Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 10, Number 5, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 2 August 1879 — Page 2
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AUG.*, 187»
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O/ this Paper are published. The FIRST EDITION, on Friday Evening, bM a large circulation in the surrounding towns, where tt is told by newsboys and agents. Ilie SECOND EDITION, on Saturday Evening, goes Into the hands of nearly every xeading person lu the elty, and t^eforiners of this immediate vicinity. Every Week's Issno Is, in tact, __
TWO
THE GAMBLERS' PARA DISK-ARISTO-CRATIC VISITORS WITH VULGAR TASTES—MISS NEILSON AS A J* JgJtETTY GAMESTER—THE '-PALACE OF GILDED -i ..4 BIN AND VICE.
Cor. New York Times.
EX-KINO OF 81*All?,
Accompanied by a number xf gentle men, who, as is generally the case with Italian nobles, had little to distinguish them from the average Italian, and were rather a shabby looking set. The Prince himself bad a soldier like appearance, a well knit frame, and the proverbial plainness of Victor Emmanuel's children. He generally staked a 500 or 1,000 franc bank note, and after losing it be would walk up and do# the great hall known as the salle des pas perdus, smoking ona large cavour or another. After an hour or so be would return and try bis luck again,' and then, being equally unlucky, would return again to bis cavour and to the hall. He repeated the peregrination day after day until he bad no mobey left, aud then be asked the Casino director to advance him 30,009 francs. 'Reiss, on® of the directors, and formerly of Wiesbaden, a common but shrewd looking man, told him in his bad
German-French:
"we
are entirely at your disposal." Amadeus smilingly pocketed the, money and wasted no thne in
LOSING THJS GREATER PART OF IT,
-$va
Upon which he departed with the uncomfortable feeling that Monaco was no more friendly to him-than Madrid had been, and tbat Mme. Blano of Monte Carlo was as hostile to him as Mme. Isabella, late queen of Spain, and now ••mourning" very moderately over the successive and suspicious deaths of the two daughters of ner old enemy, the Duke of Montpensier. Prince Amadeus while at Mohte Carlo, made his appear* auce at the Casino with a very plain but piquant English lady of doubtful character, and whenever he won, onoe in a great while, he exclaimed in English: •'Splendid I" "splendid and smiled. He ought to smile perpetually, as only when be smiles does he look attractive, and be always looks singularly unintellectual. The third royal visitor was the
Crown Prince o* Austria, a pleasant, "id
intelligent looking lad, escorte oral old ladies, who evidently
which don't
rt•
by sevrotected
him against the smiles lavished upon him by the female accessories of Mme. Blanc's establishment. A ourth and more substantial Prince was Frederick Charles of Prussia tall, bearded, stern looking, as Prussian Princes generally are, and grimly enjoying the spectacle presented by the rouge et noir and the roulette. .n.,
MRS. SFfiNOBR COWPSR, ^9 McLean,of Baltimore, who lately lost her husband, attracts much attention whenever sh6 drops in from Nice at the rontette 'Sbe puts gold pieces upon ever so many faumbers fn a very theatrical manner, and In that respect sbe rivals the actress Neilfeon, wbo han such a pretty, coquettish way of playing that •he wins the heart of the croupiers, and, jas she generally loses, also that of the formidable Mme. Blano. But Neilson }s really a beautiful creature, wonderfully got up, smiling bewitchingly, and HS she knows that smiling is an imperious neoesslty to setoff her peculiar style of beauty, she smiles even when she loses, but in such a subdued manner as sadden the races of the croupiers, who in fancy her feelings of desolation, ^,
NEILSON
Is really prettier off than on the stage, and she speaks so distinctly, so musically, she makes all the French say, "ElU «t( si gmtiUe}" and then, somehow
y°uUr„
of the hall, and annoying people as much as he oan by his egotism, waiters call blm M.le ComU, and when he la reminded thai Jfce belongs to M»e lower and not to Cte blghef das«p, to s*a»: ••Never nfipd. luke to beOldledtkuQtl" and yet biws*p no occasion ttf, abage the nobility, Another Ro»siaif| «Jgfcalled Pribcess, also «alks gbotirwlUra yellow thfttcb purporting to be hair, oovering her head, and falling down In eooentrto Buglets over her brow and shoulders, and her Excellency Is all the time Ashing after somebody who may advance her a few louis. One of the most indefatigable gamblejs ^tj^ojaco
-.. which are partially paralyzed. Mrs. til #i gmtiUe and then, somehow or Qaerison's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ranother, she has made the acquisition of
the rarest of all elixirs, that of perpetnal
A HUGE CALIFORNIA WOMAN,
whose formidable dimensions seem to inspire the very roulette with a singular awe, and make it favorably disposed toward her lest in her disappointment
NEWSPAPERS, toward her lest in her dluppolL..
