Daily News, Volume 2, Number 77, Franklin, Johnson County, 17 November 1880 — Page 3

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B. Ijji BKAPCHAMP, Bdltor *nd Proprietor.

P*ibU«*tfm Offlcc, corner Fifth and Main Streets

Entered at the Poet Office st Terre Haute, Indiana, /. as second-class matter.

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17,1880.

Two more earthquake shocks in Austria Yesterday. :mj

Foub

hundred additional troopa were

sent to Ireland yesterday. ii" •iif 'i Eisht thousand rifles were recently shipped from Italy to Ireland.

Some

distinguished American citizen,

is practicing,aa a "bogardu* kicker" into -days News. lit

There are reports that anew colored exodus from the jSouth, will b^n sometime this winter.

1

There is a rumor to the effect that Gill.' Shan kiln will go Into the newspaper business with 0. J. Smith, of the Chicago Exprut.

The "booms" have recently taken a matrimonial turn, for there were three prominent Rushrille widowers married in one day last week.

The Indianapolis Journal and Cincinnati Commercial have locked horns upon the question of "laurels," in tlie late campaign in this State.

A GIFTED statistician has ciphered out the cost of the late political campaign, and makes it $8,000,000. We.pkQuld like to see an itemized account.

1

The glue and curled-hair business is fully up to the average for this season of jr the year, Says the Trade Journal, and the remark will applylto fashion as well j** as to commerce. :V IU

C- SEHATOIi DoRfiEY reoommends Mr. Gorham for Secretary of the Senate. Mr. Gorham would, no doubt, recommend Senator Doreey for Postmaster-general, Both would make good officers.

The fat cattle show is on at Chicago. Thus far most of the prizes have gone to

to Illinois, but if Hawn, of Perry, and Skinner, of Porter county, put in an appearauce Indiana's credit will be saved.

BOCITWICLL has got another office. Hayes has appointed him consul for the Uuited States before the newly-or«anized

Franco American mixed claims commlssion. As a barnacle, Boutwell is a sue-

"ceM* "WHEN

thieves fall out." says an old

proverb, "honest men will get their dues." We may expect, therefore, to get at the fads about the forged Chinese letter, because theit! are indications that Truth and ilarnum will have an unpleasantr. nesa.

The social question as to Bernhardt decided in the negative. While the New York ladies all go to see her on the stage, not a single door of refined ^ttciety has been opened to her. She lias attended dinner parties at Delmonico's and other restaurants, but they were given her by men. No lady of social standing in New York has so far recognized Bernhardt'* society,

HEWITT-M0BET.

Whitelaw Hold, the editor of the New York Triform, has writteh a personal letter to his friend, Mr. Hewitt, of "Chinese forgery letter fame," and advises him to como out frankly and acknowledge that he was mislead by an appearauce of genuineness, and was sorry for the mistake, and to let no man be more zealous Sn the detection and punishment of the criminals. To this good advice Mr. Hewitt replies and says:' ,, A« to th© later development* of the case, they are all new to mo. I know nothing of the witnesses who confess that they committed perjury. I have never seen cither of them, and I never heard of thsm until they appeared as witnesses. If forgerv or perjury nave been committed. I trust that the offeuderswill be punished, fc" and I will do all in my power to bring them to a just retribution. If the letter lw ,r is a forgery, I re«r#t extremely that I 1,^.k made any reference to It, but Is absurd to attack a man, as I have been attacked, for the mere expression of an opinion as to the genuineness of a signature. I may have been in error, but it was an uniutcn v4^']tlo«al one. 14 Mr. Hewitt authorised the publication of the letter, and the Tribvm comment*

IJis follows: We are profoundly sorry that this is *11 Mr, Hewitt finds himself able to say even yet concerning the wicked forgery and conspiracy against his personal friend,, whieii he was used to bolster up. But for

Mr. Hewitt's indorsement, this forgery would haw been comparatively harm less* He now knows that what he nursed into life was the slanderous invention of characterless adventurer, and that it could only be defended by subornation of ipistjory. He should have known as much the hoar he saw the first dispatch ftorn Mentor denouncing the forgery, and should then have been to repair the wnmg into which he had been betrayed, ion his failure to attempt to rtptit that wrong even yt% we prefer at present to meke no comment.

