Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 7 November 1878 — Page 4
0f,
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iizcttc.
The DAILY GAZETTE is published ©very afc-rnoon except ^Sunday, and sold by the carrier at 30c .per fortnight, by mail. $8*00 per year $4.00 for nix months, $2.00 for three months. THE WEEKLY GAZETTE is issued every Thorsdry, ani contains all the best matter cf the six daily issues. THE WEEKLY GAZETTE is the largest paper printed in Terre Haute, and is sold for. One copy per year, $1.50 bix months, 76c three months, 40c. All subscriptions must be paid in advance No paper discontinued until all arrearages are raid, unless at the option of the proprietor. A failure to notify a discontinuance at the end of the ytar will fce considered anew en gagenv nt.
Address all letters, iWM.C.BALL&CO. GAZETTE. Terre Haute.
/THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1878
JTHR Bobton Herald thus sums up the disclosures made by the Tribune's cipher dispattekes /^.J|§ (i„) The electoral ^bte» of Ilorwa and Louisinnn belonged to TildeOj^z.) Electoral votes were in the tnarket^pCj.) HJtyes secured them.
That is the whole case in a nut shell,
A RI KAI. eil»n »s lost faith in the luck bomshois. Ho nailed one over bis door recently, and that moi ning then) came by mail three duns and sevou "stops," and a man ca led th a revolver to ash, "Who wrote th it article?"
The above was sent to the GAZETTE office with a view of bringing into eontempt the gorgeous specimen of* horse •hoe which holds an honored place in the sanctum sanctorum. It has been without effect. Whera the shoe was it is, and whoever, with Impious hand, attempts to haul it down, shall be shot upon the spot
BRK BUTLKK is one more than an amphibious criminal. He takes considerable dirt With his drink. He is a tripjiJlcatei A Republican, with a session's jfse^lcediie a Democrate by his pretend^|ed t)pmination for Governor of Massf&hu.ilisettt and a Notional Attic by his public ^speeches. He is not responsibly. He cannot fee straight enough to follow ^anything. He is not a trinitarian, as he 71 is without faith, hope or charity. He is a triplicate, made of himself, Kearney and ,' the devil—the first and last predominat ing.
CALEB CVSHIKG has foimally with drawn from the Butler ticket, on which he was placed as a candidate for Attorney General, by the bummers of the Worces* %'ter convention, without his knowledge or consent. He is too eld a fox to be caught in any such trap as that old Ben'^jamin proposed. Cushing's withdrawal, at this late day, is a serious blow to the
Butler cause. Just at present we do not ,1§ recall the name of a single nominee of the Worcester convention, Butler ^excepted who has staid on the track.
FOR the twelve months ending September 30th, 1877, our imports were $468.• a73»2S9i. $43353°68*» a decrease during the last year, as compared with the previous year, of $34,743,577. Our exports for the twelve mon.hs ending September 30th, 1877, wer® $608,318,795 1878, $728,256,947. For the twelve months ending September 30th, 1878, the excess of our exports over our imports was $294,726, 295. This shows a. grati* tying balance in our favor, and explains the manner In which we are beginning to own our own government bonds.
MR. SILAST'KAro OWBB eight acres of land near Hartford, worth about 175 tier are, on which, tnia season, 1,900 bushels of potatoes, worth to cents per butiiel. were crown. --I Mourning Express
And yet the times areperfectly frightAil. Itis sad, fc It not? In the Old flush Uinet the ground would have probably been worth
$50
borne
per acie, and would have
300
hundred bushels of potatoes,
of coune, instead of only
{50
bushels per
acre. If on that land come eastern capitalists should have a mortgage for half its value, which is
$12.50
per acre, drawing
ten per cent, interest, which 1*
Just $1.25
per acre, he would be sapping the very file out of the hard working owner, who, with all of his labor on i\ gets only
'$75
in value in one season out of ground worth
$25
per acre. Don't tell the Bra-
ail Miner about the hard luck of "this poor, down-trodden old farmer or it will have another fit.
