Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 10 January 1878 — Page 2
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-5 THE POETRY OF DRESS REFORM.
J&f*
TIIAOTSON.
Shorten my skirts, mother,«h orten «-*s*irt8« lam faiiAlng with wearim«°* dressing like
Ncvc^'a'stci.
,ny
toil can 1
tabe'
and I gather
Never at dance, Jei«t»re StrolJ, or croqiiet^ Tinova but tue the w»y
Can I mow but these flounces arc rifchtifc -r-r the w»y I can't holu them up and half work, play or ry—
O, shorten them, mother, or soon I must rile!
*hH O, sever those tie-backs! tiey put me to shame, •.
For they mock ey'ry joint nature fixed in my
Thpy exhibit each muscle, and tell that know It. And that snobbish notice impels me to show it. 'Tis great deal too bald, tho' about like the rest Of the frauds cunning plotters oa softheads have pre6t I'm beginning to see how men bear too sad wltnifcs That mothers'entail both the falsehood and sickness.
Away with my corsets dear mother, I pray— Let my lungs swell with life, my riba healthfully sway Hick of parlor, paint, torture, remorse, and th»ir train, I resolve from their causes and calls to refrnln .. I've floundtred in fetters and sunk 'neath their weight, I've pante I in grips that my spirit doth hate— TUe fashions in sordid intrlgne khango and
Ah, mothets, no more joy and growth for them givel
So shorten your skirts, mother?'banish the bodice. Have your feet free as Dian's and forms like thr god'tcss Stand by, go before us, all earth craves this duy, And we'1 prove to prudes that Uod understands auty. Cosiuct.es. go hence bloom of health seeks your place. Even foptt shall concede that both grandeur and grace Can dwe 1 with the woman who lives divine law Apparent in trousers, despite the old saw. *-Yineland Independent. -r.
MRS. ARDORY,
A CHRISTMAS SKETCH.
.« CHAPTER I. 4
iA
MRS.' ARDORY's SENSLBILTFlis. That had to be the subject of the first chapter. That was always the first chapter with Mrs. Ardory. She was a woman of acute sensibility. Everything shocked her. For my part, I can never laugh at people who have sensibility without being sensible. They must suffer a great deal, both from their sensibility and their lack of sense. It is a double misfoi tune ltt us pity them. But if selfishness and indolence hide their heads behind sensibility, let us blame, evtn at the risk of being shocked to sensibility.
I did not say that Mrs. Ardory was selfish. Some readers are always in, a hurry to jump to conclusions about people. To say that Mrs. Ardory was selfish would be a libel, a slander, a defamation of a most tender-hearted creattire. Ptor dear Mrs. Ardory was a bundle of sympathy, an unfailing fountain of pity, a fathomless ocean of philanthropy. She wept and lamented over the condition of the poer, the sick, the bereaved, the widow and the fatherless. When her children came in of a morning, shouting with delight because the white snow was eagerly piling itself up higher and higher and yet higher on the garden fence, and nearly smothering the dark green cedars with massive and matchless whiteness, poor Mrs. Ardory clasped her pale hands in distress and sighed: 'What a day for people out of coal!1 I am sure you could not say she was not benevolent. She never failed to burden everybody about her with her sympathy for the poor. She wouldn't sufter peop who had comforts to enjoy them so long as there were people who hadn't them. She seemed to be .•1 saying perpetually: 'Let ua all be unhap py together.'
Mrs. Ardory's sensibilitis were philanthropic. Her husband's father had the good fortune to be a simple-hearted old truckman, and, though Mrs. Ardory's husband was quite wealthy, Mrs, Ardory iound it a great thorn in her side that Ardory the elder wouldn't give up his low calling and be a gentlemanly depend entofhisson. It would seem so much
better. It was all an eccentricity—so
she told her if-iends-this persistence of the old man in the ignoble business of
i' earning an honest livelihood when his
gon was ready to take care of his parents a a give them a giudged pittance to keep them in a state of genteel good-for-noih ingness. And at last, when her mother-in-law, a woman of a sturdy will of her own, died, Mrs. Ardory attacked the old man, who was of an easy temper, and besought and besieged him, for the sake of her delicate and refined sensibilities, which were so shocked by his course, to yield to her entreatise, sell his old truck put faithful old Bob up at auction, and tome and live with them. It made Deo pie ask so many questions, you know about the why and the wberelore, for the old man to live alone. Questions that reflected upon her character for benevolence were a dreadful shock to Mrs Ardory's sensibilities. And so the old
,?„7 man, unwilling to quite cut down the bridge behind him, hired out his horse and truck, put i'o Let, Furnished,' over the door of his shabby little house, and became a sort of chore-boy in his son's family he rolled the baby-carriage and hoed the garden, and was a miscellaneous utiiity man about the house. All for the sake cf Mrs. Ardory's sensibilities.
