Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 11 September 1879 — Page 2
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iPOOR MADELINE'S VAGERIE».*
I sit and sing, With the darlr cricket king. As the long summer day gocth down
When the eve stars peep out, -Then I laugh and I shout,
For my lover will como from the town. Hishair is as black .me&aXs the wood beetle's back,
And his eyes are as dark as the dell When the }ark, moonless midnight It RJDINFEONTAIGH
A£ we meet, his full (ace like the soft? morning sky Lighteth up, for he loveth me will.
O, lover of mine!
I All my being is thine, -y *iSH Yet I wring my thin hands in a dream
4
A dream of ail woe Wherein dead warriors go Sinkingdownin the dark, stagnant stream,
Whose inky waves creep Where the pines eve? keep Their watcho'er tho bones of the'dead,
That a spirit who rode on the, volcano's waves, With noises of earthquakes ami pawning """of graves, ,' sBlew 6fece in that valley of draad.
,{i. Go, dream,from my brain! You would craze me again And my lover did not goto war!
Now rises and swells ~'4 The sweet chimeof the beHs -i
.. ..And smiles my betrothal eve's stjar."" j' All In white I will ride
rJ
By my dark lover's side, And the envious maidens shall sigh As we blithely step ia at tho good parson's door,
And I lean on his arm as we walk up the floor, O, who'll be so happy as I? ,.
Late! late! is It late? Do I query with fate? Why falls not that klngliest tread!
O, ho! so you say
trr'
That my hair has turned gray. That my hero, mV lover's long dead Go back with your l!e
I will look to the eky' •, And believe the sweet angels instead. ,„,Far off, mid tho stars, sounds,,a .soft [golden bell, 'v
And 1 know that the seraphs are ringing It well ,jp In tho morning we twain shall bo wed. —[B. 8. Parker In Iiokome Tribune.
AN INVISIBLE WOUND.I One of the most celebrated practitioners of Pesth, Dr. K., was called upon one morning to receive at* an early hour a visitor in great haste, who, while waiting in the ante-chamber, sent in word by the footman that delay for him was danger. He must be received immediately.
The doctor threw on his dressinggown hastily, and had his patient shown in.
He found himself in the presence of a man utterly unknown to him, but who, to judge by his dress and manners, evidently belonged to the best society. His pale face bore traces of great physical and moral suffering. He carried his right hand in a sling, and, in spite of his efforts to restrain himself, from time to ,time a stifled grown escaped him. Seeing the poor man stagger^ the doctor invited him to sit down. .. "I am tired. I have not* slept fbr a week. There is something the matter with my right hand—I do not know what. Is it a carbuncle? I? it a cincer? At first the suffering was slight, but now it is burning, horrible, continual pain, increasing in intensity day by day. I can bear it no longer. I jumped into my carriage and here I am. I have come to beg you to cautcrize it or to cut out the painful part,, for one more hour of this dreadful torture would drive me to perdition!"
The doctor asked to see the hand, which the patient put into his, gnashing his teeth meanwhile trom the intensity of pain, while the physician proceeded to undo the bandages with every possible precaution.
fcAbovc
,T
I 1 V, t, X" -r/Av ,4Vf & n'
all, doctor, i' beg of you not
to attach any importance to what you will see. My complaint is so strange that you will be surprised, but I beseech you to take no notice of that." "Where is the painful spot? It is surprising. I see nothing." "Nor I either and yet the pain there is so dreadful that I feel tempted to knock my head against the wall."
ffcamined,
The doctor took a magnsfying-glass, and shook his head.
wThe
'-:a
H:
,n4
skin is full of life. The blood
circulate* very regularly. Underneath there is neither inflammation nor cancer. It is as healthy as any other part of your body."
44And
'rtv' -if"te.isW
**"•,' Kv*. !!f^r
yet it seems to me that it is
rather more red there than elsewhere." Where?" The stranger took a pencil from hib pccket-book and traced bn his hand a circle as large as a ten-cent bit, with the remark,
wJust
:J 'qtl bttii' •. 34
there."
