Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 17 July 1879 — Page 4
4
Weeklp (Buzctk
The DAILY GAZETTE is published every afternoon except Sunday, and
sold
by the carrier at 30c. per fortnight, by mail. $8 00
per
year $4.00
far si* months, $2.00 for three months. THE "WEEKLY GAZETTE is issued ev.ery Thursday, and contains all the best matter of the six daily issues. THE WEEKLY GAZETTE is the largest paper printed In Terre Haute, and is sold for: One copy per year, $1.60: six months, 75c three months, 40c. All subscriptions must be paid in advance. No paper discontinued until-all arrearages &re paid, unless at the option of the proprietor, A failure to notify a discontinuance at the end Of the year will be considered anew en gagement.
Address all letters: WM. C. BALL & CO. GAZETTE. Terrc Haute.
THURSDAY, JULY 17, 1879.
A CIRCUJ.AR bearing the signature ot M. D. Manson, Auditor of State, has been sent all over Indiana, announcing that John A. Finch has been appointed by the Governor as an insurance commissioner to act with the Attorney-Gen-eral and Auditor of State. The duty ot such commissioner is to codify the present laws ot the state relating to the business of insurance, and to prepare a draft of a new law concerning the entire subject. By this circular it is expected •jhat such persons as have any information on the subject of insurance or any views which they may wish to see embodied in the forthcoming, law, will place themselves in communication with the Commissioners. The methods of procedure resorted to by the Legislature in reference to this important branch of jurisprudence cannot be too highly com mended. When finally prepared the law ought to contain the ripest results of experience, and embody the most valuable deas devoloped anywhere on the subject.
THE JOURNAL STRIKE. The position assumed by the proprietors cf the Indianapolis Journal is the true one. Strikes must be met by determined resistance. The least concession by the employer is a yielding of his rights a surrender ofthat which he should defend with all his power, fortune and, if necess arv, his life. We believe fn fair compensation lor all work, but not4by force
The following from the editorial columns of the Journal shows a firmness that, had it been practiced by proprie. tors in general heretofore, strikes would haye been a thing of the past: "The publishers of the Journal have nothing to apologize for in connection with the strike. No truthful compositor will say that he has not been fairly treated. No demand was ever made by the publishers for a reduction of the price of composition until the Union was formed which fixed the price at 333 cents. No complaint was ever made by a compositor upon the paper, either to the foreman of the composing room or to the publishers, that the wages paid were not satisfactory until a committee of the Union gave the notice. No compositor ever failed to get his money on the day it was due—and advances were frequently made tor his accommodation There was literally no provocation for the compositors joining a union and attempting to subject the Journal cotnposi tion room to its dictation. When we heard (hev had done so, we gave it out at once that* unless the publishers could be left free to manage their own business the publication cf the paper would stop
We haVe never wavered for one moment from this determination, and have never doubted that the paper would continue to appear daily if we received the protec tion to life and property which the law attempt to affords. We have received assurances that the protection will be afforded by the city, and w'e have received the assurance of the best people of Indianapoli? that they will stand by us in this contest."
WOMAN'S OPPORTUNITY. One of the most cheering aspects of our time is the increasing opportunities opening for women. They could marry if they were fortunate enough to have a good chance. They could w^rk in the kitchen or the mill. A few of them could teach school. For the rest there was nothing but to be maiden, aunts, to tease children ana pick up such bits of employment as dropped at rare intervals from the milliner's counter or the tailor's bench. Out of marriage there was nothing inspiring for a woman, and es pecially a woman of culture, refinement and ambition, to do.
