Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 2 September 1872 — Page 2
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DAILY EXPRESS.
TEREE HAUTE, IFD,
Monday Morning Sept. 2f 1872.
GETS. JOSEPH R. HAWunr, of Connecticut, has agreed to visit Indiana and make several speeches in this campaign.
A. JOHNSON is arguing down in Tennessee that the recent war was causeless, and that the secessionists were clearly in the wrong. Whole families agree with A. J. .jfl
THE telegraph informs the public that justice haa been exalted and the law vindicated in South Carolina by the strangulation, in the most horrible manner, of two black men.
THE telegraphic news this morning is particularly horrible and sensational, in" eluding the details of two great ocean disasters, an atrocious Indian massacre, and the arrest of modern Lucretia Borgia, for poisoning five persons.
1 seems to be generally understood that Charles O'Cohor will not bite at the bait offered by the Greeleyites in the shape of nomination for Governor of New York That he will accept the Louisville nomination is not sure.
THE Commissioner of Patents has lately issued a patent to John K. Weed for a hash of dried fish and potatoes, as an article of food. Patent hash' Will there ever be a stop to the inventive spirit of this remarkable age
THE Chicago Tribune recently expressed doubts of the results of the whole scheme of emancipation, and now it indulges in flings at the black people because they are ignorant. The Greeley movement ,will make its little impression on the Rtouleit Republican newspaper.
THE straight-out Democrats of Fort Wayne want to see Mr. A. P. Edgerton nominated for Vice President at Louis ville. Mr. Edgerton was the Democratic candidate for Lieutenant Governor in 1SG8. He is one of the wealthiest men in the state.
THE Chicago Times has words of truth and soberness in reference' to the New York Sun: "Probably the most reckless, sensational, personally venomous, and every way untrustworthy public journal of the second class in this country is that which is edited by E. M. Stanton's whilom beggerand spy, Mr. Charles A. Dana, and called the New York Sun."
A HAND-CLASPING is advertised for Louisville, upon which occasion it is understood that the soldiers of the North and the soldiers of the South will bury the fratricidal hatchet and fall upon the shoulders of each other and weep tears of reconciliation while singing the battlecry of Horace. The meeting will not be numerously attended for the apparent reason that, excepting heroes of the late strife who are candidates for office, there are few who feel like taking the trouble to go to Louisville to indulge in a species of mock sentimfentalism. The soldiers of the North and South learned to respect each other in battle, and, generally speaking, they have friendly feelings for each other, but they do not think it necessary to travel far in order to proclaim to the world their undying love.
MASSACHUSETTS LEADS. The first inan killed in the war of the revolution was on Boston Common, and Massachusetts blood was the first to flow in the war of the rebellion. Massachusetts furnished the heart and brains of the abolition movement. There never was a day nor-an hour when the black fugitive could not receive food and shelter and sympathy from the people of the old Bay Stftc. The nation has followed the leadership of Massachusetts Steadily since the trouble about the tea in Boston harbor, and what honor America has obtainpd among the powers of the earth, is due in large part to this implicit following. Massachusetts does Bot propose to yield the leadership. The Eepublican state convention, in session at Worcester on the 2§th ult., adopted, with scarcely a dissenting voice, a platform which included the following resolution:
Booked, That we heartily approve of the recognition of the. right which is_ contained in the 14th clause of the National platform, that the Republican partyof Massachusetts, as the representative of liberty and progress, is in favor of extending suffrage on equal terms to all American cilizenSj irrespective of sex, and will hail the day when the educated intellect and enlightened conscience of women find direct expression at the ballot-box.
The Republican party of Massachusetts plants itself squarely in the van of progress. Heretofore the motto of the Massachusetts Radicals has been, "Trust the manliood of the nation." Now they add the inevitable corollary, "Trust the womanhood of the nation."
The cause of woman is inevitable and unconquerable. The wealth she has gathered, the sceptres she has worthily swayed, the volumes she has written, entitle her to the ballot. The nation can not .afford much longer to disfranchise the potter and purer part of its population. The country heeds her ballot. The cause of honesty, and of purity at the polls, calls for her assistance. Men may laugh at the woman movement, but it Will not yield to scoffing. Every step in the world's progress has been met by the same derision. So the Jews laughed gleefully at the carpenter's son who preached eighteen hundred years ago in the valleys of Judea, little dreaming that the poor Nazarene was founding the religion of civilization.
Invisible forces of go*d help the great reform. He utters abase libel on free government who asserts that woman will be fevered or degraded by exercising the duties and privileges of full citizenship she will be ennobled and exalted by so doing. The woman of barbarism ^is a slave, ., the woman of civilization is destined to be man's equal and companion. This is the fiat of the future.
It was a good day for the land when the Republicans of Massachusetts put woman suffrage upon their banner. The Republicans of the nation will soon fol
low tlus
leadership.
