Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 25 July 1878 — Page 2
BREEZY
A Climate Whsre Overcoat# are Still Used.
MVi ,.I yjT
Partici^rs of a Trip up Lake Superior. •I
Correspondence of the
GAZKTT*.
Duluth, Minn., July 16, 1878.—It seems almost impossible that the citizens of Terre Haute should be suffering with heat to day, when even the residents of this place are wrapped up in overcoats The heavy seas roll in from Lake buperior and wash over the low wharves the stately propellers rise grandly on one wave and then receive the spray frem the next over their bows ti'e passenger hold on to the railings, tables or chairs, and find it difficult to keep their feet, while others visit the 6ide and distribute their breakfasts to the fishes.
THK CITY OF DUTUTH
is situated at the hcid of Lake Superior near the mouth of the St. Louis river, icc miles by railroad northeast from St Paul, and 565 miles northwest from Chicago. The Northern Pacific railroad starts from here for Bismarck and Puget sound. The city is located on the
side
of a rockv hill, facing the east, and the harbor "is formed by Minnesota Point, which ttretchrs seven miles out from the city into Lake Superior. A ship canal, twelve hundred feet long, admits vessels into the inner harbor,^where they find extensive wharves on which to load and unload, and the freight trains back down almost alongside the boats.
Leopold & Austrian run two magnificent steamers through from Chicago to Duluth, leaving alternate Thursdays from near the Madison street bridge, stopping at all points of interest between Chicago and Duluth. Having just made the through trip, of 1,220 miles by water, on the magnificient steamer Peerless, your correspondent can speak in the highest terms, not only of the boat, but of the pleasure and satisfaction derived. But to commence at the beginning.
CHICAtjO TO MILWAUKEE.' Leaving the former city at 8 in the evening, the boat pushed out into Lake Michigan, and if the traveler is favored with as fine weather as your correspondent has been, he will find the lake as quiet at a millpool, and will 6leep quietly till 7 A. M„ when the first call is made for breakfast, and by the time that is leisurely finished, the boat will glide into Milwaukee river, ninety miles from Chicago, expofing to view one of the cleanest and most elegant of cities. The southern p«rt of Milwaukee resembles Chicago, but passing up East Water street and northwest, the visitor finds himself ascending the bluffs that overlook the lake. On each side are elegant residences with yarcs and gardens and fine trees shade the streets. Op the bluff or lake 6ide there is a steep descent of fifty feet to the water, and this slope is kept green by closely shaved gra.-s and protected from washing away by bouldered gutters that seem to terrace it to the water. The court house, three stories in height, -with a mansard roof and cupola, lends its attractions. The building is of red sandstone, and the cupola is crowned with a gilt figure of justice, with scales, etc. In front is a small park, with fountains, trees, etc. Several handsome churches loom up in this part of the citv, and the general appearance is grand. In the central part of Milwaukee, and on Wisconson avenue and Broadway, are many fine hotels and business houses, prominent among which are the Newhall and Plankinton houses, and Mitchell's banking house. Leaving Milwaukee at noon, and finding the lake as smooth as glass. .the traveler reaches
SHEBOYGAN AT NIGHT.
This city is fifty-one mi'es from Milwaukee, and presents a fine apperance from the lake, but upon arriving at the wharf. the illusion is dispelled and nothing1" very attractive is to be seen although the place contains S,ooo people. If the traveler has time, a walk to the mineral springs near the center of the place, is worth the trouble, and a drink of water resembling Kissengen, can be had for the trouble. Stops are next made at Port Washington Manitowoc and Two Rivers, but these towns are reached at night and your cor respondent did not 6ee them. A long run of 210 miles brings the boat to
MACKINAC OR MACKINAW. This island is located on the north side of the 6traits of Mackinaw, and is three miles long and two miles wide The highest hill or plateau is crowned with a fort, and seventy soldiers are sta tioned there. This fort is over one hundred years old, and from its elevated platforms a splendid view of the island and surrounding bay can be had. Quite a number of our party stopped off to in dulge in fishing and look over the island The Peerless left Mackinaw at dark and by daylight we reached the mouth of the
ST. MART RIVEB.
