Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 19 June 1879 — Page 4
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The DAILY GAZETTE is published evsry afternoon exoept Sunday, and sold by the terrier .at 30c. .per fort o:^ht, by mail. $8'00 per year $4.00 or si* mouths, $2.00 for three mouths' THE WEEKLY GAZETTE is issued every Thursdry, and contains all the bftst ir.attercf the six daily issues. T:iK VfEitLKLY GAZETTE is the l3.-i.est paper priat#4 in 1 erre Haute, and is splci for: One oopy per year, $ 5 6'.: six moathb, 76c three months, 40c. All subscriptions must be .paid in advance. No paper ^disoontinnad vutil all arrearages fc.re laid, unless at the option of the proprietor. A failure to notify a discontinuance at the end of th? yair will be considered anew er~ gagenJent.
Address all letters, WM. C. BALL & CO. GAZETTE. Terre Haute.
THURSDAY, JU E 19. 1879.
WHETHER or not Terre Haute is to have a public library will be settled tonight. If the city does not take stock the enterprise is really ended for good and all.
AN octagonal cylinder has just been discovered at Babylon, on the sides of •which are engraved a hiBtorj of the campaigns of Sennacherib against King Hezekiah. The "find" is to be placed in charge of the British Museum.
A GERMAN experimenter is now working to mae boots that wiil never wear out. He uses a thin leather sole as a •fourdation, upon which he spreads a mixture of a waterproof glue with a suitable quantity of clean quartz sand. These quartz soles are said tj be flexible .and almost indestructible, while they enable the wearer to walk safely over slippery road 6.
A RKCBRTLY prepared statistical table chows the progress made in the introduction of the metric system of weights and measures. It is now established obliga 'torily in eighteen countries, representing a populotion of
236,600,000,
655,000,000
comprising
France and her colonies, Belgium, Holland and colonies, Germany, Sweden, Norway, Austio-Hungary, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Roumania, Greece, Brazil, 'Columbia, Ecuador, Peru, Chili and the Argentine Republic. It has been made legally optional in England, Canada and the United Stales, comprising a population of
75,600,000.
It is admitted in
principle or partially for customs in British, India, Russia, Turkey and Venzuela. so that it is in use obligatorily or permissibly in twenty-five countries» with
of inhabitants. In
Switzerland, Mexico, Japan and China* represeting
471,000,000
of people, the
decimal system of division and subdivision is in use, but applied to other units than the meters.
GREAT tcacheis cannot be too guarded in their generalizations. Prud'homme •aid that ''property was robbery," and a good many philosophers of imperfect lights have concluded from this dictum, that theft was proper. The broad statement that "haste makes waste" is taken by the constitutionally deliberate as a justification for never doing anything until the day after to-morrow, while many a youthful sluggard on hearing that the early bird catches the worm has instinctively put himself in the place of the early invertebrate and prolonged his morning nap. But all these instances of demoralization are nothing compared with tt-e effect produced in the Scandinavian mind by an epigram which has wandered from a National Fiatic platform to the hyperborean legions. TheCarlshamns Allehanda, in a recent issue says unblushingly. "Fins det ingenting hogre hira an pastor Beecher's trosdogm. The accumulation of screen backs is the chief denof existence." We are thankful at least that this dreadful aphorism of greed was mutilated in its passage. By the time it gets into the journals of Kamtschatka it will be comparatively harmless.
INVALID AUTHORS. Burton says in his "Anatomy of Mel anclioly,'' "How many deformed Princes, philosophers and orators could I reckon up So numerous, indeed, are the instances where genius has been allied 10 Phy6ical weakness and malformation so much of the best work of the wvld has been wrought by toilers who have Jibored amid sickness, poverty and soriow, that one might almost regard it as a rule that high intellectual gifts are balanced by privations of health, of comfort, of fortune, or of worldly hopes and come to inquire habitually, on the performance of any great deed in the domain of thought, 'Of what deep or abiding pain is this the product, with what throes of bitter and lon^-borne anguish ,wag it born'" JJThe experience of Pope comes first to mind in recalling the histories of eminen men who have struggled through life with the pangs, the mortifications and the bereayements that bodily infirmities -entail. Pope inherited from a sickly,
diformed father, a puny, crooked frame, that while he lived was racked with pain and suffering. He was an only child, the son. of a tradesman who hhd retired from business at an early age with a comfortable competency, and was a ''dwarfish, amiable, invalid boy, with a sweet, childish voice, and general indications Of precosity," No more pathetic pictqre lingers in the memory than that of the misshappen little poet at Twickenham, writhing under the scoraful mockery of Lady Mary Wortley Montague, whe met his avowal of passionate admiration with heartless gibes of derision.
