Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 7, Number 31, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 27 January 1877 — Page 4
:im§sm
'."V
HOB ERG?
HOOT & CO.,
OPERA HOUSE,
Are offering1 thei
usual large and' well
selected stock of desi
rable seasonable goods
at Closing Out Prices.
Many goods are sold
less than elsewhere.
Please examine.
Wanted.
W\
I Kl—HOARD-TWO I'MtSOSs d.-sirt-Kootl boaril in a private family A location rrorth of Mult: and i*ast of J1 street preferred. Address P. O. box l.o4, city.
TIT
I'KU—TO HUY A SKT OF
W
the
1
IN
VY NKIW TOOL.S AN'D MACHINES— Must b( comparatively new and in Rood order. Will pay cash. Address, stating price, TIN NEK, care of tills office
ANTED—ALLTO KNOW THAT THE HATriRDAY EVENIHO MAIL has a.larg- «_ .i nntr noirananAr numish
HATnKDAY r^VK-IN i.iw "lAii-.
•r circulation than
any
newspaper publish
•d in the State, outside of Indianapolis. Also ttat it is carefully and thoroughly read in tbe homes of its patrons, and that it is the *ery best advertising medium iu Western
or oirouiHuuu LiiotJ •d in the State, outside of Indiana ''--"y and thorough.j ... patrons, and that it is the
ndiana.
Strayed.
STRAYED—A
SORREL COLT—4 YEARS
old, about 15 bauds high, shod all round, na ble nish. Any person delivering the same to JOSEPH AlilJOLT will be aniplj rewarded for their trouble
Found.
FOUND-THAT
WITH ONESTROKEOF
the pen you can reach, with an advertisement In
Saturday Evening Mail, almost
even' reading family in this city, as well as the residents of the towns and country surrounding Terre Hjute.
FINE PERFUMERY
Lubin's Rtinmell's, Atkinson,Crown, Lund borg, l'otain's and Hazin
Fine Kxtracts for the llandkcrchief
Genuine Imported Farina and German Co lozne,
Fine
Toilet and Fancy Articles, ine
Toilet Hoaps, Cosmetics, Tooth, Hair, ulotti and Nail Brushes, Combs, Dressing Cases, Cologne Sets, Finest of Toilet Powders, Diamond, Silver and Golden Powders for the Hair, and all articles wanted for the toilet.
BUNTIN & ARMSTRONG,
lrnir«clNtN, Tor. 6th an«l Main streets.
Clearance Sale!
-OF
NOTIONS and MILLINERY
-AT-
Prairie City Emporium.
Large line of Embroideries and Remnants, AT HALF PRICE!
Commissioner's Sale. BY
VIIUT.'E OF A CERTIFIED COPY of a Decree, to me directed, from the United States Circuit Court, for the District of Indiana, I will, on Tuesday, the 27th day of February, 1.S77, between the hours of 1 0 o'clock, a. in., and 4 o'clock, p. in., at the Couit Mouso door, in thu city of icrro Haute, Vigo countv, Indiana, offer for sale,
at
public auction, the rents and prollts for a term not exceeding seven years, of the following described Real Estate, In ig« countv, state of Indiana to-wlt: I^tsNo.s 2 a 4 o, 1, 7, X, 5), 10, 11,12. 13, 14, lfi, 10, L, 18, a'ix\ l!, together with Flouring Mill, situated on lot Wo. IS. and ail appurtenances appertaining to saM mill ftnd lots, nil in Koni subdivision of lot No. 2, of McCabeis subdivision of Thli ty-one *31) acres off the north part
of the
southwest quarter of section fif
teen. (1") township twelve, (121i range nine (9) west, and upon failure to realize a suin suf
ficient
to satisfy the demand, I will, at, the
same
time ami place, and In like manner, otter for sale the fee simple for the same. Ordered to be sold as the proper of Aeg dlus Maimer, at the suit ot The Lite AssoeloUion of America against Aegldius N aimer, et al The Mimv 10 le sold without any relief whatever from vultiatlon or nppra.seinoiit laws. 11EV J.
Jan. 20,1.S77. Special I onimissloner.
J. P. WORRELL,
Omee, I.1XTOX MAXSIOX, Southwest corner (5th and Ohio Streets. Ofttco hours from a. m.to I p. nt. and from 4 to 6 p. in. I*rncttce now limited to diseases of the
KYK and KAK.
OBEPH RICHARDSON, M.
