Daily News, Volume 2, Number 12, Franklin, Johnson County, 2 September 1880 — Page 3

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,1

MILY NEWS

THURSDAY, SEPT. 2. 1880.

Uailroaii dime Sable.

RAILROAD TIHK TABLE. [Care folly corrected to date.] /aiott Depot—Tenth and Chegtnnt Sts., to all %i* except I. & St. L..T. H. A 8. B. (to Worth ton), and freights. Time, five minutes filter in Terre Haute time.

HJPLJJC ATJOU OF

err day. All other train* daily except San .•Parlor cars dally, except Sunday. gleepJSTr*. Reclining chair car. Union Depot time den is five minute* fouler than city time.

VAND ALIA LINE

1 (Leave going East) wfclt Line .. 1:40am Ail and Acc.,.,.,, 3:40pm 'tDayEx... 2i»pm *U find Acc .. 7:00am (Arrive from East) aclflc Ex 1:® am ,11 Train..,. 9:55am |Fa*t Ex 2'JSO pa 3 iana polls'Acc.... 7:00

C1***6 «°l»« Wcat)

faciflc Ex 1:32 am gfl Train ,. 10 90S am rant Ex 2:35pm (Arrive from West) Fast Line 1:82am ill and Acc 8:50am Day Ex 2:35

TERRE HAUTE & LOOANSPORT, jf Loganaport Dlv. of Vandalla. (Leave for Northeast) srtl Train 8:30am tain ..... 4 :Q0 (Arrive from Northeast) 1:15pm

In 5 ."00 TERRE HAUTE 4 EVAN8VILLB. (Leave for South) Nashville Ex 4:30am Jxnre«» 2:40pm mst\u and Acc 5:00 am (Arrhre from South) -astern Ex ............. 8:40 #'tilcago Ex —... ....10:45 ra ghtand Acc......

Hand

'if **1

-©Jr

11

tomm

Keokn Chicago... Milwaukee St. Paul...,

Chicago & Northwestern R. R.

lallfurnla Uttf.

j,r Chicago... 12.30p.m Ar, C. Wutfs... 9.30a.ra 2.15 I 'T.2»p.m IftUwnukef, «rrrn liny A' Ijikc H«i»erlor 1.1 nr.

ILtWa.m

.10.00 ..10.(»

**.

Chlci^o..

& 3*a«f*rtftrpr

I

S

i*'1" f»-

4:4fipm

CHICAGO St EASTERN ILLINOIS. (Leave for North) Chicago Ex.

7:86

a ra

Acc 8:10p

tffVillc |i'a#hvi err« Hi Wilraco I

Me and Chicago Ex ...10:50 pm ..11:10a ... 5:35 ... 4:30 am

Jhlcago

(Arrive from North)

err* Hunts Acc lirogo and Tcrre flan to Ex oaad Nashville Ex .. ....

%4 «^cag'

ILLINOIS MIDLAND RAILWAY. (Leave for Northwest) Mall and Ex fi:87am

forta tcaflu

Passenger

4:07

INDIANAPOLIS & ST. LOUIS. I Depot, Sixth and Tlppla (Leave going East)

1

rn

(Arrive from Northwest)

Ha Mall and Ex 9aJ0 kltanapolis Passenger 1:10 T. 11. A SOUTHEASTERN, (to Worthlngton. [Depot. Main and First Sts,] (Leave for Southeast) j?»nodaiion. 7:00 am (Arrive from Southeast) mmodatlon 3:00 pm

2

Icanoo Sts.]

•»F« York Express.... ....... 1:85 am ^lanapoila and Mattoon Acc....:...... 8:13 am Ksprcss 3:10pm (Arrive from East.)

Express 10:52 am t-. s"N«w York Exf»re«8. 1:38am

dlanapolln and Mattoon Ace. 6:85 (Leave going West.) tNew York Ex l:38atn •y Ex ..I0 54am dlanapoUs and MntUxm Acc 6:87 a in (Arrive from West) *New York Kx 1:83 /lianapidls and Mattoon Ace........... 9:19 a ro ,»ySx 8:0epm

DANVILLE ROUTE.