The vanity of Byron never ceased to fret over the malformation of one of his feet. "The embittering circumstance of his life," says Moore, ''which haunted him like a curse, and, as he persuaded himself, counterbalanced all the blessings showered on him, was the trifling deformity of his foot." He once silenced th: vain attempts at consolation offered by his friend Belcher, by saying, in mouruful tones, "Ah, my dear friend, if this (laying his hand on his forehead) places ms above the rest of mankind that (pointing to his foot) places me far below them." When a child, his mother one day in a fit of passion stigmatizud him as a "lame brat," and the "horror and humiliation" that overwhelmed him with the words he afterwards declared were unutterable. Again, during boyhood, his sensitiveness was cruelly wounded by hearing Mary Chaworth, the love of his youth, disdainfully remark to a female friend, "Do you suppose I could love that la.ue boy?" Tile man never recovered fiom these pitiless hurts received by the child. They induced a morbid and lasting melancholy.
Gibbon, the historian of "The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire," was the only oae of seven children that survived infancy. During his early years he was feeble and sickly, and remarkable for the extraordinary size of his head, which amounted to almost a deformity. In after years his small bones were weighed down with a load of flesh tha they were inadequate to carry. For a period of thirty-two years prior to his death he suffered from an enormous rupture and hydrocele. Nelson, the great naval hero of England, was, as at child, delicate and ailing and, as a man, was small, frail, and attenuated in frame. These facts hint at the trials he must often have had, in order to cserce his body to carry out the resolves of his daring and heroic spirit.
Though Walter Scot^ matured into a man of robust health and nearly herculean strength, he was a puny weakling in the beginning, and early afflicted with a lameness which continued through life. Akenside, the poet, arid the *on of a butcher, was wounded in the toot, when an infant, by the fall of one of his father's cleavers, and rendered lame for life. The frail health of Leigh Hunt was the cause of constant solititude during his infancy and childhood, and, while life lasted, crippled his energies, and imposed upon him the torments of hypochondria, palpatations, dyspepsia, and a long train of physical ills. "#ne great benefit," he says, "resulted to me from this suffering. It gave me an amount of reflection such as, in all prob ability, 1 never should have, had without it and if readers have derived any geod from the graver portion of my writings, I attribute it to this experience of evil. It taught me patience it taught sne charity (however imperfectly I may hay* exer cised either) it taught me charity even toward myself it taught me the worth of little pleasures, as well as the utility a*d dignity of great pains it taught me that evil itself contained good nay, it taught me to doubt whether any such thing as evil, considered in itself, existed whether things altogether, an far as one planet knows them, could have bee* so good without it whether the desire, nevertheless, which Nature has implanted in us for its destruction, be not the signal and the means to that end and whether its destruction, finally, will not prove its existence, in the meantime, to have been ntcaiiBsarv to the bliss that supersedes it."