The doctor looked.' He began to think that his patient was crazy. "Remain heri," he said. "In a few days I will cure you." The doctor saw,. to his astonishment, that hi« strange visitor spoke seriously. He took off his coat, turned up his' ehirtsleevs, and took a bistoury in hia left hand. A second more and the 6teel would have made a deep incision in the fle6h. "Stop!" cried the doctor, who vras afraid that his patient through unsinfulness might open some important vein, "Since you judge the operation indispensable, so be it."
He took the bistoury, and, holding in his left hand the right hand of the patient, he begged him to turn away his head, some people not being able to bear the sight of their own blood "It is unnecessary! On the contrary, it is I who will indicate hoy deep do^n you must cut." .L
In fact, he watched the operation to the end with the greatest possible composure, indicating hdw far it was to go. The open hand did not even tremble i" the doctor's hand, and when the little piece of round fle&h was cutont he heaved a deep sigh, like one who .experiences a feeling of immense relief.
fcThe
burning pain has ceased?"
"It has quite gone," said the stranger, with a smile. "The pain has entirely ceased, as if it had been taken away with the part cut out. The slight pain occassioned by the bleeding is, compared with the other, like a refreshing breeze
after an infernal heat. It does toe realty good to see my blocd flow. Only let it flow, it does me 60 much good.^
The stranger looked witii delight at the streaming blood. The doctor was obliged to insist upon dressing the wound.
While he was binding it up the pa tient's face changed completely. The expression of pain passed iway he smiled«©n the doctor with a look full of good humor, and there was no longer any (contraction of the features, any look of despair. He ieemed to have taken a new lease of life. His brovy cleared »the color returned to his face his whole per 6on .underwent a visible transformation.
wThe
When his hand was replaced in the sling fye made use of the one that remain ed free to shake the doctor's hand warm ly, saying to him with cordiality: "Ac-J the carriage and ran towards me as I cept my most sincere thanks. You have positively cured me. The small remuneration that I offsr yoii is rn no wise proportioned to the service you have rendered me. During the rest of my life I will trv by what meansjl cart Jo discharge my obligation."'
The doctor, however, would not con sent to accept the thousand florins placed on the table. The stranger on his side refused to take them back, but seeing that the doctor was beginning to grow angry, he begged that be would bestow them on some hospital, and....so took his leave. £t' y,
The doctor informed several of his colleagues of this singular case, and each formed a different opinion on the subject without, however, any of them being able to give a plausible explanation. Towards the end of a month.JDr. K. received a letter dated from his patient's residence. He opened it. It was closely written, and he saw by the signature that his patient had written it with his own hand, from which he concluded that the pain had not returned, for if it had he ould hardly have held a pen.
The letter ran as follows: Mv DEMI DOCTOR: I do wish that either you or medical science should be left in doubt as to the mystery of the strange disease which will soon bring me to my grave—and even elsewhere. "I am about to describe to vou the origin of this terrible malady, it broke out a week ago, and I can struggle against it no longer. At the present moment I can only manage to trace these lines by placing on the sensitive part a piece of lighted tinder, to serve as a cataplasm. As long as the tinder burns I do not feel the other pain—and it is as nothing in comparison. "Six months ago I was still a very happy man. I lived, without care, on my income. I was on friendly terms with all the world, and took pleasure in everything that can interest a man of thirtyfive. I had married a year ago, married for love, a most beautiful young girl, of cultivated mind and with the best heart in the world, who had been companion to a certain Countess, my neighbor. My wife had no fortune, and the loye she had for me was not only gratitude, but also the genuine affection of a child. Six months passed in 6uch a way that the morrow always seimed to ire happier than the eve. If sometimes I was obliged t® go to Pesth and leave my home for a day my wife had not a moments peace. She would come two miles bn the road to meet me. If I was belat6id she would stav awake all night waiting for me, and if, bv dint of entreaty, she was prevailed upon to go and see her former mistress, who wa6 still very fond of her, no power on earth could keep her there more than half a day, and even then her regrets for my absence put the others out of temper. Her fondness for me went so far as to make her give up dancing, so as not to be obliged to put her hand into a straneer'S* and nothing caused her jsuch grave aisplesure as the compliments she was apt to receive. In a word, I had for my wife an innocent child, who had. no thought but for me, and who would confess her dreams to me as enornous crimes ®f she had not dreampt of me. "One day I know not what demon whispered in my ear, 'Supposing this were only dissimulation?' Men are mad enough to torment themselves in the midst of the greatest happiness. "My wife had a work-table, the drawer of which she kept carefully locked. I had noticed this several times. She never forgot the key and never left the drawer open. "The question rap in my head: 'What can she be hiding from me there?' I had taken leave of my senses. I no longer believed in the innocence of her face or in the purity of her eyes, in her caresses or in her kisses. Supoose all that were nothing but hypocrisy "One morning the countess came again to fetch her, and after much entreaty *uc ceeded in deciding her to spend the day with her. Our estates were some miles apart, and I promised my wife to go and join her "As soon a# the earriage had left the court-yard I gathered together all the keys in the house and tried them in the lock of the little drawer. One ot them opened it. I felt like a man committing his first crime. I wa6! a thief about to surprise the secrets of a feeble woman My hands trembled as I drew from outtke drawer, pruderitly, carefully, one by one, the objects contained therein, so that no Confusion should betray that a strange hand had ransacked, them. My breast heaved I was well nigh suffocated Behold, suddenly, beneath amass of lice, I had placed my hand on a packet of letters! I felt as if a flash of lightning had passed from my head to my heart. Alas! one glance told me what these letters wete!. They were love-letters!
