Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 8 May 1879 — Page 7
E AIL ROAD TIME-TABLE.
Union depot. Chestnut 4«d Tenth Ptreeta for all trama cxcept 1. & St. L., C. & T. H. an'2 freifebtf*. Time five minutes faster than Terre Ifaute time. Depot of I. & St.L.corcer Tippecanoe and Sixth streets.
Explanation of References: excepted. "Sunday excepted. iMond&y exepted. fcDally.
ANDALIA LINK. (Leave going East.)
•Indianapolis Accommodation 7 00 jKaet Line 1W a {Eastern Express 8 06 •Indianapolis Accommodation a (Arrive from East) JWestern Express •Mail and Express 4faet Line Indianapolis Accomodation (Leave going West.)
Fast Line •Mail and Accommodation IExpress
Accommodation 8 45 a 4i»av Exvress ID 5 New York Express No. 5 1 27 am (Arrive from K*«t.j 6Lay Erpress .....'....11 00 a SAecoa/UJodation 29 5New Vork Express No. 8 188am (Leave goinsr West. JPay Express 02 a •Accommodation JNew York Express No.*.. (Arrive from West.
Accommodation Day'Express New York Express No. 6
No,2.1'corla Mailand ExnroSfe ... 7:00 a No. 4 Icca «r ocsommodation— 4 10 No. 14. Local Freigfct 4 CO a
Arrive.)
No. 1. Torre Haute Express 9 00 No. 3. Tcrrc Hauto Ac'mmodatlon 10 28 a No. 11. Local Freteht 4 0c pm
f^hc ^eeltlg gazette.
THURSDAY, MAY 8, 1879.
The early cucumber hitt belew the belt.
One fifth of the people of Richmond Va., are Baptists.
The principal style in gentleman*® spring hats is to pay for t'.iem in advance
Rev. Charles Spurgeon now often •akes the place of his father in the pulpit.
Tlie Philadetphia managers have harvested $238/000 gross receipts on "Pinafore."
Mrs. ChristiaRcv, the wife of the minister to Peru, is lying very ill at the home of her parents in Washington.
PRETTY DRESS FOR A CHILD. (Sacramento Union, San Franoisco Letter, A littiegirl of thirteen, the daughter od one of our wealthy men, sat the other -evening in a prominent seat at the theatre. The child has a remarkably infant le face for one ol her years, with an innocent look shining fiom her blue eves. She seemed.all unconscious of the attention she attracted and took evident •delight in the play, while her parents sat either side ot her as if to protect her. «6he wore a dress oi'iblack velvet enlivened by a plastron ot blue satin and long light-blue embroidered kids covered her hands and arm«. A turquoise locket .depended from her ne and bracelets .*et with the same encircled her wrisis. •Her li^tit hair was .aombed back plainly .tvhird ner cars in a braid tied with blue .*nd cardinal ^atin ribbon, while her roil i'ly whitr plu.sh hat was wound with
Vuperb oMnch feather of mised blue and •cardinal.
HOW TO PAY A COMPLIMENT. From the Boston Transcript. To pay a compliment ic to tell the truth, and to tell it a6 though you meant lit. And the only way to do that is to •mean it. If a girl is pretty or accom •plished iif she plays well, or smgs well, or dances well, or talks well if io a word, «he pleases, why, in the name of common «ense, shouldn't she be told of it? Don't blurt it out before everybody. That will on'y serve ito make her feel uncomfortable and make you appear ridiculous. Say it quiefily when opportunity offers, but sav it strongly. Convey the idea distinctly and fully, so that there may be no mistake about it. But don't say it "officially." Formality is about the coldest thing known. More than one maiden lias been made happy—say for half an hour—by a man's taking the trouble to 6ay a pleasant thing about a toilet that he liked, and many of fashion's follies have been given up by girls when they noticed a discreet silence concerning them on the part of their gentlemen friends. A bewitching little black eyed beauty once eaid to a gentleman, "I like to have you say 6weet things to me, it 6eems to come so easy and natural." In general terms, it may be said that it is always better to say an agreeable thing than a disagreeable one—better for all parties. The gallant who, when a young lady stepped on his foot while dancing and asked pardon, said: "Don't mention it a daintr little foot like that wouldn't hurt a daisy," not only told the truth, but doubtless felt more comfortable than the boor, who, when his foot was stepped upon, roared out, "That's righl climb all over me hoofs,"
with your great, plumsv
1SI8S1
*.^"7* "f* &*?»i "j- *5?H J*"* £f* I TT\,
.. 1 IS a a .. 8 65 .. 7 00
.. 1 32 a .10 08 a .. 8 10
Arrive
#rom
West.)