-•'Chicaro & Eastern

1u

Illinois Railroad,

sonTM.

Tern Hanto.

«¥Ttve. Danville .... Itoopeston s" Watseka.....

7.50 a.m. lO.flOp.m

...10.35

L20 a,m 2.44 8.40 7.40 12.05 M. 11,20 a.m 7.00

1 1 8 8

.,. 12,40 p.m ... 3.30 7.50 .»» 7.45 1.00

V.' Peorlft.,.. Burllhston... ik. .....

Kcnku Chlcajfo Milwaukee St. Paul...

frrlvo, Terre Hants, i^avo, Danville.,... 3" IliKposton,., v- Wfttseka....,

.18.00 night 12.45 p.m 1.33 p.m. 6.00 a.m

SOUTH.

Peoria ...... Hurlin^ton.

4.20 a.m 5.aop.m

1.60

.11.56 p.m

&M 1.25 12.85 8.55 a.m 3.55 4.00 2.00 3.15 12.85

.11.00

7.35 2,30 3.55 7.50

1.00

8.05

Ar. Milwaukee 11.15 a.m 12.45 p.m Ar, Oreen llnv $.*»

2.00 p.m

MHwankeell.%a,m Oreen Ray 5.40 Sseattaba, 10,54 p.»

0.00

9.00

«ir, Pnnl Jfc Slnwapoti* Uw. Chttoafo.%.,iim»*m I At. St.Paul ... G.ft)a.m 900p,ta| .... l.»p.ai W II. STENNRTT. Oen Pass. Agl. Chicago.

icajo, Milvaokei & St, fail Siilwa

Ar. Mllw*ttke^l«.asp.»

...miOaJtt ,10.10 .mio ...10,10 ... 9Mnm 9M ... 9,00

Occmoefc. 2.43

UCtxm* .10,10 St. Pas®.... &.HJa.m MUwankeell.«p.m

St, P*«t. .. 1.95 p.rn

A V. CAtJPSNTER,

0««. Pa#$. and Tit, Ajrt» Milwaukee.

VEA(ilKHS#Url,tu/,U*1,^ taring VACATION f'.-r fnl ^Aft!e«lar». %dimsTJ t*. ifr€l KIl tmrliuultl^. 134 mi.

WM. DREUSICKE.

CARPENTER AND BUILDER

of D»«aitke^

Piitait HeWgenvtors,

Oat, Ntotli and 8ycmm** St*., T¥M\m HAITK mmhmw iTf&mi,

W. P. HOCTOR

Practical Plumber

AND OAS..FITTKR,

\H wwk ilan« in Utc style. Office tinder

IMWikW I© ta-w I if*"5- -v j« Uie cf tt*

mgdfclaei n-s»»»

1

Prof. *•... «\\&* V: a. Kv

*JL

-V .*• r. V5

RAX DOM StRAim Br WgLIrKmWfr POETS. •.* The peculiarity In the foUtmfoff Ingenkwaly eoiioct«?d line* constat* is ttois. that eadi line is one of weU-kaown verses, sod yet titer so well collated that tbey rhyme, and are of the came meter:

The moon wu shining sliver bright, All bloodless lay the untrodden snow When freedom from the mountain bight.

Exclaimed, "Now don't be fooUaluJoel" Aa A

hour o«»«ed on, the Turk awoke, bam»le-bee went tbundertn* by, To hover In the sulphur smoke

And spread its pall upon the aky. His echoing ax the settler swung. He was a lad of high renown: And deep the pearly caves am

Qilee Scnxfgins courted Moi Load roars the wild. Inconstant blast, And cloudless set the sun at ev *n When twilight dews are falling fast.

And roll# the thunder-drum of heareol G, ever thus, from childhood's hour, By torch and trumpet Cast arrayed Beneath

TOO

Ivy mantled tower.

