Daily News, Volume 1, Number 147, Franklin, Johnson County, 9 August 1880 — Page 4

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DAILY NEWS

MONDAY, AUGUST 9 1830.

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A GOOD SPEECH, A GOOD AUDIENCE AND A GOOD TIME.

At an early hour a large multitude assembled at the wjgsvam to hear thespeechc of Hon. W. W. Curry and others. A littlebetore 8 o'clock an escort of from one to two hundred men with torches and banners, headed by the McKeen padet band, proceeded to the Terre Haute House and escorted Mr. Curry to the wigwam. His appearance there was the si^. al for an outburst of applause. Af er a pete iy the band Hon. Win Eggk'Sion called the meeting to order and in, oduced Mr. Curry in the following manner: Ladies and gentlemen: I have the honor, as well as the pleasure, to-night, of introducing to you one of Indiana's most glfied tongues—a man who has, under every condition and circumstance, stood by and advocated the principles of the g.eat Republican party—a man who strikes terror into the hearts of Democrats wherever he goes—Kev. W. W. Curry.

Mr. Curry, stepping forward said: Fellow citizens: 1 he Republican State Convention nominated me as one of the Presidential Electors at large, and thereby commissioned and* appointed me to address the people of this State, as opportunity might occur, concerning the great political question at issue between them and their political opponents.

I am much pleused to meet so huge a number of the residents and citizens of Terre Haute and the county of Vigo. I shall endeavor to address you in a calm ami dispassionate manner, presenting the real questions which are involved in oqr coming election.

It is not my pm pose to-night to dee5 in any questions of personality. I shall possibly hardly allude to the matter of the candidates upon one side or the other. I shall take it for granted that you know that the parties have held their conventions, have nominated their candidates, adopted their platforms and now appc ll to you to choose between them iu the coming election.

So far as the candidates of the Republican party are concerned I may say without tiny mental reservation* that we are entfrely satisfied with them, [Loud cheers. and would not if it were within our power change the nominations which we have made. JRenCwod cheers.]

Qur candidate tor President is not only a soldier but also a statesman, a scholar and a man, standing the peer of any of his fellow countrymen in every department where his presence has yet been felt. [Loud applause.

Our candidate for Governor is also a statesman, a gentleman and a scholar, fitted to preside with dignity over this great Stato of Indiana as its Governor, and discharge the duties of the office to the .satisfaction of all his constituents. [Chewrs.J

And we feel sure that, when James A. Garfield shall bo inaugurated as President of the United States every patriotic American will have cause to be proud of tUe Chief Executive of this g.eat nation. (Loud cheers.]

And when Albert G. Porter shall be in augut atvd as Governor you will have no cause to blush at him whom you have chosen to be the first citizen of the com monwealth when viewed in comparison with the Governors of other states of this great nation. [Cheers.]

Reeling content with these candidates characters are established and read of all men. we simply leave them for your consideration. If our Democratic oppo ncuU can say as much for their candidates, if they are entirely satisfied with their eluiice, if they do not think they could improve on them were the opportunity offered, we should congratulate them but we think they are not desirous of being coti&va lulled. [Laughter.] But mv purpose is not to deal with men, but wfth the issues represented by the two great parties who have so many times divided the suffrages of the American peo-

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For twenty four years these parties been opposing each other. Daring that period many questions have been before the public, and have been voted and acted upon and passed out of the aretta of active controversy. The qties tious have rel ited to and affec.ed the rights of humanity. They have been questions which have affected the character of the country, and the pecuniary interests of the people iu both their public and private relations. These parties are still confronting each other upon tievv* questions, and it becomes the people of the country to understand and intellmmtIv act upon the questions submitted by these two parties for their consideration.

Whit arts the substantial questions which have sto long kept them apart, and still keep them apart?

When the Democratic convention*met in the city of Cincinnati they adopted a Platform, whioh now hold in my hand. We naturally suppose that in that platform thev have brought before the American people those questions and enunciated those principles they desire to have adopted. They have selected the «Aund upon which thev desbe to join issue.