The complete hopelessness of woman's lot was known by the answer made by a bright belle who was urged to carry on her studies and gain a complete education: "What on earth could I do with a complete education?" She look in the situation at a glance. She saw that woman with a thorough culture, but with no field for the exercise of her faculties and no object to live for, would be as unfortunate as the man who drew the elephant at a lottery. But thirty years has witnessed a complete revolution in this respect. It is "easy to say that the agitation for woman suffrage has failed and ask in triumphant tor.e,
not already secured the ballot, it has opened a hundred fields for women to find labor and culture in where there was but one before. Almost every trade women can work in, is open for their entrance. They are in all kinds of stores. They are chosen accountants in offices and banks. They are the selected nurses in hospitals, and successful practicing physicians. They write the best stories and sketches, and have a recognized place in journalism. George Eliot and George Sands are two great modern novelists. Women practice at the bar and take an active part in all the reforms and charities and churches of our land. They are among the most popular lecturers, and have won a recognized place in the pulpit. Forty colleges are open for their instruction. Science has its
Maria Mitchell, sculpture its Harriet Hosmer and Vinnie Ream Hoxie, and painting its Miss Thompson. Almost every path that a woman can desire to cords with the spirit of our times and the genius of our institutions. America stands for opportunity. In no other part of the world are things plastic like clay, waiting to be fashioned into perma nent forms. It is the privilege of doing which comes to the American man and woman like a new gospel, and tints the horizon with the rose and violet hues of promise. In older countries everything has been shaped into a certain order, substantial and complete in itself. But here only the foundations of a social system have been laid and just as the rising walls need the finish of carved pillar and architecture created in accordance with the new-world spirit, the fresh energies of woman have been called to assist at the work.
Our country needs the best efforts of the people in it more than ever for.more than ever is it open to influence, and if the best do not mould its institutions and determine its character, the worst surefly will. For an American woman to awake to the consciousness that here, in her own place she can accomplish more than anywhere else in the world, is itself an education. The leaven of the new time has been given her, and she is to put it into her measure of duties and let it leaven the whole. In no other part of the world does frivolity and dissipation of time and thought seem so inexcusable as'here,'where everything is crying out to be shaped, moulded, polished, and put in place. Any one who thinks at all must feel that the free life of this continent ought to produce a race of women nobler than those to be met with elsewhere, the perfection of beauty, the glory of the race. Now much of the coarse work of the sledgehammer and the crow-bar—the pioneer work of civilization—has been accomplished, and there has arisen a demand for the finer work of the chisel and graver. These women's hands can wield as deftly as man's. Her refining touches are wanted everywhere, and a women who has con victions, culture, refinement and noble thoughts must work in some way if she would benefit others, or even maintain her own self-respect.
DEATH OF WILLIAM ALLEN. About three o'clock yesterday afternoon the telegraph brought news of the sudden death of the Hon. William Allen, yesterday morning at his home, near Chillicothe, Ohio. The state had not a greater man to lose. Mr. Allen was of that high order of statesmen who knowno interest but the general good, and while he was a Democrat in politics, he was not such,from partisan motives or self-interest, but from principle and the Democracy of Ohio, indeed of the whole United States, owe much to the industry and integrity of this one of their greatest leaders.
Mr. Allen was born in Eatonton, North Carolina, in
1S06,
1S22,
and came to Ohio in
walking all the way from Lynchburg, Virginia. The following is from the Indianapolis Sentinel:
A dispatch published elsewhere in the Sentinel announces the death of Hon. William Allen, of Ohio. The sad event took place at his reisdence, near Chilli cothe, yesterday morning. William Alien was a native of North Carolina and was born in Eatonton in the year 1S06, and wa6 therefore 73 years of age at the time of his death. At an early age his parents moved to Lynchburg Virginia, and when enly nine years of age it was the good fortune of the boy to weet ana converse with Thomas Jeffer son and General Jackson, who were to gether at a public house in Lynchburg.
At the age of
l,In
16
what
State do women vote?" But if it ha lead is open to her,if it does not invite her entrance.
All this is certainly cheering, and ac
years, William Allen
left Lynchburg to seek his fortune in Ohio, and in midwinter crossed the Blue Ridge on foot. This incident fully illustrates the indomitable will of the youth mhich distinguished him in all his after life. Arriving at Chillicothe, the home of his sister, the mother cf Hen. Allen G. Thurman, he soon over. omc the fatigues of his journey, a .J et 'ered an academy, which he attended for two years. Leaving school, he at once entered upon the study of law, and was admitted to the Ohio bar beLore he was 21 years of age. When once his energies were aroused he rose rapidly at the bar, and it was soon discovered by the Democratic party that he had the elements of a statesman, and he was nominated for Congress in a district overwhelming Whig. But he led the for)rn hope of his party triumphantly.