packet was tied by a pink ribbon
with a silver edge. *A« I touched the rib ton the thought occurred to me: I« this righ'? Is this work worthy of an honest mar To steal the secrets of a wctaoen! Storets which b«long to the time when she was a young girl! Can I ask her to render an account of the thoughts she had before she belonged to me? Can I be jealous of a time when she did not know me? Who cculd suspect her of a fault? Who? I was ba$e enough to do so, and the devil again whispered in my ear: "Supposing that these letters were'of a time when! had already aright to all her thoughts, aright to be jealous even of her dreams when she was already mine?' I untied the ribbon. No one" saw me. There was not even a mirror in the room to make me blush for myself. I opened one letter, then another, and read them to.he end.' "Ohf what a fearful hour that was for me I What did those letters contain?
1
*. ^4 THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
The vitfest betrayel of which a'man nas ever yet the victim and they .were wittten by one of my most irifuisatei friends! And in what a train! what passion! what certainty this love being shared! How he snoke of secrecy! Whatcouncels he lavished on the art of deceiving a hu&band! and all these letters were of a time when I was married and perfectly happy! Shall I tell you what I felt? Imagine the intoxication caused by a deadly poison, I drank deeply of that poison. I read all the the letters all. Then I refolded them, retied the ribbon, replaced the ftiujk.et and shut the drawer. 1 knew that if I did not go for her at 12 o'clock she would come back from the Countess' in the evening. And so it happened. She go*, down hastil from
stood waiting for her on the steps. She kissed me with extreme tenderness, and seemed to be very glad to be with me again. I let nothing be seen on my face. We talked, we supped together and then retired to our separate bed-room. I did not close my eyes. Wide awake, I counted every hour. When the clock struck a quarter pa6t midnight I got up and pasted into her bed-room. There was the be.anttiful blonde head buried in the white pillows. It is thus that angels are depicted in the midst of white clouds. What a frightful lie was this on the part of nature, vice with a lace of such innocence! My resolution was taken. 1 had the stubbornuess of the madman haunted by a fixed idea. The poison had corroded my whole soul. "I p'aced my right hand gently under her throat and hastily strangled her. She opened for one moment her large dark eyes, looked at me with astonishment, then closed them and died. She died without struggling against me, as if falling asleep. She was never angry with me, not eyen when I killed her. One drop of blood fell from her mouth on the back of my hand. You know I did not perceive it until the next day, when it had dried. We buried her without any one suspecting the truth. I lived there in complete solitude who was there to control my actions? She had ,neither relatnesor protectors to qik-stion me on the subject and I designedly put efl writing to my friends, so that aone of th°m could arrive in time. "On coming back from the vault I did not feel the slightest weight on my conscience. I had been cruel, but she deserved it. I did not hate her I could forget her I hardly thought about it. Never did a man commit a murder with less remorse than I. "On my return, I found in the chateau the Countes* so often mentioned. My measures had been so well taken that she also arrived too late for the funeral. She seemed much agitated on seeing me. Terror, sympathy, grief—I know not what—made her speak 60 confusedly that I could not understand what she said to console me. "Did I ever listen to her? What need had I consolation? I was not sorrowstricken. Finally she took me familiarly by the hand, and said in a low voice that hhe was obliged to confide to me a secret, and that she counted on my honor as a noble-man not to abuse it. She had given to my wife to keep for her a package of letters that she could not keep herself, and she begged of me to give them back to her. While sh© was speaking I felt several times that I shivered from head to foot. With apparent coldness I questioned her on the contents of these letters. At this question the lady started and re plied with indignation. "Sir, your wife was more generous than you. When she took charge of those letters she did not ask me their contents. She even gave me her word never to look at them, and I am convinced that she never even glanced a' them. Her was a noble soul, and she wculd haves disdained to break in secret her given word." 