Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 25 September 1879 — Page 4

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The DAILY GAZETTE is published •very afternoon except Sanday, and

sold

by the carrier at 30c. per fortnight, by mail. $8:00 per year $4.00 for si* months, tS.OOfor three months. THE WEEKLY GAZETTE is issued every Thursday, and contains al. the best matter of the si* daily issues THE WEEKLY GAZETTE is the largest pa:» er printed in Terre Haute, «nd is sold for- One ,cdpy per year, $1.60: si* months, 76c three mouths, 40c. All subscriptions must bo paid iniadvance. No paper discontinued1 until all arrearages tre

jfoid,

unless at,

^e optionoftheiproprietbri, A failure to notify a disCvAtinuaiee at the end of the year will be considered anew n»~ cagement.

Addfeare'all letters: WM. C. BALL & CO. ^GAZETTE. Trre Haut»i$

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25.1879.

NEW VORK seems to be as wild owr the walking match as San Francbsco is over the reception to Hiram Grant. The enthusiasm in both cases oeems «. 'little forced, -with the odds in tavor of "New York.1

J**

THE associated press agent set San Francisco ought to have his head wrapped wltfh an ice p®uKce. He is to© flowery by half in his annewncernenit of the most trivial details of Grant's ckoings-4n San Francisco.

AK alliance both ofFensiveJand defensive's one cf the things which understood a§ having, been^rranged*- (between Gennahy^nd Austria. Acting in odacert'these two powers would be able to oppe with all the rest offfWopfr.

THE preliminary forms in the suit ol Annie Stewart, the fraudulent mediuip, against the GAZETTE aretbeing*irrjmge3. There is a strong -liklihoot) of|^o& than we e^er dreaoied of asserting being,proven against thfc' pimdemontum. The'trial will be interesting at all ever ts

FROM the„way premjnc

OL«9»MANi|-N I ULTO-

"the *nf6s

in which

tea#flo:

wn|ncfcpf, Ml In Tammany are nesenting thealictabioa of Joha Kelly and resigning from th society it looks, no#, as iif John would be compelled either to throw up ithe sponge or support Robinson for Governor.

I T-A

CALL®D-A-Dfe«ifcoGUE%Vil^H^ his Pennsylvania home working at preparation of hi« report showing depressed condition in which he. and his committee lourfd the labor oMhe couritry on their recent tour of investigation. fin

the the

THE arrest of the boy who set fire to the .harn of l^i Jaraes HudiQq, his prompt trial and sentence to. the penitentiary reflects credit on the officers who iftfle the Jitfest ,«nc| pti ali dkhers connected with the case. The authorities are .on the alert, and this species of crime mustaad will be stamped but.

Ti^ npw«rd^en^cncf of whwt^an agreeable thing to f^mers. The foreign demafid'h strong Iftrtteady N*itft nd prospect of dijpini«h(jpyept. It would seeni^wtf thehnagfy felloes bigvk»ico»»ld^ot gft- en wheMvtafl corh'tf aatisfy their app^tHt».t So \Wg M^tAieir mon^f Awfd cut we shall eihdeavef |t supply 4h&s wapU. ..

Tnx longer the appointment of &. Erny to Uie Chief deputyship

jflr? MSS?*,«1H4W apgw.

the bitterness engendered by the long contest oyer the fiif .puted presidency, all classes and condit' ons of men could unite to do honor to a'j officer who has faithfully performed the duties of his high trust and su /rounded himself with the best and mo & honest men in his party'.

IT would seem to be a pity that no owe could be found to take iiarge of the County Clerk^s office, in the absence of the C'jerk, except the chairman of the Republican -County Committee. The men. responsible for this-outrage will be cal'jfed to strict account. Mr. Erney is a good man, and the GAZETTE has rtOthing""against him personally, but the path to preferment in the Democratic p*rty is not through the Republican County Committee. This might as -weH'ke understood now as at any time in the future. "i:

THE GRANT £OOM

Considering the^ftiCtth^ Ittis adminisjtratioa was Kignalizipd by Repeated exposures of corruption amozig liis highest andtnost intimate associates, the easy complaisance with Which the people lend theeVselves to help along the elaborately^ planned triumphal reception of Hiram

