Daily News, Volume 2, Number 89, Franklin, Johnson County, 2 December 1880 — Page 2
.k*
fc
DAILY" NEWS
B. P. BBAUCHAJfP. E.-r Hid Proprietor. Pablfcaikm itfBee, corner fifth tad Main Street*
Kaiervdets" Voet Otterf Mt Terrr B*«te, Ta&aoa, second-class matter.
THURSDAY, DECEMBER, 2. 1880,
THE brfpuiiws will begin ponry reign on Mondays»
MOBET has the advantage of Barnuta and Hewett he never wa* born. .J
sfcock,
«v -T
THE Republican majority on joint ballot in the Indiana Legislature is eighteen. In the Senate the vote will stamf 35 to 25
We fail to hear any great demand for the continuance of Carl Schurz in office. Equally no I* it with some other grade** of cheaply acquired cabinet fame
A RKWAILD of £1,000 has been offered for thoj deletion of the muiderer* of Wheeler, the late Irish landlord, whose cruel exaction made hi* name a synonym among the tenantry for all that was atrocious.
3=saa^^
THE anti-Jesuit movement continues in Germany, surpassing in bitterness and intolerance any political movement of the last half century. What readers' it the more melancholy spectacle is that it teems to receive official encouragement.
HAN3.AN and Lacock have signed the articles of agreement for that long-talked-about sculling ra^tch. It ia to come off on de 17th ot Januaty, tor' £500 a side, thfc Sporttman challenge cup, and the championship. The parties each put up lialf the stake money yepterday. •.-•i.i,. ssssr
AT last the full official returns are received from California, The total vote for Hancock was 80,882, Garfield, 80,257 Weaver, 3,881. Han cock plurality, 75. irhe electoral vote will stand five for &wi
and one for Garfield. Judge Terry, whoso killing of Broderick in the murderously contrived duel could not be forgoU ten, is the defeated Democratic electoral candidate. s-:
TITK Public Lcdgtr Htxy.H that it "would be a gopd thing, dOubtlefes, tdprosleutthe people engaged in swindling life insurance companies in *ti»e interior of this State, or thps^Who mate f»icqolation in life inlffratice policies a matter of busi1 neMfbut no on^ill liaye mudi sympatjj Iftu! ^&piu>fefep6car$fc^|o tl^rliiiafp&B operations as to insure for $26,000 the life of a woman in the last stage ofjconsump, tlOtt. ... .... OOLORKP WtCTQBBibetters have been written by Governor
St
Jotyn, M^s. Cpm»to others, who are laboring among &>lortd refugees down In Kansas, giving a detailed account of /the great sttffetfug «0|0ng thesfpopr peo !)Uct They jay tha& the ttrriva& eootfoue at the rate of about one hundred and fifty per week, most of them in a destitute condition. The weather is very cold, and as the .capacity of the present barracks is greatly overtaxed much suffering is the result. Everything is being done for their comfort that can be with the limited means at command. Mrs. Comstock and the Governor make especial appeaU for lumber. They need four carloads tp purjxjso of bntiding dew barrack^.
THB BE LSI8BFS CANAL SCHEMEA despatch to the) rM»*from Paris says the promotion of the Panama Canal scheme has been resumed with extraordinary •Igor. The movement is 9d universal that success as regards subscriptions and capital Is certain. Adhesions are arriving jfrom every quarter of the globe. -«r -s
M. De Lesaops told the Tims* corres pojndent that news arriving every moment confirmed his conviction that the enter* prise is safe. Every country in Europe is taking part in it offices Vebeicg opened ^ln Germany, Austria and Itsiy, and sub-
Icriptions are ffowtag In.
The English have ruu up the shares to premium on the I*ari» Boarae, by sending orders which cannot be executed, ex jcept by paying a premium. Founder# shares, wbloh vtfre, 50QO franc#, reach nearly 40,000 francs. 'WIhhixgtox HEWS. I
WASHIKOTOK D. C.
Nov.
80, 1880.
«J Bmo oo6 hai ittit 9tan ,that a combination has been formed in which Fair of Nevada, ta to hare a part. {Upuhlicans to qrganita lhe
jnaemUte ifphjk t»c-
have, it i« said, definite and satisfactory assurances as Vo the character of the cwn-
log admi£t«tr4$A- I Ol v.)