But Mrs. Ardory's sensibilities were more than ever shocked by his lack of polish. She did not like to have her father-i»-law in the house when there w^s company he was sure to do some thing very shocking. So the old man who had tco much sense to mention his sensibilities, who had never used the word sensibility in his life, and who really thought it meant come fearful disease when his daughter-in-law used it —the old man, having sensibilities, nevertheless, staid out of the parlor when there was company, only went to the table to keep from shocking Mrs. Ar dory by staying away, and when at the table'swallowed but a little dinner awkwaidly and in silence, taking pains to shovel h:* rott-toe* up with the back of hi* Knife irr fear .f net being polite cooiiiig his ai.'ic by blowing on inn his saucer, as his master taught him, and yet feeling that, do what h« would to bt,
l-mg&nered, he the len»iWlitie9 all the lisle. Without aitljr *ocieH nit servants, too low d5wn —the old man had nothing le to do but to go on »hoclil% ^nsibihties all the time. Perhaps therfefS no way of passing one's lifetime more unpleasant than to spend it in^being an object Or dislike. People who ftre stumblingblocks always teei.ifc. mpre keenly- than, those who stub their toe6 against them. It is far worse to be fofcjhe way and know it than it is to hive Somebody in your way. And eo, the old man, conscious of being in the way, fideetv in half-genteel jig,, longing again for^tbe society of his
"die
woman,' aching for the petty cares of old occupation, epvying every man whom he saw rolling a barrel—what should he do but 6eek comfort where there were no sensibilities that could be Shocked, in one corner of the hice warm saloon which bore the name of 'The House of Lords,' where he could sit in a shady corner on the 6awdusted floor—so much better than .velvet carpets, you could wa'k without timiditV here—he could sit in a shadj? corner with an old crony who would generally forgive his cheap, fine clothes, and play seven-up and drink whisky,with him until he felt his humiliation all gone, and talked as though he were indeed a member of the house of lords, owning his son and all his property, but always confiding to his friend that" hi9 darter'n-law was a dreffle fine Woman—and troubled with the what-you-may-call-'em, the sensibilities— didn't know jest what that might bj—buv it was a disease as made you have to be keerful when she was around or she'd take on. you know.
And when the old gentleman had come home several times a little too full of the nectar of the gods, and acting as if he were Jupiter himself, Mrs. Ardory confided to her inmatef, those who 'came right up 6tairs* when they called, that her husband'6 father hadn't any'sensibilities at all—not a single sensibility. He never seemed to care for anybody but. himself, ate like a hog, poured his coftee into his saucer, and cooled it with his breath, and—and—well, she wouldn't say anyhing against her husband's flesh blood, and besides she'd promised her husband not to tell, you know. But if they could only have seen—O my!—if they could only have seen and heard him when he came home last night at xI o'clock—well she wouldn't say anytning, of course. But they could imagine what a sacrifice she had made in receiving him under her roof, and how one of her delicate sensibilities must suffer 1 hey could guess, at least. Ah!
CHAPTERII.
MRS. ARDORY'S SENSIBILITIES. Yes, the second chapter will be about them, too. Mrs. Ardory's sensibilities were too acute to be disposed of one shert chapter.
Mrs. Aruory"6at, fit! the very day before Christmas, at the window, looking over a perfumed lot of letters, and talking in her tragic way to a friend who sat near her. 'Memories!' whispered she in a tone of fathomless sadnesss. 'Memories, my dear—sad, sad memories—tKat si ir my heart to the very bottom! Whenever I untie this pink -ribbon and see these letters all my sensibilities are reused memory is too much for me!' Here Mrs. Ardory shed a few well considered and appropriate tears. 'Ah! who can know who can ever know the bitterness I have suffered?4 Then, after an interval of choking emotion, in which Mrs. Ardory's ejes—and, for that matter, her nose, also—were buried in her lace har.dker chief, she proceeded in a disjointed and finely pathetic way.
Schoolmate, room-mate, friend, I shall never see the more, alas!' 'Is she dead?' asked her sympathising friend.
Worse!' 6aid Mrs. Ardory, looking out from under melancholy brows, and speaking in a tone that made her friend's flesh creep with terror, horror and ever so many other kindred emotions. 'Worse! a thousand times worse!' Then, in an awful whisper, 'Ran away from school at 17—worthless fellow—married him, lost all social standing and all her friends. Oh! my poor Laura, where, where are you to-day? What kind of a Christmas will to-morrow be to you poor, lost sheep?'
This was Mrs. Ardory*' with her friends. Do you bonder that they said, and truly, that Mrs. Ardory was a woman of leeling?