jo which all Advertisements appear for «he might smash the whole table, and so TaE PRICE OF ONE ISSUE. gigantic are her proportions that she might accomplish the feat without pat,i» jing herself to great inoouvenlenoe. '-•'"'•nBlhirrip.c at TT. AV Auother curious American was one who won largely and then pulled out a dirty
ENTERTAINING SKETCH OF old pocket handkerchief to wrap, op MONACO,
hundreds of thousands of francs. Once he fall down in a fit, having burst a blood-vessel from over-excitement, hut to the great dismay of Madame Biano, he recovered to win again, and ultimately disappear with a largo amount of gain. Reiss, the director previously mentioned, oan not bear to see people win. On such ocoasions he walks up and down nervously, positivelv screaming with rage, apd turning to
During the last six months many dis- Fignerou, of the inspectors, exclaims in visited Mo- despair "That iellow is ruining us." tinguished personages have naco, the paradise of European gam biers. First came the Crown Prince of Sweden and Norway, a tall, rather rustic looking youth, who might be taken lor an English or American student and who played to a very small extent blushing with delight on winning a few dollars, and evidently annoyed whenever the croupier took the liberty of retaining his contribution for account of Mme. Blanc. Next appeared in the Casino Prince A made as of Savoy,
Yet the bank cleared last year 9,000,000
deil
PtinwOurusoff, Count Fludoff,
and all the friends of the Cassino are |ecijon
giad to g*t from her a word or a smile, Morrison of St. Louis and she Is in her element. Another f_whn has Inherited three or four of a different order, Is fortane«, of which, being an orphan, she the Oouny" has the exclusive control, whoy«t,weafs boHher dUmondi nor point taee. ahenas little of the remarkable Intel- .... lectuallty either of her father or Lady tttk WAtwnRTfm MdTftKR. Herbert, the illustrious convert to the
and to discover that she only appears once in awhile disguised in the feminine form of humanity. She is so indefatigable dancer, looming up in all the drawing-room* of the London seaaoa Ilk* a light-hoots, but not as Print* Bismarck savs of the inconveniently tall Gorman ambassador, Count Munster,lighthouse without, a light." The Countess of Lcosdale is on the contrary, a lighthouse with a molvlng light, for her photographs abound In X/ndotl shops. Nondescripts and
ADVKOTBS8S OP MTS MXB
abound here as nowhere else. A paralysed Russian, a former grain dealer of & Petersburg, who eats like a glutton, has been here for several yean, laying
FRANCS OF PROFIT.
But Reiss, nevertheless, dislikes to see anybody win, and does much barm to the institution by his excessive cupidity. Figneuro is an elderly, coarse, brutal individual—the gay Lothario of the institution—and was formerly one of the croupiers. It is almost Impossible to escort a lady without seeing him leering at her In a disgusting manner. Men like Fignerou and Reiss dig the grave of Mme. Blanc's fortunes. It is not generally known that the Princes of Monaco is now a partner of the company which runs the gambling hell for Mme. Blanc, and, of course, he shares the odium of the place. In the latter part of Blanc's life he was so afraid of Communists and despera'e gamblers tbat he all the time expected to be murdered. His attempted to ward off misfortune by endowing charitable institutions and surrounding herself with a halo ol benevolence. Yet there is perpetual alarm felt at what may happen some day. Once, when a German gambler deemed himself insulted by the brutality of Fignerou and Reiss, he threatened to bombard the Cagiqo, and, puerile as was the menace, it had, nevertheless, the effect to produce a grea£ feeling of tin easiness. Several Cabinet councils were held in the palace of Monaco, and for some time it was contemplated to raise the Monooo army, whicli consists of seventy men, to eighty or ninety. However, the' panic subsided, and no German man-of-war molested the port