This river connects Lake Huron and Lake Superior, and is sixty miles in length. On the east side is Canada and opposite is the west shore of Michigan At the entrance the river is about a mile wide, and very deep. After passing Drummord, Pine and St. Joseph islands the boat enters Potagannessing bay. dotted with numerous small islands, mostly belonging to the United States Mud Lake is then entered, having an ex panse of four miles. The Canadian side has been set apart as an Indian reserva tion, and the birch bark tents and canoes can be seen all along the shore. These Indians cultivate the land and catch fish, in summer, and hunt and sleep in the winter. A tmall town called Sailors Encampment is then passed and the boat enters the Nebish rapids, which are not very swift. Then Lake George passed through. This Lake is tour miles broad and nine miles in length, with an average depth of thirteen feet. Tne two towns are reached.
SAULT ST. MARIE,
-Michigan, and its namesake on the Cana dian side. On the American side jFort Brady where two companies of the
Twenty-second U. S. Infantry, consist jng of Seventy men, under command of ,Capt. Hooton, keep watch and ward
u.«ver
about twelve acres of government property, consisting of a parade ground "Wen to the east, and surrounded on three aides by two-story frame buildings, -•ficer's quarters, etc. On the river bank 'jarc two cne-hundred pound riled cannon "and two i.we vc-ound brass piece^
Ok.
toward^ St.' Mary's, Canada, was rjpted in *823, *nd is con-, Quite anWa»po*tant military po
bat your correspondent thought the seventy men had better b© tent to fight the Indians.
THK SHIP CANAL/
just northwest of the town, enables steamers and vessels to raise eighteen feet and nter Lake Superior. There are two locks, each three hundred and six feet long and sixt» feet wide, built bv the authority of Michigan. The government is now building two additional locks, each 515 feet long by eighty feet wide, to accommodate the increasing business. One of them is nearly finished. The oid locks have a fifteen feet rise: the new ones will have an eighteen feet rise. It is a very interesting sight to 6ee vessels panting through, and at the time our vessels reached there four propellers and 6ix vessels were waiting their turn.
Parallel with the canal is the rapids of the St. Mary river, having a fall of eighteen feet in a half a mile. The channel is filled with sharp rocks, but in spite of these the Indians run them safely with their birch-ba- canoes, and several of our party made the hazardous run and got badly scared and wet through, as the Indians use ther paddles rather carelessly. About the fall a number of Indians reside and eke out a scanty subsistance by scooping up the fi-sh as they try to ascend the stream. Leaving this attractive point our boat dashes out into
LAKE SUPERIOR.
which presents a grand appearance, being 460 miles long with an average width of 100 miles. The first prominent place seen is White Fish Point and light, forty miles from St. Mary then the Grand Island, celebrated for its bays, inlets and caverns. Then the Pictured Rocks, which can only be seen to advantage by taking a rowboat.
MARqyRTIE,
the chief city of the upper peninsula, is reached by davlighf. This place was named after Father Marquette, the great French missionary and xplorer. It is handsomely located on a bay, famous for fishing and boating. Among the attractive buildings is a publ:c school house, two stories and a half high, built of red sandstone al?o several churches and private residences on the hill overlooking the harbor. This place is the great iron shipping port of Lake Superior. The peerless reached Portage river at sundown, and then the passengers had the pleasure of passing through the
MOST ATTRACTIVE OF CANALS.
Quiet little fishing stations, wharves and wood yards relieve the monotony of the trip, and for seven miles the boat was carefully steered thiough an artificial canal into Portage lake a broad and deep lake 'hat narrows again as the boat reaches Houghton and Hancock, towns on opposite sides of the river. Hancock was first laid out in 1858, aud contains about 3,000 inhabitants, its prosperity be ing identified with the rich deposit of native copper, in which *.his section of country abounds. The town is located on the side of a hill, rising from the lake level to a height of 500 feet, where the opening t® the mines is situated. Here the ore is raised to the surface from a mine 1,900 feet deep, and run down an inclined plane on small cars to the crushing mills, where it is crushed and then separated and *melted These establishments run nitfht and day, and the water used to wa'h the ore runs back into the riv.r, coloring it a dark red, and destroying all the fish that enter it. Afler leaving Houghton and Hancock the boat again enters Lake Superior, and after passing Eagle harbor, Ontonogor and the Apostle islands, reaches Bayfield, Wis. Just opposite, at LaPointe, your correspondent visited an old French Catholic church, said to be 200 years old. Among other articles shown is an oil painting of the crucifiction, said to have been sent to the church from France. £. W. A.