On that same evening Mrs. Ardory sat in the dining-room of her lamily. waiting the return of her husband, when a little ragged girl came td the door. 'Please, madam,' said Bridget, 'she says she must 6ee vou.' 'Ask her what she want's, Bridget and if she is a tramp, 6end her right away at once. My nerves will not bear any excitement.' 'Please, ma'am, she says she is the child of your old friend that uted to be Laura Bordan, and her mother's tick and ain't got no home, and sends to know if you won't come and take her into your house for the night. She's turned into the street by the landlord, and she's got five children.' 'Oh, dear! what shall I do? Why, I couldn't have poor Laura ,bere I'd die with pity to see her and a half a dozen poor children. 1 couldn't stand it! My sensibilities are so keen! Bridget, send the little thing away. Don't let her come in. Oh! what a dreadful thing it is to have sueh sensibilities! Poor Laura! how she must snffer! Tell her to go to the secretary of the association fc.r the amelioration of the condition of the destitute. Tell her I would send her "some money if my .husband were at home. Poor Laura! A beggar'" And Mrs. Ardoiv wept in sincere grief for her friend and in pity for the poor generally. Old Mr. Ardory was so shocked at her gritf that he got up and went out', and did not even return to supper, which was served a few minutes later, when Mrs. Ardory's husband came in. To her husband that worthy lady talked most pathetically, about her old friend, her beanty, her intellect and her unhappy marriage, and now this sad, sad denouncement—in the street sick, a beggar, absolutely a beggar. Here Mrs. Ardory broxe down and wept. She declared that she would not be able to sleep a wink that night. Her sensibilities were so delicate. The shock of hearing from poor, dear Laura in that way was so rude and sudden. She hoped her sympathies might never be so severely taxed again. She couldn't get over it—poor Laura in the street!
And at bed time she couldn't sleep. She said her sensibilities were absolutely shatiered. And then, too, her husbandV tather was out, and she just knew that he would be home after midnight, in a state tbat would shock her more than ever. It
TERSE
DORY'S SENSlBlIilT!
I find that the last chapter must -be given to the sensibilities of Mrtf^Ardorj. It was Christmas day. Even on this blessfd^iy ^that ffcni|er-ttearf^a 'HI could dot fay asidfe her senwbilities and
eajoy bertudf.
cbed,
For, jmt thinky wai you,
how many poor there are! How could a tender-hearted woman enjoy a feast when so many were hungry? It was not in the good woman's heart, I am sure, to be for a minute oblivious to the sorrows of the poor.
She had also another anxiety. The dinner hour was approaching and she was to have several friends. Among others, the rector and his wife were tp dine with Mrs. Ardory on this day. All the company, the rector's wife included, were there—the rector only being absent. He would come presently. Mrs. Ardorv was explaining to the clergyman's wife how awful a thing parochial duty must be she could never stand the tax on her sensibilities if she were a clergvman. But what Mrs. Ardorv was thinU^ij about while she was saying this was bomething very different, indeed. She was thinking that her father-in law had been out all night on a Christmas spree, and that he might come in any moment, and shock her sensibilities by his dis disgraceful appearance. But to her surprise the old man came home sober arid, what Wat iibdre curious, came in company with the rector himself. And the rector was showing him every attention! Was the like ever seen before? 'I-Ie didn't want to come,' said the rector with excitement, leading the old man in. 'But I brought him by force. I must tell you what he did. Found a poor, sick woman, with half a dozen children, on the street last night. The woman's husband was dead, Landlord turried them out. Mr. Ardory. senior, here went and got a truck, pushed his way through the rude crowd that stood about, and lilted the poor thing up off the sidewalk, and carried her to the truck. Then he took her to his little house and laid her on the
and got a neighbor woman for nurse, and went for a dootor, and got supper tor the hungry children, and he'd bsen with them ever since, doing all he Could for them. Only he went this mprniyg and shook his fist in the landlord's face, and threatened to punish him if he didn't give the woman back the last ten dollars he had exacted. He'6 a brave old man. 'Why, indeed, we are,' said the younger Ardory, 'proud as we can be of you, father.' 'lie can do such things, you know,' said Mrs. Ardory, aside, to the rector's wife 'he hasn't any sensibilities.' 'If you could only have heard that oor woman tell it,' cried the rector, as thev went down to dinner. 'If you could have seen her kis* Mr. Ardory's handas we came away. It did my heart good —more good than any Chriitmas service I ever attended.' 'Conn, father, you must sit at the head of the table,' *aid the younger Ardory. 'Oh! no, 1 can't carve,' stammered the old man. •Well enough,weil enough God bles6 you!'6aid the rector. 'I vote for you to preside to-dav.'