The bull-frog croaks his serenade. O, my lore is like the rod, rod rose, He bought» ring with opsy true, Sir Barney Bodrln broke his noso,

And, 8axon, I mo Rhoderlck Dbul

Wonderftil Birds, Be«sts sod Beptilea. ISew Zealand is, or rather wae, the home of these wonderful and gigantic birds called moaa by the natives, and dittoris giganleut and dmornis elephant"

scientists), belonging

quaternary epoch towards uie close or end of the glacial period, and which have become extinct within the memory of man. The bird is spoken of in tlve traditions of the natives, and the last living moa Is said by them to have lived in Poverty Bay District, in the North Island, and when resting to have stood on one foot with its beak always turned to the quarter in which the wind blew. The feathers of the bird were said to be very beautiful and to have been used for ornament by the native chieftains. There are fourteen species of this bird of which the fossil remains have been discovered (many more may be found in the future) aft are now extinct. The largest of these is the dtnornis giganteus (huge bird), probably twelve wet high, possibly fifteen or sixteen feet. The tibia, or thigh bone, has been found nearlv a yard long and as thick as that of a horse and an egg was also found, still well preserved, over a foot long and nine inches in diameter, which would hold two gallons. These birds are all wingless, with two enormously powerful hind limbs (the forward limbs or wings being rudimentary), adapted for running. The ilinomis elephantopis was of oven heavier build, had toe bones as large as those of an elephant (three toes on each foot), thoir feet were big enough to till those mysterious threetoed footprints of the triastic sandstone in the Connecticut Valley, which have caused so nuich wonder, for nothing oould be found to fill them in the formation in which they were imprinted. They stood out in bold rolief, only a three-toed footprint, and nothing more. It is known that these birds have beoome extinct at a comparatively recent date, because bones have been found with feathers attached and with pieces of horny skin sticking to the legs. The dodo, a clumsy old fellow of about fifty ounds weight, has died out within the ast two centuries, and the apteryx, a bird like itself and no other, is fast leaving us. The apteryx is the highast representative of the worm blooded class of animals that lived in New Zealand before the introduction of man. (Theterm "introduction of man" is Professor Owen's, and you will notice now cautious he is. It is stioh a vexed

auestion

how, when and where man

rst came upon the earth, that the learned Professor handles it carefully.} In Madagascar the remains of a bira larger than any of these have been late* ly discovered, also wingless—the apiornis maxima* (tall bird.) With the bones have been found eggs three times as large as an ostrich egg. Two other speoies, similar but smauer, have been found so closely resembling the New Zealand ditwmw that some geologists say that these two regions, now so far apart (1,000 miles) were once united, forming one immense continent These birds could not fly and urJ*as there were two separate creations how could they have got there? There are some objections, it appears to me, to t'ais theory, viz: snakes, largo and small, abound in Madagascar while there are none in New Zealand: crocodiles, Boor-

V*IV «M «VV»U«4IUt VlVUVMUVOt »W» ions, centipedes and lizards make the rmcr place agreeable and pleasant to ramble In: the reverse is true of the lat-

I

tor. New Zealand is remarkably healthy &nd Madagascar is remarkably unhealthy, etc.

But to return to my big bird. In a history of Madagascar, taken principally from materials and papers sent here by missionaries to that island in the early part of this century, it is said: "A bira of the ostrich kind is reported to frequent the tnest desert places of the island,'' and adds that the story which Marco Paulo refers to may not be without foundation." The story is briefly Uiis: "The people of the island ?eport that at certain seasons of the an extraordinary bird comes the southern rvgious, and that it was so large and strong that it could sebo an elephant In its talons, lift it In the air and dash

3

it to

the ground in order Tf»e quill to

quui part of be two hand

to kill it and eat it, the feathers was said breadths' wide." The people o»U this bird the Rukk* So much for Marco Paulo. Now, in an Arab or

a

.• r-1.V«. A

Persian

dictionaiy, Rukh" is defined as the name of a monstrous bird which was powerful enomrh to awry off

a

rhinoce­

ros*. and the editor erf Marco Paulo" said that the existence of such bird was universally credited In the Bast" Now, it Is proved by tlrtbe feceat di»* cowrie* that such

a

tables say.