'It is well,, I replied. 'How shall I recognize the package?' 'It was tied by a pink ribbon with a silver edge.' 'I will go and search for it.' "I took my wife's keys and began to search for the packe although I knew where it was, I pretended to have some difficulty in finding it. 'Is it this? I said, handing it to the Countess. "'Yes, yes! see, the knot I rrtld'e is still there. She never touched it.' "I did not dare to lift my eyes to her. I feared lest she should read in them that I had undone it, and that I had undone something else besides. I took leave of her hastily she got into her carriage and drove ofE Poor woman, she had her excuse. Her husband was brutal and dissipated. If 1 had been like him I should have deserved a wife like her. Oh! but my wife! Her heart was innocent, her soul angelic. She loved her husband even in the moment when her husband killed her. I do not know what I did during the first hours that followed. When I came back to the consciousness of the horrible reality I was in the vault, beside the coffin. I saw the lid siowly raised and the dead woman within rose noiselessly before me. I was stretched, stiff and stark, beside the coffin,,one hand on its edge, and the other beneath her head. ,, The lips cf the corpse were white one, drop of blood hung from them. She bent slowly toward me, opened her eyes as when I murdered her, and kissed my right, £and. The drop of blood fell again on my flesji her eyes shut once more, she fell back on her cold pillow and the coffin closed over her dead body. "A short time after I was was awakened by a pain as sharp as that produced by a scorpion's sting. I rushed, into the open air. It was early moaning. No one.saw me. The drop of blood has disappeared there was no outward sign of the pain, and yet the spot where the blood had fallen burned as through being eaten away by a corroding poison The pain gave., me no respite,, and increased from hour to hour. I could sleep sometimes, but even then I never lost consciousness of my suffering. There was no one to whom I could make complaint, and for, that matter there was no one who would have believed myE story. You have been witness to the 'intensity of my suffering, and you know how much jrour operation relieved me. But as soon as the wound heals the pain comes back. It has come now for the third time, and I have no longer the strength to struggle against. In an hour I shall be dead. One thought consoles me—as she has evenged herself on me in this world, she will, ^perhaps, for-
VL:. 4
•?fr r— gf^B me in the next. I think you. for yoar good office. May God reward you for them!" 'X, j||
A few days- after newspapers bf Sz —recorded that one of our richest land ed proprietors had blow out his brains. Some attribute the suicide to grief at his wife's death others who were better informed, to an incurable wound. Those who knew best said he was a monomaniac, and his wound, which could not be cured, existed only in his imagination.
OiTTERY
S
S A E A O IT The Kentucky State lottery is drawn in pursuance of an act at the Gen era! Assembly of the State of Kentucky
For the Benefit of
Educational Institutions.
'5
I Mil!
If
i'f *fi
FI NTOTHE PUBLIC, The undersigned own exclusively ev ery lottery grant in the state of Kentucky. and every drawing, circular, notice or advertisement not signed with our firm name relates to a lottery eithi not drawn at all, or if drawn, it is so done unlawfully and in violation of the la of the state and the decision of the courts. .. SIMMONS & DICKINSON,
Managers and Owners.
Covington, Ky.» Aug. iS, 1879.
