Daily News, Volume 2, Number 153, Franklin, Johnson County, 16 February 1881 — Page 3

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1

4.

W

prtuu They Knew Four Thousand Year* Ago.

from one of these boobs, compiled after niannet of our modern eiicyelopaduw,

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tbe compilation of which shown to vc been made more th ui 2,000 years B. it ban been ascertained, fetch luw long .,*cn supposed, that Chaldea wo* the pa*ht land of astronomy for it Is found, this compilation and from other j, that the Babylonian catalogued the jjArs, and diattnguitib&d and named the Ibnstellation* that they arranged the Twelve coiwtollations that form our pres|t/zodiac to show the course of the sun's [Hi in the boa vena divided time into eka, months, and years that they diided the week, as we now have it, into |ven day»,»ix being day» of labor, and the fsventh a day of rest, to which they gave, a

*me from which we have domed our rd "Sabbath," and which day, aa a day rent flrom all labor of every kind, they jy served aa rigorously as tbe Jew or the Alirttan. The motion of the heavenly

Jfches and the phenomena of the weather 1 .fere noted down and a connection, as I jjivo before stated, detected, as M. de Perle claim® to have discovered, between ^3 weather and the change of the moon, ihey invented the sun-dial to mark the *""Movements of the hoiveuly bodiea, the |e.ter clock to measure time, and they (e iu this work of tbe spots on the Btin, v% fact they only could have kyown by the id of telescopes, which it is supjwsed they (tomegsed, from olwervations Chat they have joted down of the rising of Tenus and the "krt, that Layard found a crysUvl lens tho

40U

Diini of Nineveh. The "bricks" contain account of the deluge, sulwtautiaHy the iiime as the narrative in the Bible, except §tut the names are different. They dis» wlose that houses and lands were then sold leased and mortgaged, that money was •j loaned at interest, aud that the marketfpinlencrm to use an American phrase, fworked on sharesthat the farmer, when

*vaeu

J«rc

^owtug with his oxeu, legiiiled his lal»r r|pt short and homely songs, two of which been found and, to connect this vet^r

I^mote civilisation with the usages of toAny, 1 may, iu conclusion, refer to on*? of fpfi bricks of this library, in the form of a ^We, which is to the eflroci that visitors are #.'equretrd to give to the librarian the num* wt»r of the book they wish to consult, and 'jiat f' will \vs hrougnt to (hem at the pefttsiu of which one is disposed to fkll back \ron U»e esclamation of Solomon, that .There is nothing new under the the sun."

CM KK

1PEJ'

JXE8DAY. FEBRUARY 18.1881,

4

HBLF.

Tfcw vrot W I* tail Of labot, ll ioll* In w**ritje» Too t*uootl*»r luburdeo,

BaiyvacaanuUceft Mm. A JtiUip ctotW la trying To Jin Jx-nvy load: iW th« helpl#*** latter

Along th*wmry road. A jM^.oOk). frt«MlleMwoiaM J* t«4t*r!i)g on akxj#: B«rtmnbitncatret»cti» te« M»l«d Itn (to after Iwr jroar own. l)«x»fh UUJ* be tbe action.

It* hmut ttwe Lord wfll aw. Awl win b* |)H wttitew. -VedM lieniux'^.* -—•I'si.. i.,l

,i,

JMJim.

HOPE.

*f apeak aoddmua wtlii fc*M» d*H Of tome «or«M*w»In* brttrf day: Te CHln the bappy bright

Ait madly pre** lb* crowded way, Tb# world grow* oM aad yoeo* by um». Bat bum an bopr itticbutfini l*»r»*. Hope leada (It* tu&ot forth to life. 1 And gaily plomw the boytoli Iwsad.

Her cp*!!* torw yoatta to maaty ttrtfe, Xor kw^ea the v«*r*u'» dying bed: And wbefl 111* o'*r, front the tonics

Hope iprisji to abed bff lirifbtwi biootu. jfc Ail 1* not valu 11 (union—tw

Xero fa.no'. sprung from *rror"a br*h 1 Too wrll proclaim* the life know 9 A higher lift? naau *b*l attain:

Aud. »lwl tboae Inward vow** *ajr fcliall ne'sr tb# Uopeftal soul betray

JVHTIUK DALY, in Popular SriMonthly. I"

1

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A few yent* ago, a young merchant in ew Orleans whose business was fkirly teeessfttl was tempted to buy a lottery iickeU He drew a prite of $*0,000.

