Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 19 August 1880 — Page 8

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 19.1880..

STOCK SPECULATION

John A. Dodge & Co., Bankers and Brokers, 12 Wall Street, New York, buy stock on reasonable margin, and, when desired, will advise when and what to buy. Also Stock Privileges in whicn $25 to $100 can be profitably invested. Oppor tun ties for good profits are constantly •occurinf. Full information CD annlicaion, aw vVeckly Report sent tree.

COMFORT

IB WHAT ALL WHO STOP AT THE BOOTOH HOUSE SECURE. "Jim" Boston, as all his friends ca him, is one of the best hosts any man eve stopped with. He sets a good table, take the best care of .your horse, and charge ou reasonably. When in town stop with at his place on the east side of Fourth, just south of Walnut street.

S

PrrvsiciANs treely prescribe the Food Medicine, "Malt Bitters," because more nourishing, strengthening, and puri fying than all other forms of malt or medicine, while free from the objections urg ed against malt liquors. 3w

GENTLEMEN

Will find that the National House is the nicest plnce in the city to ^et meals. To the traveling public superior attractions in rates, accommodations, and location? are offered.

hunter's Troy Laundry

is in keeping with the importance of a metropolis numbering nearly 30,000 souls. The work is done as nicely as it could be at Troy, N. Y. Work delivered to any part of the city.

A Uara.

To all who are suffering from the erlors and indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, loss of manhood &c., I will send a recipe that will cure you, FREE OF CHARGE. This great remedy was discovered by a missionary in South America. Send a self addressed envelope to the Rev. JOSEPH T. INMAN Station D, New York City.

The Gazette Would Like to Know.

The population of the Sixth wardHow many voters who went there Saturday intending( to reside there have changed their minds.

Dave Phillip's religious predilections, Whether or not the ring 'rules of '09 will govern the Council hereafter.

If "Slim Jim" is going to be made Chief of Police. If Ed. Vandever is now a Republican

The Sixth Ward Election.

The total number of votes qast at the Sixth ward election yesterday was 772. The votes of the candidates were: Dsyvid Phillips 427 Ernest Bleemel .. 345

Phillipp's majority, 82 When the result became known a jollifl cation meeting was held. About 300 men and boys headed by tho McKeen Cadet Band 'marched through the principal streets making the night hideous with their yells. Half the number were drunk and used the most profane and obscene language. Mr. Phillips was serenaded at his house and then joined the procession and came up town. Mail Agent Walker presented him with a bouquet on the corner of Fifth and Main streets. The jollification lasted until a late hour.

ELECTION FIGHTS.

At the Sixth ward election polls yesterday a colored fellow named Nolson Saulters was raising a disturbance when Policeman Walsh interfered. Saulters told the officer that he was not man enough to arrest him, at the same time mating a motion as if to draw a revolver. Walsh caught the fellow when half a dozen colored thugs closed in and were about to jump on the officer when several other policemen arrived and arrested the crew. Postmaster Nick Filbeck followed the party up to the station house and furnished bail for the appearance of the darkies this morning. The cases have been postpone^ until Friday morning.

The notorious ''Slim Jim" jumpedon a fellow at the polls yesterday after having previously announced that he would like to see the policeman who was able to arrest him. "Slimmy," however, found his match in officer Tom Caughlin who marched him off to the Station house in double quick time. Was Jim allowed to remain there long. Ono! Postmaster Nick Filbeck was at the heels of the prisoner and when they got to the Station house he offered bail for McGinley. A few hours afterwards "Slimmy" adressed the Young Men's Republican club along with Mr. Mail Agent Walker.

MY brother traveled through Monroe Co., Ohio, last Fall, and found some of our friends using and recommending the Hamburg Drops very highly. Thi ey said that they would rather be without bread than Hamburg Drops. We procured some, and the remedy proved as recommended. G. H. DIEHL, Mowrystown Ohio.

HOME CIRCLE OF ORIENT.

Prompt Payment of Insurance.

