Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 12 June 1879 — Page 4
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The DAILY 0AZ£TTE is published every afrernosro except 8unday, land *oldby tt»o worrier at 30c. .per fort tife ht, by *iail. $8*00 per.year $4.00 or six months, $2.00 for three mouths THE WEEKLY ttAZETTK is issued every Thursdry, and contains all the best matter cf the six daMy issues. THE WEEKLY GAZETTE is the largest paper printed in Terre Haute, and is sold lor: One copy per year, $ 1.60: six months, 7So three months. 40c. All subscriptions must be paid advance No yaper [discontinued nutiil all arrearages i.-e paid, unless at the option of the proprietor, A failure to notify a discontinuance at the end ot the year will be considered anew en gageme
Ad iruss all letters, WM.C, BALL Sc CO. OAZE TTE. Te?re Haute.
THURSDAY, E 12, 1879.
THE S/ENGERFEST.
Many cf our German citizens, who have nti previous occasions and at other places participated in the annual festival of sonij given by the Saengerbund for Indiana and for other states, knew what was to be expected here at this time. But to the ma? 8 of the people of Terre Haute the event has so far exceeded expectation, and realization runs so fast and far ahead of the most sanguine anticipations that surprise and delight are both felt and mingle in tqual proportions. Few, if anv aside from those with the special oppofunities lor knowledge we have ahead) stated, had a definite idea that this festival would bring together a concourse of people from all over the State who would undertake the interpretation Of the masterpieces of the world's greatest
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and could execute this self-
•appointed labor o: love with a fidelity to the text and an artistic finish 60 nearly faultless. The Gazette itselt, which invested many hopes in the enterprise mingled with manv fears, begs to capitulate unconditionally, and on this lastday •of the festival in which the feast of reason is succeeded by the flow of soui does not hesitate, to pronounce it one of the greatest and most gratifying entertainments in which
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ple have participated. We •hope the stranger., in our midst—no, not strangers, or at lea-t not any longer such, but rather oar tYitinds from sister cities in the state—have enjoyed the occasion as much a« cur own pe'op!.- have. Mingling their voices with those of our own townsmen and townswomen, they' havj mini^terel to a craving for the beautiful in music. Through the open door of our quickened ears they have marc'.eJ with conquering phalanx to tne ritidel ot our souls. Nor have they finished their labor by the momentary satisfaction of this desire. In this kind of culture the appetite grows with increase of nourishment. What kept alive the flickering flame last year wili not answer tor the next. This 'JBrtgerfest lias no' only shown the poesibili. ties of the present, but created necessities for the future. And to the Indiana Saengerbund we Icok wi«h eager eye* for gratification ot that, yearning which i« so largely the creature cf their creation. We cannot help regarding the exhibition of musical culture which lias beer) displayed by the (.r:"ormers, and the marked appreciation of their efforts, which has been shown by delighted audiences, a6 a happy augury i«r increased enjoyment during t: years come. It is as heartily a subject for congratulation as any cxnibiti of material resources wit'. it promise of multipl ed creature comforts. It is a valuabie discovery, and its exercise is the developement of an inexhaustible mine of wealth which grows richer the more it i* worked. The GAZETTE, in the name of the people of Terre Haute, thanks the g»ntle ncn who have been instrumental in bringing this testival here, and on whose shoulders has tested the labor incident to making it the grand success it has been. They deserve both thanks and congratulations. They an especially deserving of commendation for having prweurid the assistance of
Miss Kcilogg in thdr festival. AsiJe from the tact that she stands without a peer among the list cf American singers in the c!^fs of music which she was expected to sing, she is a particular favorite in Terre llau'.e. For some time she lived here. Here, in large part, was laid the foundation of h-r musical training, and here were her first audiences. In the lame she »s winning the people of Terra Haute, who first recognized in t.e youthful aspirant the promise of the present artist, feel an interest and enthusiasm hich is sincere and enduring. How grandly she has fulfilled those early expectations of her friends and admiters is told iu unmistakable terms by the delight of the critical audiences of the (.a:t two days at her singing, the enthusiasm she evoked and the applause which followed her every appearance. In the face of such victories words are poor vehicles of expression.
