Daily News, Volume 2, Number 11, Franklin, Johnson County, 1 September 1880 — Page 3

4

DAILY XEWS

WEDNESDAY SEPT. 1,

Chicago,

IS,:

18§0.

Uailroab £imc Cable.

BAILKOAD TIME TABLE.

[Carefully corrected to date.]

Union Depot—Tenth end Chestnut 8U., to all strains except I. & St. L.. T. H. & 8. £. (to Worth Jiogtou), ana freight*. Time, five minutes faster thin Terre Haute time.

EIRI-AXATTOX or

itxreazxcE

ilch is live minntes faster than dty time. AND A LI A LINE (Leave going Bast) •sPast Line 1:40am Mail and Ace .............. 8 40pm *#fDayEx —...... i|Upn .Mail and Acc..,.. .. 7S0am »M*_ (Arrive from East) •sPaciflc Ex lJan

MatJ Train 9:56 am •SrFast Ex S *pm IndianapoUc Acc.... 7:00 pm .J. (le»v«go.'og Wwt) rsPadflcEx .. 141am if all Train ,..10rt»a •sFast Ex 2:35 pm (Arrive from'West) !*»Faat Line.... isKaii

Wail and Acc 8:50 am '•Day Ex *tKpm TERRE HAUTE fc LOOANSPORT,

Logansport Div. of Vandalia. (Leave for Northeast)

Mail Train 640an Mixed Train, 4:00pm I? (Arrive from Northeast)

Mail Train 1 15 Mixed Train.... 8:00

4^,^ TERRE HAUTE 4 EYAS8VILLE. (Leave for Sooth) iville Ex 4-JOam 2:40p r'rti^ht and Acc ... 5:00a (Arrive from gonth)

Eastern Ex 5:40p faTlcago Ex .,..10:4&p freight and Acc... 4:4ft pm

CHICAGO EASTERN ILLINOIS. (Leave for North) and Chicago Bx...« .. 7:35 am imville Acc 8:10pm Nashville and Chicago Ex 10:90 (Arrive from North) Terr# Hunte Aco 11:10 am Alffuro and Terre Haute Ex 6:85

1"

«*eNi

Chicago ana Nashville Ex... ......... 4 :S0 am ILLINOIS MIDLAND RAILWAY.

(Leave for Northwest)

B^Jn^qriaMail and Ex 6:87am

1*»*|Brtttr

Passenger 4:07 (Arrive from Northwest)

'^oria Mail and Ex 9:80 ^dlaitnpo'.l# Passenger 1:10 J* 1- SOUTHEASTERN, (to Worthlngtqn. mlk [Depot, Main aud First 8ts.) #11 (Leave for Southeast) accommodation 7:00a (Arrive from Southeast) "tCGomjnodfltlfm 8:00 pm

iCCOnUTK

fi

INlJhVNAPOLIS & 8T. LOUIS. (Depot, Sixth and Tippecanoe 8ts,]

Mm

1

Tlppcca

11

(Le going East)

•Few York Expri*s. fdlnimpuii* and Mnttoon Acc..... »y Express A (Arrive from East.)

1 am 8:18 am 8:10

Express 10:8®a ^XlaN'ew York Express 1:86a Mlanapoll# and Mattoon Acc..., ...... 6:85pm (Leave going Weal.) 4.N«w York Ex ,1-48am avKx...,,.. ,,10:54 am uilanapoiia and Mattoon Acc. 6:87 ant (Arrive from Weat)

New York Ex 1:88v. dlanaioliaandMattoon Aco,. S:18am »y Ex 8:«Jptn

DAN VILJjE^ ROUTE.

vikieago Eastern Illinois Railroad,

feave, Terre Hantc,,. _*rlve. DanvlUe Hoopedton.. fcj Wataeka

NOIITM.

,7.50 a.tn, 10,80 p.w .. .10.88 1.S0 a,tn .11.8R i8.44 ltt.40 p.m 8.10 .. 3.80 7M ... 7.80 18.05 M. 7.48 11,80 a.m ,, 4,(*) 7.00 ... lfi.t*) night K.43 p.w .,, 1.88 p.m. 6.00 a.tn »OOTII.