WHAT A GREAT NEWSPAPER SAYS OF THE COMING GREAT SHOW.
Unquestionably, by far the greatest Menagerie and Circus that has ever visited this place will reach here by its special trains, on Satiuday July 37th, and that is the Great European Seven Elephant Railroad Exposition of the Sells Bros. Its proportions are simply enormous, and its educational and amusement resources. almost beyond computation. It is also as superior in refinement and elegance of presentation as it is overshadowing in vastness, and comes recommended and indorsed in the highest and most unqualified terms by the entire press wherever it has pitched its mammoth tents. Such indisputable authority as the Pittsburgh Daily Dispatch emphatically praises it as follows: "The 7 elephants, to which such prominence has been given our advertmng columns, arrived by the Pan Handle yesterday, together with the balance of the big new menagerie and circus by which they are employed as a distinctive title. The really superb and sensational parade on the South Side in the morning, together with the highly original and successful advertising escapade of the two-horned rhinoceros, gave the show
such a first-class send-off that business was excellent in the afternoon and extraordinary at night, when the smoketinged brawn and muscle of Birmingham rallied in admirable disorder to forget the furnace, factory and forge in the presence of the "Tropical Terrors" and the "Monarchs of Muscle." Well recommended as the show has come, and liberal as were its promises, it fully merits the one and redeems the other. Much liberality, originality and ingenuity is displayed in its street pageant, which seems to compass the limits of possibility in that direction, and give an excellent free idea of what comes after for pay. The menagerie is very large and complete, and notably cosmopolitan. The circus troupe i9 an unusually large o"e»
?M£E TEKKE HAU
a"d
combines a wide diversity ot talent. The barcback riding is of the best, and the various gymnastic feats command continued applause. Willis Cobb's educated dogs, monkeys and goats give most entertaining and laughable variety to the programme.
In the commencement exercises of the Western Female high school, ii* Baltimore, the Rev. Dr. Wilson prayed: "Oh God, grant that not one of these young ladies may be the victim of unrequited love."
Mr?. Snow, an aged lady, fell into the canal while crossing a bridge at Cohoes. N. Y. As she was going down for the last time the lock-tender caught hfr with a pike-pole and saveii herjif'e, \v.
A CIRCUMSTANCE FROM REAL LIFE. Click! In the dead of the night a sharp sound wakened Mrs. Halifont. The room was dark. Not even a gleam of moon or starlight fell through the curtains of the window. It was a very strange sound, indeed, but she saw nothing, heard nothing more.
She sat up, leaning on her dimpled left elbow, and put out her right hand and touched her husband's shoulder. He lay upon his pillow sound asleep, and did not waken at her touch. "It must have been a dream," said Mrs. Halifont and her young head—she was only the bride of a" year—nestled down again closer to her husban J's arm, and she slept again.
Click! This time the sound did not arouse Mrs. Halifont. It was her husband who awakened. He did not stop to listen, but grasped his revolver beneath his pillow and jumped out of bed at once. I11 an alcove in the next room stood a safe which contained money and valuables. It was not one of the wonderful new safes which defy fire and burglars, but an old one that had been in the family a long while. Mr. Halifont knew on the instant that some one w^s,. opening the safe.
A man of courage, a man who never hesitated in the face of danger—one, too, who had warm regard for his worldly possessions. Mr. Halifont strode at once into the rooin where he knew housebreakers were at work, and running in the dark against a powerful man, tackled him at once.
The light of a lantern flashed across the room. There were two more men. Three against one.
