Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 25 December 1879 — Page 6

•THE WORLD" BALLADS,

One Pair or, A Day's Journey in the "Wilds of the Honeymoon.

4 N W Thou

and X.—A

Morning Song to Constancy.

*The wind that lifts the morning mist,.. And wakens up the daisies, ,. .u: Till ail the daJsici have been kist

Upon their dainty (aces Till all the daisies have been kist, And blush beneath the lifting mist, To see the sun come winking up,

Come laughing in their faces— Oh, what a revel has the wind Among the dainty daisies

My love, the lOTVthat lores like this Can scarcely last the morning. It'sdifferent,Susan,when we kiss, it

All interruption scorning It'# different, Susan, when we kiss Like this, and this, and this, and this*—

II it benight or morning. 2. "We Twain Aj.one.—A Love Rong for Lunch Time. The gentle air is heavy with the sun,

Beloved one

The laboring day has stopped to breathe awhile, The shadow* all have halted on the lawn,

The summer morning's gone, The drooping flowers already long for night. Say—Shall we take a bite?

Say, Shall we smile?

Say, gentle Susan, will you come and eat? For Phillis neat Has spread tuc checkered cloth and ponreft the wine. Ito, there's the soup, and here are swoons for two-

More than enough. For you Cold fowl for uic cold mutton boiled. Tie right.

How is your appetite? Oh, arink to mine!

Sometimes I think that I could sit and cat— E'en at thy feetTill hungry Time had swallowed up my years, And sure, substantial lunch at ore for two

When one of us is you,

The other I, is Paradise for both. So we renew our troth. What, Susan, tears?

Ton tliink 1 eat too much to love too well? Why see! Farewell Ixrfd mutton, farewell seup, farewell the wine! 1 may be crumby but I am sincere -1

I kiss away that tear.

Tood iu its place is very well, but naught To me, if I am not Forever thine!

8. Us Two.—An Evening Hymn. Now take the weary world into thine arms, Soft mother night, dear, faithful mother night

LaHghlng, we left thee' for the morning's charms, ftor vagrant loves enkindled by the light.

Long has been the day, the glowing, golden day, Rose at morn, aud told at noon, but best a4 evealway: Life must fa Je, love must Wli¥eil', wei'e it always dayTake us then and hide us, dear, grateful mother night. ,t„

Dearer lsve far of thy embrace is born, lMep-bosomed mother, cool slumber-breatli-ingnight,

Than from boyish kisses of the laughing morn. Or the strong, hot fervor of the noonday bright.

Morn and noon have gone for Susan and for me, Breakfast, lunch and dinner we have followed up with tea. Now aweary for thy shado ive turn we both to thee— Sake us in thine arms and hide us, gentle mother night. i'

Susan, here, 1 half asleep I'm yawning, too Pitiful great mother, abounding mother

5

night,

Laptts two up tenderly for eight houis or no: With thy gray forgetfulness seal up our sight

Just us alone, only the two, us twain Truants we may turn when the morning comes again. But we're aw-yaw-awfully fond of thee till then, De-yee-ee yee-a\v yee-ah-aw-oh-h-h mother night!

4. H*

and

Sub

or,

They.—A. Cry la the Night.

Singular time of day, i. »r Night of the soul of the night, ., What is it proper to say?

How Bhall 1 sing ttee aright?

My

9unan awakes me dvmandinR a lay— Tirelay! That shall suit like the others the hour of the day,

Singular hour, three A.M.! Tra la-lai ee tec Tirelay!

UJK.:

Characterlstical hour, -What are you like Let me sec, Gorgons, or anything, lower

I—rather think not. Dear me!

O Susan, O Susan, what kind of a lay— Tirelay JM you fancy you'd get at this time of the day

Thissiugular hour, three

.A.M.? Tra la lai ee tee Tirelay

A.M. Tra la lai ee tee Tirelay

I Noises.

The sun may come and turn and go, But naught to us his warning* He'll leave or find us hand in hancl

:h-

"i*# Curtain.

•Tennyson.—The author desires to give all reasonable credit.