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Mrs. Antonio Swreck, the iady who died last Friday of congestive chills, was the wife of John Swreck, of the Vandalia blacksmith shop. She was a member of Home Circle of Orient, A. O. XJ. W. No. 2, and her husband will receive an insurance from the order in accordance with its present membership which must necessarily be small at present, owing to the fact that the order is new, and can not pay in full. But if it in creases in the future as it has in the past it will soon be able to pay its full insurance off1,000. This lodge stands in the same relation to the A. O. U. W. that the Knights and Ladies of honor does to the Knights of Honor and is intended for the wives sisters and daughters of members of the lodge. It is growing raipdly here and includes in its membership a great many worthy ladies.

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THE

LAKE GENEVA.

•Another oga of the West Added to the Census.

What a Terre Hantaan Thinks of the Place.

LAKE GENEVA, WIS., Aug. 15th 1880.

To the Editors of the Gazette.

I might as well have postmarked this letter Chicago as Lake Geneva for it seems, though about seventy miles.away, but a suburb of of the great city by the lake. Chicago "discovered" this place and con siders it hers by the divine right which kings established. Her citizens, princi pally, people the hotels and it is har capital, almost exclusively, which has built the beautiful country seats that animate the surrounding hills. Of course you hear a good deal of Chicago talk. Even one Chicago man in tho crowd of two hundred persons from other places can silence them all and since the census make St. Louis and Cincinnati people

AS MEEK AS MOSES.

The trains on the Chicago and Northeastern are so fast and the rates so low that people come up hear very frequently, and consider it about as accessible as we do Lake Fluvanna.

When I arrived, two or three weeks ago, it was very cool as Toby Veck would put it, "a long way on the frosty side of cold". But the weather has since moderated.

As more and more people every year are coming to the conclusion that a vacation of a few weeks conduces to their health and increases their capacity fbr hard work, besides being a source of a good deal of pleasure, it may be well to to add a little to

GUIDE BOOK LITERATURE

4

on the subject. I proceed to get thi task religiously off my hands before becoming entangled in other topics or being inveiglea into some sport that would seriously imperil the life of this letter altogether.

4

As intimated before, there is an appar ent newness about this place as a resort. Like a recently introduced protege of society it is anxious to learn but doesn't yet know how to hold its hands. I am willing to admit that this limpid water perhaps reflected the stars on the occasion of that ancient concert when they sang together and these green hills have no uoubt held in their tender embrace this lovely lake from time immemorial tracing their origin back to as remote a time as the greatest mountains in the world. But tor all that the lake was innocent of applause it has been basking in the light of popular approval for only a few years.

The evidences of this are soonest noticed in the hotels. Most of them were built last year and they arc by no means such as will be here next season or, at most, in a short time. The proprietors are perfectl astounded to find their houses overcrowded and yet fully half the people here are members of some of the camping clubs and about a third more are domiciled in private houses. The lake stretches east and west about nine miles when it is srAooth, but, if you are rowing in high wind it seems about twice that distance. Its width varies, but probably averages a mile and its greatest depth is about two hundred feet. The water is remarkably clear and pure and nature in one of her most industrious moods and with an eye, perhaps, to save the future man perspiration, has lined the gracefully curving shores for miles with boulders. There may be handsomer lakes in this great country which yield inexhaustibly more beauty every year as we look for it, but the number is certainly not greater than three or four. Lake Gporge is larger (though Lake Geneva is fully large enough) and is surrounded with higher hills, and Green Lake, nestled in the strong embrace of the grand, romantic Rocky mountains, ten thousand feet above the sea, thrills you with a wilder joy, but Lake Geneva yields the palm to few others. Dozens of beautiful summer residences and among them that of L. Z. Leiter, of the firm of Field & Letter at Chicago, are gracefully situated principally along the north bank where is most fully (.xijuyod a delightful breeze. The smooth mown lawns and brilliant flower beds extend to the water's edge. Picturesque wind mills pump water to keep perpetually green this beautiful grass.

The lake is sometimes at evening almost entirly still." It lies hushed and would seem as inanimate a reflecting surface as-a mirror but for a laughing purling ripple, no deeper than the dimples on a sweet girl's cheek, that gives it life. And then at sunset there appears to be the tenderest communion between this water and the slanting, gorgeously tinted rays. This beauty cannot be compared to anything. It steals into a man's heart and conquers him. To compare it with aught except its own peerless self would be profanation.

