Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 26 September 1878 — Page 3

••THE WORLD" V. ALL ADS.

AH ATTEMPTED BULGARIAN OUTRAGE.

From the N. Y. World. I.

lTwu

in the prime of summer-time, Time when the city fool To country goes 'ncath the hallucination that it's cool. •Twas in a little rustic burg,

Ne'er mind what State or co My hero found himself—a youth N it bad as young men go, Though he had a way of putting on airs.

And a tendency to blow.

II.

You could not broach a single theme, Of persons, things or places, But it to this young man would seem "Familiar as his" -braces,,* If onetiis recollections gave

Of trarel anywhere, That 500th had noticed twice as much The last time he was there. Whco tie who had to Yerrup been

Would rend arousing lie, "That reminds rae," the youth serene Would answer, "that when I" lie would hear all tho traveler said

He at I'arres had done, rending the Expcsitiong, And see, and raise him one.

III.

Thus was it this young man became, At that wee watering place, invested in the girls' eyes with

All dignity and grace They would gather round this young man's chair,

As round .1 candle bands Of moths,tD list to the sunny memories of foreign lands. lle'd tell th«m all he knew about

The European swells, Tho Rothschilds and Rochccnouarts, The Daau-Ponts-Birkenfols, The Hohenlohe-Schillingsfursts,

And the princely Dardanelles. He'd tell oi Spain, the senoras With eyes as black as jet The gay garbaseo's fueros,

The Usher's castanet The mountain pass where on the crag 'i he bronzed guerilla sat To listen for the tlnkiings «f

The traveller's ball crowned hat The haciendas' all night long All revelry and fleas Fat priests, and mules, and mandolinB,

And other things like these— All which to heareach girl her ear Would seriously incline, While the local young men would get mad

And sneer, "The cuss is lyin'." IV.

TJeware, beware of the rural lovcre, Thou city belle or beau! Many waters cannot quench his hate,

And he will work thee woe. He putteth tho sponge of chloroform To the stuck-up maiden's nose, And utterly divests her form

Of whol ho c-illa her "olose," He rolls his rivals in feather-beds And baths ef ebon-tar, And rideth tftem t»n the good fcncc-rall

Where they may be seen from far. He outteth them into segments twain, And at midnight forth doth hie To feed them to the merry eels

Of Huntington, L. I. V.

The young men of this rustic burg Had seen their stars grow dim llcfore my hero's meteor-blaze,

And they put jobs up on him. They got him to talk about tho Turks, To tell bow he had seen a Whole village bound in the national dance,

The mazy Herzegovina How he had in Bulgaria seen The Turks, witli slaughter reJ, Flaying at tenpins with for ball

A new-lopped human head, And how the Pasha hewed one oft, girl's with glossy hair, And bellowed,

4^ete

mup ag ain!"

As he with It made a spare. Then he would in a melting voice, In the soft Bulgarian tongue, lleclte tho songs at evening that

The Bulgar maidens sung And when the women said, "How sweet,'» "How plaintive!" "IIow melodious!" Then up and spoke with a ravon-croak

A local rival odious: "There is a swart Bulgarian here— This afternoon he came, He will joy to meet with one whose tongue

Can his natlvo accents frame." That young man first grewcold as ioo, And then turned hot as flame.

But then across his sore racked mind There shot a happy thought: "Either this stranger's a Bulgar,"'" 11c said, "or he Is not. It he is not, he cannot tell

But'tis Bulgar I speak, And it he is he can't exroso Me anyhow—Vive lechcsk!'' So he to tne local rival spake, i'V. "Bring you Bulgarian In! A Itaw points I'd like from him to learn(

Of the Narodna-Skupstina."

vii. ..

SlPSlltilflflp

'Tis well to measure 46 Or so about the chest *Tis well to have a sana rnmtj

if

They have brought the swart Bulgarian in: .»• Around tho women standi The hero.rubs his forehead with

The back of his left hand, With the knuckles of his right hand .r, He taps theBulgai-'s Vnce, And he saith: 'Bij maj nlos skedcehlum!