MUSICAL AND DRAMATICAL NOTES. Mary Anderson is now playing at Cleveland.-

It is said that Mme. Gerster is offered $2,500 a night in St. Petersburg. It is rumored that Clara Louise Kellogg. now in Parisj contemplates marriage.

The Weathersby-Goodwin troupe begins a week's engagement at Cincinnati Monday.

The drama that Car'.atti Palti didn't drink is liable t9 cost the Post-Dispatch something. /. t: j.*,

Adelaide Niellson closes a week's engagement at McVicker's theatre, Chicago, to-night.

Madame Nilsson, Faure & Lorrain, of the Opera, will sing in opera at Monaco, the season to begin Jan. 24, 1880. Jk

Verdi is going to Paris td direct the rehearsals of "Aida," which is to be brought out at the Opera in February. "Oberon" was recently revived at Her Majesty's Theatre, in London, with Pappenheim and Fancelli in the principal roles. t- -y

Sotheftt'ivill play & wfeek at Cincinnati beginning the 26th inst. Thence he will go to St. Louis and Chicago, and then to California, where he will play for six weeks.

To-night Lotta concludes a week'b engagement at the Olympic Theatre, St. Louis. She has appeared in the Little Detective and Zip, enjoying a very successful season.

Sir Julius Benedict, 75 years of age, is about to complete the century by taking a young wife of 25 or so. She is attractive, highly cultivated, clever and an excellent musician.

Mr. Maratzek's physician declares his patient broken down by anxiety, care and ill-fortune but his mental condition i6 not impaired and it is hoped he will be able to be about in a few days. "Richard the Third," as an opera, is the latest effort to set Shakespeare to music. The composer is Signor CaTiepa, and the librettist Fulvia Fulgonio, and the opera was produced at Milan with considerable success. ,»• J.-• -V v,' 'X/V.

The musical club, of Cincinnati, has decided to celebrate the 1 ooth anniversary of the birth of Beethoven, on the evening of the 17 of December, by a recital of a programme from the master's works, and an informal reception at the rooms of the club.

There is one individual in New York City—known to the members of a certain company of Pinafore performers as 10, from the seat which he alwaj occupies—who has. by actual count, witnessed eighty-eight performances of this piece.

It is the general impr«ssion that there will be a strike of the piano rqanufactories in the near future, probably about the 1st of January. It is thought they will strike tor a 20 per cent advance in v.*ages, and a reduction of time from ten to eight hours.

A writer who knows Lecocq, the composer, says that he is able to write at any time, or any place, the best music. "Many of his operas have been jotted during his railway journeys, and I have known him to write in a restaurant while a it in or is or to

It is difficult to predict what will be the result of Carlotti Patti's suit against the Post Dispatch. The members of her company, so far as they have testified, give her a good character and it will probably be hard for the Post-Dispatch to show that Carlotta was ever on a 8pfee.

Mr. Max Strakosch's season in New Orleans opened brilliantly, the advance sale of subscriptions for the season having been unprecedentedly large. All through the West the musical critics spoke most kindly of Mr. Strakosch, and especially well of Madame Theresa Singer.

The Weathersby-Goodwin troupe open at Pikes Opera House, Cincinnati, Monday, for aweekrs engagement.

What poems mean by "a lone farewell" is the sort of farewell Ole Bull bids to the public. It takes him thirty years to bid it, and then he returns to fiddle once more by general request.

The Orphan's Club gave their first concert of the eighth season on the 6th, speaking ef which the Musical and Dramatic Times says: The gentlemen were assisted by Miss Fanny Kellogg, of Boston. who 6ang charmingly Rode's Variations, and songs by Abt. Adams and Taubert. The ooncert was a very agreeable one and gave great pleasure.

Maurice Dengrement, the twelve-year-old boy .whose playing ot the Mendelssohn violin concerto at a recent Crystal Palace concert took all London by storm, is said to be coming to this country next year. Nothing like his performance liad been heard since Vieuxtemp6' debut in the same piece and the same place 25 years before. His phographs show him a charming-looking little fellow in Knickerbockers, with a refined, intelligent and sympathetic face, and bushy, wavy hair.