Her appearance at future festivals of the Saengerbund will be bailed,., with delight by all who had the pleasure ot hearing her on this occasion. She has achieved a triumph of which she may well be proud, and ha? furnished enjoyment, the recollection of which will linger long in the memory of tli»se who heard he 6ing.
Voicing the desirei of the people in this matter, the GAZETTE wishes the Indiana Saengerbund cntnr happy returns of this annual Saengerfest, and hopes they will understand that they are more than welcome to our city every time they can hold their reunion here.
THE WHISTLING LAW.' The whistling law which went into effect on Monday last upon all the railroads of the state, is a specimen brick of the crude and foolish legislation so often perpetrated by the average granger when he dons his ^tore clothes, blacks (his boots, and .takes his seat among his brother solons in the state capitol, pre pared to "reso'.oot"' and enact laws Tor every conceivable purpose. The special object of his surveillance seems to be the railroad, and upon this he bestows his paternal care and protection. What he does not know about fixing freight and passenger rates, arranging time schedules, and the intricacies of railway management generally, there is no use in knowing. Consequently a session of the legislature rarely passes during which 6ome ambitious wiseacre has not introduced some act to regulate the traffic or the operating arrangements of these corporations. The law referred to was introduced by a Mr. Cadwallader, and reads thus:
AN ACT prescribing certain duties of Railroad Companies, and requiring such companies to sound the whistle on all locomotive engines at the crossing of any turnpike, or other public highway, prescribing penalties and punishments for violations thereof, and repealing all laws in conflict therewith. Approved March 29, 1S79.
Section 1. Be it enacted by the Gen eral Assembly ot the state of Indiana, That it shall be the duty of all railroad companies operating in this state, to have attached to each and every locomotive engine, a whistle, such as is now in use or may b«* hereafter used by all well-man-aged railroad companies and the engineers or other persons in charge of, or operating such engine upon the line Of any such railroad, shall, when such engine approaches the crossing of any turnpike or other highway in this state, and when (-.uch engine is not less than eighty, nor more than one hundred rods from sucii crossing, sound the whistle on such engine attached hereto, continuously, frotn the time of sounding such whistle until such engine shall have fully passed such crossing Provided, that nothing herein shall be so construed as to interfere with any ordioance that has been, or may hereafter be passed by any city in this state, regulating the management of running such engine, or railroad, within the limits of such city.
Sec. 2. That every engineer or other person in charge of, or operatiug any such engine, who shall fail or neglect to comply with the provisions of section one (1) of this act, shall be held personally liable therefor to the state of Indiana, in a penalty of not les* that ten (10) dollare, nor more than fifty (50) dollars, to be recovered in a civil action, at the suit of said state, in the circuit or superior court of any county wherein such crossing may be located and the company in whose employ such engineer or person may be as well as the person himself, shall be liable in damages to any person or his representative who may be injured in property or person, or to any corporation that may be injured in property, by the neglect or failure of such engineer cr other person as aforesaid.
The public roads throughout the 6tate are located on the section aatf half section lines, and are never more tkan one mile and usually a half mile apart. The law requires the whistle to be blown con tinuously for the distance of a quarter ot a mile or more from each crossing, so that considering the additional crossings in the villages, the whistle must be blown about half the time the train is in mo tion. And if a station should intervene between the whistling point and the crossing, a strict construction of the law wouid compel the engineer to blow his whistle during the stop at the station That this is a most unmitigated nuisance to passengers will be made plain te» any one ,who may have occasion to make a trip to Indianapolis or beyond. At this time of the year when the car windows a-e kept open to admit air, conversation must be carried on intermittingly and under difficulties very trying to one's equanimity. Then, at night sleep is out of the questior, and the wearied victim cf the whistling law passes the night in an agony of torture, and vainly endeavors to shut out the horrid noise by closing all the avenues of sound as well as of fresh air.'
