Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 12, Number 2, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 9 July 1881 — Page 7

THE MAIL

A

Paper

for the

People.

THE SONO OF THE DRAKEMAN.

Oh, listen to the brakemnn, through all the livelong day. As the rattle of the wheel* bear* the train away. How cheerily he bangs the door when anybody leave* How cheerfully Into the ditch the lazy tramp he heaves, ... And when you reach the station, how lustily he screams: "Lone Sparis what he aay*, bat "Logansport" he means.

The burning cinder in your eye awake* yon from your nap. And "Cedar Rapids" must be nigh you bear him shout "Ce-rap!" His merry shout flows on and on, and near the break of day You slow Into "Batavia," and bear blm shriek "Btay!" And when at noon be hollers "KToo!" yon think it's some place new: But when you reach the station, It* only "Kalamazoo."

Oh, you bet your bottom dollar, in all this broad, fair land, If mutter what the brskeman says, yon will not understand. "Apple l" he shrieks for "Hannibaland when he hollers "sville!" You have to gucfl* if it's "Hopkins-" or "Crawsfords-" or "Tltus-ville." "Txbar! Chay cah! Pans' goluneast hav' twent' mln*t din How do you know, from whAt he says, its

Pittsburg that you're iu?

Oh, the wasted English language that he slays without a sigh! Oh, the stations where you want to stop, but where you're carried by! "Dab!" he calls at "Oneida when they hear his shout, The passengers for "Buda" in haste go scrambling out: And then to theconductor, in accents plain and clear, From his station at the step* ho shouts distinctly, ALL RIOHT HERE!" —Bard cite. /f

The Argonaut.

The Conductor's Story

ANKPISODEOF BIDWELL'S BAK.

I think it is Emerson who says: "When you pay your ticket and get into the car, you have no cues* what good company you shall flnu there. You buy inu4 that is not rendered Jn the bill." I have found this remark eminently true on sevoral occasions, particularly when my life-loug friend, Ruth, bears me company.

Ruth is Iho most unconventional of women. 8be travels as she does everything el He, with whole-souled earnestness, and fluds bread where most people could gather only stones. Thus, recently, being in the rear car of the long train,she preferred standing upon the platform and drinking in at one draught that magnificent valley through which we seemed flying than by tantalizing sips, as one has to do from behind a narrow car-window.

I followed hor. I always do. And, holding on to the narrow railing, we felt somewhat like two lost comets whirliug through spneo. Soon the door behind un banged, and a gentleman in the midsummer of life, with a face as classically beautiful as Edwin Booth's, and a waist of Falstallian dimensions, joined us. lie bonmodon us almost literally. From the dimple in his fair, soft chin," to the ring of brown, silky hair which lay upon nis broad, smooth forehead, thoexprosHlon scintillated with intelligent good nature. Withal, there was such a retrospective background to the sunny brightness tiint after a few commonplaces, Kuth, the daring, honest, impudent creature, said, looking up meanwhile into his face with a smile so honost and kindly that ho would have beeu a llersorker not to have reilocted it: "Sir, permit ineto remark that yoti are a physical incongruity." *'tfot so irnd US that, niadame, I hope. I am merely a conductor, as by thistime you have discovered, and a pretty woll Wlanced one, independent of avoirdupois." "But your thoughtful face, sir, that is what tierplexos mo. It should belong to a body but one-third the weight of yours, suggested Ruth, tho wise disciple of levator. "Mv faoo is all right," he replied, stroking his choeks and chin' with an air of marvelous self-complacency. "It stopped growing ten years ago, but It is here." touching tho reglou of his diaphragm with the tlpof his forefinger, "that contentment and my good luck show themselves. Once I was as thin as Peter Schemmel's shadow, and"—he paused, looking into Ruth's clear grav eyes as if he would sound her aoul depths—"1 am strongly tempted to tell vou mv bit of romance, for there is a long stretch a head, and you look like one of tho kind to enjoy a touch of nature. Isn't it so?"