1

•"1X9

I'm a poet, 1 own it, but now You have cornered your poet, sure, If you don't let a poet sleep, how

Can his vgor poetic endure

Uiut you kick him andwakehim andcall for a lay— Tirelay 1 jAt this beastly, unusual aud dumb hour at day,

(S^O-vt

& t-

This villainous hour, three ,1 A.M. Tra la lai ee tee Tirelay! ..

O Sleep, lady, sleep some more Let me out of this painful fix, No, pray do not poke me atfour—

I might manage an epode on six.

.Ah, you weep! Well yeu may. Your de mand for a lay Tirelay

Was a sin—There get out!—at this .hour of theday. •s Don't you wake toe Igatn at Ih'refe

iV'

1

V,

$

*.•

C*1 4

The organ which is now building for the Stewart Cathedral, at Garden City, L. I., is in several respects one of the most remarkable instruments in the world. It will be placed in four different parts of the buildin|, the organist sitting at a keyboard in the chancel and playing all four parts at once by means of electrical connections. There is also an echo organ in the roof, which can also be played from the chancel, and the chime of bells in the tower will at times lend its aid to the organ in the same way.

ANEW MUSICAL PAPER.

The opening number of the Indianapolis musical World is out, and presents a-good appearance. It is the on'v musical weekly published west of New York, and is one of the three in the United States. It is to be devoted to the interest of music, art, the drama,. society and literature, andj if the first number is a

THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY*

fair specimen, it promises to be a decided succes. Its typography is very neat, and the cover is embellished with a fine picture of Marie Roze. Each succeeding number will have a picture of some distinguished artist. W. L. Allen is editor, and H. A. Harmever proprietor of the World. \y histle us something old, yon know! 3is

Fucker your lips with th8 old time whist And whistle the Jigs of the long ago, Or the old hornpipes that you used to whist—

Some old, old tune that we oft averred Was a little the oldest thing we'd heard Since the "bob-tailed nag was a frisky colt," In the babbling

diyt'St

Old "Ben Bolt."

Whistle us something old and graySome toothless tune of the bygone yearsSome balu old song that limps to-day,

With a walking-stick, this vale of tears. Whistle a stave of the good old days £re the fur stood up in a thousand wava

On the listener's pelt as he ripped and tore. And dlddle-dee-blank-blanked "Pinafore."

IRVING AND ELLEN TERRY. An enthusiastic admirer of Irving's acting, especially in "Hamlet," and of Ellen Terry's Ophelia, writes with something of unnecessary fullness about a particular, but by no means an important point in the play. Still the perfection of the minor touching goes far toward the making of the beauty of the whole. The correspondent says: "Nothing more lovely has ever been seen than the 'business' of Miss Terry and Mr. Irving in the play seen at the words: 'Hamlet—Is this a prologue or the poesy of a ring?' 'Ophelia—!Tis brief, my lord.' "'Hamlet—As woman's love.' "Here Ophelia drops her fan of peacock feathers, and covering her face with her hands, weeps. Hamlet, seeing the fan drop, clutches at it, apparently at first because he can use it to hide his fiercely rising emotion from the King but remembering himself he raises himself on his elbow and offers the fan with most courteous and graceful gesture to Ophelia. He sees that she is crying, and then for a brief moment he gazes earnestly at her bent head and flowing golden hair, realizing the effect of his thoughtless words on her gentle nature. Then the progress of the 'mouse-trap' play recalls him to his thoughts of revenge, and swiftly he passes from the tender, yearning, remorseful lover to the tiger-like avenger of blood. This is to my mind, and I have seen 'Hamlet' at the Lyceum many times—the loveliest rendering of any portion of the play. And it is also skillful, for Hamlet retains possession of the fan all through the 6cene, and when he comes to the lines screamed out in the frenzy of triumph: 'j "For thou dostknow, O Damon dear !,

This realm dismantled was Of Jove himself and now reigns here A very, very—pcaeock.' He pauses at Jvery' for a simile, and then, suddenly catching sight of the fan in his hand, the word peacock comes in with most powerful and startling appositeness. It is a touch of comedy which comes as a most refreshing reaction from the terrific climax of the play-scene. It is in such touches that the thoroughly artistic and sympathetic style of Mr. Irving is revealed."—[Chicago Times.