Wahonomazi skrns?' Whleh means, *1 hope my ord is well What is his will with me?'"

VIII.

Then fcr each word of gibberish :*3 The pseudo- Bulgar get olT, The hero unawod (triumphant fraud!}

His mouth with a dozen shot off. And as he did the interpreting, Ho made—that shamcleu youth!— The Bulgarian prove that everything

He before had said was truth. He made that Bulgarian sonnd his praise And tell how the renown Of the traveler to this day Is sung v,V

In each Bulgarian towa. And whon the great experiment^^^ ^., Of his local rivals was o'er, The hero was a more promiuent man

Than be had been before.

IX.

"'TIS well to have a biceps big And muscles of the best.

'i

1

fc&iIt-

A corpus banum In But 'tis best to have an ample space 'Tween the eyelid and theebin. New York, August, 1878. O. T. L.

Young men do not wear garters now.

BERTIE'S SUNDAY FROCK.

COD HAVE MKBCY UPON THOSE WHO ARE POOR. From the Detroit Free Press. lie was walking up Macomb street, peering in on the Italians, glancing into open windows at junk-buyers, and now and then entering alleys to inspect rickety old vehicles standing in front of barns.

What am I looking for?" he answered the policeman: "well, it may strike you as foolish, but I've been searching around for a whole month, and I may have to keep it up for another, I'm looking for a rag-buyer. I'd know his rig if I should see it again, but I haven't the least idea where he lives or when I'll find him." "Did he Bteal something from you?" "N—no," v-as the hesitating reply, '•Want him arrested for an/thing?" "N—no."

The officer was wondering what the cause could be when the man said:

tfI

feel a bit ashamed to tell you, but perhaps you won't laugh at me. You see I have old clothes on, and don't look as if I had any cash to spare. I'm only a poor laboring man, renting a cottage up by the reservoir, and though I've only the old woman with me, it's often that we barely have enough to eat. When there's plenty of work one of us is sure to fall sick, and when

y/e

are in health, the

world goes dead against us. It it is a sort of a life and death struggle with us, aud sometimes we sit in the darkness and wish we were dead and buried Mongside of our little Bertie, up in the poor folk's share of Elmwood. That little grave up there is all that brings us here—we cling to life that we may keep flowers growing there. I've stood on the wharf many a time and felt like going to death at one jump, but that grave rose up to warn me back. On my way home at night, I've feared, time after time, to find the house deserted or a corpse on the floor but that little grave has restrained my wife the same as me." "How old was she?" asked the officer, his own heart aching a little.

Th—three old," replied the man, "and she was the only child ever coming to bless us. We had luck enough before she died. I worked day in and day out my wife was singing thar whole day long, and when I starsted for home a| night the knowledge that Bertie would be watcltLig for me through the bars of the gate, picked tny feet up faster than anything ever has since." "Well?" queried the officer, as the man paused. "Well, 6he took sick and died. I don't want to tell you more than that, or I'll be breaking right down here in the treet, and people will wonder if I've been drinking. It was three years ago she died, but her voice rings in my ears this hour the same as if I had left her at home. It's the same with the wife, sir —a dozen times a day she runs to the door, thinking she heard Bertie's voice and I never go in that she doesn't look at me with reproach for not having our dead darling on my arm." "I've lost children," sighed the officer, as he turned his head away. "Theh you know how the wife treasures up the little dresses and stockings and hats and things. We put all those things away after the funeral, and though it almost broke our hearts to set the bundle down and look it over, we somehow had to do it every Sunday and there wasn't a thing which hadn't been tearwet before the first year was gone. Those relics have been our riches. We wouldn't exchange them for the wealth of any man you can name. One day, about a month ago, a rag-buyer came along. You may think it funny, but even the poorest of the poor sometimes have rags to sell. Wife made up a little bundle that day—enough to get a tin cup or something of the kind—and in some way or other Bertie's frock—out dead child's Sunday frock—got mixed up with the rags and papers, and was sold and carried off. My wife has done nothing but weep and lament since that day, and I've looked here and there and everywhere in hopes to find the rag-man and get the precious relic back, ft may seem a little tning to you, sir, but to us—we remember the first time she wore it— how proud she was—how we took her walking—how much she looked like a rich man's child. That dre6s had more tear stains than all the other relics, and though I haven't fifty dollars worth of furniture in the house, I'd give every stick of it and go into the street to find Bertie's Sunday frock. I don't expect to get it now. It has probably been shipped to the paper-mill ere this, and we have lost it forever." "I'm sorry," said the policeman "And when I go home to-night,'' whispered the man, "wife will be standing at the gate, watching and hoping and