The sound of blows, struggling and the reports of a pistol aroused the young wife once more. Amidst her terror, she had the good sense to light the gas. It shone upon a spectacle of horror. Her husband weltering in his blood, wrestling with a gigantic man, whose features were conceaied by a mask of black crape a man, the upper part of whose person was clothed only in a knitted woolen sbirt, of some dark color, with sleeves that left his great arms bare. On the right one, the jne which clutched Mr. Halifont's throat, was a red mark or brand, a scar, a birthmark. would have been impossible for Mrs. Halifont, even in a calmer moment to tell what it was but it indelibly impressed itself upon the struggle and fought with all her might to drag the horrible hand from her husband's throat, screaming all the while for aid
A blow, a kick would have,
For weekt» she r&tfed in wild delirium of the murderous hand, of the great muscular arm with the scar upon it, and called upon them to save her husband's life but she was young and had a fine constitution. After a while her health returned, and, al last, her mind regained its equipoise.
She removed from the city and took up her iibt de in a lonely country place, with a favorite sister for a companion. She had resolved, as all widows who loved their husbands do at first, to remain a widow forever. And indeed, though many men would gladly have tempted one sy young, beautiful and wealthy to change her mind on this point sht seemed to care less for any one of them than the kitten which purred upon her knei or the little black and tan terrier which ran by her side along the garden paths. She was nineteen when her husband was murdered at thirty two she was still true to his memory.
Is any one lorever utterly true to another's memory out of romance—any one who does not die young? I fear not. In this the lapsing summer of the woman's life, when she pretended tj believe that autumn had actually come, te.nptation to inconstancy assailed her. For many years a fine kouse upon the neighboring estate had been empty, but now there came to take possession of it a gentleman not yet forty. A widower with plenty of money and no children, a handsome man, well built and stalwart, with magnificent black hair, and eyes that were like black diamonds. Spanish eyes—indeed he called himself a Spaniard, and his speech betrayed a foreign accent.
The dark eyes and the blue eyes met, a few neighborly words exchanged, a call followed soon. Mrs. Halifont felt a new emotion creeping into her heart. She felt pleased and Battered by this stranger's admiration. Then she knew me was loved, and rejoiced—and soon discovered that she herself loved again.
At first she was angry with herself, then she swept oyer her inconstancy, but at last 6he yielded utterly. After all, it was the love that made her untrue— since she had loved she could never pride hereelf on being faithful again, and so she listened to the sweet words, that, despi herself, made her happy, and promised to marry Colonel Humphries.
When a widow does marry a second time she generally contrives to make a fool of herself.
Mrs. Halifont had certainly no*, done as foolishly as some widows de. She had neither chosen a little boy, or a titled Italian without money enough to keep himself in macaroni. Her future husband was older than herself, and too rich to be suspected of being a fortune hunter, hut after all, no one knefw him. He came into the neighborhood without letters of introduction to anyone, and whether he won his fortune by trade, or came to it by inheritance, remains a mystery. "There were those who shrugged their hhoalders and declared that Mrs. Halifont would regret not having chosen some one of whom was more known— some retired merchant, some gentlemen of fortune, whose father had been known to her friends. Nothing, to be sute, could be said against this Spaniard or Cuban with the English name but who knew anything in his favor?
However, no one said this to Mrs. Halifont, and if any one had, words never changed a woman's fancy yet. Mrs. Halitont believed i.i Colonel Humphries, and meant to marry him.
Indeeed the trousseau was prepared,
the wedding was prepared, the wedding .bl.
GAZETTE.
happy woman. She once more built castle* in the air. Her old sorrow seemed to fade away in the distance. She was a girl again.
At Tastonly twenty-fourjhours lay between her and her wedding day. She was busy in her sewing room on this last day, finishing some ruffles in a lace and ribbon, and sining softly to herself. when suddenly the house was filled with cries.
An old man servant, while cutting the grass upon the lawn, had' wounded himselfe serionsly. The doctoj* was sent for at once, but was not at home, and meanwhile poor Zebedee was bleading to death.
Suddenl/ Ida Halifront remembered that Mr. Humphries had said that he understood wounds as well as though he had been bred a surgeon. Without this it would haye been natural for her to call on one who was soon to be her protector, in a moment of anxiety. She would call him herself,,that there might be no delay and. seizing her garden she ran along a little path that led from her ground to that of Mr. Humphries, climbed a low fence, to «aye time which would have been lost in reaching a gate, and so gained the rear of the dwelling, of which to-morrow she would be mist^ss.
