Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 15 May 1879 — Page 7
RAILKOAD TIME-TABLE.
Union depot. Chestnut and Tenth ."treets for all trains exccpt I. A St. L-, C. A r.«. and freight*. Time five minutesfaHtCT than Xcrre ll&ucc tinci J)jpofc oil. ot»,L»corner Tippecanoe an«l Sixth streets.
Explanation of Hefercncea: {Saturday excepted. »8unaa.y excepted. 1 Monday exepted. {Dally.
AND ALIA LINE. (Leave going East.)
Ca*t Line Eastern Express Accommodation... (Arrive from East.) Western Express •Mail and Express 9 to a Jfast Line •Indianapolis Accomodation 7 00 (Leave going West)
!Indianapolis
Fast Line •Mail and Accommodation (Express (Arrive from West.) Fast Line Effingham Accommodation 8 50 a Eastern Express 45
fiDay Express •Accommodation }Ncw York Expross No.O (Arrive from West.) Accommodation Day KxprCHS New York ExprcssNo.6
AMUSEMENTS.
Grand Concert and Tableaux 1
-AT-
Dowling's Hall,
-ON-
Monday, May 12th, 1879.
To bo given under the auspices of
Tammany Tribe, No. 39,
OF THE
Improved Order of Red Men
The most noted B'ngers of the city of Terre Hnute, assisted by Tout's celebrated brass and string bund, nave been engaged for the occasion.
Admission, 50c Children, 25c.
§hs ^cekbj (gazette.
THURS0AY, MAY IS, 1879.
It is an old sheep that can not renew his yeuth in the hands of an enterprising butcher.—[Boston Transcript.
Every time Eve dressed to go out she turned over a new leaf, and didn't care a fig abwut the trouble, either.—[Philadelphia Item.
An enthusiastic eucher player is apt to give himself away by the triumphant manner in which he slaps down his ticket at the church festival.—[Keokuk Gate City.
The Utica club has a pitcher who can get a beautiful "twist" on a ball. You can only compare it to the twist which a green apple gets on a small boy.—[Utica Observer.
When the mild spring days come, if they ever should, look out for the sidewalk $3 baby carriage pushed along the side walk by a bedragged looking mother who hasn't had a square meal all winter —[New Haven Register.
The old getleman looked out of the front window the first warm summer evening and the faint vision of two forms near the sidewalk caused him to remark with sigh:"Ah! they've struck their old gate a gain."'—Syracuse Sunday Times.
Gray diagonals for coats and panta loons will be worn this season by dressy men,
ail
except us no diagonal course
for us we prefer a 6uit in which we will know whether we are at a right angle, triangle or a perpenqicular.—[Toledo Commercial.
The wheelbarrow is the most useful
and elegant appendage of a well-regulated
1*
7 00 a 1 40 a 8 05 8 40
•Indianapolis Accommodation...
1 82 a 10 08 a 3 10
INDIANAPOLIS ft ST. LOUIS. (Leave goingEast.) Accommodation 8 45 a 4l)ay Express 5New York. Express No. 5 (Arrive from East.) 4Day Express *-1! 9?
8 15 I 27 a
{Accommodation }Kew York Express No. 6 (Leave going West.)
.11 08 a 6 29 1 38 a
8 45 a 8 12 1 27 a
TKHP.B HAUTE AN1) LOGANSFORT. (Depart.) Day Mall Accomodation 8 45 (Arrl\o.) Day Mail 10 00 Accommodation 10 00
TEIIKE IIAUTE AND EVANSViLLE. (Depart.) ^Nashville Express •Day Express (Arrive.) Mail and Expres* Express
... 4 85 a ni ... 8 15
,..10 15 ... 2 55 pin
E ANoV I LLE.TE I1RE HA UTE ft CH1CAGO (Depart for North.) 6 45 a 8 15 {Night Exprcus »v YiIY"10
*Chica a ExprcsB •Danville Accommodation..
17
(Arrive frora North.)
{Night Express ^0 a •Terre Haute Accommodation li j- a •Day Express
0 40
ILLINOIS MIDLAND. (Depart.)
No,2. Peoria Mail and Exprese.... 7:00 a No. 10. Local Frolght 4 00 Arrive.) No. 1. Terre Ilauto Express 9 00 No. 9. Local Freight 4 0c am
backyard. Any one coining contact H. c'treneth of with one of a vefy dark night can't fail to be struck forcibly with the truth ot this remark. He'll tumble to it at once. —[Keokuk Constitution.