monstrous bird did

realty exist, though not so large

would, of course, be exaggerated, though If our own eagle cam carry off

a

BANK

RAIRIS CITY ^tfe&xtli. Street,

The rocks of Madagascar are chiefly primitive, huge masses of granite ana syenite, pure quarts, large blocks of exquisite rose-colored quarto, chalcedony, marble, also sandstone and limestone, some volcanic rocks and coral* One writer speaks of finding apiece of limestone oontaining a fossil which he supposed to be a flattened serpent it was probably one of the coiled ammonites which used to be taken for serpem*. fife*

The animals of the post piiooene ware very numerous ana often immense. Rrst, there were marsupials or kanga-roo-like forms only of great size. Think of a jumping, kangaroo-like creature with ahesMl betweep threaand four feet long, and the re3t in proportion. Another branch of this family is supposed to be related to that peculiar animal called the native devil of Van Dieman's Land, only much larger, one tooth being two and a quarter inches around. Australia claims the most old-fashioned animals—*ni*nnls nearer old types.

The animals and plants both have an aspect like the Eocene tertiary, and very low forms of man exist on that part of the globe,n while the natives of New Zealand, only two miles away, are unusually intelligent well developed md quite poetical in their

rcaiiv sioaily and anc

tical

ideas. Many birds witfi long tong

The bones of man have also been found in some cave deposits of the post-plio-cene, but at what time lie maae his ap-

iiearance

is still a matter of conjecture,

Asia, also, sometimes called the cradle of the human race," a great many bones of extinct animals have Deen found, also fossil ferns, corals, etc. It is very singular how in all parts of the world nature has, as it were, many duplicate leaves, giving a clue to many mysteries now, for instance, in this part of Michigan carboniferous limestone crops out, and sometimes we find fragments oontaining orinoidai stems (stems of stone lilies), and in many other portions of the clobe this same limestone is found with its peculiar fossils. Of course, wherever it is found it shows that the rooks belonged to the same age in the history of the earth that is, were formed during the same epoch.—Mrs. S. S. Ballard* Grand Iinpids, Mich., in N Y. Graphic.

The Secret of Happiness, Walkin' out dis mawin to behole de bewtiful in natur,1' began President Gardner as he arose, my mind recollected dat I had been axeato splain de true secret o' happiness. In de fust place, when am a man happy? Is it when he has lots o' money—when he has fixed his enemy—when he travels an' sees de world—when he has a good home? An' how many grades of hap-

Eappiness

iness kin you count up? An' what am when you come to boil it down? Happiness, as anole black man like me defines it," continued Brother Gardner, am nof sto1 doze, a fat wallet, a big bouse an' ice cream eberv night afore you go to bed. When I looked about me arter a wife I didn't look fur anything gaudy. 1 knew I mils' ma'ry a black woman or none at all. I knew she'd be away off on her Greek an' Latin, an' so when I got my ole woman I war* not a bit dis^pinted. She am as good as I am, an' what more can I ask? When I war" free to start out I reasoned dat I mus' job 'round at dis an' dat, kase I had no trade. I nehber counted on bavin' more dan a cord of wood an' five bushels of 'taters ahead, an* I nebber have had. I knew Td have to live in a small house, own a cheap dog. live an* dress plainly, an' keep dis black skin to de grave, an' it has all happened jist as I 'spected. I lun happy kase I havn't 'spected too much, I am happy kase I doan't figger on what I havn't got I am happy kase I reason dat de weather can't alios be fa'r, money can't alius be plenty, good health can't alius last, an' yer Dear fr-endscan'i alius be cotmted on. If dar* am anv secret of happiness I believe it am dis, an' we will now begin de reg'lar toizaess of de occashun. a-"*

If

as

the

and the elephant story

a

lamb or

e&lld to his!rsux*s£ttbte ttesi. I do so* «t* why a leh larger bird oooldikot carry off a proportionately laqger aalmal*

and

this sain* mttHmm

probably tarnished or was the original rocof Smbad the bailor. *q that there is «t likely* at least so fax as the hint eotc«roal. a grain of troth ia t&*t si, a grain fanciful and fa^cmatiog narrative- We oo«r know* at any that a bird did exi#t large eno« rti and strong enough to hare carried gin bid a lotH? distance.

the muniapai authorities had the power, says a Paris letter, they would pull down every monument Doilt ~*poteoo.