She thought herself terrified and distressed. She felt rather injured in that such an unpleasant as the wounding of poor Zebedee should have happened on the eve of her wedding day. Ten minutes afler she thought of herself at t.hat moment as utterly at ease, wondrously happy—for as she reached tho?e windows and peeped half timidlv through the curtains, a thing happened that made all sh^ had ever suffered appear as nothing.
The room, the window of which she had approached, was one that opened out of a conservatory. She saw Col. Humphries buty with some rare plants he had just set out to the warm sunshine that fell through the glass. He had taken off his coat and rolled his sleeves. Now he left the conservatory, and coming forward proceeded to wash his hands in a basin of water thac had bc»n set ready for him. He was close to Ida Halitont. He did not see her, but she could have ache out her hand and touched hira. Whv did she not ttpeak and call him by name? Why did she sink down upon her hands and t.emble like an aspen leaf? Alas! the awful reason wafc this: Upon that arm to which she was about to give the right to clasp her in tenderest embrace she saw a terrible mark—a mark, she had seen before. She knew its 6hape and size and color. Her eyes had been riveted upon it as the sinewy hand, at the
silenced I w"sto«'whichit
her. The burglar must have known husbands throst. tint, but there are very bad men who
could not use violence toward a woman. This man could not. His companions had flown with their booty, help might have arrived at any moment With a great effort he wrenched himself from the clutch of his victim, and let go his throat and sped away. It was not too soon assistance arrived no that it was too late, but Mr. Halifont did not live to tell the story. He was mortally wounded. His young wife watched by his bedside until he breathtd his last, and then dropped beside it senseless. \m
ended, grasped her dying
She had learnt it off by heart 6he could not be deceived. Tnough years had rolled away, that horrible marked arm was not to be forgotten or mistaken for any other.
Suddenly Col Humphries felt himself grasped by a hand, that small as it was, had the fierce clutch of a tiger's jaw The fingers closed over that red mark— a white face came close to his. •'You aiemy husband's murderer!" hissed a voice in his ear.
Then the two stood staring at each other. He made no denial. He only looked down at the red mark upon his arm and cursed it aloud. "How dared you make love to me?" she gasped. "You—" "Because I loved you," he said. "Woman, if I had not fallen i.i love with you th«rt night I would have killed jou also. It was risking my life to spare you, with your screams calling men to hunt me down—" "Oh, if you had butkilledme then?" she moaned. "Well, I am at your mercy now," he said. „»a vnf -.•*
She answered:, •. "You can kill! I wish you would. I pray do it. You killed my husband. The murderer of my husband must be brought to justice, and I—yesterday, nay an hour ago—I loved you! Oh, God pity me! I have loved this thief, who came in the night to rob my husband, and who murdered him?"
She rembered saying this. Afterwards a strange drowsiness overcame her. She seemed to let so her hold upon the world. She faintly recognized the fact that Col. Humphries knelt at her feet and kissed her hands. Then there were blank hours, and strange wild dreams, and*he awakened in the twilight, found herself bound fast to a great armchair. long corJs about her arms tying her har.di and confining her feet.
So he- servants found her but she was the only living being in the great house. Col. Humphries and his two black servants had van shed, no one knew whither.
The empty bottle of chloroform on the floor—the fact that he had always kept his money in a form that left him fret to leave the'eountry al any time, all proved that detection had been prepared for. And he was never traced—or had the means to bribe thobe wh» were set upon his track.
Ida Haliford lived through it all. She lives to-day tn the quiet house beside the river, but no one has ever seen her 6mile since that hour. No one will ever see her smile again and from her deepest slumbers she often starts in terror, fancying that she sees uplifted menacingly above that cruel, terrible arm irarked with the blood red 6tain. There ia no hope of happiness for her, for she never can forget that this arm has also embraced her.
They were strolling down Third street, bathed in 6uch glorious moonlight as is known onlv to Minnesota and Italy. His arm was twined lovingly around her waist, and her arm was twined caressingly around his waist, and the waist places were made glad. He was telling her that he could buy a lop-eared mule for $27, and she was tenderly describing a second hand cook stove she could get for $3, and a cow reclined directly in their path. Neither of them 6aw that cow, ansi in the street forgetfulness of love, they meandered peacefully over it, and as the cow took the floor a pair of namber nine boot?, and a pair of number two button waiters hung for a moment in suggestive proximity over that cow's back. There are moments when soul melts in soul, too holy, and too blissful to be rudely disturbed by any third presence, and we left that loving pair to bright dreams of the future, and silently stole awav. So did the cow.—[Stillwater Lumberman.