Sara Jeweit has been visiting tlie engine houses in New York, tapping the bells and feeding the horses apples, sugar, etc. "I love the horses and the men she said with a sweet girlish enthusiasm God bless you all." And consequently there is not' a New York fireman who is not willing to be her fighting husband. •—[Chicago Tribur.e.
p|pgg WftR
-r
a 111
fi 29 in 138am
HAD ST. PAUL THE RHEUMATISM AND A LONG NOSE? From the New York World.
M. Ernest Renan has taken the rather unusual step of replying to the reply to his reception speech at the Academie. Custom prescribes that after the new member has eulogized his predecessor the Immortal charged with greeting him shall put at least one hatf-penny worth of criticism to tha intolerable deal of effusion that usually characterizes such speeches. M. Mezieres in reviewing the new Academician's work said:
You make those old cities to live again and carry us back to those vanished ages with such a power of imagination that we seem to be reading the narrative of an eye-witness, of a fellow-traveler of St. Paul. Nevertheless with the very lively admiration inspired by your talent is mingled 6ome uneasiness. We are seduced by the grace of your style rather than convinced by the force ot your argument. Poetry with you flows from so natural and abundant a spring that well may the richness of the poet sometimes make us doubt the prudence of the historian. One is inclined to ask in what unpublished memoirs or documents known to you alone you find so many details hitherto overlooked. Before your aiay much had been written about St. Paul no one, however, had been admitted to such intimacy with him. An ^minent critic pretends that you have seen him you ir.ust have, since jou are the first person to describe him from head to foot as an ugly little Jew. "He was," you say, "short, stout and slightly bow legged. On his strong shoulders was oddly set a small, bald head. His 6allow face was, as it were, invaded by a thick beard, an aquiline nose, piercing eyes, black eyebrows meeting on the forehead." You cannot, at least, be charged with fiattering your hero but for you the greater portion of the human race would never have entertained any doubt »f the physical beauty of the apostle of the Gentiles.
M. Meziers also protested against the finished portrait ol St. Luke and the rehabitation of the Empress Faustina, but the principal count in the indictment had reterence lo St. Paul. M. Renan has answered the criticism in a leter to the Journal des Debat", which he gives as his authority a passage in the famous Chronicle of Thecla, concerning the origin of which Tertullian gives many interesting details. The story according to Tertullian, was the work of an Asian priest who was an ardent admirer of the apostle and declared that he had written it because of the great love he bore to Paul—convictum atque confessum id 6e amore Pauli fecisse. Now, says M. Renan, it would be natural for such an author to imagine noble adventures for his hero and place what he considered Bublime language in his hero'9 mouth but it would not be natural to discribe him as mean and ugly if he were not so, and the fact that he was mean and ugly was not generally known. Out of love and admiration the Asian priest would not have invented so unflattering a pojrait hence
M. Renan urges that the writer of this oldesi of Chi istien romances, having to describe the apostle, followed the receiv ed traditions ofhis personal apperance Tertullian wrote his treatise on Baptism, in which he combated the authority of this Chronicle of TUecla, then held in esteem in certain churches, about 195. The Asian priest, its author, was then dead hence, the book haying attained some circulation, M. Renan says it is not acting rashly to assume 175 or 1S0 as the date of its composition. Paul having died not long before 70, the author of the Chronicle stood in the same position to the apostle, relatively as to tiir.e, as a writer of the present day does to Vol taire, and so had it within his power to get a very full aud accurate description of Paul. As to the text of the Chronicle of Thecla, which Grabe and Tischenc'orf have published, while it may not be the same as that Tertullian had before him, the opinion of ih Geimm commentators is that it is the Asian priest's own language very slightly changed. In in corporating this passage in ,his book M. Renan says he was influenced by the remarkable coincidence betwen the portrait ami that in the dialogue, preserved among the writings of Lucian though not by that author, entitled "Philopatris." This is accurately dated at the close of Julian's reign, or about the year 363. '•Once," 6ays the Christian Triephod, "I was nourished with the same doctrines as thou art, until I had the good fortune to meet with a certain Galilean (used as the equivalent of Christian), bald and wiih a long nose, who had ascended* to the third heaven and there learned the most lovely things. He regenerated u& by water, and snatching us from the world of the impious introduced us into the company of the happy." It is made certain by the allusion to the rapture of beingcaught up into the third heaven that the writer is describing Paul, and as it is not at all likely that, being a heathen, the writer of "Philopatris" had read the Chronicle of Thecla, the inference is legitimate that^ it his portrait accords with that the Christian priest drew two centures before, it was because he knew and described the traditional type according to which the Christians had always represented Paul
M. de Rossi, in his work on the pictures of the Apostles Peter and Paul, estab lished their great age *if not that they were real portraits here, too, the tradition coincides with the text. Precisely the same description of the features of 1 St. Paul is given by the Byzantine historians, as Nicephorous and John Ma1 jlas, who add ether details, evidentlytaken from the pkt-ires before their eyes, and no one should know belter than M.