Money easily acquinsd is spent freely, libits of lavish expenditure and disregard business were soon acquired, and in four r* Mr. C. found himwlf a poor man. tend of going to work he devoted all ie money he could raise to the purchase lottery ticket#. Not long since, he paid his last penny three shares in a mammoth lott«sy fchemc. When the day of drawing came x»y proved to be blanks. He went home ithout a wonl to his garret ami the next

ky

was found dead with a bullet through hrain. Few of our readers have any ides of the tent to which this specie* of legalised subline is carried on in this country. We all hear af the gm»t .Stat* lotteries which prominent men lend the faction if their names, Vail btwides thes»e there are Enumerable combination eompanit's, Tem£k* of Oood Fortune, etc„ which exist Ittly iu cimilar* seat broad tsasfc through cottntry. usually to villages and tiurm*

unwary victim sends his dollar or

4# dollars which is to bring hiia a golden Ifower, and receives a ticket printed in j&ariog colons and that is the end of it. %me d«j* the (tostmaster at New York

Philadelphia warns the police of a sua nU-ku* number of letters add reused to those combination ewupaniws etc^ and tbe lice discover titat Uw wmpany consist* a single shabhv swindler.

Smaller fraudulent coaeertis address Ivea to «cl»ool-boy* and ehilin ihtm, ehpneea of g»W w*trh«s au»i emea Auras* b*

.t«lvr*8v«

eenfes.

Jleio«r U«se come the wltole |w4t»-wiek-,fe mteta, and kwwt of all the mweraife I it tie sho^m in ohscwre atreeto in tlw ,i cities in which poor negroes servant* iris, etc^ aw eheated mot of Uteir «uail •4j*VilM9k

Tm bo« and girts should be earned of tempU»t»OB!S and asmred Uiat it is a

4-»

nwutim in t»d* that no man erer something out of t»0tla«.— ten,

sat I ha*"e heea a taard drinker fe said wi old tope* to mr in«a»e«. "Ye* I do.w at« mistaken. At oo« periW I Saeh a drop for orer two ywwt--to Act I lisak nothing but milk.** "Indeed! what wo yaan was that -Jfcly first trn."

4

i— J—

Feet DiMonlon In Cbins.

The binding of a child's feci is not begun until idie has learned to walk and do certain things for herself, a# it would be difficult, if not imp4,wiible to teach her aj\erwsrd. The rich bind their chtklren'fe feet from the sixth or seventh year, bat the poor do not begin until they are 12, or even older. Parent* who have been forced by poverty to sell a tlaughte* as a slave when she was a tbild? will bring her back afterward if tbey can, and then, no matter how old she is, they Wed up her feet and marry her as a lady. But the pain of binding a full-grown foot i* f«ud to be most intense. Strong white bondages two inches wkie, are mannfactored fbr Hie purpose, Tbfcse worn the first year are two yards long, and about five feet iu length worn afterward. The following, according U» Mian Fielde, is the method adopted: "The end of the strip is laid on the inside of the foot at the instep, then carried over* the top of the toes and under the foot, drawing the four to«s with it down upon the sole them* it is passed over the foot and around the heel, and by this stretch the to** and heel are drawn together, leaving a bulge on the instep and a deep indentation in the sole, under the instep. This course is gone over in successive layers of bandage until the strip of cloth Is all used and the final end is sewn down. To please a Chinawoman the "indentation" must measure about an inch and a hail* fw^n the part of the foot which rests on the ground up to the instep. The toes are then completely drawn over tbe sole, and the foot is so squeezed upward that in walking only the ball of the great toe touches the ground. Large quantities of powdered aimn are used when the feet are first botuid, and always afterward, to prevent ulceration and le^wn the offensive odor. The bandage is taken off only once a month. At the end of the first month the foot is put in hot water, and after it had been allowed to soak some time, the bandage is carefully unwound, the dead euticuTe, of which there is so iiuuh, being abraded during the process of unbinding. When the foot is entirely tiubcand, it is not unusual to find uh-ersaud other abominations. Frequently too, we are told, a large piece of flesh sloughs off the sole, and it sometimes happens that one or two toes drop oil'. When this happens, the patient considers herself amply repaid for additional »ufk ri»R by having smaller and more delicate fret tlmsi her neighbors! Indeed, the desire to have small l'eet is so intense that giri.- will slyly tighten tbeir own bandages in spite of the pain i" p.. i. i.

