Daily News, Volume 2, Number 44, Franklin, Johnson County, 9 October 1880 — Page 2
B. P. BBAT7CHAMP, Editor and Proprietor.
Publication Office, corner Fifth and Main Street*
Kmered thePOst Office at Terre Haute, Indiana. second-claae matter.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1880.
FDIi.PJiESlDENT
UNITED STATES,^
JSME
vS A. GARFIELD. »OE VICE HRE81DKXH7
CHESTER A. MTHUB.'
STATE TICKET.
For Oorcrfcot, *, ALBERT 6. PORTER. For Lieutenant Governor,
THOMAS HANK A.
For Jadgcc of Sapreme Court, BYRON K. ELLIOT. Third District. WILLIAM A. WOODS, Fifth Diutnct.
For Secretary of State, EMANUEL It HAWN. For Auditor of State,
EDWARD H. WOLFE, For Treasurer of State, ROSWELL S. HILL,
For Attorney General, DANIEL P.JJALDWIK,
For SnperJatcnicntSPibllt IrintijDcOon, JOHN Mj l|LOS|. ForReporier Jmjfrfem^Conrfc
M.
FRANCIS M. DICE, For Clerk Snpreme Court, DANIEL ROYSE.
For Congress,
ROBERT B. F. PBEBCE.
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. LAUGHBAD. For Senator, FRANCIS V. BI0H0W8KY.
For Beproaentatlvos, WILLIAM H. MBLRATH. DICK T. MORGAN.
For Surveyor,
GEORGE HARRIS.
THE NEWS HAS THE LARGEST
DAILY CIRCULATION Ifl THE CITY.
Wttf "THE SOOTH IB SOLID JOE HANCOCK. Consider what Lee and Jackson would do were t/ieu alive. THESE ARE THR SAME FhlNCIPLEH FOR WHICH THEY FOUGHT FOUR TEARS. Remember the men who poured fourth their life-blood on Virginia's soil, and do not abandon them now. Rememier that npon your vote depends the success of the Democratic ticket,—[W»de Hampton, At Stqun-
lUiLjjE
DEMOCRACY AND LABOB.
Now that but two days intervenes between this iisue of the NEWS and the election, we call the attention of the laboring men to the position of the Democratic party on tho tariff question. An oxchange covers the whole ground when it says that the Democratic party is a party or free trade. Free trade is the hobby of ft ijiumtw of people who do not realize the consequence of the institution. We now address the laboring men of the country, that is to Say the laboring class. In England, for example, free trade rules let us look at the effect on the bono and sinew of the people. Iu the district called the "black country" a parliamentary inquiry in 1859, showed that out of some 62,000 laborers, but six per cent, knew the difference between God and Qa een Victoflfi'lantyrenfiix years old wore daily working, carrying upon their heads loads of clay and manufactured articles, crushing in the undeveloped sott fckull and making them beasts, not human beings, and what for? one shilling, (twentyfive cents) per wee*. Just think of the progeny such animals would generate, just think of the immorality, the misery the wretche$n4f» types would blush to rtNial] whtoji W6ii!tf result aad actually eilsUft a Hl&t<f "1f things. But there were schools. Oh, yes, there were schools, but the parents of those children received for their work from twenty ftt ptr day. That class of people were very prolific, and in fact made it a point to increase their families so as eventually increase their income. The woman worked and bore children, the man worked and grumbled, and so life went to the happy denisens under Ahe influence*-Of ^foe $radfe. In the coal regions of the north the condition of itffalrt^vma, if possible, worse. Women, half-n»ktd, demoralited. wet* degraded to the position of beasts of bur den. Thei tolled thxouglv .this slitting galleries of the mines, harnessed to carts of coal, and sick or well, strong or weak, had to work likes slive« tjnaWe them to feed the c&ildrfeh, which yearly accumulated on their hands.
Think of this, ye farm laborer* who sit down daily tb three solid meals think of this ye miners, whose wiws are happy, and have a smilling home to greet you on your return* think of this, y* street laborers, who take daily in your dinner c*n8 mow than mn English laborer can
in this country can you lite better than the smaller busine** p**p^ land. It is because of RejmblKsaa pro taction. The Republican party has said that it will neither allow the alaw labor
free trade and slavery^ Dtpiocrac^'. ^Vorkingmen do your duty M.J ...