Tho conductor half struck the very kov note of our neons. Wo were pining for a veritable California storv, told in an unconventional way, outside of the well read romance® of Bret Hart© and the Argonaut. To be told, too, under such lWKHiliar circumstances would be an added spice, and thus Ixwoucrht him to immediately yield to temptation. "I am an'ofd stager," he said, "at least as far back as the Spring of 1850. With a blanket strapped upon my back, fifty cents in tnv pants pocket, and the biggest stocjc ofhop©and unused energy that ever uuule a lad's heart as light as a l*loon, tramped along here in my c«nrch for the 'gold diguing*.' My

ambition was higher than those buttes yonder by thousands of feet, and the top was to lie capped lv solid gold," pointing as he spoke to the three singular and isolated pe«ks we were iustthen passing, known as the Marysville Buttee whose volcanic heights looked as inaccessible to us as their peaks seemed brown and barren. •'it appears to me," said Ruth, measuring the moat precipitous sides tf those lofty and t&ygusrioue hills, "that When a higher guerdon than naew gold, not, however, that I hold the metal in contempt." "I had, madame, and that was the whole matter. I was desperately to love—that was a solemn fact expressed in a* few words as possible—*ud believe that she loved me, but lh« top of Mount Shasta was not mere unattainable to me than Jennie. H«r father, an old Philadelphia druggist, had money, and I had none. He was as proud as Lucifer, and as ambitious for his daughter as he waa proud. I felt that I could 'move a mountain' if I could find a mountain to move so Jennie and I said good-by one afternoon tinder an old oak in Fairmount Park, Mid in the very depths of my heart I believed that she would be true to me. It was not a severe seven day*' ride ina palace car from New York to 8an FnMbra in thove davs, and the tall, slender, hungry, pennifesft lad who tramped along We twentv-nine yean a*o, seeking his fortune like another IHck Whittington, was a wearv and homesick one as well." "By 'here,' which you have twiced used, do rou mean this veritable Valley of the Sacramento?" said Rath.

"The very same. My objective point I was a place now famous in the of that period, called 'Bidwell's Bar,' on account of a richer bar in the Feather River, full of golden sand, which was discovered by. General Bidwell. The place was many miles from me: the country was thinly settled I did not know a soul, for even tramps were scarce in those early days, ana so my courage and my legs gave out together. Patting, off my boots about 5 o'clock one sultry day, I beared my blistered to the cool evening breeze, and, creeping into a clump of young manzanitas, fell asleep, hoping that I would never awake again this side of the stars. I did, however, conscious that my toes were being licked in a gentle fashion, and discovered that it was being done by a brown setter dog, about as hungry looking and generally dilapidated as I waa myself. "Where be came from I never knew, but looking into Us half-human eyes, we spedily entered into a sort of dumb compact to trudge on together.. I found that the poor fellow (I never could call him a brute) bad a soar knee, inflamed and bleeding. I tore a strip off from my last handkerchief to bina it up, and in place of the Good Samaritan's oil and wine, gave him my last scrap of cold

It is strange, but forlorn as I

was in those days, 1 recall them with a tender pleasure almost unaccountable. If I had been raised a Brahmin I would have believed that some immortal spirit

of unfailing cheerfulness and unending resources were imprisoned in that dog's body. Did you ever read the fairy legend of 'The White Cat,' who, after she had persuaded the young Prince, her lover, to eut off her head and tail and throw them into the fire, suddenly stood before him a woman, as fair as Aurora. Fritz, for that was the name by which I called the dog, looked at me with Jennie's brown eyes, half roguish, half thoughtful, and together we resumed our journey. Nor would I have followed in the "wake of the young Prince, even had I known the result would have been similar, for Fritz, the dog, was invaluable just as he was. All lonesomeness was gone, now that he rarely left my side, and, although our shadows had grown less by the time we reached the 'bar,' our immaterial entiless were In prime order for everything in tbp&sbape of adventure. 'Have never beenany gold dug.' Then I'll not at this late day spoil your first impression of a miners camp by diserihing mine as I approached Bidwoll's liar. I may say, though, that one might have supnosed an earthquake or tornado had 1een at work there, tearing up the hundreds of thousands of cubic feet that had been moved and removed by mortal hands in their frantic and persistent search for gold. "The 'bar' was a world in miniature. Almost every nationality was there repseseated, and almost every feature of human kind but humanity. Armed with a pick, pan and shovel, like hundreds of others, I began to aig and burrow and wash dirt. But my labor and its results would not balance, for some-

