Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 4 November 1880 — Page 6
SEYMOUR.
From the Address of Ex-Governor Seymour of the Brooklyn Acad emy of Music, October 21, 1830
From the New York, Sun Oct. 22,1M0. FKI.I«OW-CITI7.KN8.—To use a homely plirasf we find that our opponents have concluded to swap horBCS while crossing a stream. [Laughter and applause.] They attempted first to inflame your Mindsagainet your fellow-citizens of the South, and now they are trying another issue. I am not astonished at this anxiety for m-r only two weeks before the ejection, but why did they not hare this anxiety at the outset? They have been forccd to change their position in this canvass. The public mind revolted against appeals to passion, directed against the people of the 8outh. The business men in constant intercourse with that section learned the falseness of tlie charges brought against it. Driven from their first position, they now say tiiat tho labor of the country will be harmed iQ General Hancock is elected. They claim that the present prosperity is due to political acliori, and not, to the labor of our people in field and woikshop*.
WHY* TIIK CU03THY 18 l'UOSI'EIUU.'S. \v are we now prosperous It is because the American people, without distinction of party, by their toil in their •workshops and by their attention to business, have gained that wealthy aided by the boundless harvests which God ?n His kindness has given us, and because the people of Europe have been le'S fortunate than we in this favored land, lint the history of the Administration since the war has been the- most sad regards the morals and interests of our country to be found on the pages oi history. what ha» mariethecnaugc? Why are new factories built all over our land? Why are all forms of industry now blessed with prosperity? Everyman of intelligence
Knows
of
that it is due to the
abundance of our farm products to a demand for them from Europe, and to the low costs of transportation from the West to the seaboard. The failure of the crops in Europe made the demand the labor of our people brought forth the supply. The question remains, what reduced the coat
transportation That is not onlv
of interest as to the past, but it is vital to the future. If it can be kept down we shall be able to keep our foothold in European markets. Republicans claim that their administration is entitled to the credit of this. Wo charge that they liavc destroyed our ocean carrying trade and that at the outset they opposed the measure that more than all others helps our exports at this time. The only thing which stands between the products of our land and the markets of the world is the cost of their transportation. If they could be placed thc*c without co there is no industry that would not flourish. That can't be done, but the problem of statesmanship now is how far we can cut it down. NKOF.B8AUY KlfiVENUK AMl'f.K I'UOTKCTION
FOK MANUKACTURKKS.
The Democratic party knows that the amount of revenue which our government has to raise will ever afford staple protection for all industrial pursuits. If any modification of the details of our revenue laws have been demanded, tlicy liave been »s frequently on behalf of manufacturers as by others. The whole public without regard* to party distinction, have rejoiced in their prosperity. A KKAIi DANG1CU TO EMPLOYERS INI) EM
PLOYKD.
44
There is but one thing manufacturers ar those in their employment have to fear. Tliat is a check upon exports which will tun. the balance of trade against us andput an end to the prosperity of all pur suit*. The efforts which arc now openly made by ofllcials connected with the Genoral Government to get control of.the carTying trade of our country is full of danger. Wo know that private persons connected with private corporations gain unbounded wealth from this power. We accept this as one of the laws of trade, and we seek to. hold it in check by competition. Kival routes are multiplied when profits become too groat. When Government ofllcials lay their hands upon the rights and interests of the jeople, there aro no laws of com inerce, no competitions, that hold them in check. Just what Mr. Garfield says he wishes to see, 'the gravitation •f more power in the hands of the Government,' has led to the corruption and downiall of most of the Nations of the world. The Republican ofllcials as|f of you for more jurisdiction than wise n\en seek or honest men want. Can manufacturers, can business men ean the 'laboring classes be guilty of greater folly than that of placiug the control of all their interests in the hands of those over whom they can exercise an influence^o remote aud so weak? This great state, with its vast commerce, with ouc-fenth of the population oi the Unioi" has about one-fortieth representation in the Senate. When men say to you, under our constitution, tliat'theyseeU for more power, without defining or limiting its measure, they ask for the overthrow of all the maxims and all the principles which the American people heretofore held sa orefl"
Hancock Stock is t-4 (NeW York Special.)
The ouo topic of conversation is the new life given to the campaign since the Democrats got their second wind. You hear i1 on street corners and see it in the ^cheerful mien of party managers at headquarters. Hancock stock is up, and no mistake. Don't make any mistake about the conduct tf the campaign in New I York State. The Democrats are terribly :*rnest. new force of clerks has oeen put to work in head-quarters. The demand for documents is overwhelming, and must be met. Leaders from the rural counties are making hasty final trips to the city for them. They all tell a reaction or avalanche of public opinion in favor of Hancock, that must sweep the stale by UO,OOJ majority. It is 4no idle talk it ts teal, scnous, earnest business.
1V
Father is letting well.*/.. Jly daughters say, "How nfuch better ^father is since he used Mop Bitters." He is go tin/j well after his long suffering 'Z, from a disease declared incurable, and we are so glad that he used your Bitters —a ladv of Rochester. N. Y.—Utica Her-
uc\ fJY5 'h.~
i?s'
Will the Rebels Rule if Gen. Hancock is Elected? From the New York Bun. I
No, never! What is the use in writing or talking and haying nothing?