POSTAL car employes and baggage men are the greatest sufferers from the whistling nuisance, more so in fact than the engineer himself* Bat passengers and train men are not the only sufferers. Those living on the lines ot the various railroads are startled from their dreams
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by the horrid din made by the passing locomotive. The weary toiler, the aged and the sick are allowed no rest. Persons congregated at the station platforms have their eara split by the piercing shriek of the whistle of the passing engine. Horses are frightened which would not be affected by the passage of the train in the usual manner. In fact it is stated that upon one of our principal roads there were ten cases of runaway horses on the first day of the operation of the law. So that it is safe to infer that this law will increase the number ot accidents to an alarming extent. It is gratifying to know thai on^County in the State has already enjoined a railroad from complying with the law, and that its constitutionality will soon be tested before the proper tribunal.
EXCESSIVE LAW MAKIMG. Oxenstierna, of Sweden, the wise Chancellor, to whose statesmanship Gustavus Adolphus owed BO much of his success as a ruler, is credited with the authorship of the remark: "That State is governed best which is governed least.' The apothegm has passed into a proverb. It embraces the whole philosophy of government, and embodies the experience of mankind. No one ever ventures to contradict it. The average law-maker undertakes his labor with a mission well defined. It is to make laws. No deduction of philosophy or leaching of history, nor results of experience, nor all the gathered wisdom of ages can ever convince him that his work in the world is not, to far as his office is concerned, to make laws. You mar reason with him and cite authorities. You may even quote to him the last words of Artemus Ward's pirate, who said, as he fell dead on the tow-path: "The world is., governed too much." You may convince him, and he admit it all, and yet you cannot get it out of his head that a patriotic and enlightened constituency has sent him to the Legislature to make some mora laws, and make them he will. To him the Legislature is a machine for grinding out statutes, to be printed and bound in blue paper covers first, and afterwards gathered up. compiled, jand set up in law libraries in law calf. He would be faUe to his constituents and derelict in his duty should he hesitate^) contribute to the work, for the function of law-making must not rust unvarnished, but must shine in use. And so from day to day, through the many, many days cf long sessions that must intervene until every ax is ground, there shall be a constant stream of bills for public acts pouring into the general hopper of legislation.
Here shall come by his delegated representative to the great and general court whoever has a grievance, or a hobby or a pet project whoever has an en terprise in hand which he wants fostered by the 6tate, or aided by a municipal corporation whoever has a theory of taxation or education, or a desire to reorganize the military force whoever has any special case for which he wants a special enactment. For they reason, this is democracy, nere the people rul-: the people make the laws, and we are the people. "1?he law-making machine is as much mine as my neighbor's," says the citizen, "and I have as good right as anyone to turn the crank. Why shall I not use my privilege?" And jso he says to his representative "1 hate dogs. Get a law passed against them." Thereon a Solon rises in the House with: "Mr Speaker, I beg leave to offer a bill for a public act entitled, 'an act in addition to an act for the protection of sheep culture,' which provides for the promiscuous slaughter of unmuzzled dogs. Or the citizen i6 pinched somehow between the Assessors and Board of Equalization in the matter of taxes, arid his sovereign command goes up to his representative: "Fix the law low." Straightway goes into the hopper "a bill for a public act entitled an act in addition to an act for the assessment and collection of taxes." Whatever his grievance, his hobby, or his whim, the average citizen has «nly one short process in his logic—something's to be done make a law about it. Talk about panaceas! To the American legislator the "Be it enacted," is not only the sovereign remedy for all our ills, but it is the wand of the magician, the horn of plenty, the scourge of the avenger, and the sheet-anchor of Democracy.