A ST. LOUIS LADTS DIAMONDS. Cor. Boston Herald, The most elegant dressing at Saratoga is always seeh at the United States Hotel. At the other hotels, where less attention is paid to conventionality, a delightful independence in the matter of dress is practiced. Nevertheless, the most valuable diamonds seen as yer this season have been worn by a lady at the Union. I have heard it estimated that those she bad been seen to wear at one time mast be worth $100,000. Apropos of diamonds, if the young wife or Commodore Garrison continues to add to her collection, she will be the diamond queen of America. As I wrote the Herald, she and her husband and her sister, Miss Randell, sailed for Europe a few weeks ago. At the latest accounts they were in Paris, and Mrs. Garrison and her sister were asking where the finest dlamosds could be purchased. Last winter Commodore Garrison bought for his wife a diamond whioh I em assured Tiffany had said is the largest ever imported into this country that is to say, the largest of the first water. There is an importer of fine diamonds who has a branch of his New York store hero for the summer. He purchased from Tiffany the setting of the pendant out of whjch Mrs. Garrison's diamond was taken, and the smaller of the two stones originally set together. The smaller one weighs 11?£ carats, and the dealer tells me the larger is about three times the sisee. One of Mrs. Garrison's friends, who has held it in his hand, says it weighs twelve Carets. It to cushion shape, and having seen the setting from which it was taken, I know it Is nearly an Inch square. Mra, Garrison wears it as a pendant from a black velvet ribbon encircling her throat. But, in addition to the enormous diamond mentioned. Commodore Garrison gave his wife at Christmas solitaire earrings worth 18,000. The engagement ring, of whioh I wrote the Herald last summer, was then believed bytboee wbo owned diamonds to have cost nearly 95,000' Commodore Garrison and wife will spend the summer at Moulin*, whose baths have been recommended to him as a restorative for his ankles,
gti Louis, and their SOBS are also
pot
Jn
ur0De
Asa
contrast to the taste for the ool-
0f
rare jewels, I can mention a
THE
Church of Rome, and a superior woman, fi v! of remarkable qualities of mind and Prank Walworth, the youth who, in heart. Her husband was yachting wbile order to protect his mothers life, slew •he was at Monaoo. How one prefers to his father, is here at the old Walworth be a sea, whsn on land one can oall home, in Broadway, says a Saratoga such a daczUng oreature one's own, Is correspondent. He has not a single
A feature or trait or character that Wonfd r« ORB 0FTB09* MTWPWWM indicate that he Is a parrtoide. Hfs health is poor, but be is trading law.
fathom
dancing, beam
raflb like, with la rge cha
»IM (MBU UVIO JVC 9QVVIW hi.»ui«H lowu inil toug&ii on the bonctwa j** do Aera.
WAL\MOTMKU
ated from society.
BOB INQBB8QLL
'•IT WILL NOT DO AN., IS JTA
his exit from
.nly.
mother has been very busy with ber literary wot on art mod science. Sbe has been very successful on ber lecturing tour. She has the respect and sympathy of the entire community here, all of whom are acquainted with the terrible trials she had to endure at the bands of en erratic husband, and her struggles to oar* for her five children previous to and since his awful dfeath. She to a beautiful woman on the brink of fifty hut, deepite her sorrows, sbe looks tea yean younger. It la presumed that the old homestead will be sold, and she will, with ber unhappy son, sail for the Old World and |ola her children now there, hoping to find anchor in some spot where ner earrouridings will not Mir up unpleasant memories of the past
TERKK HAUTE SATURDAY EV1NCTG MAIL.
JEWS.
The following litter from Col. Ingersoll, dated at Wishlxigton, ifC,, July 3^ Is aditfreased^to the Hon. J. J. Noah, of New York:
MY DJSAR FRIIBND—AS a matter of course, 1 am utterly opposed to the oppression of any class, and regard tne action of the proprietors of the Manhattan Beach hotel in reference to tbe Jews as bigoted, mean and disgraceful. 8oen action belongs to tbe Dark Ages. Tbe persecution of the Jews should brlug a blush to every Christian cbeek. Nothing is more infamous than the oppression of a class. Each man has the right to be judged upon his own merits. To oppress him or to hold him in contempt on acoouqt Qf ttliglou, race or color Is a crime.