When a hov 1 was a g.-eat admirer oJE Hannibal's address to the army in Italy, and there remains in my tmnd a sentence in that address which has been the key note of my warfat* ever since the days of my boyhood. Th« words are these: "The hope and courage of the assailants is always greater than that of those who act upon the defensive." Hence it has al way* wen my policy to make an agg.essivt? warfare,"and I propose to take up the Democratic platform-— precisely the placc whom they have fortified themselves They begin their platform, "The Demo* cral* of the United States, iu convention assembled, declare: First, We pledge ourselves anew to the constitutional doctrines and traditions of the Democratic party, as illustrated by the teachings examples of a long line of Dcmoci #tatesmett and patriots embodied in the platform bf the last national convention af the party." This party claims then that it has subsisted sufficiently long to have established a body of doctrines recognised and understood and they invite our attention to the doctrines and traditions, and pledge themselves anew to their maintenance in the event of their «uc

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cess. "By the ieaehiugs and examples of a long" line of Democratic statesmen and patriots," wc are then to leann what Democracy is by looking into the past We arc to study its history and judge of its effects as it has been illustrated by the ''teachings and examples of a long line of Democratic statesman and patriots." ll will not do then to ask that bygones may be bygones. It will not do for them to say that thev have turned their backs upon the St. It will not do for them to p'ead the statute of limitations. They come forward and pledge themselves anew to the old doctrines, traditions and practices Us they have been exemplified in the past history of the party. They pro pose to teach hereafter what they have taught in the past and they propose to do hereafter what they have done in the past. What the Democratic party has done it again proposes to do. Bo we Shall find out its purposes by simply re ferring to its record unon the pages of the political history of this country.

Let us see what further declarations they make: They tell us in the second place that they are opposed to centraliza tion. It would seem from their state menu? that there must be a dangerous tendency the pan of the American people which looks towards centralization Anu this Democratic party declares that it is opposed to this concentration of owers opposed to this consolidation ow, what are they talking about? What is it that is likely to be made one? What is it that tends towards consolidation What is it that they are opposed to? We sballflind light upon this subject by refer ring to the Republican platform, adopted p-ior to the a.sllmbJing of the'.National Democratic convention. The Republicans declare in tlidr platfoi.n, that "the Coft stitution of the United Slates is the prenie law, and not a Uic/e contract out of confederate states it made a sovereign nation." '[Cheers.! We believe that the United States, by the constitution that has been adopted by the people, has been created one nation it has teen consoli lated into one people, and Aye desire to have it remain one undividefj'£nd.inseparable, as long as we shall continue to live. [Loud cheers.]

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The Democratic party come before you and openly declave that they are opposed to this sort of centralization they are op posed to consolidating the United States into otic nation they want it. divided they wa' 't it Kept apar. so that it shall not be one nation in sovereignty and all under one constitution and a system of laws based upon that constitution! Here istlie first issue. There is no mistaking iy It is clearly arid completely presented.

There are two theories regarding the character of the United States. The Republican theory is that the Constitution of the United* States was adopted by the people acting in the»r individual- sovereign capacity—-that it is the supreme law of the land, and that by virtue of that constitution all the States have been consolidated into one national government

The Democratic "doctrine is that the United States is not a nation of sovereign powers, but that it is simply a confederacy of independent sovereign States, and that the Constitution is only a compact or contract into which they have entered with each other, but which does not subordinate the States to the National Government

Now in the days before the war when Democratic doctrines and Democratic traditions ruled in the government of the United St.ites—in those days when Democratic statesmen and Democratic patriots illustrated Democratic doctrine by their control of the affairs of the people they were iu the habit of expressing an approval of what were called the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions of 1798-9. I hold in my hand the Kentucky Resolution setting forth the Dtmocratic notipn of government. It reads as follows: "Resolved that the several States composing the United States arc not united on the principal of unlimited submission to their General Government but that by a compact under the style and title of the Constitution of the United States, and of amendments thereto they constituted a Geneeal Government for special purposes—delegated to telat Government certain definite powers, reserving each State to itself the residuary mass oT risiht to their owu solf-

and that whensoever the

eneral Government assumes undelegated powers its acts are unauthoritative void and of no force that to this compact each State acceded as a Stale, and as an integral party, its co-States forming as to itself the other party." Here is the doctrine that the Constitution derives its force from the States as independent sovereignties tha„ they have simply delegated them and that whenever the Government does anything not in accordance with the power delega ed by the States j.ts acts are hull and void. Novr here is an exposition of tho doctiine of the Democratic party:

Who is to be the judfe of what powers have becu conferred upon the general government? Who is to say wheo it has transcended its power? Who is to say •vhether its acts are constitutional or not? Under this theory the United States is not the judge of its "own constitution. Who then is to be the judge? Here is the an swer further on in the resolution: "Asin all other cases of compact each party has an equal right ts judge for itself as well of infractions as of the mode and measure of redress." There is the doctrine! The Slates are sovereign! They have entered into a compact and are the final judges of ihe Constitution of the United States! Or at least each Stale has an equal light to judge for itself as well of infractions as of the "mode and measure of redress. Eacu State is authorized to sit in judgment upon the acts of the United States, and is authorized to apply whatever redress and in whatever manner it sees proper! These are "the doctrines and traditions of the Democratic party as illustrated by the teaching and example of a long line'of Democratic statesmen and patriots"! And they pledge themselves anew to these doctrines for the future.

In 1833 there was a controversy concerning certain laws passed by the Congress ofthe United Siates. Th«?y had enacted a prolectine tariff. Some of the States of the South took the ground that the Government of the United States was not authorized by the Constitution of the United States to extend a protective tariff to any class of citizcns whatever. They said a protective tariff was unconstitution al and without authority. The State of South Carolina held a convention and de-chM-ed that these acts of the Go vein me nt of the United Suites w*re not law and Should not be executed within the State of South Carolina. They nullified these acts of Cong.ess and organizing the malitia prmed them and prepared to resjst the execution of these laws in that State. This is what is called the Doctrine of Nullification. It was a great example of Democratic Statesmanship—South Carolina sitting in judgment on the acts of the Government of the Uuited States, and deciding upon ike mode and measure of redress'

At that time the chief executive was a Democratic President who did not believe in the Democratic doctrine, and hence he ianed order to these Democratic

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Statesmen that the laws of the United States must be executed in that Statv a.} well as in every other State. He warned w, them that if any anned- residence was

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we: T^iis controversy resulted in tlfre organization of the Republican party under the leadership "(if that holy name which was not born to die—Abraham Lincoln,—[loud cheers^ arid the issue of the campaigu reveajed that Mr. Lincoln was chosen to the Chiiif Magistracy of tliis nation^ [Renew ed Cheers.] Then these Democratic patriots and Statesmen illustrated the Democratic doctrinc concerning the right of States to sit ita judgement and apply such redress and in such manner as the deemed Statesmanlike and patriotic, by declaring that they would not remain in a Government of which Mr. Lincoln was the Chief Executive. In per.suanee of the teachings dt along line of Democratic Statesmen and patriots seven of the States held conventions and passed Ordinances of Secession. They organized an army, seized upon the property of the Union and made war upon the flag of our country—this was '.he second great illustration of Democratic patriotism and Statesmanship treating the doctrines of the Democratic party. [Loud and prolonged cheers.]

Now I do not propose to go into any discusfim of the late war. It is sufficient to know that it was a Democratic war— it was an illustration of the Democratic loctrine held by democratic Statesmen. It was Democratic voters who filled up the ranks of the federal Army, which sought to destroy the national l!fe, [Cheers.] They it Was that pledged themselves anew to the doctrines and traditions of the Democratic party as their "doctrines and tradi tions have been illustrated in the teaehing and example of a long line of Derhocratic Statesmen|andJpatriots." Now we have nr doubt of the "long line" but you will pardon me if I express my doubts of either the Statesmanship or patriotism to*wl«ich they make an appeal. [Cheers.]

We in tl North, believing the United States is a sovereign nation, think it is right to compel obedience to the laws made under iits constitution. We believe that the. GovurnmeJt had a right to call its patriotic citizens to the field and send them out with the arms and munitions of war to restore the integrity of the Government, and we did so, and brought these democratic States into subjection to the Government of the United States. _Loud applause.] Either they w'cre wrong or the)' were right, and that is the question w'e have to settle. If this is a mere confederacy of sovereign and inde-pendent-States, and these States are the proper judges of the constitutionality of the acts

Of the General Government, then

vole to nullify and set aside the laws of the General Government. We of the Republican party do not believe that. We believe in the nationality of the United States in the supremacy of the United States in the right to coerce and compel obedience. [Ctieers.] We believe this because it is "so nominated in the bond the Constitution of the United States. It upon its face declares the character of the government—declares that it is a government of the people, and not of the States The preamble of the Constitution says: "We, the people of the United States,'— not we, the States, but "we, the people of tho United States, in order to provide a more perfect union, secure domestic tranquility, and provide for the common defense, do ordain and establish this Consti tution for the United States of America."