a

far as she can see me she'll tell by my face that the search has not availed. I had rather iose

finger than meet her

white face and reproachful look. I wish we were both dead." And with weary 6tep and homeless heart he dragged along, having such a mission as neither hope nor despair nor love brings to one in ten thousand.

Rev. Mr. Talmage insists that there are holidays in heaven as well as upon earth. If the special attractions upon these holidays are base ball games, pigeon-shootings, sermons "by Talmage and military parades, they might just as well be abandoned.

It is said that when Kearney left California he had $2,000, which sum had been raised for him by the 6and-lot fiends. He now appears to be reduced to abject beggary, and the supposition is that he spends too much money for washing. —[Baltimore Gazette.

^tr'' '.

THE lERKE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.

A WILLING SUBJECT. *'?&?$ -T, vim-

HK SUBMITS VOLUNTARILY TO THE INTERVIEWING PROCESS. From the Oakland, Cal., Times.

He walked into the office with an air of grandeur and importance scarcely commensurate with his general untidy, unclean and unkempt appearance. He might have been a tramp, but the probabilities were that he was only a boarder from the Haybunk Hotel, of Commercial street wharf, on a short rural excursion for the benefit of his declining health. "I've arrived," he rasped. "Well, what of it?" "Nothin' pertickler only I thought you might want to see me so I dropped round to save you the trouble o' huntin' me UD." "Why should I want to hunt you up?" "Why? well you're the wust I ever saw. Why, to interview me, of course." •'To interview you? What do I want to interview you for? What do you know?" "I reckon I'm 'bout's well posted ez the general run o' folks you interview." "I dont know where to begin." "Yon don't? S'pose Gen'ral Grant should skip along here, what'd ye ask him? Er how'd you tackle Beecber, s'pos'n you was to give him the grand talk? Er King Calico, or the Chinese Amhassy, er the Tullis garfg, er any roosters of note an' cons'quence? How'd you begin on them?"

I'd question them on those subjects with which they are most familiar, of course.

Well, let me see maybe you could pump me on finance. Try. ("Are you familiar with the financial question." "Familiar enough, ef bein' on speakin' terms is familiar. But, to tell you the truth, finance an1 me never did get along together very well, though we never disagreed when I could get a fair holt. "What do you think of the present state of the finances throughout the country?" "Now, look here, Mister please don't press me so hard. The finances is all right ef the financiers would only let 'em alone. What we need is a circulatin' mejium, an' how're wegoin' to hev a circulatin' mejlum ef it don't circulate? What good'8 money in the bank do? Fur instance: You've got two bits in your pocket what good is it doin' there? No good. All right. Now t'pose—I'm only s'posin', you understand—you should convey the idle capital to me an' I transfer it to the five-cent beer man, and he pays it over to the brewery proprietor, and the brewery man pays it to you for subscription. You get your money back less the wear and tear, and hez circulated and done good an' lifted a single soul at least from the pit of despair to the gallery of bliss in the theater of life."

His tones were almost eloquent, and his sottisn eyes almost flashed as he caught the last sentiment on the fly. "What do you think of communism?" "Communism! Nov you've got me where I live.