Every man should be treated)justly and kindly, not because he to Or Is not a Jew or a Gentile, but because be is a human being, and as auch capable of joy and pain, ir at any hotel a man fails to aot In a deoent and becoming manner let him be put out, not on account of the nation to which he belongs, but «oa account of his behavior. Any other oourse is unjust and cruel.
It will not do for tbe keepers of pub Ho houses to brand an entire race as nn fit to associate, with them.
Some of tbe leading men-of the world are Jews. These wonderful people, although dispersed, despised, and for many ages persecuted in all countries where people loved tbeir enemies and returned good for evil, have contributed to every science and enriched every art He who has heard the music of Mendelssohn and Meyerbeer, who has studied the grand philosophy of Spinoza, and has seen upon tbe stage Rachel, mistress of passion, will bardfy unite in the condemnation of the race to which these prodigies belonged.
Neither suould it be forgotten that the Jews furnished tbeir "persecutors witb a religiqp, and tbat tbey are the only people, according to tbe dogmas of pur day, with whom the Almighty ever deigned to have any intercourse whatever.
When we remember tbat God selected a Jewess for his mother, passing by the women of Indiah Egypt, Athens and Rome, as well as the grandmothers of Mr. Corbin, it is hardly in good taste for the worshippers of that same God to hold tbe Jews in scorn.
We should also remember that, tbe Jews were ttfe only people inspired. All the "sacred" writer^—all the "prohets" were of this race, and while Christians almost worship Abraham, notwithstauding the affair of Hagar, and his willingness to murder his own son and while tbey hold in almost infinite respect David, the murderer, and Solomon, the Mormon, it certainly is not perfectly consistent to denounce men and women of the same race who have committed no crime. u#
:-x
'i
"the Christians have ^always been guilty of this inconsistency with regard to the Jews—they have worshipped the dead and persecuted tbe living. 1 think it would be much better to let the dead take care of themselves, while we respect and maintain tbe rigbtB of the living.
I cannot forget that during tbe revolution tbe Jews prayed in tbeir synagogues for tbe success of the colonies. I cannot forget tbat during our civil war thousands of them fought for the preservation of tbe Union, many of them rising from the ranks to the most important commands. Neither can I forget that'many of the "Jews are to-day among the foremo fc advocates of intellectual liberty that they have outgrown the prejudices of race and creed, and believe in the universal brotherhood of man. And in this connection it may not be out of place tj speak of your father. He was a man who adorned every position he held, and wbo as lawyer, judge, essayist and philanthropise Wasari honor to his race and to my country.
It will not do in this, the second century of tbe United States, to insult a gentleman because of bis nation.
We are, at last, a great, rich and prosperous people. Greatness should be great. Wealth should be generous and prosperity should at least beget good manners.
Every American should resent every insult to humanity, for while the rights of the lowest are trampled upon the lib erties of the highest are not safe.
Wbile for the ancient myths and fables of your people I have not the respeet entertained by Christians, still bold tbe rights of Jews to be as sacred as my own. Yours, respectfully, 1 R. G. INGERSOLL. 1 I ... 60S!it UOOD LESSONS,
Temple Bar.
I once ckined at a strange house, in a strange country, among strangers and listened with admiration to a young gentleman who laid down tbe law about tides and currents, and "sat upon"— rather too heavily, I thought—a grayhaired, thoughtful-looking person, who ventured now and then to differ with him. During these passages an expression Of amusement played round the mouth of our host for which I was unable to account until after dinner, when the "aat upon" one left us. Then quoth mine host to our instructor: ••Well, you've made a nice idiot of yourself, that was Maury!" In the days of my golden youth I was present to a sporting tavern, (at which in those day* a gentleman might be seen), and there was a fuss about something, which a clerical-looking man came forward to stop. "Mind your own busings," shouted an angry disputant, "or I'll punch your bead. "I'm Owen Swift sir,** replied the peacemaker with the utmost politeness.
AfBS. TILTON'S FORMER RRSlDENC& ... New York Sun.