From that time to the close of his long
and brilliant career the name
1S33
to
1S36
&
tees, and from
1S39
to
AT its last session the Texas Legisla ture passed a law imposing a
Upon every commercial traveler, drummer, salesman or solicitor of trade by sample or otherwise, an annual occupation tax of
$200
A LESSON IN FINANCE. To the Edltorof the Evening GAZETTE: The abolition of usury is one of the
measures proposed by the Greenback party, or at least the Indiana wing thereof represented by De La Matyr, Bu chanan, and our own Express. The ordinary construction put upon the term us ury is the taking of illegal interest for the use of money. The greenback philosophers however use the term in its original sense, and when they denounce usury, they denounce th? taking of any remuneration whatever for the use of money.
01
William Allen has been a tower of strength to the Ohio democracy. From
he was a member of
•Congress, serving on important commit-
There is much ignorance and prejudice afloat in regard to the subject, and the greenback organ and orators labor incessantly to pander to the ignorance, and intensify the prejudice already existing. They tell their followers that usury is one of the mean3 used by the Money Power to enslave the people that it is the sum of all villainies, and that the money lender is the boss villian of the age. The bible is ransacked for texts to *how that usury has received the curse of the Almighiy, and ministers of the gospel, who mildly dissent from these views, are accused of heresy and dc' nounced as fit subjects for church discipline.
Is there any reasonable ground for this crusade against a jtime-honored and universal custom, or is this one of the many hallucinations which this greenback party is laboring under? A brief consideration of the subject will, I think, demonstrate that the latter assumption is the correct one.
The form of government generally conceded to be the best is that which gives to each individual the largest liberty consistent with the rights of others,
a a
Twr^j r~T -^vr ^r,")^S?f" Tjf'.v*''-: *r* *c v*
THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
1849
wa5 a
member of the United State Senate. In 1873 Mr. Allen was elected Governor
01
Ohio and his term of office clc»ed his public career. In
184S
his friends urged
him to accept the nomination for President, but his friendship for Lewis Cass and his high sense of honor prevented. William Allen was a man of unbending integrity, and of unyielding fidelity to honest convictions. He was a type ot the public men who lived during the halcyon days of the republic, and whose connection with public affairs exalted the government in the esteem of the world. He leaves a record unsullied a name and a fame that the country will cherish. That a great man has fallen all will admit. His death was unexpected and the announcement will create a painful sensation throughout the country. William Allen fought the battles of life nobly and has Fallen in a ripe old age full of honors.
the
$200
tax on
commercial travelers from other States By this law Texas has done a very great deal to discommode her own citizens. She could hardly have done anything which would be more calculated to retard progress and prevent enterprise. The important features of the law are as follows:
5
shall be imposed pre-
vided that such person shall not be required to pay the same if the person lirm or association of persons represented by him or for whom he is soliciting trade, shall have paid a merchant's occupation tax, as provided in this section, of
$200
and any firm, person or association ol persons desiring to be represented or solicit trade by such commercial traveler or travelers, shall Have the right to do so by paying to the Comptroller of the State a tax of $ioo, payable annually in advance. Provided* that nothing herein contained shall apply to anyone soliciting subscrip tions for religious, literary or historical books or maps. Amendment in the meaning of this act is, any person, firm or association of persona engaged in buying or selling goods, wares and merchan dise of anv kind whatever. .Doubtless the gentlemen who represent the wisdom of the state in the legislature thought they were doing something very cute when they passed this enact ment. That they took a very narro view of the commercial traveler question is evident to everybody else. Quite as many benefits are conferred upon the people of Texas and other States by the visitations of commercial travelers as the representatives of that much abused class receive. Suppose for exmple that a mer chart residing in a remote section of Texaswants goods. Commercial travellers make it their business to visit him, exhibit their samples, state prices, etc. In this way goads are ordered and a long journey is saved by the merchant, and this profit as against any other method of purchase, he is enabled to divide among his purchasers. A tax upon commercial travelers means higher prices for merchandise, which the people of Texas will have to pay, and they will be the only sufferers by this unwise legislation. If, on the contrary, this tax should have the effect of excluding them from the state, the merchants in the first place would discover that their purchases would be made at greater expense and trouble than before, and the people, in the second place, would soon discover that the mercantile class were not disposed to bear the burden alone. It is a source cf gratification to know that such laws, being in dissonance with the spirit of the age, are very apt to work their own repeal, once they have been tried and the people have become familiar, through experience, with their troublesome features.