THE SITUATION ABROAD. (This editorial abridgment gives, in connected form, the substance of the foreign dispatches received at night, without the repetitions noticeable in the crude telegrams.)
The St Petersburg papers have adopted a more conciliatory tone, and now deprecate the giving of direct assistance to the Ameer of Afghanistan Jby the Russian government. Very singularly they consider the English ultimatum as a postponement of hostilities for an indefinate period, and advise Russia to act as a mediator. By order ot the commander, the Russian forces in the trans-caucasian districts are to be reduced to a peace footing. Replying to the Porte's overtures. Russia has
expressed a readiness to enter into European negotiations for a definitive treaty. England has sent a note to St. Peters burg, expressing regret that the withdrawal of Russian troops from Turkish territory has been stopped, and saying in c^ect that if it is not resumed England will take precautions.
Franco is expecting to issue a note, ad-^ vising diplomatic pressure to favor of Greece.
Count Andraasy has b«ien censured by the Austrian Reichsrath for not consulting it about hit eastern policy-'
Minister Layard has been informed by the Porte that til# teforrtis proposed by England wjtybg tri^d. ii) one province of Asia Minor at once, and in (Uhtifr&vWben Turkish finances are in abetter condition.
The sale of socialistic worlds at Lasalle. Germany.have biysiv interdicted.
jJIH
M. Tricoupis has succeeded in form ing anew cabinet in Greece.
1
A Calcutta dispatch says India is seriously contemplating the abandonment of the single silver standard of money always maintained there, and the adoption by it of the single gold, standard. This is a very important piece of hews. India, with its vast area of territory, -and immense population, ha Jiitherto been one of the largest users of silver coin. If its uBfc shoald be abandoned there very important results'.would follow. The gap between gold and silver would widen very considerably. Silver mining, except where the yield is very rich, as in the bonanza mines of the Pacific coast would be 6top* ped because its purchasing power would not warrent the labor requissite to secure it In this country we would have the single silver standard after specie payments are resumed, as we are certain to have any way, if even the present disparity between the coin and bullion values of the two metals continues. Two wings of Maynooth college, Dubland, Ireland, were destroyed by fire, yesterdy, and the librany slighly damaged total los6 $50,000. The students lost their personal property.
A number of new failures are reported from England and Scotland, for the most part caused by the collapse of the Glasgow bank. John Leehie Co., saddlers, of Glasgow and London, have failed for $250,000 R. Shore & Co., brokers, of Liverpool, for $175,000 and Matthew- & Nailman, merchant*, of Glasgow and I-eith, for a large amount. It is altogether probable that many others, during the next month, will also go dowu. The breaking of a bank for $50,000,000 could hardly fail to wreck many smaller concerns.
SPINNER AND THE 7-30 BONDS. Among the many curious fictions invented by our friends of the late flatic party, and palmed off by them on a suspecting public as facts, was the statement that ex-Treasurer Spinner had somewhere declared in a letter that the 7-30 Treasury notes were all legal tenders and had circulated as such. It was used in an argument trying to show that at one time there had been vastly more money in circulation than there is at the present. In their tables they placed the 7-30 bonds, which *they said were legal tenders and circulated as money, at $940,000,000^ For them that made a very large Showing. Its falsity was shown in Indisna, over and over again yevery time it was reported, and among people who cared to be informed on the finances, it was understood as beingfiothing more or less than a very bad Case of "cooked figures". Chased out of Indiana, it has taken up its abode in New York and ft beingt|^ill^^#iealated there. Some fiend has callcd tfie attention of General Sherman of the use to which his alleged assertion about the 7 30's has been put,"and it has dr*wn out a letter from him. From tliat letter we quote the pertinent pofcits,^^^ 8 Mohawk, N. Y., Oct i8th* 187$.