Fast Line
ft
fiflin jrhani Accommodation 8 60 a Eabt'/rn Expregs S 4f INDIANAPOLIS A ST. ILOUIS. (Leave going East.)
6 20 1 88 a
8 45 a 8 12 1 27 a
TERRE HAUTE AND LOGAN8PORT. (Depsrtt.) lay Mail Might Express
8 0 a
8 86 ,m
Arrive.)
Day Mail ."Night Kxprcss
J2 55 10 00
IERRE HAUTE AW EVANSVILLE (Depart.) {Nashville Express 4 85 a ni "Day Express 8 15 (Arrive.)
Mail and Express 10 15 in Express 2 55 pm
E VANS ILLE.TKKHl'EH AUTE 4 CHICAGO. (Depart for North.) •Chicago Express 6 45 a •Danville Accommodation 3 16 iNiglit Expreua 10 1" (Arrive'from North.) JNight Express 4 80 am •Terre Haute Accommodation 11 16 a an •Day Express
6 40
ILLINOIS MIDLAND. (Bepart.)
WOMAN'S WORDS.
Something About Preachers and Preachers* Sons.
.'Crowdedlout of Saturday's Issue. A yery unusual sight was presented on Thursday evening of last week, at the ordination services held at the Congrl'e gational church, and one that few peopeever see that of a father and his three sons all ministers of the Gospel. The ceremonies by which a man ib consecrated to a life of ministerial labor are always solemn and impressive but the peculiar circumstance referred to rendered them, on this occasion, doubly so. The exercises throughout werie perfectly plain and simple, but every word uttered was fraught with deep meaning, and every action indicated intense earnestness. The interest of the large audience was manifested in the close and sympathetic attention given from beginning to end. One could not help reflecting, while listening to the words of the venerable father, how diffierently they would fall upon the ears of the parents present how they would arouse an echo of deep thankfulness in the hearts of those whose children, liite his, are a pride and a blessing to them, but 6harp thrill of anguish in the hearts of those whose offspring are only a sorrow and a burden. For of all the joys which earth affords, none, it seems to me, are quite so pure and deep -as those which fill the heart of a parent when his hopes and aspirations for his children have been fulfilled. And the reverse is equally true. Of all the sorrows to which humanity is liable, none can quite equal in poignancy those which wring the soul of a parent who is disappointed in his children. But there are innumerable degrees or shades of feeling between these two extremes, and very few parents,
I iear, can say of a child as this father 6aid that evening,"! thank God forevery recollection of you." But it is not always the fault of the child.
This'incident iproves that there are exceptions to the rule which is supposed to exist, that ministers' sons are worse than those of other people. Whether they really are so, an a class, every one will decide for himself, according to his own observation but, in coming to a conclusion on the subject, it must be taken into consideration that more is always ex pected of a-"minister's family, every mem ber of it, even to the baby if there be one, than of the families of other men. The boys instinctively understand this, and soon learn that they are kept under constant and strict surveillance. Should it iprove that the general verdict 'in this case i6 a righteous one, those who are acquinted with the'characteristics of the average bay, the .general contrariness and unexpectedness, so1 to speak, of his conduct, might rfind. 'justrhere, one of the most potent of the various causes which have heretofore combined to bring about such a result. One or two others might be guessed at. If the old time ipreadhor was anything like the personations of that character which are put upon the stage now-a-days, and are to be found in many of the standard work6 of fiction,-whocould blame the boys that were forced 1 into close contact with him, for making up their minds to go as far as possible the other waj? The long face, the 6tiff solemnity of dress and manner, the «tern unbinding will, the unsmiling, forbidding expression of countenance, the utter disapproval and condemnation of everything, however innocent or beautiful in itself, which did not pertain to the rigid observance of what was then looked upon as the duties of life, formed the outward esmblance of the ideai preacher of "yeancient time." Such a person could not be very attractive, either in himself or his teachings, to an ordinary youth,-however edifying his walk and conversation may have been to the elders of his family and ilock. Of bourse the many excellencies of these pioneers of the Good-Cause ane conceded, and their memories should be held in all reverence, not only for their sterling qualities, but'for the great-self sacrifice which they practiced from
A
sense of duty. For
such a demeanor as was required of them could scarcely be natural to any man in amy age of the world.