been
-aaa'i&m
and the preservation of order. '"The PAYING state which is governedieast is governed best," is an acknowledged truism, and the people who* opinions, h.bitt oc-|ov**
Tried by this standard would a law for to the
suppression of usury be beneficial to Jf
the amount
*7,000,000 D.SBUKED
30th
pension6)
any community? Of course it would 1^220,472.44 had alrsady been paid, or require a vivid imagination to conceive were readv for payment on that date, ot the passage ol such a law by men ot They were distributed among tha several sound mind, or of the impossibility of en-
forcing it if enacted but assuming that agency rolls, as follows: such a law existed upon the statute books Boston,
and provision was made for its enforce. 1.227 Columbus, 1,296 Des Moines,
,, us Concord,
to an inquisitorial espionage that would adelphia, 1,095, Pittsburg,
simply be intolerable. It would abolish 1864 Washington,
all credit transactions all banks of issue
and discount all savings banks and trust
companies
all joint stock companies or- a greater number monthly until all ganized to create and
manage railroad
outlay of money, which could only I
It would prevent municipal corpo-
of each years'tax
over a number of years—would exist no
more. Such a law would prevent the aged
active business,—from obtaining a »veli-
It
make sacrifices of personal comfort in Marshall, aplasterer, and his family reorder to live within their incomes and cently removed from the neighborhood, and on Saturday last left on a flat boat bound down the Ohio. It is suspected they induced the girls to forsake their home.
keep a deposit in the savings bank, and thus accumulate something for a rainy day. It would make the rich richer, and the poor poorer, for only those would be able to carry on business who had wealth at their command. The energetic, enterprising young man with all the neces-
sary qualifications for a successiul busi- jlorgej
^p^enting the sum of
0
claims are settled. The number of pcr-
sons
and steamship line9, and carry on mining inc]utjing the 13,890 already or manufacturing on an extensive scale"
who have made daim for arrears is
senied,
not more than
It would tie the hands of government in persons who already are pensioners have case of war, or any sudden and pressing arrears due them. Many who apply are 1 not entitled to arrears. The Commisemergency demanding an unusual
oner
cntitled
be obtained by the slow method ot October, taxation or from revenue
receiDts
45,000
DEVILISH OUTRAGE ON A BOY. While returning tc his home on Sunday night, and when near Frake's mill, a son of George Adams, an excellent young 1 man, was waylaid, dragged from his
ancj
ness manager, but without money, would ones by a band of miscreants, whom he find himself debarred from any position failed to recognize. He was badly hurt, except that of a hireling. All enterprise
I
would languish, for the elderly,the gouty, TRICTS. the cautious and the conservative Thieves are- operating .in a small but whose anHoying way in many of the out-town-ships In Harrison cdunty. Honey, pro-
men of the community, only gratification is their wealth, would I come to the front, become the captains o4 industry, and the young, the hopeful, the enthusiastic, but impecunious men would be remanded to the ranks.
Bv tlic enactment of such a law, the
lands,
catUc, merchandise, or produce, b,,t ^o^ shall not lend money to ycur neighboi jng
to do likewise, although you have it to the working of the Continental and Ilaspareand he is suffering for the want of zeldell mines, which are only divided from the burning vein bv a pillar of coa
You may deal every commodity
under heaven, but you shall not deal in ings take fire this town wouid that which will give you the command of be ruined. Several valuable pumping every commodity. You may rent, or engines, together with the breaker office 'and all buildings except the stables, were destroyed.
wh'ch is the same, borrow a house or farm on such terms as you see fit to make, but you shall not borrow money to buy a house or farm, although the rent in the one case, and the interest in the other, might cost you precisely the
were
same. It is true you do not borrow row escape from destruction, receiving money for the sake of the money itse!f» timely warning from two boys who had but for the sake of the commodities
have been endowed with omniscience in afterward succeeding in ravishing her all other men's private affairs,
and
The organ of the party here labors assiduously to convince its readers of the enormity of the practice, and when one of those formidable editorials appears, it makes the miserable emissaries of the money power fairly shake in their boots.