You've tumbled to my gentle racket, an' sent her in with a twist. It's a line shot, a ten strike, an' the las' roll down my alley. Ef you'd called it Kerneyism I'd a dodged the issue if you'd a called it Butlerism I'd a backed water. But you pooled the issues an' called the turn for Communism. Communism is good. Division is the price of Liberty. What's yours is mine, an' what's mioe is my own. Capital's a fraud, and the greatest good to the greatest number i3 the hinge the times swing on. The greatest good that can be bestowed on us is capital. Give us capital and we'll run the unrverse. I'm a Communist from the word go. Anything else you want to know "No not .to-day. The valuable information you have already vouchsafed is sufficient lor the day thereof. "Aint you goin' to say anythin'?"

His cool proposition w&i'ia' sublimely impudent that the quarter was immediately forthcoming *nd the last view we obtained of the "interviewed" he was "circulating" around the corner to "circulate" the "mejium" in a five cent beer hall, siifl'-t

14

vsHE WANTED A DRINK...^ Burdefcte in the Hawk-Bye. Moreover I saw the boy who wanted a drink. A restless, questioning, uneasy, thirsty boy. He let the window fall on his fingers before the train had gone a mile. He stood out on the platform until he wa6 encrusted two inches deep with ashes and dust and cinders. He went to yie water cooler and got a drink, then he came back and told his mother he was hot and went back and got another drink. He drank about four times per mile, seldom oftener, unless he was seized with a sudden uncontrollable spasm of thirst. If he was drinking and somebody else came after a drink, the boy would suddenly seize the cup he had just set down and refill it and drink as though he had wrapped his stomech in the desert of Sahara, glaring suspiciously over the top of the cup at the waiting passenger as he drank. When he was in hi9 seat he watched the aisle narrowly, and if he

?saw

I

When a fat man slips on a wet crowing and sits down with emphasized precipitancy on the damp, chilling bosom of earth, he realizes clear through to his boot straps that the world is cold and unsympathetic.—[Cincinnati Breakfast Table.

The sick man in the east—Eugene Hale.—I Boston Post.

A

15

ir,.

ran nearly

any passenger get up

and move toward the water- cooler, he would jump up and race for it. It he got there first he would drink and snore oyer the cup until the thirsty traveler forgot what he w6nt down there after. People began to wonder how much the boy was guaged for, and if he wasn't rather straining his capacity. The remotest hint or suggestion was enough to send him to the cooler. When the train ran over a creek the water made him think of his thirst When it rattled over a long stretch of dry prairie, the absence of water droye him mad. I was afraid the supply of water would give out before the boy was filled up, and he was a rather small boy too. His interior circumference, I think, must have inclosed an area double in extent to that inclosed by the exterior belt. Near Waseca we

a

1

"Haven't I said enough?" "Skeercely." .r,hh 1 "What more do you want?" "Didn't I say something about circulatin' mejiums?" "I believe you did." "Did I mention any pertick'ler amount?" "You did—two bits." "Well, ef you think my reasonin' was sound. I should be pleased to illustrate in a practical manner. 1 would circulate." .vt

mile without the boy

ing

a

stop at the tank. I grew very nervous now for I was fearful that during such an unheard of abstinence from water, his pump would run dry, rust out, and he might blow up. So I leaned over the edge of the seat and said, carelessly "By George, but I am thirsty. I wonder if there is any water on this car?"

You want to understand me now, as recording very plainly, and without any mental reservation, the fact that the boys mother,fitting beside him was no fool. Her eyes snapped when she heard my careless and innocent remark, she took in every syllable of it, and she turned on" me in a flash with: "I wish you would mind your own business and leave my boy alone!"

A low, mocking murmur of applause went through the car, a little of it for the indignant mother, some of it for I he charity boy, but most of it for me. She suppressed yours truly very successfully, but it was too late. Long before she finished that brief sentence, her boy was down at the water cooler, holding his eyes tisjht shut to keep the water from running out of them, while he flooded his system as though he had taken a con tract to keep up a perennial Baptist revival inside of himself.

MASTODON AMERICANUS.