Grant at San Francisco isife* humiliating as it is astonishing. Forwtself, theGA'jtr.TTE can not hear 'IRS name pronounced or set it in print without thinking ot Black Friday Fisk, Gould end brother-in-law Corbin without thinking of the Dents, more numerous and, as Kearney would say, more "bloodsuckerous than the locusts of Egypt without remembering Belknap and his rescue from impeachment by the indecent haste with which ihis resignation was accented without reopllecting^Babcock, the private secretary and intimate "Confidential friend of this man, l&p ised -his place to 41reclf the most stupendous conspiracy of modern times $ against the revenues of a government whose employe he was without rememtoeriia# the difficulty with which the pe^fre, «%qd their mo^t honored representatives lft Cbngress suppressed tbejtf^trageous scheme of this man for obtaining possession of Santo

Domingo and its revolutionary politics without remembering Mullett and his manifold methods of plunder without remenob€fri«*g how Secretary Bristow in-

was only retained in -the cabinet because lie dared not dismis#him,and all because this honest- secretary, whose appoint ment Vra9,k was able and honest enough to execute the laws and bring Sieves t%j udgnjggJ^without rpae

lajudem

them,

jtf

County Cietk's office looked at twfewglh DenMoratic-^pectactes the more otpoxious it seems. It should be. under|koo(l once for all tliai tbe pathilo prefj^menl in the Detaacr*tSe: party doea n«A .W through^lt^y ^Repuhllcan cki^M^ing Of ,th« Repttblicfs

O

^TO« J3L.JW. VQOKHEI

THE Okolona Southern States edi+or, who came NoilhronV lecture toiir, has return^Tbome|with t»i^ disgust.? The people did not want td hear his ravings. Democrats loathe him and his audience, seldom over fifty in number, was made up of Republican politicians, who went in on dead-head ti^dfets. The Okolona man, in making his calculations," forgot that each State has an asylum for maniacs, the expense of caring f®r whom is heavy enough without their being asked to support importations.

WE wish it were possible for the committee having in charge the G. A. R. celebration in this city next week to secure the presence here of President Hayes. Laying aside partisanship and

it seems to.ihe GAZETTE as if the people, who assist in these demonstra tiOj^s which ,wily manipulators are getting up to help along a Grant boom, were glprifyingblaoic pages in the country') hretor/ to their shanrie and confusion.

A CURIOUS APPOINTMENT. The GAZETTE has nothing to urge against S/ErneyKp«"«tOn{ilIy. ECaving betij offered the oHief deputyshij) of the CciuVity'Clerk's office,he a*^ted, of course. But when it is remerpbered that

CouAty Cle^ *iPw^CTa%and

:Mt

^a^ra^tK#^«|»p|int

RMMt 4iAcided^ obbo*i«aa tn^- caitdot be tolerated. H# who made the appoint menvas well as th«ee who Urged i|upon him^tlsing the ftovimr which |he fa?t of ti)j^^'baing*~' his bondsmwi gave them possession lof, deserve atodf ^llreceive jthe censure

If there-it no man in the ty competent to be chief Cou^ty^erk's office, then

therire '$$$• the' party comprtent to &!pm|^!6hn liurkin made%a ittpdlit^ieii liAd Patrick Slhannofa wh^ wrce4'

lea%

to

lat&lis

from (dtSt

•menee totiBSpiStoS diy, ^veri^hcrf^nh^mthusiiMm, and listened to Willi attention. Judging from the howl the Republican papers arer setting up All over the Buckeye State, he Is hitting then "where itburts." He will continue in the good ^prk until ^e^ flection. iiJ

ts bi ttei^rcfire and ing Repubyljl

tthnilatofi

:gp4

contributed to tlttf

fund which secured for them a daily organ, without which the party, though possessed of a couple of weeklies, was going to rack and ruin, but with which they are organized arid ready to 4ispute the election next year in both city and coun ty. If his subscription is not yet paid, and whether it is or not we do not know, he |nay ib&e the salary attaching to the office, _J he lias/ now been^ given, to pay it In a word, the democrats art placed'by these meit in the plight of kindly furnishing the enemy with aramunitipn with which to blow them'to piece*. This luch^oor sense that it amounts to treachery and is not to be tolerated There are hundreds of good and true Democrats all over Vigo County, to some one of whom this place ought to be given, and if Mr. Shannon, with the Ledger and S. D. T^fcirjS ofr both of which things he is c^Uailjr the owner, thinks he can cram an appointment of this kind down the throats of the Democrats, he is vastly mistaken.