And then the rector said grace befure maat and the old truckman cut up the turkey as b»st he could, growing red in the face, half from diffidence and half from modesty, for the rector did not intermit his praises ot" the old man's benevolence and of his carving. 'And what do you think?'continued the clergyman. 'That poor creature told n.e she sent last night to the most intimate friend she had in better days, and begged a shelter for the night, and was refused. It was absolutely outrageous. It would have been the death of the poor creature but tor Mr. Ardory here.
The rector said this Under difficulties tor his wife was treading on his corn6 vigorously all the time. But gentlemen never see anything and how should he notice that this incident powerfully affected the sensibilities of the lady at the other end of the table? But if his eves were not sharp, his ears, at least, were always open to a theological question, and he now turned to answer a question, put to him by Miss Crabbe, whether he thought an unregenerate person couid do things pleasing to Chhist. 'Every good thing a man does—everything that has a likeness to Christ's own self sacrifice draws him nearer to Christ,'
The old truck man, whose self-respect had grown visibly, refused an invitation to 'the House of Lords'that evening, started his truck the next week, went to church after that merry Christmas, and dined every now and then at the house of the rector.
Mrs. Ardory was quite ill after her Christmas dinner, I believe. Her sensibilities had been so shocked by the harrowing things she had heard —[Edward Eggleston, in Christian Union,
Capt. Raymakers of the Belgian engineers has started, at the expense of the King of the Belgians, for Central Africa He will land on the western coast, at the mouth of the Congo, and direct his course toward the centre of the continent with the view of meeting the Belgian expedition under Capt. Crespai, which is to proceed from the eastern coast. The French Geographical Sociecv's expedition vrill leave France on Jan tuary 15, and land at the mouth of the Niger. From thence it will endeavor to ciosstethe eastern coaft. It will be composed chitfl} of African tiralleurs, under command of the Count de Lemale, a lieutenant of'furcos.
Joseph Cook is getting ch the lecture busin-8s. John B. Gough is to make a lecu.re ur in England. Collector Sin.mons of Boston lectures to New England audiences on 'Reform.' Joaquin
Hawkeye is on a lccture tour in the east,
(K»»intpr Tj-o-h^r iwinrps twn or!
the winter, iseecher lectures two
three timee every week, and has reduced his price Irom $500 to $200. Wendell Phillips has just completed a tour of six weeks in the west. I
ASBURY CHURCH.
Quarterly meeting—the second of thtf year—begins this morning at half past ten o'clock. Services will be held at 7:30 this evening.. Quarterly lo,ve feast will be held a! nine A. M. to morrow, and regular ser'-ke at 10:30. Rev. James John 60n, of Rcckville, officiating as presiding elder.
5 WEEKLY GAZETf
This is to certify that nava t'ne, manufactured by H. It. Stereos, Boston. Mass.. for rheumat'sm and general prostration of the nervous system, with good su cess. I recommend Vegetinc an excellent medicine for such complaints..
in ths place, havingoneof the largest stores in Springfield, O.
Our Minister's Wifei LotriSvlLiF, Ky.,Feb. r®,
it's
18T7.
MR. II. R. STRVKNS: Dear Sir—Three years ag*» I Was *nffer'ns terribly withinfl«mntory theumatisni. Onr minister's wi advised me to take:yegO' ine. After taking one bottle I was entirely relieved This year,feeling a return ot the disease,I again oom"iencol taking it adri ani being benefitted great y. It a«0^reatly improves my digestion. Respectfully,
MRS. A. KALLA1P.
.,f 1011 West Jefferson Bt.
'1 'SAFE AND SURE.,
MR. IT. STBVSXB: In 1872your Vegetlne was reeommended&Q me and, yielding to to the persuasions or a friend. I onsented to try U. At the time 1 was suffering from general debility and ner* vons prostret'on, superinduced bv everwnrk ftnd 'Irregular habits. Its wonderful strengthening and curative properties seemed to affect mv debilitated system
from
the
first dose ana under Its persistent ns« rapidly recovered, gaining more than usual health and good feeling. Since then I have not hesitated to give Vegetine my 'mottUn*" qoalifle) indorsement. a»beinir a*«afo, «ure and powerful agent in promoting health and restoring the^ wasted sx stem to new life a?d ehergy. Veeetlnc fsthe only medicine I nse, and as long as I live, I never expect to find a better. Yours trul v,
W. H. CLARK,
12jj Montgomery St., Aileghanny, Pstin.
VEGETINE.
The fol'owing letter frqm ft. W. Mansfield, formerly pastor o' the Metbod:st Epts' epal Church, Hyde Park, and at present sett ed in Lowelf, must convince everyone who reads his letter of the wonderful curative qual ties ot Vegetine as a thorough cleanser and purifier of the blood
IIVDE PARK,MASS.. Feb 15.1878.