PMvrift Hurllhgton. ... Keokuk. Chicago Mitwmikco i?t. Pawl

Vive, Terre Hants........ 4.90 a.m 8.80 p.m ave, Danville 1.30 SJtt lloopeatoti........ ..,11.86 p.m 3,*15

Wataoka HM isi.88 Peoria 7^15

M.

llurlington. 8^90 Keokuk 9M

ejW»a.m

w.

.4,00

Chicago,............. 7.B0 ».tW Milwaukee 1.00 3.15 Si, Paul.,.. 8.05 1S.8&

icagoS Nortliwestern R. R,

(alilomia l.ine. lii.iHJ p.m Ar. C, Bittlfa.,. 8.15 I 7.$8p.m

Innttkrc. (Jrwit liny A Ukr *«|»erli»p

A

i.lttr

.^lilcagn. ., S.t)0 A.m *T ..10.00 .,10.00 »l .... »,oop.ta ».w

Ar. MHw«ttk«Nff 11.18 a.m li.4S p.m A/. Oreen Bay 8.00

MllwauktHsil.Wa.ro Orten Ray 8.40 Kacanaba, 10X p.m

*». Pnul A' 1.1n. Ar. St Paftl.... 6.00 a.t» '4 .... 1.»p.m W. 11. STKNXETT, Oen ^aw. AgX Chlca^x

",ChiCAj|^,...H),tVa.ttt .... 4.00p,m I

fcigo, Milwaukee & St, Paul Railway.

4hic*$°

Ar. Mllwaakee lt.a8p.ta Oconom t.45

... 10.10 a,m

...mo v.'.iW.W i,t»p.m

W:~« 41 W

9M

,l

LaCto*a» 10.10 St. l*aal .. (MX) a.i» Mitwattxec. 11.86p.m

St. Paal,... 1^8p.m

A. 11. CARPKNTKR, Ps«* 'andTkt, Ag't. MtlwUnkW'.

A rII VTO Xi AV rjli%no«» jt. |t»t nt

WM. DRETJSICKE,

vRPENTEE AND BUILDER

34at»ttfaetMtWat Daenalcke'a

patent llofristerators,

I 0»r Kintli and

TE£ DAWK WILL COME.

Tb%

nl|fhtm«f belfreaiyand somber and sad. Asd swfftl? may speocf tlifl wild rack to tbe ky The ocean may roar era the wsve-beateo chore.

But the dawn of the bright golden moraine to nigh!

The tempeat may gsthet aod thaw# may roll. And the frighted bints bide from the Ugh* mmwsi from lta alumbers re-

nfu#r'a

XAHKS.

"Every day. All other train* dail lay. tParior car* ^n^cdr*. Reclining

I other trains dally except Sua dailv. except Sunday. Sleep* jig chat rear. Union Depot time

But far iir the leased, The dawn of tiiMMght golden morning la seen!

Tb« bitterest Borrow may gather around. And banish the smile to aire place to a tear. But time will relieve all who tremble and grieve.

For the dawn of the aweet-smiling morning ia near! Th*n do not dwpair, O ye weary and aad, suih- disperse e'en the shade of a Brigfat'days will come back, and the night and the rack

Will tiee when the dawn of the morning is nigbi —Eduxu Oxen ford.

The UnreasoBAbld

K6w

4

TERRE 1UITE. IND

A\". P. HOOTOR,

ractical Plumlier,

Am OAS FITTER

iwork d«a« in tins bett nntHit

OGk*

A HUE CITY BANK. S*re*t

i*ettHar to female# tfwedOy widiouv the tak .t of a- -.o Hr aau IVII. Oil......K

Antt.

AJfD then, while we reste-4J we

watched the iftboricras ant at his wortf. I fouad oothiog new ia hJm--oertalnly nothing to change

my

opinion of him.