Office on Ohio Kt, Bet. 3rd Ufc. TERRE HAUTE, IND.
MUSK.
I~)ROF.
T. K- GUTHRIE, wrritms STRING HAND,
"fon? "ube v?ry°
orders an the v»mer of 12*li an»l Main
81#.,
TKKRK HAUTE. IND.
noiTNl^THATTHK SATURDAY EVEnine Mull is the most widely circulated XUJWspuper in Uio State outside of IndlauspOJl*.
E A I
A PAPER FOR TIIE PEOPLE.
TERKE HAUTE,
P.
JAN. 27, 1877
S..WESTFALL,
EDITOR AKD PROPKIKTOR.
TWO EDITIONS.
this Paper are published. The FIRST EDITION, on Friday Evening has a large circulation in the surrounding towns, where it is sold by newsboys and agents. I he SECOND EDITION, on Saturday Evening, goes into the hands of nearly every reading person in the city, and the farm ere of this immediate vicinity.
Every Week's Issue is, in fact, TWO NEWSPAPERS, which all Advertisements appear for ONK OH-iRGif.
WITH gold at 106 and still declining specie payment in 1879 does not look so very formidable.
SUIT has been entered against Mr, Tilden for the amount of income tax of which he is alleged to have defrauded the Government. The amount is 3150,000.
MOODY and Sankey will begin their revival work in Boston to-morrow where a very large and expensive tab ernacle has already been erected for their use.
FOB some time past, a temperance re vival has been in progress in Pittsburg, Thus far more than twenty-five tboa sand persons have signed the total abstinence pledge.
TERRE HAUTE and Vigo county have the smallest delinquent lists of any city or county of their sizes in the State. Two efficient treasures are to thank for this gratifying state of affairs.
IT has just occurred to us that there is not more than halt as much talk about "Reform" now as there was beforqthe election. There seems also to have been a decline in public interest in reference to the Southern war claims.
RELIGION, love and politics are getting strangely mixed up in this country. Now Ash Wednesday, this year, will fall on the 14th of February, which is St. Valentine's Day as well as the date fixed for counting the electoral vote.
THERE are nine Judges of the Supreme Court including the Chief Justice. Of these, Chief Justice Waite and Associate Justices Swayne, Miller, Strong, Bradley and Hunt are considered Repnblicans, Justices Clifford and Field Democrats, and Justice Davis doubtful.
THE New York Independent objects to the common statements that Commodore Vanderbilt was illiberal and selfish, and says that in addition to his public gifts, his private benefactions which were never heard of averaged $1,000 daily for many years.
AFTER the thirty-fourth ballot in the Illinois Legislature, for United States Senator, Gen. Logan peremtorily forbade the use of his name, and the Republicans, in caucus, nominated Hon. Charles B. Lawrence. Judge Lawrence is known as a very able man, a leading lawyer of the Chicago bar, and was for several years a member of the Supremo Court of Illlinois.
NEW
A
styles in the forms of so-called
religious worshipare becoming the rage, and changes are looked for with as much certainty, if not with as general interest, as changes of the fashion in other things The latest Bosto'i novelty is styled the
First American Church," and meets in the Paine Memoral Hall. Charles Eris, a graduate of the Meadville Unitarian Theological School, is its pastor, and a recitation from Tennysoii was a feature of last Sunday's worship.
IT is the opinion of the Inter Ooean. that the Republicans on the commission to decide upon the manner of counting the votes have been overreached and outwitted. "The fact is," it says, "Edmunds is so supernaturally smart, and so eDjoys the contemplation of his own shrewdness, that he never dreamed it possible that he could be taken in and done for and the misery of it is he never will believe it. He will go on firna in the conviction that the egg in the nest was laid by himself, and he will follow the fowl that shall bo hatched though it leads to his own discomfiture." It j^ives Htwitt the credit of originating the plan and says it washes its hands of the 'ocwardly bargain" and disclaims all responsibility for the aftair from beginning to end.
A HILL to create a board of railroad commissioners i« before €he New York Legislature. It provides for the appointment of three commissioners who shall supervise all railroads and keep themselves informed as to their condition and the manner in which they are operated, with reference to the security and accommodation of the public, and the compliance of the corporation with the provlsiohs of their charters and the laws of the State. ^.They are also empowered to investigate accidents, and if possible ascertain their cause. A board clothed with similar obligations and duties, exist in Massachusetts, and it would seem desirable that evsry State in which there are extensive railway interests should havo some such agency for securing a proper compliance with the laws regulating these corporations, and for the frequent exercise of such supervision over their operations as will keep them fully alive to their duty to the public, and in case ef violation of or failure to discharge such duty, to promptly bring them to a sense of their responsibility.