OBDER is finally fully established in Belfast, and there is room for hope that it will be long before the people of that city will again begin "murdering each other in the pame of God."
THJSBE was another advance in the price of coal in England, on 8aturday. The English people need not be alarmed. America will furnish them with both iron and coal after a little time.
THE Austrian Minister of Foreign Affairs assures the states of Europe that the impending meeting of the three Emperors, in Berlin, must not be considered a menace either to France or Turkey.
THE St. Louis Globe is a good newspaper, and the public will be glad to learn, by the following extract from that journal, that it has been entirely successful:
The circulation of the Globe has_ run up far beyond our highest expectations, and it tries the capacity our press to get off our editions. In a few weeks our new rotary Hoe press will arrive, and we then hope to supply the demand and get out earlier than at present. The Globe, though but forty-five days old, will be found circulating all over the country.
WE publish elsewhere a communication giving the names of Butler county Democrats who will not go for Greeley. If the list is accurate, and we presume it is, the number of Bourbon Democrats in the longstanding Democratic stronghold of Butler is larger than was represented in the information received before this. —[Cincinnati Commercial.
THE LIVINGSTONE LETTERS. The credibility of Stanley is fortified by the following additional testimony: "AMERICAN GEOGRAPHICAL SOC'TY'S ROOMS,1
COOPERINSTITUTE, NEW YORK,Aug. 29, 72. "To the Editor of the Herald: "DEAB SIB.—I have compared the original letter of Dr. David Livingstone, addressed to James Gordon Bennett, Esq., Jr., with an original letter of Dr. Livingstone's, dated 'Rivershire, in Africa, January 6,1862.' and addressed to the President of the American Geographical Society, and do not hesitate to pronounce the handwriting of these two letters to be identical. "E. R. STBANZNICK, Rec. Sec'y."
THE ladies have won another battle in Great Britain, which ought to assure them all the privileges for which they have so persistently contended during the last few years, against the colleges. For a long time certain women of the United Kingdom have insisted that it was their right to receive a medical education at the Edinburg University, and also a diploma if they properly qualified themselves for one. But the Edinburg professors held other views, and excluded the ladies from their lectures, and denied them diplomas. Upon this the ladies appealed to the courts, and recently Lord Gifford has decided that women are not by law excluded from the enjoyment of medical degrees, and that the Scotch universities must not only admit women to their courses of regular medical study, but must, when qualified, grant them di-
flomas
entitling them to practice.—
Philadelphia Inquirer.
OF all documents ever made by the hand of man, the Declaration of Independence is perhaps the most precious. Certainlyj there is none so dear to American hearts, and there is something very painful in the assurance which comes from Washington that the manuscript is fast fading away, and that in a few years the parchment bids fair to become a mere blank. Nearly all the signatures are said to be already effaced, and unless some remedy is adopted, it is easy to calculate the time when all those memorable names will disappear. Surely, however, this can and ought to be prevented. If we mistake not, many old manscripts have been restored at the Imperial Library at Paris. No time should be lost in arresting the further effacement of our great national heirloom, even if unhappily it should prove impossible to restore the portions that have become illegible. Both the Declaration, and Washington's Commisssion as General and Commander-in-Chief are now on exhibition in the Patent Office and we trust that steps will be taken at once to stay so far as may be the mournful ravages of time.—[N. Y. Times.
WONDERFUL CELESTIAL PHENOMENON. Spccial dispatch to the St. Louis Globe.]
LEXINGTON, KY., August 30.—Wondrous celestial phenomenon was witnessed here to-day. Abou!t noon, while the sky was perfectly clear, a faint halo gathered about the sun. It soon assumed a yellowish cast, and then, in the course of half an hour, five circles, tinted with all the colors of the rainbow, made their appearance, one after another, around the sun. Then, for nearly two hours, brilliant globules, apparently one-and-a-half inches in diameter, were emitted from the various circles. Some made their appearance very slowly, like bubbles rising to the surface of water, while others were shot forth like the fire-balls from Roman candles. Myriads of them were in motion at once. Most of them took a straight line in the direction of the earth, while others shot off at a tangent. At first they had a brilliant white light, which became less intense as they approached the earth. The globules increased in size as they came near, and finally entirely disappeared before reaching the earth. The weather was very cool, although the sun was shining bright.
This wondrous scene was witnessed by nearly every person in the city, and created no litte alarm among the ignorant and superstitious. The local savans are puzzled, and can give lio explanation of the phenomenon. The popular belief is that it was the long expected meteoric shower.