being goou, stoppeu uigging anu mreu myself as a eamp-scullion. I did every kind of jobbing within the range of a miner's wants. Washing dirty flannel shirts aud cotton overalls, patching leather trousers, and cooking 11a, is not the most dignified and nowersirkttn path to fortune, you must know and to a boy whoso ideas of chivalry, independence, aud deodsof nightly valor wore purely and intensely Byronic, such a fate, you must acknowledge, was a sort of poetic injustice. My aim, though, was to earn enough money with which to buy a certain claim of which I knew, and that I had, in advance, labeled 'Bo nanza.' "I might have succeeded, but I was prostrated by a malarial fever, and for days aud weeks lay unconscious at the tendor mercy of a few rough Welsh miners with* human hearts. My little hoard of money and my energy melted away together like spring snow. But for "Fritz, I'd have died of disappointment alone. He had adopted the 'Never say die' motto, and as I often road in his glorious oyes the sentonco, 'You great old coward! At him again!' as a tendor and appreciatlye sympathy which the gift of speech could not havo made more assuring. My nurses had pitched mo a tout on tho south side of a low hill, and had left mo to got well at my leisure. My 'bottom dollar had dwindled to the value o! a dime, my legs to tho thick ness of a pair of tongs (for all appetite was gone), and one evening hope failed mo. Believing 1 was going to die, I resolved to do the fair thing by Jennie, apprise her of the event and advise her to forget me. By the flickering light of a bit or tallow candle I began the Tetter, the first I had written for months. I thought aloud and wrote. Fritz lay beside me, his nose wedged between his paws, but I knew by the twitch of his ears that he understood every word I was writing. "I had reached the climax of renunciation and wretchedness—or, rather, my expression of it—when he suddenly rose and went out. I soon heard him pawin and scratching and tearing the earti about six feet from me, as though he were under contract to dig a tunnel to China before daylight. Thinking he had found the burrow of a wolf or a fox, I called him off but he was as deaf as a rock to my voice. Seizing the candle, I hurried to the spot, around which lay a half bushel of gravel which he had loosened, when mv eye caught the gleam of a dull red streak that veined a piece of quarts about the sise of an egg lying among the fresh earth. Wouldyou believe it? That streak was worth fifty dollars, for it was virgin gold. Nor was it the only one upon that hillside. Frits had fouiul a lode (thanks to the gopher), and I thereby had found a fortune. As soon as possible I had the gold of that precious stone wrought into a ring of inv own designing—ail of it, at least, but the contents ot one blunt corner, which, in its native roughness I had mounted as a simple brooch, Sending these to Jennie, I—" "An act of great gertert*itjr, sir, I think," interrupted Ruth with laughing glint in her eve. "One would have thought you'd have preserved such a piereofr*w good fortune aa?a memorial stone." "You anticipate mo, madafcne. It was as a memorial that 1 sent my first bit of treasure, but I expected to get ft bacx again within two years, and the girl with it." ••And dM you?" "No nor eve# received a line of acknowledgement that mv offer had been accepted. Nothing finds gold quicker than gold, when a man has once got a fair share of it, and in two years had, In various way*, secured Investing It, as I thought safely, I returned Philadelphia in all the pride of a conquering hero. My story ought to end to wind np with the chime of wedding bells and a 'beautiful Rachel' as mv rewmrd for faithful serving but I hail scarcely arrived when I heard, Incidentally, that Jennie had gone with her father to Europe, nor left no sign thai abe ever remembered me." "You certainly did not let that Het dampen the ardor of your pwmxitT"

queried Rnth "you followed her, of course." "I did no such thing, madam. I returned to San Francisco, and plnnged into the excitement of gold hunting with a recklessness that woman cannot understand. SLx months after and I lost every dollar, but by that time I had learned that experience is worth nothing ss solid capital until it has been dearly bought. I whistled my rhyme

Loss and gain, pleasure and pain, mm Balance the see-saw of life, in the sensitive ears of my faithful Fritz, hugged his brown head dose to my shoulder—don't laugh, that dog was my 1

MIIaiI

out. It did, and five years afterward I had a bank account which ran largely into the thousands. I invested it in land. By that time I was a bachelor of thirty. Hard knocks and my one big disappointment had shaken all the romance out of me, and when I again went East it was on business connected with the construction of this railroad." "And you have quite outlived your boyish faney, as your heart began to lose its youth?" said Ruth, with the least bit of cynicism in her tone.