Tbe Tritem deals very Rently with Mr. Hewitt and Mm *®P*e town to re ceive the •ttMiiglal son** back to ita co»^ flden«- and friendship, should he aoose to come in Ume. We are of the opinion that Mr. Hewitt, Baroutiu *ad the «®«fe Democratic KatioaaH Oom«itle« equally guilty, and should receive a just punishment I

wmm

TnKRE is a drop of bitteraess in averr cup. That ffenerJthlff but lhou|Pilesi old salt. Secretary Thompson, forgot tb invite the aiarfkt vlceadmfrst navy to thi review at Hampton Bonds, while he invito! the general ot the wmy and navy civilians. Now they call him a "landlubber/ and say he oqghS to go oh to the docks for repwr*.—/Ri»Jnapa li* Journal,

We kro quiet of the same opinion as Ibe dear Journal, "there is bitterness .In every cup," and it appears to us that there is a little "green cup,'somewhere around about the Journal establishment.

Fobt Wayxb has demanded and been accorded anew Qount under the census. Since the election every Republican thereabouts counts a dozen, and th ambitious little city has determined to take advana of

A sbksatiok is said to have been caused at Tribe's Hill N. Y., the other day by a minister's giving out the hymn "839." It was by no means decreased when it was ound the hymn was "Crown Him Lord of All."

A Queer Fish- I

That most queer fish, the anabas— wliicli respires and livw and thrives as well out of water as in it which has its rampages upon the plains and fresh

Ssutures

as well as its gambles among

je weeds under the briny waves, and which is even reported to climb aerial trees as easy as it does the coral shrubs of the sea—has been known from remote antiquity to exist among the wonders of the East, but never until now has it visited the Western world. France is the fortunate country which, thanks to the learned pisciculturist, M. Carbonnier, has welcomed into its aqua-! riums a living anabas from the far-off Indies. There is nothing in the exterior appearance of the anabas to indicate its aerial habits or capacities. It is purely a fish in its formation, and its power of creeping or walking upon the earth is due simply to the fins and tail which control its movements in the sea, and which belong only to the tribes of the Jinny deep. A pott mortem examination is necessary to discover the secret of its amphibionsness. In the head is found the special organ whicn invests it with the faculty of living two lives, as it were—aquatic and aerial. On each side of the head, instead of being hard and rigid, as with other fishes, the upper pharyngeal arches are divided into fine, irregular laminae or plates, more or less numerous, forming cavities and little cells capable of containing a considerable amount of water. The theory of science has been that a fish dies out of water, not from immediate want of oxygen, but bocause the gills become dry and unsuited to its transmission. Hence, Culver believed that the labyrinthiform cavity in the head of the arabas was a reservoir of water which the fish carried full when it went upon its land excxirsions for the purpose of moistening its gills when occasion required. The French scientists, however, have discovered that it is nothing of the sort that Culver, so. long an undisputed authority in the matter, was wholly mistaken and that the cavity so far from being a water reservoir, as alleged, never contains water, but has simply a surface that secretes a certain humidity in which the air for respiration is maintained. The anabas inhabits all parts of India and the Indian archipelago, living mostly in marshes and inlets which aro occassionally dry. When its habitaes are destitute of water the anabas, fish as it is, flees to the land in search of a livelihood. Ita peregrinations continue many days, ancf sometimes even months. Nothing is more curious and interesting than its manner of locomotion. No sooner is it upon terra firma than it closes its mouth and its opercules or gillcovers, and no contraction or flapping is any longer seen then, by a general movement, all its fins aro erected, the pectorals being extended like two arms the fish supports itself in an upright position by means of strokes right and left with its tail and aided bv an inferior propulsion of the anal fin it progresses with a lively and easy motion, using its arms like oars, as it were, and sculling from side to side alternately, in accord with the strokes of the tail. As to the ability of the anabas to climb trees, modern skepticism generally regards that merely a fish story, although enthusiastic naturalists continue to assert the fact, and even to verify by statements which challenge both charity and incredulity. In the latter part of the last century a Danish gentleman, M. Duldorff, communicated an account of the anabas to the Lmnsean Society of London, in which he stated that he had himsetf seen it in the act of ascending a palm tree, and had taken it at a height of five feet from the ground. And M. de la Blanchere, from whose statement in La Nature we have derived the fact here given* affirms that a friend assured him that he had shotjan anabas in a tree. In view of this marvelous assurance, M. Blanchere naively remark® that truth is sometimes stranger than fiction.