IT
IS a little curious, the perfect equan imity with which the world receives predictions of its own destruction. Of course, it can hardly be expected to be more excited when the extinction of another planet—the sun, for instance—is foretold, as now it is by Sacchini, an Italian astronomer. It appears that bright Phoebus is now evolving enormous masses of the vapor of magnesium. From this it is deduced that the sun may (1) fall off in heat or brilliancy, or may (2) in renewing his heat and light so increase the power of his rays as to make this world no world to live in. There is something, it must be allowed, quite touching in the childlike confidence which we all repose in the ability of the .universe to take care of itself. Comets, dark days and thunderstorms in January, eclipses, earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, Only frighten us for the moment, and when they are happily over we are quite at our ease again But, after all it is very much so with all abnormal accidents, pestilences, revolutions, anarchies, family disputes, insolvencies, and so forth. We have a faith in the good judgment of destiny, and a trnst that what seem to us aberrations are a part of the divine order. The exceptional man or woman fusses or frets, but the masses of mankind move on with a kind of animal stolidity. It is this unconscious and involuntary gravity which keeps the world going. Our business is with yesterday, so far as the understanding is concerned with to-day for work and production with to-morrow we have no business, and no thought of it, and, if we be wise, no feeling but that of a calm trust. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof, and equally sufficient is thegood. So when, if ever, the world is destroyed, the ruin will probably find most men un-
WBPW
expectant and busy about the common affairs of life—eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, precisely as they did in the days of Noah.—[N. Y. Tribune.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS Steiibeimlle, Ohio. leiale Seminary. This widely-known school affords thorough Christian education, at a coat of little moro than 85 a week one-fourth off for aergynieti. The 87th ecs?ioii (20 weeks) opens September lltli. The address of all former pupils is requested a grand re-union at the close of the next year. Send for particulars .to Eev. CHARLES C. BEATTY, D. D., LL. D., Sup't, or Rev. A. M. KKID, Ph. D., Principal, Agent* Wanted for CkinberlUt'i (treat Campaign Book,
The Stragfgrle of" '7S A Novelty in Political and Popular Literature a graphic history of the Republican and Democratic Parties a racy sketch of the socalled Liberal Republican Party an inside view of the Cincinnati Convention. The minor tickets or side shows of the campaign. The finest Illustrated Book Published. A Book wanted by every American citizen. To secure territory at once, send $1 for ontfit. UNION PUBLISHING CO., 165 Twenty-second street, Chicago, 111.
Presidential Campaijp
Cups, C?pes co Torches.
Send for Illustrated Circular and Price List
CUNKIXGHAX A BILL, MAXOACTCBEBS, 204 Church St., Phila.
Campaign Badges!
Thirty new and beautiful designs. Get a Price List of T. C. RICHARDS & Co., Manufacturers, *7 Murray St., N. Y.
Brilliant Colors and Best Black in Six Cord Threads.
J. & P. COATS' —BEST— SIX-CORD IN ALL NUMBERS.
Band and Machine Sewine
REWARD.
iFor any ease of Blind, Bleeding, 'itching or Ulcerated Piles that DR. BINCPS PILB REMEDY fails to
si*
cure. It is prepared expressly to cure the Piles, and nothing else. Sold by. all Druggists. Price $10Q. ..
FEVER AND AGUE.
Fellow's' Compound Syrup of Hypoplios phites, so celebrated in nervous and other debilitating diseases, is now being used with complete success, .curing Chill Fever after the failure of well known remedies,"quinine, fcc. One dose containing two scruples of soda and rhubarb (equal parts mixed), in a wine glass full of cold water, should precedethe use ot the Syrup. FULLER & FULLER, Chicago.
Sold by all Druggists.
A
STAPLE ASB FANCY
1ST OTX OIsTSJ White Goods, Shirts, I BUCK GLOVES, &C.
Exclusivo Agents for all Piece Goods made by the Vigo Woolen Mills. No. 140 ••i
Main Street^
TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA, -t,
All orders promptly attonded to. d«
•JJNI02? STEAM BAKERY.
{FRANK UEINIG & BRO.,
Manufacturers of all kinds of g£Bg
Crackcrs, Cakes, Bread,
9i'
v*
AND CANDY.
Dealers in
Foreign and Domestic Fruits,
Fancy Staple Groveries,
LAFAYETTE*STREEl,
Between the two Railroad?,?-^-' TERRS HAUTE, T£i»T
JJALL, BLACK & CO
665 and 507 BBOABWAY,-
IEW YORK,
Will continue the sale of their immens stock of
SILVERWARE, DIAMONDS,
JEWELRY, and
F.A.ISRCRS' GOODS
Dutiag the
RUMMER, MONTHS.
1 All Oootis will be sold
WITHOUT RESERVE
AT A
GREAT REDUCTION,
TO
CLOSE THE BUSINESS.
_CE!
ICE!.
I E
The undersigned have purchased the ice of J. Steinmehl, and agree to t&rnish the same to all consumers during the season
At the very lowest Rates
.All orders loftAt
IslaTha
Washington
REPUBLICAN TICKET.