OUB OEBMAN AND IBIiH CITIZENS. It is of the utmost importance that our German and Irish citizens should examine carefully the whole ground before they qast their votes next Tuesday. Our Gerlfrftn people are instinctively Republican ti?6ause, they as a race, are the most thoughtful people on earth. Their institutions of profound learning are the best in the world, consequently in their general education there is moulded a germ of governmental form which is only to be found in the Republican party of the United States that.form is, that every man inhissocial condition .be it whatitmay, should have equal protection before the law, equal protection under the law without any reference to his previous condi tion. As a class these thrifty people area home loving people, and as such homeJo ving people they will not, we trust, vote with a party which desires to destroy the prosperity which they now enjoy. And to our Irish neighbor and brother we have but to ask him to read the extracts herein given from the work of the celebrated Irishman John F. Scanlan. He says in introducing his book: "For some unaccountable reason the masses of the Irish people are not aware how important apart the question of na tive industry played in the subjugation of Ireland. It may be that, in the^ exuberance of their martial ardor, our historians have not considered it worth while to treat such an every day subject as labor, or that, in the glories of Brian Boru and Fontenoy, they have neglected to teach the people how to be free, happy, and great "by the sweat of the brow." It is known to comparatively few that Ireland —now a mendicant- before the nations the earth, with her children flying from her bosom, as from that ot a viper, after hundreds of years of as brave a struggle iu behalf of their native land as any people on the face of the globe—has been reduced to its present condition not by the sword, but by the application in her domestic government of that principle of political economy known as l'ree trade.
I believe all Irishmen, particularly the United States, should know this, for several reasons, chief of which is, that learning what the results of free trade have been in their native land, they might prevent alike fate befalling this republic, by avoiding the confidence game of the conspirators, who are now trying to apply the same political economy to our domestic government: break down our industries, impoverish and weaken the nation, and "trust to luck" for an opportunity to 'burst the bubble," as they
fc*f
"Thus does Ireland, with all its natural resources, its rich soil and salubrious climate, hurl from its bosom its mechanics, its laborers, and its farmers, to become toilers and wanderers in strange lands, because that vandal nation, England, will not permit her people to apply that political economy, protective tariff, that makes Belgium, with only two-thirds its area of land, support a larger population in happiness and prosperity, and gives the teeming millions of Frenchmen in France work, wealth, and happiness: while Ireland—poor, brave, dear old Ireland—has to periodically stretch forth her hand, an unwilllmr mendicant among the nations of the earth, begging food for her children—a victim of English free trade. Do the Irishmen of America desire to repeat the sacrifice on a larger scale in America? If you do not. then cease to vote for free trade, and ally yourself with the men who have American labor and American prosperity at heart the men wo favor protection to American industry."
WE call the attention of every body to the fact that the city will be full of pick pockets to-night and that the best place for every body after dark is at home. We caution every one against carrying any valuable watch or money this evening because the chances are ten to one that some Democrat will get his hand into your pocket before you get home. -rr
THE Philadelphia Public Udger'.says, "a great many Philadelphia ward politicians and roughs have gone to Indiana to aid in distributing the money collected in large «ums for legitimate ex^enses fn saving the life of the nation." Our citizens should leave their pocket books at home to night for some of them will surely be here.
OWING to the resignation of ex-postmas-ter Key, the lottery cases pending In the Supreme courtwill probably be dismissed
BUSINESS mnnjjshould All turn out tonight atRepulJJcan headquarters to array for the Tuesday election.
Qf Um iffiuti^- riar the imuner jauJOEoX mmm* Ui*rt*prrt"in other countries to compete with you. It One of the greatest evils known iu flu has secured you good pay, good homes, good prospects, and above JBI the free 4om of the ballot, through #hichyou can make your influencu felt i^defeatinir ih^ --J —yjg: l)t 'fit'.*
hoped/
it was
Jjurst in 1861." ^He shows that British competetion is tho cause of ruinin'g Irish manufacturing, and that from this manufacturing oppressive Ireland has almost entirely been forced to .toiling the scanty soil in order to evade starvation, and that most of tUemwiJl eyentually be forced to migrate to the United States. He closes by sajring:
M}
MORON A the new Hawaiian representative will not hob nob with Secretary Evart* at present.