The enjoyment of rowing in the evening in this lake grows on a person in intensity. I have never seen it rise to the dignity of a great storm but in such tempests of temper as it has shown it has been a pleasure to be tossed over its angry waves knowing that they will so soon again resume the serenity of sweetnfts of demeanor that most becomes them.

The sporting public wants to know

'i

ABOUT THE FISHING.

Well there are no spiritless fish in the lake. They all cling to life and their native element with such tenacity and a vigor born of clear cold water and a robust constitution that it is "roaring sport" to catch them. The truth must be admitted however that they are not very large although some one caught a twelve pound salmon here not long ago. I have seen some elegant strings of fish—black, and rock bass, perch and pickerel— caught in Delavan lake which is some nine miles from here. Alter such fashions does fortune always recede from us as we approach. I have no doubt once arrived at Delevan a fisherman Would

TKRRB HATTPB WEEKLY GAZK1TK,

extremity to i, womdhear

have to row to its utmost get*those fish and even then. of some still more famous place nine miles further on." It's old, but true that "man never is, but always 'to be blest." Still, all true thin are immemorially old though but late discovered.

We have no distinguished people at our hotel no Narragansett pier Senators, nor vice-Presidents with piscatorial fancies nor foreign ministers. We have nothing to stare at unless it is, perhaps, a newly arrived bridal party from Vienna, but I don't know that there is anything remarkable about them except to use the widow Burdett-Coutts' delighted accounj of hereelf, that they have lately found out "love is just too awfully nice for anything" and wonder they "didn't know it before." As near as I can learn of all of us here "our ancient but ignorable blood has crept through plebeians ever since the flood." It seems a pity to me the musicians who hourly terment us, without apparent let or hindrance, weren't drowned in that flood.

The annoyance, however, does good in wadding us more fully to this Dotmie lassie of a lake.

I have met no Terre Hauteans here. They are all at Waukesha where there isn't anything under the fall of the sun but mineral water and the name, "The Saratoga of the West." Yours,

S. F. B.

ADELAIDE NEILSON.

Her Death Reported in Paris Yesterday

worded, that Adelaide Neilson died suddenly in Paris yesterday. To those who love the drama, the news comcs like a knife-thrust akin to the shock felt when a dear friend and relative is snatched away, but a moment before in health and strength. "None knew her but to love her,

None named her but to praise." A type of all that was lovable in woman with a personal fascination that none who ever met her will be able to forget and over and above that, one of the greatest exponents of a noble art that dramatic history records,—who can forget the witching coquetry and melting pathos of Viola as Neilson painted her, the perfect woman, suffering Imogen, or the living realization of the master's ideal Italian maiden whose name is a synonym for passionate love. If Neilson is dead, "Juliet" is no more.

That Lillian Adelaide Neilson was the greatest actress of her time in Shakspear's younger heroines, can not be questioned. To her undoubted genius is not alone due her wondrous success whereever the English language is understood. With her marvelous beauty, her clear, thinking mind, that found new points where others saw but conventional readings, she had added years of hard experience in that best of training schools, the theater itself.

In England, as in America, she was recognized as the reigning queen of Shakespearian drama but in the former country she only attained that honor after struggling, provincial experiences, that all great actors know. We have seen her here in the zenith of her career, and know nothing of the toiling girl who climbed from the bottom to the highest round of the ladder of fame, unassisted and alone-

That the terrible news of her sudden taking off may be untrue will be the heartfelt wish to-day of all who have ever known or seen her. If she is gone, the tears of thousands will moisten the sod that grows on Juliet's grave.

A Pious Horse Thief.

About midnight last night Policeman Reglein and Merchant Policeman McChesney came across two men on horseback near the National State Bank, on the co-ner of Fifth and Main streets. One of the men immediately gave the rein to his horse and was soon out of sight. McChesney started in pursuit of the flying horseman and the other was nabbed by Reglein.