-Il"
THE
sIS
Next Drawing Takes Place
September 16,1879
The Three First Capital Prizes: $15,000 FOR $1
$8,000 $5,00C:
.H
F03 $| FOR $|
Tickets^ (1*
-. r-
4 ^FULL SCHEME:
1 Prize of *15,000 ts '.....$15,000 1 Prize of 8,000 is 8,000 1 Prize of 5,00J is 6,000 2 Prizes of 2,500 are 8,OJ0 2 Prizes of 1,000 are. 3,000 10 Prizes of 500 ar*s 6,0 0 10 Prizes of 100 are 5,000 100 Prizes of 60 are 5.O00 200 Priz3sof 25are 6.000 500 Priz *s of 10 are 5,000 1,000 Prizes of 5 arc 5,000 27 Aproxim ition Prizes am'llng 2,925
18M Frizes amounting to $87,925 Club rates upon application. Address ail uftlers to our Western Agents.
RIORK1S RICIflOXD, C'oiriHgton, Ky,
Or to our General E is tern Agents, WIL.LIA.mSOX ft CO. 599 BroaJway, New Tort. List of drawings published in the New Yor* Herald, Sun, Staa a Zaltung, Philadelphia Bflcorti, Philadelphia Sunday Tispatch. and Louisville Commercial. All out-of-town ticket liler# arc ma rod a copy of the offliiil list as soon as receive'!.
The next following drawing September 80th, 1870.
Wanieif^at once Good, Reliable Agents In Every Town. Address Williamson 7k C".
Authorized by the Commonwealth of Ky
3L2t3i=
Popular Drawing of the
So&ao&vd<li Distribution Imw j, At Macauley's Theatre,
In the City of Louisville, on
PriZeS
WESTBM
Bre&ch-I,OMiing%tiftt Gun*, Gnu. tB to
SIM.
1 1
S E E E 3 0 1 8 7 9
Drawings, never postponed, occur :regu larly on the last day of every month (Sundays excepted), and will be supervised by men of undoubted character and standing, and ticket-holders, agents and clubs are respectfully requested to send on representatives vt Itn proper credentials to examine into the ^rawing.
A New Era in the History of Lotteries.
Every ticket Ider can be his own supervisor call out his number and see it placed in the wheel.
The management call attention to the grand opportunity presented of^obtainlng for only 92, any of
THE FOLLOWING PHIZES. 1 Prize... fSO.OOC 1 Prize 10,«* 1 Prize #,000 10 Prizes $1,000 each lr^oc 20 Prize* 8500 each 10,000 KO Prizes $100 each.... 10,000 200 Prizes GO each 10,000 600 Prizes 20each 13,000 1000 Prizes 10 each........... 10.00C 9 Prizes 800 each. Approximation
Prizes VW 9 Prizes 200 cach, Approximation Prizes 1,*» 9 Prizee ICQ each. Approximation
Single
800
ywuPrizea, $112,40b Whole Tickets $8. Half Tickets, $1. IT Tickets,$50. 65TIo:*v^ $100.
All applies ion for club rates should bo made to the home office.
Full 1'st of drawing published in Louisville Courier-Journal and Hew York Herald, and mailed to all ticket-holders. For tickets and Information address T. J. COMUKSFOKli Seo'y, Courier-Joums' ".ouisvnlt Ky.
Gunn,
FOR
fi to |20.
N SCILLANEOUS ADVERTISEMENTS
•s Attentioffl
J. F. KOEDEL,
whose grocery ?s situated on the corner of First and Ohio streets, is supplied jtfcl ust the goods you want and he soils hem on terms to please you. Ka as
SALT MEAT8, STAPLE GROCERIES, FANCY GROCER: S'
QUEENS WARE,
and a general line of desirable good Cash paid for country. produce.
ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned administratrix of thb estate of Jonathan Smith, deceased, will on the 35th day of September, 1879, bet wees the hours of 10 o'clock A. M. and 4 o'clock p. M. of said day, at the court house ddCR in the city of T'erre Haute, Indiana, sell for the highest and best offer the following described real estate in Vigo County, Indiana, to-wit:
The east half (J$) of the soir.heas quarter of section eight (S), township ten (10), range nine. (9) west, except twenty -two acres heretofore set of to the widow.
TERMS OF SALE: One third purchase money, cash in hand, balance in nine and eighteen months, with interest secured by mortgage on land,
CORNELIA J. SMITH,
At
Administratrix.'11
CATALOGUES
o/'the 14th 'Annual Fair and Industrial Exhibition of the •Vigo AgricuituralJSoiciety,
are out and can be had by calling on the officers or coming to this office. A splendid list of premiums is offered and the programme includes many attractions.