MY. DEAR SIR—"YOU «F,V the Nation al Greenback Labor Party claim jou as one of its members, and ywr «re announced in certain localities as giving to that party your sympathy and support, which is chiefly based upon a quotation from one of your published letters, wherein you4 state 'the
7-30
Tteasnry
notes were intended, prepared, issued and used as currency.'" As no copies oftheman? lgtuift that I answer are kept, 1 at* uuaMe to say whether the quotation is correct or not, but 1 prMBine that it is. As I have not the letter here to which it was an answer. I can not uow say what the question was or whether the context of my letter would fairly bear the construction that this single sentence does. But be that as it may, certain it is, that when it was written I had in my mind the original issue of one hundred and forty million dollars under the act of luly 17,1861, and had no thought ot the larger issue of these notes, ot eight hundred million dollars that were negotiated through the agency of Jay Cook & Co., at the close and after the war for the preservation of the Union.
The first named were principally paid out over the counter* of the Treasury, as currency, to'paymasters, quartermasters, and government contractors. But the latter, and much latryer amount was issued as a loan and was never issued as currency.
It is constantly proclaimed that the great commercial revulsion of 1873 was entirely due to the great reduction ot the
T:r
currency of the country, have taken the pains to look into this matter, and find that, taking the various isems of demand note*, legal tender notes, fractional cfcireqcy and national
fohn W. Vrooman, Herkimer, N.
THE xfiKKE HaUTK WEEKLY GAZETTE."
bank no'es, (and nothing else was then! currency.) the circulation stood after thsj close nf the war in i865*t $647,419,115. And that eight years later, at the beginning of the business panic, it had increased to $^91,051,132, being more than for-tv-seven and one-half million dollars more just at the time ot the great business revulsion, than it was eight vea»s before at the close of the war. This was an actual increase in those eight years of more than one dollar of piper circulation to etch man, woman, and child in the Lnited Sta.es. vf Your old friend.
F. E. SPINNER.
day's elections is surprising. After the heavy gain? made by the Democrats in the'October election States, it was only reasonable to suppose that the elections of yesterday would denote continued progress. This they have not only failed to do, but the net results indicate Republican gains. It is more, surprising than significant, for, as ^affair* now stand, the .Democrats are *ure to ,f control both branches of the Forty-sixth Congress, which begins
I the 4th of next March. The majority will not be as large as was anticipated, but the Republicans contemplating the result, may well adapt for themselves the language of Mercutio speaking of the wound that Tybalt gave him: "No, 'tis not so deep as a well, nor so wide .as a church door but 'tis enough, 'twill serve. I am pepperd, I warrant, for the next Congress."
With the Senate and House both against them they may find small comfort in elections which oniy serve to keep them from being as badly beaten as they expected. Democrats may take plenty of comfort from the result, even aside from the fact that they have secured what they were aiming at, yiz: the control of the legislative branch of the Government. Democrats, will rejoice over their own defeat in certain places. Not expecting to elect their own ticket in Massachusetts they combined with the Republicans to defeat Butler, who is the common enemy of all that is honorable, or decent, or worthy, or of good repute in politics, That "The Lone Fisherman" of Essex, who haitl^ his hook with carrion to catch gudgeons, has been drowned in the dirty pool he himself befouled, is a source of sincere gratificationt) Dim)-rati even more than to publicans.
No Democrat in this scctiorr of the country will 6hed any tears over the defeat of Tammany, in New York City, by a combination of all the rest of the com# munit against that dictatorial organization, which has kept the party all over the country constantly apologizing for its manifold sins of omission and, commission. The mulishne68 and hoggishness of Tammany has cost us the State of New York, but since its defeat was a necessary preliminary to a general and genuine Democratic victory, it is a source of gratification that it came now when it does no material harm. With the present leaders of Tammany swept into the gutter, and the society reorganized on a new ,and clean basis, New York can be' carried by the Democrats in 1880.