THAT VAULT ORDINANCE. An alleged newspaper called the Courier, wot content with the castigation ad" ministered to it by Councilman Schloss^ viciously attacks the City Council in general and Mayor Havens in particular for passing an ordinance for the cleaning of vaults and water closets. It is perhaps unnecessary to particularize the items its attack which, when they are pertinent, are felse. The ordinance itself has been pablished the GAZETTE, and can be read by all citizens. It is the result of th$ investigation which grew out" of ihp fel&rming oases of typhoid.fever in Tetre Haute a few, weeks sgo.. Everybody was alarmed at the spread of disease only a little less deadly than the

Kourge which has laid waste Memphis *nd other Southern cities. The Board o1 Health instituted a thorough investigation and made an elaborate and able repert. 1 lie Council deliberated on the matter carefully and faithfully 46 ever

body knew except the able editors of the

:aBd

'Sri

how Jie »ia»J ^jSidiersii^l S(ftrth

his

JCt-iaisK jaw ^^dknembering worthiest men in his party, and hia intimacy with the Murpheys, Delanos. Rolxsons and whoever else ^as identified with.machine politics, and tposfeased, of ^a damaged reputation. .Remembering .r these thingvt»ittrfcg able^ fapt to^ forget

kee

SOMEWHA'i*' PERSONAL. Within the past two years two Saturday evening papeES'have.been started in Tcrre JIaute, Fir.dfng the wprld a cold andj cheerless place, .they have been unhappy, vety utilup?}/: These, interesting tions to journalism are named re» 8pe tively the Courier'and^ the Ledger. Spring from the loins of destitiftijri

Jy

'T11.vi.tJ i" '.Vt Hott THE TERRE HAtJTli WEEKLY GAZETTS.

kone

could

be found who i^ould undertake it. According to the opinion of the Board of Health and the Council it will remove a source of disease and do it at a6 little expense, more thoroughly and with less offense than another system they could devise* II the .. Coi:nc|l an^1^ the Board ol Health lifter all their investigation, last summer into: the causes of the tpphoid fever in, our midst, after, ascertaining a noisome soutjlfc' of th^ disease and knowing a remedy likely to he effective, had quietly folded theit' hands,'u.

./done nothing^ their

negligence would have been criminal, 4nd they wouldfbei unwbrthy of the offices they were,^cbtftpetent:*} fill. T£iey*did theirferybest thing .they knew'then or knoWiuiow, and: did it promptly. If ti$e shall suggest .*my changes in the ordi-1 nante, either in the way ofadditions* to 'subtractions from it, body can be 'e|y trusted to att£g4 tfj? iV which has shown,its finest 4esi^ ,to ma|e *nd fvCwean anfwalthfu^ |ii

they have pip6d to the

tune tnu denunciation and despa'r" The editors pf.th^rti both.are doubtful ad dit:ons bf recertt date

to the

population of

the place. .^Schooled in tbe

art

of chang­

ing Itheir resj^enfcds'from practice therean, ihey have conducted their alleged newspaper on the theory, that the tworld it wide and that when they have run themselves out here they can bunt new pastures.'! as liiibre. The origin of each paper is uuique^nHis leryices no longer being needed on tbe Miil,

where he was employed for a time, this man Hardesty started the Courier to kill tht&ptifav. H£' is still engaged in that task, with decisional interruptjons, devoted to the adjustment of difficulties with constables and creditors. His maerial not being all oh hand he was enibl^d to get out the first issue of his »a|er by borrowing froin the GAZETTE And had not the decency to defer until a later issue an infamous attack on the pro* ietors of thid paper which had not the it of being true. It occurred to u« at time that he was a gcod man not to hate