When the man was searched at the station house one desperate looking horse pistol, two revolvers, a|l silver piece and a volume of Methodist camp meeting songs were found in his possession. He said his name was John Perry and said he lived in Park county for 22 years. Notwithstanding his long stay there John could not tell the name of any of the county officers and had forgotten the name of the street on which he lived. He was remanded for further examination. He is probably a horse thief. McChesney did not succeed in capturing the fellow who escaped.

HEALTHIS WEA LTK.

Dr. E. C. West's Nerve and Brain treat ment: a specific for Hysteria, Dizziness. Convulsion, Nervous Headache, Mental Depression, Loss of Memory, Spermatorrhoea, Impotency, Involuntary Emissions, Premature Old Age, caused by overexertion, self-abuse, or over-indulgence, which lead to miseiy, decay and death. One box will cure recent cases. Each box contains one month's treatment. One dollar a box, or six boxes for five dollars sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. We guarantee six boxes to cure any case With each order received by us for six boxes accompanied by five dollars, we will send the purchaser our written guarantee to return the money if the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees issuedonly when the treatment is ordered direct from us. Address JOHN C. WEST & CO., Sole Proprietors, 181 and 183 W. Madison street, Chicago, 111. Sold by all druggists.

All Persons who Aspire to Beauty

of persons: appearance should I not neglect .hat natural necessity, the hair. Ly many it has been neglected un" il it has grown thin, gray or entirely fallen off. The

LONDON HAD* COLOR RESTORER restores nature's losses and imparts a healthy natural color, thickens thin hair, cures dandruff and all itchy eruptions on the scalp, insuring a luxuriant growth of hair, in its natural color. Ask your druggist for London Hair Restorer, universally used by the fashionable world both at home and abroad. Price, 75 cents. Six bottles, $4. Bun tin & Armstrong, Terre Haute.

Judge Carlton at Greencastle.

AN ELOQUENT EXTRACT FROM HIS KCB

Judge A. B. Carlton spoke to a large audience in Greencastle on last Saturday. He spoke about an-hour-and a-half and was listened to with the closest attention. After discussing the political questions of the, day, he paid a high compliment to Wm. H. English, whom he had known personally for more than a quarter of a century. "Referring to Gen. Hancock, and the manner in which some of the Republican newspapers have attemped to depreciate him, by insinuations that he was "like Gen. Scott,—all fuss and feathers—and "chiefly remarkable on dress parade," the speaker pronounced a eulogy upon Gen. Hancock^s a military man. He said, substantially:

Talk about "Sunday soldiers," an carpet knights," and fuss-and-feathers! Talk about Hancock being only remarkable on "dress parade!" It is not so recorded on the pages of his country's history, from Contreras, Churubusco and Merino del Rey, on the plains of Mexico, to Gettysburg, the Wilderness, Cold-Harbor, and those other world-renowned battles of the rebellion. True, that on dress parade he was a magnificent-looking man,—as magnificent as Marshal Ney or the white-plumed Henry of Navarre. But, in ihe shock of battle he was always at the post of duty and of danger. He was not on dress parade" in those great battles of the war, that are familiar as household words, where blood flowed free as a gushing torrent. He was not a "carpet-knight" at Yorktown, Malvern Hill, Antieiam, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, the Wilderness, Spottsylvania, North Anna, and those other great battles or the war, in which he won by hard fightitag, the name of "Hancock, the Superb."

Gettysburg! Hancock! So long as courage, manhood and patriotism are honored and revered among men, will Gettysburg and Hancock, linked together in immortal fame, go sounding down the corridors of time!