The result in New Jersey, which changed radically from the Democrats to the Republicans, is astonishing,^ It can hardly mean that the people had detected the Democrats, who have been in power there for many year?, in any frauds, and that it was their purpose to rebuke it, tor they have elected Robeson, late Secretay of the Navy under Grant, to Congress. In that particular district it probably means that Robeson spent freely the money he made so easily while at the head of what was known* during his secretaryship.au theknavv department.'/
It Js gratifying to learn that the southern states have effectually put to rout the last vestiges of that army of bummers, who plundered their treasuries during fourteen long and weary years of political servitude.
Qur fiatic friends did not tare well yesterday, indeed they bid farewell to every hope and are probably engaged today in wiping their weeping eyes.
The best thing about the elections is that they and the yellow fever are both over and ended.
VESUVIUS.,
This remarkable volcano, which is now in a state of eruption, stands on the east shore of the Bay of Naples, and about ten miles from the city. It stands alone on the Plain of Campania upon a base of ajiout thirty miles in circumference. In 1U upper portion it divides into two peaks, one ol which, called the Somma, attains the height of
3,747
feet above the sea and
the other, known as Vesuvius, readies an elevation of
3,949
feet, but varies both in
height and shape in consequence of the eruptions of the volcano. Vesuvius is often mentioned by ancient Roman writers without allusion to its volcanic character. The first recorded eruption occurred in August, A. D, 79 and it was during this that the cities of Pompeii and Hercutaneum were buried beneath the ashes. The materials ejected from the mountain were scoria and ashes alone, the quantities of which exceeded its own bulk and in the occasional eruptions which succeeded, these were -the only volcanic products until the year 1066, when the first
flow of lava occurred. The total number cf its great eruptions, down to the present tim*, has beert'about sixty, and some of them have been remarkable for the vast movements taking place in a short time. Between the years 1336 and
1631
no erup
tion occurred, except a slight one in 1500. But throughout this period Ktna was in a state of unusual activity, and this, perhaps gave vent to elastic vapors and laya that would otherwise have found a pasage through the craters of Vesuvius.
The eruption of 1631 was accompanied with great currents of lava, which flowed over most of the villages at the base of the mountain, and at the same time torrents of boiling water were sent forth. The eruption of 1779 is described as among the grandest and most terrible of these phenomens. White sulphurous smoke, like heaps of cotton, rose up tour times as high as the volcano, and spread about in a porportional extent, In June, 17.94 occured a terrible eruption, which destroyed the town of Torre del Greco. A single stream of lava was estimated by Breislak as containing more than 46,000,000 cubic feet. The eruption of 1822 broke up the whole top of the mountain and formed an elliptical chasm about three miles in circumference, and supposed to be 2,000 feet deep. In May, 1855, the floods of lava destroyed the village of Cercolo.
An eruption of great violence occurred in December. 1861. The disturbances commenced on Sunday morning,the 8th, in tremblings of the ground. In the afternoon a large opening was made in the ground a little above Torre del Greco, about half way up the mountains, which was soon followed by others, from all of which proceeded terrific explosions and )ets of fltme. Streams of lava poured forth, and on the morningof the 9th were Sowing in a current half a mile broad. The explosions, like the sound of heavy artillery, continued till toward evening, and at night were succeeded by the most brilliant display of electric lights, forked lights and columns of fire and smoke continually rising from the crater. The convulsions continued for several days, and ev. up to January t, 1862, the trembling of the earth had not ceased. The effect of this eruption was to materially alter the shape of Vesuvius, deepening the old crater and forming several new ones.
A month or so ago there were inter* mittent eruptions of a slight character and lasting through parts of several days. Considerable alarm was felt by the inhabitants of the villages but it quieted down with the cessation of the trouble. The dispatches now indicate that more danger is to be apprehended.
ALL SETTLED.
With gold and paper only a fourth of a cent apart, the financial question ceascs to be of any particular interest —Lawronco Journal.