The leading newspapers of the country wlU have very Ml xnp oonw^wn befits here this winter, not so large, per haps, as the exciting event* of lime
ftha»
brought,
previou*to
otim***
any
point of number* J&tf York others, but the various agencies news and «ensation» |a times of
all of
papers exceed emp oytoent through which
the
aie
aW Wkwn. p.
p«m exhibit more energy and liberality than the New York Mmd* or Polit kai events
tat
those which make Wash
Ington life worth expensive reporUng and the ioter^ln* National poltttei
rather thai*
are
,?..s Eastern,and the of th»
E: Welti* rai^y *hiktii*toi
the Etutii nearly atatiooary.
mm -i
4
General Garfield expect® to leave to morrow night, but may be detained. As was certain (e be the case, politicians have taken up moist of his time lince he reached hefb. Senator Blaine has beea granted the longest interview. It is now held to be certain, that whatever "policy" the General may attempt to carry out, he will attempt it with the advice of those Republican leadera wbo have the confl deuce of the Republican masses. j,,,,
Many influential citizens of the district will this year repeat the effort of the last, to secure a liberal appropriation from Congress for the improvement of Wash ineton harbor. That barbor is becoming a marsh, slowly, but surely. A" comparative small sum judiciously expended now will prevent the total ruin of our water
front
or save enormous iexpense at a later date. It is a curious fact that every president during the past generation has earnestly recommended government action in this matter, and that nothing more has been done for thftn might have been done for the trout?streams annually provided for ia the river and harbor bills.
The National Grange, Patrons of Hus indiy, closed its annual session on Saturday. It voted to maintain an official in this city, The daily sessions of this year have been Ybxy pleasant, and the "Patrons" have created a most favorable impression. This city will be the place of meeting again next year. ".»*
Reports received here do not confirm rumors of a revival of "Exodus" feeling among the negroes of the Southwest. I am able to say, from personal observa tion, that the North Carolina craze among negroes on this subject is over.
KKOX.
Cheyenne men bet on anything. Two of them put up five dollars apiece on a wager that one coukl hold a wasp longer than the other could, and the fellow who rubbed the chloroform on hi» hand expected to win but'the other fellow happened to know that male wasps don't sting, and got one of that sex, and they grabbed their waspa and smiled at each other, while the crowd wondered, until the chloroform had evaporated, and the fellow who used it suddenly let go his wasp Aid let the audience into the secret of bow to swear the shingles all off the roof.
"This can't be beat," as the man when he bought a porcelain egg
said
Heavy RaiiiiUls, and Their Causes.1
We measure rain by catching it in a vessel called a rain-guage, the area of whose mouth is accurately known, and then calculate how deep the layer of water would have been if all the rain that fell into the gauge had been spread out evenly on & surface of the size of its mouth. A gallon of water would only cover a space of two feet square if spread out in a layer an iueh thick. Accordingly, an inch of rain falling on an acre of land amounts to 100 tons of water, and the same fall per square mild would give 60,000 tons. Now an inch of rain falls not very unfrequently at stations on our west coast in the course of a, day, HO that we caai easily see why two or three day's heavy rain cause floods in most of our rivers. The area drained by the Thames'!* 65 square English miles, or fivo [tiare geographical miles as statfcd Sir J. erschel and accordingly, an inch of rain
falling on that district would give us 4,000, CJ00 tons of water, which must almost all of it drain oft' the high lands and flood those lying lower before it ultimately finds its way to the sea.
However the wettest weather with us is almost dry when compared with that experienced between the tropics during the rainy season. Old Dampier, in his 'Theory of the Winds," says Of the Ialand of Gorgoviia, which lies not far from Panama: "I have been at this isle three times, and always found it very rainy, and the rains very violent. I remember when we touched there in our return from Cape Sharp, we boiled a kettle of chooolate before we cleaned our hark, and having every man his calabash fall, we began to sup it off, stand* ing all the while in the rain but I am confident that not a man among us all did clear his dish, Ibr It rained ao fast and such great drops fell into our calabashes, that after we had supped off as much chocolate aud rain-water together as sufficed vis, our calalashca were still above halt ftill"
a
The heat of the sun is the power that causes the water to rise into tho air. It has been very truly said that the world may le considered as a gigantic »t«am-engine. The Are is the sun, tire toiler the sea near the equator, the condenser the cold air of high latitudes like our own. while the work done is the growth of all vegetables and
Let look a little cloeer into this, and gee how the operation goes on. The action in virtue of which the wirier rises iscaUed evaporation. Water boils at a certain temperatures hot lobg before it boils steam may le seen rising firotn the vessel in which the water is being heated. In fact, attain—or, to uneak more correctly, aqueoos vapour—ruwe from every free*wster swrfttce, *t»d even from ice at all temper*tare*. This steam is not the white thing jtm aee coming out of-the ftrand of a locomotive, but a perfectly transparent m. When this la first cooled it form* little drops oF water called "bubble steam,* and tbcae bubbly floating in the air mafce an ettdne doud, just as a heap of pounded gf*« opaque, although the glass itaelf ma? have be«tt quite clear and transparent The reason is that the light is unequally refracted ia fasting through the ak and the water on u»giiM% &od so the rays cannoi get through, at ail, and the cloud looka Opaque.
