Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Volume 8, Number 48, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 28 June 1877 — Page 7

INNOCENT BUT RANT.

wc

Jnit

IGNO-

READING OF MARK TWAINS "qUAKER CITY" TRIP.

From the New York World. He was a very larman, and he seemed |o know it so well as to think that his liothes were tight, although in reality |hey were loose. He squeezed his way Tvith unnecessary through the aisle of a fiarro.v

railway

car in West Virginia till

spied the World reporter, when he [took a seat next to him. The reporter new him by sight. He was a SundayIchool superintendent, a church trur tee, |he head of the Young Men's Christian

Yssociation, and a prominent, worthy and wealthy citizen of a town from whicli the Iraia had just started. He knew the reporter by sight an:l introduced himself, ky a name which was almost big man but not quite. "My name is Bigman—Judge Bigmrn. f'erhaps you know.'

The reporter bowed in a nori commit-

il

way, 'Well,

I'm well known around here—

.ell known. Now, you are from New li'ork, I reckon? "Yes."

Know many of the leadin people? "Wcll.no not many." The Judge looked is commiseratio

3

Ind from his talk it soon appeared that helid kuow a good many, and was proud [t it. He had dined with Holland, whom le styled the "Emerson of the people.'' lie had taken Tupper by the hand. He lad spent two days in the same hotel kith Sylvanus Cobb, Jr. lie had met klrs. E. D. E. N. Souihworth. He had Imce sat under the preaching of John S.

Abbott, and his vanity about it all l/as touching. He thought it strange hat the reporter knew no prominent lit Irary people. The reporter humbly suggested that had he once worked on a paper nth Mark Twain. "A very disreputable person, said [udgo Bigman, severely. "Do you know lis character?" I

Auain the reporter refused to commit liitnself. He said, however, that he Ihought Twain was funny. rom that loint, the Judge had the conversation all |o himself. "Funny! Yes.it is funny to be proine, ignorant and drunken. Sir, 1 was a basseiiEer on board the Quaker City, and know this ruffian well. He was the [version of every respectable man on loard, and when we were making up our little parties or squadds for visiting the l.acrcd localities, it had to be done in seIret, sir—in secret. I asked one ™08t lespectablc gentleman from New York lc let me see his list, and he declined to [how it even to me, for, as he said: 'you

don't want it known, but we re

Irving to keep bores

out of

Impudence

all the historical and geographical information he ever had he got lrom me, ir." '•flow was thatr" "Well, you sec, one day I was on deck liarkin" mv maps and reading up my liotcs on the places I was going to visit, when up comes Twain with a slouch and swagger, and says: "Judge, I hear you ve rot a liner idea of sacred localities than my man on board. Let's see your mays. was proud of my maps, and had tliem leatly marked with reference to Mr.

Crime's great work on the East. J. wain •vas mighty picased, and said it was the Tummest thing in

maps'he'd

was

ever seen:

twain was eoarse as well_ as profane ut there was one good thing about him Jien—he didn't deny his ignorance. He had never seen Prime's book, and coneased that he had 'come on a lark, and hadn't any ideaof impioving his njind, ut beiiv ignorant as a lull about the Scriptures and about Prime, he be [obliged for a little instruction. Now sir, what is a Christian man to do^ when a darkened heathen seems to desire mstrucitions? Is he to consult his ease and preferences, and prehaps have his brothers poul to answer for?' "Decidedlv not." "So I thought, and day after day I patiently took that darkened mind under my instruction. Why, sir, everybody on board the ship knew about it, and Mark himself was obliged to confess that my research and certainty about sacred localities

what he called 'staggenn

He sat just like a little child, anu read and listened under my directions, and was silent, observing and respectful But the ignorance of the questions he would ask was appalling.

why be'°''e

a knot of people one day he said that he always considered Jericho one of the cities of refuge, because, as an outcast and a vagabond himself, he had so often

been

told to go there. Computation of distance, by scriptural days' journeys, he invariably began to count by steam trav-