Mezieres, who has resided at Athens, how strong tradition is in Greek religious art and how each type of saint is absolutely and invariably fixed. It does seem strange that Nicephorus, Malelas and in some measure the author of the Chronicle of Thecla pretend that Paul
a ha so a in
but thU Renan accouIft8 for
by "the strength of the tradition which compelled even those who affirmed his beauty, most ardently desiring t« fit his face to bis character, to record the traits which contradicted their assertions. Finally, M. Renan contends that Paul in his epistles to the Corinthians gives evidence that accords thor-
ib., xii., 5-9-10: Galatians, iv.,
Corinthians, ii.,
13-14
I.
et.
®cq II. Corin
thian#, x.. P-y\ ib., xii.,
THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
5-9-10.) .„The apostle's temperament M. Renan says in conclusion, was not less singular than his appearance. Though his constitution enabled him to resist the great fatigues of his life, it was not absolutely sound. The thorn in the flesh cannot have been carnal passion in view of the explicit testimony of I. Corinthians, vii., 7-8, and M. Renan has come to the conclusion that it was rheumatism. that being the infirmity which most accurately agrees with the appostle's description (II Corinthians, xii., 7-10) of the messenger of Satan sent to buffet him lest he should be exalted above measure. M. Renan concludes his clever article as follows:
I would like to clear myself of the charges of having made St. Paul ugly. I have need of the intercession of saints. A good monk, who had read my article on St. Francis of Assissi once upon a time, was charmed with it and ever thereafter when he heard me abused would say, "Oh, of course—but he has spoken well of St. Francis ©f Assissi and St. Francis of Assissi will save him." That will be a powerful intercession I hope St. Paul will join his in consideration of the trouble I have taken not to present him as a handsome man, but lo show him as possessing one of the strongest and most extraordinary minds that ever existed.
LETTER LIST.
List »f Uncalled for Letters remaining in tholcrrc Haute Postofllce, county of Vigo, state of Indiana:
Saturday, May 10, 1879.
LADIES.
Ames miss N E* Johnson miss Eva Andrews Luly .Jordan lieile Armstrong Mary Ej-Knohr Caroline
tcr
Kilive mrs Mary 2 Lawrence Fannie Lear miss Mollie Markle miss S Mallard mrs 3 Miasey Lizzie Mitche'l mri LD Mansell mis.) E Moore Mattie MurrymrtCA McC-raen mrs AIV McVeye Anna McKac Dilla 2 McC'rary Nannie McNultLou I'rau Jennie Prindlo Ida Pease mis Karldon Ella Kelnhard mrs Robert Hector Hattie Ritter mrs Wm ltiiter Mary Kogors Ella Rowland miss E ttobcrtsOn Mariah Routzahtt mrs E A l&oalcs Ahbie Swai ts mi68 E E Seaman mrs Cynthia Stevet.8 Eunice Stevenson Emma Sheets Dilla
Hall mrs Baldwin Marthi Barnes mrs A. E Hrecount mrs Borgman Jennie Brown Sarah Bundy bora Buskey miss A E Carl is Maflgic Cuscaden mrs Honing Melta Djaiie Aonie Doan Minnie Duty miss Alta E\yari Laura Eeley Louvina E lgerton Loucinda Eller Jennie Flemming Peail Puqua Emma Gamble Maggie Greenlee Belle Hall mrs Hatick Minna Ilaukin Uachel Hall Belle Haberstock Annie Hill mr3 A Hill mrs PC HillJennie Holmes mrs John Hubbard Mary llyser miss DA
GENTS.