Every year adds to the bulk of pon derous volumes of public acts, and stilmore largely to the fearful growth of what are distinguished by the name of private acts, and many of them of such a character that we are led to wish sometimes that the public acts were private) and the private acts were public, and lhat( the whole annual grist might be turned over to some experimental government in process of development from barbarism, after the manner of the quacks in medicine, who keep a dog to try their nostrums on. We would not of course, deprive the free American citizen or the intelligent legislator of the exercise of his law-making function. By no means. But since we have already too many laws for our own comfort, and our machine, tnust be kept running to keep from rusting, we would have it run for the benefit—if benefit it be—of some other people—just emerging from canni
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balism, gire them our yearly batch of laws, and let them meet on the threshold of civilization the blessed boor* of the "Be it enacted."
If we should have a law-repealing Assembly alternating with the 'legislature^ whose function should be confined to repealing laws, I am convinced it would be for the general good Failing that, it seems to me that the more rarely our legislatures meet and the shorter their session, the better for the people. The most valuable additions made to legislation, says Buckle, have been enactments destructive of preceding legislation? and the best laws have been those by which some former laws were repealed. The general truth traceable through all history, the final outcome of all the efforts of mankind to accomplish social progress or establish morality and virtue by legal enactmenthis that whenever men have undertaken to lay upon society the duties, privileges, and responsibilities belonging to the individual, then and there they have done work for some one's undoing by and by. It is as plain in the work of your last gear's legislature or your last Congress as it was eighteen centuiies ago, when the founder of a new dispensation swept away the accumulated rubbish and litter of forms and ceremonies, traditions and laws that had grown out of ages of effort to legislate righteousness, and established in their place the law of individual responsibility.
The Kingdom of Righteousness is within you." That State interference with individual concerns, with business enterprises, with commerce, manufacture*, trade, with personal moraU and religious belief, have all grown out of the best purposes and sincerest motives, is not questioned for a moment. The worst tvrannv is always that whose- mainspring is in conscientious conviction it is rarely en tirely brutal, or even selfish. They who piled the faggots or builded the scaffolds where martyrs have made suffering and death glorious, were just as conscientious and sincere in what they deemed their duty as they who stood in the flames or under the beam. All re pressive laws, restrictive and prohibitory enactments, sumptuary legislation in ev ery form, have grown out of an intense desire for the well-being of the individual and a mistaken idea that it can be ac. complished in some way by working through society, by extending the sphere of state government, and deadening the sense of individual responsibility.
The first form of oppression which ex ternal government took, naturally enough related to the religious beliefs of men. The amount of mischief done in the world by the delusion under which men so long labored, that it was the duty of Government to encourage religious truths, and discourage religious error, is incalculable. The vices of administration that grew out of it, the corruptions generated in both Church and State, the demoralization of society, and the degra. dation of individuals, are familiar to all who have read intelligently the history of these sincere, but misdirected efforts to establish religion by law. Instead of promoting, they have retarded the progress of civilizati9n. The interference of Christian rulers, honest but ignorant, has done the world vastly more harm than good. Then legislation was mischievous. The undoing of it released the conscience, intellect and will of the world.
From State interference with religiont it is only a step to legislation, or attempting to legislate, morality into a community. In the "good old colony times" in New England generally, and notably in Connecticut, the pudgy-thumb cf the law-maker was in everybody's mess.
He regulated kissing, superintended courting and defended family government he fixed the hour for retiring, and for rising he made himself lesponsible for the behavior of the young and the respectful treatment of the old he never slept nor was idle through the week and on Sunday he pounced with a penalty upon whatever seemed to him irreverent or giddy, or to savor of worldly enjoyments. It was good to get rid of the over-legislation of that period. The release from it freed men from hyphoc^isy and deceit, the meanest of all vices, and left them to grow manly and self-poised, clean, pure and self-respectful.
PERSONAL.
From Monday's Dally.
Mrs. Robt. S. Cox has gone to Alton on a visit. Mr. David Beaty left .for Decatur yesterday. .'1 -Van- -Viivft*
Mr. Harvey Huston has been admitted to the Terre Haute bar. Mr. Jacob A. Miller has returned frdtn an eight davs visit to Fairfield, Iowa.
Miss Ella Kellev, of Marshall, III., is visiting Nannie Means at the St Clair House. .«
Mr. Miller, who has been visiting at Mr. S. S. Early's, returned to Cincinnatti last night.