anything to do with, and that pqlicy«S been pursued, The Ledger ij the. d^fljrid, ^reck of old Journaf, without,theAssociated jpress Tranchise which gav^f it-Value. Gaily from foreign parts came jo ung man named Terry, to run the Journal, And he and Eli Jones, Of tnalodrous memory, did run it. They ran it in a way which causes a shudder to thrill the frame of any man who ran for office on the Democratic ticket ^during, that period. By threats and blackmail: and tears and groans the candidal* of the party and others interested in. the success of the ticket were mulcted in several thousacd dollars. And yet the shameless thine amounted to nothhig, Was a byeword, and a scoff, and a stench in the nostrils ot all decent people and injured the party more than it ever helped it. Its unpaid printers were objects of sympathy. Though claiming in that day, with a mendacity unparalleled, that it had an immense subscription list, when the GAZETTE administered on its subscribers leas than three hundred were found, a.. I large portion of whom were dead-heads. Jones went to a Kentucky jaU and Terry started

Ledger, which from the first has been the impudent and brazen organ of a very select cotei ie, which has tried to ruin the Democratic party when they could not, as they cannot, control it.

Hating the GAZETTE because it was successful these two papers have permit" ted no opportunity for venting their spleen to pass unimproved. Mistaking the silence of contempt for fear of their yelping they have disported themselves continually. We shall now turn and kick the curs that have been biting at ou hecl$. Editing theif paper with a pair of shears, getting their news at second or third hand, lacking the respect of decent people because, of their senseless attacks on their betters, whining for

11

the

It was not written by Mayor Havens as tbe Courier 6ays, and he has no interest in it as the same unveracious authority intimates. Thfe apparatus is expensive, and unless some guarantee of business could be given no

fcUDtle

intellect, and was a skillful archi­

tect' of panics Through 9 \\ild««C8* of wrifakletv al'hejjjrew Old, hisf kderr steel gray eye6 twinkled

With

4compelled

'the vitality of

0ne^and"20- '-Mdssonier should have paiiited him. ^His faccwas odd and even grotesque. His sense 01 humor was very and itt' h&t wildest freaiks when pedri of thousands of dollars hung a ttrfttrawttry-irtort crr-Tr-pungent epigram would start him in a roar of laughter His "nicknames wefe' numSr* ousr-the "Old Man," "Uncle Daniel," therUrsa Ma^W,'* the "Old Bear.'4 He was| never idle, but always seemed intent on ^1 job. No game Was too small for his huntings As a^'elwiddler" Mr. Drew wa^ a great success.** The opeWlor- who hasithe,/neans apd .understands that rare art i^tJiftraddle, Qr/.behig. apd "shprt" at the same time, is a genius. Mr -IDrew was) a'genius. For 30 and tnore rears hr beared the ^rrwrket but although there wals great prosperity in the Country and ttll his predictions Went asYray, |ie acciAifalated an immense fortune, and. was for a generation the feature, of the "street." For eight years, dating from 1829, Mr. Drew was the .head and'front pf, the* Erie railway.. Knowledge of Erie's exact position was power, .and Mr. JDrew availed himself freely onit. Knowing the sad fate of that greit company he speculated large* ly in its stock. For good and abundant security lie loaned it money.. Ii he wished the price of Erie to goup he loaned it money. It he wished it to decline he refused money. He played with it as a cat idoes with a mouse. In March i860, Erie Was quoted at 8 and iol Mr. rew held an enormous block of the stock and by judicious representations jent ihe pricejup to 42, at which he sold, realizing nearly two millions of dollars. In 1864 Adrian Jerome cornered Mr. Drew in Hhrletn stock, and the "Old Man" lost a quarter ot a million* In the historicer battle between Vanderbilt and Goald, Drew was an interested party, and joined with Gould infthe Jersey' City campaign against the commodore. He was frighttened, however, stole a march on his aft sociates, nfi»de a trip from Jersey City to see Vanderbilt, struck hands with him and