I

elling, and he wore out my patience explaining its impossibility. He thought I that the Black Sea was a kind of fishing ground, he said, for Africans, and the Euphrates was a sort of ancient baggage car, and Jerusalem he avowed he had never heard of except as an exclamation which he used to avoid swearing before church members and as to history, he thought

Paul lived in the time ot the crusaders, because lie was let down in a basket by night. I never saw such ignorauce I

he

studied, ami I own, gave himself no air- md when we landed, he says: Fudoe, I think I'll get more amusement with* vour partv than with ahy other. You've taught me so much. Do take me with you.' It was a matter of conscience, and I took him with us. '•Well, I knew he had a knack at writ inK. and'I advised him for once, to write something sensible—a hisloiv, for instance, ot our voyage, and I ottered him all my notes and all my observations to help him out. He said he would, and at

first

wrote, along pretty steadily, and used to go and sit by and make suggestions, until he took to writing in sucn way that nobody could come into the room." "How was that?" ••Whv, he'd lie down on his stomach on the floor, with a whiskey bottle and a tumbler and little pieces of paper scattered all around the room and he'd have an old stump of a pencil, and as his ideas came to him he'd crawl around from one bit of paper to another, and knock over anvbodv thftt came in the way. I remonstrated, but he said it was his way of writing, and he could at bring out his ideas on a difficult subjcct like our jour «eyin*s in the East except just in that

&U.:

way. Of course I didn't endanger my safety by overlooking his work any more, but he assured me it was of a nature that would do him credit, and that he thanked me heartily as the originator of the idea and the prompter of same of his finest passageb. I bore much from Twain, sir. I put up with ignorance, with cigars and whiskey and had jokes for the sake of seeing our pilgrimages put into proper shape before the^ public. He never let me see his manuscript, bu: he sent me a copy of the history after its publication. That history, sir, is 'The Innocents Abroad,' and I don't hesitate to say it's a disgrace to civilization that it should be received as the true record of a party of church members seeking instruction, improvement and inspiration among sacred localities. He tries to make me—me who instructed him—ridiculous he travesties the information I gav him he makes game of Prime, whose great work he studied day by day and his impressions of sacred localities are worth nothing except to amuse the profane and vulgar. Sir, Twain is a rascal—an ungrateful rascal—too ignorant to make use even of the heaps of excellent information about sacred localities that I gave him but he gave the public, instead of a history that might have graced the Sabbath-school iibrary, a low publication that can only excite the contempt ®f wise men and the godless laughter of fools."

STROLLING PARAGRAPHS.

How to take with coal oil.

our partv.

rive minutes after I saw Twain intruding on that very man, and actually looking over his maps with him. 1 wains

was unbearable, and lie

touln't take a hint. He knew something

Ibout writing—tnat

is, comic writing—

A Philadelphia Judge decides that a railroad company is not responsible for baggage further than to check it, pound it to pieces, and preserve an ordinary watch over the trunk handles.

Summer time here, and once more the poetical young man wanders bv the river side and tries to get into a rowboat by reaching for it with his hands, and hayind it glide off from the shore with all of him but his feet.

Next to his pedigree Mr. Charles Francis Adams prides himself on the great strawberries which he raises. He has now some delicious Clifford berries almost three inches in circumference in his garden at Qiiincy, Mass.

Captain Boy ton had a narrow escape while descending the Rhone. AtTarascon the peasants taking him to be some new kind of marine monster, got out their fowling pieces and o}ei.ed a lively fusilade upon him, compelling him to hoist his colors,

W. H. Norway found during his explorations ir. the neighborhood of the Casita pass, Santa Barbara county, a petritied clam and some star fish at an altitude of 5.000 feet above the level of the sea, on the mountain range between the Sespe and Cuyama.

The Parisians say that it is quite proper that princes should travel for their education and pleasure befor ascending the throne, but that sovereigns shouid remain at home and attend to their duties. They call Dom Pedro "L' Empereur Benoiton, who is always out."

During a recent investigation in London a room, nine feet by twelve, was discovered situated near the Bank in England in which resides a woman(ill). a man and his wife, a young woman and three children, her younger sistea her younger broth er, and a female dog with six pups.