Here is a mode oFlpwch clcSely related tr the Irish bull. Got off as wit it is rather cheap, but when fiillen into unconsciously »,often very ludicrous. We clip from current exchanges a .few specimens:

A Peoria paper suys: "A child was rim over by a wagon three years old, and cross-eyed with pantalets on, which never spoke afterward*."

A clergyman says: "A young woman died in my neighborhood yesterday, while 1 was preaching In a beastly stale of intoxication,"

A widow, intending to succeed her hrab&nd in the management of a hotel, advertised that the hotel will brf kept fanner landlord, summer

oa a

A correspondent* in writing of a recent cekbration in the city of Cleveland, says: The procession was very fine, and nearly two miles long, mm alio lite report of Dr. Perry, the chaplain."

There has been sion, not only as to the height* but the spring of one of the best known of the SkJJnS* oflcelar^ whkj fc HekU. Heck

to tnSJSJX

meaning hooded, in wn to the *now or dona which Thf height of Hekla

hSjftar *,m feet.

HOPE.

Man apeak MM! with kom delight orwm«awr»«o«tns beuardnjrs Tsg»ln th* h*|pr height

All UwUy prw* tb# crowded f. Tha world fffttw* oM MwS yoomr t»7 tan*k.„ Bal liumiuj hopsuybangtn# burn". SZOjtt Mb

Men fiuicy. ipeung f^om error'* brftlni Too w#U procSaltia th« Hft w« know A hi*ber Uft niso aluril And what those inward volcca a*y Shall ne'or tb« bopeftil Noul botray.

The buffalo and the elk, too, have disappeared before the pale faoe. Grass is growing in the war path. The white man took away our lands and built narrow gauge railroads over them. My people are few. I shout, and their voices come back to me in tne wailing winds. Our camp-fires have gone out, and we are compelled to use tne baae-ourner of the pale face. The jerked buffalo of our fathers has disappeared, and the white man's porterhouse steak and jerked pancakes are given to us to keep away starvation. These are our wrongs.

We have called on the Great Father at Washington for redress, and ho told us to "brace up." Are those the words of a kind father to his children? We asked again, and he told us to "cheese it." Is that the talk of a great chief? No 1

We are dropping off like autumn leaves. The toes of the red man are turning up on every hand. [Laughter, and cnes of "Oh let upl" from the galleries,] We are but a. handful. Where once our warriors were as the sands of the sea, now there is not a corporal's guard. There is not enough to make a

Ete

ie. Thq Qreat Spirit does not like this., loves his children and will not allow the pale face to get the bulge on them. The buflhlo, the elk and antelope belong to the red man. The Texas cow and the veal-cutlet belong to the pale face.

Warriors, I have-taken down the scalping knife and the tomahawk. I mean business. My system requires the blood of the pale face. We must have a little excursion through Colorado. I' will arrange for the round trip and furnish the refreshments. And now, farewell. Go to your couches and rest, Adux 1 Bon Homlingl Ta! tal Don't oversleep yourselves, for on the morrow we cook the

foreesof

oose the pale face, and ride our war over his watermelon vines."

Autumn Care of Plants.