NATIONAL^
For President,*
ULYSSES 8. GRANT, of Illinois. For Vice President. HENRY WILSON, of Massachusetts,1:
STATE.
For Governor.
HON. THOS. M. BROWNE, of Randolph. For Lieutenant Governor, :LEONIDAS SEXTON, of Rush.
For Congressmen at Largo.
GODLOVE S. ORTH, of Tippccanoc. WILLIAM WILLIAMS, of Losciusko For Secretary of State,
WILLIAM W. CURRY, of Vigo. For Auditor of State. JAMES A. WILDMAN, of iloward.
For Treasurer of State,
JOHN B. GLOVER, of Lawrence. Reporter of Supreme Court. fJAMES B. BLACK, of Marion. 'Clerk of Supreme Court.
1
MS Mi m®
The Chemistry of Divine Providence has never produced a mineral water which combines in such perfection the qualities of antibilious tonicZand cathartic medicine, as that oi the Seltzer Spa the Tarrant's Effervescent Seltzer Aperient is the artificial equivalent of that great natural remedy.
New Boot Free,.£££«*
important questions. Address, with stamp to pay postage, Mrs. H. METZGER, Hanover, Pa.
Amoney
GEHTS—Wanted—Agents make more at work for us than at anything else. Business light and permanent. Particulars free. Q-. STINSON. & Co., Fine Art Publisher) Portland Maine.
URIAH JEFFIBS. ELISHA HAVIFCB,
FR
JEFFERS & CO.,
Commission Merchants
And Wholesale Dealers in
1
CHARLES SCHOLL, of Clarke. Superintendent of Public Instruction..' BENJAMIN W. SMITH, of Marion.
Attorney General,
JAMES C. DENNY, oi Knox Elector. Sixth District, JAMES T. JOHNSON, of Parke.
CONGRESSIONAL.
For Congress,
GEN. MORTON C. HUNTER, of Monroe.
JUDICIAL.
For Judge Circuit Court.
DAVID H. MAXWELL, of Parke. For Prosecutor Circuit Court, ROBERT B. SEARS, of Vermillion,
For Judge Common Pleas Court, ISAAC N. PIERCE, of Vigo, For Prosecutor Common Pleas Court,:
W. S. MAPLE, of Sullivan.*
Wi
From No 8 to 100 Incluire, "J FOR "V
COUNTY.
ijSfgl ForSenator, -5 nARVEY D. SCOTT. For Representatives,
WILLIAM K.EDWARDS, PATRICK H. LEE. For Clerk. TOUISSANT C. BUNTIN.
For Treasurer, .f fat
S CHARLES H. ROTTMAN. *tr For Sheriff, JOSHUA M. HULL 1 fi-t"" For Commissioners. 1st Dist—STANLEY RO^BINS.
2nd Dist—JOSEPH FELLENZER. 5 For Prosecutor Criminal Court, I RICHARD S. TENNANT.
For Real Estate Appraiser,
i' PLEASANT B. RIPPETOE 1 For Surveyor, ALEXANDER COOPER. {.f*v «l EorCoroner.
WILLIAM D. MULL.
Principal Office, 101 W. 6th St., Cincinnati, O.
The only Reliable Gift Distribution in the country!
1
$50,000.00
IN VALUABLE GIFTS! •Tjw' To distributed in
L. D. S iisriErs
a
157th Regular Monthly
Gift Enterprise,
To be drawn Monday, Sept. 9th, 1872.
One Grand Capital Prize of'
$5,000 IN GOLD Two Prizes.pf Two Prizes j9MPive Prizes, gg
6BEENBACES!
One Famib Carriage and Matched Horses with Silver-mounted Harness worth $1,500 One horse and buggy, with silver-mounted harness, worth $600. One fine toned rosewood piano, worth S5P0. Five family Sewing Machines, worth $100, 750 Gold and Silver iever hunting watches, worth from $20 to $300 each. Ladies gold leontine chains. Gents' gold vest chains, solid and double-plated silver table and teaspoons, photogragh albums, jewelry, &o.
Whole number of fiK's 6,000 Tickets limited to 80,000,
Agents Wanted to Sell Tickets, To whom Liberal Premiums will be paid. Single tickets, $1: six tickets $o twelve tickets, $10 twenty-five tickets, $20.
Circulars containing a full list of prizes, a description of the manner of drawing, and other information in reference to tne Distribution, will be sent to any one ordering them. All letters must be addressed to li. D. SINK, Box 86, Office, 101 W. Sib St. CINCIMUri. O
S O E S
TIJTVPJIRE.
U.
'i
Saloon S
Main Street, between 2d and 3d, will be promptly attended to. Ice can be nad there at all times., Respeotfolly, 6574t Mg SIETUS ZOUL11C.