The Rochestor Express tells this story: A young girl in Meridian, Cayuga county gava hea canary to a sister in Albany last fall, and the canary has just found its way back to its old home. It came to the door of the house in an exausted condition, and being admitted to its cage seem ed to be happy.

Itisielated of Thomas H. Benton that a gentleman whose guest he was went up to his rooui on the morning afhe had made a speech, taking a newspaper contaiuing a very laudatory notice of his remarks. "Have you read it sir?" Does it do justice to '.he subject?" asked the host. "I know all about it sir," replied Benton, with great dignity, "I wrote it all myself."

Anew air has takeft possession of Pans, as a sequence to L'Amant d' Amanda {the Lover of Amanda). It has created an equal furor, simply through its supreme idiocv. The title is "La Couleur de mes Guetres" (the Color of my Gaiters), and the following is .the .refrain: I "No, no you shall not see

The color ofmy gaiters No, no, you shall not see ":"tThe color of my stockings:

tor of

tor of these impunity

The

life easv—Be careless

The St. Louis Journal says, a man out on Myrtle street calls his dog "Clouds" because he's fleasy.

A monument to Virgil is about to be erected, by subscription, in one ot the public squares at Mantua.

Jefferson Davis, by a recent decision, has securcd the title to a Mississippi plantation formerly owned by his broth er.

Somebody advertises for a servant girl "who would not be above placing herself on an equality with the rest of the family."

"Looky thar!" he remarked to the waiter "ycur coffee is all O. K., your hash is about correct, but ain't your eggs a little too ripe

Norwich Bulletin: A couple up town who have seven children, have called the last one Theophilus, which is theophilust name in the family.

The London Court Circular says that the "Philadelphia Exhibition March," by Wagner, is "a commonplace composition of no permanent value."

Oil City Dcrrick: It is probably some satisfaction to a mule to know that while he cannot soar as high as a lark, he can sing just as loud, and kick very much sorer.

"Which of you four is' the 'Harper,' and which are the 'Brothers some person once asked of James Harper. "Oh, any of us is llarper, and all the rest are the Brothers." was the reply.

For if you weie to see The color ot my gaiters,^ You would be able to guess The color of my stockings." An indignant commentator observes that Bitoir, who only committed murder was executed, and yet the perpetra- not despair, hQwcver.

iTD iJ'A&A'ti CiTJj.Jrl

point

THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.

LOVE-

THE NEW YORK SUN ADVISES SOME CORRESPONDENTS IN LOVE,

Wherein Appears Very Plainly Some of the Infelicities of Love.

It is gratitymg 10 KIIOW ma.1 "ilic^oun advice in affairs of a tender nature is so highly appreciated by our young readers of both sexes. The heart pierced by love enjoys showing its wound to a sympathetic friend, though carefully concealing it from the general gaze. The youth who has begun to thrill in the presence of some fair maiden, though he may not dare to avow his tender feeling to her, is yet glad to confess it to one whose opinion he esteems, and on whose fidelity he knows he can rely. The maiden who has learned to love, may not unasked acknowledge the fact to the young man she has fallen in love with, but it is delightful to her to impart the tale in confidence to a discreet advi^r, such as The Sun is. This is well.

task of responding to these love

confidences, and the questions accompanying them, mu6t be entered upon with great delicacy, and the advice given must be thoughtfully considered, for otherwise smitten hearts may be rudely treated, and the pleasing wounds made painful lesions The first letter on this interesting subject is from a young man, and it reads thus: "For some time past I have been quite an intimate acquaintance of a certain young ladv. She is one whom, at times, I feel as though I actually loved then, again, upon reflection, I am almort persuaded it is wrong for me to trifle with her affections, for she is one whom my friends would look upon as my inferior in asocial

ofview. Her ideas, I ad­

mit myself, are, by no means, congenial with mine. This, however, I attribute to h«tr society, which is respectable, but not cultivated nor refined, I feel, were I to marry her, and to remove' her from among her present associates' she, in course of time, would be .greatly improved. What I want to know from you would I be doing my family an injury by marrving this young lady, or am I ri^ht in feeling that she, being constantly with me. would soon be a different person, so that we both could lead a happy and Christian life?"