All know the sad s'o ies of Coleridge and De Quincey, both of whom undermined their constitutions and perverted their lives by the excessive use of opium. Yet sadder still is the story of Hartley Coleridge, who inherited from his father, brilliant, but disordered abilities, a craving for artificial stimulants, and too little moral power to govern the tendencies that he knew full well must lead him to an inglorious and untimely end. Charles Lamb, the delightful essayist, came of a family bearing the terrible taint of insanity. He was a nervous timid child, full of the whims and fears that beset an unhealthy intellect. At the age of twenty he was confined six weeks in an insane-asylum at Hoxton but fortunately, though wayward at times, and given to habits of excess, he did not again relapse into absolute aberration of mind. Dr. John Kitto, the celebrated scholar and Bible-commentator was one day, when
12
bt0i.t8
25
arn^r^
-'.tf A «*-V ^f
vived the fearful accident, but was thenceforth totally deaf. Blindness settled down upon Milton when he was only
46,
With mortal voice, unchanged To hoarse or route, though fallen on evil days On evil days though fallen, and evil tongues. In dirkness and witli danger compasseu round, And solitnHe. Tet not alone while thou, Visitst my slumbers nightly, or when morn Purples the ea't—still govern thou my song, Urauia, and
at
Much of the surliness and sharpness of Samuel Johnson's temper were due to the malady that consumed him. From his birth he was infected with scrofula, and all the ailments which that dire disease can generate, fastened upon him during one period or another of his life. Spineza, the great modern philosopher, WAS endowed with the fatal heritage of consumption, which manifested itself early in his youth and carried him to the grave at
44
T?ERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE
and under the
shadow of this dreadful calamity he produced Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained, Samson Agonistes, and other of his noblest works in poetry and prose. In darkness and loneliness the afflicted poeti wrote of himself in his immortal epic:
audience find tnough few.
Again he plainrtively remarked, referring to the text in Genesis, "Loneliness is the first thing which God'6 eye named not good."
The learned Zimmerman was oppress ed with both bodily and mental dise 8e which tortured him with hvprcchondia and a sickly irritability. Beethoven poured out the sorrow of his life in these effecting words:
O ye who consider me hostile, obstinate, or misanthropic, what injustice you do me! You know not the secret causes of what to ytu wears this appearance. My deafness forces me to live an exile. O God, who look^6t down on my misery, thou knowest that it is accompanied with love of my fellowmen and a disposition to do good. Omen! when ye read tliis think that have wronged me. And let the child of affliction take comfort in finding one like himself, who, in spite of all obstacles, did everything in his power to gain admittance within the rank o^ worthy artists and men.
And yet it is said of him
Throughout his life of study, of abstemious, of bodily and mental suffering,—for his constitution was undermined no less by consumption and overwork, than his sensitive mind wa» wrought upon by the violent severance nothing of the misery of occasional want and of perpetual persecution,—no complaint ever passed his lips.
In consequence of a debauched life, Scarron, the French satirist, was seized with permanent paralysis of the lower limbs while he was yet under
30
years Of
age. He was a withered and helpless' cripple when he married the beautifu^ Franceis d'Aubigne, who afterward became the mistress of Louis XIV., and took the name of Madame Mauntenon Heine was struck with an incurable disease of the spine in February,
184S,
and
for the remaining nine years of his life was for the greater part of the time bedridden. He endured the most acute pain and almost total loss of eye-sight, with extraordinary equanimity, throwing off some of his his most exquisite songs in the internals between the spasms »f anguish that convulsed the brain.
Cowper was from the first a delicate and nerVous child, and, placed at school at t}ie age of 6, the wretched circumstances that surrounded him confirmed his tendency to disease, and made him an invalid for life. He was subject to spells of distressing despondency that occasionally developed into delirium. The final years of his life were pawed, in, utter de: jection.
1
Malobranche was deformed and sickly rom his childhood. Mrs. Browning was for several years during her maiden life confined, by illness, to a darkened room, and after her marriage was compelled to reside in Italy on account of her delicate health. Herbert Spencer 'shattered his constitution by overwork several years ago, and now is concluding his great system of phylosophy in invalidism and poverty. George Macdonald was supposed to be dying of consumption when but little over
20,
and his wife mar
ried him in the sorrowful fear of burying him within three months of their wedding day. All his novels nave teen dictated to an amanuensis sitting bv th^ ?ick couch on which he lies «t least half the day prostrate. Charles Darwin, the industrious and emineht naturalist, has ver/ inferior health, aud pursues his diligent, exacting investigations while suffering from debility thai would discourage ordina men fro
11
uan6ther
years old, carrying
and mortar for his father, who was a pocr stone-mason. The boy stepped from a ladder to the roof of a house, with a load of slates on his headiest his balance, and fell to the pavement
Ket telQw%.^He sur
activity
Descartes, the French philosopher, and Howard, the English philanthropist, had naturally extremely delicate constitutions, which they were obliged constant lv to fortify and favor. Pascal, the magnificent but irregular genius, early became an invalid, and was scarcely ever after free from pain. "He furnished,' says Alger in "The Genius of Solitude,"
exemplification of the truth that
great men, unless blessed with health, are more unhappy than others, because their transcendent powers are intrinsically less harmonized with their ej*thly conditions." Before he had reached the age of
31,
Pascal had
suffered two attacks of paralysis in his limbs. While thus weak ened he was driving across one of the
"4 *w,-i**, y.