.'it.
REFRIGERATORS.
ICE CREAM FREEZERS.
in/
•*,
S. R. HENDERS01T & CO.
assTi
Ml
vz&JOHI tih&ra
SOUTH JSIDE OF MAIN ST.
Bet. Fourth & Fifth.
EAGLE IKON WORKS,
Cor." 1st and Walnnt Sts.
TEKKE HAUTE. IHDIAXA,
J. A. JPAIiKEIl, Proprietor, sg (Successor to W. J. BALL A Co.)
MANUFACTURER OF"
Stat ionery and Portable Engines,
Flouring and Saw Mill Machinery, Corn Shelters,' Cane Mills and Machinery generally
Iron r.nd Brass Castings, ftci
J. A. Chance. John Teagcr, Wm. Cornthwait.
CHANCE & CO.
CUSTOM PLANING MILL,
XOBTH SECOND STBEET,
SASH, DOORS, BLINDS,
Mouldiugs, &c.
Win. Cliff,
Henry Cliff.
CLIFF &
SON,
Manufacturers of Locomotivo, Stationery and Marine
g. BOILERS,
Tubular and Cylinder. '.^.c
Iron Tanks, Smoke Stacks, Breeching, Sheet Iron Work, Door Steps, &c., 1 st St. bet. Poplar A Walnnt,
Repairing done in the most substantial manner at short notice, and as liberal in price as any establishment in the State. Orders solicited and carefully attended to.
Wabash Woolen Mills,
Established in 1854.
6.
F. ELLIS, Proprietor.
Wool Dealer,
And Wholesale Manufacturer of
WOOLENS,
OFFICE AM) MAflUFACTOBT, K. W. Corner First and Walnut Sts. Terre Haute, Ind.
gp-
Y. G. DICKH0UT,
-fit 4%
TRUNK and VALISE
M-A-lVTTir .A. TTTlilLIS,'
Afe sMir---.'
•I'^TERItE HAUTE, IND,
$ 1 0 0 0 0 0 0
SECOND
GRAND GIFT CONCERT 1** FI IK AID OF THE
ii
J.
Public Library of Kentucky,
i%
$1,000 $5co $100
i' $
BACH IN
"lAT liOVISVIItliE, KT.
BYincorporating
authority in tho act of the Legislature the PUBLIC LIBRARY UF KENTUCKY, the Trustees will give their
SECOND GRAND GIFT CONCERT
In the great hall of the Public Library building, in Louisyille, Ky.t on
Saturday, September 28, 1872.
100,000 TICKETS OF ADMISSION
Will be i8sued*at $10 each half tickets $5 quprter tickets $2 §0 11 whole tickets for $100 28 for 8256 56 for $500 113 for $1,000 285 for $2,500 575 for $5,000. No discount en less than $100 worth of tickets at one time.
During the ooncert the sum of
§500,000
in Currsncy'^:
Will be given to the holders of tickets by distribution by lot of.. ONJS XMOUISABil Wlfrs, as follows:
LIST OF GIFTS.
One Girani Gift. Cash ..i.iglOO.COO One Grand Gift, Cash.. 1 1 1
4 Gifts'of !fSi) each
15 20 21 25 35 45 50 eu
1,OJO
aaw
900
800 7t0 600 500 400 300 2(,0 100
y,t •til
100 612
V.
Mj
5TJ
I E 3 O A E S
£li%*
''."t
Total, 1,000 Gifts, all Cash...$500.000
The drawing will take place in public, in full view of the audience, and nnder the immediate supervision and direotion of the officers and Trustees of tha Public Library of Kentucky, and'the following named eminent and disinterested citizens, who have confented to be present and se? that all is fairly dene
Hon HAKDIH, Judge Court Appeals, Ky. Hon PHOCTOR KNOTT, late Lebanon
Dist.
Hon W BBUCE, Judge Ninth Judicial Dist Ky. Gen ELI MURRAY, S Marshal Dist KR. Hon COCHRAN. Chancellor Lou- Chan.
Court,
Hon E STANOIFORO. President Farmers' and Drovers' Bank. Hon JOHN BARBCB, Manager Royal Insurance
Co, Liverpool.
Col PHIL LEE, Com. Att'y Ninth Judicial Dist. Dr GRAHAM, founder Graham Cabinet. Col JILSONP JOHNSO", Manager Gait- House. Jr S BKLL, Prof Medical University Louisville. Hon a BAXTER, Mayor Louisville, Hon BURNETT, City Attorney. 'MIf HKNRY WOLFORD, Treasurer Louisville. A
O BR*M*IN, Pres't Manufacturers' Bank. JAKES BRIDGKFORD, Pres't 2d National Bank. W WHIPS, Proprietor Willard Hotel.