But among all classes of people un worthy members are found. Ministers are no exception to the rule, and while searching for the causes of the reputed naughtinest of minister^' sons, we shall be obliged to notice some of the short comings i«f ti-.ose who wore the cloth in the days gone by. Children are keen observers, wad quick to detect the slightest discrepancy between precept and practice. The preacher's-son» who went to church on sunday and heard their father sermonize on the beauties of love and, pea^, truth and justioe, and who returned home and saw his every day life full of the reverse 6f those qualities, unloving and unjust to both wife and children, exacting and tyrannical to his own, but always bland and smiling to strangers, could .not fail to grow up feeling contempt and aversion for the hol!ow forms and shaia observances of such a ministers lite. And who can wonder that, in many cases, after a yotth of such training they should be unable even when they grew u*, to distinguish the real from the counterfeit? I used ithe past tense in the description of thic last example because, of .course, there are no such ministers now. 7'hen again, I have known ministers who were so fully occupied in serving others, that they let their own children go to destruction, or.,4f they did not go, it was no credit to the father. Such min isters spend the! greater part of the time away from home, and are so zealous in working for the good 01 the church that they have no time to devote to their families. They are so busy in providing for the wants of the benighted heathen of distant lands, th£t their ova children are only prevented from growing up much worse heathens by the efforts of the neg lected, overworked,but heroic mother,who arter all, is often spoken of by the un thinking as a "commonplace woman who is much the inferior of that fine looking, popular man, her husband." This species of minister is not yet extinct more's the pity (but it is not to be found in Indiana) and when I meet with such an one, and especially when I hear the abeve remark made about his wife, I say to myself, "It is evident that justice is not always done iJ^ thi^rorld and if, as it i«
*HE TEERE WEEKLY GXiZETTlf
growing to be fashionable to believe, there is no place of future punishment, there ought to be." To those who are so fortunate as never to have seen the original of this picture it may seem over drawn and unreal, but it was taken from life. And there can be no disrespect to the true, consistent minister, or to the religion which I reverence and believe in, to hold up such shallow importers to the scorn of the world. An army of Paines, Voltaires, and Ingersolls if not half so disastrous to the cause of Christianity as oae of these hypocrites in high places. Their lives and examples are too frequently fatal to the good, not only ofthe'r own boys, but of many others of both sexes and ot all classes, who come within their baleful influence.
But to return for a moment to the ordination services which suggested these reflections. The address to the people was sensible to the last degree,?and full of the spirit of the times. The speaker reminded the flock that their new pastor is a man as well as a minister, and that his duties as a minister do not deprive him of his rights as a man. That one of his rights is to receive the pay for his services as punctually as other business men receive theirs, and that that pay should be sufficient to enable him to meet his obligations in full, not so meager ai to force him to go through life on half-fare as was too often the fate of the old time preacher.
This is as it should be. In the past many a minister wa6 expected to support a family comfortably on four or five hundred dollars a year, contribute liberally to all charitable objects, and entertain hospitably all sojourning brethren. He and his family were expected to be grateful, and to need nothing more for six months, when the congregation took it into their heads to visit them unexpectedly, and of course just at the most inconvenient time, bringing with them a lot of things which could not possibly suit the recipients fo well as if the proper persons had selected them, eat up everything in the house, and then depart, leaving dire confusion behind'them.
But if the donation look the form of a 6uit of clothes for the pastor (which it often did) he was expected to feel under lasting obligations to the originators of the movement, regardless of the fit, or more frequently the want of it—of the garments, which having been a surprise and consequently made without the usual preliminaries of measurement, were quite as often across as a comfort to the good man. The modern minister is spared such an infliction, and is no doubt duly thankful that'he did not live at an earlier dAte But if, the past, to be a minister involved many disagreeable features^ to be a minister's wife was not in all respects a position to be coveted, unless (as sometimes happened) she was a woman of umisraall' independence of character arod asserted herself in ttee beginning If she did not iher life was often made a burden to her every action being noted' and commented upon by -scores ot self-appointed crit ice. If 6he was plain and unassuming in appearance and manners, they won dered what he could see in her to admire, more than 'half suspected that he had sacrificed himself, and sympathized-with him accordingly. If she was pretty and attractive the tongues wagged faster still. If site was fond of dress and society she setabad example if she was domestic in her tastes and fond of seclusion, she was an injury to the church by reason of her want of sociability. In any case it was plain 1® many that she was utterly unfit to be a minister's wife, and if this faction happened to be the ruling one, the minister lost his position on her account and without reference to hi6 own merits or demerits.