MB- H. R. STKVJTNS: Defcr Sir— About ten years 8jp mv health failel through the d-pletin^ efFrcts of dyspepsia nearly a year later I was attacked'by typhoid fiver in its worst form. It settled in my back and took the form of a largo deep-8«ated abcess which was fifteen months in gathering. 1 had two surgical operations by theb st skill in the State nut received »o permanent' tuie. I suffered geat pain at times, and was constantly weakened by a profuse discharge 1 also lost tmall piects of bone at uiffereut times.
Matter* ran on thu$ ebout seven year*, till May, 1874, when a friend recommended me to go te your office, and 1alk~With youof the virtue of Vegetine. I did so, and by Tour kindness passed througu jour manufactory, noti-. the ingredients, Ac,' by which your remedy is produced.
By wh I saw and heard I gain some ''onfidence in Vegetine. Icommenced taking it. soon after but felt worse irom its effects still 1 persevered, and soon felt it was benefitting me in other respects. Yet I did not see the results I «'eslred till I had taken it faith ully tor little more than a year, when the uifficu'ty in the back was cured: andfor nine months I have enjoyed the best of health. 1 havfe in that time gaihed twenty-five pounds, be^ng heavier than ever before in my life, rflil lwas never
u.orn
able to per-
orra labor than now. During the past few weeks 1 had a scrofuloas swelling as large as my list gather on another par of my oody. 1 ok vegottne faithfully, and removed it level wi ihestirfa eln a month. I think I should have been ured of my main trouble sooner if I had taken larger dose#, after having become acustomed to its effwtj.
Let your patrons ti oubled with scrofula or kidney sease understand that it takes time to oure chronie d'seascs and, if they will patieutly tak Vegetine, It will, my judge men t. cure them.
With gi eat obligations lam I, lours very truly, W. MAXSPIKLD.
Pastor of the M. E. (Jtmrch.
YEGETINE-
PREPARED BT
H. R. Stevens, Boston, Mass.
Vegetine is stild by all Druggists
Tol ourists.
No portion of the continent of America presents so much grandeur, beauty and marvelous interest to the Tourist as the famous Rocky Mountain region of Eastern Colorado, in the vicinity of the beautiful City of Denver. The magnificence of the mountain scenery is equaled only by that of Switzerland, and many
Tourists from abroad have pronounced Colorado scenery superior to even that of the Alps. The popular resorts in the mountains, famed alike for their grand surroundings, and their magical waters, are daily becoming recognized as the MOST DELIGHTFUL in America for either health orVecreation. Hundreds of people, tired of the resorts of the East, are going to spend the summer in the grand old Rocky Mountains amid its charming parks, majestic 6now-clad peaks, grand canons, clear sky and magic atmosphere The popular KANSAS PACIFIC RAIL way, with its steel rail and automatic air brakes, is the favorite Tourist Route and the only line running Pullman car^ from Kansas City to^ Denver. Low round trip rates from all eafern cities. Descriptive touri ts circular*., maps and guides sent free, upon application to tjie general passenger agent Kansas Pacific Railway, Kansas City Mo.
rael.
WrencournViViT"rdi«re!
in not easily earned in ibes» times, b' it can be mace in three months by any one ot it her sex. in any part of the country who is willing to work steadily at the ^mgloyment tUa( S66 per week In your own tewn.
we furnish
You need not be away from home over night. You can give your whole time to the work, or only your spare moments. We have agents ho are making over S2o pei day. Alt who engage at once can make money
At the present tim) money cannot be u.ailesoe:isilv and rapid at any other bus'•i*F8. ltco*-is nothing W try the business.
Miller is on the p'at form this season. Virms and 85 Outilt iree. Address at once,
..
d?S.thBn»SrTf: "Xttl ^l.20O profit on 8100
Maaean
Ger.. Banks has mide a few engage- accor ing to yonr means. «2S, |90, or fiOO in jments. Mrs. Livermoorft is booked for 1 s*t«ck.
fortune
A
MEDICAlit
How LosViit
Just published,
ted Essay on the radical cure (without med-
of Spermatorrhea or Seminal
1
The celebrated author^ in th's admirable Essay, clearly demonstrates, from a thirty years' successful practice, that the alarming consequences of self-abuse may be radically cured without the dangerous use of internal medicine or tile ap$liciU ion of the knife pointing out a mode of ''cure at once simple,"certairt, and effectual, bt tiieans df, which every sufWrer, no matter what his condition may'be, may cure -Himself cheaply, privately and radically,
HTThis lecture should be in the hand of every youth and every man in the land.
Sent under seal, in 9 plain envelope, to any addnfes^,'p j«t-paid, onf receipt of nix cents or two postage stamps.