a Compromise. Toledo

and Wabash stock was one of his favorites and He endeavored' to manipulate it into public1 confidence. He utterly failed to do s$, and saffltl$dd,06o in tt& effflrt. A subsequent attempt to cornel* Southwestern. cdst him another $500,006. As he grew older he seemed to have faith irk luck He rarely invested in solid stocks, but operated enormously in fancies. His fondness for cliques and corners led him into excesses of marginal development,

anticipated

Ue

but flWrWttlblly. All that was known was that he had met .'heavy losses, and refused to accept a "put" which he had sold and had turned against him. Fortu natiely. soon after the death of his part ner, Robinson, Mr. Drew transferred a great deaiot .property to his son so that he was still a very rich man, though technically heowced nothing.

During *11 these years Mr. Drew had consistently kept up his interest in the Methodist church, and always gave liberally to its representatives. He was a trustee in the Mulberry Street church, and also in a church near his country home. He built the edifice at a cost of $6,000 and gave it an income of |i,ooo a year. He donated $250,000 to the Drew Seminary in one sum, and con tinned his benefactions later. He .vas a trustee, patron and giver in the Weslyan University, a trustee in the Concord Biblical Institute, and a trustee in the Troy Uni-

-#T

sujporl

where they have given no assistance, and seeking to reap what they have not sown, they deserve the contempt they have al ready received.

DANIEL DREW.

Mr. Drew, one of the monarchs of Wall street, died very suddenly in tfew

Cpurier and Ledger, who never are pref- York City last week, as was announced ent at those meetings exce,rt to get a biVl allowed. This ordinance i6 the outgrowth of that discussion. It cloeely resembles the one which Indianapolis has and which the Board of Health in that city says works like a charm. For1 Wayne and Richmond, Ind., we -elieve' also have similar ordinances. When this one was presented to the Council it was endorsed by the Board of Health, which had given the subject patient study.

briefly by telegraph. The New York Herald, in a long obituary notice of the famous speculator, say6: By nature Mr. Drew was a gambler," his fancies bein stocks, and from 1S42 until 1S76 he deal in them purely, as a speculator, in this he differed from Vanderbilt, who was far superior in many ways. Drew controlled no long lines of travel. In his hands were no reins of mastery. The interests of transportation were nothing to him, and the opening of new lands in no way interested him. When a middle aged mar, he entered the arena in which bulls and bears made sport. None of the sinoe famous names in the stock market had! been heard there. Jay Gould was not yet born. The baby whistle of Jim Fisk'had not been blown. The Jeromes, Hatches, Lock woods, and Wood waijds, of 30 years later, had not made their virgin plunge into the vortex of speculationr in the field, as then seen, Jacob Little reigned supreme, and for 10 years thereafter he and.Dijew fought for the vantage. Mr. Drew rarely bought to hoick .There again he differed from Vanderbilt. In 1855 he indorsed acceptances of the Erie road to the amount of j$5o?,ooo, and .the public suddenly wolje up to the fact of bis great wealth. In 1S57 he repeated his helpfulness, tins time to the amount of $1,500,000, and its the country was then in the throes of a general bankruptcy his action was lookt'd on as that of a lunatic. Ashrewd observer Oride said of Vanderbilt that as a bull1 "he traded on tbe hopes of men,", whereas Drew, he continued, 'tits! a bear trades"on financial lea* and' apprehension." Ln his, monster .dealings Nir. Drew seethed? at timei to be utterly unsdhipulO'US. IIeT hfid a

versity. His name was honored in all church gatherings, and he was always looked to for generous contributions to further the cause."