Btr,L
JPHBSill
TERRE TTAUTE SATURDAY EV ENIN MAIL.
Now that women are looking anxiously for new worlds to conquer, or at least, for new fields in which to exercise their talents and win an honorable living, the success of Mrs. Amalia Berrian, of New York city, as related in the Phonographic News, will not be without interest. The paper referred to says that Mrs. Barrian has many times while writing after a reader, reading from new matter, attained the extraordinary speed of over two hundred and eight words a minute, and on one occasion wrote one thousand and seventeen words in legible phonography in four minutes, making in the last minute the unprecedented speed of three hundred and seven words. This is a greater speed than was ever attained by any man, and Mrs. B. is there fere the champion phonograper. The hint ought to be sufficient to her American sistors all over the country.
IT is proposed to amend the present school law, which allows text-books to be changed once in three years, so that they may not be changed oftener than once in six years. This is a sensible proposition and should immediately be adopted. The school book-business is the most infamous swindle that the people of this State are called upon to endure. The prices are from two to three times as high as they ought to be,regular steal, in fact—and the frequent changes are an- additional insult to the existing injury, that renders the tiling almost ntolerable. Once iu six years is often enough to change text-books, and it is a pity that some remedy could not also be found against tbe book agents and teachers who speculate on 1 he frequent changes.
?,
has been introduced in the
House to tax church property. It should be passed promptly. "No man shall be compelled to attend, erect or support any place of worship against his con sent," is already a constitutional pro vision. The exemption of church property from taxation compels other property to make up the deficit caused by such exemption, and thus compels a large class of taxpayers to contribute indirectly to the support of churches against their consent. Every dollar that the revenue loses by the exemption of church property has to be made up by other property. Churches are an excellent thing but as, a matter of justice church property should be taxed just like any other.
•A NEW YORK newspaper of a few days since contained this suggestive para graph, which carries its own sufficient comment: "In a certain fashionable uptown church, §16,000 were subscribed for foreign heathen missions on Sunday last. A charitable association received in the past four weeks applications from 5,968 families in this city for relief from starvation. A visiting committee found in the Sixth ward 1,300 persons without shoes."
ONE Episcopal minister in Chicago, Rev. Mr. Petrie, assisted Mr. Moody in his revival.
B'NAI BRITH.
Mr. Philip Schloss and wife, Mr. Jo. Erlanger and h:s sister, Mrs. Hamburger, of Mattoon Mrs. A. Arnold, and Mr. Levi Hirsch, are all in Cincinnati, attending the anniversary ceremonies of the Grand Lodge of the Hebrew Benevolent society, "B'nai Brith." The gntlemen named are delegates to the Grand Lodge, and Mr. Schloss is one of the grand officers, he having at Columbus, Ohio, last year, been elected Trustee of the Covenant Endowment Fund, a position which he is to hold five years. The B'nai Brith is a very old and flourishing society. District No. 2, which now celebrates its twentyfifth anniversary, is composed of the States of Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky and Missouri though the meeting will be attended by distinguished gentlemen from all over the country. To-morrow (Sunday) evening there will be a magnificent dramatic and musical entertainment at Melodeon Hall, by the society. On Monday evening the public ceremonies will close with a banquet and ball at the same place. It is not unlikely that Mr. Erlanger, of this place, will be chosen Vice President of the society for District No! 2. The Covenant Eudowmeat Fund mentioned above was established about three years ago for a special purpose. Upon the death of any member, one thousand dollars is paid out of it to bis heirs. It already has to its credit a surplus of $28,000. The B'nai Brith embraces among its membership some of the most talented and learned men in tbe country, and is highly venerated by the Israelites everywhere,
A. O.U.M.
The Grand Lodge of the Ancient Order of United Workmen met in Indianapolis this week. On motion Terre Haute was selected as the next place of meeting on the third Tuesday in February, 1878. The following are the grand officers and representatives for the ensuing year G.W. Hill, G. M.W. P. H. Bairett, G. G. F. G. M. Otterman, G. O. John T. Francis, G. recorder A. Eaton, G. receiver J. M. Totten, G. G. T. T. Thompson, G. W. O. R. Weaver, P. G. M. W., G. W. Hill, J. W. Haley and G. F. Cookerly, representatives to the Supreme Lodge Bcnj. Davis, John Pauley and W. ^T. Royse were selected trustees of the Grand Lodge, to serve respectively for one, two, and three years.