What we have quoted above, from the Lawrence Journal, is taken as a text by the Brazil National Index, and made the basis of a very wild and pernicious edi torial article. Let us pause to remark that the Index is one of the b-ightest and best local papers that comes to the GAZETTE'S exchange table. How it manages to get so uniquely and marvelously wrong on its editorial page is an unexplained mystery, except on the theory that it is running a ace with its brother, the Miner, of the same city, in distorting fact!, and looking at everything through jaundiced eyes. We herewith copy its article by paragraphs with a wor.lofcom ment "Thei. the Greenbackers may as well disband.1' ,» ..ij-.
The fiatic?, wiongly'called Greenbackere, should by all manner of means. The eooner the better. In some places tl-ey have. Genuine Democratic Greenbackers, who believe in having just as mamy Greenbacks as cait be kept in circulation at paf with and Convertible into coin on the demand of the holders, should increase a multiply. "Everything lovely and the goose hangs high."
Ye: it is, and it does. "But the army of tramps is still in the field!"
An army of 1aa^ vigrant* and bonde, who won't work when they a chance, is in the field, and will stay in the field just so long as misguided individuals and communities, by mistaken charity, render tramping more tolerable than working. "The mills still riitt in idleness*."
vagahave
No, they don't at least not here. They arc all gunning, and many on extra time. If they are not all running in Clay county, it is because shafts have been burned, and capitalists are afraid to invest in a community where they are callcd Shylocks, and looked on with distrust, and spoken of at public enemies.
Wages go lower au4 still lower!" But not as fast as the articles which wages buy, and which laborers need. "Farm produce hardly sells for enough to pay for hauling it to market,"
A wagon load of farm produce will buy more clothing, house-furnishing goods and groceries to-day than it woald at any tine since
i860.
-Half the farms in the country are mortgaged for le$s than half what they are worth, but for more than they will now sell for.w
This is a vefy popular thing to say but it is not true. Careful estimates made in
Vigo County' by a competent authori»y,| declare that mortgages rest on not more one-twelfth of the land here. Considering the number of improvements that have bsen made on farms in the last} twenty years, this is a vcrv satisfactory S sho'virrg.
United States bonds still go untaxed I and yield abetter income than any otner: property."
If this is. so, as i. is not, it is strange that more people, instead of buying other property, do not inve».t in bonds. The index is anew paper. It was recently started. It cost money. If untaxed
Nonsense. Nero still fiddles white Rome is burn* ing."
We had an Jidea the old fiddler was dead.
"But gold is worth only a quater of a cent on the dollar more than greenbacks." 2
Isn't it nice, getting home cnce more after weary wanderings on tempestuous seas?
ti~
,v,
i#:
y.
v.
"Therefore let us rejoice and be Imppy." If.we are wise enough to know when we have a good thing, trank enough to confess it, and sensible enough to keep it,wewill spraid th? f„»ast of our rejoicing and rites tution.
What more can we desire Nothing, except for silence to come like a poultice, and ,beal the blows ot sound made by Vagging and complaining tongues. "Let the starving laborers be warmed ar.d filled with comfort, notwitnstanding they have none of those things which are necessary tqjhe.body. What odds does it make?" 'v ,.e.
Fudge.» -e
1
"Greenbacks areWorth almost as much as gold." Again we say this is good. Afle* wandering in the wilderness for fourteen years it is about time the greenbacks were finding the promised land. "Let that console them. True, greens backs will not boy any more comfortthan before."
But they will buy more, nearly thre? times as much, of all the comforts as they woutd anytime back of six years ago ii« "But Shylock will hold them with a tightergrip, and it will tw harder for the poor to get them."
So long as anybody holds on to money it does him no good. Money grows by use. The miser that hoards his money, not usir.g it, is the greatest and only loser. Let u^ shed no tears over the losses and folly of a Shylock! "Let the mortgages be foreclosed by the Sheriff."
That is what Sheriffs are for. "Let the dear homesteads be sold to strangers."