Xamcii of.Couiiiries.

Tbe following countries, it is said, were originally naibed by the Phceniciaus, the greatest commercial people in the world. Tbe names, in the Phoenician language, signified something characteristic of the places which they designate.

Europe signifies a country of white complexion so named because the inhabitants were of a lighter complexion than those of Asia and Africa.

Asia signifies letween or in the middle, from the fact that the geographers placed it between Europe and Africa.

Africa signifies the land of corn or ears. It wits celebrated for its abundance of corn, and all sorts of grain.

Siberia signifies thirsty or dry—very characteristic. Bpain, a country of rabbits or conies. It was once so infested with these animals that it sued Augusta for an army to destroy them.

Italy, a country of pitch, from its yielding great quantities of black pitch. Calabria, also, for the same reason.

Gaul, modern France, signiiies yellowhaired, as yellow hair characterizes .its inhabitants.

The English of Caledonia is a high hill. This was a rugged mountainous province in Heotlaud.

Hilicruia is utmost, or last habitation for beyond this westward the Phoenicians never extended their voyages.

Britain, the country of tin, great quantities being found on it aud adjacent islands. The Ureeks called it Albion, which signifies in the Phoenician tongue either white or high mountains, from the whiteness of its shore#, or the high rocks on the western coast,

Corsica signifies a woody place, Sardinia signifies the footsteps of men. which it resembles,

Syracuse, lad savor, so-called from the tinwholsome marsh ou which it stood. lihodcs, serpents or dragons, which it produced in abundance,

Sicily, the country of grapes. Soy 1 la, the whirlpool of destruction. ^Etua signifies a ftirnace, or dark or smoky.

/I&ihctics of Labor.

Labor is not drudgery. Some of its phases are of the most elevated character, •some of its conceptions rise alwve the lower tr«ide of sturdy toil into tho realms of sub.imity. Some of its productions attain the most exquisite perfection. It does not always cling to the absolute of necessity it reache# at times to the accomplishment of man's beatitude. It is not always a delver it assumes when requisite the emljodiment of the very highest portraiture of excellence, it visits The toller In dreams of marvelous felicity and presents to him visions of enchanting loveliness. It bears him from the harsh discipline of earth to the soothiilg freedom of celestial Jibertv. tinder ita msthetic influence he ts no longer a beiug

of flesh and blood he is transformed to an angel of light, and leaving his toilstrained muscles and thoughts on earth he so*** into the realm of ecstatic blics and repose. In moments like this the materialisation of his wildest dreams gives to hi* fellow men dawsltng gleams of superoal bliss,or such proofs ol benefleial utility a* they had never before experienced, aid opens to them a wide expanse wherein is ever to be found a solace for the harsh fatigue of strvnous toil. In proof of this, the delineation* upon the canvas of the idealistic sentiments of the world's most renowned pointers: or the creation from the quarry's rough block of the entrancing forms of beanty by the hands of sculptors of renown or the aottl-rtirring thonghta of the poet's most hanaottioaa wa$\ or the swaying infi» of the orators exciting aud well ^««i.ted words or the olroost vital mat which the inventor hits commanded into existence as the slave to perform task* of olitHy fer mankind efttlt and all, and even snot* than have bee® mesttkHied, cao he cited without aj»* nrehensiom of rebuttal.

In the wide field ef labor there are those whose dc*tiny to delve and itrottriev while others of their fellow workmen nod their allotted tasks in the higher plane of SKrtheUc production wh«»e harmony and ckttWKS are intended to soothe, elevate and utiero their seemingly less gifted brethren. There i» a gra&denrto labor which elevates it it times to the higher grade of inn

Booton Batked Beano.

rax NEW KXU LAX CITY Vj FAVORITE DISH,

Though Boston has acquired some fitme as a largti»cemmmer of this esculent, baked beau* h»ve been from time immemorial a favorite dish throughout New England. The sturdy men and women of genemtions ago, who braved dangers and hardships in planting an independent colony, added strength, to their