WE are informed that a club is being formed to buy every foot of real estate that may be offered for sale by the city treasurer, at his sale for delinquent taxes, whic! will take place on the 1st Monday (5th day) of February next.
THE EARLY TERRE-HAUTEN-TOTS!
HOW THEY TRAVELED!
INTERESTING INCIDENTS OF -PIONEER LIFE.
A Lcttci: From One of The "Oldest '5 Inhabitants."
WESTFALL.: When I was at Terre Haute, a few days ago, and had the ploasuro of meeting you, many by-gone facts, and things of long ago, were brought to my recollection. Looking into the City Directory caused me to think ol the time when we had there no directory, except the poll-book or asses sor's lists, and I knew every man, wo mm and child In the town there were three hundred of them, perhaps. The same book of names and residences in an introductory paragraph in relation to your railway facilities, reminded me of the years when all our roads were of the most natural sort—they were indeed as Nature made them, when the great wa ters brought down the drift from the north and covered up the rough and rocky ribs of that part of creation, making prairies, etc. Nature makes some things well and so it came to pass that when the prairies were new, wild, unfenced we had mo3t excellent highways, always smooth and dry enough, and only low grounds, in wet seasons, gave us any trouble. River bottoms and the like were difficult and even dangerous to travel at times when deep waters flowed over them. Such waters and deep mud were often east and west of us,—high and dry prairies to the north and south. Before the National Road was opened for travel from Indianapolis, a small town to which the seat of government had lately been rempved from Coryden, near the Ohio river, people coming thence to Terre Haute passed by Greencastle to Kelso's ferry across Raccoon creek near the southeast corner of Parke county, thence southward By Marklo's mill, and over Harrison prairie direct to town. There were then no farms so fenced as to interrupt the tran sit. After we got stage coaclies, this was the mail route till the National Road was passable. Stages were two or three days making the trip from Indianapolis by this roundabout way, but when the new government route was used two days sufficed for the journey, the passengers and horses stopping over at night with Mr. Townsend, of Putnam vilie. The travel to Vincennes was at first very similar in speed to that east. When.the Emisons put stages on the road between Terre Haute and the oldest town on the continent, at first they stopped over night at Carlisle and finished the trip the next day. Those who go nowadays to Indianapolis or to Vincon-. nes by rail in two or three hours, will imagine our old coaches- were of the slowest kind—and they were. But before many years had elapsed, public and private interests required improvement and got it. By using moro horses and changing more frequently along the road, coaches wero not so slow, and the whole distance to Indianapolis and to Vincennes, respectively, was traversed in one day. To illustrate, after a fashion, the importance of the improvement, I may mention that I was in Vincennes one morning wishing much to return home, but the stage was gone. In doubt as to what I should do I went to the s.Ugo stable (the Messrs. Wise were then proprietors) to ascertain if I could obtain a horse to ride, and Mr. Sam Wise told nie they had not a horse except some turned out in pasture to recruit, but very kindly said he would have one brought in for me. He did it, and mounting the worn down horse (ho was a famous animal worn down te the condition of the race horse) I trotted up the road, and at Emisons, (the old stand where the horses wero first changed) I overtook the coach and passed on, telling the driver if he had any word to send to Terre Haute I would carry it "for him Passing Carlisle, after, speaking with Dr. Davis about a case we had visited together in the vicinity of tbe present town of Sullivan, (Sullivan as yet had not been dreamed of) I moved on halted at Merom, fed and rested my horse—rested and fed mysolf. The stage came up before my hour of rest and refreshment was half gone, and the driver, having taken four fresh horses (the tame man drove the whole distance) and assuring me that he could take his own word to Terre Haute and wouldn't trouble me, cracked his whip and moved on. Wheu we (hcrse and I) were ready we moved on too. Wc trotted steadily onward and near night overtook the stage below town, passed it at Strawberry Hill, (the road at that period left the river bank at "Old Tyre Haute" and run ever the prairie to town) and I went in ahead of the vehicle drawn by four horses! We were all good horseback riders in those days. It had beon our only way of traveling for many years. On horseback lawyers went from court to court, having fearful times occasionally, fording creeks preachers rode their circuits with the same baptismal risks, and doctors traveled looking after their patients, risking everything. In fact everybody went on horseback unless be walked and tramps were not known as they are in those days. Col. Thompson used to tell a startling incident of his experience when he on horseback onco met a threatening individual for whom, I think, the Colonel's horse proved too much. Lorenzo Dow also came riding to Terre Haute and preached in the Court House. Sinners were more inter
ested in his eccentricities than in his tbreatenings to the wicked. He promised to visit us again if God was willing. He never came any more. J'
The enterprising merchant went on horseback over the hills and far away east for goods to sell in the next twelve months—he couldn't get them every week as the merchants do now. He sat on his big saddle-bags in which he had his cash and an extra shirt he traveled away and was absent months. His goods came down the Ohio river to Louisville, to bo transported thence across the country in the dry seasons or by steamers in the spring. Merchandise was as slow in its passage then as our old coaches, if not more so. But physicians had the wcrst of it. We almost lived on horseback, and there was no excuse for us in heat or cold, in storm or sunshine, in mud or water. And there were not forty-four of us to divide the toil and dangers. Dr. S. Patrick, Dr. E. V. Ball and myself constituted tbe medical faculty of the embryo city. Though Dr. Modisett was with us, with in my remembrance he declined practise, except for a short time while Dr. Paris C. Dunning was his partner. Gov. Dunning was then out of his elemeut.