All tender plants,as begonias, the tender cactuses, mesembry-anthemums, peperomias, calla, epiphillum and all those classes of plants, should not become chilled at night. Geraniums, ageratums. latanas, fuchsias and all that class will not injure short of actual frost, but care should be taken that no plant intended for the house should be exposed to strong winds. When the weather is blustering, it is better that they be removed indoors, putting them out again upon the recurrence of fine weather. Avoid, above all, allowing them to be drenched by cold chilling rains. Whatever the temperature of the room during the day, it should not fall below fortytwo degrees at night, nor shotfld the night temperature often go much below sixty degrees. One of the very worst things for plants is to allow a direct draft of cold air to strike them from the outside. Change the air of the room by allowiug it to enter through another apartment. Do not water unless the plants need it. This may be soon estimated pretty correctly by the size of the pots, and the nature of the plants. Po-rous-leaved plants require more water than Ann-leaved ones. All the cactii tribe require but little water in winter. The smaller the pot, the oftener it will require water. It is betterthat the plants sometimes show signs of drooping than to keep them drenched. If the soil is kept full of water, the plants are sure to sicken, for this Is one of the reasons that water should never be kept in sauoers under the pots, except in minute quantity, and not so deep as to reach the earth in the pots. The soil will absorb loo much by capillary attraction, and the very act of this absorption and evaporation will keep the soil cold, and it will become ultimately sour.

One of the greatest disabilities to house plants is the dust from the building of fires, the constant passing to and fro, and especially from sweeping. If yon have a bay window, the plants may be easily protected from dust at such times by means of curtains to be drawn. If not, a curtain or cloth should be used for covering. This, with an occasional sponging with tepid water of the firm and smooth-leaved plants, and the rinsing of soft and downy ones, with an occasional showering with a fine rose pot or plant syringe, should keep them in good condition. Jf.

foobabiy more horses are lost by colic than all other diseases combined, and one chief trouble in treating the disease is that many of the sonealled remedies are either absurd or the ingredient* are not available. A few weeks since! we had a horse taken violently with flatulent oolic, and I started for a "horse doctor" a mile distant. On my way I recollected having read in the Michigan Farmer, I think it was, of applying blankets wrung out of hot water, and 1 wished I had, tried it before starting. My wife it seems* had read the same article, and alter I had jrone went to worklngood "woman" earnest and applied the hoi blankets, and when 1 returned in about half an how she came to the door laughing, saying "Yoor horse is all right now* and wire enough be waa walking around the yiwd entirely relieved, ssid a kaWitome bin* rod.

Vscan

mid

v*

Um !o Atnt fortti to Ufe,"

And jnii* oiumee Uw tnjtth head, luroa youth to mwUjr atrlfti, Nor l«»voath«T0t«r*n'»dylu* ImmIs An* when Mfts'io'er, tfm tram tbtottaaJy* ^Iop^aprtn«a to abed b«r I AUto not?*!* Uhwlen—no

Native Eloquence. -t

The Laramie Timet publishes what the IJte chfefj Colorow, might have said had he been tilled on for a few impromptu remarks, a la Logan "Warriors, I have called you around the council fire to talk with you. We are not a great nation. The bones of our people are bleaching in the home of the pale face. We are not too numerous to mention. The light air and the firewater of the white man have yielded a big crop of copper colored "stiffe." I call to my people and the echo of my voice alone comes back to me from the wilderness. Some are in the happy hunting grounds. Others are in Leadviile. We are becoming more and more seldom.

yon decline a klasf **Yea, tfr

the girl, dropping a perpiejted cm fewy,"X can, but I hate tc."

O

#*V

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**5

BottH Wa*t© Yttal Energy. The moat vigorous persons do not have too much vitality. People general ly inherit a lack or at least 'find tha' much vital energy has been permanent ly lost in their childhood and youth through tho ignorance or carelessness of their parents. Often it is impaired by wrong indulgences in early manhood The endeavor with all persons should be to husband what is left, be. it much or little. Therefore— 1* Don't do anything in a hurry .2. Don't work too many hours a day whether i« be farm-work, shop-work, study-work, or house-worfe. 8. Don't abridge sleep, Get the frill eight hours of it, and that, too, in a well ventilated awl sun purified room. 4. Don't eat what is indigestible, nor too much of anything, and let good cheer rule the hour.