On a steamer recently crossing the ocean, a traveler remarked to a very stylish but pale looking American belle: '\Vhat! you seasick?" Looking around at the rest of the company leaning over
ra:j ng?,the
day fixed, and all was ready, and Ida «.y vou don't S-'R suppose I'd'be Halifont believed herself to be a very I
unhappy lady faltered
QUt"0f t\i^hion,do
jrour'
».* Sri****?: i*
VK(?ETJLXE
FftB t»BOP8T. I Never Shall Fsrpet the First Dose.
MK R. R. STKVKNS:—
PROVIDKXCB.
Dear Sir—I have been a great sufferer from oropiy. I was cotflncc to mj louse more tbanayear. Six months of the time I was wtorelyhelpltms. I was obliged to have two men whelp me in and out 01 bed. I was swollen 19 inches larger than my caturr.l sise around my waist. I suffered alia man could and live. I tried ull remedies for dropsy. I bad three different doctors. My friends all expected I would die niauv nights wMeipect^ to die before morning. At last Vegetiue was sent to me by a friend. I ntver shall forget the liras dose. I oouid realise its goodefle ts from day to day I wns getting be t.r. Af erl had taken some five or si\bolties, I Could sieep quite well *t ntghts. I began to gain now qnite fast. After taking some teu bottles I ooull walk from one part of my room to the other. My appetite was good the dropsy had at thin time disappeared. I kept
Votin ifth. I
taking the Vtyotino until "I great got
regained my uciial hpulth. I heard of a great many cares by using the Vegetine after! got out and was able to attend to my work. I atn a carpenter ttud stair bniMer. I will also say it has cured an santof my wife's of neuugla, who had suffered for more than SO years. She says she has not had any neuralgia for eight month#. 1 have given it to one of rar children for nsnker ht\mor. I have no »ut)tin my nijn 1 it will cure any humor it is a gi eit cleanser of the blood it is safe to givo a child. I will r"-orn»nen» it to the wori'l. My father is 80years old ann he says there is not h*ng 1 ko it to give strength and ltfe to an age-' perssn. I cannot be too thankful for the us* of it. lam,
I Very gratefully youre, JOHN S. NOTTAGE.
ALL D18IA8X8 OF TRK BLOOD—If
Vegetine
will relieve pain, cleanse, purify, anil cure sush d'seaset, restoringtbe pat'.ent to perfect health aft«r trying different physicians, many m«di. s, «i«d!suffaring for years, is it not concluaive proof, if you arc a sufferer you can be cured Why is 'his me' ielne per* forming snch great cures It works on the blo jd. in the circulating fltild. It -,an truly tic railed the great Blood i'urifler. The great source of.lists'- ortginatesin tho blood and nomed'eine that 'loeii uot act directly upon it, to purify and renovate, has any just cla:m upon public attention.
VEGETINE.
R. STEVENS:—
•Sf
I OWE MY HEALTH y#
To Your Valuable Medicine.
NEWPORT, RT,
Ma. II.
Dear Sir—Having suffered from a breaking out of cankerous Bores f*r more than five ea-e, caused van Occident of a fracture I bone, winch fracture ran luto a running sore, and having used everything I couli-i think of, and nothiug helped me, until I had feitcen six bottles of your valuable medicine, xrhich lr. Miller, the apothecary, recommended very highly. The sixth bottle cured me, and all that 1 can say. is thai I oto my health to vour valuable Vegetine.
Yourmoit obedient servant, ALBERT VON KOKDEB.
"It is nnneccessary for me to enumerate tne dlseas :0r which the VliGGlINii should be used. I know of no din- ase which will not admit of its use, with good rosnlits Almost ini umerabiecODipl.iintd are caused uy poison ins arc eiionain the blood, ub ch can be entire expelled frum th« system by the use of the Vegetine. When thperfeotly cleansed, the disease rapidly yields all pains cease, healthy action is promptly restored, and the patient is cured.