I think Fritz knew." said the conductor quietly. "I had become almost misanthrope for his sake. .If I left him' to go into society—such as we had—for a few hours, he either whined like a sick child or kept up such an increasing barking and baying that to save him from being shot as a nuisance I went to no place where it waa impossible for him to accompany me. The old fellow went with me even to New York, and on the journey I often caught myself cogitating aow he—born in a wilderness of wild mustard, and as fond of camp life as ah Indian—would take to the constraint of an old city. Well, I had not been in Now York a week before there was a strong tugging at my heart to run down to Philadelphia. Not that it was home for me, for my parents had died before I first left it. I called the desire 'the charm of association,' and it led me. "There, as I went down Arch street my poor dog lost his wits and the sober dignity of lus maturity. He had a remarkably fine scent. I always knew that but no sooner had we turned into that particular street than, with nose close to the ground and rigid tail, he ran zig-zag to and fro, as though he was on the trail of an erratic fox. I called him. but he gave no heed. Pebple got out of nis way. The gamins shouted, and, with a wild, shrill bark, he suddenly bounded into the doorway of a large dry goods store. I bounded after him in time to see him rush up to a lady in black, who was examining some gloves, and danced around her with signs of the most extravagant ioy. There are tones that live without the aid of photographs. •Roy! Roy! Dear old Roy,' was all she said, but I'd have sworn the voice was Jennie's if I had heard it on the summit of Mount Blanc. A white hand was laid upon his head and my ring was on the hand."

He paused. "Yours? Sir, I hope you did not claim it," said the practical collocutor. "I did, and the hand which wore it. just as I orginally intended." Nor did Alexander, in his hours of conquest, ever smile a more serene approval of himself thau our conductor at this stage of tho story. "But the conduct of Fritz, and the lady's silence, and all the queer concomitants which exist only in fictionhow do you reconcile them with an ow'r true tale?" said Ruth, the truth loving. "Fritz was Rov, the Roy who Jiad often been caressed by Jennie before his young master, Jennie's cousin, got the gold fever, when I did, and camo to California, never to return. Jeiinie had written but her letters had never reach ed me. She thought me dead. Why the dog came to me, when his master died, is one among the riddles of my life which I will disentangle in tho hereafter." "And to-day where is she?"

He stood waiting for the answer. "On our ranch near Sacramento, and I believe one of the happiest women in the State. Wo havo a hoy ten years old, whose name is Fritz, and all the dearer for the sake of the old friend where I hope one day to meet the human of him. I wish you could stop off a bit and see my wife. Queer, isn^t it, that I should have introduced this bit of private history upon vou? But the truth is—. Yes. coming 1 ill be with you again, ladies."

A brakeman beckoned him inside, and we had seen the last of our handsome conductor.

The evening shadows had begun to lengthen. The setting sun had turned the vast plain of the Sacramento Valley intp a "field of the cloth of gold," and the distant peaks of the Sierras, clad in eternal snows, but now rose tinted and glowing, seemed to tint the azure above them as with a wedge of burnished silver. It was starlight when we reached the end of our car ride and were registered for the night. "The conductor's story was a pleasant little episode, Ruth, wasn't it? Do you believe it all happened?" I asked, as 1 leaned from my pillow to hers to leave 4 good night loss on her round neck. "I like Fritz," was the sleepy answer. "There's an instinct about some dogs that the half of mankind can neither appreciate nor maintain. I trust a man whom a good dog loves."

SO HOSPITAL NEEDED. New York Independent. No palatial hospital neeked for Hop Bittors patients, nor large salaried talented puffers to tell what Hop Bitter will do or core, as they tell their own story by their certain and absolute cures at borne.