,?w

5. Don't fret at yourself, or'anybody else nor indulge in the blues, nor burst into fits of passion.

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6. Don be too much elated with good luck, nor disheartened by bnd. Positively—be self-controlled* calm and brave. Let your brain have all the rest it needs. Treat your stomachf right. Keep a good conscience, and have a cheerfttl trust in God for all things and for both worlds. .. j-i

Platitudinous Ponderosity. The New England Journal of Education, in a serio-comic lecture, gives its readers some good precepts, beaten in with examples.

a

In promulgating your esoteric cogitations, or articulating your superficial sentimentalities and amicable, philosophical or psychological observations, beware of platitudinous ponderosity.

Let your conversational communications possess a clarified conciseness, a compacted comprehensibleness, coalescent consistency, and a concatenated

l/schew all conglomerations of flatulent garrulity, jejune babblement and asiiline affectation.

L«t your extemporaneous descantmgs and unpremeditated expatiations have intelligibility and veracious vivacity, without rhodomontade or thrasonical bombast

Sedulously avoid all polysyllabic profundity, pompous prolixity, psittaceous vacuity, ventriloquial verbosity, and vaniloquent vapidity.

Shun double enlendres, prurient jocosity, and pestiferous profanity, obscurant or

aPfn

other words, talk plainly, briefly, naturally, sensibly, truthfully, purely. Keep from "slang don't put on airs say what you mean mean what you say. And don't use big words

Humbumred Again.

I saw so much said about the merits of Hop Bitters, and iuy wife, who was always doctoring, and never well, teased me so urgently to get her some, I concluded to be humbugged again and I am glad I did, for in less than two months' use of the bitters my wife wa3 cured, and she has remained so for eighteen months since. I like such humbugging.—H. T., St. Paul.—Pitneer Prm,

•PERMANENTLY CURES

KIDNEY DISEASES, LIVER COMPLAINTS, Constipation and Piles.

BR. K. n. CLARK, Routbllero.Vt., nay*, "la «mm of KIDXKY TROUBLES Uluu aetca llko a ehana. Xt ha»cored aai very bat M»ea or

PILES, oad ha» neTor fullei to

a«t ettoleatlr.'* NKLSOX FAIR

CHILD, «rSt.Arbaiu, Vt.,

na7% "Hi*ofyrlectoMtaIs*. AfUndxteo yearn of grfi«t Miflfcrlnc I*l!e« n«d Co#tlveaewi It tionyletcl? cored na."

C. S. HOGAIION, anterluUra, tajn, "oiks paokacehaadoaa wonders for mo la completely car lac aavore Llrt* aad KMnajr I Caaqplatnt."

IT HAS U/Hyfl

WONDERFUL II HI I

POWER. ainU

BECAUSE IT ACTS ON THE UTERtTHB BOWELS AX0 KJLDinrrs AT THE 8A."tin TOH5.

Bmwum It olMtWM tha ayctwn of th* poisonous humor* that cfev«lo#6 In Kidney ami Urinary dlaaaaaa, BllIomami, Jaundlo*, Constipation* PllMf or In RiMumatiwii Nauraigla and Parnatedlaordara.

KXntfBT.WOfeT la a4rr nrtaM* mm. a—laal taaktMatkraaOynfaU. Om yarfcaffti will make

itaWil wilt!

vwr«gaaaB*MM.Saf«» *»ialaav»te«l«t aaA to avaaQjr aatliatiiwtvp 4r/r is ttnaaaa. Ztaavaa tb* naaaMt^rafprapartac. kahnftMttr. arfkaen a*fljrlatoant* mm iwi|ita grtoa,MparbaW1a. tMSomjufomnaatM wr vrnxroavm

WZUA, KICaAJtMOV CO., ••iflaa«»a, Tt.

SSB1

»«««», wWc*

Morton Post, No. i,

oxrmxnrr or TXBUMA, TEREE HAUTE. Headqcartcra SMfh Third.

RcrolarsaeeUnc* first and third Thursday «ve&l«pk, aaciawBtlL gar°BMdlsg Boom open tmrj cvcslag.

Ootara^M vtdttaf Hw dty wtt stwsT* lw audi wclocme. W. E. McLBAN. OcMa'dr.