GENERAL AND PERSONAL. Mr. Walt Whitman is ill in St. Louis— too ill to travel. When he is well enough to leave the house he either goes down to the river to "loaf and invite his soul," or visits a neighoring Kindergarten, where the children gather merrily about him to beg for stories.

At the reinterment, on Saturday, of the remains of John Randolph, of Roanoke, one of the pall-bearers. Judge Hunter Marshall, was a survivor of those who witnessed Randolph's first burial under the pine tree at Roanoke in 1833. Judge Marshall was then a child, taken by his father to the funeral.

It is stated that, at the lowest calculation, between $20,000,000 and $30,000,000 have been sent across the water annually by Irish workingmen and women of the United States to relieve the poverty of their distressed relatives in "ould Ireland," and this money has gone to fill the pockets of Irish landlords.

A Tribune subscriber living in Newtown, Penn., noticing a paragraph in relation to cylindrical railway cars,says: "Some 25 yeara ago a Maryland man conceived this same idea. He had his car made, and loaded it with bituminous coal, on the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad. It came through all right, only that, when it was opened at Baltimore, the coal was an impalpable powder. It never made its second trip."—[N. Y. Tribune.

A Paris schoolgirl, the daughter of a baker, was extremely studious, and had been working hard to pass an examination. Her parents insisted upon her following their trade—a course to which she was averse—and told her that she could not go to school any longer. One morning a fortnight ago she rose suddenly in school and asked the lady principal to kiss her, as she was going away. The teacher told her to remain until the close of school, but the girl persisted in going. Half an hour after she was found in a closest, shot through the heart, with a revolver lying by her $ide.

I, OBITUARY. Mrs. Kate Barry, formerly housekeeper in the National Hotel, of this city, died last Friday at South Bend, Ind., after an illness of only about ten days, from inflammation ot the bowels. Mrs. Barry was at the time of her death acting as the housekeeper in the Oliver House, at South Bend.

She was aged about thirty-five years. She had a thorough knowledge of her business and had become almost indispensable, on account of the able management of the affairs in her department. She was quiet and lady-like in her appearance and deportment, and a true, earnest woman in the 'best sense of the expression. She will be buried at Cincinnati.

Jaurif.t

& Co. will keep open this

evening and every evening nut week until 10 o'clock, in order to give every one an opportunity to look at the display of holiday goods, for which there is a great rush*.* a-,-"

THE NEGRO IMPORTATION TO INDIANA. -From Saturday's Daily.

Negro importation to Indiana is a thing about which people ia Terre Haute have heard, but concerning which they have had no personal experience. It is no longer a mere matter of outside interest affecting other counties in the State, but of no local concern. The train on the T. H. & I. road that leaves Indianapolis at 4 o'clock p.

m.

brought over here yester­

day afternoon a number of colored immigrants, and more are to follow. It has been said that they wete chiefly women and children. This party consisted of ten men, two women and four children.

This particular party came from Rocky Mount, a little town in Nash County, North Carolina, on the line of the Wilmington & Weldon railroad. They were well dressed and a good looking crowd. They were laborers, chiefly on farms, and few, if any of them, could read or write.

Two of them were interviewed by the writer of this article who happened to be coming over on the same train. The two who were talked to were father and son, the former a man of about fifty years of age and with a good honest face the latter, a young man, as black as the ace of spades, but intelligent looking. The elder man's name is Warren Thorn. He stated that he had owned a farm of 78 acres near Rocky Mount. It was mostly cleared ground. His team consisted of a horse and a steer. He had some farm implements and some stock. He raised cotton and corn, of the former a bag to the acre he said, meaning, as he said on further inquiry, a bale of 400 pounds. He estimated corn by the barrel, saying that'he raised from five to eight barreU to the acre, which would be from twenty-five to forty bushels to the acre. He would seem to have been living reasonably well.