Whenever I think of risks incurred by physicians I suppose I shall never fail to recall a visit (there were two of them, almost) that I once made with Dr. Ball to see a patient of his over the river. The water was high and the dauger great. We had good horses and Ball knew the way. He was a quiet, brave man, and having confidence in him proposed to follow him. Having come later than he to the Wabash, I did not know so well all tbe ways. Old Mr. Anderson ferried us over the river and we rode up the river bank nearly a mil^e and turned westward. The track, if there was one, was, forsooth, in the deep bosom of the water buried and safety was a problem. For a time we proceed ed, not exactly swimmingly, but pretty nearly so. I had my feet on my horse's neck' and saw the water flow over the back of Dr. B's horse, as the varying surface let him down a little deeper occasionally. My horse was the taller of the two and I had yet kept dry. Wf were moving with the utmost care when suddenly the doctor's horse stepped off a bank (of a slough perhaps) and for moment all I saw was the tip of the horse's nose and the doctor's hat. The horse had evidently gone for bottom and touching it, lunged upward, whirled around and came quickly to where bad suddenly halted in water above mid-side of my horse. The doctor was rery cool, in fact, with shivering anxie ty he wished to assure me that the whole thing was unexpected. I told him I thought so, when he added coolly that however much he was in favor of hydropathy he would prefer not to be its patient. There was ice floating on the water. The time was February. We retraced our steps (they were very wet if we had any) we dried and warmed ourselves, and later in the day we crossed the bottom in a'dug-out. Having returned home we calculated we had made a visit and about a half. Tbe half we afterwards gave Mr. credit for when, in the course of the ensuing summer, speaking of his great loss in the death of his wife he assured us he would rather have lost the best cow he had on his place!
Exceeding cold covered the swollen water with thick ice and teams crossed on it, not only over the river but over the bottom. But the subsiding flood left tho ice resting on all sorts of supports all over the bottom. There was some sleighing withal and Dr. Patrick, who was my partner, having built a jumper, wo went in it over into Clark county, Ills., to visit a patient. Returning the next day and coming to the bottom we started down upon the ice directly in the line of the road where the liig grade and the slough bridge are as they were constructed by the Wabash Bridge Company. There- was naught there then but the low lying ice with water under it in spots. We came along pretty well till we were over the slough, when cautionary signs made us conscious of dang«-. Tbe rumbling and crackling were fearful and we hurried hoping to escape. We had made good progress when all at once a crash came and horse and pung went through. The doctor and I went through too. We were about four feet below the surface, resting upon terre firma—we would much preferred to have been in Terre Haute. Tho sleigh and horse had fortunately fallen upon the slope of tho bank of the slough a few feet above the edge of tho water. We climbed out hastily and Dr. P., in the excitement of the moment, exclaimed "Doctor, what in h—1 are wo going to do now?" I roplied that the situation did not suggest to me anything so warm as the place ho mentioned—that what I had to do for a few moments would be about that cold hole in the ice. I procured a pole, broke the ice in front of the horse, sufficiently to lead him out and we went en our way rejoicing. Nobody was hurt.