Many characteristic anecdotes are told of Daniel Drew, but they con.sv chiefly in records of His rxpertness in misleading other operators, the sangfroid with which he heard of the loss or gain of a million dollars, quaint illustrations that fell from his lips, and the singular lack of ral appreciation of a man of his profusions and unbounded liberality in relig'ous directions. He was a very strange man. Had he been an educated person he might have become a great man. He was) an inconoclast rattier tban a builder. He used his power for his personal advantage, as did Vanderbilt, but, unlike Vantjer-bilt-f-save in the instance of the steamers on the Hudson—he did nothing to further human progress or secure the .benefit of the general public. His family and friends were devotedly attached to him, and he to them. He refused them nothing. Indeed, it always seemed as if he reserved his home and his chuich to receivje all the benefit that his fellow citizens might have fairly expected from him. His origin was humble, his rise gradual, his progress in later life rapid, his fall precipitate and sensational. After that, although never forgotten or entin ly estranged from the "street," he was ratqer a memory than a fact.:^

THE DEATH OF GEN. HOOD. From tbe New York Son, 8ept. SI.-1 The General asked how long he had to live. The Doctor replied that he could not tell, but it would be well to make every preparation that with an old soldier like him the thought of death would not disturb him to which the General said: "No you are right about that let Mr. Dow be sent for*"

During the administration of the sacrament he folded his arms, and seemed to follow the service closely, no muimur or groan escaping him.

Shortly after this he sank rapidly, and became delirious, but not violently so-. Onie or twice he attempted to raise" him1self in the bed, but was easily .controlled* Only once did his mind seem to revert to the days of war. In a tone ot oomr rnand he exclaimed: "I want those stores taken from my own commissary." Just before his death, and while Gen. Ogden waa holding his hands, he lifted himself up, threw his bead round, and seemed to i,e gazing into the distance with flashing eyA, and such an expression as he must have worn when, in the heat of some desperate engagement, he looked back for his old brigade with which to lead a forlorn hope.

On the second dav he called the Doctor to him and said: doctor if you find you canpot wiri the fight, let me go off easily."'

When Gen. Ogden went in to see him, he «aid, in answer to an inquiry as to how he felt, "God's will Redone and not mine What Gpd does if right,general."

Sinking back exhausted resumed the |ieavy breathing and moaning which indicates, inevitably, hear dissolution. At thfs timerhe frequently Called on "his warm friend! Col. Sa'rbueT WdfreP, ^ho, from first to last, wag &fth hftn and'con* starltly watched by his bedside.'

At twenty-five miHuteft before 4 o'clock, on Saturday mornirig, the 31st of Augutii, a convulsiv^ shudder, his spirit s*ed awav.

A BARTElfDER'S 'LEtf Tllll *0 HIB SWEETHEART.

•r viTimi

Mb fll-MtfU'-rM' to* irttlflttstflc 'BI WRITING LIOW, my lovely Bne, •$: B^eide a smoking toddy, 'o say tiiat 1 belong to you

In spirit and in body. '•"H yearn to praise your eyes so fair, Tbose orbs as brown as sherry, nd tell ydh that your jrippl1iig'Maii|ftj' Hath hues:like "rom|aod Jeiry?{ '1 jfour wltLpo^s up like ginger it -"1 'Tie varied as a tulip in. And yourdellcioas breath, my'deaif,3-

Is sweater than a Julep. ,4,'b Tour seraph, voiee is like the cllpjk Of forty silver slttaers, And It is Jjiit as soan^, I thiol!,

As Angostura bitters. You know I've sworn to love you long, Bat words we will not bandy I simply state that leve ts strong,

Yes, quite a*strong as brandy.,

1'Take

pity on the flattering heart Your eyes bavefllled with gssbes cannot stand sly Cupid's dart As I stand whiskey smashes. .i Ltfeuntome without thy face lias neither taste nor odor, jxis tame,"'and flat, and commonplace,

Like seltxer or plaua soda.

Alas! I dream of you so much, I think of you so madly, :ff' ^baM begin to lose my touch,

Andmixmysoektallstadlj

\. 1 make my aangarees so week. That they would veif qnaier Last night 1 let a beer keg leak,*

*V

t.:

And lost my silver "shaker'" *t I baveforgottea all the laws, 1 I'm always making botches I serve my cobblers without straws^,'

And nutmeg** say "Scotches.?'. I, i. &MU-. In fact.

If byiyioar proud disdain* 1

I'm Left wltnotat a gnider, soon Will lose inr n^ighty braifi, And serre "stone fence" for older! k*or grim despair saCh disHlal night

Comes down upon me thicker, And oh. nwwet^ee, At yiu don't ^rritsI'll have to take to liquor! tcnnJoiqis..