bridges over the Seine, the horses took fright, plunged and leaped off, leaving the carriage poised on the edge. The shock was so great that, during the eight years left of his life, Pascal was frequentlv troubled with the hallucination fan abyss yawning at his side.
Kep'er, the astronomer, was a uny, ailing child, and through life suffered from periodical attacks of' fever and other maladies. Among famous men who, in the dawn of life, had a hard struggle to maintain existence, was Sir Isaac Newton, who could have been entirely hid under a quart cup when he was born Voltaire and Fontanelle, who were so feeble during infancy that their survival was scarcely hoped for Goethe, who says in his autobiography: "I came into the world as dead, and only after various efforts was I enabled to see the light d'Alembert, the distinguished mathematician, who, an ilFgitimate 6on, was exposed by his mother on the steps of the Church of St. Jean-le-Rood, in Paris, until rescued in a nearly dying condition by a passing policeman Charles Summer, who weighed but three and a half pounds at birth ancl Washington Irving, who was extremelv feeble in infancy.
PERSONAL.
From Thursday's Daily.
Louis Cole, of Marshall, is in the city. G. R. Hawkins, of Sullivan, is in town, Mr. Geo. E. Levir.gs, of Paris, is in the city.
D. K. Burton, of Indianapolis, i6 in the city.
Darius Lagore, Esq., an eminent attorney of Marshall, was in towrn yesterday.
Misses Dora and Maggie Buckworth, of Frankfort, are attendiug the Saengerfesc.
Mr.jno. R. Robinson, northern pass* enger agent of the "Sunset route,™ of Chicago, is in town.
A. B. Coffroth of the firm of Haven & Coffroth, is in Washington, D. C., on business connected with an important patent suit.
Mr. Stephen Albert, member of the New Albany Maennerchor, and a member of the Indiana Legislature of
-•*«","
'-if^j•-**.
v'
Miss Amy Richardson, of Brazil, is in the city. Mr. A. M. Green is in Chicago on a little visit.
E. E. Taylor, of Kalamazoo, Mich., is in the city. Mr. Robt. M. Craig, of Crawfordsville, is in the city.
T. W. Brown, of Brazil, was in the city yesterday. Flen R. Neal, city Marshall of Marshall, 111., is in town.
Harry R. Junkins, telegraph operator of Marshall, is in town. A. H. Peyton, wife and daughter, of Paxton, Ind., are in the city.
W. T. Leggett, who takes excursion parties to Kansas, is in the city. L. G. Archer, of the Quaker City Mills, of Marshall, is in the city.
B. S. Blackledge, editor of the Montezuma Era, was in the city yesterday. Chas. Hodges, of the American Exptess company at Paris, is in the city.
Harry A. Clem, formerly of this city but now of Greenup, 111., is in the city. E. C. Madison, a wealthy 6tock raiser and fruit grower of Marshall is in the city.
1875,
is in the city. Geo. Reglein deserves thanks for shutting up the mouth of that bov who yelled fire near the Opera House on Tuesday night.
Gastin Adams, a wealthy land owner, living near Hutsonville is in the city. Mr. Adams is the owner of 1,500 acres of land in one body, near Hutaonville.
N. G. Buff, Esq, has left for Oberlin O., where his daughter, Miss Allie is attending college. On his way home he will attend the Sreagerfest at Co* cinnati.
Rev. Alex. Sterrett has just returned from a visit to the haunts of his boyhood in Tippecanoe and Corroll counties, and will occupy the pulpit of the First Presbyterian church next Sunday morning.
Dennis Hayes continues to sell those fine cigars, a few of which he has left although the Sngertest I rew heavily on his stock. All smoker's materials are kept on hand. Main street between Fifth and Sixth streets.