The present has its faults which need tefonming quite as badly as the Radicals of society claim, but there are two particulars in which it is deserving of high Draise. viz: what it has done and is still doing-for women, and its emancipation of the christian ministry from the unnatural conditions which were forced upon it in the past. The clergyman of to-day dares to assert his individuality. His pay is better than in the past but is not enough yet being, on an average, much less than what other professional men earn. He exercises the right6 -of citizenship, and deposits his vote openly, instead of smuggling st into the ballot-box clandestinely, or else refusing to vote at all for fear of impairing his popularity. He dosen't wear a long face aimless nature gave him one, nor utter dismal groans over the perversity of things in general. He do$en't expect nor desire to get a-reduction on everything be buys, even to his hat and moots, because he is a minister. On the contrary, if me hat kuits him he pay* for it as any other man would ao. He dresses and act« like any other christian gentleman, and is usually a mod?el of geniality and cheerfulness, as, indeed, if he 'believes what tie preaches, he has aright !o be. When he marries he chooses a wife to suit himself, which is one of the inalienable rights of man and little Mrs. Dominie herself is no longer in mortal terror tvhen the good sisters cat! upon ner, lest a weak place be discovered in her management, and it be forthwith asserted that the money they pay the preacher only goes to feed his wife's extravagance and wastefulness. She has recently found out that her husband's pay is his own, the «ame as the doctor's or the lawyer's earnings are his own, and that people haye no more right to come iato her house and find fault with her, than she has to do the same by them and the discovery is a beneficial one all areund. The minister's son, too, poor fe&low, rt is to be hoped, has a less rugged road before him in the future than he was forced to stumble over in the prst. And the result of the change is that the modern minister, no longer harassed by the conciousness of not being his own master, nor hedged about by difficulties planted in his pathway by the ignorance and prejadices of others, is fast becoming the large-hearted, clear-sighted, liberal minded man that the world of to-day needs for a teacher and guide.
At each returning Christmas, New Year's, birthday and festal occasion, a kind but pradent father presents his little daughter with a valuable gift of the useful variety—a dress, a hat, or a pair boots. ~Pa," finally said the little one '"my birthday comes next week. If you love me and think I have been a real good girl you might give me something that's useless.''
GATARRH
IS IT CURABLE?
mHOSE who have ntffered from the virion* and _L complicated forma of dUMte assumed by Catarrh, and have tried many pbyalclana and remedies without relief or core, await the answer to tht« question with considerable anxiety. And well they
MAY
for
DO
dlaeaae that can be mentioned la so uni
versally prevalent and so destructive to health as Catarrh. Bronchitis, Asthma, Coughs, and serious and frequently fatal affections of the lungs follow, in many Instances, a case of simple but neglected Catarrh. Other sympathetic affections, such as deafness. Impaired eyesight, and loss of sense ot smell, maybe referred to as minor but nerertheleM serious results of neglected Catarrh, bad enough la themselves, but .as nothing compared with the dangerous affections of the throat and longs likely to follow.
IT CAN BE CURED.
FImmediate
can be cored. There Is no doubt about it. Tho relief afforded by SANTOKD'S RADI
CAL.
CUB*-FOR CATA Kim Is but a slight evidence ot what may follow a persistent use of this remedy. The hard, lncrusted matter that has lodged in the Basal na&satrcs is removed with a few applications: the ulceration and Inflammation subdued and healed the entire membranous linings of the head are cleansed and purified. Constitution ally Its action IS that of a powerfui purifyinif agent, destroying In Its course through the system the acid poison, the destructive agent in catarrhal diseases.
A COMPLICATED CASE.