THE Steamships, Celic and Neckar brought $916,000 in gold to New York yesterday.
:M
A T"*n may grow up t© bo Ilk® a sturdy oak but he commences like a creeper. Shoes should be oyer two feet, A dress train ahould never be under one foot
Julias Guar didn't know that he would go down through the ages aa a» effective and powerful epithet*
The placidity of expi^pn worn ^y a man who is "next" in a foil barber ahor cannot be counterfeited, even by an old with *er ftntkn* 1 fc
matil 'hTI
family circle is the disrespect so frequentifshown between members, one to another, in speech, action and dress. The nrpff "yes* or "no" of husband to wife, answ# to a pleasant qaciyj leads unpleasant consequences, and begete a coul, calculating style Of address on either side, which sooner or later js adopted by thfc yoYniger members, and the iove and aJFection which should dwell within is dispelled like*dew trefdre the morning sun. The_indifference often fchWn in nftlFacts of duty, and the manner ki which they are performed, seeui io carry the expression: "I'm "glad that's out of the way don't trouble me again." In dress and personal appearance the husband goes unkempt and unshaven, and the wife sUphod and shabby. Anything is good enough fbrnb|ne, when there are no strangers about!"Thus are habits of disrespect formed, arid one of the great dangers of home life bred and fostered. Many of us have seen the play of "Flannigan's Home," where Pat comes tumbling into the house at dusk, dumps his hod one corner, liis hat and coat in another, kicks the cat through the window, damns Biddy, swears the grub isn't "fit for a mon to ate," and raises a general row all round. It is a good thing for the well-to-do in life to studv the character of the extremists of the lower strata, and ask themselves if there is not room for improvement in thrir o^m more pretentious homes.
Some horaes are full of love arid sunshine for strangers, and all ugliness and gloom for the ones for whom they live. To constitute a truly happy home, there should be pretty little personal adornin^its on the part of the wife, who thereby shows a desire to please her husband, and to add to the general attractions of her home. A pleasant word on her part, when the overworked man comes home, often eats away the raw edge of some trouble on his mind, and draws out a coriespanding desire to be both agreeable and respectful, which characteristics are always accompanied by affection^ .jVVhat is true of manners is true of dress alsa Rudeness, roughness and impatience are soon followed by insolence, and when sweet temper gives way to anger and discord the home circle is no longer attrao tive. _.
Mental Maturity.
Meptal maturity—-at what age do we attain it—that is to say, those of us who are not predestined to perpetual greenness It has been said that "a mrfn may be a fool at thirty, and yet die a sage/' Rather questionable, that. The fool of forty is admitted by metaphysicians to be a hopeless case. Let him who learned nothing by experience at that age, stand aside from the world of action ne is not fit to play his part in it. His only safety is in being dry-nursed by some stronger nature than his own. Dull youths, or youths called dull, sometimes mature, however, into great men. Sheridan, we are told, was a particularly stupid schoolboy. Perhaps the fault was in the schoolmaster, not in the pupil, lhere were in Sheridan's days, and there are yet, multitudes of bad teachers. Pedantic pedar gogutes, of the "Dr. Blimber" class, are as plenty as blackberries, and the mill-horse system of education is still in vogue. Over-crammed students rarely turn out well while those who cannot.be crammed generally do. If there be anything that is unpromising, it is precocity. It is better to be comparatively ignorant at fiye-and-twenty, tnan to be a prodigy aft thirteen. We entirely agree with the doctrine that the most usefhl part of man's education is not that which he receives in schools and colleges. The world is the university in which the grandest and most useful lessons are taught, and in a way which fixes them indelibly in the memory. The "Groves of Academus" are not to be despised but let him who desires to be a man among men beware of neglecting those paths of wisdom which lie through the^marketplaces of mankind. Wisdom is not a thing that can be injected into us with a scholastic forcing-pump. It can only beacquired by observation, reflection, and the independent exercise of the judg» rnent. ________________
Changes of Life.