It seems to me that in the matter of intellect the ant must be a strangely overrated bird. Daring many summers now I have watched nim, when I ourht to,have been In hetter btSMlness, ana I have not yet come across a living ant that seemed to have any more sense than a dead one. I refer to the ordinary ant, of coarse I have had no experience of J&oae wonderful Swiss and African ones which vote, keep drilled armies, hold slaves and dispute abont Teligion. Those particular ants may be all tnat the naturalist paints them, but I am persuaded that the average ant is a sham. I admit his industry, of course he is the hardest-working creature in the world—when anybody is looking—but his leather-headedness is the point I make against him. He goes out foraging, he makes a capture, and then what does he do? Go home? No he goes anywhere but home. He doesn't know where home is. His home may be only three feet away^ no matter, he can't find it.

He makes his capture, as I have said it is generally something which can be of no sort of use to himself or anybody else it is usually seven times Digger than it ought to be he hunts out the awkwardest place to take hold of it he lifts it bodily up in tho air by main force, and starts—not toward home, but in the opposite direction not calmly and wisely, but with a frantic haste which is wasteful of his strength he fetches up against a pebble, and mste&d of "going around it, he climbs over it backwards, dragging his booty after him, tumblos down tho other side, jumps up in a passion, kicks the dust of!' Ills clothes, moistens his hauds, grabs his proporty viciously, yanks it tnis way, then that, shoves it ahead of him a moment, turns tail and lugs it after him another moment, gets maader and madder, then presently hoiits it into the air and goeslearihg away in an entirely new direction comes to a wood it never occurs to him to go around it. No he must climb it, and ho does climb it, dragging his worthless property to the top—-whioh is as bright a thing to do as it would be for me to carry a sack of flour from Heidelberg to Paris by way of Strasburg steeple when ho gets up there ho finds that that is uot tha nlactf fake a cursory glance at the sccnery, and either olimbti, down again or tumbles down, and starts off once more-—as usual, in a now direction.

At the end of half an hour he fetches up within six inches of the place he started from, and lays his burden down. Meantime he has been over all the ground for two yards around, and climbed all the weeds and pebbles he came across. Now he wipes tho sweat from his brow, strokos his limbs, and then marches aimlessly off, in as violent a hurry as ever. He traverses a good deal of Kig-za§ country, and by-and-by stumbles on his same booty again. He does not remember to have ever seen it before he looks around to see which is not the way home, grubs his bundle and starts. He goes through the same adventures he had before, iioally stops to rest, and a friend comes along. Evidently the friend remarks that a last year's grasshopper leg is a very noble acquisition, and inquires where he got it. Evidently the proprietor does not remetfiber exactly where he did get it, but thinks ho got it "around here somewhere Evidently the friend contracts to help him freight it home. Then, with a judgment peculiarly aatio (nun not intentional), they tak ti opposite ends of and oegin to tug with in opposite directions. Presently they take a rost, and confer together. They decide that, something is wrong, they can't make out what. Then they go at St again, Just as before. Same result. Mutual recriminations follow. Evidently each aoctises the other of being an obstructionist, They warm up, and the dispute onds in a fight. They lock thera*eJv«s together and chew each

), they talce hold hat grasshopper leg !h Si their might

ilel the

wa for a while then they roll »r. ne ground till one loses &

4» w* l«g and W to haul off for They make up and go to worA egain in the same old insane but the crippled ant is at a disadt ^,

%ug as ma\v&i$ ilMr. W

drags off Jfche booty and him at the end

ving up. he hangs

drags of it- Instead of on and gets bis Khinff bruised agairiH every obstruction that comes In 1&» way. By-and-by, when that grasshopper leg has been dragged all over the same old ground once more, it is finally dump**! at about the spot where it originitliy lay. The ant# in#eet* It

Wliy sure Y«m mittama you h»xv allowtwl your bowels me Wdhrr.\ lit^r torpid, Cf-

K- 4« free ftaie lK»*d%iihd ii €leaa- the tktn of it*

htw It.