The third of July, 1863! The arena was Gettysburg. The amphitheatre was the whole union of forty millions of people watching with 'bated breath the greatest battle between the greatest armies that had ever met on the continent. For two days the Union army had been driven back, and its line doubled up like an ox-bow. Gen. Reynolds had fallen, and "Hancock, the Superb" was ordered to take the chief command on tlxc field. How nobly and well he did his duty, all the world knows and all the world wonders. In that awfu) crisis,—in those dreadful hours of doubt and anxiety, when the hopes of the Rebellion and the fate of the Union hung in a doubtful balance, Hancock and his brave men snatched victory from the jaws of defeat, and the country was saved. But let us look at this "Dress parade Hancock" just before that renowned charge and repulse. On the night berore the 3d of July he had reconstructed the line of the Union army which ban been broken in many places. On the third day the battle was reopened by the confederates wtth an artillery attack of two-hours-and-a half with one hundred andfifty cannon. Honcock knew what that meant! He knew thaf it was the prelude to a charge all along* the line from the Confederates

Then it was that the superb Hancock went on "dress parade"! Amid this storm of balls and shells and death-shots falling thick and fast as lightnings from the mountain cloud, Hancock rode up and down in front of his lines, for two miles, inspiring confidence in his troops and preparing them for the charge which he knew was coming. Finally the dreadful shock came. Eighteen thousand confederates under Longstrect, the fiower of Lee's army, were hurled against Hancock's line. But the gallant charge was gallantly repulsed and the red field was won, by the "dress parade" Hancock, who fell in the forefront of the battle desperately wounded, reddening the green sward of his native state with as rich and noble blood as was ever shed on battle field.

This just compliment was received by the audience with great satisfaction $nd applause.

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tr

All the meetings were characterized by the deepest interest and these having the conduct of them are full of hope that they may be able to accomplish much.

There seems to be a misapprehension on teh part of some as to the State Holiness association. It is an orginization that has been in existence in the United States for ten or fifteen years, and was formed in this state the past spring. It is made up from all the evangelical chuches, is

non-sectarian,

and is, as its name signi­

fies, simply for the promotion of holiness. The workers in it are men of good standing who are devoting their time and labor to the cause without payment, many of them bearing their own expenses in whole or in part from their own pockets. A gate fee of ten cents is charged for the purpose of defraying the expenses. No charge f6r teams.

The meetings will continue.during the week and it is hoped the deep interest already evinced will be extended so as to insure a large attendance daily and increase the power for good that is being exerted.

BILCTHER BENSON will lecture at Mt. Zion church near Toungstown, Tuesday evening, August 24th. Admission 10 centa

Dog Licenses.

The City Clerk commenced this morning to issue dog licenses. Up to 2 o'clock licenses were granted to the following: Emil Baur, Abe Ravell, Harry Russell, Eugene Duenweg, Mrs. J. Brady, Espanhain & Albrecht, Dr. L. J. Willien (two), and Master Charlie Regan.

V*# I4ti-

CHARTER OAK

COOK STOVE,

For coal, or wood, or both.

LEVEL BEST.

We are sure it pays to do yous "level best" at all times, as whatever is worth doing at all is worth doing well as an illustration, the manufacturers of the fam ous Charter Oak Stoves have always aimed to buy the best material, employ the best workmen, and make the best COOKING STOYE that could be pro duced, and the result is, the CHARTER OAK has attained a popularity unprece dented in the history of stoves,

They are the cheapest to buy,

They are to use, They bake evenly and quickly, Their op8 They are made of best material. They have always a good draft, They roast perfectly, They require but little fuel, They are very low priced, They are easily managed,

uiied to all localities.

Eveiy stove guaranteed to be

Absolutely Perfect!

FOR SALE ONLY BY ISIS

E. L. PROBST

No. 26 South Fouth Street.

tilinois fciaiand Railway The Terre Haute, Dec alur ar.d

No. 2 Peoiia Through Ex

3

PP

THE CAMPMEETIN6.

A large Attendance and Successul Meeting at the Fair Grounds Yesterday.

5

There was a large attendance at the fair grounds yesterday and a series of very successful meetings was held, commencing with a testimony meeting at 8 in the morning which was followed by preaching at 10:30 by Rev. M. L. Haney, of Bloomington, Iil. After dinner there was a children's meeting at 1:30 o'cloek and preaching at3:00 by Rev. D. S. Warner, of Rotne City, Ind." Kev, Haney preached again at night and the day closed with altar services.

6:87

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No. 4 Decatur passenger 4:07 TRAINS ARRIVE TERRE HAUTE. No. Peoria Through Ex 9:37 No.