Change is the common feature of society—of all life. The world is like a magic lantern, or the shifting scenes of a panorama. Ten years convert the population of schools into men and women, the young into fathers and matrons, make and mar fortunes, and bury the last generation but one.
Twenty years convert infants into lovers, fathers and mothers, decide men's fortunes and distinctions, convert active men and*women into crawling drivelers, and bury all preceding generations.
Thirty years raise an active generation from nonentity, change fascinating beauties into bearable ola women, convert lovers into grandfathers, and bury the active generation, or reduce them to decrepitude and imbecility.
Forty years, alaal change the ftice of ail society. Infants are growing old, the bloom of youtn and beaiity has passed away, two active generfttioha have been swept from the stage of life, names once cherished are forgotten, unsuspected candidate* for fame have started from the exhaust leas womb of nature.
And in fifty years—mature, ripe fifty years—a half century—what tremendous changes occur. How Time writes her sublime wrinkles everywhere, in rock, river, forest, cities, hamlets villages, in the nature of man and the destinies and aspects of all eivilised sodety.
Let us pass on to eighty years—and lo we desire and see tr world? Our parents are gon|e
what do we desire and see to comfort us
I— world to fight the
passed away from us the world to fight ihe
ur children hove ps lit# all parts of the rrim ana desperate 1
aTjm ana desperate battle of life. Our oldT friends—where are they? We behOW a world of which we know nothing and to which we axe unknown. We
friends in the wave. We see everything turned upside down bv the ficfcle hand of Fortune and the absolute despotism of Time. In a word, wf behold the vanity of life, and are quite ready to lay down Uie poor liorden aad be gone. _— dtMm i.
The perfbme manufacturers in the department of die Maritime Alps consume annually 600,000 pounds of roeea, and the neighborhood of Grasses and Camies is thickly studden with rose farm*. On one hectare of two and a half aeree 30,000 bushed ar plan ted, a single busb yielding for twelve years. 1
Tmt-
A single hec* net an ave-
Are in good cultivation will rage profit of twenty-four E rage profit
twenty-four per cent per
A"'^®^,|mcSor—A clothes-pin Old maid's laughter—He! he! he! Thieves work on abstract principles.*^ Widows and widowers ongHtcbe retired. &
Can a cow-hide in a shop? No but Jfikin. Cal
!l
J. Hi.
"Does yerekape nothin' but dry goods here.?!'. ,uNo nm'm,l "Thin.where,jseill 1 be afther goin' for a watered silk
When She lights are low and »a fellow occupies a big rocking chair with his girl, bow he does wish he^was at the North Poie where it would be six months till morning.
A Wisconsin woman' has been married fifty-eight years' and has never missed building her kitchen fire. Her husband is pfqbabiy the oldest fire-escape on record.
A young couple were found out at the front gate one cold night this week locked in each other's arms. They said the combination was lost and they could not g»t it because the janitor was asleep. -The following ludicrous sentence is the rejsftlt of a compositor's erroneous punctuation: "Caesar entered npon his head, his helmet upon his feet, aimed sandals upon his brow, a cloud in his right hand, his faithful sword in his eye, an angry glare."
A red nose is a suspicious facial ornament on a man or woman, and sometimes ^ives small boys a handle to play with. An urchin who had begged a penny of an old toper in vain, rewarded him with this advice—"Dont you carry that nose o«* ydur'n near to no powder fact'ry or tl ey might play the £oee onto yer."
After a telegraph pole had fallen on a 3avannah negro's head he threw up his hands and shouted: "Don't hit me again, Maasa P'liceman it wasn't me dat stole de chickens it was Deacon Henry." Then, looking around and seeing what struck him, he walked off muttering to himself: "Golly, I'se in luck dis mornin'. I 'spected de 'pliceman had me shuah dat time." "Sure," said Pat, rubbing his head with delight at a prospect of a present from his eniployer, "I always mane to do my duty." "I believe you," replied the employer, "and therefore I shall make you a present of all that you haye stolen from me during the year." "I thank your honor," Pat retorted, "and may all your friends and acquaintances treat you as liberally." But a little better than that was the reply of a Brooklyn Irishman as a funeral procession passed he was asked who was dead, and responded, "Troth I don't know, except it be the man in jthe .coffin."