AlexanderJ Addison W2 Bayley Seal John Briggs Bouser Mr Brown Willie Brown A A Brass Mithias Brunaemer Wm Burns Huyli (Ja tpbell Frank Oady Chritlv SK CnstAiford Cluster Cluster Wm Cohere Jim CoughUn Thomas Di'ausfleld John Dunlap W Ealey Harris Gilnwn John Goodwin lias Guthrie Hants A Mall Wm Hann.i W Hamilton Geo W Haunaman S Healy Isaac Hessol Cl.arles Hull W Janus W kliu DA Kenned/ James Kester W Kester Douglas II
MilncrThos2 Mllare Dan Miller Charlie Miller Wm KorrisTim McCarmicft Luther 2 McKinberry ltotiert McDonouy-n Joseph Naughi tt I)avid NettlJ Newlivind John A orris John Neruuie James utcs Ji-rome Owens N Owen Gilbert O'Brien Wm P«tten stout Prioe A Pi ice Henry Ueuix Diiviu lteevls carl Kenhanl CD
Wiley 1 Hoblnfon W W ltuasell A ltussell James fcheaTim Shepheid Roll A Stiles Smith Ge« HmItb Lou Smith Elroy Scott Wm Bulllvan Con Scliut'k II W Tate Wm Xhuinas Alford Thompson Win Watson Kuoon Well John Winger Goo Wilueltank UhiteEA WbiteAlE Wilson W Willliams David Wolcott W Wood W Wurmll John A Miss A 2
Relman Henry Kijngel Frank Kohu Aaron Kouach E Lawrence Etna Jerkins John lienncrt Ferd Lilly Jas E Link John rister Kich&rd Magoon Dr Jas March Mas«y si Mall) Jacob Myers Louis Metzol DA Milligau A
W 2 E
Mr John
Persons calling for letters advertlssd In this list will please say "advertised," and give dato.
N. FILBECK. P. M.
DRAMATIC NOTES
Booth bids farewell to Chicago to-day at the matinee. Fanny Davenport is in San FrShcisco, where she has gone to open at the California Theater, on the 17th inst. She will remain on the slope until September 1.
John McCullough is having a new play written. The theme is "Jack Cade* though the play will be very differen' from Robert T. Conrad's drama of that name that gave Forrest so fttuch reputation.
Mr. Harry Phillips, late of the Goodwin "Hobbies" company, himself a verv clever comedian, is in the city at present aa the advance agent of Miss Kate Claxton, who appears at Hooley's next Monday in the "Double Marriage." This piece has never bicn played here. 11 is described as of stirring plot, and has received favorable criticisms wherever pretented, Miss Claxton having made a decided success of it. We will give the plot Saturday. —[Inter Ocean.
A contemporary appositely sSys: "There should be some way of putting a stop to the publication of pictures of indecent people in indecent periodicals*" Very good, as far as it goes. But how about uhotographs of decent people (sic) in indecent costume, now so plentiful and publicly exposed for sale, forming the standing disgrace and scandal of the profession? It has often struck me that it is from such exhibitions that clergymen, who do not attend places of amusement, get their idea of the theater. And who is to blame, if that idea is not a flattering one? We judge as we see, and professionals who expose themselves in scarlet pictures should not resent be* ing taken for scarlet women, nar their associate workers be surprised at being placed in the same category.—[Press.
ENTANGLED-
Crookedness of Many* Years Standing on the Part of Dr. ino. Baltiridge's Marital
Relations. ...
The Farmersburg: Sensation.
F-om Saturday's Daily.
Jackson township, Sullivan county, in the neighborhood of Dr. no. Baldridge's house, three miles from Farmersburg, is "shaken to its center" with a social scandal. Things seem to be decidedly mixed down there. Dr. Baldridge, who is a man of high standing both in his profession, as a citizen and an elder in the Presbyterian church turns out to have been guilty of bigamy for many years. It seems that about twenty years ago, Dr. Baldridge came from Ohio with a woman whom he called his wife, Mary. He bought property and settled down, lie was never married to this woman, but had left a lady in Ohio who was his second wite. Strange as it may seem, he 6ent for her. When she got here, as she s^ys now, she found her husband's affections entirely alienated from her and bestowed on an ostensible wife. The three met and arranged the matter, and tl lawful spouse agreed to live with them and conceal her relation, and she was called "the widow Baldridge," and it was given oul that she was relict of a nephew of the doctor's. Sh^ had three children who all called the doctor, "uncle" and never knew that their relationship was nearer until one of them, the present wife of Dr. Ber.nett, learned it from Dr. Baldridge, who was very sick and thought he was dying and therefore told her the astonishing facts.