The farmer that sells his corn raises cain if he is not paid, so does the laborer if his wages are in arrers and so does the publishers if his subscribers do not walk into the counting room and liqui date. The man who owes money must pjy, and if he doesn't pay he must expect to be stirred up with a long pole, which is sometimes in the hand of. a stalwart She. iff. There is noffling new, or strange or pitiful about this. It is as old as credits. The interest from notes secured by mortgage on fome dear old homestead is what keeps some other dear old homestead, from being sold under the hammer, and, if either one VtJ be sold, why ought it not be the one in which has been used the money of the other? It would be a fine thing, wouldn't it, for the dear old homestead, which loaned the money,to be sold because some other dear old homestead, which borrowed and used it. would not pay up according to promise? "Let idleness, penury, starvation and nakedness crowd our streets, or shrink and sink away into the back alley! who cares
Tax payers Care when they contemplate the expenditures of Township Trustees and the cost of poor farms, both very large, and both representing their outlay in alleviating the wants oi the poor and unfortunate, whom we always had, and whom we always will have with us. "ALL IS WELL
Yes, remarkably so. Apples do not grow on thorns or peaches on thistles a purse cannot be made out of a sow's ear only those may reap who sow, and bread cannot be won without work, but these and a few other difficulties aside "All is very well."
HUNG HIMSELF.
New York, Nov. 6.—Washington Thomas, formerly a wealthy shoe dealer and an active partisan of Tammany Hall, hanged himself, last night, soon after ascertaining the fate of his party. Hehadbeen promised an appointment, if the Tammany ticket should be elected. —i «i
Mr. Miller Chapman 2»s confined to the house pifk.
OVER THE OCEAN.
The Situation in Hanover.
Paul Cissa^nac anil Miria.i to Fight.a Qua).
Atbtria'x Snow StormPirates.
4
per cent bonds pay better than the newspaper business, it is strange the proprietors did not invest in them instead of in journalism. Anybody can buy bonds, who has the money. There is no monopoly about it, and there is no privileged class. Does not the demand regulate the price of bonds? Are they not subject in part to the same immutable laws which determine the value of other things? Is it not a splendid thing for the Government's credit to be good, and for its bonds to be a safe investment "Still labor starves am* usurv teeds itself fat on the ruin it has made.'
Kowih,
•Kuwiaii
A DUIU
Paris. Nov. 6.—-The Eventment says that aduel will probably take place be?tween Paul De Cassagnac and Marion, a member oi the Chamber of Deputies,. consequence of a dispute in the chamber yesterday.
SKVBR SNOW *TOFTV.
London, Nov. 6.—The snow storm a1f Vienna, on Sunday, last, was very heavy. All the railways and telegraph lines in that section are interupted. Thousand of telegraph poles are protfrated and parks and trees, in the city, were greatly injured. The snow lies several feet deep. The storm C\T tertdtd throughout Austria.
PIRATES,
London, Nov. 6.—-A Norwegian whaler, which has returned from the Arctic Ocean, reports that off Nova Zembla, she was bearded by two piratical Rus~ sian schooners, and robbed of everything portable.
FREE TRADE.
German papers announce the formation of a free trade league, to combat the spread of protection^ tendencies*
SHOW STORM.
London, Nov. 6.—The telegraph lines for nearly a hundred miles around Vienna have been destroyed by a snow storm.
THE HUNGARIAN UIKT
rejected a motion tor the impeachment of the ministry by .170 to §$. A dispatch '"l
19
FROM CALCUTTA
points to the order just issued for the formation, from the Madras and Bombay armies, of a new division for the frontier, ash clear indication that the government expects.an unfavorable reply to its ultimatum.
Madrid, Nov. 6.—The counsel of Moncasi, who attempted to assassinate King Alfonso, requested three days lime to prepare for the defence, but the tribunal! refused to delay. The counsel will appear to a higher court.
THB SITUATION rx HANOVER. London, Nov. 6.—The Times Berlin correspondent rays: English and Danish influences arc paid to be working to induce the Duke of Cumberland to recognize the situation in Hanover, and ac*' cept the Guelph moneys.