JD
OHNSON, President Trader's Bank. ViCTja
NEWCOHB, firm of Ncwcomb, Buchanan tc Co. HENRY DBPPEN, President German Bank. AKSREW GRAHAM, Tobacco and Cotton Merchant Dr NORVIN GREEN, Pres't I iC Short Line
Railroad.
VOL ROSE, Agent Adams Express Company. lnos. E. BRINLRTTK, Ag't Public Library of Ky-. Public Library
Building,
&
Vinegar Bitters are not a vile Fancy Driht, made of Poor Rum, Whiskey, Proof Spirits and Refuse Liquors, doctored, spiced, and sweetened to please the taste, called
a
Tonics," Appetuera,"
Restorers," &c., that lead the tippler on to drunkenness and ruin, but are a true Medicine, made from the native roots and herbs of California, free from all Alcoholic Stimulants. They are the Great Blood Purifier and a Life-giving Principle, a Perfect Renovator and Invigorator of the System, carrying off all poisonous matter and restoring the blood to a healthy condition, enriching it, refreshing and invigorating both mind and body. They are easy of administration, prompt their action, certain in their results« safe and reliable in all forma of disease.
No Person can take these Blttera according to directions, and remain long unwell, provided their bones are not destroyed by mineral poison or other means, and the vital organs wasted bevond the point of repair.
Dyspepsia or Indigestion. Headache, Pain in the Shoulders, Coughs, Tightness of the Chest, Dizziness, Sour Eructations of the Stomach, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Bilious Attacks, Palpitation "of the Heart, Inflammation of the Lungs, Pain in the regions of the Kidneys, and a hundred other painful symptoms, are the ol&prings of Dyspepsia. In these complaints it has no equal, and one bottle will prove abetter guarantee of its mfrita than a kngthy advertisement.
For Female Complaints, in young or old, married or single, at the dawn of womanhood, or the turn of life, these Tonic Bitters display so decided an influence that a marked improvement is soon perceptible.
For Inflammatory and Chronic Jthenmatlsm and Gout, Dyspepsia or Indigestion, Bilious, Remittent and Intermittent Fevers, Diseases of the Blood, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder, these Bitters have been most successful. Sucli Diseases are caused by Vitiated Blood, which is generally jjroduced by derangement of the Digestive Organs.
They area Gentle Purgative as well aa a Tonic, possessing also the peculiar merit of acting as a powerful agent in relieving Congestion or Inflammation of the Liver and Visceral Organs, and in Bilious Diseases.
For Slcln Diseases, Eruptions, Tetter, SaltRheum, Blotch«s, Spots, Pimples, Pustules, Boils, Carhuncles, Ring-worms, Scald-Head, Sore Eves, Erysipelas, Itch, Scurfs, Discolorations of the Skf Humors and Diseases of the Skin, of whatever name or naturet are literally dug up and carried out of the system a short time by the use of these Bitters. One bottle in such cases will convince the most incredulous of their curative effects.
Cleanse the Vitiated Blood whenever you find its impurities bursting through theskix in Pimples, Eruptions, or Sores cleanse it when you find it obstructed and sluggish in the veins cleanse it when it is foul your feelings will tell you when. Keep the blood pure, and the health of the system will follow.
Gratefnl thousands proclaim
BITTKRS
sustained the sinking system. Pin, Tape, and other 'Worms, lurking in the system of so many thousands, are effectually destroyed and removed. Says a distinguished physiologist There is scarcely an individual upon the face of the earth whose body is exempt from the presence of worms. It is not upon the healthy elements of the body that worms exist, but upon the diseased humors and slimy deposits that breed these living monsters of disease. No system .f Medicine, no vermifuges, no anthelmintics, will free the system from worms like these Bitters.
Mechanical Disease*. Persons engaged in Paints and Minerals, such as Plumbers, Typesetters, Gold-beaters, and Miners, as they advancc in life, will be subject to paralysis of the Bowels. To guard against take a dose of
VINEGAR BITTERSthis
KER'S
The properties of
GAR
BITTERS
50,000
$23,009 Cash 20,u00 15,000
1 10,000 5 9.0T0 1.,
1.000 7.000 6,000 5,000 4,(00 3,000 8,000 15,000 18,000 16,800 17,500 21,000 22,500 20,000 18,10) 2(1,000 61,200
RAIEIE
t*
LonsriLLK, KY,
M-Circulars, giving full particulars, sent on application. DURRXTT, President. W N Vice President. JOHNHALOEMAX,
S CAIN. Secretary.
FYEHBR88'
&
DROVERS' BANK, Treasurer.
TICKETS for sale in this city at office of the Terre Haute House and at N. Katzcnbach's Cigar Store.
GEIEKSOtf,
A I N E
Twenty-Pour Year's Experienc 3
Shop and Residence between Eagle id Chestnut streets, on Ninth.