Gentlemen,—My case is briefly as follows: I have had Catarrh for ten years, each year with increasing severity For nine years I bad not breathed through one nostril. 1 had droppings In the throat, averybad cough, asthma'so bad as to be obligedto take aremedy for it at night before being able to Ho down and sleep, and a constant dull pain In my bead. My head was at times so full or catarrhal matter as to injure my sense of hearing and compi-1 me to get up several times in the night to clear it and my thioatbefore I could sleep. Erery one of these distressing symptoms has disappeared under the use not three bottles of SAXPORD'S RADIOAI.ofURB.quit*
My hearing is fully restored. I
have 00 asthmatic symptoms, no cough, no dropping la the throat, no headache, and in every way better than 1 have years. I could feel tho effects-of the CURKbeenfor
NICHOLS, SHEPARD SCO.,
Battl© Creek, Mich. ORIGINAL AND ONLY GENUINE
I A O THRESHING MACHINERY.
THE
Matchless Grain-Saving. Time-Saving, and Money*Saving Thro-her- of fhla day and genera* tlon. Bflyimd "»U rivalry for Rapiii Work, Perfect Cleaning, and for Saving Grain from Wastage.
STEAM
Power Threshers a Specialty. Special sixes of Separators made expressly for Steam Power.
OUR
Uartraled Sttam Thresher Engines, both Portable and Traction, with Valuable ImpruT#* mants, far beyond any other make or kind. IHHE ENTIBK Threshing Expend (and often
A three to lire tlmea that amount) can be made ty the Extra Grain SAVED by these lraprovpi Machine*. Ba'sera will nof submit to Hie mot* motM wasttgc of Grain and the inf?rlor work doae by ail o:her machiaes, when once potted ou the difference.
NOT
Only Tartly Superior for Wheat, Oats, Barker, Rre, and like Grains, but the Omr Successful Thresher tn Flax, Timothy, Millet. Clover, and ttka Seed*. Keqnires no "attachment*" 09
XXPerfection
L4LNDS
on my appetite, on my kidneys,
and, la tad, every part of my system. What has been done In my case is wholly the effect of the BAOVCAL Cra*. Very respectfully,
ITCBBCBG
Oct. 14. C. H. LAWRENCE.
Indorsed bf a Prominent Druggist,
I hereby certify Mr. Lawrence purchased the RADICAL CUE*that
of me, and from time to time
made me familiar With his oase. I believe his state, tnont to be true In every particular.
TFIXCHBCBQ,
Oct. M. AS. P. DERBY.
Each package contains Dr. Sanford's Improved InhallngTube, and full directions for its use In all cases. Frioe, $1. For sale by all wholesale and retail druggists and dealers throughout the United States ana Canadas. WEEKS & POTTER, General Agents and Wholesale Druggists, Boston, Mass.
BCOLLMS'
VOLTAIC PLASTER
An Electro-Galvanic Battery combined -with a highly Medicated Strengthening Floater, forming the beat Plaster for pain* and aches in the World of Medicine.
REFERENCES.
Dr. E. M. Rlker, Montgomery, O. Mrs. Frances Harriman, Orlaad, Me. Haskell Lewis, Esq., Mllford, Del. Mrs. Richard Gorman, Lynchburg, Va. J. B. Sammls, Esq., Winona, Mian. Mrs. J. A. Tuszle, Memphis, Tean. H. B. Gooch. Esq. Oswego, Kan. Dr. Willard Colllns^Bucksport, Me. O. W. Bostwlck, Esq., Mt. Sterling, O. Mrs. Eliza Young, Cambridge, Mass. Francis Baker, Esq., Cincinnati, O. Mrs. J. M. "Robinson, E. Orrington, Me. V.8hiverlck, Esq.." Independent" Office, N. T. Mrs. Eliza J. Duffleld, Hume, 111. Geo. Gray, Esq., Montlcello. Minn. Mrs. Chas. Rounds, Woodhnll, 111. W. H. H.McKinney, Morrow, O. Mrs. R. L. Stevens,Tort Wayne, lad. Wm. B. Slmms. Madlsonvllle, Kr. Mrs. E. Bredell, St. Louis, Mo. Mortimer Lyon, Esq., San Franelsco, CaL
Jin
A
And hundred* of other*. ...