Mrs. Ralph Root and children, of Indianapolis, will visit Mrs. S. R, Freeman this week.
Misses Julia Rosenthal an3 Sallie Mitchell, ot Indianapolis, are in the city visiting Mrs. Max.
Mrs. John Gerdink has returned to Merom, after a visit ot nearly a week with her friends in this city,
Mrs. Dr, Appleby has recently met
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with a severe loss in the death of her eldest sister, Mrs. Blanchaller. Master Willie Teenalt, of Vincennes, Indiana, spent Sunday in the city, the guest of Master Harry Havens.
Mr. Will. H. Piety will, to-morrow, start on a business trip South, below Cairo. He will return in a week.
Mr. Venser Shields, on Saturday, lost ^40,20 in a store in the city. He thinks a pick-pocket must have followed him.
Mis6 Bel'e Fisher and Miss Hattie Elder, of Dana, Ind., will be the guests of Miss Hattie Paige during the Saengerfest.
Mr. F. Piepenbring has now gotten into his Ohio street premises, where he has opened an ice cream saloon and restaurant.
Mr. Vaughn, proprietor of the mam moth Fulton Dining Hall, has added a full line of confectioneries and cigars to his popular restaurant.
Hertz Strause, the "proprietor 6f the hide ctore on Second street, has bought a saw mill at Farmersburg and will resume work next week.
George Merideth, formerly of Toute's band, who has been traveling through the West with a concert troupe, will be here about the last of the month.
Misses Fannie Wright and Ella is-ing attended the temperance ball at Clinton Thursday. While in Clinton they were the guests of Miss Annie Knowles.
Dennis Hayes, whose place is near the corner of Fifth and Main, should be hunted up by visitors in the city, on account of the elegant cigars he 6ells They are first class and very cheap.
Mr. John Hasenohr, of Terre Haute, appeared in our city Sunday morning early., His intentions were to stay several days but he returned the same day. A sudden attack of home sickness no doubt. He will bring his pet next time.—rNokomis (III.) Free Press.
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From Tuesday's Daily.
Mr. Jacquith, of Paris, is in town. Mr. J. M. Carr of Toledo is in town. Chas. Read, of Marshal', is in the city.
Miss Hattie Huston, of Paris, is in the city. John J. Stark, of Marshall, is in the rr
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Mr. Geo. W. Basler, of Sullivan, is in town. *, F. E. Whitehead, of Marshall, was in the city yesterday.
Mr. Jacob Kornraan and wife left for Cincinnati last night. Mr. Will Duncan is clerks/or the Board of Commissioners. I
The late conductor Guernsey had $10,000 insurance on .his life.
ivfr*. J. R. Fisher goes to Cincinnati today to buy furniture and attend the Sa ngerfest.
Prof. Goldberg, formerly of the Banner, is doing the Ssengerfest report for the Express. t\CZ
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Mrs. Capt. Jas. ^"Payto'n, of New Albany, is in the citv visiting her daughtrr, Mrs. T. A. Nantz.
Mrs. D. P. Barner of Frankfort. Ind. is visiting Mrs. Mayor. Havens' at her residence on south fifth street.
Mr. R. B. Smith, local editor of the T)anville Commercial, was in the city yesterday attending the funeral of the late W. t. Guernsey.
James B. Wilson and Joseph McNamara, postoffice robbers, were taken to Michigan City last evening to serve out sentences of one year each.—Indianapolis Sentinel.
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Dennis Hayes is on Main street near the corner of Fifth. He keeps elegant cigars and first-class Ismoking material. Give him a call and ask for hi» champion 5 cent cigar. ..
Mrs. Landlrum ot south Sixteenth street, was the happy victim of a surprise party, on Thursday evening Ust, when a iarge number of" friends invaded her house, unexpectedly, and overwhelmed the lady with a collection of handsome presents, among which was a sewing machine. An excellent 6uppcr was provided, and the occasion was one of genuine enjoyment.—Express.