When asked about his politics, he said he had always voted the Republican ticket. When asked if he was ever bulldozed, he didn't kn6w what the word meant, never having heard it. In response to the inquiries if he had ever been prevented from voting, or if the Ku Klux had ever interfered with him, he said: "Lor' no, Boss. 1 always voted when I wanted to and jus' how I wanted to. There ain't no Ku Klux there."

He was asked what^induced him to leave a home where he was doing so well. His answer is worth remembering. He said a colored man from up here—meaning Indiana—came through his country some time* ago, and told them that men to work were wanted mighty bad in Indiana that there wasn't near enough, and that they could get big wages. So he concluded he would come.

Query. Has anybody heard here about laborers being scarce, work mighty plenty," and wages high in Indiana

He sold his farm to the man he bought it from, getting the same price he had given for it. For his 78 acres he received $313.00, being just what he gave for it, and just what he can buy it back for, as the man who sold it to him, who was, as he sa\s, his good friend, and who advised him not to le&ve, told him when he came away. This wouid indicate that land, and good land, too, judging from what he raised on it, is much cheaper in North Carolina than in Indiana. He sold his stock and farming implements, paid all his debts, and left with a little over three hundred dollars. He had with him a wife, three small children and the grown son already mentioned.

Under the impression that their transportation here was furnished by some organization, the interviewer questioned him closely, but he said that he and all the others, so far as he knew, paid their own way. He himself had paid fifteen dollars fare for each member of his family from his old home to Indianapolis, for which place they had started. The others were all from near his place.

He stated that he intended buying a farm, and when asked how much money he had to buy a farm, said a little less than two hundred dollars. He was the wealty man of the party, the others having little or nothing.

The younger man, his son, left a job as a section hand on the Wilmington & Weldon Railroad, where he was getting $10 a month and board and lodging, which is about equivalent to $1.25 a day without board and lodging. A gieat many laborers in Indiana would be glad to get that much. He expects to get a better job at railroading than that he left.

Neither of these men knew the name of the place to which they were coming, but recognized the name of Terre Haute when mentioned. They said a man met them in Indianapolis, and sent them over here, and a man was to meet them at "Tarry Hut."

The writer waited in the car to see the man who would meet them. That man was U. S. Mail Agent Walker,Mr. Turk, of the postoffice, and Mr. Ash, connected by marriage with the postoffice. Mr. Filbcck'i' was not at the depot, the civil service rulrs forbidding government officers from taking part in immigration movements.

Mail Agent Walker told the Gazette man that they had secured a job to work on the Parke County Court House. This was probabh a joke of the facetious Mr. Walker. Besides Parke County is thickly enough settled already. It is only counties like Putnam* Shelby, Vigo, etc that need laborers.

What we mean to say, and what we do say is that the men who, by talse and fraudulent representations, impose upon the credulity of an ignorant and confiding people, them to leave homes where they are needed and where thev are doing remarkably well, and to come here wher^ the labor market is already overstocked are guilty of an infamous outrage not only on laborers here but chiefly on the poor and deluded victims of their unhallowed designs.

This is an interesting question and will be recurred to again several times a day for the next year ot so.

Time

Criristmas

it coming and Kris Kringle is already looking over the new city directory notes so learn where to buy his presents. Old folks who are not waited on by Kris, can find just whot they want in the way of slippers, plain and fancy ladies', misses', and gents' fine boots and shoes at Stein & Heckelsberg's. 421 Main street.^"

New Advertisements. AGOOD

PLAN. Oombl&lac uul antral log msay orden la one mi turn has «vrry of with rktUfnl nuMtnmiit. divided pro rata na Investment* oi *S3 to ),«.M Circular, with full rxpUaatlont how all .1 untwrit !n tork lieallnjp.nuflt-illr**.

LAWS*""" ad Umt, New Torii.

I A N O S

S

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or a

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to •1000|»/^*§&£1™i

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fortunes every month. Books stuit free ex. pls'nlntt everything. Addrcas, BAXTER CO., llaiikere, 17 Wall Street,New York.

