution of Jupiter round the sun is accomplished in a little less than twelve years of Saturn in a little less than thirty years of TJranus in about eighty-four years. If it be true, therefore, that the perihelia, of these planets occasion atmospheric conditions unfavorable to life, pestilential periods should occur once in a dozen years and aggravated and still more wide-spread epidemics at longer intervals. In tracing the history of epidemics for more than two thousand years, Dr. Knapp finds the facts in all cases to validate the theory.^ Thus in the sixth, and again in the sixteenth centuries, three of these planets were coincident in perihelion, and .those were the most pestilential times of the Christian era.

rf Fraction of IRON and CAUSAYA

"W. RNI.

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1

The more widely and rai dncing other purchasers of terms to early subscribers.

Knowledge," lished.

Library of t'nlvw^al Knowledsc. 21 vols., t10.H0. MOman's Gibbon Rcme, 5 vol.. $2.50. Macaulay's History of England. 3 vols., $1.56. Macaulay's Life and Letters. 50 cents. Macaulay's Eh and Poems, 8 vols.. 1J0. Chamber's Cy^: •iwediaeod Knit. Literatnre,4 rols..

Knight** History of England. 4 vols.. $3. Plutarch's Live# of illustrious Men. 3 vols.. $1.50. Gefkle's Life and words of Christ. 50 cents. Young's Bible Concordance. 811.000 references {propa*^). Acme tatjf of Biography. 50 cent*, Book oi ss Msgp. etc.. Mas., 50 cents. Milton's Complete Poetic*] Work*, 50 cent*. Shakespeare's Complete Work*. 75 cents. Work* of Dante, translated by Cary, 40 Cents. Works of Virgil, translated by Dryden, 40 cents. The Koran oOtdiummcd, by Sale. 35 cents. Adventure* of Don Quixote. ilhs«., SO cents. Arabian 2C5ffttt«. filus., 50 cent#. Bmrrsn's Pilgrim's- Progress, ill&a.. 50 c«nts. Robinson Crusoe, (Has.. 50 cents, Munchausen Oolliver"* Travels ilTus 50 .Cent*.

Remit by bank dn

be »ent in postage «te.

ipn y1nmiMiiitiii(ftri»iiirtf»fini

8AR£,

Eaiorted by the Medical Profession, and recommend** by them

Dyspepsia, GeatrsI Debiiitj, Female Diseases, Want Vitality,

Craetetl Ten

TXK'SV. IEO'

a.,

*RI!CU "DR. 7 TIN.

Toxic b*s done xvoaUers Wis.

who had been doctored nearly to de&Uifor scverxl years, has been cared of C««t Prostration by the nse of DK HAKTOI'S Jaox TONIC, WHICH-** raised her from her bed S ft oar county, has requested *hcx« jhe had -jZfT l, .m-j jk 8 to tetuleei-yoa his fiatclai lyiag for cany 3* jhh jiMW Jwgg*^aglrao-«-Iot!irmeatsforUia greatbene^uontns. W SI ss »5f A 1® fits his vrife ract-lved from tha use of your-

No. 213 KOBTH MAIN. STKEET^ST.lLOUIS.

IE?/- FOBSTBR &c SOIsT,

DEALERS IN

Furniture, Mattresses, Parlor and Bedroom Suits,

102 and 104 North Fourth Street,

TERRE HAUTE, XISTIDTJ^JSTJ^..

W. S. CLIFT, J. H. WILLIAMS. J. M. CLIFT

CLIFT, WILLIAMS & CO,

MANUFACTURERS OF

SASHES, DOORS, BLINDS, ETC.

AND DEALERS IN

Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Glass, Paints, Oils and Builders' Hardware.'

CORNER OF NINTH AND MULBERRY STREETS, TERRE HAUTE, IND.

DOES THE CONSUMER GET PURE COFFEE

Which is, without question, perfectly Pure and Unadulterated, being roasted from

Iml ket Ms :i the-Best Eigli Me Coffees,

So delicately mixed in such proper proportions as to produce a Boquct of Aromatic Flavors, making a most delicious and healthy beverage. If you want a delightful and healthy drink, ask your grocer for

HULMAN'S DAUNTLESS ROASTED COFFEE.

I am also packing the various cofTccs of the best grades separately, under the "DAUNTLESS" brand, which is a guarantee of the excellcnce, and will be known as DAUNTLESS MOCHA ROASTED COFFEE.

DAUNTLESS JAVA DAUNTLESS MARACAIBO DAUNTLESS CEYLON DAUNTLESS MEXICAN DAUNTLESS PORTO RICO DAUNTLESS GOLDEN RIO DAUNTLESS RIO DAUNTLESS SANTOS DAUNTLESS LA GUAYRA

Sold only in Pound Packages and each package' containing 10 Ounces ofJ Pure Coffee.