Jay OnamHM, A4}n. Geo. pLAjnerr, P. (Me ttBtidquiteri

1

ta jwar «wb tmn, MM ao eqpt

Ui ri#k»dL Too trial«1&K»otesp*8**- Tb* kertfW«r* ttnity rrer offered tar ttoaw" wUlliff to tratk. Tm i&mM natll 4o at

Uwbnatorwweofw. Ho mm to opUl# kil caa dmvU atl yawr ttea or cstfy fomt tpuv tiaM lotbe testae**, «adauk» tot mate aa t— terns paroum ftw,

arrlKMirtistyoM work. W&mm maSm aach

•M wmml yam tmiaCB

cteac*. AMm HALLETt )uA.)(ate«,

tervf

•fife

vSv/h "V Wfc

4

sv 3

Itvi of the sweetest wordsln the English languftge b«gin with H, which ia only a breath Heart, Hope, Home, Happiness and Heaven. Heart is ahopeplace, and home is a heart-place, and that man sadly mistaketh who would exchance the happiness of home for anything short of heaven.

The Telephone Exchange.

The following are the names of scribers to the Telephone Exchange, in regular connection, together with respective numbers: 1 Vandalla freight 2 Seath Jt Hager, 8 Elevator A,

1

McKeas'a mill, 5 B. 4 T. H. freight offlcc? Mayer*» brewery. 7 Ohmer'a Depot Hotel, 8 Peddle's office, 9 Phamix foundry, 10 Haddock'* mill,

11 1 "St freight offlcc, 12 Hndnnt'a mill, 13 Wabaeh Iron Company, 14 A Parker's foundry, 15 Thompson's mill, 16 Co* & Fairbsnk's, 1? Bcancharap & Miller^ 18 Stanb, ,5 j. ... 18 Clift & Williams,

sab now their

4

4

20 National House, 81 I & St down-town office, 22 fc E IRH General Agent's office, 88 Terre Haute House, 24 Adams Express office, 25 A Mewhinney, 86 Hulman's store, 27 Patton Bros, 28 John Zimmerman, 29 American Express Company, 80 National State Bank, gl Wright fc Kaufman, e2 Western Union Telegraph office, 88 Great Western Dispatch office, 84 Joseph Strong, 85 & S E railroad office, 86 MeKeen's Bank, 87 Vandalia genera, offices. 88 A Austin & Co, ,! if 89 Keyes & Sykes, 40 JBaur, 41 FF Keith. 42 Prairie City Bank, 48 RW Rippetoe, 44 NS Wheat, 45 Rapp's mill, 46 Dr DcPny, 47 Eugene Ice Company, 48 Moore & Hagerty, 49 Briggs «fc Holmes, 50 Buntm & Armstrong, 51 Brinkham & Russell, 52 Daily Express, 58 Estonians Reese, 54 Unioa Depot ticket office, 55 Vandalia Yard Jtaster, 56 Davie Davis, 57 Iliinois Midland general office, 58 Dr WTillien, 59 Oil Tank Line, 60 Evening News, 61 Hamilton, Kiddle & Co, 62 NaUworks, 68 Dr Welnstein, 64 Couuty Clerk's offlcc. 65 JohiiB' Lumber Yard, 66 A Schawl. 67 Kidder Brothers, 68 Jeflers, 69 Dr Link. 70 Shryer Brothers, 71 Fonts & Hunter, 72 Staff, 78 Dr Kuster. residence, 74 Vandalia Auditor's office. 75 Evening Gazette, 76 Postofflce. 77 GNicholai, 78 Banermelster & Buech, 79 Edward Gilbert—residence, 80 E Somos, 81 Shelburn Coal Co, 82 City Cleak's office, »8 Chfef-of-Police office, 84 Boudiiiot. Brown & Co. 85 Bement, Rea & Co, 86 Havens'private office, 87 Luther Hager, 88 Wright & Wright, 89 Isaac Ball, 90 Hulman'e residence. 91 Clay MeKeen's residence, 9i

Christ Stark,

98 Ryan, 94 Master Transportation Vandalia railroad, 95 Frank Prox. 96. Board of Trade. 97, Smith &,Burnett, grocers. 88. Dr. J. R7Crapo. ft?'. Ellis Woolen Mill. 100. J. M. Dishon. 101. Joe Briggs, grocer. 103. C. C. Smith, let street store, 108. C. C. 5th street store. 104. Dr. Morehead. 105. J. C. Kelly, IOC. C, U. Goldsmith. li»7. Coal. Bluff. Mining, & Co.