Address the Publishers. tThe
"To Consumptives.
,•••:.-.-Twai .*•.. .,
Consumption, tnat scourgcf of humanity, is the great diekd of the human family, in all civilized Cpuntries.
I feel confident tiiat I am in possession of the bnly sure, infalliable Rpnpedy—not known to the profession—for the positive and speedy cuie of that dread disease, and its unwelcome concomitants, viz. Catarrh, Asthma, Bronchitis, Nerv6us Debility, &c., &c. Twenty-eight years experience, as a busy practioner, in the best Consumption Hospitals of the old and new world, has taught me the value of this Medicind in the cure of all throat and lung complaints.
Those suffering with consumption or And of the above maladies, by addressing ...s., givine symptoms, they shall be put in possession of this great boon, withoutcharge,and shall have the.benefit of my experience in thousands Of cases successfully treated. Full directions for preparation and use, and all necessary advice and instructions for succesful treatment at your own home, will be received by you by return mail, free of charge, by addressing
DR. JOHNS BURNETT, 167 Jefferson Street.
Ml
jnm 201 SO. CLAIIH ST., CHICAGO, ILL.' Jfpm^ 1)22.
C. BIQELOW,
ha* been longer engngeit In the tret
^•^A^PnentorallSKXCAL.nd tHKOJIIC
tfl,D
I
onght a little
to the careful investor. We show
an
how to operate salfely. Show with Address all
lull information sent free, tiers by telegraph or mail to
or-
BAXTEK & CO.
ae Agents wanted for a new IJV business, in which any active Man or Woman can easily make fS t« a. day. One who had nei *JPjliVr massed before,male47,50 in 1 1 experienced agent r^ade$72,76 ii ».rs. Particulars free. CL "A.
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a day. One who had never canone hour
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V. know 1.. Cl.HKiU I'.f'Si Uin, l.euiier? A^i'i'l «.- t/»rUlitury lcdueeme a to -New York Weekly 8w
U'AlY SURE
Diyspepsia!
That Hydra headed disorder, witn its bad Depression of Spirit*, Sick Headache, Soar Stomache, Scalding Eructations, Oppressive Fuliness. Loss ot Appetite, Wan, Wnsted Appearanuo, ami nervous Debility, and indicating imj erfcct digestional assimilation of food SDtl thereby lark nutrition, so nece88a"y to the support of the body can We effectually cured nv tr.euse of HOLLAND'S GERMAN lUTTKItS, the favorite prfscription of that Eminent German I'hysiflan, Christopher W. Hoofland, of Langan-Saiza, Germany, the efficien'-y of which won for many marks of dis in'ction by thi-crowned heads and nobility of Eutope- It tones the stomache to hea'tli, action, regulntes the bovpis, i^onse* the torpid liver, promotes natiifal petsiir» tion, invigorates the nerves and restores oil the fundi jns of Nature vigOrows heath. The efficacy of this remedy is daily acknowledged by tne subjects of Its treatment, who now enjoy robust glowing health.
HOOF LAND'S PODOFH LLlN TILLSare recommended when a brisk burgative ts rv-qnire-1, they operate thoroughly without grilling. They are the best Antt-BflUous PUls extent.
JOHNSON, IIOLLOWAT ft CO., Pr prUtors. Phi ladelphia. Sold by a drtiggtts.
NO CURE-NO FEE^
tsli
SHERIF of an
W^ifcffisis, Ihvtfltintirr W+rttV The northqntfrterf of the Impotency Mental and Eh} sipal Irtca pacityjt Xgopied jpienfi tdr,. ft also 'Cortsurtrp*ion. ftptlPp
arrjai Iy ancF I*?rS,
duced by self-indulgence or sexual exravagance, &c. Price, in a sealed envelope, only six cents. 'r'?'
ten
Culverwell Metfic&l Cor
41 Anft St« New Tfwrlc^P O. box4«lft0«
Oloea4
"y otherpbTiicUn ID CUICAUO.
srrnn.18, gohorkihea, clkkiCstricture, okciiitis llRaMA, all mercurial affections of the throat, skin or boon, treated with nnparaleNed success, on latest scientific principles in half the nsad time, saffflr. prirateW.