EC. ZKUZLIVC.A.IIxr,

Hliscdlaneons. UlisreUaneons

to ctsblMiiofl *i:h the Pfcosptafti,

Vigo Spice and Coffee Mills, Terre Hante, Ind.

Chambers's Encyclopaedia

15 Vols. Over 13,000 Pages. Price During July, $6.25.

Amohg the wonderful thinn-which have been accompHsbed for lovers of good books by tho

"Literary Revolution," perhaps the most wonderful is the reproduction of this "great Encyclopedia at a merely nominal con. It is a verbatim reprint at the la?t English edition, in 15 beautiful volnmcs, clear nonpareil type, handsomely bonnd in cloth, for SS3.50 the game printed on finer, heavier paper, wide margins, and bonnd in half Russia, gilt top. price 815.OO. The first ten volumes are ready for delivery. Vol. II will be ready .Inly 10. The remaining volumes will be completed by October next.

$6.25. An Amazing Offer. 86.25.

these volumes arc scattered, the greater is their is and our many standard 'publications. Accordingly

To all. whose ordersand^ money are received daring the month of _Jnl^, we will the' 15 volumes, in cloth, for $0.25, and in half Russia, gilt top, for 912.50. To any one sealing from any place, where we have no special agent (usually the leading bookseller of the town), a club of flyc order*, WB will allow a commission of 10 per cent. The volumes Issued will be sent at once by express. and the remaining volumes when completed.

A specimen volume in cloth will be sent, postpaid, for SO cents' or in half Russia, gilt top, for $1.§#. and may be returned at once, if not satisfactory. The "CHAMBBR'S

EKCTCLOPJBDTA"

comprises the ttrst

15

s*rinin

'. James Br»*n of

TCX1C. Ho tells'ns tllat, nfUr hartnff paid

threeorfourhundred dollars doctors' bills, NRO oouJe* of your lEOX Toxic did her more cixxf than all oilier tnedines she ever used. She was troubled with itaranp«i*«a As irju.'n. o':., fKci which she Is much relieved.

CDITB&VILLE, XXXAS. P. A. JF.1TMCK A MAKUFACTT?RHf BT

THE. DH. BARTER MEDICINS

TP. TP.

THE GREAT IMPORTANCE WHICH IRO-^STIEID COFFEE Has of late years acquired as a staple, has naturally suggested the better development of this branch of trade. It is already an established fact that Roasted Coffee can be purchased at a much less expense than the consumer can purchase Gree Coffee and roast it. The only question is

Comparatively few people are aware of the extensive Adulterations to which Roasted Coffee is subjected. The pernicious use of Glucose. Grape Sugar, Gum Arabic, Eggs, &c., for the Glazed or So-Called Self-Setting Coffee, is not so much for clarifying and Settling Coffee, as for Adulteration, hiding defects of poor coffee, and increasing Weight and Bulk. The purchaser of every pound of so-called Glazed or Self-Setting Coffee pays for from one to three ounces of adulteration, the amount being determinsd altogether by the conscience and skill of the Roaster. Consumers can glaze their own coffee, if desired, at less cost and without the use of decayed eggs of other injurious matter. People who have used Roasted Coffee are becoming aware of this adulteration, and with a preference FOR Roasted Coffee, are demanding bet ter and purer goods.

In order to meet this demand I have erected a building and fitted up the most modern and improved machinery for roasting coffee, and am enabled to meet and vanquish all competition, by placing in market,

DAUNTLESS ROASTED COFFEE!

influence In Inwc give special

volumes of our "Library of Universal

and the remaining volumes, complete in themselves, will be sold separately when pub-

STJ^ISTJDJlRTD books.

Stories and Ballads, by S. T. Alden, illus.. 50 cent*. Acme Library of Modern Classics, 50 cents. American Patriotisth, 50 cents. Table's History of English Literature, 75 cents. Cecil's Book of Natural History, $1. Pictorial Handy Lexicon. 25 cents.

by author of Sparrowgrase Papers, 50 eta. Mr*. Hemae's Poetical Works. 40 cent*. Kitto'fr Cyclopedia of Bib. Lfterotnre. 2vols.. $3. Roliln's Ancient History, $2 25. Smith's Dictionary of the Bfhle, 111ns., 90 cents. Works of Flavins Josephus, $2. Comic History of the U. 8., Hopldns. illus,. 50 ctsr Health by Exercise. Dr. Geo. H. Taylor, 40 cent*. Health for Women, Dr. Geo. H. Tavlor. 85 cents. Library Magazine, 10 cents a No., $3 a year. Library Magazines, bonnd volumes, 60 cents.

none order, registered ktter, or by Express. Fractions of one dollar may

AMERICAN BOOK EXCHANGE,

JOHN B. ALDBX. Manager. Trltonae BoIMlnff, Xew Ymrlt.