BASE BALL.
Buffalo, July 16.
Bostons,
4
bac]iy beaten with clubs and
THIEVES AT WORK IN THE RURAL BIS-
visions, articles of clothing, and the like are taken. Near Palmyra a fine horse was stolen.
FIRE IN THE COAL FIELDS. Centralia, Pa., July 16.—Thevein coal Prcvost's colliery is still burning fiercely,
legislator would say to his constituents I together with the dirt and rock banks, '•you may buy and sell houses,
The mine is being flooded now, but with
t]^e
night, and are now endangering
Drefe'rrfd by
true also, that when I was a humble citi- respectable woman living in the west zen I was not credited with more than part of the city. The complaint alleges ordinary intelligence, but since I have
that
clothed with the legis.ative toga, I
Ml SCELLANiCUS
PEN-
ARREARS SIONS
OR READY
THEREFOR ALREADY THE
•cupaticns are- least interfered with by le- NUMBER CLAIMS FILED gal enactments have the best opportunity Washington, July 6.—An examination for development and progress. of the records ot the pension bureau up
day of June of the present
W- year shows that 13,890 cases of arrears
?^nVr° u^n
890
Canandaigua,
946
S42
Chicago
760
Detroit,
ment, what would be the result. ii8,,^07, Knoxville,.468 Louisville. 331 would subject the business of every TO®11 I Milwaukee,
665
Indianapo-
688
New York, 1.000 Phil-
692
St. Louis,
965
Upwards of
San Francisco, S2.
9,000
expectg
cases were settled
in June. The Commissioner of Pensions
to be able to pay an equal if not
or 48,000
expects that nearly all who are
-will be paid off by the end of
I With regard to the order of settlement,
... he savs that the act of January
every
rations from completing expeditiousl) moment. The date of filing the applica and economically works of great impor- Uon is not taken into account in fixing tance, such as water works, and a sewer-
25
estab-
pensioners right at the same
the order of settlement. If the cases had
been taken up for settlement in the or-
age system, and limit the progress ol such applications the pensionworks bv
ers
levy or else compel an assessment for I would have been first paid, to the exclu one'or more ears that »culd be uoen- "on.of those residing at a distance, and in the country. durable to tax payers, in order to expedite the work. A great point, however, MYSTERIOUS DISAPPEAR A.NCE would be gained the hateful bondedl OF TWO REPUTABLE debt—which has at least the advantage YOUNG LADIES. ,.
of distr.but:ng the Wen of taxation
Special tothe lndianapoli3 Sentinel:
dOTiJu,y I5._T„o
able Ioung
anJj an
hood by-investing the savings of past in- whereabouts have failed. The characters dustrv.
would promote extravagance of the girls were without reproach, and I their parents are greatly distressed at among tnose who are now encouraged to
their
ShQ uld the work_
Loss estimated this morning at $200,000 The breaker was insured with Provost & Herring, Philadelphia, but to what amount is not known. Just before the fire commenced the colored miners who
descending into the pit made a nar-
efctaPe^
the ames.^
which r.toney will transfer to your pos- ARREST OF A RAVIS1IER. session, and it is on account of the utility special to the Indianapolis Sentinel: and general demand for money for this Mendota. 111., July 15.—Last night purpose that I, the legislator, step in and deputy sherift Raincv arrested Thomas ., ,, a- Ford, upon a charge of rape and robbery forbid all men to traffic money. It
a woman named Harris, a
^ort?
entered
the house in a 6tale of
intoxication, and after locking the doors,
struck
Mrs. Harris, knocking her down,
know person. The house was then searched
more than they do about their financial and over *9° was stolen Ford was ar rested at the depot of the Illinois Cen necessities and the exigencies of busi-
tra^
ness, what is good for them, and what is the city. If capital and labor cannot ba ARRESTED FOR MURDER.
injurious joined together without the help of.
usury, they must ever remain asunder,
The fancy sketch I have drawn does I last night by Marshal Bradley, charged not, I think, misstate the position of the with the crime ot having been impligreenbackers upon the of usurv, or the absjrd predicament in which
the theological statesmen from Pogue's
Buffalos,' ance
jus^ he was on the point of leaving
Special to the Indianapolis Sentinel:
T„
wej2}jout 18
might find ourselves, if their lunacy to Chicago on business, and it wa? should find many adherents. known thathehada certain amount of At least one member of Congress, Hne?°n
Run, entertains these views, and also an amonfc the citizens of tuio place is that eminent financier from the same locality Stittz is innocent of the crime of which whose fame has heretofore rested upon '8
he three-sixty five convertible bond scheme, of which he claims to be the sole inventor.
months ago. Bradley had been
his
Per8°n deleft the
city. He was found about a mile from
hig home.