Decatur Passenger i:o7 Passengers will find this to be the quickest and best route from Terre Haute to all points in the Northwest. Quick connection made at Peoria at

3:50

with C. B. & QyT. P, &. VV. and A. I. Si P. trains for Burlington, Ouincy, Keokuk, Omaha, Rock Uland and all points in Iowa and Nebraska. Emigrant and land hunters will find this the most desirable route for points Kansaf Colorado and Nebraska. Special excui sions to Kansas are run tvery month via this line, in connection with the Chicago & Alton RY. Excursionists are carried through to Kansas City in elegant reclining chair cars without extra charge. If you are going West or Northwest, write to the undersigned for rates and any information you desire. We offer you the decided advantages of quicker time, lower rates, and better accommodations than can be had elsewhere.'-

S

^A. E. SHRADER,

J. N- Traffic Manager, Terre Haute, Ind-

HERIFF'S SALE

By virtue of a venditioni exponas execution, issued from the Vigo Circuit Court, to me directed and delivered, in favor of Jas. T. Moore and James B. Haggerty, and against Moses Easter, as principal, and George D. Stledell," replevin Dail, I am ordered to sell the following described real estate, situated In Vigo county, Indiana, to-

The south half (JO of lot numbef one hundred and five (105) in Chapncey Rose's subdivision of eighty-four and sixty-five one hundredths (84 69-100) acres off the north end tnof the north-west quarter (W) twenty-two (22), township twelv range nine (9) west, in Vigo County, Indl

of section

twelve (12) north,

ana, and on SATURDAY THE 28th DAY OF AUGUST, 1880, between the hours of 10 o'clock A. M. and 4 o'clock p. M.* of said day, at the courthouse door in Terre Haute, I will offer the rents and profits of the above described real estate, together with all privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging, for a term not exceeding seven years, to the highest bidder for cash, and upon failure to realize a sum sufficient to satisfy said venditioni exponas and costs, I will then and there offer the fee simple, in and to said real estate, to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy the same.

This 5th day of Aui£ut^l880. J. T. Moore, Attorney. Printers fee $8.00.

IS HAY, Sheriff.

NATIONAL

Greenback

Bally!-

A Grand National Greenback Rally, will be held in thp Court House Yard,

TERRE HA UTE,

ON

Saturday Eve., August 21st. General June* B.

WEAVER?

The People's Advocate, the Soldier's Friend, Our Choice for the Preside*cy, will be with us without fail and will give us one of his stirring speeches on the Issues of the day. All are cordially Invited. Railroad fare will be reduced one-third to parties of 20 or more.

Vigo County National Committee,

W. HOWAHD MANNINO, Chairman.

NERVINE,

TOMCASPECIFICA.

A Boon to Both Sexes.

A REMEDY WITHOUT A RIVAL for alt diseases arising from Nervous Debility, Sexual Disorders. ov6r Indulgence in iclous Habits, as well as from the prostration of old age. Its curative propertien in violent and chronic forms of the following diseases have been attested to br the most Eminent Physicians:

Dyspepsia, Self Abuse, Headache, Dizzinesss,

Sexual Exhaust! Spermatorrhoea, General Debility,

Premature Decay.' &e., &c., It has been in use over forty years, and is to-day the most popular remedy for the diseases above-mentioned in the WORLD. It can be used without regard to diet, is pleasant In teste, and better than all, it 19 a sure, safeand and certain cure. It is no quack medicine, but stands upon its own merits, as any trial will amply demonstrate. Since 1836. this remedy has always been sold for a much larger price than Jthat for which it is now sold but owing to the faot that the time for the payment of an enormous royalty upon its manufacture has expired, it is offered to the suffering of both sexes at one dollar per package, so as to be within the each of all at wnlch price it will be sent to ny address free of further charge.

Address DR. WILLIAM YOUNG 416Spruce Street, Phil.a May beconsul tedon all diseases by mall

THE NEW FOOD

MEDICINE

OR ENFEEBLED DIGESTION, Impoverished Blood, Weak Lungs, Kidneys, and Urlnnry Organs, Consumption, Emaciation, Mental and Physical Exnaustion, Delicate Females, Nursing Mothers, Sickly Children, and Debility of age. MALT BITTERS are warranted more Nourishing, Strengthening, Vitalizing and purifying by reason of their richness In Bono nnd Muscle Producing Material than all other forms of malt or medicine, while free from the objections urged against malt liquors. Preaared by the MALT BITTERS CO., from Un* *ermented Malt and Hopt. Sold

everywhere.