THE PELICS OF A MONSTER OF A PA8T AGE. In January 1875, Harrison Weddler, William fojpan and Benjamin Jordan, dug a stock well, near Splunge creek on section 10 of the township of Pierson. Vigo county, Indiana. At a depth of 14 feet in a bed of blue clay they found a molar tooth of a mastodon and several fragments ot bones much decayed. One large bone was cut through as it reached beyond the limit of th» well, and they did not have time to follow it to the end. These facts were communicated to Col. Edwardsjudge Long, and others in Terre Haute, and the tooth wa6 sent to Prof. E. T. Cox, Indianapolis.

Two or three attempts have been made to find more of the bones. Saturday, August 24th, men were employed to commence work on Monday, Aug. 26, in order if possible to find more relics of the ancient monster. On Monday morning the work commenced, and Tuesday evening at a depth of 12 feet, about two feet in blue clay, a tusk 6 feet and six inches long was found and brought to Terre Haute. Wednesday p. M. several fragments of the 6kull were taken out, and a tooth which weighs 7% pounds. It was not thought best to spend more time in digging as the bones were so much decayed that there appeared no possibility of restoring the skeleton. Crowds gathered around the well while the digging was going on. Many in Terre Haute have s«?en the task and tooth, and each one has asked questions about the mastadon, so that it seemed as if a short account of this extinct animal would be interesting to many. The mastodon was an animal similar to the elephant in structure, but on the average much larger. The mastodon differed from the elephant mainly in the matter of teeth. The incisor teeth of the upper jaw in each are prolonged into tusks, and in the mastodon there were two tusks from the lower jaw which were early deciduous in the females, but in the males the right frequently became permanent. They were no canine teeth, but six or seven molare, or grinders, on each side of each jaw, but never more than two at a time 011 one side of a jaw, the process of shedding and replacement going on continuously, so that one can form no estimate of tie age of the animal by the character of a tooth. The tooth found looks like an old tooth, but as the tusk is less than seven feet long, while they are sometimes found as long as eleven feet, the animal whose remains were found inc Pierson township was probably a young one. The

!l-grinding

surfaces of the

elephant's molars are comparatively flat, while those of the mastodon are 60 crossed by grooves, that the surface is studded with conical points, hence the name, which means "r.ipple-tooth."

The bones were more massive than those of the elephant, but great air cavities in the 6kull made it much lighter in proportion to its size. One of the largest and most perfect skeletons known of the mastodon was taken from a swamp near Newburg, New York. The animal owning it must have been 13 feet high and 25 feet long, including tusks. Skeletons have been found in New Jersey, Ohio, Indiana, but in greatest /abundance around the Salt Licks, of Kentucky.

They seem to have mired in the mud. In such cases, the bones have very nearly their proper relative position. But in some cases it would seem as if the water of some flood had broken up the skeleton and scattered its parts in some pile of drift. Such seems to have been the case with the one under consideration. A fragment of the socket of the tusk was found near the front end of the tusk below this another fragment of the skull. Six inches above and a little t* one side, one tooth, and twelve feet in another, direction and two feet below, was another tooth.

Remains of the mastodon have been found in North and South America in Europe and in Asia. The mastodon and other large animals existed in great numbers just before the advent of man on the earth, and there are traditions among the Indians which seem to ind cate that they at one time hunted the mastodon. Such remains help us to realize that the life of the earth at present gives but a faint idea of what has been, and that if we would gain intelligent ideas of the past of our earth, we must gather its history from its own rocky pages*.

...

Th'5

objectionable lover whom an irate

parent kicked down the front stoop says he felt quite put out about it.—[Stamford Advocate. The i. p. probably felt it his duty to administer a stern |£rebuke. —[Meriden Recorder.

If a man says "I haven't saw," he is from Philadelphia.—[Louisville Courier Journal. And if he says "I done saw," he is from Louisville.—[Graphic. And if he says "I can't saw," he is lazy and lives in New York.

There is a great deal of difference between a calm rebuke and a clam-bake. We have had experience with both this season.—[Gowanda Enterprise.