DR. WALKER'S VINE
are Aperient, Diaphoretic and Car
minative, Nutritious, Laxative, Diuretic, Sedative, Counter-irritant, Sudorific, Alterative, and AmiBilious.
The Aperient and mild proporties of
DR. WALKER'S VINEGAR HLaxativeare
ITTERS tha best
safe-guard in all cases of eruptions and maiignant fevers, their balsamic, healing, and soothing properties protect the humors of the fauces. Their Sedative properties allay pain in the narvoti* system, stomach, and bowels, either from inflammation, wind, colic, cramps, etc. Their Counter-irritant influence extends throughout the system.. Their Anti-Bilious properties stimulate the liver, ill the secretion of bile, and its discharges through the biliary ducts, and are superior to all remedial agents, for the cure of Bilious Fever, Fever and Ague, etc.
Fortify the body against by purifyingall itsfluids with
SO
VINEGAR HdineascNO
ITTERS.
epidemic can take hold of a system thus forearmed. Directions.—Take of the Bitters on going to bed at night from a half to oiie and one-half weeglassful). Eat good nourishing food, su.'.li as beefsteak, mutton chop, venison, roast beef, and vegetables, and take out-door exercise. They are composed of purely vegetable ingredients, aud contain
spirit J-
WAI.KER,
CITY
3
The Hon. T&os. E. BBAMLKTTK. late Governor of Kentucky, has oonsented to represent the Trusteesinthe management of this second Grand tiift Concert, and he will personally see that,the money from the sale of tickets is deposited with .the Treasurer, tha the drawing is fairly conducted, and the gitts justly a warded-and promptly paid.
PLACING MILL
Sr' 1 iS Up
P* wp
\CLIFT & WILLIAMS,
mm #1
Manuiacturers of
fabrics at but a trifling advance.
VERY CHEAP. Prints, Muslins, Jeans, Tweeds, Domestic Flannels Cheap Shawls, Denim, Hickory, Shirting Checks, Ticking, &e., &c.
VINBCAK
the most wonderful Invigoraut that ever
WAI.KHR'S
once or twice a week, as a Pre
ventive. Bilious, Remittent, and Intermittent Fevers, which are so prevalent in the valleys of our great rivers throughout the United States, especially those of the Mississippi, Ohio, Missouri, Illinois, Tennessee. Cumberland, Arkansas, Red, Colorado, Brazos, Rio Grande, Pearl, A abama, Mobile, Savannah, Roanoke, James, ar.d many others, with their vast tributaries, throughout our entire country during the Summer and Auttnnn, and remarkably so during seasons of unusual heat and dryness, are invariably accompanied by extensive derangements of llie stomach ar.d liver, and other abdominal viscera. Ill their treatment, a purgative, exerting a powerful influence upn thefc various oi'gans, is essentially necesrarv. There is no cathartic for purpose equal to
DR. J. WAL
VINEGARtheITTERS
as they will jpeedi'y re
move the dark-colored viscid matter wiili which the bowels are loaded, at the Fame time stimulating the secretions of the liver, and generally restoring the healthy functions of the digestive organs.
Scrofula, or King's Evil, White Swellings, Ulcers, Erysipelas, Swelled Neck, Goiter, Scrofulous Inflammations, Indolent Inflammation.*, Mercurial Affections, Old Sores, Eruptions of the Skin, Sore Eyes.etc., etc. In these, as in all constitutional Diseases,
WAI.KKK'S VINKCARother/ HIT
TERS have shown their great curative powers in the most obstinate and intrac:able cases. Dr. Walker's California Vinegar Bitters act on all these cases in a similar manner. By purifying the Blood they remove the cause, and by resolving away the effects of the inflammation (the tubercular deposits) the affected parts receive health, and a permanent cure is effected.
w?
Prop'r.
R. H. MeDOfcA J.D & CO..
Druggists and Gen. Agts., San Francisco, Cnl., rnd sor. of Washington and Charlton Sts., New York. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS & DEALERS
tie
SASH, D00BS, BLINDS
MOULDINGS, &c.
1
I
Stairs, Stair Railings.
BALUSTE RS AND
NEWELL POSTS
Dealers in
LUM BER, LATH & SHINGLES
B®"Estimates and Price Lists furnished on application.
OFFICE A'D FACTORV,
Cor. Ninth and Mulberry Sts.
pES. WATERS & ELDER,
Honcopathic Physicians
—AND—
S E O N S
OFFICE.—Cherry St., bet. Sixth aad S.Teath jylS-dtf
tir.
The
water. Removes Toilet purposes. Agents wanted. Send 3-cent Stamp
1
jg'
4
JJOT OR COLD
1
j*
A. HI AT ALL HOITIS.
Ohio Street. Between Fourth and fifth
THIE ZDOLXjA-IR, 3D SOAP.