MALT BITTERS CO., Boston, Maes

Stool. Bookfand Musi boxed and snipped, onl "•"Mlusum

880. NewPianos,$195 to.81,000. mer offer Ill'st'd free. Address Daniel

Beatty, Washington, N.

Agents Wanted for Smith's Bible Dictionary andHolman'a irmtrir gIBLES,

FICTOWL

New

Address for Circulars, Phil.

Peoria

Short Line. TRAINS LEAVE TERRE HAUTE.

A. J. Holi olmau & Co.

XX C0T7rn0ftaMed WkltoDaek)s99.

feel two. Ko mattmt or pillows rehammock, mIt fits the body as

pleasantly, and Ilea ttrataht. Folded or opened In•tanUr. Self-fiutening. It la Just the UUng for hotels, offices, cBttaMeamp-aeeaim«ortaineii^kc. Good for the lawn, piMsa, or OOOMM place la CM boase." Splendid for laraUds or children. Sent on receipt or price or C.O.IX For SO et% extra, with order, wtU prepay eiurm to any CB. station east of Mississippi River ana north of Maaoo and Dixon's Line. For 75CI«m in Minn.. Ma and Iowa.

ID AUIIIHMU IUIU iOWII*

p. m.

EKMON W. ItAOD, XOSFalton Street,. Boston 207 Canal St., Maw York} 166 North Sec ond St., Philadelphia Market 8U,

»oa CuuraiAV*.

Chicago. Suu

UN FERMENTED

MALT BITTERS

TRADE MARK

&ITTEIISHOPS^bANDIt.MALT

HE AGED.—Mental and physical dewlth billty of the aged begins with loss of appetite and sleep. These two potent causes of premature and rapid decline have their. origin in Defective Nutrition and Impov-, erished Blood. All other ailments may be. warded If these be restored to a condition of health. To accrmplish this beneficent purpose, Malt Bitters are superior to all other forms of malt or medicine. They are rich in bone and fat-producing materials. They'' vitalize with new life the process of digestion. They dissolve and assimilate every article of food, thereby enriching and strengthening the blood. They feed tho brain as well as the blood, banishing nervousness, melancholy and sleeplessness. For every form of Debility of both mind and body of the aged, Malt Bitters are the purest and safest Restorative in medicine. r-

MALT BITTERS are prepared without fermentation from Canadian BARLEY MALTand HOPS, and warranted superior to all other forms of malt or medicine, while free from the objections urged against malt liquors.

Ask for Malt Bitters prepared by the Mai Bitters Company, and see that every bottle bears the Trade Mark Label, duly signed and enclosed in wave lines as seen in cut.

MALT BITTERS are for sale byll Drug-

APPPLICATION FOR LICENSE. Notice Is hereby given that I will apply to the Board of Commissioners of Vlg i*muty, Indiana, at their September term, for a license to sell "intoxicating liquors," in a less quantity than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on my premises for one year. My place of business and the premises whereon said liquors are to be sold and drank are located on lot No. 21, In sub-division of four acres and two rods east side the west half of section 22, in township 12 north, in range west, on Main between Twelfth and Thfr teenth streets, in the city of Terre Haute Vigo county, Indiana.

CHARLES W. STANLEY.

No. 12096. The State of Indiana, VI in the Vigo Circuit Court, at the September term, 1880. Millie M. Smtth vt. William F.

Smith in divorce. Be it known that on the 14th day of July 1880, said plaintiff filed an affidavit in due form, showing that said William F. Smith Is a non-resident of the State of Indiana.

Said non-resident defendant Is hereby notified of the pendency of said action against him, and that the same will stand for trial at the September term of said Court in the year 1880. Attest: MncBKLi. TATLOR, JoHX K, DURKAX,

PlfTs&Attys Clerk