The beat mode of accelerating evaporation ia WMiaea cnrreatoir dry air to mm over the aorfiiee of the liquid frwa %hieh the vapor fepweiady whaitamft place in the traris-rond none At all periods of the year, and aim in higher latitwdta whenever a east wind is Wowing, A»MM4fcav*per^»geaei*teA it la carried oft being absorbed by the air in it» pa*8%Bu end, the p&ee of the par. tially air at
taken tap by
rw«h jmppfcr of i&» whose ah*irt*wg pawtx Is as yet trnhnndred. Now warm air «n» mto.qanWt vapor than cold air and amwdingly, *u east wind ia always hecMoing warm«»d rmxmwt the nearer it get* to thr rmmm that the trade-windaat iht time th«r na odtas will bc mobture. tM mm* what wmM c*xu* a«naa» of air ao chaste* give up its nmiMtttx*
eh the limit of the equator#? nowHy «c qaite diarged with
The miupicst answer to this is, if we can coo! it, we shall, so to speak, squeeae the water out of it. .This cooU«n nuiy be tV«ctcd various ways. The simplest Js causing the air, wl»«n ch«ged with utoistnre. to rise up to a great bight IU the atmosi*here, where it fmda avery low temperature prevailiug. Every one knows tlsat ft is, aa a general rule, colder the higher ym ascend on a momitiiin but balloon aaoejits have shown us that not unfreqnenuy tc-uiperaturea extraordinarily low maybe met with at no very great distance from the earth's sur&ce. In .5850»
tvro
uentlemen, M. Barral and M. Bixio, aaceaded from PnriA. At the" height of 6.000 fert they entered a cloud which enveloped them till they reached the height ot «IV 000 feet, where the temperature was—*3 Fahr- and on ascending 1,000 feet further the temperature fell to—40® Fahr., so thaft the mercury in their thermometers froate.
Such a change of temperature as .this, amounting to upwards of lOtry would be sufficient to render tlicair, toall intents and purpopes, jjerfectly dry ajdaa we know that euormona volumes of air do rise at tkfi equator iuto the higher strata of the atmosphere, a slight calculation will show us how much rain might be produced by this simple action.
A layer of air a foot thick, covering an acre of ground, itod possessing a temperalure of 80°, as it not infrequently dot's close to the line, could contain nearly nine gallons of water. Accordingly, a column five miles high covering the same space, wouKI contain 1,000 tons of water if completely saturated at that high temperature. Now this is uot at all an impossible condition for those latitudes, so that, wheu we take iuto account the constant motion of the atmosphere, the place of air partially dried being constantly taken by a fresh suppbr charged with aqueous vapor, the prodigious torrents which pour from the sky in the wet seasons become ^uite intelligible.
Dampier's account gives a lively impression of what these rains are and we hear from one observer that the rain in the West Indies falls "not in drops, but in streams of water." These statements are confirmed by accurate measurements made by means of instruments. Capt. Ronssin says of Cayenne, that between Feb. 1st and Feb. 21th, 182U twelve feet seven inches of rain fell.
The wettest region on tho earth is not, however, Cayenne, or even a district situated between the tropics. This distinction is justly claimed by Cherra Ponjee, in the Cossia Hills, lying north-east of Calcutta. There, in June, 1H51, at au elevation of 4,500 feet, 12 feet 3 inches were measured,while the total auunal rainfall is 600 indies or 50 feet! The average rainfall on our own west coasts is about 30 inches, so that at Cberra Ponjee, twenty times as much fells, and that within the space of alMHit six mouths. The reason of this unequal distribution of the fall is that when the monsoon changes, and the warm and moist south-west wind is blowing north-eastwards towards Central Asia, it meets a ridge of high land which it must pass over, and iu its passage it is chilled, and deposits its burden of water on tho western slopes of the hills.—Biglishjxtpw*
The Hotel Clerk.