After Mrs. Elizabeth Tilton vacated tbe house at 2S Madisou stnfet, Brooklyn after sbe bad made her confession of the guilt of Henry Ward Beeoher, the bouse was taken by tbe Brooklyn Ana* tomlcal and Surgical society for di«seAina rooms. Tbey arouSOd the Indignation of tbe neighbors by keeping human bodies In tbe bouse, and the place was complained of to the health board as a nuisance. Tbe board refused to grant the society any more permits to receive and keep subjects there. The socioty yesterday renewed its application, claiming that their work was fn the interest of science, and that they bad a number of students belonging to the organisation who could do work tbat would prove of value to the public. The health board has decided to hear what tbe neighbors have to say on- Tuesday next,
Irtllffeailoau
The main cause of nervousness to indigestion, and tbat to caused by weakness of tbe stomach. No one can have sound nerves and good health without
the poisonous and waste matter of the njni mu Sat OUMW »»lmtnii
LAWYER'S
GEN
TUB BIO
S'av-'-
ROES.
We learn that Mr. Vanderbilt declines to pay Mr. Clinton's tremendoue bill, ana we don't blame him, for it is utterly absurd that any lawyer should receive In one case, and that only of short duration, a larger sum than one lawyer in a million makes by a lifetime of bard work and we think that Judge Com* stock (whose bill for sitting.in this/ease and looking wise and occasionally argu* ing a point ol law w** very modest 1Q pompariaion with Clinton's) bap great reason for commending Mr. Vender* bilt's generosity.
We learn that Mr. Scott Lord, the counsel for tbe contestant of the will, received $100,000. These Immense fees are beyond anything ever known or heard of, not only in thto oountry, but in foreign lands. The famous lawyers of England or France have never reoeived such large sums, even in cases of mucb longer oontlnusnce. To be sure there have been very few if aay, cases involving such an immense, amount of money, for there have been very few men in the world worth so muoh property as Mr. Cornelius Vanderbilt left. During tbe entire eight years which the famous Warren Hastings trial went on, none of the lawyers received such heavy fees. In the even more famous case of "Jarndyce and Jarndyce" the reporter of that case to silent in regard to the fees of the counsel, but we presume they consumed the estate.
Erskine, the leader of the English bar in his time, and ono of tbe most brilliant lawyers Great Britain ever produced, never received a greater yearly income than 960,000 and not more than £5,000 in any one case. Sir James Scarlet, afterwards Lord Abinger, a very successful lawyer, had an income certainly not to exceed Erskine's. The same is true of Garrows, another great English lawyer. Ballantyne reoeived from the British Government a very large fee for going to Calcutta to try a murder case, but a large part of it was consumed in expenses.
America takes the lead in big lawyers' fees, and it is only within a dozen years or so that our lawyers b%ve been so lucky. Pinckney, Webster, Choate, or any of our great lawyers in times past never dreamed of such extravagant bills. The first great.fee ever known in this country was received by Ciarkson N. Potter In the foreclosure of the Canandaigua Railroad, not many veara agO. It is stated that he received |100,000 in tbat case. It Is reported tbat Charles O'Conor received f75,0to) iii the Jumel will £ase and $100,000 in tbe Parrtoh will case/" In the latter case Judge John K. Porter and Daniel Lord received large fees.
To opme to our own city, Which is seldom far behind in anything, tbe late Henry Burden paid bis lawyers upwards of $75 000- in tbe famous Spike case, and ex-Chancellor Walworth, the referee in that case received 150,000 referee's fees. In the Marshall will case, Townsend & Browne received $26,000. j/v
1
Dr. Hw
OEM
tedaore ace
Troy the Preg inform Its*
readeraihrough a apeeHtl telegrarofrom ofcerf NeW York of certain high fees charged by'lawyers in the Vanderbilt will case As was there stated, Mr. Heniy L. Clin ton biurgecF 9250,000. Mr. Clinton was attorney in the case, which waa well worked up, and probably his bill contains items of money expended by him for. detective service and other matters. Judge George F. Comstook, of Syracuse, charged ana received 160,000.
*'U
FRENCH MONARCHS AND THEIR soNa. .Sine? the days of Louis XIII, no French monarch has been succeeded by his son. Louis XIV, Whose long reign of seventy-two years eonld well make this possible, was succeeded by his great grandson. Louis. XV, who reigned in person fifty-two years, was succeeded by his grandson. Thenceforward the direct male line never reached the throne. Louis XVI wa? beheaded in 1793, and his son, tbe, little Dauphin, called Louis XVII, was done to death in tbe Temple in bis tenth year. The young King of Rome, Napolebn I's'sos, died, Ilk? his father, in exile^at twenty• one. Louis XVIII, the brother of Louis XVI, died without a successor or his body. Charles X, brother of Louis XVIII,.when he came to the throne had already had* his son, the Due de Berri, assassinated, and abdicated in 1830 In
favor of hto grandson, the Dnc de Bor deaux, and died In exile. The Duke, as Bhe Cointe de Chambord, or Henry V, is still waiting. Louis Philippe ran away, and his sons and gratidsons are still waiting. Last of all cometo Napoleon III, whose son lied in England.
licking Piles,
The symptoms are moisture, like perspl ration, intense Itching, increased by scratching, very distressing, particularly at night if allowed to continue very serious resalts may follow. Dr. Hwayue's AllHealing Ointment 1* ft pleasant sure cure.