He afterward got well and the matter was hushed up. The lawful Mrs. Baldridge staid for SIXTEEN YeAflfs as a menial in the house of her husband while he was living with another woman, whom bhe knew was not his wife, and who sat in the parlor while the only legitimate consort (who had never been divorced) led the pigs. There's patience for you! Job's little feat in that direction wasn't a '"patchin'" to it. Three or four years ago "widow Baldridge" married a Mr. Curry, a large, fleshy man who died last winter of appoplexy and here commenced the exposure She insisted on having one-third of the property, but Mr. Curry's children by his first wife having got hold of the secret of her bigamy in being married without divorce from Baldridge) refused it and claimed that she had never been a lawful wife to their father. This opened out the whole matter and a complete exposute is being made.
All these years the deeds of lands signed by Dr. Baldridge have also borne the signature of hi3 supposed wife Mary, b.it now the farmers find that Eliza jAiie is lawful wife and are anxious fur her name in th«*ir tieeds. Last Monday, Baldridge to escape the impending storm took the freight irain and fled to Park County. Day before yesterday he was in town again and consulting lawyers. He is well to-do, but hi3 eccentric manner of conducting his matrimonial affairs will cost him much trouble and
COUP'S NEW UNITED SHOWS.
A NEW ERA IN THE AMUSEMENT WORLD. From the Hartfjrd Courant.
W. C. Coup's Monster Show pitched tent6 in Hartford on Saturday, and gave performances afternoon and evening, to large and delighted audiences. Mr. Coup does not comc to Hartford a stranger in the amusement circle. During the last ten years he has had under his control mar.y of the most popular places of amusement in the United States, and t» his able direction many of the most wealthy showmen in the country owe their success. It must be very gratifying to him to know that in all his gigantic undertakings he has never yet made a failure. Among the most important ol his enterprises may be mentioned the Barnum show on weeels the Hippodrome and thd New York Aquarium, which is at the present time-a popular resort of the most refined and intellectual portion of the great metropolis. Mr. Coup, having by his exertion made fortunes for others, has at last concluded to combine his resources in an exhibition of his own. During his' managerial experience he has personally visited almost every portion of the continent of Europe in search of novelties and attractions of a high order, capital being a second consideration in all his undertakings
Among the many attrac ions of the procession was a large and elegant den of trained ani mals exposed lo view, wit'i Felix Mc Donald, the king of all animal trainers seated in their midst, showing the won ful power of man over the brute ere ation the first royal English tally-ho eoich ever brought to this country, with all its accessories and appointments, the imperial coach of Napoleon III, positively authenticated as one of the carriages belonging to that nnhappy monarch before he was expelled from tre throne of France the royal Japanese chariot, in which were seated the impeial Japanese troupe in their peculiar costume beautiful ponies, richly caparisonsoned and there were many other features in the grand parade which paid spectators who had come miles to witness them. The aquarium is aUo an attraction in the monster show. In this department are found the Proteus or Mud Puppy, the Menopomo or Hell Bender, King or Horse-foot crab, Alligators, the Exilatal (supposed to be the reptile which the army subsisted on when they entered Mexico at the time of the rebellion) etc In the menagerie beasts and birds of many descriptions are found, some of them very rare specimens, among which the hippopotamus is the most prominent, this animal alone costing more money than any twenty cages of animals in the United States. "There are but three of these animals on exhibition in the world. The circus department, under the imme-
diate direction of the renowned James Melville, the great Australian hwMman, is far above the standard in this branch of the profession.
The $100,000 troupe cf Broncho horses are introduced, which is alone well worth the price of admission. Another novel featuie is Professor Frver's troupe of comical dogs. The smallest dog steals a collar from one of the number. He is tried and condemned to suffer the death penalty the gallows are erected and the dog is actually hanged. This is, without exception, the be*t troupe of performing dogs in the world. The imperial Japanese troupe performs in a wonderlul manner and is a notable feature which deserves especial mention.