The general impressions
c^arge^-
FIRE IN BUFFALO.*
Buffalo, July
16.—Another
$106,000
tained.
disastrous
conflagration occurred in this city this morning, at the Pitts agricultural works, entirely destroying this immense establishment with the exception of the
6tore
houses containing the finished machinery and the office building. The supposed cause is spontaneous combustion. The works were established in
no estimate of loss yet ob
ADVERTISEMENT
uticura
Messrs. Weeks & Pottar: Gentlemen,—To say that I am grateful, Is only a poor expression of my feelings. but lit is the oust word 1 can use. for I feel it in every sense of the word. I have been great sufferer with skin diseases for the last twelve (12) year*. Uea*i anil face being covered with sores, I could not rest with the burning heat and itching »f the Iparts affected, and was confined to my.house for weeks at a time. My disease has been called Eczema, of amdst aggravated type, by many physicians, but I doubt If ever fully understood by any of them. It was more like a oomblna-. tion of several skin humors. 1 have spant much money seeking a cure, and in MoT I went to Eur ipe, and consulted some of the best physicians in London. I received ten)* orary relief only, for in the spring it would, reak out again as bad aa ever. When I came back to Boston, I was I old by many friends that Dr. (whose reputation for the curu of those diseases was of the highest order) could cure me. I watted on the doctor he prescribed for me. I followed hts adriee for six months, and 1 can safely say, without any improvement. I tried other physicians, ami among them Dr. ot
East Boston, and Dr. of city proper, but all to no purpose. They did me no good their remedies were so ineffectual that at no time did 1 te^that a cure would result from them.
I have swallowed live hundred arsenic pills. 5.20 grains, and taken oottle after bottle of internal remedies, besides all the external applications I have used, but the effect was tlif same. I became satistlod that I could not be cured, .but might be kept iroiu getting worse.
Now, about three months ago, Mr. Meehan ajgenticman well known to Boston i-eoplc, called my attention to your Cuticura,
!.l
cura
living in cities near Washington
ladies, Elizabeth and Kate,
19
and
16
aged, the widows and the orphans,—inca- eric Ahalt, a reputable, well-to-do farm .. .. intnI er of Harrison countv, mysteriously dispacttated as they are from entering intolj
years, daughters of Fred-
from g{,-eraI days ago
efforts to gain a clew to their
jny6teriou8 ^appearance. John
and
promised wonderful results, if I would only make a trial. He told me of hisown experience with it, and so persevered on 1110 that 1 wont with him to a drugstore and bought two largu boxe3 of Cuticuri, and souieCuti-
fcioap, and commeneeil to uso it accirding to the directions. There was no much humor lodged witbiu the sltin, that as noon as 1 commenced tlie use of Cutioura it came to the surface and festered, until vast quantities ha'* came out and greatly lntuusified ray sufferings for about two wecfes. But
I
highly respect-
did not mind this, as
1
fMt that was
going to get rid of the uumor when I saw it coming to tbe surface in such large quantities. After the tlrst two or three weeics' use of this remedy, 1 was greatly encouraged by a gradual lessening of the inflammation cf a number of painful sores. I carefully, fa tiifully, an* cheerfully followed the ii jrections to the le:ter, feeling each wee* nearer a cure, until at the present moaient, after three months' use of Cutlcura, and twelve years of as constant suffering a» waa ever endured, I can say that I am cureil, and pronounce my caso the most remarkable on rccord I have been so elatsi with my succees that
I have
stopped men on the
street who were afflicted, and told ihem to get the (Juticuraand it. would cure them. This is why lam so grateful to you, for I believe it t.i be the best and greateht M3eovery of the age, and that it will cur« ail who are suffering with these dlseassf. I may add than took no internal medicine but the Cutleura Resolvent.