It would lengthen this writing inexcusably to givo you now any of'our experiences east of Terre Haute even on the wabers and ice, so near Terre Haute as were those of Lost creek. I havo no donbt there are citizens of your city who know not that said creeks ever required tbe heavy Macademized grade ar.d the big yellow bridge, built by Uncle Sam, to enable us to travel out on tbe National road from town—that Its waters even spread over miles of land north of the. Bloomington road (Poplar street)—crossed said street a little east of the residence of Mr. Ctookerly, formed quite a lake extending miles south of the crossing and had no outlet. It was a useless creek—was Lost, except to wild geese and ducks that came in
..
great numbers' to swim on it, to waddle.. on its shores, to attract hunters. It was a nuisance and therefore, by aid of legislative enactment it was abated—was. turned off to waste itself *nd scatter in malaria elsewhere.
When leisure permits wo may consjd-* er something of this again with other things relating to our old ways.
J. W. HITCHCOCK, M. D.
VIGO COUNTY SUNDAY SCHOOL CONVENTION. The Eighth Convention of the Vigo County Sunday School Association will be held In Asbury Chapel, Terre Haute, on Saturday, February 3,1877. Subjects of importance to the Sunday school cause will be discussed by the following persons: Rev. C. R. Henderson, Mr. H. Greenawalt, Rev. S. S. Martin, Mr. J. M. Naylor, Mrs. M. H. Waters, Rev. E. W. Abbey, Mr. J. P. Moore, and Mr. J. I\, H. Sammis. There will be a morning, an afternoon and an eveniug session. The morning session will open at 10 o'-cloCk, the afternoon session at 2, and the evening session at 7. Rov. E. P. Hammond, the great revivalist, will be in the city, and is expected to spend a part of the day in the convention. sy1*
Mr. Hammond in Newburyport, The great blessing of God upon Mr. Hammond's labors in Harrisburg and Washington last winter, led the pastors of Newburyport to inquire if ho could visit their city. From that time a correspondence has been carried on which resulted in his coining to Newburyport four weeks ago. Eight churches were cordially united ia the invitation. Union services were held in the First Presbyterian church (Rev. W. W. Newell ir.'s) as it is by far the largest Protestant church in the city.
A platform was built over the very spot where the remains of the Rev. George Whitfield rest, and a large choir gathered, and services begun. Since then we have had a morning Bible-reading, prayer and praise serviae, which has been greatly blessed to the quickening of Christians. Several children's meetings have SIBO been held in the afternoons, and an evening union mass-meeting. It was soon found best to occupy the City Hall for the evening service?, and though this is the largest room in the city, yet it has proved all too small. Hundreds have been unable to gain acces.*, and as a means of relief an overflow meeting was organized in the Baptist, church, which is now recognized as an effective part of the work.
Pastors who have been heie twenty-five and forty years say they have never known such religious interest in this city and those who are best acquainted with the history of Newburvport are sure that such scene3 have not been witnessed since the days of Whitfield. The whole community is deeply stirred. Many are converted, and all classes are aifected, from the hardened state's prison convict to the upright moralist. Pray lor us that this blessing may be continued and abundantly increased. W. W. N., Jr.
BIG LOT OF NEW EMBROIDERY CHEAP, AT CENT STORE.
BROWNS
EXPECTORANT,
The old reliable remedy for all Throat anil Lung Diseases, is a scientific preparation, compounded from the formula of one of the most successful practlcioncrs in the western country. It has stood tho test for the last twenty years, and will effect a cure after all other Cough remedies have failed.
Browns Expectorant
Never falls to cure consumption in the early stages by subduing the irrltrtlon and inflnmation ia the Dronchial tubes, atd even in the last stages it relieves the cough, promotes easy expectoration, sudues pain and induces refreshing sleep.
Brown's Expectorant
Is unrivalled In cases of ^whooping cough If used early, and contiuued as tho caso may require, it robs the disease of its disease of its distressing character, averts its common evil consequences and shortens its course by weeks. 6,1 •r
Brown's Expectorant
Instantly and permanently cures the most violent cough, and the first dose, if taken just before going to bed, will insure a good night's sleep. '•.
Brown's Expectorant
is warranted to do all that is claimed for it. Hundreds of the most promlnentcltizens of our city have used it for jears, and give it the highest praise.
Brown's Expectorant
IS FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
Hi
A. KIEFER, Prop'r
INDLOAPOWS. $ 4
Hold at wholesale in Terre Haute by GULICK fc BERRY, "4 E. H. BINDLEY,
HI
COOK A BELL.
v.v-
1
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