CATARRH
IS IT CURABLE
rnHOSE who have snlTer-d from the vnrloTifl oml JL complicated forms of Msumod by Catarrh, ana have tried many physicians And re 1 cillt* without relief or cure, awuUthe&nswurtothta question with considerable anxiety. Anil well Uu inity lor 110 (INeasettiatcaaboinentloucd Uso universally prevalent and BO dcstructivo to health an I'p.tarrli. Bronchitis, Asthnift, Coughs, And scriou-i end fri-qncntly fatal affections of the lung* follow, i'i many instances, a case of Blmpls bnt Hejrloctcl Catarrh. Other sympathetic affections, such as deafness, impaired nycslftUt, and loss of sensn ot smell, may be referred to as minor but nevertheless serious results of neijlected Catarrh, bad pnonali in thi'mselvcs, but as nothing compared with tlin dangerous affections of the Uiroat and longs Uke:r to follow.
IT
CAN
COMPLICATED CASE.
Gentlemen,—My case is brieflv as follows: Ihavo bad Catarrh for Un years, each year with lacri-a*. ing severity For nine years bad not breathed through one nostril. I had droppings in the throat, a very bad cough, asthma so bad as to be obliged 10 t:ike a remedy for it at night before being able I 11^ down and sleep, and a constant dull naln in my head. My beau was at times so full or catarrhal matter as to injuro my senso of bearing and comp-1 me to get up several times in the night to clear It and my throat before I could sleep. Every ono of those distressing symptoms has disappeared under tho use of not qnlte three bottles of SANPOED'S IJADICAL CUKK. My hearing is fully restored. I have no asthmatic symptoms, 110 cough, no dropping In the throat, no headacho, and in every way better than I have been for years. I could feel tlio cffccts of tho CURB on my appetite, on my kidneys, and, in fact, every port of my system. What has been done in my coso is wholly tho effect of tho IUDICAI. Cutis. Very respectfully,
FircHUUEO.Oct.il. C. 11. LA WHENCE.
Indorsed by a Prominent Druggist. I hereby certify that Mr. Lawrence purchased the RADICAL CURK of me, and from time to timo mado me familiar with his cose. I believe his statement to be true, in every particular.
FITCUBCBO, Oct. M. JAS. P. DERBY.
Each package contains Dr. Sanford's Improved Inhaling Tube, and full directions for its uso in all eases, price, 91. For sale by all wholesale and retail druggists and dealers throughout the United States ana Canadas. WEEKS & POTTER, General Agents and Wholesale Druggists, Boston,
COLLINS'
VOLTAIC PLASTER
An Electro-Galvanlo Battery combined with a highly Medicated Strengthening Plaster, forming the best Plaster for pains and aches In tho World of Medicine.
REFERENCES.
Dr. E. M. Riker, Montgomery, O. Mrs. Frances Harrlman, Orland, Me. Haskell Lewis, Esq., Mllford, Del. Mrs. Richard Gorman. Lynchburg, Va. J. B. Bamniis, Esq., Winona, Minn. Mrs. J. A. Tuzzle, Memphis, Tean. H. 1). Oooch, Esq., Oswego, Kan. Dr. WillardCollln8, BucKsport, Me. O. W. Bostwick, Esq., Mt. Sterling, O. Mrs. Eliza Young, Cambridge, Mass. Francis Baker, Esq., Cincinnati, O. Mrs. J. M. Robinson, E. Orrington, Me. N. Shlverlck, Esq.," Independent" Offict, N.Y. Mrs. Eliza J. Duffleld. Hume, 111. Geo. Gray, Esq., Montlcello, Minn. Mrs. Chas. Hounds, Woodhull, 111. Vf. H. H. McKinney, Morrow, O. Mrs. R. L. Stevens, Fort Wayne, lad. W m. S. Slmms. Madison ville, Er. Mrs. E. Bredell, St. Louis, Mo. Mortimer Lyon, Esq., San Francisco, Cal.
And hundreds of others.
COLLINS* VOLTAIC PLA3TERG Cure when all other remedies fall. Copies of letters dotailing some astonishing cures when all other remedies had been tried without success, will be mailed free, so that correspondence may bo bad If desired. For the enre of Lame Back ana weaknesses peculiar to females, COLLINS' VOLTAIO PLABTXBS are superior to all other external reiPedies*
PRICE,
gs
CENT8.
Be careful to call for COLUHS' VOLTAIOPLASTXB lest you get some worthless Imitation. Sold by alt wholesale and retail druggists throughout the United States and Canadas, and by WEEKS & POTTER, Proprietors. Boston. Mass.