PoJqae—The Mexican Rational Drink.

in a letter from Mexico to the New York

Sun,

fiquor

the writer say?: This liquid

ia distilled from thfe maguey plant. It has a disagreeable smell and taste, but no description possibly convey an adequate idea of its hurtful effects upon the prosperity of the country. In the first place, the. most fertile and productive lands ox the upper plain of Mexico are duction of is remembered that a maguey often ten years to come to perfectjpn, and that very little attention is required in the mean time, it will be eyident that the employment this species of agriculture gives to the laboring class is far below that required for the cultivation of any kind of grain. Yet It is by this very class of persons that pulque is most drunk, and consequently the reals of the working man find their way into the pockets of the rich owners of haciendas who spend their profits in Paris or Brussels, while the working people receive almost no substantial benefit from the principal agricultural pursuit of the country. Besides, the effect of pulane drinking is horribly enervating ana demoralizing. Taken in moderation, it is. an ^excellent tonic to the stomach, and Queen Victoria is said to be in the habit of drinking it for this reason but taken in excess the effect is fearful, as it produces the very worst kind of intoxication. I have never sees so many drunken people as in the city of Mexico, where the pulque' rias are more frequent than gin palaces in Ixmdon or gin mills in the Bowery. A pulque drunk lasts for about twenty-four hours, and as one plant produces every day about four quarts, just enough to intoxicate a pulque drinker, and this plant lasts for abont six months, the owner of a small plot of ground can remain half drunk, as indeed many of them do, for many

'ears. The enormous amount of this that is consumed yearly can be estimated from the fact that in the City of Mexico alone the consumption is at the rate of a pint a day for every inhabitant, and that a special train,

de pulque,

behind his head, split his ooat down' the Imck, emptied a can of kerosene on his head, kicked him down the kitchen stairs, aad blacked his eye with a pair of brass knuckles. It would

yours." A

te two perapiring thou^jtinlly and

tloa to me if he can't find an old nail $r thing ^Ue thil ia heavy enough to aflbrd eatert«inmettt and at the same lime valueless enough to make an ant want to ..own it,—ifori Tiemtft*' A Tramp Ahrmfc*

Jk

stm

warn

jroung, riiA and poor. Lawyer bee as doubt no longer. it'

hJSJ?™!?**00*0*

tren

runs twice a day betweea

Apam, a village in the heart of the maguey district, and Mexico City, the freight from pulque on each train amounting to between seven hundred and eight hundred dollars! The maguey yields another liquor, which ier not so deleterious in its effects either as a drink or as an object of labor as is pulque. This is the vino mezoal, which is a species of brandy, distilled from the juice of the maguey but it can only bo drunk as a

liqnera,

and is not unlike

Jamaica rum. It is manufactured in large quantities at Apam, where the dry and cold temperature of the great dusty Mexican plain prodtioea tne maguey in its highest perfection. At Tequila, a little town in the State of Jalisco, to the north of Guadalajara, a very superior kind of mezcal is man ufactuied, which takes its name from the town, and.is really a very palatable beverage. But I aniQouyinced, in spite of the wonderful usefulness of the maguey, supplying as i$ dpes toxit, drink, yam, hemp, paper, needles and brushes. that it is one of the banes of this favored land.

A Letter from General Alell^ofif.' BURDETTE, of the

Hawkeye,

has re­

ceived the following characteristic letter from'General MelikolF. In explanation "of the familiar style in whicn the letter is couched, says" the New York Graphic, jt should be said that Burdette and the Russian factotum once spent six months together in jail at Honolulu on a trumped-up charge of having attempted to assassinate Queen Emnia by "uenlv pounding a Chinese gong her bedroom door at midnight Thoy

suddenly pounding a Chinese her bedroom door both got off at last on a plea of habitual lyinff and emotiotfil insanity: "MY DEAR RonbiE: Your favor of the

2d

with enclosure of fifteen dollars

is at hand. I am eternally obliged and will hand it to you the first time I mjet you in St. Petersburg. Such a time as we had yesterday morning at the Winter Palace. The Czar got out of bed on the wrong side, and was as cross as two sticks. Nothing pleased him, and toward noon he began sinking so ra that the court physician was stimiuone He talked with His Majesty a few moments and then said to me confidential* ly, He needs excitement he lacks his usual stimulant. When was he last shot at?' I said, Nearly three weeks ago.' The physician shook his head and said it was enough to kill him and instructed me to do something. Sol fixed it all up, and when the Czar was coming down the front stairs I sprung out from behind a door and hit him an awful blip with a bolster. Somebody else hit him in the face with a snow ball, we threw him through the glass doors of the coriservatoiy, poured at tub of ice water over him, nred a shotgun

time. £ver

been cured by them, we must believe *r. gee

Xat ore's

•n!