E E E
THAT
TUELE RIPLEY & DEMING,
ABE CLOSING OUT THEIIi GREAT
Eetail Stock of Dry Goods,
IN ORDER TO ENGAGE IN THE
Wholesale Business Exclusively*
Now is the time to buy,.AS the goods we .offer are desirable, and ore being generally sold at cost, summer goods
at
LESS, AND,
AT COST.
SUks, Poplins, Alpacas, Other Dress Goods, Gloves of all kinds, Hosiery, White Goods, Embroideries, Laces,
Fine
1:
•ha
1
Recollect that the goods offered at cost and less are those that usually bea S~ the largeet'commission
^TUELL, HIPLEY & DEMING,
of
PIANOS, ORGANS, MEL0DE0NS, Smaller Instnimcnts,
Now stored on both floors of his spacious building, and then purchase an Instru ment to present to your wife, daughter or son, and be made happy.
The Unrivaled Knabe Pianos
Drums, Flags, Fifes, and Band Instruments, •p-rer pY-» ".t.v, AtPalace of Music,
WHOLESALE A3STI RETAILS
Stock's, and Lindeman & Son's Patent Cycloids and
i-rp* At the Palace of Music,
if
Burdctt's Cello and Celestc Oorguns,
Nccdham's Silver-Tongue, And other Popular Makes, At the Palace oi* Music.
REDUCED
•.
•--.-U-
.•.<p></p>Cincinnati -i.e..<p></p>Industrial
Open from September 4th to October 5th, 1878/'—'- 7 'j
Largoat ever held in America-^Exhibiting space over Seven Acres—Ono acre of Mi.c'iiinery"
in Motion—Ma&nifioent Fine Art and Floral Collection—Extraordinary^ UJTattractions in all the Sixteen Grand Departments.
^^jibund Trip 'Tickets at Rcdifccd Ratc^
Can be purchased by ALL lines to Cincinnati, and at all Stations on the Evansvillo Crawfordsville and Logansport. Crawfordsvil'e Southwestern Railroads.
RENTS' AND LADIES' WEAE
CLEANEDand COLORED
Aad Gents' wear repaired neally at
H. F. Reiner's Dye House,
MAIN STBEET, BET. «th aud 7th
only Soap in the world that washes Flannels without shrinking tliem. Warhes with hot, cold, hard, soft or SALT,,,,^' moves Pitch, Tar, Paint, Grease, Printers'Ink, Sweat, Leather or J' mil Stains.
fo
Circular and Pi ice Urn.
APPLICATION
RAPPLEY® A liNIGHT, HaaaflietBren, 1SS1 and ,'1»33 Ridge Arenue.P Iilladelphla, Pa. fe?
J. WILLLEN, M. D.,
S
4
j*
1 4 mp:
and a complete line
oi staple
I ..
«siU -1 •.
..1 .• 1-
1
f. ''1,1 '-•-S0 I-
BELOW COST.
BOWS,
Shawls, Lace Jackets, YelvetSr
Fine Laces, Fine Fans,
Aandkerchiefe,
Ladies Cloths, Opera Flannels, Pine Table Linens, Fine Napkins, fU Towels and Irish Linen,
Marseilles Qnilts,
'fl
Lawns, Japanese Poplins, Grenadines, Other Summer Dress G'ds, Fringes and Trimmings. Ribbons,
Children's Fine Hosiery.
1
iv a
n*
3^*
Torre Haute, Indiana
HURRAH FOR THE CAMPIAGN. •,
iij&fA
WHAT I KNOW ABOUT MUSICf
To render your Lome pleasant and cheerful,
MUSIC and look over the immense stock
go" to
I r"
KISSNER'S PALACE 01?
I
(4-u.
Pianos"Organs^Melodeons. and all other kinds of Musical Instrument") Tuneo and Repaired by a competent workman. The largest stock of Musical Instruments—at the lowest prices—ever kept iu he city, can be found at the R-" &
Palace of Music, South Side Public Square, Terre Haute.
FARES!
... mg&l, 4) I 4{{ 'j?
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
Ill OFFICE SIXTH STBCET,^
Between Main and Ohio. opp. PostofEce.
Superior to
.?:
T.H. BARR &CO.. A-ccrnfss Opposite Fort :OfiUe.
"It*
Squares,
IJ'ii
4
Exposition,
I-
FOR LICENSE. NOTICE
hereby given that the undersignod will apply to the County Commissioners at their next regular session for a license to sell spirituous and intoxicating liquors in less quantities than aquart at a tiuie. for the spaee of one year. The premises on which said liquors aro to be sold and drnak are located on north side Main street, between Fourth and Fifth, in the city of Turre Haute, Harrison township, Vigo county, Indiana.
CHARLES
M.
HIRZEL.
Castile Soap FOI^YJFE ,:
jrij.*