Only those who have perfect self-controJ, and can merge their identity in their position, are fit to greet the public in a' hotel office. Unfortunately too many clerks are deficient in this all-important qualification for the position they hold, yet wo can see an improvement, as compared with the state of thiugs a few years ago, and we hope to see the day wheu any complaints on this head will be unnecessary.
Self confident clerks are too ready to ignore the necessity for the constant and continual employment of the element of courtesy in their business. They do not, they will not, recognize how absolutely essential it is to succoss, but sponer or later thev will learn to appreciate the truth of every fine—every word that has been written on the subject,
Ar4t*n«aw or Ar-k*n-a*a.
The true pronuucication of the name of our state is receiving that serious attention which its iiuportauce requires. A joint committee tnuu the Electic and Historical societies have had the matter under consideration, and will report at the next meeting of the latter.' While the latter pronunciation, above indicated, accenting the middle syllable and sounding the nual a, has the sanction of some polite usage, it is understood that the committees are largely and decidedly in favor of the original pronunciation given bv tho French, and will report the pronunciation as nearly correct, which is in use by the maw ofoldcitiirens, ving the Italian sound of a in each syllathe final« aflont With a alight accent on the first and last syllable* The only objection to what fa called the rulgar pronunciation is that the final $aw is too broad. It should be «i, with the aound of« as in Urther. It la i+ he hoped that yme settled pronunciation will be established, irhfeh lexicographer* thing which has never jet„been don*/— UtOt Back Gntrtif- ..
A Boawttftd Ko^ectton.
Bulwer eloquently «ys: can not believe that earth is man's abiding place. It cannot b»tha*o«*Ufe cartnp by theofiean of eternity to INwt«pon lt» wmv« and th^ sink into nothingness etoa, why ia it that the glorious a^iriktiona which l*p like angels from thetaeinpile6f oar hearfeare imr# wandering hbont unaatisfed t_pjy isitthattbeminbowscocna over tss with a beauty that is not of this oarth, aod then Mmo#«adle*v» tsa to araa» «pon their Smd iovaiineaaf Why it that the stain, which hold their festivals around the midnight throng are set above thenup 3wriim»t«dfl^lti«. tew mo^sw us with their awp««rfabiego*y* Asd, finally, why Is it t&t hri^it ftem* of human bean ty are p*v*«nted to oar view, and
ofatreanui of o«r rffectioastoflow in Ald»e tocMBta *pem our hearts *Wea« ho^fer*hi,^r Mngr that of e«r^rthew4a»teatek where tin futihw ikrtrw fiwlen. and wheare Oj«
pumwo SMti'vii'
National House Saloon,
Some bat the tnoul liquor# kept annate.. Araosg ofticr brand*, i« some stx-year old wblaky frow McBr»jwr Jk Co., and some eight-year old from
the ccl£tsiUMl T. fl. Klopy A Co., ©anufactorer* from the Cedar Brook Ky^a}l made from h«rd iaa)e noar Their cotlre stock of wise*, bnotdie*, &e<, ate pf tbc tne*tgr*de» inth« nurket
The Only Remedy
[THAT ACTS AT THB SAMS TIME OH|
THE LIVER, THE BOWELS, and the KIDNEYS.
TTiit combined actum git**
derpH power to cure ail diet nee*.
I Why Are We Sick?!
ImmtmrngMg gggggmg gjjgjg SSSSSSSSBSS3SI Became tee aUaic Vuee great organ* \io become dogged or torpid, and I poitonoue humort are therefore forced I unto the blood that should be ezpeUed\ I naturally.
BILTOUSXESS, PILES, COXSTIPATlOy, KIDXKT COMPLUm, URINARY DISEASES, PEHALBWEAK5K8SE8, AHD KEBTOUS
DISORDERS, &
by canning free action of iheee organ& I and re*toring their power to throw off dietaee.
TThr SvffVr Billon pa!** u4 wbei
Why kin alocplcaa alghU Um KIDNEY WORT and r&*c* in I I health. It it a dry, vegtiabU compound and
ON paducevlU auke «lx quoT IMkfaw, [Get of your Drugal IU trill order it [, for you. Price,
$1.00.