A Parting Scene.
Did yon ever hear two married women take leave of each other at the gate on a summer evening? This is the way they do it:- ,,r,-"Good-by!" "Good-by! Come down and see us right soop."
ujYes,so
3
II
1
and
I will. You come up right soon."
"I will. Good-by." "Good-by! Don't forget to come soon." "No, I won't. Don't you forget to come up." "I won't. Be sure and bring Sally Jane with you next time." "I will. I'd have.brought her up this time, but she wasn't very well.- She wanted to come awful bad." ,t., "Did she, now That'was too bad. Be sure and bring the baby." "I will. ..If forgot to tell you, he's cut another tooth." "Vou don't say! How many has he got now?" "Five. It makes him awftil cross." "I guess it does, this hot weather. Well, good-by! Don't you forget to come down." "No, I won't. Don't you forget to i-une up.. Good-by!" rv' "i
^vi
And they separate.
:i
Fire by Friction.
South African savages get Are in the following manner: Some straw being laid on the ground as a bed, two sticks are laid on it a lew inches apart to form a support for the third stick, which is laid across them, having a deep notch cut in it to receive the blunt point of the drilling stick this is twirled like a chocolate muller between the palms of the hands, and when the twirler's hands reach the bottom they are dexterously shifted to the top again. A spark is got in the charred dust in about five minutes, and by carefully shielding it in a handfnl of the straw, it is noon funned into I flame.
A Michigan doctor has written a book on the human lioir in which lie presents these views: "Hnirs do not, rs a rule, penetrate the scalp perpendicularly, but ut an angle. When the angle of different hairs is the same, it is possible to give it the easy sweeps and curves wlncji we generally see it take, but if they are by some freak Of nature nusplsced, we have the rebellious frizzle-tops, that are not susceptible of the influence of the brush and comb. Many a poor mother hns half worried her life out trying to train her Johnny's rebellious lorks into better
ways, believing it wsis Johnny's pervjprseness of manners that induced snchidilapidated looking head-gear, when it wijs really none of Johnny'# fault, at all, but simply a freak of nature in misplacing the radiating centers of his 'hirsute jcovering." Sometimes fowls suffer from a contrariwise placing of the feathers—they run the wrong way. The author^ father had a hen whose leg feathers rati toward the body, those on the body
and neck toward Che head. This gave Iter a perpetual 'oufc-of-sorts' look and ihe never could fly* The erection of tlie hair of animals during anger, or hnman beings in fright, is caused by a change in the skin and the angle at which U?e hair enters the head or^dy.'
THE BERT YKHICLE.—An anoedote ia told of a physician who was called to a foreign family to prescribe for a case of incipientcpnsumptioti. He gare them a prescription lor piSls, and wrote the direction: "One pill to be taken three times a day in any convenient vehicle." The family look-
they jgot "carti tiagon, carriage, boggy, wheelbarrow." Aftet grave eonsiderction they came to Che conclusion that the doctor meant the pa* tientjahoold ride out, and while in the vehicJe Me should take the pilL He followed the apvtee to the totter, and in a few weeks the frferii air and exercise secured the advantage frb»ch otherwise might not have come.
There are two sorts of ignorance we start from the one, we repose i» the other the* .are the goals from which, and to 1 whtel, we tend and the pnrsrait of knowiei%e ia bist a course between two apo*, as hnman lift Is only a traveling from gra«e»to grave.
IIW
tVS
BltiGGfV l{:
Produce and Commission MERCHANT,|
^Corner Fourth and (%-rry fleets, TERRE JUUTE. IM)IA|$A.
TO *«100 A YEAR, or to *30 & day a 2 W
H. Bi Green. Wholesale Grocer, Findlay, O.. writes*
1
"I suffered for over 25 years with lame back and in three weeks was permanently cared bywearing one of Prof. Guilmette's Kiuney Pads.