VEGETINE
Cured me When the Doctors Failed.
CINCINNATI,
O., April 10, 1877.
UB. H. R. STKVENS(.— D*.irSir—I was serionsly troubled with Kidney Complaiut for long time. I have consulted the best doctors In this city. I have used vour Vegetine fir this disease, and it has cured when the doctors faileJ to todoso. ours truly. vJV EUNKST DURIGAX,
I Residence 621 Rme Street, Place of business, 573 Center St
Vegetine
Prepared by"'
£f. B. Stevens, Boston. Mass*
sil 4- *-m
Vegetine is sold by all Druggists.
For ten yean Tail's Pilln have been the recognized Htandard Fiiinlly n«difla« in the
ATLANTIC STATES.
be found from
Scarcely a family can
MAINE
to
MEXICO
that does not
use them. It (anon proposed to make their virtues known the WEST. A Single Trial will Establish their Merits.
Do They Cure Every Thing?
NO.-They are for Diseases that result from MALARIAL POI8ON and apEKANGED LIVER* SUOh as Dyspepsia, Bilious and Typhoid Pavers Chills, Colic, Sick-Headache, Chronio DiarrhcBa, Nervousness, Dizain ess. Palpitation of the Heart, Neuralgia, Bhsumatism, & iney Disease, Chronic Constipation, Piles,&e.
IT-A.XXRS.E TS "5TOTT
That Your LIVER IS DISORDERED
When jrou have
Dull pain laNhaaMcni CenMTeagaci Coatlro Bowels Weight la Ike Stoaiach after Katlcci flkmr Kraftalleu Aver* •Ion So Kxertlon of Botfy or Hlad.
BE ADVISED, and AT OXCE
TAKE TUTT'S PILLS!!
The first produce* an effect wbleb olles axtonNhm th« MitfTerrr, and In a short time follows an Ay* petite, good Digestion, SOLID FLESH ft HABD MUSCLE.
THE WEST SPEAKS.
"BEST PILL IN EXI8TENCE." Dk. Terr :-T have om1 yonr PilU for DjriMtl«,WMk Stomach ami Xervouiinna. I never had anything to do OK 10 much good in the wif of madieine. They are aa
Eiatenoe.repntent
1
aa jou thi-m. Tluy ire UietMt fill in and I do all I can to acquaint othen villi their good merit*. 1. W. TIBBETT8, Dacota, Minn. Mold by DrnniMtn, or sent by Mall on receipt of 33 rents.
Oflier. 89 Murray Rt.. Xrw York.
Sick Hcadachsk
Potrtively Cured fcy t.iese Little Piils. T!py alia relieve® *tr -.* from Dyspop-
CARTERS
Indigestion and•
too Hourly Eating. A perfect remedy for J.iizziness, Kaoiea, Irow*l ess,Bad Taste in the Month, Coated Tongue, Pain la tbe Side, Ac. They regulate the Bowels and prevent Const]patioa and Piles. Tbe small*
PILLS.
est and easiest to take. Onlv one pill a done. 40 in a vial. Purely VegetAbie. PriceS cents. 6otd by all Druggist*.
CARTER MEDICINE CO., Prop'ri, Erie, Pa. 5 yiw Vlito by aaall far ono dollar.
3lir
From
LOST
I? JLUif/Hi MANIJOOD
SYPHILIS, sr any other disease caught by all
(ndisenstion, who have given op hope. iftcr trying in va'n all the so-called rerae j'tes. will 5ml the only sore relief by calling )fe,or sending stamp for free, confidential, md lieneflcljJ advice to tbe fPfiSTttSK »ZE14CAL INSTITUTE. 1ST Sycamcn }t., Cincinnati. Write or call and examine i.-n Museum of Life-Size Models «»f rases cv.rrl.andyoit will be fonvlnceii it is the only fasUtta'? that HAS and CAJf sncnezafall' rc.if. tbcae ailmenta. So charge .0 respen tifele persons tor tretttssoat until cor^t}.
Chicago, Rock Island
*7
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idtesa —AKD—
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PACIFIC R. "R.
I
Gre*t S»l»ln -I 1 1 alt instil .via -.il
"Inl Rxite i. ii vjf with
ia
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Chicago, and Eastern III., R. R.