This then is not a compact between aov ereign States. On the face of the instrument it declares that it is a government of he people in their individual capacities— to unite the whole people of all the States into one nation. [Cheers.]

The fourth article of sect'on four of that Constitution says: "The .United States ^Jiall guarantee to every State in this Union a republican form of government." Shall protect them against invasion. &e. Now, the United States cannot guarantee to any State a republican form of government unless it is authorized to sit in judgment up on the constitution and government of the State and determine whether it is Republican in form. The (General Government has power conferred upon it autliorizihg it to guarantee to Indiana a Republican form of government, and it can take cognizance or the coustiiution and forms of government of Indiana and determine whether or not they are in ac cordance with the Constitution of the United States and Republican in form because ther^fis a provision in our organic law saying that it is the United States tnat is sovereign, and not the State of Indiana. The constitutions and laws of all the States must be made in pursuance of the powers conferred by the national constitution, anj! all treaties shall be made subject to the supre *c law of the land. The Constitution dc ires itself to be the supreme law of the land, and says the judges and courts of the several States shall be bound thereby anything in the laws or constitution of any State to the contrary notwithstanding. In an^y controversy the Constitution of the United States is supreme. Your allegiance is first due to the United States in pieference to a-, State ftf which you arc a citizen. This one of the great questions of diffcrchce between the Democrats and Republicans. If you beKevc that the States are sovereign and that the Spates have a right to set in judgment up on and nullify" the laws of the United States then vote the Democratic »ticket.

But if yon believe thet the United States Reade'sstory of'uA

is a nation-a sovereign power-who^e

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A female member of a church choir tried to *Vhoo" a ben over a high gone wall in North Wheeling, yesterday, and the people for four blocks around tamed oat, thinking that a circus steam calliope waa oat on parade.— Wkeding Leader.

A two-foot rule—Don't wear tight shoes.

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til trill UUU 11 OUJ OlUJW JV ^vvuvv offered It would be treason, and said By f'ynig. mopping,, washing

eternal if these Democratic Statesmen emphatically ruiiug tho

and patriots did comihit treason he would ages she has reigned and haifg them as high as Hainan. [Cheers.] wrought una&>iMed and unquestioned, So the democratic Statesmen and patriots **ve by wine meddlesome, pasting Soy or, withdrew for the time .being. [Laugh or cadaverous, bran-and-water-eating ter.] Graham. Naturally hating innovation, That passed by and soon there arose a has been content to do every thingjust great controversy as the result of the Mex- .••.s her mother used to. It is only wiihin ican war which gave us new territory, a generation or two that science and inTlie Democratic Statesmen and patriots vention have secured a place on the of the South insisted that slavery should Kearth-stone but no Sooner there than be extended into the territories p? th^ tlie liearth-s£one is abolished, the lireplace walled up, and the fire inclosed in an iron box. Clumsy and awkward as the boxes doubtless were at first, it would have been long before women, if left to themselves, would have ventured to improve the pattern yet the secret history of the patent wages, patent ovens, and the tliousand-aud-one neat contrivances that adorn tlie kitchen of to-day, would show that women's wit, not less than man's wisdom, lies at the bottom of the change. Steam at last lends ita magic fingers to aid her in her toil. Monday morning has lo&t half its terrors for now, instead of the tub, the corrugated board and the bended back, the sole agencies used by our foremotbers, a crank is turned, and lo! the scrubbing is finished another crank, the clothes are wrung while another returns them ironed. Leave the kitchen and ascend the parlor. One of its neatest pieces i8 the sewing-maculne. The days of never-done, eye-aching, sewing, extending from mother Eve to the time of Elias Howe, are over at kist. A. buzz of wheels, a rattle of the shuttle, and a yard of seam is done. Women probably invented sewing by hand men taught tliem to sew by foot. One can easily believe that woman first learned of the in^els to sing men made the beautiful piano to accompany her. Now let us jti.st lake one glance at the other side.