LKT the poor sufferers from female 00mplaints take courase and rejoice that a painless remedy has been found. We refer to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It is prepared st 238 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass. Send to Mrs. Pinkhnra for pamphlet.

MALARIAL 'POISON.

The principal cause of nearly all ricJtmpe at this time of the rear has its ortein tn a disordered liver, which. If not aegulatad in time, fpneat saflfcrlnc. wretchedness end aeatn will enstae. A gentleman, writing mm South America, sajm: "I have used Simmon* Ltver Regulator wtth good both as a prevention and eore for Mi Fevers on the Istlunns ot Putantt."

If yon feel drowsy, debilitated, have qoeot headache, month tastes badly, poor appetlk and tongue coated, jroo msnRtol from torpid liver or "biliousness,** and aoth* in* will cur* yoa so speedily and penns* nentijr as to take

Simmons Liver Regulator

It is (dven wish safety and thehappteM results to tbe roost deiiotfe infant. It takes t!M place of quinine and Wttess of e*sry ldnd. to the cheapest, pare* aad best family medicine In the wortd.

HOLD BY AIX DKUOORAM Bay the Genuine tn White Wrapper, wtth redS,prepared only by J. H. Ufia AO».

TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL.

nn mv fi^nncoa AQCl iat knew vein held

[THE ONLY MEDICI HE

15 E1THEB LIQUID OB DBT FOBS That Acts at Ike Mae time

\TBXima, TEXMWtU, in

minim

I WHY AWE WE SICK? Btemm tor allow that gnat organt to Itteoms doggtd or torpid, e*d poixm&u Ikmonan UurtfOrt farad Mo tk* Hood |ttd Qkotddbt IfjltfrflMfaMftf.

I N E W O

WILL SURELY CURE |KI0NCY DIMMEST livm complaints, (FILII. minrurtv, CMKAKT lllliiu, FEMALE WlAKSBMUHi

AX9 XKXVOITS DDMUEM,

|&y causing fttt action qT thin erftau1" thd I tutoring their power to throw of ditto*. I Why raffkr Bilioss psl* ackest |Wkr temwatod witk Piles, Coastlpatloa! I Why fHghtsaed srer disorders* Kldaep!

I Whj esdsre aarroai or

sick

headaches!

I Um Kin\EY.WORTandrycio*In health. It pot up In Dry Vegetable !«•, In tin |»BS0aep*cksge0f which make* rtx quarts of I medietas. Also in UqeM Fens, very Oeaeea. I treted, tor these th*t cannot readily prepare It, I erit

sets with wtasleOdaacr In either form.

OBI

IT OF

TOCB

DRUGGIST. PRICE, »I.M

WSLLI, BICHABDSON Co., I (WUl send the dry port-psld.) BGSUMM^Tt.

A Compound Tlnoture of the moat valuable remedlea known to tha madloal profession, prepared upon slrlotlj pharmaceutical prlnolplsa.

An ezperlanoe of twenty-five yeaie peoiee it to be the fleetest Antidote to Msiazis end ell other Agna inflneoeee known to the wend.

The only atolnii our* for'sil IflMBMM 1 fUdaeys. In Liver Ceayl^nt, elT Dli|yderw_ef the Be?

w&!^^min5S^ot uanS&intiT imala sex it has no eipial.

to thft fsmilt

NOT A BEVEgACE Bat am eld reliable Henehrii Besiedy, thanoghhr adapted to aseiek natnie..

It aoppHw tone to

UM

etomach, letofIfeistee the

digeeUve organs, stimulates the emotions, sadl£r* moting a ragolar action of tho bowele, enables every orraaaf the body to perform ite allowed work rego larly and without, interruption.

Its hlgheet oome tram thoee woe have nsed it longest and known it best. Nowhere so popolar as in lAnoaster, Pa., where has been in nee for more than a Quarter of seem

Highly commended aaa General and Appetizer. 8olrby ProggieU ers«

THI MESSENGER OF HIALTH A large sized paper deecriptire of disesse, ttsorigtai and cure, will be mailed Dree to any addreee oa application to

THE MISHLER HERB BITTERS CO. Lanoaster, Pa. tVWe strongly reoommend to mothers Prof. Parker's Pleoeant Worm 8yT«p. It neree fails, is easy to tako, and noafter-pajsieds reqnired. Prioe, 2& cents.