Dining and Restaurant Cars,
For all po'nta in KaiiMs.GDiorartOind Callfornla. Tbis road is thoroughly {equipped with *-$sr f"-'
Palace, Oay, and Sleeping Cars, a ii'-
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4
manner complying with the three principal demands made by tie traveling pub-'-lie, "speed, safety, and comfort. The Wabash route may be reached from Terre Haute via the E H, & at Danville, or via the L. C. & S. W. at Logan sport.
Fbe Longest Line of Through sleepingcors in tbe World! Time Less tban orty.tbree Hours between St. Louis sad Boston.
The new line of through Palace Sletp-'' ing cars between St. Louis and Boston running over the Wabash, Canada South* :rn, New York Central and Hoosac Tunnel railways, will commence running regularly Monday, April ist.
aweek in your own town. |S outfl free. No risk. Header, If you want business at which persons of either sex uin make great pay all the time they work, rrlte for particulars to
Portland, Maine.
vi gust a, Maine.
Third Year, begins September nth.
Bf"Send for Circulars to the Principals '1
T. L. Sewall, A. B. (Harvard.) W. F. Abbot, A. B. (Harvard
Marietta College!
Established in 1885. snd conducted on the model of tbe best Eastern Collcgrs. It kas good cabinets and ap aratns, an4 large libraries. A course of study without Greek is provided. Premising sti nts arc aided. A thorough Preparatory school in operation. The next term begins September 6th.
I.W.ANMEW9, President. Marietta, Ohio, July, 1878.
ipis
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4
Apr.
20, :87'.
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And is tha only road running
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The be"»tof meals eervtdl forT75 oi«nt*. A bottle of floe French wine furnishel, 'f de* sired, for an additional It cents. Famish ng a repast fit for an emperor. Overland travelers a! tva prefer, this route.
A.KIMB\LL,f- Onn.Pass. Gen. sunt $
:A
A. M.SMITH, Agt.,,
The Wabash Route.
4
One of (he most popular railway* ia the country ia the Wabash route extend- CI ing from St. Louis, Hannibal, Keokuk, Il Burlington and Peoria, to Toledo, male- 1 ing close connection for all points east and west. The direct eastern connec-, u-, tions ofthisro ite include the Lake Shors •& Si Michigan Southern, the New York Central & Hudson River, the Erie Railway, the Boston & Albanv and the Pennsylvania, in the east. They also make. direct connection with all roads leading westward from St, Louih, Hannibal, Burlington, Keokuk Ouincy and Warsaw, selling coupon tickets to and from all points on the routes above enumerated. The Pulrr.an palace sleeping Cart are at^*^ tached to all night trains, and parlor cars'"* to all day trains on the Wabash route: The road is managed in an unexceptional
4
SV
The Brsi sleeper eastward leaving St. Louis on train No. 2, at 6:40 p. tn., Monday and the first sleeper westward leav- J*. ing Boston at 3:00 p. m., same day, passing over the Wabash Railway on train No. 3.
II. HALLXTT. A^CO
IT can make money faster at work for ns thttn at anything se. Capital not retired we will stare vou. 91* per day at iou.e made by the industrious. Men. wonen, boys, and girls wa ted everywhere to vork for us. Now is tbe time. Costly outfit ind terms free. Address
TBCS & CO.,
ean engage In day made by any tin their own to
talities. Particulars and samples worth fi free. Improve yonr spare time at this buttices. Address
STINBON A
Maine
Co. i'ortlandt
Indianapolis Classical School
Prepares Boys'thoroughly for any |College or Scientific School-
Highest References Given I
I A O
Medical College I
Medical Department of N.W. University 20th Anonal Session begins Oct 1st, '7ft
For information, or announcement, Address Or. J.B. Hollister, 1 R*n«*lpli MreelX'klcafs, lli
STAUNTON.
Female Seminary
STAUNTON, VieGrSIA. 4\
Teachers includlngMrs.Gen. J. K.B. Stnart compoieat, kind. Terms $210. .Extras low. Ooodunarri warranted. Climate mild, healthful. Kxtraragance prohibited. Discipline excellent. Not sectarian. Bend for cata«tu*tsMT. J. I. M1LLK&, A.M.