COLLINS' VOLTAIC PLASTERS Core when all other remedies fall. Copies of letters detailing some astonishing cures when all other remedies had besn triea without success, will b* mailed (res. ao that correspondence may be had if desired. For the care of Lame and weaknesses psmHar to females, COLXI*S'Back
Fans
VOITAIO
PLABTBRS arc superior to all other external remedies. PRICEj^SS^ENTS.
Be carefal to call for CoLLin' VOLTAIO PLJLSTRB lest you ret some worthless Imitation. Sold by all wholesale and retail druggists throughout tfcs tjolted Matea aad Canadas, and by WEEKS 4 POTTER, Proprietors, Boston. Mass.
11
Change from Grain to Seeds.
rebuilding'* to
Thorough Workmanship, Elegant Finish, of Parts. Completeness of KqnlKmeat, etc., ear ViuLtTOB" Thresher Outfits are Incomparable.
MARVELOCS fir Simplicity of Parts, nsing less than one-half the usual Belts and Gears. Makea Clean Work, with no Littering* or Scatterings. fiOCI Siaes of Separators Hade, Baagiag A frsn Six to Twelve-Horse size, and twe styles ef Mounted Horse to match.
POBPowers
Partlealars, Call on oar Dealers or writ* to tutor Olaitralad Circular, whkh wsmaUir
For sale by Mf. F. MTalmsley, on aorth Fourth street.
REVOLUTION
THE
STANDAR0 SINGER.
$20 Buys this Style.
Xew apents wanted in every town Sample Machine furnished on application. $3 to be forwarded with order as a guarantee ol good faith-the balance, $18, to be paii after five day*'trial. Every machine warranted, and a written guarantee given »vith each machine to keep in order for two years. Two machtnes. one address, $38 three machine*. $54 faiir machines, S70 five machines, $&. .Special prices on large orders.
PARS0IS, FOSTER CO
1251 27 Clark Chicago, 111.
Ea&sas PacificRailway.
LANDS 1
KANSAS TO THE FRONT The Leading Wheat State in the Union in 1878, and the
Fourth Corn State—The Great Kansas Harvest of 1878 was sold for the "Golden -U' Belt,"
f.
The celebrated Grain Belt of country, in the limestone section of Central Kansas, traversed by the Kansas Pacific.
The following statements are taken from the report of the Kansas State Board of Agriculture for 1S7S: «af UC AT Kansas rises from Vi nCfl I the Eleventh Wheat State in 1S77 to the First Wheat State in the Union in 1S78, producing 26,518,958 bushels winter wheat, and 5,796,403 ishel» spring wheat total,
32,315,361
Bushels Wheat, with only one-eighth of the State under cultivation. The organ, ized counties lying in the Golden Wheat Belt of the Kansas Pacific produced 13,• £35.324 bushels, or over 41 per cent, and, including unreporting counties, fully 14,000,000 buthels, or 45 per. cent, of the entire yield of Wheat in the State, averaging 25 bushels to the acre, while the average for the State was 17 bushels .pe acre. PflRM Kansas,the Fourth Corn ounn State in the Union in 1878, produced 89,324.971 bushels of Corn. Of which the Golden Gra'in Belt counties produced 27,399,055 bushels, or 41 per cent, nearly ohe-third of the entire yield of the State, with an equally grand showing in all other departments of agriculture.
The foregoing facts show conclusively why 29 per cent of the increase in population in the State during the past four years and 40 per cent of the increase in population •luring the past year and 43 per cent of the increased acreage of wheat in the State in 1S78, belonged to the "Golden Belt."
for Everybody.—62 500 farms
—5,000,000 acres—for sale by Kansas Pacific—the best land in America, at from $2 to $6 per acre, one-quarter off for cash, or on 6 or 11 years credit at 7 per cent interest. It don't take much money to buy a farm on the Kansas Pacific $26 to $80 will secure 80 acres on credit, or I120 to $360 in cash will buy it outright
Send to S. J. Gilmore, Land Commissioner, Salina. Kas., for the "Kansas Pa citfc Homestead," a publication which tells about Lands, Homesteads, Pre-emp tion, Soil, Climate, Products, Stock raising, Schools, Wages, Land Explorers' Tickets, Rates, etc. It i6 mailed free to all applicants.
Read All you can gather about Kansas, and when you decide to start, be sure and start right by locating along the KANSAS PACIFIC RAILWAY, T. F. OAKES,
Gen'l Superintendent.