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kitehen is woman's kingdom, works her will—baking, boil-

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Visit some factory or machine-shop where women never go. Grease, dirt, and disorder are the leading features. Man, however an ingenious animal he may be, is not an over-neat one and here his deficiency becomes patent If men know their true interest, they will open every door for the advancement of woman to equal knowledge and Skill with themselves, and in every department will profit by her keen instinct, as much as by their own vaunted science.

Rules for Visiting the Sick. 1. Whenever you go to see a sick.person, never take a brass band brass bands are more or less expensive. If, however, you take a brass band with you, let each man play a different riv, finishing up with -Tam O'Shanter" on the brass drum. It is best to have this executed in the room directly underneath the sick chamber. 2. Always ring the bell as though you were trying to pull the back yard out by tho roots. Continue this until you get seven or eight engines playing on the house. 3. If yon can't get. up by the front way, either knock out a window, or go upon totheroofby the lightning rod. The latter plan will enable you, if the house is a frame one, to kick all the boards loose and provide a matinee for those in the house. After you have reached the roof, if you haven't strangled vourself with profanity, cough up your false teeth and yell down the scuttle for a step ladder 4. Always beara cheerful countenance. If you. go into a sick room looking like a thirty-five cent cln'omo*of a Shawnee cemetery, it will be apt to throw a damper on the festivities. 5. Talk-cheerfully. Commence by sayin/ ,"iat the Asiatic cholera has started on .' pleasure trip at reduced rates, and Mia. rhc hoop business is quite brisk or s.iy that seventy-five tons of nitro-glyce-rine began a business engagement near a circus in some placc in' New York, and tlia tho authorities in the principal cities of the country have !:.een telegraphed to wait on the remains as they arrive.

Talk as loud as you can, so that people in the next township will think a theological student, home on a vacation* is keeping his lungs in training.

A few such rules as these kept in mind during a visit to a sick friend will be apt to prove beneficial, as it will inspire the patient with more will and a stronger determination to live and create a sort of a vacuum in your family.

r- I®®* victim »f light Mays! read Charles

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laws must prevail above all Slate constitu-, appi^,^ tions and laws, then vote the Republican ticket—vole that the Constitution of the] United States is not a mere Contract off- How Illinois Was Bought*

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riiond annlause 1 Waa bought of ten Indian chiefs repre* The Democratic -party arc opposed to this national doctrine of the Ri publican I Pennsylvania and England. The party—they are opoosed to that centrali- ln

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It would seem a!must a waste of time' to declaim ag..iustl!ic eo:Uom of tight lacing but we ca .«ouieti.ii?s use a case to point amoral and nerve as an illustration. Such was the wise uf Eutina Plant, an English servant .^irl, who died suddenly iu Norwood,-and whose death a coroner's inquest decided to be due to tight lacing. Of" course the act of death was only the closing scene iu a drama of dying by inches fur weeks or months or, at least, ever since she began the foolish practice whiyh restricted her to just nineteen yearn of existence. It is useless to aruue with the perversity of taste which »ee«beauty iu iui niter want of proportion between buist and waist, nor apparantly, much 10 be gained by telling the faiy fanatic* who so indulge that, while doctors condemn and denounce the practice.artists abominate i' and the creature known marriageable men never liko it. Yut sit lcast lot those who set the-fashion to »iUy girlslike the

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zation of power that makes the nation fcrophnpis^ and the other the balance supreme. They are opposed* to consolid- 9. state and a portion of Southern ating the into one indfesolubable nation. Wisconsin. The consideration was "200 This thev openly declare upon the face of stroudsj 260 blankets, 360 shirts, 150 the platform. purs of stroud breech-cloths, 500 pounds

Now, I ask if any intelligent, patriotic of gun powder, 4^000 pounds of lead, one citizen dare vote that this is a confederacy srross of and not a nation. (Continued to-morrow.)

where

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es, 2U0 pounds of tobacco, two dozen gilt looking glasses* one gross of fire steels, 16 dozen gartering, M).000 pounds of flour, 900 bushels of Indian corn, 12 horses, 12 horned cattle, 20 bushels of salt and 20 guns, the receipt whereof we do hereby acknowledge. These articles have beenpaid and delivered in full counsel." "Hie deed wassigned and executed before a French notary public at Kaskaskia village.