WELLS, BICBASP30H CO., Proprfatm, (WtlMDdpaM|Mtd. Birlblte, V|»
((:"s! 'NM
ZaiMpoaMtotlMuig«Btx*qtMt* of great
aumbonaftwoptowhoiiirtbr to yu«ok«* RldnarWort vfpmni, th» proXsrletoMofUUa MlataMted rtaatAr vow ynpkronisliqaldftirBi W*U dry. It is ,nj ooaoontrstod, la pat up ia lars* toottlM, I ladtatqwUly aflolwtMthttrntnp dry In ttaoaa*. It MWI TBO—ityof preparing,
Is ahragrB ready, »ad lsmore eaaQy taken by meat paopta.' Priee, SI per bottle. USaeOTD AMDDHY BOZJi BT UBXTOMUBTa &1CHAKDSOK A CO., Prop'm,
iter.
f*i*»
Whatever pood qualities the hotel clerk may possfes8,if he lacks courtesy he cannot succeed. The traveling public isolicn rule, illbred,-unreaaon&ble,- difficult to please, ungratful for kindness-shown, and too ready to liutl funl ton the shglicst provocation, yet such as it is tho graveling public supports the hotels, and very gene roily supports bc&t those wliere its wants, whjuis and eocentricitiee are patiently borne With, and its wrath ia iu rued aside with a soft answer. In no business docs courtesy possess such a mercantile value as in the hotel: nowhere, else can iucivility result in such speedy and positive loss of income.
$ Late of "HOME AKD FARM."
"SOUTHliid WEST,"
1
rVBUSHBO AT 210 PlM* STRXKT, 8Tm LOCIf. By ALFRED AVERY & CO. Senil for sample copies Of "SOUTH and WEST,'* which Is a flrafc-claes agricultural and family paper, published seraj-monthly st the low price of60CKKTS A VBAB.
140
nk1-Makf(be
15
lead, liaise.
win uta. tlmo.
it
von-
NRWS is
Bnrtlmjrt«*. Tt.
Politics are
entirely firnorea. General new?, Talnable Infor-.. mation, and interesting reading, matter are furniehed. The best of (XHTespomicnto contribute froniallsectionsof thec-ouuuy.bBeful premiums and liberal commissions will bo given to clubraiaurs, SAMPLK8FREE.
Arllre38, S0UTH&WEST," £16 Pine 8treet, St. Louis, Mo. It mi AffsnU to S«U th« StamlarA AKTfenlttirri B«ok
Farming for Profit
Bar**
iany ttaaea It* eaat crerr Beaiiqa. SM p«|M.
IUatiratioai, Send
tor
Cirrnlai* *nd ternu to
J, O. MeCUBDlf & CO., Cincinnati. O.
Merchants, Manufacturers,
men, Florists, Stationers and Business People
everywhere are delighted with, aa4 and 8ave Money by using world-renowned Model
PRESS
PRINTING
rFroDTO™
required, itronf, rapid, lay boy can tn*n*fe It,
idfoTdoUm worth of work everrreer. Weaaka itytck, both head and tootpow. nj«fa« to prtce frng 'wSL Send Mentoaautfor dreatm. Ont jeoo la
Mid K)d toot jprtoe from
The MODEL puntsaaamade ma oyer FFC.oslaM
(utamuS. Send Mentoaamfor dreaUi*. Orer r/*» la Sm.liT"ThaM ODEL PMMB made ma war ffc.oslaet
ariJ«t« alooe."-W
P.
WOOLAXD, FairMd, Ulfc T£a
MODat doe* all ttdttwimrt tlita H. SirrORK, Newton, N.J. Flrrt PHaet at Pert*, "ji,
aadSydaey,
lt!s!w., '79. AdAweaIlordar»orliKprfH«tOBMU»iketn»e»« J. w. DuufUSaa Of. 731 CUtnut St. PhiltftifM*
TO fCOOO A TEAK, or $6 to *W a day in your own locality. riak. women do a# well a* men. Many make i' more than the amount stated above. *No one can ut meke, money fft.