RE-yNION NOTES.

apt. Dreusicke to-dmjr has a fofce of men at work at the Frir Grounds building the fort and new amphitheatre,

The prospects at present are that we are to bave little brass music at the reunion. This, however will not be the fault of the entire music committee, but of one or two persons. If a brass band should be employed, it should be the beat to be had and should be reasonably well paid.

Jerry Hedden will have charge of the carriage park in the grove just opposite the Fair Grounds, and will provide two gates, hitching posts, rbpes, sink a well, and keep a guard to care for all teams left in his charge, as no teams are to be permitted in the fair grounds daring the reunion. This will be a very useful accommodation. t,

MISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISEMENTS

SAN FORD'S

RADICAL CURE

$

For

CATARRH

la of irveloas efficacy in the tri'iUwent et 8ori lullameS. Bp) or Mattery "Eyet UlreraHori and lnf^an^umo, of the Ear, Vinlent Pains, Neuralgia,' Hinging

N is I a a Sore Throat. Uteerated Sore Throwts FJoogatlnn otthn Uvula, Swellinjf of th Tonsil*, Tickling Cough anil Bleeding of th** T.nngs Nervcns Heauche, Dizziness, Cloud Meinorv, LOM of ServOu? Force, D*»urcs«u»n of SBtrita. «iil aftections itf tho N-rvee, whether catarrhal origin omct. subdues Infl immi'loD, Ul-era-lon, and Norvons Bxciteraw wherever existing, an«l haute rapidly ouroi the above diseases. I A WONDERFUL .CURE. Of Caturrh and Sympathetic Affections.

After Hfiup the Hret bottle I began to lmprove rapidly. Tae first dose seem tl to rl®ai*my.ht alas I had not known it ta be for year.j. It seemed gradually to nrrest the ilischargcx. It stopped mv couirti in threedays. Bv using it as a gargle I «ean reduced tbe inflammation and gwellintr of my: tonsils, so that ther soon ce'tsed to treubieino. The soreness a truss my ohest disappeared, thebuzzinar noises in my head ceased, my senses ot hearing and ot seeing /. were complctelv restored, and every symptom of diseasu that h«d reduced me to tae verge of the grave l» tappaaredby the use of Sanford's Eadlcal Onre for Catarrh.

GEO. F.DIN9MORE. is

Boston, Feb. 33. It instently frees tbe Na«sl Passages of foul muoous accumulations, restores the penses of taste and siue^l, leaving the Head deodorized, clear and open, the breatn sweet, and every sense in a grateful an 1 soothed condition.

Price, with improved Inhaler, ITreatlie an«l Directions, II 00 Sold by all druggists throughout the United States and Canada.

qOLL Ihls

VOLTAIC ELECTRIC

The Greatest Medical Wonder cf Thie||Century."

Pain and tfeaknaea cannot ,ezfst S where they are applied. Thev vitalize, strengthen, ana rapport*Weak and Painful Farts? they curetnronio Aliments and diseases of tbe Lfvir and Kidney* they absorb Poisons from the Blood and thas prevent iCevcr anl Agile aii'i Malarial and Contagions Diw*asesv tkey stimulate the Stomach and Qigestire •jrgkns wnen placed oyer th« pit •*f tbe stomach, amf preheat 1 i-psi Bit 10ns Colic, Ofamps and Painit Thuy have dove more-for suffering humanity than all the other plasters, .linlmenta. lotions aad olectne appllaocesever conwete 1.

ui

PRICE 25 CENTS.

b4 'f.

aeefnt and obtain iV eetrleity fhuMafallibty cures. uggist*.

'Kleatric Plaster,, a 1 Igeniratlng a genrtl rlelty thiit'l

Ue 1 fir

Collins'- 'VoititU

combination capable of arid cjdtlnuotis current Sold by

ju? tr,4 .*.