HUICWS

and muscles by

eating simple food, of which baked beans were a much cherished ingredient, aud of all ancient dishes none have stood better the test of time and the caprices of the appetites ef the people. But it is a little singular that, while New England is so large a consumer of Indeed beans, and New Engenders, more especially the residents of Bostoi^have acquired the mystery of cooking them perfectly, the dish is not in much favor elsewhere, and that the knowledge of baking them properly is exceedingly limited. It may be said that one circumstance is due to the other—that is, that where it is not known how to bake beans properly, they are naturally not a popular article of diet,- If the method and process of Inking were patented, it could hardly be more exclusively held by New England is. In New York aud other municipalities s. contempt is often expressed tbr the Athenian love for baked beans,and yet not long agoa fashionableclub house, on the occasion of a special gathering, sent by express to this city for forty quarts of Boston tm*ed beans. This manner of obtaining a dish they effect to despise is frequently resorted to, undoubtedly with profit to the buyer and seller. An experienced baker of this city, being asked why baked beaufi were not as popular in New York as in Boston, said: "Because they don't know how to cook them. They don't soak them enough, boil them too much, and then take them out of tbe oven before they are half baked/' "But it would bo easy enough for them to learn how to cook thera "Well, if it is, tbey dout learn. That much I know."

There is a 1 unch counter in one of the busiest sections of New York, whero genuine Boston baked beans are served, which is reported to be doing a "thriving business. Travelers in the West and South have noticed in the windows of re-stauranla in cities and towns placards announcing Boston liaked bums, but, on entering and eating a dish, find but little resemblance between it and the "home articie." Cns* "m

IU1

well-informed gentleman estimates that the consumption of beans in Boston is about 500 barrels per week, or about 10,000 barrels per year. One reason why Boston baked beans are better than any others is that they are almost invariably baked in brick ovens over night Besides baking a quantity to sell, the bakers, for tbe nomiual sum of five cents per pot, receive and bake the beans that are prepared by their customers, thus materially adding to tbeir own profit and tbe convenience of the public. It is a fact, certainly not universally known, that there iBin Boston an establishment devoted exclusively to the baking of beans, entirely separate from a canning institution. It is the only establishment of the kind in th® world, probably, and it is exceedingly doubtful whether it could live anywhere else. At all events, attempts have been made to establish similar institution* elsewhere and nothing but failure has berft the result, and it is now plain enough that a bean-eating com unity id equisite to support a bean-baking establishment The success of the Boston bean liakery was assured from the start, and its enterprising proprietor has climbed up the road to wealth by the bean alone, without assistance from the pole Every night iu the week the fire under the spacious brick oven is in full bloat, and two teams are kept busy daily delivering the pots and their not con ten is. Of uie customers of the bakery, AtUy one-hid are restaurant keepers, who pay twenty-five cents for two quarts of beans, and then retail them at ten, fifteen and twenty-five cents per plute. Tbe bakery consumes from 1,000 to 3,800 pounds of beans per week, and its oven fhs the capacity to bake 460 pot* in a single night It is, perhaps, worthy of note that the bakery is located in a fashionable quarter of the city, within a stone's throw of Washington street In conclusion, it may be said that tbe Athenian fondness for baked beans continues to increase, rather than decrease and that in spite of what the world' may say, Bostonians intend to have them Saturday nights or Sunday mornings.—Motion Herald.

Confine*! Chickens.

On some farms the crops raised are of such kinds that tbey cannot be injured by the poultry, which, coastsquently, have a wide range, There are, however, many poultry raisers who are obliged to confine tbeir fowls in a run of greater or less size, and who are not careful enough to provide amusement fbr them. A few tomato plants set to one corner of the yard, protected th lath until the fruit, begins to ripen, and then thrown dpen to the chickens, will give them healthy, cheap food, and what is almost as necessary, exercise. The melon rinds seeds, and an occasional head of cabbage, will be enjoyed. It is an excel' lent plan to piough up the yard a couple of time* in the course of the summer. It brings worms and bugs of various kinds to the surface and makes a good scratching pUse. If sown with oats and corn the young tender plants will be eaten. Any butcher will sella large feteiket fttll of bones and spoiled meat for a very small sum, And often he will be glad to give them away. If yon have an outside cooking apparatus throw all this* into a mddrou, cook and feed if not cot off the best pleoasi of «at pni them in an old pot with fcw piece* of chamKd, and be* a pteeft for on kitchen ston. The charcoal will prevent any offetasive odor. Chop fine any pieces that are .too bed go the howe, and every bit will be eaten. Throw the bones in one cotoer of the yard cod they will pwidwee worn* wad maggots in great *romhex* In some part* ofFwace these white are bred on pwrpoee for «&iekcai

sir*.