It is a very desirable thing for a youjig man to marry a girl who suits his pa rentj, whose advice as to matrimony is generally disinterested, and whose knowledge of the world is apt to be far better than his. He sees the immediate moment, and his judgment may be colpred by passion they look upon the future, and coolvform their opinion in the case, well knowing that what seems to the youth an eternal attachment may be only a passing fancy. We judge from the letter of our correspondent that he is not very desperately in love, and we are glad to 6ce that he has a proper regard for the feelings of his parents. As to the young lady being what he calls "inferior in 0 social point ot

view"

to himself, we pay very little heed to that though ifhe thinks so, and his family think so we should advise her to give 110 encouragement to his addresses, for she is not likely to find happiness in marrying him, though she really ma^ be his superior in sterling quallities. As to his improving her by making her his wife, that is a very dangerous experiment to trv. Perhaps she may think she needs no improvemeht, and that he is the one who requires polishing up. However that may be, marrying man or woman to remodel one or the other is not apt to work well. Human beings are not clay, and sometimes ihey refuse to be remodelled. Besides we see no evidence from his letter that our correspondent has won the heart of his girl. Because he tdinks he may be in love with her is no reason for supposing that she would have him. Indeed, we hardly think we should advise her to do it.

The next letter that claims our attention proposes a question of a sort whilh it is painful to think should arise. This is the epistle: "I want to ask vour advice. I am a poor girl aged sixteen. My mother and I have to work hard to support ourselves. There is an old gentleman, over sixty years of age, worth over three hundred dollars. He wants to marry me, and mother presses me to take him. I cannot bear him. When he kisses me it makes mv blood run cold. Mother says he will not live long, and then I will have all his money but I think it mean to look at it in that way. Sometimes I am afraid I shall yield for mother's sake. Will you please tell me what is right to do?'- ,,

You should refuse him by all means. To marry him would be to sell yourself, and

nobody

sixty

is not so very old. The man may be good for twenty years yet. Look at Centennial Dix, and that aged lover, Si man Cameror.. Why, at sixty a strong and vigorous man is at his best. Let no sordidjnotives govern Your action in matrimony. BesideR the old man n,ay lose his three hundred dollars any day. It is far better to work hard than it is to marry a man whose kiss turns your blood

C°Not

you

advice

these lines still goes about with won (air '»Q-V-

^advised some time

since. Remember? We remember

our

welL and contend that

fjZJWW-

HIlHHT 3Hrf

love is persistency and if this yonng lady's heart is not now occupied by another, he may get it yet. The pangs of disappointment he is now suffering have been endured by thousands of men, who have got to taking their regular meals with appetite and thousands more will experience the anguish after him, and get over it. Ir a girl is asked to grant a avor hasn't she aright to refuse it? Ifa mana asks her to marry him, can't she sy no?. Let our young triend pluck up courage, eat his meals with regularity, pursue his business with industry, go to bed at a proper hour, rise early in the morning, and read the Sun thoroughly, and he will get over it in time. the disease is painful, but it is neither chronic nor mortal.

Thus we treat these cases of distress from love. Doubtless many who read this may be torn by doubts, and oppressed by anguish just as great, but we hope they all will get comfort from our words, and that happiness, like the Sun, will shine on them all.

GAS.

Gas of 16 Candle Power at $1.50 per 1,000 Poet, vs. Gas of 10 Candle Power at $3.70

Per 1,000 Feet.

Read Ye Tax-Papers Haute.

of Terre

This city now pays $2S, per post per anunm for the public lighting. The lamps are lighted 17 nights per month and not to exceed 1700 hours per anum. Each lamp consumes four feet per hour or 6,800 cubic feet per anum. In addition to this the city pays at least one dollar per lamp per anuin for cleaning and repairs. After allowing liberally for the cost of lighting, ex' inguishing &c, the gas company now get at least $3.70 per 1,000 cubic feet for the pas thus furnished the city. Under the proposal of the new company all repairs are to be made at the expense of the company. The lamps are to be lighted every night and all night each lamp to burn 3000 hours per annum for the sum of $25.00 per post. After allowing a fair price for lighting extinguishing and repairs it leaves for the gas thus consumed $1.50 per 1,000 cubic feet. It is well known that the new company can make a good profit at this price. How long then will

thiB

city

continue to be fleeced by this over grown monopoly.