V*

es,

enabling them to suck honey fromllowers with deep cups, have died out sinoe the advent oi bees, introduced by white people—the bees lie concealed in the flowers and sting the birds. The natives say they are being crowded out by civilization in like manner.

There were also in these times gigantic sloths, ant-eaters and armadillos. Fancy a sloth eighteen feet long, with a thigh bone three times as thick as an elephant's, and with forefeet a yard long and the toes armed with strong, carved claws. It has been shown as far as may be, that this huge creature sat upon its haunches and stiff tail, and grasped the limb of a tree with its powerful arms and either tore it up by the roots or wrenched off the branches and fed upon the twigs and leaves. There were armadillos more than nine feet long fthe utmost length of a modern armaaillo is about three feet and the modern animal has an advantage over its giant predecessor in having jointed bands in its shell so that it can roll itself up). Other animals were the woolly rhinoceros, Irish elk, with wide branching horns, ten feet from tip to tip, deer, a horse, (you see we are coming near to man, only a few thousand years), the urus, or wild bull, which lasted till after man came and down to the twelfth oentury, and the European bison, or auochs, which played with the mastodons and mammoths, and still lives though there is onlv one place where it can be found, and tfiat is in the province of Lithuania in Europe, where it is preserved by protectivo laws. In this country the Rocky Mountain sheep, sometimes called big horn from its immense horns, is now'rarely seen and then only in the wildest and most inaccessible spots.

by

Set

i* ft. 9*e«»iWte

That a remedy made of taeh eotamon, simple plants as Hops, l! hu. Mandrake, Dandi' &c-, make so many and *at& tnarvfiout and wonderful cows a* He® Biters do? It roust be. for when *3d and

been cured by thtsn, we must be_ .ana

them, we

doubt no longer. See other coitnira.— K-

A N A

Importer and Dealer in

Italian Marble and Granite

MONUMENTS,

Statuary, Vases, etc. 25 SOUTH FIFTH STREET.*

TERRE HAUTE. IND.

SUBSCRIBE

FOR THE-

ftliscelltfitetms.

tn sm# sm#

THE

r,3

STANDS TO-DAY WITHOUT A RIVAL IN THE WORLD. For the cure of all kinds of Agas and Chills it has no equal having stood the test of universal rse for thirty yeart in the most malarial districts. ae*sr tells to ear*, not merely removing for a time the symptoms, but eradicating the cause of the disease, thereby making a permao^rt cure. PRICE ONLY

Xaauffce«ar«4 by Tfae Dr. Harier S«IMas C*~. Ho. til H. lata Stmt, St l*vla. Bev.F. ami Agie Spec&c^is a positive^ cure for

—.says: "Dr. Hartci't never failed with us."

Mt Jwo.C. WM.Bo«N of Keysport niH says: -I cured a little girl of Ague of I standing, with Dr. Sorter's Fever and Ague Specific, after the best physicians failed to

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

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.

GENERAL DEALER IN

isroTxoasrs, toys, hosiery, etc.

675 Main Street. Sien of the Big Stocking.

LARGEST ANrHf

E S A E

4Ss« jj

hUb

IB II STATE

Prwfc Oailmette^ Freat* Liver tmL i- M9*- OttlRb e. Dj'#-

Wai^»^ hfly Wrtet isx

S2T

r,v

t.

wm. *u thr

Wfo&ri Pf5«c |3 §$ lar mstt.. &e*A ttxProt, 8®jset^Trr or Sldatrf* ami JLr-«* bf mail A«d«s» «k*c8 taw r®.. •*t- ?, i.-. r*1

tth the

ft„\

DAlLy ,N.E\VS

Jj Eim.nTMKJf c9 ., ^vi

iU W

'4"U~--f2y

nam- rn

'U:L"

... i|| Con.

75

CENTS.

of three years' benflt her."

9

That Acts at the Same Time on THE LIVER, THE BOWELS,

and the

KIDNEYS.