TnHtf fffrfrr.

maum

has prescribed either Saturday night or a circuit court.—[Syracuse Standard^—A"1 Sunday morning as t?he "correct time'7 to I when a fellow is sparking a wai ss, eat baked bean*, and the scene at the a Soup-pea-rior Court. ISt^kst. bakers then is the busiest of the week, Chronicle. And when half a dozen fellows Among the hundreds of bakers in the city l«y siege to a pretty 'girl heart, and a there are but few who do not "put to soak1' more favored one comes arid carries oil on Friday ivgbt from one to five barrels of the prize, the ease has been decided in the beans, which, added to the number cooked supreme court—[People Cause. Anrt in private dwellings, will give one a con- when a fellow sporks a girl four ception of how well deserving is Boston of years, and then goes back on. her and elopes bean-consuming city. A I with a leniale circus-rider, it is m-justice

The Frog Opera is a suitable OQfc for leap year. Sweating for one's daily breed is a pore vray of getting it.

When the slow eater calls for ketchup he means business. An unmistakable case of biuek-bawl-fng—a crying negro baby. 4

Nothing i* wholly bad." Even a dark lantern has its bright side. Can any oue improve his condition by whiniug. If not, whine not.? Jt

A young lady resembles ammunition, because the powder is needed before the ball.

Clean your last year's straw hat with a ietuon, and you may squeeze through the summer with it. Take this hint and le& tbe lemon aid you. "Will your mother ever marry again he inquired. "Not with my approval," she answered. "Such is my opinion thus far, and not a step father." "Pity is akin to love," he said. "Ah, yea," die murmured, with a flood of love light in her eyes, 4I am akin to be loved." Tbe ceremony came oft" in a week. "Spell love," said a young man to his girl one night last week.

Kiling

Aft-PCPt -V

rani«*i»« «*i*^*i

Doa't take mf of the quack ros\nim*, a$ they are regimental to the hut»*-r? cistern hut pal your trast in Hop Bitter*, which wiU core feoemi diJopidstion. -©#tive habits and all c®ffifcdi*e«*es. They saved Isaac from a severe extract of tripod ferer. They ere the pirns nnm* of w«dlcih«*.

uY-o-u,"

The suit for a lady's band is in the court of an' please.—[Marathon Independent And when she gives him the mitten aud he still persist*, it's the Court of appeals.— [Baltimore Every Saturday. And when a

fellow has four or five girls on a string it's

court. Grass as a Material for Paper.

It has been discovered that any of the common grasses make a superior article, and a patent has been issued to the discoverer. The following is the process: "The manufacture of paper pulp and paper from paper grass is one of the novelties for which a patent has been obtained. Any of the common grasses found in the field, lawn, or meadows, may be used, and it is said that the green grass pulp produced from them make

A

paper of great strength and length

of fibre, and possesses tenacity, softness and flexibility and further, that this paper is even softer and

more

transparent than that

made of linen. An advantage not to lie overlooked is the one of economy, since one square foot gives ixi the whole year,0.9 to 1.0 of a pound of green grass, making from 30,492 to 66.340 ]»onnds to the acre. One pound of green

grass

makes one-fourth

to one-sixth of a pound of fine, bleached, finished paper, or 3,711 jiounds of finished paper to the acre/' "So long as the sap is in circulation and tho cblorophyl, silica, and other inorganic matters are not dried in, in which event, the fibre is seriously impaired for the purpose of paper, either old or young grass may be used, but to avoid danger, it is best to have the grass cut or mown before it begin* to bloom." "The first process of manufacture is to pass the grass between the roller* of the press, which crushes or loosens the fibre and squeezes out most of the sap. It is then freed from dirt by Iwing throughly agitated or washed by other means in a large tank of water, in temperature either warm or cold. A perforated false lottom in the tank contains tbe grass and allow* the dirt to fall into the compartment below, where a pipe gives egress to the dirt and wash water. After sufficient washing the crushed groat is boiled in an open kettle, or in a steam kettle with lye, in a proportions of a pound of caustic soda, or two-tenth* ofa ponnd of caustic potash, or six-tenths of lime to 100