SSXUAL DEBILITT
Sl'KUUTORlUI&A,
and
IIPOTXRCi,
as the result of self-
•base or sesnu er cesses In maturcr years, or other esases, wbioh prodpoe some of the following effects: Nerroasatss, seminal emtssloas, debilltj. dimness of lifht, detactlre mem-, orj, pimples on the faoo, aversion ts societT, loss of DIUil power, eta., rendering •ARRIAOB
IirRSPXR,
work of
ILLCBTRATISfl
are perma-
[to the abore, sent la KonsnltMloo free and le* and gentlemen,
MARRIAGE GUIDE. OR SEXUAL PATHOLOGY. ..T.h.fJlJ.n,®,,,rtln*
nmnt larn slas p*t—t
ererything
oa
the sutject of the generative
•rgans that Is worth knowing, and mock that t« not published 11 aar ether work. rBKK FIITI CISTS, UUIT CT
Dyspepsia
Dr.A.O.
pHvsU bospl-
1ST Cast Wssbinttton attest. Cbkaso. for tbe rare of ait Private, Chronic and Special Dinatas, Rcmlul
Nervonn Debility,
WeakMSS,
and La«t Haabsod, permansntly
rnied. Or. O. ii agradnateof the Brforin School, and no Mercory hat
tbe
largast prattles in
ibe
Dirtied Statsa. LA*
it wil rati
DIES reqnlrfng treatmsntwiih heme ami board, call or writs. fVsrr cM.mience forpadeats. Send Fifty CeoU for MASR1A6E OtlBE! «I|»» illartrau.1. MARR1E0 LAIIIE9 and gentlemen send Fifty Cents for Sample of Rabfcsr Gcods and Circa lar of Important informauoa byszpras. ConImitation
of
UADIE9 and eentlstnsn »sn?^!fi» C«nU for Sample
mod
Rsb-
confidential. RtllftbU FvmiUc ft Box*
View 7,
from I.O8
SJ JP JP JCJKJliJtlo MANHOOD •3YPI1ILI3. er any other dfeast- caught by Ind ecretion, who hav-* given up all hope, after trying in van
al'
the so-called reme
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A PHYSIOLOGICAL
•~o'\ dtiideto Wedlock ant •iiiilcDiiil Trrattae On the ot marriage ami tbe .a:Mslh!t nnfltforlt tiicsecrets of Reproduction and .the IHMSMI of Women.
A book for private, rnnsidVate reading. 30) pages, pHo*
jOcti.
O
,n inn und Calls, inves.
trrivliege*fcas
W^MkresmSfhom Self
Abas*. Sxcessea,
or
8eeret Diseases, wall ttis best
ueaos of cure, S24 laraeipaees. price Wets.
A OtraiOAL LECTdEE
on the
abof dfseatre and
gs,
fliose of the Throat and nr
Catarrh^Bpture, the
W
lJt'hTNmiIc»~nt pou'v-.tjcn receipt of price oraH
^.r/.XOpflCe. fn*'ftt'
AdUrei# DK. BriTTi
mra%
lutrntril.
tor
7J
eta.
Xo. 12 N.
Siii
St. St. LOuia, I
Wall Street Speculation.
The reliablebouse of Alexander rothiiijr tiam A Co.. No 13 Wall street, New Yuri publish a handsome eight pago weekly paper. called the Weekly Financial Report which they send free to any address. In addition to a large number of editorials on financial and business topics, it contains very full and acurate report of tbe sales and otanding of ererr bond, suck aad aeenrity dealt in at the Steck Exchange. Messrs Frothingham A Co.. are extensive brokers, of lar. experience and tried integrity. In addition to thoir Btoclt iroterr.irc
»'kai n.
nt
FFS^LE.
... le*n«d- from I
0
c,rcuit
court, to directed
new edition of Dr and delivered, in favor of Herman HulCulverwell's Celebra-. man and Robert's.- Co*, and against] Francis M. Curley and Patrick Curley, I, described real estate, situated in Vigo county, Ind.,
northwest quarter of section twelve
west! a'so
St
the southeast quarter
(Mf) af the southeast quarter of.
8?5t,0l?J.vve,ve.(12)^township
twelve (12),
north, range ten 1 o),"west, forty (40) aci^fr also.,|he squt^we&tqaarter'O^) of! •section twelve township twelve (12) north, range ten (10) west, one hundred and sixty (160) acres also the east half of the southwest quarter of section ten (io), township twelte (12) north, range ten (10) west, eighty ^86) acres also part of the southwest quarter lying ^outh fifthe Indi-j anapolis and St. JUcrtiis railroad, in sec-' Uph %ev0n (f),• township Uvelve (12) rtort"h, range nine (9): west, one^ hundred tinn twenty" *and one hundred and eighty-five-one-Moundrtdj (120 .85tob) acres alstt psfft Qf the northwest quarter lying sotathot the Indianapolis
St. Louis railroad in section seven (7) township twelve ((2) north, range nine (9) west, thirty-one and thirty-eight one-hundreds (31 .38) acres, and on Sip^lfRDAY, the 26th day'dfJANUA1 I RY, iS^S, within the legal hours of said day, at the Court House door in Tewe H^ute, I will offer the rents and profits bt the above described real estate, together with all privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging, for a term not exceeding seven years, to the highest bidder for cash, and upon failure to realize a sum «uflScient to satisfy said execution and costs, I will then and there, offer the fee simple* in5 q,nd to said real estate, to the highest bidder for ca«h to satisfy the same.' ..:
Thi|3|d toy of December, 1878. a Geo. W. CARICO,Sheriff, Pr's lee $io oo.
v.