A rrvriT xyc Boston. H. Hastings Philadelphia, Leary A Co. Cincinnati, Robert AuJu» vII-jO. Clarke Co.: indtetwpotte, Bowen, Stewart* Oo, &rrela&d. Ingbaxi Clarke Jk Cb. 5 Toied*vB?nwn, Eager 4c Co. Chicago, Aides A Cbadwick tn smaller towns, the leadlag Bookseller, only ooe in a place. a,®y $m. L. 6MBCKB, 8«le Ageat la Itova Baste/1*

1

Leaves from Use Diary of an Old Lawyer, $1. Each of the above bound in doth. If by mail, postage extra. Most of the books are also published in fine editions and fine binding* at bighei' prices. Descriptive OotttofSM ana Term*' to Clubs (wmt freeon request.

hp.

a-"

ALL OEDEBS

PROMPTLY FILLE:

U. E. JEFFERS,

Dealer in Wool and Manufacturer

Cloths, Cassimeres, Tweeds, Flannels, Jeans, Blankets. Stocking Yarns,

Carding and Spinning.

N. B.—The highest market price in cash, or oni! own make ol goods exchanged for wool.

Terre Haute Banner

TRI WEEKLY AND WEEKLY.

Office 21 Sonth Fifth Street. P. GFROEREB, Proprietor.

THE ONLY GERMAN PAPER IN TH] CITY OF TERRE HAUTE.

English and G-erman Job Printingj

Executed in the best manner.

0. R.

Morton Post, No. T,

DKPARTMKVT OP

IN A N A

TERRE HAUTE]

Headquarters 33H South ThirdJ Regular meetings first Iknd third] Thursday evening*, each month/

HT-Reading Room open everf evening. Comrades visiting -the city \vi] always bo made welcome.

W. E. McLEAN. Com'tlr. JAY Ct!MMIN«8, Adj't. GKO. PLANETT, P. Q. M. Ofllcd at Headquarters

CALL AND EXAMIN]

THE NEW

Improved Howe,

THE SIMPLEST, LIGHTEST RT NING, MOST DURABLE AND EASIEST OPERATED

OF ANY

SEWING MACHINE, In the Market,. For sale at 23 south Sixl street, opposite Post Office.

The Howe Machine Co.

T. D. OLIN, Agenl

TO $0000 A YJSAR, or $5 to $30 a dn in your own locality. No risk. \V| men do as well as men. Mn{ make more than the am"n] stated above, No one can fall make money fast. Any ono enn

the work. You can make from 50 cents to $J hour by devoting your evenings and spare tini tin ig fore. Business pleasant" and strictly honorni

the business. It. costs nothing to try the hn«lri Nothinjj like it for money malting ever offered I

Reader, if yon want to know all about the

IK|

paying business before the public, send us address and we will send yon full particulars :u| private terms free. Samples worth $3 also fr yon can then make tip yonr mind for yourv Address GEORGE 8TINSON & CO.. Portliu Maine. Mini]

'he Torre Butt Eon:

m,

IS THE OLDEST AND

BEST HOTEL Between Indianapolis and St. Loui-

is a Firat-ClftSfl House In every respt COB, RKVRVTH Si MAIN «T«.

NERVOUS DEBILITY

CRAY'# SPECIFIC MEDICm: TRADE MARKj^e (jj.eat En-

TRAD1

glish Remedy, An un failing cure for Seminal Woakn ss» Spermatorrhea, Impotency. and all Diseases that follow as a

•IFttE TAXIRfiAbn'se MI^AFTIR TAXI of Memory, C'niversal Lassitude, Pain in I I Back. Dimness of Vision. Premature Old A. and many other Disease* that lead to Insanitj Consnmytlcm and a Premature grave. tSHFnll particulars in onr pamphlet.'which desire to send free by mall to every one. ptT"V Specific Medicine is sold by all Drnggints »t per package, or six pack«#es for |5, or will tent free by mail on receipt of the money by i\ dressing

THE (iBAY »K» I I \E CO., No. 8 Mechanics* Block. DETROIT. MICH. Sold in Terre Hante and by all Druggist# ever where.

a day Ct apij yon I

A MONTH guaranteed. $12 home made oy the industrious ul not required we wiU start

Men. women, boys and girls rnak money faster at work for os than anything el*«. Th* work is light ar

pleasant, and snch as anyone can go right at. A who are wise, who see this notice, will send their addressw at«5»ncc and see for ttoetnseln CosDyoatfttM»d terms free now the thnt Those already at work are taring op large sum on A E E A O A a

fmm