NOTICE TO HEIRS OF PETITION TO SELL REAL ESTATE,
1
State of Indiana,) Vige County.
Notice is hereby given that Amanda A. Morvill, Administratrix of the estate of Carlton A. Goodwin, deceased, has filed her petition to sell the real estate of the decedent, his personal property being insufficient to pay hii debts and that said petition will be heard at the next term ol the Vigo Circuit Court.
Dated this 9th day of Aug., 1879. Test: JOHN K. DURKAST, Clerk. Scott & Scott, Attys.
APPLICATION FOB LICENSE. Notice is hereby given, that I will apply the Board of Commissioners of ^o county, Indiana, at their *ep'ember term, lor a license tj sell "intoxicating liquors" in a less quantity than a quart at a time, wii the prirllege of allowing the same to bs UranK on my prem.ses, lor one year. My place of business and the premises wbereou da id liquors ar3 to be sold and drank, are located on lot number (9) nine, in Mrs. Burt's subdivision of the east part of lit N'».' (1) one, in Raymonu's subdivision of the north we«S quarter Oi) 01 section twenty-seven (27) Town 114) twelve, range (.9) nine west, the same being on the corner of Thirteenth and Poplar itreets, in the city of Tcrre Haute, in Harrison township, in Vigocountv, Indiana.
APPLICATION FOB LICENSE. .Notice Is hereby given that I will apply to the Board of Commissioners of Vigo x.ounty Indiana, at their September tjrm, for license to sell "intoxicating liquors" in a less quantity than a quart at a time, witb the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on my premises for one year.1 -Mj place of business an«l the premises whereon said liquors are to be sold and drank, are located on the south side of Ohio street, ns tween Second and Third in lot 146, number £08 in the Third Ward, in Terre Haute, in Harrison township, Vigo County, Indiana.
WjC jdEIHsDL.
NOTICE TO HEIRS OF PETITION TO SELL RKAL ESTATE. Notice is hereby given that ]ohn W. Davis, Administrator de bonis non, of the estate of Isaac Evans, deceased, his personal property being insufficient to pay his debts and that said petition will be heard on the 13th day of October, 1879, at the September term of the Vigo circuit court, 1879
July 22d,1879.
Double Bbflrf
Rlflea, S8 tt
pt. B*voW«r, fl to|2S. 8«oa stamp for Price Uat Quit WBTIM Ova Wouts, Pittsburgh, H. 19* Agent* wanted in every
ASK
WILSON 4 MeCALLAY'S "HAPPY THOUGHT' WAVE-LINE
Y0UR
EALEft
^PLU& TOBACCO Best Chew ln The ttarket EVERYWHERE.
*mFAT?! DR. KE A No. 178 Sortfc Clark StrwuCUogo, i* treaties Private, Ritnn, Chroaie aad'
Jonas Strouse.
Dealer in
Groceries and Provisions. Liquors, Cigars and Tobacco^, Cornel of Second and Main streets,
'V
3
Pimm.
(Miaal incapacity,) Fcaah Obtain, ate. Cotuoltailoe, partoaallT or by letter, Mft. 6reaabaokT3HabaM,teeta. riaaatilfiaratad boak astaat, MS PS*aa, port-paH, |L the oaty phyiidu ia uta city wfco
tTDr,
s'flc
Terre Haute, Ino.
Highest Cash Price Paid fer Wool
APPLICATION rOK LICENSE. Notice hereby given, that I will apply to the Board of CoiaulMiokeri of Vigo county. Indiana, as their September term, lot a license to sell "Intoxicating liquors" in a less quantity than a quart at a time, witfc the ur.vltege of allowing the same to drank on my premises, for one year. »y place of business and tbepremises whereon said liquors are to be soil inu drank, are located on lot number 14, in Centrenile, Pier* son township, Vigo County,
Indiana.
MILNatfc GOSNELL.
Farmer*' Boot and Shoe Store.
Bros.
Boats and Sfroes. 206 Main ^reet, oppo*ite Publicsinare. (Three doors *ast cf Third.) Terre Hante. Ind.
TEAS.
Afresh stock just received winch I offei at extremely low figures. J. R. CHAMBKS. 9f -vlt. -i. •r:-
MiSCELLAIttOUS ADVERTISEMENT
PBOVEBBS.