These arrrr. prcan* aretho natnral clean*--w of tli« fluent. If they work well, heaitli 111 I)" p"rTrt't If tticy b'.-come c1orkp,1. iSrcadful ^r»» #ure to follow with

TESRISU SUFFERING.

nillon.nm, lUmUehe, I)ysppp*la, Jiiniiillff, Coaitlpatlon enl Piles, or Kidney Complaint,, Grarel, Plabetes,

Pediment ia l'i* t'rlne, Milky or Ilorf Trine or UIiporoatlc Palna an«l Aclics, ire developed bccauw the tlond la poJeon v.

humors Unit

sbotild have l«tcn

tpcllcd natorally.

KIDNEY-WORT

ill rettnm theheatihy action and all thwo #tit)vlnx evils will be banlnhfd neglect iifitn and y«'» *1"

hnl

'p »nff('r-

Ttooanandshatebeencnred. Tryltandyon vin «il one more to the nnmher. Take It and health wflloneemorepladdenyottr heart

Why suffer longerfrorrs th® torment of an aching back Why bear auch dlstroast from Constipation and Pllee?

Why be so fearful bocauae of disordered urine? Kinxar-Worr will cure y»o. Tryapw* age at once and toe «atl#fled. /tun drjif vtQttabU c&r*p0*"uf One Pa»L«?e make* alx «i«arta of Hedlrlae.

Tour Pruggtoi km u, or wttt 9* /(•r you. Iiultt upon hating ft. Priet, tliXI, WILLS, BCBASSSOT ft CO., Prs^tetsn,

Thibo

kt**4

FOR THE MONE3?

fHg®SP

Vl.

H. STATJB

Ar

mm—j™

FEED STABLE

akd

Wautot

Mr. StastVs stock is **ry fresh, and is icoo&coit dltkm te&te* aO ww. He also has genOemea, sdSadfes* saddle boraes.^ ®uf iiiilf 1

L.SKtJSSNERj '.

Palace of Music

213 OHIO STREET.

TERRE HAUTE. INDIANA.

itt-WeeieralndfRab'

Atwsy^ tbolarjfwt etodtee l»ad kept is tils Hty. miof«BA9fS^a«i*eote4

tW

%*& £®i»*

to?

We now say to the articled aud doubting ones that we will pay the -above reward for a tlnglo ca»e of JB58J?'

That the Ta I fall# to cure. TW? Great ^Remedy will positively and permantly care Lumbago, Lame back. Sciatica, Gravel. Diabetes, Dropuy. Bright"? DisdW^ of the K'.dnev?, Incontlnnence and Retention of the Urine. Inriainat ion of tho Kidney's Catarrh of the Bladder. High Colored Urine, Pain in the Back. Side or Loins, Nervous Weakness, and in fact all disordert of the Bladder and Urinary Organs whether contracted by prlvate disease or otherwise. Mi

LADIES. If yon are suffering from Female Weakness, Lencecorrhea, or any disease of the Kidneys. Bladder, or Urinary Organs,

YOU CAX BE CI'RKD!

Without swallowing nauseous lUtdiclnes, by simply wearing

PROF. GUTLMETE'S

FRENCH KIDNEY PAD,

WHICH CURBS BY ABSORPTION. Ask your druggist for Prof. Gullmette's French Kidney Pad, ana tako no other if he has not got it, send ja.00 and you will receive the Pad by return mall."

TESTIMONIALS FBOM THE PEOPLE. Jndge Buchanan, Lawyer, Toledo. ).. says: •'One of Prof. Guilmette's French Kidney Pads cured me of Lumbago in threo wei kp* time. My case had been given up l»y the best Doctors as in curable. During all this time 1. suffered untold agony and large sums of money.

George Vettor, J. P.. Toledo. X. says: "I suffered for three years with Sciatica and Kidney Disease, and often had to go about on crutches, I was entirely aud jwrmantly cured after wearfng Prof. Guilmette's French Kidney Pad four weeks.''

QuireN. Scott, Sylvanin, O,, writes: "1 have been a great sufferer for 15 years with Bright'# Diseano of tho Kidney*. For weeks at a time was unable to get out of bed tK»k barrels of medicine, but they gave me only temporary relief I wore two of Prof. Guilmette's Kinney Pads six weeks, and I now know I am entirely cured."