A a ftTO $6000 A YEAR, or $5 to fSO a day \l» 1 li MiH your own locality. No risk. W'oI mI II |men do as well as men. Many make yi am more than the amount stated above.

No one can fail to tnfcko money fast. Any one can do the work. Yoa can

make from 50 cent to $2 an hour by devoting your evenings "Bnd spare time to the business. It costs nothing to try the business. Nothing like it for money making ever offered before. Business pleasant and strictly honorable.- Reader, if you want to know all about the best paying business before the pnbllc. send us your address and we will setod you full particulars and private terms free. Samples worth$5 also free you can then make up your mind for yourself. Addrcs. GEORGE 8TINTON A CO., Portland Maines 84 m6

AGENTS WANTED .RKrMX&ffi iver invented. Will knit a p#tr of EEi aini TOE complete. In also knit a great varUty ot fancyre is always a ready market. Send omblr Ksittloc

tins Macblnee ver m-ined stockings, wUaJB 90 minutes., iWTll

AtjruEB Amr. itor.

."SOUTH

atx qtaof ncdlela*.

TH.X IT NOW Bar It a* tha DrlaiMa. Prtaa, ILM, •sua, iicmsear a oq., pmbMm, 3 But Wax •».

•m

KMwa» Wort afaaadr pwi prtatoaa wt ttLis mi pMNtttaHftatdftMwi aa wall aa

fcjr. X*

la

lt mm Aran t»MI at

St., Boston, Mass.

J-.&. RASSETT, (Je a'/ AdwtUmr,

Late of*1 trOWS A*n FAHSL"

and

WEST,"

PCBU8HED AT 210 TLK* STREET, ST., LOU18.

By ALFRED AVERY & CO.

iVndl for Mtnplo oop.eiof "flOUTit and WEjOT,** which Is A fin»t-cla«« aprlculturai and family pai**, puWlabcd ^mi-monthly at tho low price of GO CkXTS A YEAR. Politic* are entirely lirnon^l. General news rnloablo Information, and inu-rortlng reading matter we furnished. The best of txwrwvondenU oontriboto from ftllsccii^nftrf tho country. Uwful premiums ami liberal rnmmi*«iotis wiG be given toclnbraisers. SAxri.cs FREE. "SOUTH4 WEST,"

Pino Streot, 8t« Lout*, Mo­

Aemats, CottpmboNlr*, A Fsra Mwiwy ta itMtfji #or» fwitt t» sveeMsfBl ftmia#.

TELL! HOW TII

Make Money IU23*^eaiS2-

INtves ansif Ummnttm «Mt wofSMHai M9 MfM. o.

'erehaots, Hannfaefnrers,

en( FJoriatt^ Stationers and mm People dcSigtittd wtti, «ctd Make and Bnt Money BFRNSAFTBA WOM-FFTMCD HTAS

PRESS

*8 «aier»«r MMfacawmi

J, w. |3ya#M*r C5». 72t OmttMut St. PkUaO^fiUa

National House Saloon.

Among tram

McBrsrw* 0»., aad •oM^hHraar rtd ACo^ mnfMam Ihae^MMstMt T.B, (tMittiOiteSnol

wkwa, Mftdnc.

KyM^l a*Aa from nttn stock at

Ae^tMof thaflaMtgndMfatte

Snsincss ©vrettorn.

CAL. THOJIA".

OPTICIAN AND JEWEL 639 Main atreet, Torre Haute.

1

vQittorneuft at £au.

McLEAK & SELDOMRTDGE, Attorneys at Law, 420 Main Street, Terre Haute, Ind

S. C. DAVIS. 8. B. Dins, No DAVIS DAVIS, q.

Attorneys at Law,

22% South Sixth Strcot, over Postal Terre Haute, Ind.