L. Taylor, Hinsdale, N. H., writes: Tor thirty years I have been greatly troubled with Itching files, have consulted several physicians and tried many remedies, which proved to be no remedies at all, uutll I obtained Swayne's Ointment at Thomas' drug store in Brattleboro, Vt., which cuteU me completely. reader, if you are sufferIng from this distressing complaint, or Tetter, Itch. Soald Head, Rlug Worm, liarber'« Itch, any crufty scaly skin eruption, tree Swayne* ointment and be cured. by .mail toany address on receipt of price (In currency stamps) SO cents a bo*, three boxes Sll& Address letters, Dr,Swayne A son,J& North Sixth street, Philadelphia. No cbajge for advice. Sold by leaiing druggists. In Terra Haute by Buntya Armstrong.
MAAYLAHD TRLXPHONB C?0.if BALTTXORK, M-0.
Dr. SwaVne A Son—Gents: 1 have been suffering tot ten years with Asthma, Bronchitis, and an affection of the stomach, causing me to expectorate a great deal of have tried various medicines and
chokes me, and induces sleep, and can feet myself improving in health ROW growing its use me, am proper, e«« well «youn^vesERt
April 12,1479. lit Parte ave. No other known remedy possesses the treat virtue of Dr. Swayne's Syrup In enrec tlvely curing aJitroubles of their alrpaasages and lung. Equally valuable in Broaehlai and Asthmatic affection*. The first dose rives relief, ami it is sure to cure the wots eOngh, all throat, breast and lunedlv
Price W cents and tl, or six not lev for 93. The large site is the most econom swayne A Son, imminent drug-
Manila A Ann*
strong. ftr. 8w*|«Pk All Hesllsg Oistmcat For that distressing complaint, "itching lies," Symptoms of which are moisture, ..Ice perspiration, intense itching, as if pin worms were crawling about the parts gives immediate relief and can? Is certain. *\3wayne's Ointment" is sold In Terre Haute by Buntin A Armstrong.
a week in your owo town. Terms ltv and $3 outfit free. Address iuiOauU, Maiua.
$66
l«r. for its lce», dlsng, ulcerpies on the
eli Panacfea^c rea of se .%rhj«ft lotchfcSQT
lUUc diseases. Bold wholesale and retail by Buntin A Armstrong, Terre H&ute.
F«r Slek or lervsni Hesdsehe, Coative hntoit* inactive liver, and to ward off malarial -fevers. -Dr. Swayne's Tar and Sarsaparill PilV are very effective. They act gently, without any griping or unpleasant seufiaUon whatever, leaving no bad effects, as 1b the case with blue mass o.- oalomel. Prepared only by Dr. Mwayn* A Son, Philadelphia, and sold at 26 cents a box by all leading druggists, buntin A Armstrong, Terre Hante. j6 5 1 BST« Your Hair. Keep It tteanilrfal
All persons who aspire to beauty of personal appearance should not neglect that natural necessity, the hair. many it has. been negleeMtunttl it has grown thiH, gray, or entirely Alien off. The .London Hair Color Restorer restores nataee^s losses. and imparts a befUtby natural color, thick ens thin hair, cures dandruff and all itcb soalv eroptions on the setip, maklug white and clean, and insuring a luxuriant growth of the hadr in Its natural, youthful color. Ask lor London Hair Restorer, Pr.ce 76 c^nts a bottle, yix bottle^ *1, Sold by Binti and Ar etron*.