If Baldness sr a Deficiency of Hair Kxists,or If the hair Is teray, lry or hsrsii the natural youthful color can be restored ly using "London Hair Color Restoier," the most delightful article ever Introduced to tjo American people for Increasing it**
restoring Its natural color, auilut? same time a iovelv hair dressing au-t beautilier. It is totally different from ah others not stinky or gummy, and free from all impure ingredients that render many other articles obnoxious in faet.it is exquisitely perfumed snd so cheaply and elegant ly preparel as to make
It alaatfngbair (ires*
tag and toilet luxury. .1. A. TYfl EH, A PROMINENT CIT1Z EN. Wilson. N.C., writes: time ten years agmy wife's hair commenced falling and is very thin and turned gray but aftor using "London Hair Color Restorer" the »calp became healthy, tho h«lr stonped falling, and otlor was restored,and Is now growing beau fully*
Ask your druggist for London Hair Color Restorer. Price 76 cents a bottle. Six boltlsft. ifain ddpotfor theU. S.r 830 North Sixth street, Poilailelphia.
Sold in Terre Hautd by fiuatln A Armstrong.
Fever aad Ag«e Cared far SO Ceats. 0C. Srmi'a FKVBK AVD AAUE PULP, without calomel or quinine,] a quick and sure cur* in every case for acae and fever, intermittent and remittent fevers, and all diseases having their origin in Malaria. Thev area great tonic and preventive as wei 1 as enre of all complaints peculiar tom ilarious, marshy and miasmatic districts. They aet on the liver, and brace no tbo system to a vigorous healthy condition. Notwithstanding these Pills are sold for one-half the price that other ague cures are sold for, yet we wiil warrant them as effectual in all cases as any pills or mixture, let the price or confound be what they may: aad being entirely pree from all minerals, heir use leaves no had effects, as fn the case with many other remedies. Sent by nalt to any address on receipt of price, fin currency or postage stamps 1, SO cents a box. threo boxes fl.it,. six boxes, $2.90 Address letters, Inr. Swayne A Son, *»F. Sixth street, Philadelphia.
Sold I- Terre Haute by Hun tin Arm-* strong, The Proper Coarse to be pursued ose tronbleawitfc a disease of'tbe skin la to
by asy
V.II k.VWWWW w..p «».s law procure and use without, delay dunes swLrflpa ?OAF, the most reliable of pui iflen. It nompletely remove# those eruptions which ointments so often fail to case aad remedies hr.tstion, abrasions and roughness of the •kin. Pimptos, blotches, tan, fieekles, In short all eonplexfonal blemishes are eradi-
the siek room, eaa he thoroughly disinfect-f ed by it, sad diseases of an vbnoxloas aa-. tare prevented by its use. It completely* does away with the neeessitv of eestly 8ui-r •har Baths, alnee sta SMrely nominal expense it produces the same effects. Physicians of eminence speak to the highest terms of it* rsmedlal propertles, and it has Been need ae adisiafeetaat and deodorizer in bospitals and ialrmarlee with the most satisfactory results. |t Is extremely popular with the fair sex ea account of the cuticle, thus heightening personal comelinees as wall as proasotfag a healtltv coadition off
Uiu't'ifin
ASP
Brown,. ||e.
Watties Dva, Btaek or
"The First Data Sim Relief.1" Tnal Bottle* of nr. Swayo^s compound ttrrupof WllldCherry, a Cents.
The Lislre«slng coogo, which tbre itene-1 niIom results, itqaiosly eared before devel-' opiagafatal pulmonary affeottoa. For al~ threat, breast, ami laag disorders, Asthmatics or Bronchialafhc»»o»s,HoooingCough, Li?--" er Complaints, Blood Spitting, Ac., no rena-r frtv It so proas? and effectual as Dr. SwayneV Compound Syrup of Wild Cherry,
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Sold la Terre Baate Gy Buatln A Armstrong.