1
men do as well as men. ^Inn.v make more tljau tho araomit afjovc. No can full to nSefc'c money*' W. Any one can do the work. You can
jnaJwUroai 30 o3uito$a*u tour bv le^ng ?otrr evening and spiu-f time to the hnphic^s. It costs uoil.ln-tu iry tije bosiaew. Nothing like it for money making ever offered Ix-forr. Business plcmauit ana strictly honorable' Reader, If you want to know all about the best paving business before the public, swnd us your address aud we will -end you fr.ll iwrticulan1 and private terms free. Sample* worth $5 alsw free: you can then make up your mind for vonrself. Addres. GEORGE STrSTON A CO.. Portland Maine? 84m6
$500 Eevard
OVER A MILLION OP Prof. (iulliuette's
FRENCH
Have already been sold iu this country and in Prance, every one of which lias given perfect satisfaction. and has performed cures every time when used according to directions.
We now say to the afflicted and doubting ones that we will pay the above reward for a single case of
BACK
Thr.t the pad fail* to cure. This Great Remedy will positively and permanently cure Lumbago. Lame back. Sciatica. Gravel. Diabetes, Dropsy. Bright's Disease
of the Kidneys. Incontinuencc Inflamation of the
Retention of the Urine.
Kidney's Catarrh of the Bladder, High Colored Trine. Pain in the Back, Side or Loins, Nervoi.s Weakness, and in fact all disorders of the Bladder and i"ciliary Organs whether contracted by pri vuie disease or otherwise.
Ladies, if you are suffering from Female Weakness. Leiuecorrhea. or any disease of the Kidneys, Bladder, or I'rinury Orpins.
YOIT AN sir. m»E«i
Without swallowing nauseous medicines, by simply wearing
i',, PROF. GUILMETE'S
FRENCH KIDNEY PAD,
WHICH CURKS BY ABSORPTION. Ask vour druggist for Prof. Guilmette's French Kidney Pad. »nd take no other if he has not got it. send $2.00 and you will receive the Pad by return mail."
TESTIMONIALS PROM THE PEOPLE. Judge Buchanan, Lawyer, Toledo, O., says: "One of Prof. Guilmette's French Kidney Pads cured me of Lumbago in three weeks' time. My case had been given up by the best Doetors as incurable. During all this time I suffered untold agotiy and large sums of money.
George Vetter, J. P.,Toledo, O., says:
!I
suffered for three years with Sciatica and Kidney Disease, and often had to go about on crutches, I \vas entirely and permanently cured after wearing Prof. Guilmette's French Kidney Pad! four weeks.1'
Q.hire N. Scott, Sylvania. O., writes: "j( have been a great sufferer for 15 years with Bright's Disease of the Kidneys. For weeks at a time was unable to got out of bed took barrels of medicine, but they gave me only temporary relief. I wore.two of Prof. Guilmette's Kidney Pads six *-eeks. aud I now know I am entirely curod."
Mrs: llellen Jerome, Toledo, O., says: "For years 1 have been confined, a great part of the time to jny bed, with Lncorrcea and female weakness. I wore one of Guilpiette's Kidney Padi and was cured in one month."
B. F. Keesling, M. D., Druggist, Logansport Ind., when sending in au order for Kidney Pads, write H! "I wore one of the first ones we had and I received more benefit from it than anything 1 ever nsed. In fact the Pads give better general satisfaction than any Kidney remedy we ever sold."
Ray & Shoemaker, Druggists, Hannibal, Mo. "We are working up a lively trade in your Pads, and |re hearing of good results from them every day."
Prof. Guilmette's Frcnch Liver Pftd. Wipl positively cure Fever and Ague. Dumb Agus. Ague Cake, Billions Fever, Jaundice. Dyspepsia. and all diseases of the Liver. •Stomach and Bood. Price 81 5(1 bv mail. 5t( nd fAr Prof. Guilmette'« Tn-iiii^i! on rne Kidneys and Liver, free by nail. Address
KEN''11 PAD CO.. Toledo, Ohio
HEQfltYMEDlCfflE
^hat Acts at tlie Some Time on THE LIVER, J"\
I THE BOWELS, and the KIDNEYS. These xreat organs are the nature clean ser« of the Svstem. If tfiey work well, heaitli wilt, be perfeet: If they beoome cloMed, drcadfuldiseasw are sore to follow wltn,
TERRIBLE SUFFERINB.