FROM the Worlds Dispensary Printing Office and Bindery, BufFalo, N. Y. we have received '"The Peoples Common Sense Medical Adviser, in plain English or, mcdicine simplified," by R. V. Pierce, M. D., Counselor-in-chief of the Board of Physicians and Surgeons at the World's dispensary. Whoever helps humanity in its struggle with its, inherent weekness and diseases, to bear or cure, is its benefactor. Ignorance is not only ot itself a cause of cisease and mortality, but it the enemy of every effort to cure or mitigate. Nothing will so speedily remove this cause as knowledge (an elementary one at least) of the diseases to which" we are heir, a6 well as those superinduced by our own imprudence. Dr. Pierce has rendered in our judgement, a benefactors seavice, both to the afflicted and to the profession, in his diagness ol the diseases treated of of, and in the presentation of the philosophic principles involved in thir cause and removal. He is sparing ot remecies, aud usuallv prescribe such As are safe in unskilled hands. As a book merely of ab stract knowledge, it is exceedingly read ble and interesting, especially the following subjects:—Cerebral Physiology, Human temperaments, I'seudo-Hygiene, the Nursing of the sick, Sleep, Food. Ventilation, ect. In one chabter on another subject, so delicate in its nature that it is shut up beyond the domain of warning to all but physicians, so accursed in its results in modern society, shows the truth as presented in teachings of scripture,— that life begins with doncebtion,—with great force, fo which is added iaithful warnings.

Price of the. Medical Adviser $1,50, sent postpaid. Adress the auther at Buffalo, N. —-(From the Philicelphia Presbvterian.)

DR. SCHENK'S PULMONIC SYRLP. SEA WEED TONIC, AND MANDRAKE PILLS.—These medicines have undoubt edly performed many cures of Consum tion than any other remedy known to the American public. They arc compoun-' ed of vegetable ingredients, and contain

nothing

ever does that outright with­

out getting the worst ol the bargain. How does your mother know how long he has got to live? He may outlire you. Though it may seem so to you at sixteen

long ago we gave "v Well-Mean-

ine Fellow," who was deeply love with a girl, and who hesitated to propose to her the advice to boldly plunge in and learn his fate. It seems he has done so and the remit has been disastrous in the extreme. I-Ie thus describes the calamity, and the feelings it has provoked him. "I am in perfect misery. I have proposed marriage to a young lady whom I adored, and have been kindly but forcibly rejected. I am in torments. I can ea"t read or sleep It is impossible to keen mv mind off of the painful subject vYhat shall I do in order to forget my sorrow I loved her dearly, and it is a oreat disappointment. I feel now as if my whole life were blighted-as nothing could now incite me to live nob'y. 1 am unfit for business, and am the most disagreeable condition, mentally, that I can conceive of. Be good enough to advise me at once, through your columns "A WELL MEANING FELLOW, up _i am the same 'well meaning fellow' 'whom

which can be injurious to the hu­

man constitution. Other remedies advertized as cures for the Consumtion, probably contain opium, which is a somewhat dengerous drug in all cases, and if taken freely by consumptive patients, it must do great injury, for its tendency is to confine the morbi«f matter in the system, which of course, must make a cure impos sible. Schenck's Pulmonic Syrup is warranted not to contain a particle of opiuir.: it is composed of powerful herbs, which act on the on the lungs, liver stom ach, and blood, aud thus correct all morbid secretions, and expel all the diseased matter fi om the body. These are the only means by which Cnosumtion can be cured, and as Schenck's Pulmonic syrup. Sea Weed Tonic, md mandrake Pills are the ouly medicines which operate in this way, it is obvious they arc the only genuine" cure for Polinonic Consumption. Each bottle of this invaluble medicine is aflcmpanied by full directions. Dr. Schenck's is professionally at his princial office, corner Sixth and Arch Streets Philadelphia, every Monday, where al,l petters for advice must be addressed. if"-.