State TF Indiana, IN THE VIGO I I VI COURT, APRIL NTO. 11,161. TERM, 1879, Gerhard Eshman Ix ^ORECLOS-
VS. AA URE.
Nicholas Katzenbach, Be it known i6th day of said plaint.fF filed an form, showing that Jacob H. Smith, fohn Hay, John Moore, Mattie Yelton, Isaac Hays, Elisha Hannan, Sylvester Raddish, William Uptegrove, Gabriel G. Knecht, Mary M. Steiner, Simeon R. Henderson and Marcus Burnstein impleaded with Nicholas Katzenbach and others, are non-residents ot the State of Indiana.
that on the April, 1879, affidavit in due
Said non-resident defendants are hereby notified of the pendency of said action against them, and that the same will stand for trial at the April term of said court in the year 1879, on the 9th day of June. 1879.
Attest: JOHN K. DURKAK, Clerk. B. FELSEKTHAL, \V. E. HEN-
DRICH and T. W. HARPER, PlaintiiFs Attorneys
APPLICATION FOli LICENSE. Notice is hereby given that I will apply to the Board of Courmssionera of Vifco County, Indiana, at their June term, for a license to sell ''intoxicuttng liquoie" in a lessqumtitg than a quart at a time, with th9 privilege of allowing the »&me to be drank on mv premises for one year. My place of business and the premises when on said liquors are to be sold and drank, are located on lots No. 1SS and l'9 in Hose's eubd vision ot 47 and *2-MX) acres, corner of Tenta and Chestnut streets, in Teri-e Haute, in Harrison township, in Vigo County. Indiana.
DAVID BRONSON.
Attention
ot perfidfts desiring building sites is called the otfsr of 57 choice lots, now offered for sale in Gilbert's place on long time and at low prices. For full information call on E. V. Marshall, over Prairie City bank.
1 ON AS sntoust:. Dealer In
Groceries atn* Provisions. Liquors, Ugars and Tobacco. Corner of Second and Main streets. socona an Terre Haute, Ind! Highest cash prl^paid for Wool
MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISEMENTS
NICHOLS, SHEPARD & CO.,
Battle Creole, Mich. ORIGINAL AND ONLY GENUINE
"VIBRATOR
'THRESHING MACHINERY.
THE
STGAH
rower Thrmhera a Specialty. Special tint of Separators made tzpretaljr for St«am Powvr.
OUR
Unrivaled Steam Thresher Engines. both Portable and Traction, with Valuable ImpiUT*mcoti, Air bejond *ny other or kto!«
TOE
OTIRK Threshing Expenses (and often throe to fire timet that amount) oan b« mad* by tha Extra Grain SAVED by th«M Improved Maehlnaa.
GRAINwafttvgQ
Bi'wn will not submit to the enot* mnu« of Grnla »ud the inferior work done by tU other inachinot, whoa onoo poafeod on tho dlflfertnoe.
NOT
BE CURED.
ITimmediateCATARRH
can'be cured. There Is no doubt abont it. Tna relief afforded by SANROKD's IUd!' OAL COBS FOR is but a slight evidence what may follow a prrsistant use of this remedy. Tho hnrd, incrusted matter that has lodged in the Rasal passages is removed with few applications tho ulceration and Inflammation subdued and healed tho entiro membranous linings of the head urn cleansed and pnritli-d. Constitutionally Its action is that of a powerful purifying agent, destroying in its course through the system the acht potion, the destructive agent In catarrhal diseases.
Mass.
Only Vastly Superior for Wheat, Oat* Barter, Rjre. and Ilk* Grain*, b«T the OXIY SUCOWK ful Threahor In Flax, Tlmothr. Millet. Clover, and Uto Seeda. Bequlres so "attachment*" an "rebnildlm" okance from Grain to Sctd*.
JXrerftctlon
Thorough Workmanship, Elegant FlnfnbJ of Tart), Complelenm* of Equipment, «tc.^ oar ViBUToa" Tbrother Outfit* aro Inooc¶ble.
JWABVELODS ftr Simplicity of i'artu, utiif I thanone-hulf thouaunl Belt* and (lean. Hakes Clean Werk, with no Littering! or Soatterlnga.
Al&o for furnishing 500 cords of good hard wood of the follwing named varieties, sugar tree, hickorv, beech, jack oak and ash to be delivered to the trustee of Harrison township at any point in the city limits he may designate subject to the inspection of said board and trustee previous to payment therefore, the board resevering the right to reject any or all bids that may be presented for either or all the above contracts. The person or persons reciving all, or any part of such, contract to give satisfactory bond for the faithful performance of the same.