PBOVEBBS, "$500 will be paid for a case that Hop Bitters will not cure orhelp.,x
"For sinking spells, fits, dizziness, palpitation and low spirits, rely on Hop Bitten."
"Bead of rocure ters. and nSe Hop! and you will oe strong healthy and happy.'*
'"The greatest aptlzer, stomach, lood and liver regu-
petizer,
blood ai later—Hop Bitters.'1
Hop Bjpfters builds
up, strengthens and cures continually from the Ant dose."
you
Ladies, do to oe strong,
want
Pair skin, rosy
cheeks and the sweetest breath in Hop Bitters."
healthy and beautifiur Then use Hop Bitters.
"Kidney and Urinary complaints of all kinds permanently oured by Hop Bitters/
ten. Law
Sour stomachjslck headache and dizziness,Hop Bitters cures with a few doses."
yers, Editors, Bankers and Ladles need Hop Bitters daily."
"Hop Bitters has restored to sobriety and health, perfect wredv from intemperanee."
"TakeHop Bitters three times a day and you will have no doctor hills to pay."
CURE YOURSELF!
Dr. Bohtonnn'i "Vegetable CirmllrV ii warranted to per. nuHMtly cure *11 iiaihn* of .SpenultorrhM or Seailnal Wedwew, Oeaeral Dehlllty, liHlnn. etc., and rettorea "Laal Power,"• and brinn bark the "Voatkfhl Vigor" f* thoM who have destroyed it o/iexual ezce«M( or
CTII prae
tlcet, from two to sewn weeki' time. Thlt remedy, which ta* been oaed by Dr. Bahamian In hia private practice fbr over thirty rear*, wai never known to fail in curing even the
WOHLST CASES.
It givea vitality and lmparti energy
with wonderful elftct to triote middle-aged men who feel a weakneai bej~wd their yeara It* invigorating properties are felt at once. Young men suffering from the consequence* of that dreadfully destructive habit of Self-Abuae can uae this medicine with the aiturance of a tpcedy and PIMiKEKT ears. The patient Mini strength anJ elasticity of spirits at once.cs It act* directly on the part* affected a* a aoothing and tailing tonio ana anOCrne to the relaxed semiu.1l vesicles and irritated ducts, imparting power and tone aad r«*toring (hem to their natural state, the same a* if the baneful habit had never been indulged In. The ingredients arc simple production* of nature—bark*, roots, h«rb« etc.. and area specific for the above di*ea*e*. •3TPrice, Five Dollar*, sent with full direction*, etr., to any addre**. For rale only at Dr. C. A. Bohannan's office, No. ffll North Fifth street, between Washington avenue aud Green street, Pt. Louis, Mo. Established in 1837.
SJ-Dr. "TreallM on Speelal Diseases," which give* clear delineation of the nature, caosrs, symptoms, means ot curcjeu-., ol hVfltlLIM. MiHlXAl, WEAKSESS,ETC.,seal FUEE to any address upon receipt of one stamp.
Ill Bill AVA Book of
nearly
DNKIBHIi
800
psges
numerous engravings re
HIM IIIII HUE
veals secrets which the
a marriedandthoiecontent* PMinrTPpliliniiMrristeshould know
ArlinP I
^%How
to
%#kVlllB I
cure diseases. Ilund-
%wred
Of
Recipes. Sent securely
•ealed-torSOeents [money ornostago stamps.] Address fir C-XBOUAMMAM S3 IK.
Fifth Stunt. St.
Looia.
GRAY'S SPECIFIC MEDICINE.
TRADE MARicTh® TRADE MARK. 1 Kern
An unfailing cure for Seminal Weakness, Spermatorrhea, Impoten ev, and all Dls-
Before Taking^^^ After Taking. quenceof 8eIf-Abuse ae l.^os of Memory, Tniversal Latitude, P«'" in tho Baclr, Pimness of Vision, PrfuisUir»j Old Age, and many other Diseasos that .lend to Ins-tnity or Consumption and a Per ma*'ire Grave.
J&9*Full particulars In f»ur nainphlet, which we desire to send free by mail to 'vorvone. J£^The dpociflu Me-iloinu Is doMbyall druggists at fl p** packn^, »Jx packages for ?5. or will be sent, frtw by mall en xiay^t 01 the inpney by adarcHiing
11
1
The Gray Medicine Co.