NECROLOGICAL.

dence

was sound. If his sad fate im­

pended, whv

might it

not as well fall on

him now as'at any future time Let him Famt heart never is alwavs more

A V,

I than

one

chance. The great thing in Tribune.

Cf all "parties. He was a prominent member of the order of Od& Fellows. He was an honest upright citizen and acted well his part in the drama of life. He leaves a wife and eight children —seven boys and one girl.—[Rockville

SECOND GRAND DRAWING

mm

ram co

LOUISVILLE, Ky., June 30,1877.

$310,000 CASH IN GIFTS.

Farmers & Drovers Bank, Louisvi le

Ky., Treas.

THE KENTUCKY CASH DISTRIBUTION CO., authorized by a Special Act ol the Legislature 'or the benefit of the Public Schools of Frankfort, will have the second of the series of grand drawing* in the City of Louisville, Ky., Saturday June 80th, 1877

at PUBLIC LIBRARY HILL,

A Scheme Commensurate With the Times

$60,000 tor ONLY TEN.

READ THE LIST OF SIFTS.

Grantf Cash Gift ....|60,000 1 Grand Cash Gift Si,000 1 Grand Cash Gift. 15,000 1 Grand Cash Gift 10,000 3 Grand Cash Gifts, t5 000 each 15,000 5 Grand I ash Gifts, $2,000 each 10,000 20 Cash Gifts, tLOOO each..., 20.900 4o Cash Gifts, $300 oaeh..... 80,000 100 Cash Gifts, $200 each 20/00 300 Cash Gifts, $100 each 80,000 500 Cash Gifts,

$50

each., 25.000

6000 Ca?h Gifts, flOeach... HO, 000

6972 Cash Gifts, amounting to $S 0,000 Whole tickets $10, halve?, $5, quarter, 2.50, ii tickets $100,32X tickets $800, &6}i tickets, $500.

DRAWING POSITIVELY JUNE 30th, 1877.

And every three months thereafter.

Certifiicate cf Supervisors of Drawing.

This is toe rtify that the first drawing Of the Kentucky Cash Distribution Company took place on the 8th of December, in Major Hall, Frankfort, Ky., in our presence aud under our fmmediato supervision.

Wo further state that every ticket, and part of ticket, which had been sold, were represented on the wheel, and that the (irawinfc was fairly and honestly conducted. We further state that we had no interest whatever in the enterprise, nor any conuecion with tho »nme, except in the cnaracterof snpervisocs,'whosa sole dntv was to protect the Interest of the ticket-holders and to prosldo over tho drawing. Hon.AivinDuvall, late Chief Justico Sup, Court of Kr. James G. Dudley, Chairman Hoard »f School Trustees. Grant Green, Cashier armor's Bank of Kentucky. Hon. S.I. Mnjrtr, Publlo Printer State of Kentucky. Hon. Thomas N. Lindsay, I'ros't. Farmer's Bmk of Ky. Hon. Thomas Jones, Clerk of Sup. Court of Kentucky. Judge It. A. Thompson, I'res'dg Judge Franklin Co. C'rt. JauicsG. Crockett, Clerk Franklin Court.

Remittances CM be made by Mail, Express, Draft, P. O Order or Registered Letter, made payable to G.W. Barrow & Co.

All communications and orders for tickots should bo addressed to

G.W. BARROW & CO.,

Courier Journal Building. Louisville, Ky. Or T1IOS. II. HAYS A CO., Gcn'l Agents. Send for Circular. C97 Broadway New l'ork,

Kussner,

Palace of Music.

2\3 Ohio street, north side of Public Square, sells the best and cheapest

Pi an

quences

Necrology is becoming alarmingly prom inent in "the newspapers. D.D.Pratt, John Pettit, J. S. C. Abbott, and Mayor Edmunds of Tcrre Haute, are among those who died within the past week, Death seems to have laid aside his an- on receipt of six cents, or two postage

iO

-AND-

ORGANS

-IN

THE—

WORLD!