Anyone cani'd tS»# work, Yoo can
make fart* VJ cent to f9 *n hour by demoting ydnr evening *nd epare time le tiie on-ine««-. It .cojta twiihlnj/ to try the bt«#ur^», 5nthing like it for money waklnr r*rr offered before. Bonneaa plf*«#t.t an«I "iriifti* hnnorable. Keader, if yon wanttoWtowall a twit the bf-t trying htifinees ron- tie public. aenl a* y««r iiltlrtiw and we will a*tid T-u ftll particular*, and prhai* lenn* free. Fiinplf* worth fn »l«
free:
yoa ran Then
make «p yoor mind for yecr-flf. Addre*. OSORGB STINTON CO.. PortUad Mataee Mme
Morton Post, No. 1,
asr ABTVBjrr ot taniaaa. TEBBE HATXTE Besdqaartert 83H 8oatk Tilrd.
Jtefolar meeting* flrit and tkird tlandiy ereiSmt1*. eadimotttb. lajrEesidttBt Room «)tea every **Cffl^idea Tiaitinc «ke eity wil alwaysjbe aasde welOMDe.
W. IB. McLBAN, Cosi'dr. i*rCra*«i»«AdJ Gao. PLamft P. l3f. si Headqtarteys
A WfiKKtn ymirown town.maa s« capt tainsketf. Too eaag!*'* the toulseSs trial without ezpeaee, Tha beat eppor* inni^f ercr offered for those wllttag W .wwrtL Toe aBoaid trf aoifcinc else aatfl yoa eee fbr yonrself what yoa eaa do at MM vwiaew we o9mr. Ho reosa te rvpti&m here. Toe caadnoteaU year gate or *ly four spare ttne tothe Iraslaee^ sad *ake fteat pay for or«fr boorthat TOO work. Womea make as m&eb as sea. Send for apecUl prtrate t*rm» wjd pmt cicala** wkleli w« SMB feee. t&M o*Utt free. Doa^tecNaplaia ot hard times while ytm ha'reanefe ackaaee AMnm HAI.L8TT 00.. Port
JfcSklliak* W*BTTCt)ttledtWp«iaintwo
Or lUM
AO Em WAMTEJ 90* MMW MOOM
MARCHAL.
»& I Vu
!*WDt»irCanraaai HTftr Sala by all
The People's Paper.'Arpd Base
Hx. I um, i.*-'* um -v 1 •OF THB PEOPLE, FOR THB
PEOPLE, BT THE PEOPLE.
The Terre Haute
DAILY NEWS
Possesses many adTantafee aa a daily
newspaper over all other competitors cir
culated in the City af Terre Haute.—TH*
a modern neteepmper in the full
sense of Jtlie term. It "belongs to that
class of pApers which is flourishing most
signally in the East and West, and filling
the especial want of the people of to-day
viz. a cheap, spicy paper which furnish-
es all the new* in the most reliable form.
Many of our people cannot afford to tak^
the costly city papers, while others find
neither tho time nor the inclination to V" ,j peruse theirlcngthy and indistinct columns
printed ing&mall type. Tim NEWS pres
ents^ compact shapt tha t^epaphie aod
genejjl i£f8 ls^sjgr^id, out inter
minably in the metropolitin journals. cri f.p Itfl editorial columns, while dealing large-
fy'wlfti Naftooal^Wd State politics are
especially devoted to city, township and
countr affairs.' And the miscellaneous
literary selections are soiled with great
care, and with a conscientious regard for
the Instruction and morals of the com
munity. The soand and healthful in
fluence of a hearty laugh is recognised by
Tun NRWS corps, aad aa effort is spared I 5 to lay before oor patrons the latest and
choicest productions af Aa Twaias and
Burdettes of the laad.
la more towaa thao any other daily ptp^r
j- 0 I
nod ha«
4
tfc WC^era Saa£tt.f *be DAIW W&iW^ii
tha only fearleaa outapokeo aad aoter-
Hit# I
prising daily west ef IndiaaapoH*., The
I fj
Jf V* baa htcraaaed ,bar airenJation
ooa thoaxaad withl# liic lat UaJfty days.
*4 '4
now *, tomm jldr
1
tbeKswt
ei?cal*tioo
*A. *fi
SMITH ORGAN CO.
ouadt tfcl* VhTV
S jPwaaWMi^BWa aPmSi -SWaa
esttyrainieeaiUfKt*?.*'16 bemerwnd t* o«irOrgma t* r«tan»«l!» »».
jjtiuuA
itSeea* OTKItl
NEW PREMIUM CORN SI
•XIYCHKAP P&ACTtCUS HASDCJKNSm.