WILLIAM TA^ [.OH.
Boston, Aug. 22,1S7S.
GUTICURA REMEDIES.
Juticura Itesolvcnt is K.t most powerful Blood Puriller and Liver btimulant ever compounded.
Cutijura is the greaxexternal remedy for all Humors of the Scalp and Skin, Ulcers, and Old Sores.
Cuticura Soap is an olegint toilet and medcinal assistant to Cuticura for all exteral affections.
The CUTICCRA REMEDIES arc prepared by WFKKS & FOTTKR, Chemists nr.d lirutrgists 860 Washington street, Boston, and ale by all uruggists. 1'rice of mall boxes, 60 cents: large boxei,
1 'rice of CCTIC'UKA,forare
u...
...ge boxei, $1. itrc-
soiiVENT, 41 per bottle. (JUTICUKA SOAP, 'L' ionts per cake, by mail, 30 cents three cakes, "Scents.
Hundreds
of little Muscles E ii of these
Nerves und
VOLTAIC A«KE
PlBsrcw, they itre
*LA the moment
applied. Thoy instantly Annihilate Tain, Strengthen Weak and ralnful Parts. Draw Balsom from toe blood, Prevent Fever and Ague, Liver an:l Kidney Coin plaint
"The Saratoga of the West."
GRAND HAVENS, MICK.
The coolest and most popn lar rssort ia the entire Northwest.
THE i'l'TUiR
the finest hotel in the State, and firstclass in every respect. Improved passenger elevator and all modern conveniences. Trnnslentratel $2.00 and I'J.SO per day and by the wect, JlO.iO to $17.50. lim U. a. Signal Service gives Grand Havfn a record of from 10 to 15 degrees lower during the summer thin any other Western resort Good Ushing from May :.o October plenty of minnows, tackle, etc. Good boating and plenty of amusements. $i rf bathing in Lake Michigan. Sheldon's cc!ebrate Magnetto Mineral Springs opposite the Cutler House.
D.CIUfLfclB, T. F. PICKERING, Owner anr Prop. Manager. JOE. E. SPIKES Assistant Manager.
Chicago Medical College.
Twenty-flrst annual session begins Sept. 20th, Graded Course of Instruction. Physiological Laboratory established. Anatomical Material actually abundant. Seats numbered and secured In order of application, Professor's fees,175. Practitioners' course throuara April fee, S30. For announcement of particulars, address
PllOF. J. H. HOLLISTER, 71 Randolph St-. ChlcflBO.
For
,.
'1 Earitown, 111., July 15.—A German named Jacob Stiltz was arreted here
FOB YOUNU V/OMK.V.
_______ Atiburndale. Mass^ Bo7to"pr"iMeC with delightful i- varban home, especial care of health, niani -t, and morals or growing girls. 9/nie reductions in prices for next year, which begins Sept. 18th.
Catalogue, addres3 C, C. BBAGDON, Principal.
KILLED BY THE CARS. New York, July 16.—Anthony Zal ke, a millionaire, living at Central Morn-ana, a member of an ancient historical, and very eccentric family, was instantly killed this morrtfng at Central Morrisana bv the New Haven express train. Mr. Zabriske had just left the ,• grounds surrounding his house, which is on the road of the car repair shop at Central Morrisana, accompanied by his sister, Mrs. Martin E. Green. They intended to take the train for the city, which leaves Central Morrisiana depot at 9:10 o'clock. As he approached the track he saw a train approach frcm the north and suppo- that it v/as tU- train he meant to take, and that it would stop at the depot, which was about one dred yards distant from him. He Li.crefore hastened across the track, but the train, which proved to be the New Haven express, did not stop but rushed down upon him at the j, rate of
40
1851
by John
A. Pitts, but had lately been merged into a stock company, of which Mrs. Mary A. Brayley was president. Total insiir-
miles an hour, and the cow-
catcher striking him,threw him a distance I of
200
feet on a side track, where he
struck on his head, frightfully mangled,' Zabriski's property is estimated at^io,000 000.
His sister was so shocked that
her'condition
Isflffli
is considered precarious.
itiillSI