}s
Louisville Kyi
........- •=*., Apr 1} w-i y.
MADISON
DISPENSARY,
,* SHERIFF'S SALE,. By virtue of a decree and order of sale is? ued from the Vigo Circuit Court to me directed and delivered, in favor of Samuel McKeen and against Myron J. Wheeler,. Harriet Wheeler, Mary E. Levan, William 1* Slaughter, Thomas W. Watkinp,John H. Sykes, Equitable! Trust Company, and Jonathan Edwards, 1 am ordered to sell the following described real estate, situated in Vigo county, Indiana, to-wit: A part of out lot number fifteen, 1 5 in the city of) Terre Haute, Vigo county, Indiana, bounded as follows: Beginning at the I southwest corner of said out lot, running thence porth thirty-seven (37) feet three and a half (3%) inches, thence east one hundred and forty-one (141) feet and two (2) inches, thence south thirty-] seven (37) feet three and a half (3)$) inches, thence west one hundred and forty-one (141) feet two (2) inches tothel place of beginning, and on SATURDAY, the 19th day of January, 1878. within the legal hours ot said day, at the Court House door in Terre Haute, I will offer the rents and profits of the above described real estate, toge lier with all privileges and appurtenat ces to the same belonging, for a term not exceeding seven years, to the highest bidder for cash, and upon failure to realize a sum sufficient to satisfy said order of sale and I costs, I will then and there offer the fee simple, in and to sa:d real estate, to the, highest bidder for cash to satisfy the same
This 27th day of December, 1877, GEO. W. CARICO. sheriff. Pr's tee $8.00.
ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE, Notice is hereby given that by virtue! of an oider of the Vigo Circuit Court,! the undersigned, administrator of the est] tate of Isaac Budd, late ot Vigo county,] Indiana, deceased, will offer for sale it) private sale, at the office of Thomas Harper, Attorney at Law, No, 309)^ I Ohio street, in the city of Terre Haute,| Vigo county, Indiana, on Saturday, January 19th, A. D. 1878, and from thence] to Saturday, January 26th, 1878, the! real estate hereinafter described and if| not sold at private sale before the hourl of 2 P. M,, on Saturday, January 26th,I 1878, then the same scall be offered atf public auction, at the place aforesaid,! the following described real estate, situ—I ate in the county of Vigo, in the State! of Indiana, to-wit:
The north east quarter of the! south west quarter of section seven! (7), township ten (10), range ten (io)J
Also the «ix and thirty-nine one hundredths (639) acres oft the nortl side of the norsh east quarter
4
.v
ulic.
of
4
a\
oetho«ls ef U-jfitii»ato spc S advice is valuable, and bv fv)lowiii( I aany have made fortunes*—]New York polls.
"J
thel
north west quarter (J^) of section! eighteen (18), township ten (10), range] ten (10.)
Terms —One-fourth of the purchas money cash, and the balance in three equal installments at six, twelve andl eighteen months,respectively, irom day! of sale, the purchaser to give notes! bearing per cent, interest from! date, waiving all benefits of appraise*| ment laws, and with approved security Sale to commence at two o'clock. P. M.J on said Saturday, January 26, 1S78.
DANIEL GARTRELL, Administrator.
SHERIFFS SALE.
By virtue of an. execution ismfcd from! .the Vigo circuit court, to me directed and? delivered, in favor of James Bcditie andl William R. Bodine, administiatprs ofl Charles Bcdine, cea»i d. and rgainstf James M. Boord, I have levied on theij following described real estate, fcituated] in Vigo county, Indiana, to-wit: Lotj number sixty-two (62) as designated on? the recorded plat of the town of Sand ford, in said county and state, and onj SATURDAY, the 26th day ofJanuar
18781.
1
within the legal hours of said day. at tliej court house door in Terre Haute. I wjlll offer the rents and profits of the above! described real estate, together wilh alii privileges and apurtenances to the samej belonging, lor a term, not exceeding! seven years, to the highes: bidder for Cash, and upon failure to realize a sum sufficient to satisfy said ex-j ecution and costs, I will? then and there clfer the
ft
e-sirnple,|
in and to said real estate, to the highest JvtMt ffr'wh to HHii^iv the .cnro«\' This 3 u.iv |ai.u..rv.
Gto. W. CARICO, Sheriff.,
P*rs. fee $8.
it ,.•