"OH! MY
FROM TlkB
Yigd .Woolen Mills
A
^eruptions, boils, ^OHta^jpreakenea
&
mu* »r
of tl teorpie jemMktjuaiase^lesm. tiff ol ut comrhtrumatism, sores
nose, on tbe face, arms, mouth, eyes, ana all disea*** arising from pure blood, or ulcerous character, mercurial andsyph-
Hcriri'A MKMKDY.tbe great Kidney and LI verHediclae,cures Pains In the Back, Side or Loins, and all
U-3 l'
BACK!
mm
r-ellamie may be placed ih it.
Diseases of the
77 Kidn^j's,Bladder and Urinary OrA s, Dropsy,
Gravel, Diabetes,
Bright's Disease Qf the Kidneys, Heteutlon, or Incontinence of Urine, Nervous DIHESSPS Female Weakness, and Excesses MUST'S B£MEDY is prepared EXPBKSStl for these diseases.
PaovriiENCE, B. I., Aug. 19,18.8-
WM.E. CI..\BKB—Dear Sir: Having witnessed the wonderful effects of HUNT'S REMEDY in my own ease, and in a great number of others. I rec nnrne ided it to all afflicted with Kidney "Diseases or Dropsy. Tnose afflicted by disease should secure the medlcluc which will cure in the shortesj possible time. HUNT'S RFM BUY will do this. E. R. DA WLEY, 85 Dyer st.
From Rev. E. G. Taylor, D. D., pastor F.rst Baptist Church. PBOVIDEMCE, I, Jan. 8.1879 can tea llV to virtue ot HUNT'S REMEDY in Kidney Diseases from ac ual trial, having been gieatly-benetttted by its nse. E.G.TAYLOR. HUNT'S BUMEDY is purely Vegetable, and is used by tne advice of Phycicians. It- 4iaa stood the test of time for 30 yea and the utmost1
HUNT'S
O'STE TRI4I, Wlia COS VISCfi yeK. Keod for pamphlof t6 W.-a. E. CLARKE. Previdence,
SOLD BY ALL
enson's Capciae Porous Plaster
Fok1'Woman Mad Children:
-TO THE-* 4.4 tt
have a full line of goods expressly made 1 for FARMERS, which I will excminee for wool at tbe highest market price, or for
Will also receive wool on commission, and mnke% cash advancement on Philadelphia and Bo"rton market price*
We believe It will be to the advantage of farmers to call at tbe Vlga Woolen Mills aud exchange Lhetr wool for goods.
U. R. JEFFERS,
Cor. Tenth and Main sts., ferre Hante, Ind.
OLD UD K1UBU.
DB. S*KKmril IDTVSB IXVIOOBATOB is a Standard Itanily Remedy for dismseaof the Liver and Bowels.Vegetable.—It never Debilitates—It Cathartic and
SEND
i.T.W. SAIF0RO.il.D, fmnpfcjif.——
Trial Will re its Popu-
rit^E wlier^*
^THITE Shuttle Sewing Machine
When once used will retain its place forever.
It Is ce:ebrated for its advantages In tbat it is one of the largest sewing machines ann,uctured--ad»p'e alike to t!ie use of the family or the workshop, it has the largest shn tie, with a bobbin that holds almott a spool of thread.
Thesbuttle tension is adjustable without removing the shuttle from the machine. This machine is so constructed that the power is applied directly over tut- ueedle, thus enabling it to sew the heaviest material with unequaled ease. It is very simple in its construction, arable as Iron and steel can make It, all its wearing parts case hardeued or steel, and Ingeniously provided with mean* to taking up io-^tmotion so we are justified in Warranting Every 3(aebln* for 3
Years.
It is the lightest ant easiest runniug machine in the market, it i«, also, the most aborately ornamented aud preKiest machine ev^r proiuced.
With all these advantages, it Is sold from tl5 to S25 less than othur first-class machines
J. N. Hickman, Gen. Agt.
W
5
aw Main street Terre Haiit1, lud.
Will gl ve:
DRUGGI8T8.
LADIES,
a
RANDALL'S^
CIRCASSIAN
CREAM
^WASH
you a, cpoiplexion as pure as a
baby's. For Ails", wb Buntin A Armstrong, 1 Groves & Lpwry, W. E. Freeman A Sherburni!.