^KANSAS CITY, MO.
Tft£B£ST I'm WOULD
SOLD BY
-a
3" •f'ft.'i**|
E A I E
:y
S«yv*
& Pacific west of Denver, thence the
O E 8 W E A O
DEALERS INJALL KINDS OF
Farm Implements
Ohio St., East Side of Public Square.-
Open and Top Spring and Farm Wagons. The] Celebrated Hughes Sulkey Plow. The Hamilton, Fort Wayne, and Buckeye Breaking Plow, for General Purposes. TIIP Canton, Clipper, and Other Stubble Plows. A full stock of One-Horse Plows, both Right and Left Hand, Double-Shovels, Iron and Wood Beams, Single Shrvel Plows, The buckeye and Osbourn Self-Binding Harvester. The Buckeye Table Rake, Dropper and Mower. The Wheeler Self Rake, Dropper and Mower. «y,
Jf
JEST Farmers are most cordially invited t» call and examine our stock purchasing. All of our goods are Fully Warranted.,
ODCajT'T POEaET TO
f-
/hi mmmmmmmmrn—m
A
RICH OPENING. ZM
.^5"
***.
iW1' ss -tf'i
Leadville, Colorado.—The vast deposits of carbonates of silvee at Leadyille, so m»nv miles in extent, are conceded to be the richest ever discovered. They lay in horizontal beut, as coai or gravel, from to ten feet thick and from 8 to 100 feet below the surface, are mined with aid of a pick and shovel, no blasting or deep, expensive shafts being required, as is the case with the narrow, vertical veins of hard silver quartz heretofore found, muscle, energy ant^daily bread being the on-
Colorado.—The prea* sanitarium and .Pleasure Resort of America elevated above the influence of miasma, with its
Golden Belt Routs.—The Kansas Pacific R'y is the only line running entire^ trains equipped with Pullman Sleeping Palaces and elegant Day and Second Class Coaches to Denver without change of either passengers, baggage or mails. This being the short line and quickest, is *1 J* therefore the cheapest and beat route in ,** .J. every respect.
Free.—Send to P. B. Groat, Gen Pass. Agt. Kansas Pacific R'v. Kansa
it or or ad ist,*' for 1879, the new "Colorado Mine an 1879 Guide to Leadville,'' illustrated' with the best map published. Enclose postage stamp.
P. B. GOAT,
a«4Ab3aliies»
The Russell, J. Q. Case, and Springfield, Pitts, with steam or horse power.fss The Taylor and other first-class Sulkey Hay Rakes. We would call the attention of Farmers especially to our Bar Plow Cultivator. ZW A lull stock ot Repairs always on hand for Machines, either Reapers Threshers sold by us.
11500
Bt OF nv"'acn-iltUMB£RS NOTICE OU* Grll^^uRSAHD -«/f rr FOR KARTICULARS ^HUHBEPnu
WHITESEWING MACHINE CO.
*',V5
is*
Btst Way Thert.—At Kansas City
or Leavenworth take the Kansas Pacific R'y to"Denyer, the. Denver, South fark R. to ^Webster, 70
milefr Park
South
daily, stages 28 miles to Fairplay, 42 miles -j. to Leadville.* This, the short line, |saves ioo miles staging.. Emigrants on Kansas Pacific R'y are carried on SFast Express Passenger Trails. Rates asJ[lowfc as by any other line.
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pure, tonic and exhilarating atmosphere, its numerous mineral springs, immense deposits of gold and silver and tne grandeur, extent and variety of its scenery, of- V' fers unequalled attractions for the Pleas- V'A ure Seeker, Scientist, Artist, Capitalist, the Invalid, the Overworked and the gold .1 andsilver seekers,
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Gen. Pass. Agent. ,,
C1YMNO
KAT ASS.,
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A0DRE5S:
CLEVELAND,OHIO.
PLOWS! PLOWS! PLOWS!
Three CarJLoad8 Juit Received.
The Champion, Weir and Smith Plow*
The Celebrated Weir and Chair,pion
Three Horse Sulkey Plows.
Also the Leidy and Avery Stalk Cutters. Call at once, as these Implements are the very best. Terms easy.
W. F. WALMSLEY
North Fourth street, Near Chestnut
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AMAUTfO