Argand Base Heati

I3ST TIKE LEADa Always was, and always will b£

E.L.PROBST, Fourth street, bet. Main and Ohio.

WM. DRETJSICKE,

CARPENTER AND BUILDER

Manufacturer of Dreuslcke's

Patent Refrigerators,

Cor. Ninth and 8ycamore Sts.,

TERRE HAUTE IND

$900 Reward

OVER A Mil LION OP. Prof.

Gullnietto's] FRENCH

Ilavo nlreailjfe.^ been sold in tliisS country and France, over, of which has en perfect, satis-} faction, and has performed cures every time when used according to directions.

We now say to the afflicted and doubting onej that we will pay the above reward for a single casj of

BACK

That the pad fails to cure. This Great Remedy will positively and permanently cure Lumbago, Lame back. Sciatica, Gravel. Diabetes, Dropsy, Brlght's Disease of the Kidneys, Incontinuencc and Retention of the Urine, luflamation of the, Kidney's Catarrh of the Bladder, High ^Colored, Urine, Pain in the Back. Side *r Ix»Ins, Nervous Weakness, and in fact all disorders of the Bladder and Urinary Organs whether contracted by pri-| vatc disease or otherwise. i* yon are suffering from Female^ Weakness, Leutecorrhea, or any disease of the Kidneys, Bladder, or Urinary Organa,

YOf CAN BE Cf'IlKD!

Without swallowing nauseous medicines, by simply wearing

PROF. GUILMETE'S

FRENCH KIDNEY PAD,!

WHICH CUBES BY ABSORPTION. Ask yonr druggist for Prof. OuUmatta's French Kidney Pad, and take no other if be has not irot it, send &00 and yoa will receive the Pad by return mail/'

TXBTIX01TIAXJ TMOM THE PEOPLE. Judge Buchanan, Lawyer, Toledo,©., aays: "One of Prof. Oullmette's French Kidney Pads curcd mc «f Lumbago in three weeks' time. My case bad been given up

tnr

the beat Doctors as in­

curable. Dunag all this time I suffered untold agony and large same of money. George Tetter, J. P., Toledo, 0., ears: "I suffered for three yeara with sciatica aad Kidney Disease, and ofUn bad to go about on crutches, 1 was entirety and permanently cured after wearing Prof. Otsllmette's French Kidney Pad four weeks." unire N. Scott, Sylvania. O., writes: "I have been a great sufferer for 15 years with Bright'* Disca*e of the K!dn«/s. For weeks at a ttis« was usable la get oat of ned took barrels of medicine, but tbejr gave me only temporary relief. I wore two mt rrof. Ouilmetle's Kidney P»d« six weeks, and I now know I am entirely cured."

Mrs. Hellen Jerome. Toledo, O., aays: "For years I bare been confined, a great part of the tiioe to my bed, with Locorrtea and female weakness. I wore one of Oullmette's Kidney Pada and was cored in one month."

H. B. Oreen. Wholesale Grocer, Flndlay, O.. writes* "I suffered for over SB years with lams back aad hi three weeks was permanently cored by wearing one of Prof, Gullmetto's Kidney Pads.

B. Y. Keesling. M. D., Drugjrist, lgatispojt, Ind., when tending in aa order for Kidney Pads, writes "I wore one of tha first onas we bad a»d I received mora benefit from tt than anything e*er aMd. In fact the Pads give better general satisfaction than any Kidney remedy we ever sold.*4

RarA gfaronafcer. DfuMist*. Hannibal, Mo. "We are working up a Uvelr trsde In jrour Pads, and are bearing of food results from them every day."

Prof. Guflnaette's Frenelt Liter PaA. Will positive!/ car* Fever aad Ague, Dumb Agus, Ague Owe. Blilioas Fever, Jaundice, Dyspepsia. *.nd ail diaaaaaa of tbaUver, 8tom«h and Stood. Price §1 Wbjrmafl. Send for Prof. nilm«ttte's Treatiae on tn« Kldmrys and Liver, free by maiL Address vBEXCV TAB C*«

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Toledo, Ohio,

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