TUTTS

INDORSED SV

PHYSICIANS, CLERGYMEN, ANI THE AFFLICTED EVERYWHERE.

THE GREATEST MEDICAL TRIUMPH OF THE AGE.

SYMPTOMS OP A

1

TORPID LIVER.

XJOSSof eppetite.Nausea.

bowels eostlvei

tfc"e~b soTc part. Pafn under the shoulderblade, fullness after eatfPB, with a"3ffl clination to exertion of body or mind. Irntabilfty of temper. Low sp ofmemory.with a feeling of hi

Low spirits. IJQSS BSE:

ing of having

lected some duty, weariness, Disslness, Plutteringof Ibelg eart.'Dots beforetbe eyes. Vallow ftliin, Headaobe, BestTessne»ratliTgh17Hghly colored Urine. IF THB8B WABNIH08 ABB tTHHBBDBD, SERIOUS DISEASES WILL SOON BE DEVELOPED,

TUTT'S PILLS are especially adapted to such cases,one dose effects such a change of feeling as to astonish the sufferer.

They Increase tbcAppeltte, snd caosetbe body to Take

ot* VleM.

HAISor WHISK

ESS changed to aOMssr

RLACK by sincie application of this Dva. It

Office, 38 Murray 8t* Mew York. l»r. Terr* SiKtiL »t Itlmkl# tafcraallM fe rwfel S.nlpf wSI W Mllrf mil MI

HE SUMMER RESORTS

O

Wisconsin

and Minnesota

Are reached moPi dMMtljr and with greater con renlence (o thejKirW, via the

Danville Route

And CHICAGO

Than by any tout* they eonld sdect. Ws run

Througn Sleepers Daily

BETWEEN

Terre Haute and Chicago Eyansyille and Chicago

^ReettnU^CbalrOaiii dtity between

Indianapolis and Chicago

Trains on this route are ran to arrtre In Chicago at sDCh hours as to make the fliuwff conaectlons with the C. A N. W. and CL, M. *8CP.R*yn,aad enahietheTnnrWtorca^ their destination to the SHORTEST TIME POmiBLE. For time of trains see current

Gon. Agent, «M Main 8U, Terre Haute, tx-H,. A. & DUNHAM, Osn. Pass. Agent, Chicago, III.

95 to

$20 sasftsri -ssrftujawr A Co. Port'and. Malna.

/trmrm

OsxxLnm: I was Sanson*tonM. Am—r lactssssd proatrstioo sad

(SkstM,•//rsa.Ara.I

'fks Iris 9\ande l( s\ si MsisWtw mf A wsWs »ssJsr, sssias»l

Msssiifafsd

wttk ihm Tvmm—Slel 4rssisWie. /IMTSMI e»e»' sw

JISSS

wksrsy

a T»mlo ei»susssai .f •AltfAITHII «T Til DR.

TTHE

NERVOUS SUFFERERS. ORSAT EUROPEAN REMEDY. BR. *4B. mpnal Spaalflc XMIICIBS

It la a nositLve case Mr Spermatorrhea, Seminal Weakness, Impotency, and all diseases resulting from self abuse, aa mental anxiety, loss of memory pains in back ii or side, 111 diseases in lead to 11sumption isanity andan early grave. The Specific Medicine if being used with wonderful success.

Pamphlets sent free to all. Write for them and get full particulars. Price of Specific,*1 per package, or six packages for S6. Addnas all orders to

J. B. SIMPSON MEDICINE CO., No. 1(MS Main street, Bufihlo, N. Y. 8old in Terre Haute by GROVKS A LOWRY.

GRAY'S

SPECIFIC MEDICINE.

TRADE MARK The OreatrRAOE MARK Engllfi' remedy. An unfailing cure for Beminnl

Weakness, Spermatorrhea, Impotency, and all Diseases'

BEFIRE T/Ulllfi.asasequenwAFTER TAIIH. ot Self Abuse as loss of memory, universal lassitude, pain in the back, dimness of vision, premature old age, and many other dis* eases that lead to Insanity or consumption and a premeture grave.