unds of grass. Writh an open kettle the iscontinned from four to five hours: with a steam kettle twohours will suffice.1" "Front the kettle the material goes into a filtering-trough of magnesia for aboat thirty minutes, then is placed a second time in a solution of carbonate of soda, and finally, a second time in a solution of sulphuric acid. These operation* may he repeated more or less, till tbe pulp is as fine aud white as required, after wliichit i* washed in clear water."

Another method is to filter tho crushed pulp with water-glass, and bleach it with a solution of chloride of lime or chloride of aod*. Still another it to bleach the cradle pulp in chlorine gas, and finish with waterglass, after which tbe pulp is washed with clean water.

Old Bob ftttd "Ottfeet Teaching."

"Object teaching" is not always racceasftil, as the following incident, related by the JPoK&'i Ckmpismm^ will ahow: "A mmtkman calling bin servant one day in* lu d(p him he wished him to lemn the names of books in the Bible. "Now," said he, "I will telli you the first, end daring the day I will aak yon what it is, to aee if yon remember, it ?s Genesis."

Later in the day Bob was called, bat he oould »ot remember what it was.

"Now," *aid the master, "I hav**wmy to impress it upon your mind, so you cannot forget it, Now, Boh,wehaveaho»*iji the stable: what do we call itf "Jencie.® "Correct, and we have a little girl to tbe kitchen, wha* do we- call her!"

*Very well. Now, pat the two together aad yon have Jennie-^—Genema. 1 think you can renunnoer it until termor-

Th« mart morning Bob was mnwnwd to appear before his manter. "Goed morning, Bob. Cm ywa give tarn the uaaei of the find hook in the Bibb

this m^aingr *Y«*. aah? •We^what HT

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hoa^aaiu* ,-r

"E-1, -V

0. Mm/rs

DYSPEPSIA.

s.

W.

die

timidly essayed. The courtship had been protracted one, but they are married now. When you see a man take oflf his hat it is a sign that he respects you. But when he is seen divesting himself of his coat it is a sign that he intends to make you respect him. "Did you know," said a cunning Gentile to a Jew, "tliat they hang Jews and jackasses together in Portland!" "Indeed," retorted Solomon, '"den it ish veil dat yon and I isli not dare." "My dear," said an anxious matron to her daughter, "It is very wrong for young people to be throwing kisses at each other." "Why so, maumiu? I'm sure tbey don't hurt, even if tbey do bit." "Oh, grandma," cried a mischievous little urchin, "I cheated the hens so nicely just now! 1 threw them your gold beads, mid they thought they were corn, and ate thrm as fast as they could."

BILLIARD PARLOR

A N

SAMPLE ROOM.

The HamlRomest in Western Indiana.

Finest and Beet

WISES AM) LIQUORS

of all kinds at the bar.

The stock of cigars on hand is culled from the choicest brands in the market R. FHISBIE,

No. 020, Main street

raHMAHKHTLV OUKU

tarn swum,

urn cixfums,

conmAtnw nut. H. Clark, 0OQth Hero, Vt. *aya "In

BeoaiMH II iilniimm itn

mr rr

7

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DK. HAKTHT* IKS TOme is BfCMnttoB of Protoxide Iron, Perarim Bark and ttwj Ptaoot*bf« ArcuctaUe*. Kadorscd by tbe Medical Profession, and reeomtale Eiliriur*, W»nt of TlUl-

Pevatr. ll wma every purpose whero a Tosrte 1« ttcc«*mrj. Uutficlnd If IKE DR. URTBI HGHCIKE CO., No. 213 Xortb Uala Strut, St. Lh!S.

CLIFT. J. H. WILLIAMS. & M. CLI

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. TERRS HAUTE, IND.