CALL AND SEE-

Pianos and Organs for rent and sold on easy monthly payments.

A Lecture

TO YOUNG MEN!

Just published in a sealed envelop. Price six cents. A Lecture on the nature, treatment, and radical cure of Seminal Weakness or Spermatorrhoea, induced by SelfAbuse, Involuntary Emissions, Impotency, neivous debility, and Impediments to Marriage generally, Consumption, Epilepsy, and Fits, Mental and Physical Incapacity, &c..—By ROBERT J. CULVERWELL, M. D. author of the "Green Book." &c.

The world re-nowned author in this admirable lecture, clearly proves from his own experience that the awful conse­

of Self-Abuse maybe effectually

removed without medicine, and without dangerous surgical operations, bougies, instruments, rings or cordials, pointing out a mode of cure

at

O

I*S®

3

Sandford's

JAMAICA GINGER,

The Quintessence of Jamaica Ginger, Choice Aromatics and French Brandy.

A preparation so elegantly flavored au medicinally effective as to uttorlv surjtas all previous preparations ot crude ginjfer and household remedies for the relief an«( cure of diseases and ailments incidental to the Summer and Winter seasons, and to sudden changes of temperature. ., 1 The substitution of It instantly relieves brandy for alcahol.

CHOLERA MORBUS

the uso of true Jamai oa Ginger, of their own selection and importation,' its combination with choice aromatic*, as devised ftnd originated by Dr. Sanfforu placed thiB preparation in actual-" mer so far nhoid of* anything before compounded, that, notit a 1 1 jr most bitter "opposi-

DIARRHEA,

S E N E

CRAMPS & PAINS,

SEASICKNESS.

COLDS & CHILLS,

r.r„rn

.tion from the trade,

CHILLS & FEVER,!tts sales in Xew Eog~ land now exceeds that FEVERISH of all others combined. The scund year Sv

of its manufacture its*

1 0»:gaic exceeded thepre-

na-r Annum Ivions year by over CATARRHAL lllttv thousand bottles It is manufactured oiv

SYMPTOMS,» scale simply enormous. Two thousand NEURALGIC {vance of consumption |by which it acquires a delicious flavor ami ibriil'ant transparency. Every improveSv

and

RHEUMATIC

Ml nienOn labor saving

1

apparatua

DYSPEPSIA,

MAKES

I E W A E

HARMLESS

IS GOOD

F0 AL AGES.

i8 adopted,

so "a* to permit the use of costly materia1 and yet retain a profit The bottlinjr maehinc Is atone able to All i,400 bottlo per hour. From ihts brief statement it 11 bo seen that Messrs. Wccka- & Potior have entered upon the mannfactv.ro of Sandford's Jamaica Ginger in a niauner thr.t must In t'mo so•tire lor them the enormous tra*ie in this article. Its elerant flavor,great merIt, and iow price should be tested onceby those in nce4 of a family medicine beforo allowing Themselves to be Induced, by uiisrcprisentntion, to ltuy ethers, insist upon liav'ngwhiitvou. wall for—Sandford's' Jamaica Ginger.

INDIGESTION,

FLA E N Y,

RISING

O O O

MAKES

IN E E A

CAA RKWARD will be paid for a bot--tleofany other extrsct or essence of Jamaica Giuger if found to equal it in flue flavor, pnritv ami prompt medical cifect. Sold by all wholesale and retail druggists. grocniti and dealers in medJcine. Prleo 60cents. Sample* free I'ealtrsshould pnrchaseorigli.nl pack aires of one doz»n to obtain the triii' b. for free distribution. WKKKS & 1-O'tTEtt, Gen. ral Agents and whoiesa Uoston. Wholesale agents, Gtilln'!i".% 1J Try,Terre ilnuio.

COLLINS' Voltaic Plasters.

AX o. oVrn u.'iivim le b.ittcry,combined wi(h ttie cel 1 "uit! Me ira'ed Porous Plasters, lor tip: th« giv-nderit curative agent in tie world ol uij: iciiie, and Utterly surpassing nil other jiiartn'i".- heretofore In ttte. l'iiey nc•:oni tisi! mo'c in

0110.

ulasier?