Mr. Hervey, in a letter to H. E. Read, Esq., denies having promised to make anv other lace the terrnin is of his J, The Evansville, Washington and Worlhington. We accept Mr. Hervey's denial as conclusive.—[Evansville Tribune.
Mr. Chas. M. Statz, the south Second street druggist ii naking his drug store, the institution of the south end. Mr. Statz, during his stay at Buntin & Armstrongs, jhowed himseli to be an excellent prescription clerk, ami uie success which he is receiving is only justly due him.
From Friday's Daily.
Miss Mollie Mancourt is visit at St. Marys. Mrs. Merril Smith was at bt. Marys yesterday. -V-V- Tv
Miss Mary Baridon went to St. Marys yesterday. VMiss O'rfaver, of Evansville, is visiting Miss Gtroerer.
David Buntin returned from Blootnington yesterday. Mr. R. L. Ball has gone to Zanesville, Ohio, and will remain until Sunday.
Charles H. Knight, of Brazil, is in the city, a guest of the Terre Haute House. Mr. Lee Hirsch went s'erday afternoon to Cincinnati to visit friends. He will return ntxt Tuesday. ,,
,/1
M:»s Alamsgood. of Mattoon, who has be«n visiting Mrs. Simeon Hischler, has returned to her home.
Judge Gookins returned from Chicago, yesterday morning, where he had been for a week on professional business.
Major W. A. Brown, of Indianapolis attorney for the east division of the I. & St, L. Railroad, is in the city, stopping at the Terre Haute House.
Edwin D. Seldomridge has returned from Toledo, Onio, whither he went to take the deposition of one Granger, a witness fcr the defense in the ReadeMurray case.
Wm. B. Hawkins, ah old pioneer is the Wabash Valley, now living in Coles county, Ills., has been in this city thi, week visiting his son. Frank M. Hawkins, on Chestnut street.
Dennis Hayes continues to sell Ihose fine cigars, a few of which he has left, although the Ssengerfest crew heavily on his stock. All smoker's materials are kept on hand. Main street between Ftfth and Sixth streets.
1
James Stunkard graduated at the State University Wednesday. He returned home yesterday. These young collegians who bring to business the enthusiasm of growth and the training of years of study, are welcome additions to the population.
Hon. J. G. Shanklin, Secretary of state, was to have been married yesterday to Miss Gertrude Avery, daughter of a prominent plow maker, of Louisville, Ky., at Wyoming, N. Y., where the family have a summer retreat. A dispatch was received from Mr. Shanklin yesterterday, saying that owing to the death of Miss Averly's maternal grandfather Mr. Louts, that morning, the ceremony had been postponed until Saturday.— [•Indianapolis Sentinel.
From Monday's Daily.
Mrs. W. S. Ryce is in Chicago. Mr. Jacob Early graduates this week. Miss O'Boyle has returned from Glendale.
Dr. F. A. Von Mo6chzesker is in Fort Wayne. Mr. George Fred, cf Cincinnati, is visaing in town. 1 ".
Mr. A. O. Johns {has returned from a trip to St. Loins. W. S. Edwards, of Chicago, Was in the city Saturday.
S. A. Wharton, of Paris, Ills., was in the city Saturday. Dan Fasig writes from the Hot Springs that he is improving.
Miss Mary Condit, of Indianapolis, is in th« city visiting relatives and friends. Mr. Eilert Harms is still confired by his late severe accident, but is somewhat improved.
Mr. A. W. Smith, booa-keeper for Slaughter & Watkins, is visiting his sister, Mrs. Gibbney, at Carroll, Onio.
Mr Lawrence Heinl will fill all orders for flowers for the commencement exercises at reduced prices. Address P. O. box
1901
or call at Mt Rose.
Mr. Stech, manufacturer of the celebrated piano which bears his name, is in, the city, the guest of Mr. L. Kussner who handles his instruments in this city.
Misses Nannie Floyd and Sue Gratiot left yesterday for Mount Vernon, Ind., where they will be the guests of their relatives, the family of Ray G. Jenckes.