ifs it iriniMt 11 m,de of

common.

pie plants »s Hops, Budio. Mandrake, Dandelion, make so mtny and

such

njarv ttiand wonderful cures as Hop Bitters do? It must be, for when old and f, Pastor snp Potior, wyer and Editor, all testify having ana other j^lumn.---

The kidneys are nature's situce-way to vatli cut the debrfs of our constantly chanf" Indies. If they do not woii| propc.... the uoubk is felt everywhere* Then be wtws, and as -soon as you see sign*

tut

MUiwW Heftdaelte, «cn!

iSa

M'

diiMfder. get mekage of Kid­

ney wort an*? take fjdthfulTy. It win clean tlu^ lud, or and purify the whole syitm.

W. S. CLIFT, J.

•I 44% 'i.

FRANK PRATT,

Importer and Dealer in

IMan Marble and Granite

MONUMENTS,

Statuary, Vases, etc.

,25 SOUTH FIFTH STREET. TERRE HAUTE. IND.

SUBSCBIBE

-FOR THE

V' 'l

DAILY NEWS tt

?At1

it» S-f

.just

have

done yens mKxlto see how the old man brightencd#ip. 'Ah,' he said, rubbiag his hands cheerfully while the doctor was pasting oourt plaster all over him, aid a Couple of attendants were pulling silvers out o/ his baejk, Ah,' he saiC smiling upon us, this is something like living. Metikv, dear, cut somebody's heaa off and we 1} go in to bre&kf#st.' Eggs are cheap and butter is scarce. We haven had any rain for nearly two weeks. Love to your brother John and com* and see me

.t

PIIH

illisccllantfotis.

STANDS TO-DAY WITHOUT A RIVAL IN THE WORLD. jportbe cure of all kinds of Ague and CMIIs it bus 8o equal having stood the test of universal use for thirty yeor in the most malarial districts. a eye/ fins to care, not merely removing for a time the symptoms, but eradicating the cause of the disease, thereby making a perma^c^ cure. PRICE ONLY

si**

KaaaflMMred by JTbe Dr. Harter MedUefo* Co^ Mo. US H« Mala Street, SLUaia.

Bev.F. Kev^F. ^Acxoiitjra,Supt German Protestant Orphans' Home,

GENERAL DEALER IN

3ST0TX03STS, OTOTTS, HOSIBB-?, ETC.

675 Main Street. "Sign of the Big Stockiner.

toili&stt

-jfih

-"ctt

"3 'PER

IfttJ

"week:a tu* *V» I# IHIR I"

£L-V -thi

"THE LARGEST AND

it*' -4ssri«ii6

BEST 'P APE

^T|gpS-.

FOR THE MONET

*R* WSSJ

if

MI'

*i ST

9«iilfl»ette*9 French Liter

«.

jWb Will

sst

*Bi -4IM

Pad.

r«T* fewer *s4 Af««.. it

Du»b Bjr*4 «ki'

Pr SI SOIi^tMn. Send for fret. 0«flm*: Kfdttef* «r,d Uvvtr ftee

KE1CV PAB CS„ Tokdo.Ohio.

FEYE*BAGUE SPECIFIC

Ke^spori, 111, says: "I cured a little girl of A

wanning with Dr. ITartei't Iv&eraod Agne Spcdfe, after the best physicians

Ma-

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

S, DOORS, BLINDS, ETC.

AND DEALERS IN

Latli, Shingles, Glass, Paints, Oils and Builders' '.'Hardware..

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

75 CENTS.

St

Charles Bock Road,

J?r: -Eajjto"', Fevcr attd Agve Speci/lc is a positive

Ohm* aod Perer: has never with tut" IS# •. *5,

Road, St Loois cure for fcdS-i--

of three years' to benflt her."

*Dr. Barter's Fner and Apm #M

H. WILLIAMS. J. M. CLIFT

CLIFT, WIT,T,JAMS & CO,.

MANUFACTURERS OF

That Acts at the Same Time on

E O W E S and tho KIDWEYS.