BtHo*sti«M, Head arks, Dy»tpep*la, Ja#Allce» Constipation and Pile*, Or Ki.lComplaint^ DUbstea, I
Sediment in t!i* UWae, Mllky" or Ropy Urin« or Rlif 4WI 1 aKtc Pain* and ArlxM, art developed bec« with the numol*^ expelled naturally.
I KIDNEY-WORT
111 restart thebe^thr kc^oa^aiid all th e*troy1or ertla wilt baatttiM aegl limvxdyoa wUUlmbattoauffer. tboniHUJditlavebeencnred. Tryltandyou win add one Mara to the number. Take U1 an« health will once moregladdqn yoar heart.
Why •uttmr lon««rfrom th« tormsnt tWMn Oonto* 25 of dl9-
ifhy be fefjw
omWrad urteM? Hiuwrr-WoaT ^ffll aire yoa. Try a packae« at once and Wj satisfied.
ItUa dry vegetable (•omp&und and OH of Medicine.
9^b^mpmhavytf(t.PrU!e,%\mt
00.,
i«cp«9i WortaMy ofttla otlMai
wall *y. la O IN II N I
-•ii
'ISM
ilim
Tp*fl
1
finsincsB 0ircclarji.
CAK THOMAS.
OPTICIAN AND JEWEI i, 639Main street. Tern HauU^
Hendqnartrrs Commercial Traveler^
JUSTICE HOUS^ JOII
HOUUEK, I*to|»t,
Northwest t'orncr^Main and Mi-rldiati ,r .*•
I ^^lUmncns ut llam.
Attorneys at Law,
5
4^) Main Street. Terre Haute. Ind.
S, C, DAVIS. S. B. DAVIS, Not J" DAVTS & DAVIS,
Attorneys at Law,
23*4 South Sixth Streei, over Postrffit Terre Haute, Ind.
J". KELLEY Attorney at Law, Third Street, between Main and Ohio.,
Q. isdicnsrxjTa Attorney at liaw,
5
322, Ohio Street, Terre Haute. Ind.
A. B. FEL SENT HAL ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Ohio Street, Terre Haute, Ind.
CARLTON & LAMB ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Corner of Fourth and Ohio, Terre Haut
BUFF & BEECHER,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Terre Haute, Ind.
ALL ORDERS
PKOMPTLY FILLE1
'. .—AT
U. R. JEFFERS,
Dealflr in Wool and Manufacturer of
Clothes, Cassiineres,
1
Tweeds, Flannels, Jeans, Blankets, Stocking Yarns,
Carding and Spinning.
N. B.—The highest market price in cash, or our, own'make of goods exchan ed for wool.
Terre Haute Banner,
"J 1
ii I W E an W E E •.: a Office 81 South Fifth Street.
nemlgia,
IfenonsBM^ UlMlUtiM, Coitiveiefli,
£|L
Fem^e
ciT Wetbwi, Sick Nerrou Hatoebe.
Th«e9 P«di dure allDiaetaea Noxiotu inw the of Stomach,
DAILY NEWS
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7
P. QFROEipR, ^Proprietor.
CITY OP TERRE HAUTE.
English and G-erman Job Printing
Executed in the best manner.
yii-A.GK3-'S
IMPROVED PATENT LIVER PADI N«r*a GET« RAMS. CAM BS MADS ANT STRENGTH DZIIRXD. Last
TWICB AI Lona.
DiiiuM OONAvltkotttSraggisi tht fjitab cvitsa Chilli ud Fever, Liver CcnpUiit,
WAY
Ptda Cure all Dteuea br AMOfptioBu Ho Pills. Oila, or PoifonoaamedldBea are takgi Stomach. The Pada are worn orerjbe Pit Imnach, oorerlnK toe Great Nerve Oentrey,
Lirer and Stonxaclu A centie yinUMe teo^S^^UonTfthe 6lSSdt»l rlfyhsx the
Kidney* .. Stomach to BACH.
Blood. tthntUaMnir the Liver and
to healthy action* and iMtthnioi tM adWSodTTStM 0Vi3nMin« IT ALL OF MBtbjr Mil afaetarad -i-Moaa. M».
SOLD
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at A 41 NOKTI Ltsrarr 8f«
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