From Wedeesday's Daily,
Kadel has got to eat. s.v« Mr. Cal. Taylor was in town yesterday.
N. S. Wheat has purchased
Messrs. Easter's Brewery. Benjamin Briggs, of the Sullivan Democrat, was in the city yesterday.
Mr. Jas. Modesitt, formerly of this city, but now of Cleveland, is in town. Miss Lena Duncan, of CloverUnd, is in the city, attending the Saengerfest.
Mrs. Murry Briggs, wife of the editcr cf the Sullivan Democrat, is visiting in it
Mr. Thos. F. Donham, son of Senator Isiah Donham, is in the city. Mr. Donham is a poet of some merit.
H. B. Felsenthal, Eeq., is expected home Roon, from Hot Springs. His health is greatly improved.
Mr. David N. Taylor has gone to Bloomington to attend a meeting ot the alumni of the Indiana State University.
Miss Sadie Brand, the beautiful and accomplished daughter of T, H. Brand E*q., of Effingham, 111., is visiting in the city on the occasion of the Saengerfest.
Rev. Dr. McCabe, of Topeka, ^ho|-
ie hefn East attirirliiK' thp Pri^hvtprian _• I ..n i..aV.»in I. has been East attending the Presbyterian Assembly at Saratoga, is in the city on his way home, and is the guest oi Mr. and Mrs. Modisett, at the National House. Dr. McCabe is accompanied by his wife.
UK J. E. McGBEW.
Office and residence over store.
Hound's drug
No. 220 Main Street,
Xorth of the poblii&qure.
Office houra? 8 to 10 na.» 1 to 3 p, m., 6 to 8 P* Oft*
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uticura
THE 6REAT SKIN CURE. The ITIoal Healing, Ssothlnf, audi Refreshing External Application In the world*
It rapidly heals Ulcere, 'Old Sores, and Discharging Wouods Itching Piles andi otter lu-hitig affections ithat have b« en the tortureof a lifetime, thus affording uuepenk.-. able gratification to thousands Burns, Scalds. Wounes, and Fostors ail Itching ami Scaly Eruptions nf the Sain, and all Affections of the Hoalp, incliuUnir Loss of Hair. Nothing like 11 has ever been kaown to the most Intelligent physicians. It has swept a host of poisonons remedies out of existence. is revolutionary lu its composition andmodeof treatment and succeeds in curing every external affection. At every stage It is ablv assisted bv Cutlcura Soap, which is a part of itself medicinally and at the tamo time the most delightfully fragrant and refreshing Toilet, Bath, ana Nursery Soap in existence.
Cuticura Resolvent, a powerful parlfylag agent and liver stimulant, should be taken to neutralize and resolve away blood poisons, caused by the virus of sorofiila, cancer, canker, malarial or contagious diseases, which maintain and foster diseases oi the Skin and Scalp.
SALT RHEUM.
JLife a Burden From th« Suffer ings Caused by this Terrible Disease.
Messrs. WKEBS & POTTKR: Genttemer., Please accept my most arruteful thanks for thegreu, very great, comfort I have received fr)iu the use of your (Jutieura.
For the past eight cr niue venra I have been troubled witn that dreadful disease, oalt Rheum.
For months I would be helpless,—my very life a burden to me. I have used eve-ything in the suape of medicine, both external and intern at, but with no effect.
My hands were in a terrible condition, tho backs of them being all raw, and 1 tnought I would try Cuticura. 1 tried it, and lo! it was as if a miraclchad been preformed, for I will take my oatb that iu turee applications my hinds were as smooth as a new iiorne baoe's.
I presume there lire hundreds, if n?t thousanus, who know of my oase, among whom there may be tone one sim llarly atllietcd, and If so I would earnosc.y advise a A a
Yours, very thankiully,
A. D. BAKfiK. Ticket Aireut 0. S. R. R. ....... Detroit Junction, Detroit, Alich., Jan. 30, 1879. _____ .,
TETTER OR SALT RHEUM. On the Hands Cured. A Urateful better.