J". 3-. IB j*L R, 1ST A. IR, JD

JVTL^TISrXO

Mti

MACHIN

A I N E S O A N O N

CMW

acted like a ch*rm._ It ittf Pile*, ami has

Nelwn ftirelUM, of *t ABiaae, VL, *2*1*

C*. Bogaten, ofBerkiMra aaya. "Om pM3k•gehMdooa wonder* for me la oomptet«ly curto* ft iwrere liter aiul Kidney Oomj^atJil." 19 KITBEB LIQUID OB »BT FOR*

ITHA8 IMHyi)

WONDERFUL IT HI POWER, hm BMMHM it acta oa tfcc LITER, BOWELS aad KHMtElS at the aawa time.

nfttTT"*~rr

oa b«n» *lMk» d«r»iop© tn XidiMjr aad U*tany Wee*—, ailwrnwi, jr«nwtlMi. OKM«patton.M**, lta H3t—wHwn. WascralfJa jF«mi atoordf aad Teiiiati Oomptataia. |y In pet op la T««ft*M« rirm. io arm *y._g*^g8*_S£-2!lS^J5SiLS-!i? Karqaarlaef uM4tete*^ or Aim te arfar Ite owwtow

of them

that oaoaot

ATTH*

1*sfsr#!

mmam*.

WELLS, kIClABB*OJI CO,t 1W*. /WTO rnmd fl» dry srwuswww, rr.

AHBKCNORPAEFTOWTEJMAFT* Y«MBI

rwmrWwt HIiiiy »inmij. aclaAaMafCUtf MMHMI MW^ WW MRmtriiiRi «a *r»»faaa«e»liB«W, «aa*iaf ally tOUbmtaatWps**9 *T *a Ma turn Tuawiflu ww—rir^l I toUwiwi mm«j it»li IWNMIIIWM*. zjfSsmAWDtauwoui *r xmmoam

WELU. nUMAMMW*

ik

AND Four*

Manufactmer ct

Portable and Stationary Engines, Flour, Saw Mill and

MINING MACHINERY, HANGERS, PULLEYS. SHAFTING, UPRIGHT AND HORIZONTAL STEAM ENGINES. ©02 N. Sixth Street, Terre Haute, Indiana.

HOP BITTERS?

(A Medicine, not a Drink.)

HOPS, BI7CH0, MANDRAKE, DANDELION, AND TH*

Pram Aim Bierr M«ntCAi.Qnxw TIKK or ALL omen BITTKKS. THEY CUBE All r1«ea*c* of tbe Stomach, Bowel*, Wood, jut ver. Kidney*, and UHnnry Orptan*. Ner*

TOUiacM, SiceplMiMioM ami especially Fouialo Complaluu. SIOOO

'•J

BLOOD.1

Fevers and Cbronle C1U1U and

IN COLD.

Will be n*tl for a r.«#e ttjpy wil! not curc or help, or for anytlilnit Impure or Injurious fcuud in Uietn. Auk yonr druft^Ut for Hop Bitter* *nd try them before you deep. Take no other.

T, C. 1* an abnolutr and irrcnlntlbtc euro for Drunkenness, u»e of opium, tobacco and narcotic*.

BOVP ROB

CI8CUI.A*.

AH thorn «oM by lirtwgM*.

Itnp RHtffl M(|r. Co.. N.

I

A Tenuis, On I.

Qusincss dircclorji.

•CAI, TIIO.WAW.

OPTICIAN AND JEWELER, 629 Main street, Tcrrc Haute.

^ttornegs dl Cato,

McLEAN & SELDOMRIDGE, Attorneys at Law, 420 Main Street. Terre Haute, Iud^

8. C. Davt«. 8. JBi Davw. Notary. DAVIS & DAVIS.

Attorneys at Law

22W South Sixth Street, over Po*thfflce, Terre Haute, Ind.

B7CTFF & MORGAN, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, OfBce—521 Ohio St., Fred ROM' building.

Pllpeiciang.

I

•^1

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Dr. A. Drake,

TETERIKlItY SURGEON

OFFICE:—24 north Third Btreet, (Oortco'a gtablec.) RE*TI*J*CB-—624 North Fifth, Trcam every dlMsa*« lt»own to horae or e*Ul at moderate cot. Hae met vlt& large PrKtle nwS onifora snztxtm* ifti*.

CALL ON

fHM*

/, CHAS. TALB OTT,„^l|

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Painting, Paper-hangliiz,

't J," Olttw

giCaisominine Q-laziiig, 6co.^,

All ofder^profcptly attended to. Lea?* order* at G09W* faraHure Stow..

WV«M MMIU, U1U.