Full partieular8~in our pamphlet, whichwe desire to send free by msil to every one. The Specific Medicine 1b sold by all druggists at $1 per package, or six packages for 15, or will be sent free by mail on receipt of the money, tr addressing

THE GRAY MEDICINE CO., Buflblo, N. Y.

Sold in Terre Haute, wholesale and retail by GULICK A BBRKY'

WONDER OF THE WORLD!

GOOD NEWB FOk ALL!

PROF.HERMAN'SWORLDyet

•t*, CROWN

N

M« features and eonvsniei

are. Itarol ««w and eoluaM« features

It is larpt, Upht-nmning, nolttUi««, handtomf, eon. wenitmi, tfurabU, and rimpU. Warranted and kept la repair free ford years. Circulars with full description sent free on request it is surely the best A trial will prove It Doa*it fall to see before rou bur. vIAICUTAUTV%u BT FtXmENCK MACHINE CD.,Florenee, Mass.

OTICE,

thus the system Is

nourished, snd by theirTonle Aetlesion the IMveetlve Organs, Bemlar StooUsrsprodueed. Price cents. Msrrsy

TUTT'S HAIR DYE.

OK

A

THE

Eldredge Sewing Machine Office

Has been changed to

Fisk's Stone Pnmp Building,

No. 117 South Third street, between Ohio and Walnut, west side.

It is Warranted.

It Is the most complete, desirable machine ever oflfered to the public. Being the latest, it has the advantage of having very desirable and new lmprosre* ments.

Dont buy until you see it. Harry Metseker, late solicitor for the White, will be glad to see his old customers.

Office. 117 South Third street, second door north of Fouts, Hunter A Oo* Livery Stable.

W. H. FISK, Agent.

w.

H. BEOWK

Dealer and Shipper in

Hogs, Cattle and Sheep.

Gash paid for Hogs, OaUle and Sheep all the year ronnd, Offlee on Fourth street, one door south of Henderson Hons*, tttock yards one mile """have*f?e«i^rscales and feed pens, and respectfully solicit the patronage of all honorable farmers, shippers aod batchers,

I will buy all you have to sell and sell AoythlDfcTowo* Ktf CMQ on dtllfcij9 ever, aod sell In the same way.

Botcher Staff always on hand.,, So thieve- or legal adviser- wanted. W, I.BEOVJt.

ICE!

We have a large supply of

SUPERIOR ICE

With which to serve our patrons this season. Batescbeap. LeaveG*tSenatotftoe,611 Main atieet, orhaod to drives.

dabilttrto sash sa axtaat thst mj labor wssein—rtlwstrbaa-

saoafii did no* five a* aash rallst, bat ea the eoatrsiy, ~as followed by iacohills. At thisU*e I began tka aaa of yoor laox Toxio, froxs -rhish I rv id that taynataral torse [hara done twice the la-

AMS

RENOWNED

VERMIN DESTROYER, which is known to be far superior to anything discovered for killing rats, mice, insects on poultry, ants, bugs, cedk roaches, black beetles, tleas on dogs, ullglit and Insects on plants, moths in furs, tick or scab on sheep or goats, also on cattle, etc.

Tliis preparation has been applied witk great success against the insects that attack plants.

Sold in packets, at 25 cents per packet, cr slx packets for SI 25. The powder is warranted free from all bad smell, and will keep in any climate. It may be spread everywhere without risk, as it is quite harmless to cats and dogs, as they will not eat it.

Directions for use on each packet. Manufactory: Gravel Lane, Houndsdltch, City of London, England.

The above discovery has rained for Prof, Herman a silver prize medal at tbo Intercolonial Exhibition of Victoria, Australia, of 1866, besides numerous testimonials.

GULICK A BBRRY,

Terre Haute, Sole Agents for Indiana

«ray, vis: Direct A: "tb

A I N E

BEST

It is the remit of 90 .years' experience and in Sewing Machines. It Mi experiments foodpointt of alt pruent and former tnami, and is •ot a_" one man "or one idea machine, as others lds the defects of others, and pos-

WHOLXSALED BT

GEO. P. BINT, and 81 Jackson St, Ohicsgo, iK

Wtth the traaquil aeree Tonlo has not done the

/mm/c.