MeBsrs. WSIKS & POTTER: Gentlemen^— Having been troubled for many years with the Tetter or Salt Rheum, and,spent many a hard-eariied dollar, I was given a trial of your Cuticura, and, thank God, my hands are well. I never had anything do mo good like that.
You mar put this in the paper and we' come, anu may it do »ome other poor sufferer the same good it has donome. I am well known here, naving lived here almost llfteen' years and kept boarders for a living, and sometimes my heart was sore, thinking I would have to give up altogether with my soreeands, ana having a small family to take care of but oh! thank God, my hands are well, so I strain return thanks.
Yours resoeotfullv, ELIZABETH UU'.KLEY. Littleton,
Pi.
May Bttth, 1878.
The CUTIGUKA REMEDIES are prepared by WXEKS A POTTJCK, CbeaiisU and Druggists 860 Washington atieet, Boston, and are for sale by all urnggists. Price ot CUTICURA, small Boxes, 60 cents: lar^e boxes, $1. RESOLVENT, $1 per bottle. CUTICURA SOAP, 25 sents per cake, "by mail, 80 cents {three cakes, 75 cents.
I IAle* Placed over tho cenQUMwilflr tre of the nervous ncw—forcea, the pit of thei '"•"••^dtomach, they furnish the absoroents with that marvelous vitalizing and restorative agenoy, Electrioity, united with the curative properties of our own fragrant Balsams and Pine, For Weak and Sore Lungs, Palpitation of the Heart, Painfu'. Kidneys, Livar Complaint, Bilious Colio, Weaf Stoutach and Bowels. Rheumatism, Neuralgia and Sciatica, they are thebest remedr in the world.
WUNC|
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Per
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DEAR SIR. iS'QS
lfl(Uf Of RIFLES, SHOT GVHH REVtiLVEHS. Addreos Great Western Gun Wor&e, Pittsburg, Pa.
A N S A S
THE SAlilNA HEHALD) the oldest I paper in Central Kansas, (now in its 18th year gives full news irom all parti of Kansas. is is not published the interest of any land associatioo. but is strietly a News* paper. If yon are thinkiog of coming to Knnsas, subscribe If yoar friends live in Kansas, subscribe I I he Herald Is a large 32 column weekly paper, containing a full resnme of happenings in Kansas, crop reports, new settleinects, etc. $2 per year: |1. ror six months in advance. Addsess A. w. STACY, Salina,Kansas.
Mc. ALISTER S
ALL HEALING ALL HEALING
O I N E N
This remarkable Ointment contains no Mer .urial or other Mineral substance, and nothing cau be found lu its composition thatcauinjure th« tender infant or unduly affect the aged or infirm. Beine a Vesttubie JKrepuraiion ibe ALL IIHALINtt •I.K'WIEBIT will never injure you, but can be used with impunity by ALL leu h. aliug powers are wonderful, and thf leputatioh it haa •cqufre.i Hurlng the past 35 vcurs spwaks volume) of praise for its merits THIS HAS nitPOWlK TO CAUSE ALL EX-
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Sores, Scrofulous Humors, Cutaneous Uruptlons. Common Itch, tMon and poisonous Wounds to discharge tin lr puti id matter and
th0r0Ugtl
healing process follows. Burn
and Scalds arc instAntly relieved. Chapped Hands and Feet. Frosted Limbs and Chil blains are promptly eured. Bait Rheum, Barbers Itcn, Ring Worm, Ac., are speedily eradicated. As a remedy for* W
Prioe 25 06,14
it is a Specific.! A B) per box. Sold by all Druggists, or mailed free on receipt ei 3&u. by tlALL A RUCK EL. Druggists, 182 Greenwich Street. New York.
Notice!
Mot ice is hereby given that "Dorothea Schroeder, has been appointed^by the Vii0 Circuit court of the state of Indiana, administratrix of the estate of Henry Sckroeder, diceased. The estate is solvent. •DOROTHEA SCHROEDER,
Administratrix.
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