TauGray'a
(if: Cd-')
Females suffering from pain an»l wea^ nefs will derive great' comfort and *trength from the use,of Benson's Cap cinePOwuis Plaster. Where children are allected with whooping cuugh, ordinar oughsor co'd or w#ak lungs, It is tht me and on treatment' they f-hould receive. This,article contain-^new meiilc inal elements snch as are found in no ther remedy'ID the sameform. It is fat superior to ooumon porr-u^ jiliisters. lin tments. elec.Mcnl Hpoiiance-i and othei external romedles. It 'relieven jxiin a nce, ^irengthens and cures where othn plasters lit not evon relieve For LAM? \N1) VV'KAlv. B.V.CK, LUU'Uniat.L»m Kidney Disease and ail local achesand puin It 18 els') the best krno*^ rein^iy. Ask for Benson's Capt ine Ptew^rand taken •jtheir. Soid by a! I dru£glsls. Price 25c
an-i IvUI'., by
»nz, Terre Haut*. Retail, p. QO-, •and., aawyiO 6m.
GREAT ENGLISH REM KIYI Mpeciflc Mediciuo a
is especially recom and Ab. a ed as au untailing cure lor Seminal Weakness, ttpermator- firbca, impo
I a a
After Taking
sequence on-Self Abtts« as Los of Memory, Universal Lassitude, Pain iu .the Back, dimness of Vision, PrematureOld Age, aud
many
other diseases that lead to insanity, Consumption and a Premature Gi ave. Full particulars In oar pamphlet* which we desire to send free by mall to every ooe. The Speclllc Medicine is s.ild by all druggists at 81 per package, or six packages for id, or frill be sent by mall on reo'-ipt of the money, by addres^ing HK ORO M.LL. CINE O, No. S .Mechanic'* Block, Detroit, Michigan.
Sold in Terre Hante, wholesale and retail by Gulick & Berry, and by druggists everywhere.
iIANO TUNING. ?.'j "?r
If y6utp!i%'d naeds tnain? o-- repairing,. youaiaa»«e mo«ey b/employing th« p»puiar aud reliable tuaer, v, ri.PAiGK, WHO makes a specialty «f tdnlug and mpalrmg alt kind* of histrbmeftu. All t» aun executed Uie sAine as at piauo and org^n uiau-
Ptenoftuned and ceaned, motha exterIn ated an^ wires prevented fro.n ruatlng Without extra charge. Pianos tuned by the year at red uo«l rate^. Prices greatly reducecf for rebufling pianos The OaKi of references glv^n when desired. Leave orders with W.H. Paige, 0/7 Main street, or send your ad»ress through tae postom
Evansvilie, Terre Haute fj and Chicago
PAXVILLE ROUTE.
CfiROUGS TO CHICAGO WITHOUT, CHANGE OF CARS.
Trains leave Union Depot, Terre Haute, a« Allows: 6:40 a. m„ dally, except Sunday* 9 5 0 a
Through sleepiog cars on all night trains. Close cjnnecaon is made at Danville for Hteorift and points we«, alsj with WabAsh train* both east und we-t.
JJS. CJLLE ti. HDcrlutendeut.
y. », HUNT, U. "1*. A.™' V' I
*ERRE HAUTE ICE CO.
We take pleasure in saying to thepubllo itenernliy that we
are
well supplied with
"uJendid Ice. Prices low and oraera prompt1 fllied, if left at ofllce or given to drivers. L. F. PURDUE. ice, fill Main street, between Sixth and nth.
».
EGBERT
CDRTIS, Terre Iltfiftr, lad.,
Breeftar of Pore HMW and WUi Leg horns,Browu and Whilf China Ge«»e, and Moscov DnCks.
Hfjfick ilDd tOT iftlft Agent
for
Animal Meal for Fowls and
wine, and German Hottr Pilis.
NITED STATES SCALES.
My improved Wagon and Railroad track scales are taking the lead tu all^allties where they have had an Introduction. Mechanics and others who have examined them pronounce them constructed on better principles than any others in use, insuring a greater degree of sensitiveness and durability. If you want sea es, den be humbugged into paying a big price for a
name,
praotioa public^
investigate and save your nioney,
and at the same time get abetter scale. The march is onward, and scales
fvre
improved, like eveiything
$5 to
belog
else.
UroularK,
references, price lists, tlon. Address B. J. ALHT1N, Pnjf**^'t i*S Terrs Hau?e, lud.
Ofllee, corner Fourth aad Ksrrington.
OA per day at home. Samples worth $.5 free, Address, oTIXbOX k, Pui tiaud, Aiaiue.