,? ^j.

mak­

Pedge

McLane,

"§§|§§l§g|lilj

l§p§?£

45 Years Before the Public.

THE CENUINE

DR. C. MoLANE'S

CELEBRATED

LIVER PILLS

UN in the right side, ifhder the of the ribs, increases on pressure sometimes the pain is in the left side the patient is rarely able to lie on the left side sometimes the pain is felt under the shoulder blade, and it frequently extends to the top of the shoulder, and is sometimes mistaken for rheumatism in the arm. The stomach is affected with loss of appetite and sickness the bowels in genera] are costive, sometimes alternative with 'ax the head is troubled with pain, accompanied with a dull, heavy sensation in the back part. There is generally a considerable loss of memory, accompanied with a painful sensation of having left undone something which ought to have been done. A slight, dry cough is sometimes an attendant. The patient complains of weariness and debility he is easily startled, his feet are,cold or burning, and he complains of a prickly sensation of the skin his spirits are low and although he is satisned that exercise would be beneficial to him, yet he cin scarcely summon up fortitude enough to try it. In fact, he distrusts every remedy. Several of the above symptoms attend the disease, but cases have occurred where few of them existed, yet examination of the body, after death, has shown the LIVER to have been extensively deranged.

A E A N E E

DR. C. MCLANE'S LIVER PHLS, IN CASES OF AGUE AND FEVER, when taken with Quinine, are productive of the most happy results. No better cathartic can be used, preparatory to, or after taking Quinine. We would advise all who are afflicted with this disease to give them a FAIR TRIAI

For all bilious derangements, and as a simple purgative, they are unequaled.

REWABE OF IMITATIONS.

The genuine are never sugar coated. Every box has a red wax seal on the lid, with the impression DR. MCLANE'S LIVER PILLS.

The genuine MCLANE'S LIVER PILLS ftear the signatures of C. MCLANE and FLEMING BROS, on the wrappers.

Insist upon having the genuine DR. C. MCLANE'S LIVER PILLS, prepared by Fleming Bros., of Pittsburgh, Pa., the oarket being full of imitations of the Wme

spelled differently

•me pronunciation.

all

37 Court Place,

but

^SELLERS' LIVER PILLSi

lkm itood forM nn Ut Stanford bMlr for thtf cur* of lAtnr Ctmplmlnll, (MHMIL Sick act*, ud

dtm|Mmti «f th*

1'' Seller*' LWer

lirtr. IBtad-f M4

Mill

«ur«d 3M of Li Mr Complaint,

which ooapdted work."-W».A»ilr«w«.l Baltimore. I eu rtemuMBl Sellers' Liver Plll«.'_

Thejtawwwtmilrri««Kill»iUtaui*»IIM."l —Tboe. itai, Bl tolj, Ken tacky. Frlee St. (Box. 80M by *11 Draniiu ud eeontry Store Keeper*. a. yauj«g|^^rrgo^^»gyp

DR. RICE,

LOUISVILLE,

tar«r yeer*, or other ewuet, ud prododnt oome *f the towint effects: Nenroaneos, BemlulKaitsdsas, (olfht OBitodiM by Irauu), Dlmaaae of Bight. Oekettee Memory, Phyt afcmlDecay, Plnpieeoh PSCSL Ater^on to ef

afcmlDecay, Plapieeoh

SCSL A*er*TOAJOSociety

Confute* of Idsu,

Society of

Ian

of Sexasl Power,

rile* ud other private diseases q^efetysarad. It bsetfovideat that aptiy who to a certain elas* of

OHMM,slctea'—"

ud

ally, acquires great aktll. Physidaas karaiag thi* Ihet eftea raeomaiead pcrsoat tom ear*. Whca tt is Mcsavtaient 0 tUU (he city tor treatment, mediclae* eu ht seat peiTalsly sad eaMy by mall or exprese uywhoro.

Chum Guaranteed in all Caaea

^ConsultstioB* mSoaaBy or by letter ftw aad iertted. kMoud on Chargei reasow ocneepoatsaoe strtttly

PRIVATE COUNSELOR

Or SW paces, ee"« to uy address, seoarely sealed, fcr thirty (30) cents. Should be read by alU Address as abore. Office hour* beta 9 A. JL to S

P.