Mrs. Jencks, of La Fayette, and Mrs. Farotte, of Marion, Ohio, were visiting their nephew, Mr. Wm. Farmer, the past week. They left for La Fayette on Saturday.
Messrs. Geo. Dunn and Jas. Gordon have returned from Denver. Young Dunn will go to the Indianapolis insane asylum to see his mother, who is reported to be getting better.
Lamaster, who was to lecture last night at the Grand Opera-honse on the intemperate conduct of temperance agitators, struck a dead wall so to speak. The ticket office showed but $1.50 after waiting until
8:45,
and then seeing that,
he woul not have an audience, Lamaster adjourned.—[Indianapolis Journal.
Jones & Hunter is the title of the new law firm which occupies chambers over Beach's bank. The members of the firm, Horace B. Jones and M. C. Hunter, are both well known members of the bar cf Terre Haute, before which they have practiced for several years. More perfect gentlemen and reliable attorneys are not engaged in business. They deserve the congratulations of their friends and patrons on their commodious and nicely furnished rooms. -From Tuesday's Daily.
MVs. L. M. Rose is in the city. O. P. Davis was in town yesterday. C. P. Uunt, of Rockville, is in town. Cyrus McNutt, Esq., is in Indianapolis
S. S. Martin, a merchant of Chicago, is in the eity. Hon. M. t. Hunter was "in the city ye?terday.
Mrs. Enos Strouse has returned from Cincinnati. iftiss Phoeba lludnut has returned from Glendale.
Mr. and Mrs. A.E. Wailing, of Evans ville, are in the city. ,uw'' Constable Charles Fiaid went to Marshall yesterday. He returned last night.
Miss Fannie Burt, of Greencafctle, is in the city visiting her sister, Mrs. John N. Cory.
Lee Hirsch has returned from Cincinnati. His little girl is getting along very nicely.
Miss Hattie Harbert of this city, will soon pay a visit to her father, in Inde pendence Kansas.
Jonas Strous got back this morning from Cincinnati, where he has been at tending the Szengerfest.
Mr. S. C. Stimson contemplates taking a health tour shortly, to Colorado and other Western points of interest.
Mrs. Jennie Wolf and daughter Carrie, of this city, have gone to Greeneastle to attend the commencement exercises of the Asbury University.
:mm
r«
*r
Mr. David -N- Taylor will return this evening from Bloomington, where he has been attending the Alumni Exercises of the Bloomington Universitv.#
Mrs. E. W. Chadwick and daughter, Mrs. R. E. Stephens, of Indianapolis, returned to-day from Paxton, Sullivan county, where they have been visiting for two davs.
Miss Julia Gaylord, prima donna, and Fred E. Packard, leading tenor of the Carl Rosa Opera Company, have been in the city the past week visiting Capt. and Mrs. M. E. Smith. Miss Gaylord is a cousin of Mr. Smith.
Justice Cookerlv, yesterday afternoon, officiated at the marriage of" Francis M. Crabb and Miss Amanda E. Fugate. The ceremony took place in Justice C«okerly's office, and was witnessed by a large crowd of friends of the contract' ing parties.
From Wedneadav's Daily.
Nancy E. Baker, formerly steward at theNational House, left yesterday morn* ing for Chicago.
Mrs. Matilda Stock we 11 of La Fayette is in the city, the guest of Mrs. Hudnut, on Cherry street.
Dr. Moss lectured last night at the Normal school on liberal education. Theie was a large attendance.
Mr. Ed. L. Feidler will furnish the refreshments for the Boptist and Con* gregational picnic next Tuesday.
E. M. Sappenfield, Esq., has returned from Chicago. He brought with him a valuable present, the gift of ex-sheriff Chas. Kern, to Jos. H. Blake.
(ut uticura
THE GREAT SKIN CURE.
The Most Healing, Saothiitgt and Refreshing External Application In the world*
It rapidly heals Ulcers, 'Old iJores, an! Discharging Wound* itching Piles and otter Itching affections that have been the to-tureof a lifetime, thus affording unspeakable gratification to thousands Burns, Scalds. WounC?, and Festers all Itohinjr anT Scaly Eruptions ot the Sain, and au Affdtttions of the Scalp, including loss of Hair. Nothing like it has ever beon known to the most intelligent physicians. It has swept a host of poisonous remedies out of existence. It is revolutionary in its composition and mode of treatment and succeeds in curing every external affection. At every stage it is ably assisted by Cuticura Soap, whidh is apart of itself medicinally and at the same time the most delightfully fragrant and refreshing Toilet, Bath, and Nursery Soap in existence.