30

''ays on 1100 invest-

ed. Official Reports and lnform-

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nDPAIIC New 7 stop organs |46 UnUflllCNenr

13

8t°p

or&Mi only

16 days trial. Cata­

logue FREE. U. 8. PIANO CO. 103 Bleecker street. New York.

Agents Read This.

We wantan agent In this County to whom we will pay a salary of flOO per montb and expenses to sell our wonderful invention. Saxplbfrkx. Address at once

SHERMAN & CO.. Marshall, Michigan.

On 30 Days Trial

We will send our Electro-Voltaic Belts and other Electric Appliances jpoa trial for so days to those suffering from Nervous Debility, Rheumatism, Paralysis or any diseasesof the liver or kidneys, and many other diseases. A Su'e Cure guaranteed or no pay. Address, VOLTAIC BELT CO..

ALL HEALING!' ALL HEALING!!

O INTME N"

This remarkable Ointment contains no Mercurial or other Mineral substance, and nothing can be found in its composition that can injure the tender infant or unduly nfl'ect the aged or infirm. Being a Vegetable Preparation the ALL HEALING OINTMENT will never injure yon. but can be used wltn impunity by ALL, Its healing powers are wonderful, and the great reputation 1' has acquired during Jthe pa 85 years speaks volumes of praise for Its merits. This ointment has the power to cause all external sores, scrofulous humors, cutaneous eruptions, common itch, felon and poisonous wounds to discharge their putrid matter and thorough healing process follows. Burn, a scalds are insanttlyrelieved. Chapped* hands and teet, frosted limbs and chilblains, aru proroptlv cured. Salt rheum barbers itch ring worm, ftc., are speedily eradicated. Asa remedy forMf {IN) Price 25 cents a box. it is a specific laMMHi Sold by all druggists, or mailed free on receipt of 25c. by hALL & RUCKEL. Druggists, 218 Greeuwiiich Street, New York.

Dictator Grant

fand

Farmers Buy

John Deere's Molint

a $

C"CLl11TTSL tO S,

They have received the highest premiums ever given in the United States or Europe for materials and work in Actual Tests, $

C. A. POWER, Agent.

410 and 106 Wst Ma instrt.

Farmers Attention J. F. UOEDL,

whose grocery situated on the corn of First and Ohio streets, is supplied wi ust the goods you want and lie .is hem on terms to please you. H? as ALT MEAT,

TAPLE GROCERIES, FANCY GROCERIES QUEEMSWARE, and a'central line of desirable good-

Cash paid for country

ti

oduce.

CUBEn. A viMfOtKkii«i

79

WARNER'S

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(fbrmerly

Dr.

Craig's Sidney (Sire.)

A vegetable preparation and the

S I N S.HI

I I

sah P|U

Marshall, Mich.

Mc A LISTERS'

mi1

Or the [••ertlirow 6f the Republic in 188V* Thin story was road with deep intorest by manvof the older (Fall River) operatives—[Atlantic Monthly. A startling illustrated pamphlet.-(New York Eve. Express. A master hnnd at startling description*.— National View, Wasnlngton, D. C. A thorough patriot and reformer.—[Chicago Sentinel. Calculated to stir up tbe neople to a true sense of their rights.—[Qriflln Sun, Georgia. Should be read by every working man an4 voter in America.—|New Hayen Daily Union. Takes a look into the future as far as human eyes caa see.—I Boston Times. A soul* riveting story.—| National Monitor, Reading, Pa An extraordinary

iroduetiou.—I Puck. A great work.—(CI veAdvance. ''Ihe prophets of evil have been unusaally cotive. Chief among these is Mr. Samuel Leavltt iNT. Y. Daily Graphic. This [trampj part of the story is exceedinirlv pathetic at times, bnt not strained. —Winsted'Conn) Press. TO p. 40 to 13 pictures by Cusachs. Story written land printed in winter of 1878-9. For sale by all newsdealers, and mailed, postpaid, for 30 cents, by Samuel Leavitt, 5 Worth Street, New York: for many years with the N. Y. World, Triuune and Graphic and editorial (not financial) manager of New York Idvo ate, till its circulation was 700,000. Agents Wanted.

mm

wwy in tne world fbr Brlsfct's DUktMa. aM ALL KMB^" UmT IIHaarj Dleeaaes.