Mrs. Ilellen Jerome. Toledo. O,. says: "For years I have been confined, a grfcat part of the time to my bed, with Lucornea and female weakness. I wore one of Guilmette's Kidney Pads and watfenred in one month."

II. B. Green, Wholesale Grocer, Fimllay, ()., writes: "I suffered for over 25 yfcarc h.li lame back and In three weeks was pertnently currd by wearing one of Prof. Gnilmette's Kidney Pads."

B. F. Koesllng, M. D., Druggist. I.ogansport, Ind., when sending In an order for Kidney Pads, writes: "I wore one of the first ones wo had and 1 received more benefit from It than anything I ever tved. In fact the Pads give better general *utis faction than any Kidney remedy we ever sold."

Ray & Shoemaker, Druggists, Hannibal. .Mo.. "We nro working up a lively trade In your Pads, and are hearing or good results from them every day."

Nsw York Wsekl Herald

ONE DOLLAR A YEAR.

The circulation of this newspaper has Increased during the past year. It contains all the loading news of the Dally Herald, and is arranged in handy deportments. Tho

FOREIGN NK WS

embraces special dispatches from all quarters of the globe. Under the head of AMERICAN NEWS are given the telegraphic dispatches of *the week from all parte of tne country. This feature alone makes

THE WEEKS, HERA I J) the most valuable chronicle In the world, as tt Is the cheapest. Every week t«

port of

THE HOME

giving recipes for practlcsl dishes, hints for making clothing and for keeping up With the latest fashions at the lowest price. Every Item of cook lng or economy suggested in thl* department Is practically tested experts before publi&illon. Letters from our Paris and London correspondents on the very latest fashions. The Home Depart' ment of the weekly llersld will saw the hows' wife more than one hundred times the price of the paper. The interests of

SKILLED LABOR

are looked after, and everything relating to mc chanlcs and labor saving is carefully recor/^«k There Is a page devoted to all the Istest phSMS of. the business markets, Crf»ts. Mercliandise. eU".,' A valnable feSturc Is fonnd in the specially reported prices and conditions of

THE PRODUCE MARKET. Spobtiko N kws at home and Abroad, together with a Story every week, a Sermon by some eminent divine. Literary. Musical, Dramatic, Person ftl snd Sea Notes. There Is no paper In the world which contains so much new» matter every week as the Weekly Herald, which is sent, postage free. for One Dollar. Yon

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flie Slew York Berald

Address,

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Livery^ Sal® and" A iss?fc

vw

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•®£B£v"." '-S A

'j $il)0 Eevard

given

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OVER A MILS LION OF

Pror.

FRENCH

Sidney Fads

Rave already bein sold In this tiountry an# In Praace.everyone of which has given perfect fatlsfactlon. and has performed cure# every time when a?ml according to directions.

a faithful re-

POLITICAL NEWS

embracing complete and comprehensive despatch es from Washington, including full reports .if the speeches of eminent politicians on the questions or the honr. I the farm Department of the Weekly Herald gives the latest, as well as the most practical suggestions and discoveries re latlng to the dntles of the farmer, hints for rafs lng Cattle, Poultry. Grains. Trees, Vegetables, etc. with suggestions for keeping buildings and farm- f! lng utensils in repair. This is supplemented by a well-edited department, widely copied, under the head of *I 4

time.

weekly form, ^LOOl

NEW YORK HEHALI), •Broadway and Ana »ts.,N. Y. City.

JESSE ROBERTSON

& CQ

f.,. 4 1 Ikm Now Owoers of »b® 4^

ObftRLESS .MACHTNB'

Any persons wanting rsnlte li.-Abed can I* v-'- 1 accomodated by tearing orders st "•V I

v„ 3

225 south tide public square, or al berg's cis?w store No. 519 Main street,

JOS. If. BRIGQB.

Produce and Commission

MERCHANT,

Corner Fourth end Cbcnry streets,

TERRE HAUTE. INDIAN A3

BXT^T 5TOTJ 3=1

HATS & BONNETS'

AT EMIL BAUER'S Wholesale and Retail Millinery StdftJ The Urgm stock and lowest pfifiW-

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