Cuticura Resolvent, a powerful purifying agent and liver stimulant, should be taken to neutralize and resolve away blood poi sons, caused by the virus of scrufnla, cancer, canker, mxlarlal or contagious diseases, which maintain and foster diseased of the 8 in an S a
SALT RHEUM.
Life a Burden From the SaffoV Inge Caused by this Terrible Disease.
Messrs. WXKIS A POTTER: Genttemen, Please accept my most grateful thanks iffr thegreit, very great, comfort I have received from the use of your Cutleura.
For the past eight cr nine years I have been troubled wiin that dreadful disease, aalt liheum.
For months I would be helpless,—my very life a burden to me. I nave used ev:rything in the shape of medicine, both external and intern il, bus with no effect.
My hands were in a terrible condition, the backs of them being all raw, and 1 thought I would try Cuticura. 1 tried it, and lot it was as if a miracle bad been preformed, for 1 will take my oath that in three applications my hinds were as smooth as a new borne bane's.
I presume tb^re are hundreds, if n)t thousands, who know of my cast:, among whom there may be «ome one similarly afflicted, and if so I would earuusc.y advise him to give Cuttcnra a trial.
Yours, very thsnklully,
A. D. BAKKK. Ticket Agent J. S. R. R.~ Detroit Junction, Detroit, JM ich., Jan. SO, 1879.
FETTER OR SALT RHEUM." On the Hands Cared. A Grateful shelter*
Messrs. Wasas A POTTHS: (ientlemen,— Haying been troubled lor many years with the Tetter or Salt Uheum,and spen1-. many a hard-earbed dollar, 1 wa«glv6n a trial of your Cutiours, and, thank God, my hand* are well. I never had anything do me good like (hat.
You may put this in the paper and we' rome, and may it do «ome other poor sufferer the same good it has done me. I am well known her*, naving lived here almost fifteen 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, Imy hands are well, so I again return thanks.
Yours respectfully, W ELIZABETH BUCKLEY. Littleton, J5». ., May 8dth, 1878.
The CCTICCRA REMEDIM are prepared by WIKKS A I*OITEK ChetnieU and Druggists 860 Washington btteel, Boston, and are for sale liyall 1'ruggists. Price ot CnTictraA, small hoxrs, fiO cents large boxes, $1. RESOLVENT, $L per bottte. CUTICURA SOAP, jents per cake, by mail, 30 ceuts three cufces, 75 cents.
Downey
Placed over the centre of the nervous
COLLINS? VOLTAIC flusteS*
ncMM'Orces, the pit of the i*l*""B®»toraaoli, tbey furnish he alisoroents with that marvelous vital
izing and restorative agency, Electricity, uritcd with tho curative propcriiex own fragrant Balsams find PlbC1* For Wiuit and Sore Lungs, Palpltal ion of the Heart. Painfu'. Kidneys, Liver Complaint. Bilious Colic, Wi'.i Hiotuach an4 Bowels. Kheumatism, Neti'alsria and iciatica, they are theLrf'St icroedv in the world.
ATTACHMENT NOTICE. STATE OF INDIANA, COUNTY OF VIOO.)
ss.
Be it known that a writ of attachment was issued in due form against Jeremiah J.
at the suit of George Aimy,
and James B. Harris, and a return of defendant not found, has been made on the summons, issued by .me in said case. The said Jeremiah J. Downey, defendant, is hereby notified of the pendency of this suit, and that the same is continued for hearing at my office in Harrison township, in said county and state until the nth day of August,
1879,
16th
at the
hour of ten "o'clock A. M. at which time and place the iaid defendant is hereby notified to plead and answer to the plaintiffs complaint. Given under my hand and seal this
daj of June,
1879.
LINUS B. DENEHIE, J. P. SEAL.£