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tracts, one called, South-

nives, 30 pounds of vermifhon, flints, 200 pounds of brass ket*

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STANDS TO-DAY WITHOUT A RIVAL IN TNE WORLD. For the cure of all kinds of Agtt* and Chills it bas no equal having stood the test of universal use for thirty years iu the most malarial districts. It never falls to care, not merely removing for a time the symptoms, but eradicating the cause of the disease, thereby making a permanent cure. PRICE ONLY 75 CENTS

•aanfMared by The Dr. Hartor XHIflno Co., Mo. SIS N. Main SL Lonl*. ^ev^RHACKEtETKR,Snpt German Protestant O ^&,April Sp*11.1877. savs Dr. Har ad Fever has never failed with us."

AND DEALERS IN

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

CORNER OF NINTH AND MULBERRY STREETS, TERRE 11AUTE. IND.

^m IMldw III IM—MM

IF IT1

THE GREAT IMPORTANCE WHICH

ROASTED COFFEE

Has of late 3'ears acquired as a staple, lias naturally sivrgostsd the heller develop moot of this branch of trade. It is already an established fact that Roaxied Coffee can .be purchased at a much less expense than the consumer can purchase Green ColT^e and roast it. The only question is

DOES THE CONSUMER UET PURE C0FFKE

Comparatively few people are aware of the extensive Adulterations to which Roasted Coffee is subjected. The pernicious use of Glucose. Grape Su^ar. Gum Arabic, £$gs, &c?. for the Glazed or So-Called Sell ln tlin.u: ColTee, 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 CoiTee pays for from one to three ounces of ndulleration, the amount being dc term in 2(1 altogether by the conscience and skill of the Roaster. Consumers can glaze their own coffee, if desired, at lc'ss 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 better and purer goods.

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

DAUNTLESS ROASTED COFFEE!

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

Sound, Sweet Berries o( the Best Sigh Grade Coffees

So delicately mixed in such proper proportions as to produce a Boquet 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 coffees of the best grades separately, under the "DAUNTLESS" brand, which is a guarantee of the excellence, and will be known as DAUNTLESS MOCI-TA ROASTED COFFEE.

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

gfbkl only in Pound Packages and each package containing 16 Ounces ofj Pure Coffee.

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SPECIFIC

irphans' Home, St Charles Rock Road. St Louis Fever and Ague Specific is a positive cure for

Kgygport,. I]l-. says: "I cured a little girl of Ague of three years'

standing, with Dr. Sorter's Fever and Ague Sj^tcificy after the best physicians tailed to beufit her.r

In my practice, and can heartily recommend it to the public."

York, Mo., says: "I have used Dr. Hartcr's Fever and Amm Spccii*

FORSTER 3c SOIST.

DEALERS 1^"

Furniture, Mattresses, Parlor and Bedroom Suits,

10? tuivl KM North Fourth Street,

tjeirt^ SC^-CTTEI, iisra3X^.Tr^_

W. 8. CM FT, J. II. WILLIAMS. M. CM FT

CLIFT, WILLIAMS & CO.,

MANUFACTURERS OF

DOORS, BLINDS, ETC.

Vigo Spice and Coffee Mills, Terre Hanks Ind.

FKANK PRATT,

Importer and Dffllcr

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Italian Marble and Granite

MONUMENTS,

Statuary, "Vases, etc. 25 30UTH FIFTH STREET,

TERRE HAUTE. IND.

SAMUEL S. EARLY,

Wholesale Proylsions

Pork, Lard, Bacon,

$

Sugar Cured Hams.

18 MAIN STREET.

A WEEK in

your own lawn. ta*d

no oapf

t*l rinked. Too can give the basinegg a §t -trial wfUnrat

expense.

beat oppor-

tonltj rret offered for tbOM willing to work. Yoo *twnld

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Ytm can de*ote aH your timeor only yoor^jrprjre time to Ibe baitWM, and make great p*y err bowrUMtfira work. Women wake a* mSCb ac mca. Send for *pecial prirate tern* and parttcnlara, wblcltt we mail ire*. 9&M ontflt free. Doa't 6M*b!a(« of kard time* while yon bare such ichaoceTA&SreM HALLKTT A CO., Portlaod, Ma^ae. s?