Thews jrrsf^ iiretlio natural eleanf•r*ot the t. tfthey woi*Wcill.heattli v|i| hi* t*\ Woy -heroine closrg««. Ure*dfvilJ. $ *tiro to follow with

7

mV't SUFFERING.

BlTlonnr.j^K, lTpa«!Krft«, Dr»|i»psla, .Trtsn* 4lrp, Const. iUn:« mill nir", orKlil-ni-v ('Ac.pi.'ittS, Cr t'pl, niahotes, tU !!•»t la tli« IVItic, JHllijr or Hn Vy Vrlnp? or I'lmi-

1

laat'^ Pi! is niri Aelif*,

ire dflvelopH li" 1* poisoner! will? tha Miirmri luM have beeu. oxpelletl nat«sa!3y.

KIDWEY^WORT rj will t*«ore thehcalthf act «w! allUj'M cstmfntf y,U will -.rl»hed negl'.?' tbcm eri'l v- live twi i.ti|Tt r.

Th«i» -i eenenred, Tryltan«ly0tt irtl! »f:d ,«i!iorn to the nnmln'r. Tslf© it

of an aching back.? Why near ouch tiirtresa from Con-, ^iptraon ancl Pifaa7

Wiy be so fearful uecavse of disortleiwurlne? IvinSET-'iVo^r^lt njrc yoti. Try a parftat oUceiin*

M,

no,aitrfrpfneuO) irrwrtana ,sy.] One Parker*waiMftU^jiartaof^lfdlrJa*.'

(VrSii

L' Sir si' 'i

y-m Liyery, Sale a

-mm $ «W

FEED STABLE

COR. THIRD

AUD

HPOBTI*O

WAUCCT STS#-

dfttiiSi

Mr. Staab'a «tock t* resry freah, and in food eon Allio. boggle. all aew. Be *J*o &as eraUesaea, aodladiM* auUletersefe Sltf

L.' KtJSSNER,. S

Palace ol Music

213 OHIO STREET.

TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA.

A!v*jvtJ» target Med ImnA lw|*t tettM* dty. n*ooiawaer»uttntBM«l eo tim mm wfil pay for theou

$5(1) Reward

OYER A MIL'S -OF

LIOS

Prof* Wuilmette'sf

FMEXCM

Pais

Have already been sold la this conntry and in Ftance.every one of whicn W given jerfect satisfaction. and has performed enrea every time when used according to directions.

We now say to the afflcted and donbting ones that we will pay the above reward for a single case of TO

LAMES AOK That the Pad fall? to cure. This Great Remedy

will positively and pfcraantly cure Lumbago, Lame back. Sciatica, Gravel, Diabetes, Dropsy, Bright*? Disease ot the Kidneys, Incontinence and Retention of the Urine. Inflamation ot tho Kidney's Catarrh of the Bladder, High Colored Vrine. Pain in ihe B.sck. Side or Loins, NVrvoun Weakness, and in fact all disorders of the Bladder and Urinary Organs whether contracted Jby private disease or otherwise.

Gravel,

LADIES, if yon are suffering: from Femalo Weakness Lenoscorrhea, or any disease of tho Kidneys, Bladder, or Urinary Orjrans,

lot CAN BE C1RKD!

Without swallowing nauseous medicines, by simply wearing

t—— PROF. G-UELMETE'S

FRENCH KIDNEY FAD,

VHICU

CURES BY ABSORI^ION.

Ask your drngfist for Prof. Guilmette*# French Kidney Pad. ana take no other if he has not ifot it, sood ^i.(X) and you will receive the Pad by return mail."

TESTIMONIALS FE0M THE PEOPLE.

Judge Buchanan. Lawyer, Toledo, O.. says: "One of Prof, ttnilmette'd French Kidney Pads enred me of Lumbago.in three weeks' time,* My ease had been given up by the best Doctor# as Incurable. Dnrlnpall this time I suffered nntold agony «nd large sums of money.

George Vetter, J. P., Toledo. 0.. says: "I suffered for three years witf) Scintlcn and Kidney Disease, and often had to go aboitt on crutches. I was entirely and permantly cured after wearftic Prof. Gnilmette's French Kidney Pad four weeks."