.11

Comfort,

his condition may be, may

cure himself cheaply, privately and radicallv. Hgf'fhis lecture will prove a boon to thousands arid thousands. Sent under seal-in a plain envelope, to any address,

I 1 A /IkABS ^V* A nti ni 1

cient sickle and employed a reaper in stamps. Address the publishers, his ghastly harvest. [Cincinnati En- Jhe CulVBrWell Medical CO. quirer.

James B. Edmunds, Mayer of Terre Haute, died at his residence on Monday evening at nine o'clock of pneumonia. Mr. Edmunds was the veteran newspaper man of Terre "Haute, and was one of the most noted paragraphists of the west. Mr. Edmunds was serving his second term as Mayor, and enjoyed the confi­

41 Ann St«New York P. O.

50

week than tho old

viho.o y^ar. Tiitiy do tut palli­

ate, ihey eu v.

Collins' Voltaic

Safety,

or.ee certain and

effectual, by which every sufferer, no

matter-what

*rr?r8

and Abuses in early life, Mauhood Restored. Imped' wi

intents to

Karri

.age l'cmoy

O ed. New methoa 01 treat' O

ed. New methou inent. Xew and remarkaDie remedies —Books and circnlars sent free in sealed envelODCS. Address Howard ISation, 419 ». Ninth St. Phii. Pa An institution havii.fr ahijih rcputat ion ior honorable conduct a- professional skill.

Plasters.

for local pains, lam'.'itess, soreness, weakness, Numbness, aud inflamaflo.. of the lungs liver, kidneys spleen, bowels,b'.a-V'or, heart and mus- les. are equal to an uvuiy of doctors,. ai'd aero* o' plants and ehritiis

Price 2 ..-ins. Sold bv all druggists. Mailed on reccip' of price, 25 i.ents for one, $1.25 for »ix, or *2.25 t" tw«'v». carefully warruu tod, by W KS & PoTTEU, Proprietors, Boston", Man.

Centennial Reduction in Advertising.

Three thousand, tivu nnnarefT and fifty dollars worth of iwwnpapcr advertijing, at publiutiiTo' aohednie raU n, given for fiOu, and a. three month*' iiota aecepted in puyn ent from advertiser:' of responsibility. A printed lisL. giving Ni.nie, character Aetu.u Daily and weekly cin uliitiou, and Schedule Kates of advortiwinj:, *•-'1' five to any addr-*--. Ayplr to Geo. P. iJotveil HdvjrtiHinj i*. *1 --.A Xdiw S

THE ORIGINAL AND ONLY GENUINE

TBITSSES, $1.00 TRUSSES, $L0» TEUSSES, $1.50 TBUSSES, $1.50 TBITSSES, $2.00 TRUSSES, $2.00

•CKLEY'8 HARD RUBBER TRU88M#

Relief and CURE for RUPTURE»

Made in every dojlrabto pattern—light, cool,cleanly, free from all sour, rusty, chaflnf or padding unpleasantness—used In bathing* Always reliable Avoid Imitations. Genuine stamped "I. B.8eeley. Price, Maad^S. Complete«j»ortaient for sale by

These trusses, and all other ood3 kept by a Crut class drutr store cau 1« obtained of W. K. M'-Grew Co. 'ouihvest corner of Thiidar.'! *Va not.

Ah

Honest

4580.

Hapuy relief to Young Men from the effects of

IfdiciMf.

Of all mcdicints calculated to cure affections of the throat, chest and lungs, we know of none we can begin to recommend so highly as Dr. Kings New* Discovery for Consumption, Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Bronchitis, Hoarseness, Tickling in the Throat, loss ot voice, Sic. Jt doea positively care, and that where everything else has failed. No medicinecan show one half so many positive and permanent cures, as have already been wrought by this Tvon^crful remedy. For the Asthma and Bronchitis it is a perfect specific, curing the worst cases in the Shortest time possible. W would -ay by all means give it a trial, bw d^ea Will relkvt- the went cj.se. 1 rial bottles free. Regular

v1

b'-

GROVfni u!.o'.vsr-