MAnK-
aajaia«iati«K.~i
TWO IMPORTANT ADVANTAGE FIRST.—It does not njnre the corn, and is thereto*! tlilne to naa for shelling corn for aeed^
SKCOND.-The tip end and butt cod ot the eor| Celled into one Teasel, and the body ot the ear intw which la an Immense conv enir nee, as many farmers p, thacorn from theralddleof theear.
DfllCvf mis iv ur tie vv' IKNTS WANTKD ineveryCowity. laa« Country Stores and Dealers in Hard1
11ST THE 3L.E3-A.:
Always
was,
and always will
E. L. PROBST. Fenrth street, bet. Main aiid (M
WM. DREUSICKJE
CARPENTER AND BUILD
,* Manufacturer ef Drenticke'a
Patent Refrigerfttors]
Cor. Ninth and Sycamore St«„
TERRE HAUTE
OVKH A JLION Pror. tiullmc
FREN
Mitre
A
ht'cn «old country
Kmncf.evpi of which en perfect faction, an| performed every time lifted accordl' directions.
an| vci
•if anf sd
We now nay to the afflicted and donbtln that we will pay the above reward for a sln«
LAME3 IB-A.C
That the pad falls to cnrc. Thii«' Great It will positively and permanently euro Lu Lame hack. Sciatica. Onttcl. Diabcte*, 1 Bright's Disease of the Kidneys, lncontl and uetentlon of the Urine. Inflatnntlen Kidney's Catarrh of the Bladder, High C4 Urine, Pain In the Back, Bide er Loins, Na Weakness, and in fact all disorders of the 1)1 and Urinary Organs whether contracted bj at is as or he is
1
The elty dapartmaat af the Kaws is 't
1 1 1
S
wall looked after. Bach day it aontains
oftfirwisii
la our midst. Senaaiioaalisai in statement
&L
patrans are able la rely apoa the sub-i
staaUal aocsraey,af.ea# sad every Html
Ladies, if yoo are suffering from Fol Weakness, Lenoecorrhea, or any disease ef Kidneys, Bladder, er Urinary Organs. yoi' can uv. ci niDi Wlthont swallowing aanseons medicines, by if wearing
PROF. GUILMETE'8
FRENCH KIDNEY PA WHICH CURBS BT ABSORPTION. is* *onr drnggist fer Prof. Onilmette's Fr KUbtiey Pad. and take no other if he has not send £.00 aad yea will raceira the Pad by mail."
TXtnxosiAiJ nam
'*1 anf
THX
no
Jfndge Bnchaaaa, Lawyer, Toledo, O.. says: "^Uaette'a ftssch Kldst^ itkr« heed in tkreoweelb tljBt •tsb ap
by the best Ddata
all-this time 1 aoffered
agony aad large stems of^saoney. George Vetler, .. P.,Tolede, O.. says: iffered for tlwio jeara with ftciatl Kidney iHfkase, and often had to go a.
cratches, 1 was entirely and permanently a/let wearing Prof. Qailaiette'a Freach Pad foot weeka." I .i"
Qalre H. ScoU, gyhraaia. O.. write#:
,7I
have beea a great safferer for 15 yea Bdgkfs Diaeaae of the Ktdnem For w^«k= tine was aaable to get oat of bed took harye medicine, bat thev ga*e me only temporary re vat* two .at.ftot..Oallmette six weeks, aad I now know I am entirely can
Mrs. Heuen Jerome, Toledo. O., says:
of
boat tOOO. Tha Kvwt caa be orderd
-I "i| i* pig it
througit
\h*
Yaws bozea, «r dljnect from
office,^ smwr
Pads and wa# cored in one motitb." H, B. Of?ea, Whalesals CJrocer, Flnalay
fair ^2^1* ^,^,
and la tBree week#
was
pe^anentlr cor.
wearing one of Prof. Gonmette* Kidney B. v. Keesling, M. 3D., Iro*|rf*t, Lygansp Iod., when sendmg la aa order for Kidney *%ire ooe of the tfrst ooes we had and celred more beneSt froar tt than asythiag I sued, la fs*A the Pad* jf«« geaensl factioc "We are working op a lively trade in vow and are hearing: of good rcaalta from tham dar."
Pr«r. 6aUa*tte'K French Liver
mette iqriaafL
(U*er, Stomach
alldiseaeetfof
Price $1 50
tt
stall. Send for Prof.
't Treat Ue oa wfe Kidneys aad Urer, tfL Adaresa klEROi PA0 Cm..
Toledo,