WTTestimonials of the highest order In proof of these statements.

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1

1

SAM B1'" S

where.,

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Ifyne area m«a of twriees^ wwkwed fcy the 1, yoor duties, avoid stlnmlants and on

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take

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pETROLEUM

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tor

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Used aiid 'tpprovea by tae l«adii.s physicians of'to. orne and America.,. The toilet nrtii'tes tiiaao from wire Vaseline—snob as

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tSTERBHOOICS

i1AfiDARD

Plows

ol

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plrtse uame t'us paper

,149 ?»T7in'

APPLICATION FOR LICENSE. Notice is hereby given that I will apply to the Board of Commissioners of Vieo»^)unty, Indiana, at their December tjria, lor a Ucensc sell "intoxicating liquors" in a less quantity than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing the rame to be drank on my premises for one year. My place of business and tne premises whereon said liquors are to he sola and drank, are locate 19 feet and JO inches, off the west side, of lot

in Rose's addition to Torre Haute,

on Main street between Eighth and Ninth, south side, in the Second ward. In the city of Terre Haute, Harrison township, Vigo county, Indiana. if. C. RAFFJCltTY.

Guaranteed I Investments

.By our InsuranceBysUn of Investment* in Stocl Operations we lanin Jpdemnlty firom low.

"Marginal" or "PrlvUe«r plana. Invwtoeali neehred in nuns of 925,00 and

.10-

BY AU STATMMB&

SALE

f&TERBROOK STEEL PEN CO.

Works: Camden. N.

t.

Maw TodL

vVpSowth

WDR.KE

A-H_j

ITS Clark Street. Ch'iijo, 'Hug Private, Nervous, Chroaic

mi

1 Diseuet. bperiuatorrhea, ImpotaMJ^ inrxuAl mraparity,) Female Diteisea, atlb ouuilulm, perioDall* or bjr Utter, Ma 1 Viol, illustrated, CO eta. Fiaert Mla» "••J book esUnt,

53$

j-O:

tngti, port-paid, $1.

fZT Dr. Kean r^e only physician in toe city arfes I e*JV or no fty.

Ail

langaacei spoken.

:za Cii'O jkt'i

Pittsbukgh.Pat

Write for Free Illustrated Catalogue.

ONSUMPTIO

o'sti

N

In cured by titc continued use of OtrnKlCl Tod Liver Oil and Lsfto»Pho»phate

Coca

lime, a cure for Consmnpiioa, ColdvA.«tbma. Bronchitis, and all

aod a vuietyof information invalnable to to

mailed free

l«''

r.VON"

Kcroftuoos

Disease*. Askyotir druggist for Osama9** and take no other. If lie nas not got it.

I will

send six bottles nnvwliere on receipt ol S&.

CHAS. A. OSMUN.

k,13 Seventh Aveaae, New Yerlu

Onr raperbly T!!nstrst«d Catalogue of Band and Orchestral Onttits, containing engravm*'! of the nwst

4 UKA1,Y.1S2B!»"

IMJ

Prewrlplion Free. K«rthesi»wlv

i!Mof

Seminni Weakno.-w. Low of Manhood, and alt diaorders bro'irhton ly indiscretion or pxi-se**. Any I)rofriri*t ha* the inrredfeota. Addrot* DAVIDSON A CO.. 18 Stamu Nt. X. T.

•'.}'i'» Bible CemneaMMi 1

$55.66

c-lU

ff-.

-fir--.easiTS

"'t'f tr.t4-n»UB-r 93.79m.i

Afesta Prtft scr Week nn prove ftor forfeit

ONE

oa.

fioadway, Sit

Yak.

tOUO.

$4 Out."it fre^

lUU KG. EIDEOUT4COT. 21£ tVittoaStl^w

dollar only, for a large chromo and frame at Probtt's.