On ire N. Scott, Sylvan I a, O.. writes: "I have been a great sufferer for 15 years with Bright's Disease of the Kidnevs. For week* at a thne was unable to get out of tied took barrels of medicine, but they gave me only temporary relief. I wore two of Prof. Gnilmette's Uiunoy Pad# six weeks, and 1 now know 1 am entirely cured."

Mrs. Hellen Jerome, Toledo. O., says: "For years I have been confined, a great part of the time to my bed, with Lucorriea and feiualo weakness. I wore one of Gullmotte's Kidney Pads and was cured In one month."

H. B. Green, Wholesale Grocer. Findlnv, 0., writes: "T suffered for over years with lame back and in three Weeks was permouUy currd by wearing one of Prof. Gnilmette's Kidney Pads."

B. F. Keesling, M. 1)., Druggist. Lognn*iort, Ind.. vi'heti sending in an order for Kidney Pads, writes: "1 wore one of the llrst ones we had and I received more benefit from It than anything I ever nsed. In fact tho Pads give better general satisfaction than any Kidney remedy we ever sold." liav & Shoemaker, Druggists. Hannibal, Mo.. "\Ce are working tip a lively trade in your Pads, and are hearing or good results from them every day."

Sew York Weekly lei#

ONE DOLLAR A YEAR,

The circulation of this newspaper hap incroae* ed during the past year. It contains all tho leading news of the Dally Herald, and Is arrauged in handy departments. The

FOREIGN NK W8

einhroce* special dispatches from all quarters of the,globe. Under the head of

AMERICAN NEWS

are given the talegrophic dispatches of the week from all parts of the country. Thls fcHture alone makes

THE HTsi/v 1{J. HERAL1) tlie most valuable chronicle in the world, as it Is the cheapest. Every week ts given a faithful re port of

POLITICAL NEWS

embracing complete and comprehensive despatches from W ashington. including full reports jf the speeches of eminent politicians on the questions of the hour.

THE FARM DEPARTMENT

of the Weekly Herald gives the latest, a» well a# the most practical suggestions and discoveries relating to the duties of the farmer, hints for raising Cattle. Poultry. Grains, Trees, Vegetables, etc. wfth suggestions for keeping bnildfngs nnd»farm-

This is sappletuented by a

ing ntensils In repair. well-edited department, widely copied, under tho head of

THE

no

ME

giving recU»e» for practical dishes, hints for mak ing Clothing atiil for k»0 fashions at the lowest price,

np with the latest Every item of cook­

ing or economy suggested in this departmant is practically tested by experts beforo publication. Letter* from our Pari«and London correspondents on the very latest fashions. The Home Depart' ment of the.weekly Herald will save the house-, wife more tfian one hundred time* the price of the paper. The interest# of

SKILLED LABOR

are looked»after. and everything relating »o mechanics and labor saving is carefully recorded. There is a page devoted to all the latest phases of the bnsiiiess markets. Crops, Merchandise, etc. A valuable featnre is found in the sjK»cia!Jy reported price# and conditions of

THE PRODUCE MARKET.

Nxtra at home and abroad,- together

with a Story every week, a Sermon by some eminent divine. Uitxmry. Musical, Dramatic. Personal and Sea ??otes. There Is no paper in the world which contains so much news matter every week a# the Weekly Herald, which is sent, postage free, for One Dollar. You can subscribe at any time.

Hie New Strali

weekly form.

Addreta, 4..

NEW VORlt irERALD,

P'osdwsy and Ann

JiL"^

SUMN.

W Ts-r—

Y. City,

JJiSSE lOlJERTSON & CO.

u,u"

lArc Kow Owners of the

ODORLESS MAOinSTE. Any »«ulU5 cleaned can acoofliod^d by leading orders at

225 south side public Kiuare, or besrg's cii^ar More No. 519 Halo

be

at Hirschstreet.

JOS. H. BHIG08.

•'V

Commission

JMERCHAKT,

Corner^Fourth and Cherry streets.

TEKHE HAUTE. mDIAXA4

^oxrm

I&TJUR

[HATS &

4

AT EMIL BAUER'S ^, Wholesale and Retail MHHneiy Stowfl The larpat stock asd lowest prices,