By order Board Commissioners Vigo County. ANDREW GRIMES, *7"*2$ Auditor.
APPLICATION FOR LICENSE: To thoBiard ot Commissioners of Vigo County, Indiana:
Pursuant to notice given, by publication in the Terre Haute GAZETTE, a weekly paper printed in Vigo County, for at least twenty days before the first Monday of June, 1879. Pr°of of which is hereunto appended, I George A. Schaal now apply to your honorable board for a license to sell "intoxicating liquors in a less quantitity than a quart at a time," at my place of business, (with the priviledge of allowing the tame to be drank on my premises,) for on year. Said place of business, and premises whereon said li« quors are to be sold and drank, are lo* cated in the east room of the building on lot No. 6 on Samuel C. Scott's subdivision of in lot No. 97 being on the south side of Ohio street near Third street in Terre Haute in Harrison Township, in Vigo County, Indiana.
.n
11
Hateblesa Grain-Savtar, TLME-SaTlny. and Mooer-Stving Threihers of uii dajr and Kfuer*ttoo. B«yood ill riTalrr iter Rapid Work, MM ud fit SaTtsg Qrmin (Tom Wutafc.
1
FOUR Sbm of Separator* Hade, Banging? from Bix to Twelve-lloree »Ue, and two ttyloa of Mount. ed Rorae Power* to match.
POR
Particular)*, Call on our Dealers tr write to fox Illuatnied Olroolar. which wt mall
For sale by W. F. Walmsley, on north Fourth strest.
NOTICE
iiaiffii
To Coal and Wood Dealervf
Notice is hereby given that sealed proposals will be received by the Board Commissioners of Vigo County Indian at their next regular June term ot cour 1S79 f°r furnishing 3,500 bushels of bea quality Brazil block coal a,000 bushels *o be delivered to the Vigo Connty poor asylum and 1,500 bushels to the court House and jail, in said county all to be delivered by the 15th day of September 1879.
ftAnnni A CIH£A£O.IL
Also, Dealers In Grata' Tnrnliblng Goods. FIM •nits mad* to order a specialty. Send 8 cent •tamp for our JUustrmttd Catalogue for 1479* Over 00 engravings of new styles, with prices. Full ins tractions lor taking meat ure andf ordering by mall or express. Boy of tbo mana* foctnrers, and save middlemen's profits. W« employ over 800 hands in oar bctory. If yon are to the city, call and see the largest bouse of the kind in Chicago. See address above. All goods sent by expross are C. O. I)., with privilege ot eramtning before paying charges.
NERVOUS
A
MS"
Slsil
IpM?Si
filli
DEBILITY
Vital Weakness flnd Prostration, from ovprwrrH or indiscretion, ia radically and promptly cured b7
Seen In use 20 rears, nnd Is the most raccessfal PPTIV cdy known. Price $1 per vial, or S vials and large vuf Ot powder for $5, sent post five on receipt of price.
Hamphreyu' Hoaieopmhlo Medicine Co., 100 Pulton Btrcct. Now Yorb'
APPLICATION FOR LICENSE. Noticc is hereby given that I will apply to the Board of ommissioners of Vigo County, Indiana, at their Jnne terra, for a license to Bell ••intoxicating liquors" In a less quantity than a quart at a tlmo, wit* the pr.vlleare of a lowing the same to Ibe drank on my pre® 'ses for one year. My place of business and the premises wher. on said liquors are to b» gold and drank, are located on lot No. l?2 in fiose's eutrlivldion sf 41 acres and 2 rorte. north side of Poplar street bstween Tenth and Eleventh streets. In Terre Ilante,
Harrison township, in Viga County. Iniiani- JSO. F. RUKTKER.
EPILEPSY.2
Palllnc StetaMn, St Vitas Daaes,JfeavuUoM, sad *11 Kerrom Afflictions,
CURID (fOr. VOn-Berg'S
Celebrated German Cure. An inf»uibi« .i*i UMxesilaa raaMdy wamaud^o rp'eij soJ |*r- f]f| Cor*. 8Cmii«Ue« fbow an »vtfw« of cwrwt oat of issngxtssr* B, F. COOKE Sc CO^ Chenlfti^
OFFICE, 111 WEST 30th ST., N.T.