M. gudajs,

S

ff

nMlt

Absolutely Pure.

Consumers should bear in miad that the Incomparable "Royal" la now the only BakinS Ponder In ih« market made from pare G-ape Cream Tartar, imported exclusively for this powder, dire©.' from the wlne-grewlng district of France. An old experienced housekeeper writes that although she has pay a so mnch farther, and works uses the powder in pudding, cakes, and all corts of iadv from Ohio writes that it makes the only blscu is because the best and most wholesome materials

so much farther, and works so mucn better, that it's economy to use It. Another says she "pastry,wholly without eggs. Aa old ft her dyspeptic hnsband can eat. This auu most wnoieaome materials are used. Approved by the Mew Tork Board of Health, and by such eminent oherautsas D»\ MOTT, New York: Dr. HAYKS. Bolton Prof. GENTH, Philadelphia, etc. Sold in tin cans only, by grocers. SS® -Sti

FOR THE CURE OF .. ..

Hepatitis, or Liver Complaint,

DYsrarstA AND SICK HKADACKZ.

Symptoms of a Diseased Liver.

mi

BAKING POWDER

An old experienced housekeeper

par a few pennies more for the "lOoyal," Indsthat it goev

GRAND DISTRIBUTION

CoBBonnltk SistrMn Co&|ut,

By authority of the Commonwealth ot Kentuck, supervised by Hon. R. C. Wlntersotlth, Ex- i"r«*8.,Gen*lsT. A. Harris, Geo. E. Gray, and other prominent, citizens, .will., giro their

FIFTH POPULAR DRAWING

In Public Library Hail,Louisville, Ky.,on

Monday, September 30, 1878.,

No Scaling! ^No Postponement!

N A A E E S E E $115,400 in Cash Prizes

And Tickets Only $2.00-

Bead the List o' Price*..

Prize.: '/.f.fao.ooo

1 Prise 10.000 I Prize... 5,000^ 10 Prizes $1,010 each 10,000 SO Prizes $600 each... 10.000 100 Prizes $100 each 10,000 300 Prizes 150 each 15,000 500 Prizes $20 eacn 10,000 1,000 Prizes 910 each 10,000

0

Prizes $300e*ch, approximation prizeb 2,7001 3^ tizes $200c.tch,approximation prizes 1,800 9 Prizes $100 each, approximatioo prizes 900*:

1,960 Prizes $115,400' Whole Tickets, $2 Half Tickets, $1 27 Tickets, $50 55 Tickets, $100.

Remit by postoffice money order, registered^

letter, bank draft, or express. Fall' list ot drawing published in LouUvllle Courier-in Journal and New York Herald, and mailed to all ticket holders. For ticketB and infnrmat ion, address Commonwealth Distribution Co.,orT. J. Commerford, Bec'y, Courier* Journal Buildin*. Louisville, Ky.

THE GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY

GRAB'S SPECIFIC.MEDICINE

iRADE MARK Is especlallyTRADE MftWlC recommended as an unfailing cure for

S a WEAKNESS SPKR AT aBHBA, IJJPOTBxer, and all diseases that

BeforeTakiiigJ^®*aJ"0jAfter Taking:

•.

on Self Abase as Loss OP MEMORY, UMITB -M SAL LASSITTTPC, PAIN IN THE BACK, DLLFNKGS OF Vi8iox, PREMATURE OLD AOE, and many other diseases that lead to Insanity, Con- SO {i&Mf sumption, and a Premature^Grave, all of* which, as a rule, are first caused by deviating from the path or nature and over indulgence, a Ji The Specific Medicine Is the result of a life tudy and many years of experience in treating these special diseases.