HARTKK MEDICINE G«., II. ti* MIT1 MM IT1IIT, ST. II

Church, Troy, O.

NICHOLS.SHEPARO & fO

Cattle Creek, Michigan, gunriomns or ont oannxi

VIBRATOR

THRESHERS,

Traction and Plain and Horse-Powers. MestOsmpletw

TOWSIMFMIMT 1

Established

Ue World. 1843

ut 6wi.

Traction Enflnes and Plain lknglnea ever seen the Amoncan market A muMftd* tfqxrtal for 1881,together with "««Wor tion and matn-ialt not drosmed of by other rnakors.

Four sises of Separators, from O to IS bore©

TRACTION EN8INES

•lied

sect free. Ad NICHOLS, 8HKPARD A CO. BattM Creek, Michigan*

TradftMark

AND SPERMATORRHEA.

lire In Med. tlx sffoctlv* re of Semionly true

1pel Best "ffiK LNOOI»-.ThaI

of the Olaaase, ito iDeoiflo lefleenoe ulatorySuets, Prostate Olana. and Vrethra. uo of the Bemedr is atteeded with oo pain or jnlano«, and does not iDterfsre with toe ordinary persuitsof iifei it is qsieklr diasoWedaod soou absorbed,prodsoiiig an iamedlatesooUiloff aod nfetorv athre eifsot npoa the asxnal and nerrons ontanlc*. tions wrecked from self-abase and excesses, stopping drain front the system, restoring tbe mind to tta aad sound memory, removing the Dlmnseau

SUrbt, Mervoue SebUlty, Oonfusloa of Ideas. Avers .version to Society etc., eta, and tho appoaranoo of premature old. age tuoslir aooompanjrin« tbla tronMe,and rastorlngnerfcct sexual vigor, where it has been dormant for rears. This med« of trsst* ment hss stood ue test la very severe eases, and la BowaDronounoeasnooesa. Drugsareioomuchpra* scribed in these troubles, aad, aa manr oan bearwitairr permaaentgood. There ob-o iatre thai

pass to, with bat little fanononsenseaboatthisPreparstloo. semtlon enablss ns to BpsitUsJ* guarantee that 1

any permaneatgoed. JsPreparstioo. Practical WMttfr*)/ guarante*

w«l Isatisfaction. Durln* the el«ht jrsan

(UaWMriVlBWWH sw uw •{w »*«vee wssw» #»e dlaoorarad of raacbUyr and curlo*thU rtrj pravataoft trotib *, that Is wall known to b« tha oaom of untold miaeryto so manr.and upon whoa quacks pre* with, their usslsss nostrums and blgraee. The Bsmsdv fo put spin neat boxes, of three aisss. Ho. l,(enoucn touurt a month,) S9

Jffo. 0,

IIMUM

(suiBeient to effeot a per-

nanent cure, unless in severs.essos^

g&|

Ho.

8.

over three months, will stop emissions au

HARRI8 REMEDY OO. IP1 OfEMBIBL Bgrket sad Mk Its. 8T, L0UI8. Ma

DRi BUTTS'OSSS^SE

Treat all Chro&io Pissaesn, snd si rspetelloa tfcro^dittiooari^of

The

ti::

L.F.PERDFH.

TbduCHaetk Ics Co,

•arWe hare Telephone eannecOon.

Ana a week. 113 a dar at borne easily Olw made. CostlyooutCree. Addreas an 4sly TTOK A 0»»Augusta. Malna.

a oatioo*

alAEU

who are (heeflscts ts IU rkr cured. kf UUUmttxpnm/ vtM powlMi.

nil mt tevtu

rvrpROYED

UKITEB STATM SCALES, Wagon, Railroad, Track and oOwrs. 1 wilk guarantee them the txsrt scales made, and furnish them at prices that defy competition. Be sore and Inquire Into the merits of this ecalc before purchasing elsewhere. For clreulitrs and full pertlcuiars, address

H. 3. AUKCI.N, Patentee, Terre Haute, Ind.

flcafes of all kinds tested and repaiied. promptly, tihop, corner 4th and Cluliek sts

fe&NBPACTrW