B^virtn^ of a vebditioul exoonai Execution issued- from the- Vigo Circut o'tivt, to vertd,in me directed and del

1 favor of, ». 1',

Worrell and against Hattie Cassad?,, I am ordered to tsefl Hattie Cassidy's un llvi'ici fiit^rest in and to the following described real estate, aituated In.VigoCounty, Indiana to-wit:

The northwest qaartsr l^J of sectiafri fifteen) IW1 towns Hpiltvca it*U'north ran^e teo I lul wesi. Also.the easo half [it] at tne souttiwertt quartek'/klof section Bitten 101 township eiev^n fllf north',' range ton 10 west, aa&alao the south haif .i^ of the soutn west fractional section fourteen II, townsnip eleven IJ nor'h. ran^re ten 19 wear in saiq county and ante, ana on BATU®DAT, 9tl 11TH DAY OF OCTO-/J-'i BB3, 1879, b'tWCen the hetir ^of 10 e'olock 'A:1 ith n1 4 o'CI^ok P.M. of M»IDday, at tbe Cgowt i-Ionftt doop jo Terre JUaute, I will off -r t^. rents and profits of the, '«bove discVlMd real estate,' together wltpall privileges and appnrtanences to tae samOrbeiongiDg, for a term not exceeding i^ven years, to,the hlr -esc bidder Wr cajb, »n failure to rcarlz s-a stim suffi'Ment-' nd costs, !ee simple,

to »iiusfjr said esponns exocution Jar I wall then and thsrs offer the fee in and to aaidireal estate, to tub highest bidder for caih «o *MiSfy the same.

This SMh day of September, IS7I /»i LOU£HAY, Sheriff. Jdbn T. Wiley, Agent. Printer's fee, to.

llKRIFF'S SALS.

S

By v'rtvepf a venditioni exponas execution issu*l from the Vigo dircnit Court, to me dlxedted and delivered it» favor of

-lot

BER, 1879,

between f.ehonrsof 10 o'clock a. h. and 4 o'clock r. M, of said da at tucVmai/ -House dour in Terre ttaute, I will tffer the rentj and proftte of this tlevcffbed' tate,.tvg«tberwiih Mil priv.legea, and appurtenances to the same belonging, for a Mr in not exceeding seven years, »the higheu btdder for cssh. aid upen lailnre to realwn Mini jnifiolentlo satisfy said venditioct exponas execution and costs, 1 will Uhen ami ihere off^r the lee tfimple, in and zo said rdsl estate^ to tbe highest bidder for essh tosatjsfy the same* t,

lon,M^ok laVl», Att'ys. tnurVfee(R. j.

S and toe Counters!

't|d THE TRADE:—The live bnslne^men ot fte day are'starting these eonnters. W» irW the

Originators and headquarters 1 We hiVe the only two KXCLCcivx 5 .and 10 cent lobbing Honses to the U. S. naHsen't for Catalogue and oarticalars.

BUTLBR BROa.,

200 202 Rantfolpb Street Caicvge, Also, Hand 18 Channcy Btfeet, Qstoa.

WANTEDS

ti'j

,l''-

Msttet a OfOver and afatast Obanneey .u Warren, I am ordered to a*il the foliowing y. deseribea real estate, situated in Vigo county.icdlaaS, to-wli:

Lotnurs— thr«e (8) in Cbe subdivision of number fifty-eight sectioa_ six ,r 1)

£amber

fifty-

"I !•.

(18) township, twelve (13) north, ranee nibe (i) west, also, ten (i0) feet off the south ot lot number two (4) in tbe subdivision aninber flftj -eight IMj in section xtof lbtaninber lift)-eight 1681 in section xteen township twelve li2| north, range ni'ie fij*est in Vigo jounty, Indiana,' and on'SATURDAY, th« 11th day of OCTO­

1.

If.

Aovrrx JUn*ra to trodnoeons goods sample. Qooda and ln large d. Will pay salary |7« to |100

per month and expenses, or liberal 00mmissions. Tbts is a rare chance offered to the right party.

Lx BXU.K MAmrrAonmixeCo., R. South Clark Street. a... ... Chicago,IIU:

Ladies will find die largest and best •elected stock of millinery goods at Emil Bauer's establishment, No. 22 south Fourth street. Sign of the big bonnet.