Full particular? In our pamphlets, which we desire to send by mail to ever}* one. -V w* Tho Specific Medicine

1ssold

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A ruraUriy educated ud le**lly qualified pfeyricUa ud the •oit iuoceKfal, hi* pr*c

Spematorrkea and Impolwncjr, the roolt of eeltkbaM in yoMfc.ietMl netmn

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_/ sad pentv cured aode»

lirely endMotef £xa tho nrstem OoB

GLEET,

Gonorrhea,

Strtetoro, Orehlti*, Hfrmla, (er SMgUmi,

to P. Jfc

CLIFFORD'S

FEBRIFUCE

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•RADICATES AI*L MAJaAMAL

W. Wa Sharp & Co.,

PUBLISHER'S AGENTS. No. 25 Park Vow NdW ?ork,aie authorized to contract for

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in onr paper*

by all drug- »/,

fists at $1 per package, it six packages for $5, or will be sent by mail on receipt oi [the*""'"^ money, by addressing

Gray Medicine Co.

No. 19 Mechanic's Block. Detroit, Mloh.~~ Sold in Terre Haute. Indajlat wholesale and! retail by Gulick & Berry, Wholesale agents..

Sold at retail by Grooves ie Lowry, Cook. St Bell, W. £. McGrew A Co., and by reepoi* sible arnggists.

frfgfg a week in your own town. $5 ontll ifi&srt V***# free. No risk. Reader, if you want a business at which persons of either sex.. ian make great pay all the time they work, write for particulars to H. HALLETT Co., _(i

Maine.

Portland, VT can make money faster at work for ns than at anything else. Capital not ro-t juired we will start von. $12 per day at hou.e made by the industrious. Men, wo- C'^uiul men, boys, and girls wanted everywhere to work for us. Sow is the time. Co»tly ouWt

financial and business topics, it contain* very full and acurate report ot the sales ana standing of every bond, stock and aeenrity dealt in at the Stock Exchange. Messrs. Frothingham ft C«., are a*tensive brokers, of large experience and tried integrity, la addition to their stock brokerage business they sell what are termed "privileges.*' or "Puts and Calls." now one of the favorite methods of legitimate speculation. Their advice is valuable, and by fallowing it many have made fortunes.—(New Tork M»!ropolis.

The New French Combination

Microscope and Floroscope.

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ind terms free. Address TRUE & Co.," Augusta, Maine. Hli,Grr business yon can engage In. D-U'O -I- 16 to $20 per day made by any worker of either sex, right in their own lo- ,. sallties. Particulars and samples worth f$-4 tree. Improve yonr spare time at this bustaess. Address. STIKSONCo. Portland, Maine .1 »St«t

For examining Animal Lite in water Flowers, Minerals. Seeds, ftc. Is also a per- ,v feet linen glass, and counterfeit detector. Agents wanted everywhere, exclusive terrltoryfree. $10 to $15»day can b* made by good agents. =. .•

Sample and instructions sent by mail on receipt ot $1 00, or by Express, C. 0.1. This is the simplest microscope ever Invented,and will accomplish anything obtalned by a $23 Microscope, andlsfree from inclined lenses or glasses. Address

C. C. PROCTOR C«M 679 Broadway, Hew York.

Fine Plants for Faire,

B. P. CRITCHELL, Carthage, 0.

lias for tale a large assortment of Palms Crotons, Fancy Caladiuma, Tree Ferns, Ferns in Variety Ficus in Variety, Cissus Diacolor. ftc. These plants have been grown fair Exhibition and are in good order. Prices reasonable. Address as above.

CineinnatL Write or call and examine the Mtoseum ot Life-Size Models ef cases cared, and yon will be convlneed'it is the only institue that HAH and CAN successfully treat these ailments. No charge »o responsible persons lor treatment antu oared.

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Wall Street Specula^ tLtl

tiOD.

The reliable house of Alexander 1 rothinf ham ft Co*. No l2 Wall street. New Tor*, 14 $ vsu

publif ha handsome eight page weekly paper. called the Weekly Financial Report which they send free to any address. In addition to a large number of editorials

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91111 MANHOOD SYPHILIS, er any other disease caught by Indiscretion, who have given up all hope, after tryng in vain all the so-called remedies, willflnd the only sure relief by calling at,or sending stamp for free, confidential, and benfiedal advice to the W£STI£BR WKiiiiiAi. lNSTlXCXjEe 137 Sycamore St.,

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