No. 8 Mechanic's Block. Detroit, Micr, Sold in Terre Haute, by Gulick #c R»rry, Wholesale and retail sgents and.by drugsts evetyw here.
fSTERB ROOK'S
t'. AriOARD
/LIABLE
CHARLES F.ORT a.
SYPHILIS,
JOHN K. DURKAN, Clerk.
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLE MENT OF ESTATE, Notice is hereby given that the under-, signed adminiitrator of the estate ot Richard Rtdford, deceased, will present his accounts for final settlement at the next September term of the Vigo Circuit Court. LEMUEL STUTHARD, ..Administrator.
FOR SALE
BY ALL STATIONERS
ti&TERBROOK STEEL PEN CO. Works: Camden. N. J. New York.
DISPENSARY,.MADISON
201
SO. CLiU ST., IllCjtflO, (IL.
DM, C. BIGELOW,
'Who has been lancer engsited In the tre«S '.o«otor»llfcFXCAlana
so toM btubels Cons 40 to
timojtic
100 luih. per acre.
NoSlMunra BMMM. Goodclimate, pure water,, fine school*^ churches,
at
Dise^
1 .Uian any other pbvstciaa in CHICAGO.
MHOuniEl, (.'IJEBI,
STaitTCBK, OUCiUTIS
HESMA, an swrearisl sflections of the ibroat. skin
or
lion«s(
treated with anparalelled ruueess, on latest mientiBs priaoipta* In hair the osnal time, safalr. rrivately. SPIHIATOKIUKKA, SUCAL orsurnr and laPOTE*tr, as the result of art* abase or sexual excesse* hi maturer yean, or other oaose% whleh prudaoe Mm of the following effects: Nervonsnesat seminal emissions, debility, dimness cf sight, defective mm* iiry, pimples on the face, aversion to society, loss of SIXTH power, etc.. rendering MARMAOB IKTIiePia, ase forma, oenliy cured. Pamhlet (36 pages) raatlnc to the above, sent la aeaMaarelonw, for two 3-coot stamps. Consultation free aad iKMnDmlili Rooms separate for ladles and gentlamen,
MARRIAGE GUIDE. OR SEXUAL PATH0L©GV. This Interqstlat work of TWO •CKVRIB lsMB ctas fLLCSTKAVIRO evwythlng on the surest ar too geoeratiTf "srgans that Is worth linowlo*. a«il mash that la not gabilshes a tut tber work. MUCK rim
CZITS, an*
tf
lAIb
On the Kansas
Pacific
Railway. 3,000,000 Acres for Sale
in
the
GOLDEN BELT.
11
O E S
Md good'soe'etyTiRaTlro«l and market facilities excellent Map* and fbil Information FRKK. Address tm.MOHK.l.aud Cummi^tiioiier.^aliua, Kinsaj.
Dr.A.G.OLIN,
i08 Sor.th Clark Street, hlrsyo, (20 gears' ex
JSerron debility, 1-oases hj night er dajr, the rs salt of self-abuse In yoctli, Kxreases in sastarei years saytmoJileof the OeneratlreOrfans frois any raise PKRMA5ESTJ.Y CUBED, special a» tentlon to Diseases of Females. Weikaeas, lqsi of p^salen. Sterility, etc. All confidential aaj honorable. No mercury ased. "finldf to Health" 64pp,2stamps "HarnaceGlide" IV6tpM60ets
Onr «ipertly^ Bltwtrsted dhtalogne of Band and Omhwtal of the most elessaS iostrnmenu ianse, and a variety of inferm*Bon btrtUmUm to
Bur, MSStoto
listen
frtmp. aai certain relief fo* all Female Weakaess. MeasliMirwsiiassiisiils aad Irrer ilsSK by Dr. Olla's Ceto brsSad rseals mis. Prep*/*
LADIES
tar D*. Osaora, So. Clwft SL, FSst^Caa a«t ATI ,in. StOOfsrM. S«W
ttfltntlflfld invested in Wall St. Stocks makes iPlU IwiplUUU.fortunea.eyyysftonth. BooksenS free everything. Ad'ress BAXTER