What is the use of a public journal in: apolitical canvass that discusses every-! thing save the real, live issues before the people, but never touches upon them, or only handles them as if they were thinshelled eggs and easily broken
Life is too short to be thus wasted and such an occupation would be too meaningless for us. We have felt from the beginning an irresistible impulse to handle this Hancock and Garfield campaign without gloves, to deal with it with the utmost Frankness and fulness of speech. Hitherto, what wo are now saying might have.scemcd to some premature now all must concede it is opportune.
The greatest fact in the history of this country next to its first settlement and to the Revolutionary war, is the war of the rebellion. The parties engaged in that war on the one side were colled Unionists, and on the other Rebels. On On the part of the Unionists the war was waged for all that is sacred and dear to man for all that is comprised in the vast and hallowed word Liberty and for a government pledged to the support of Liberty and Equal Rights while the rebellion was indissulubly weducd human slavery.
The Unionists, thank God, conquered and they will forever hereafter control and conduct the American gov-rninent.
We not only recognize this truth, but we rejoiee anil glory in it. We ourselves helped to dig deep and to lay in principles tho foundations of the Republican party and so far as those principles touch upon human liberty, we are still in cordial accord with them and we support Gen. llaucock, the loyal soldier, who fought on tho side of the Un-on. who never uttered or entertained a rebel sentiment, as their truest and best representative in the present campaign for President. It' wc thought that in his victory disunion and rebellion would triumph, we would oppose him as earnestly as we now support him. We go further, and say wo believe that disunion and rebellion would triumph in his election, we would sooner see him shot than elected.
But the election of Gen. -Hifficock will not and cannot be a rebel triumph. The former rebels may be encouraged under it to repentance, and to bring forth work meets for repentance but t8at the unrepentant and persistent devotees of the Lost Cause will swell into new and dangerous importance and undue or increased influence under.it, is utterly untrue and if we believed it to be true, wo would oppose Gen. Hancock's election as strenuously as we now advocate it.
What if the South should be solid for Hancock? Would not the Republicans like to htivfi the South solid for Garfield They would give a million dollars for it to-day.
Gen. Grant himself was the n\an to go South and tender, in person, the first flattering solicitations to the old rebels, in the beginning of the campaign, this very year.
The truth is, the rebellion is dead and it can have no resurrection, not a particle more under Hancock than under tho Republicans. It deserved to die and to have no resurrection. dh
Now, IudependentSTMid Democrats, do not he frightened by a bugbear! Vote for Hancock, for Liberty, for Union, for Free Government!
Hancock's administration will be as free from the rule of rebels as fj rule ofthe Czar of all the Russiaa
For the Ladies.
Tho newest gold cloth is of fine net wrought with leaves and blossoms in bright colors.
French makers of underwear put hoods on nightgowns. They would be useful in case of fire, wouldn't they ?Mjs.
Flesh-colored ruching is newer than color or plain white, but it is exceedingly trying to the complexion.
A Paris correspondent notes that at the last Conecrt Besselievre many American visitors wore nicely-fitting pelisses made of cashmere shawls.
The first thing to do after buying a ready made plush jacket is to remove about two-thirds of the wadding, which is quilted into the lining.
Tho last piece of fashion-writer's slang is to call a gown "restful." How anything but a nightdress can suggest that queer word it is not easy to see.
Red jerseys, with cashmere skirts and red cans or white aprons, are recommended by a London paper as a suitable dress for attendants at fair tables
Carriage suits are dark and quiet looking, this season, although made of the richest materials. They are invariably made with a basque and trimmed skirt, and are worn with large cloaks.
There is a widely-spread belief that Philadelphia is a city of good taste, but, nevertheless, a jacket* of heliotrope plush, with a lining of baby blue, was exhibited at an opening there a few days ago.
Tho belt occupies loss and less spacc. Cnce it encircled the waist then Worth began to insert it at the side seams, and now it begins at the darts, and soon there will be nothing left of it but the buokle.
New fans are made of black cocks' feathers so arranged that the curly tips overlie each other, and the small bluegreen feathers of the peacock's breast are also used in combination with the little red feathers from the wing of the gray parrot.
Some of the saleswomen have acquired the baby stare, and practice it on customers. It is ti lerably effective on a man, but the woman who encounters it is always made furiously angry and is tempted "to complain to the proprietor of the shop.
There are two kinds of Tjeaded bands for trimming, and it is best to examine the ods carefully before buying. The cheaper has the beads sewed on by a ir.a chine chainstitch, and rips badly, but the best trimmings arc hand-sewn, and a child can tell them from the imitation.
Bonnets of peacock feathers with strings of peacock blue are the prettiest head coverings for red-headed little girls, and it is to be hoped that they will all be lucky enough to get them instead of the red and green and blue bonnets which their mothers often inflict upon them.
Grantism Revived. From the Post Dispatch.
The result ol the late election signifies Grantism. Grant during his administration, collected around him the most iafamoiiB band of public plunderers that ever disgraced any country. By bribery and corruption, monopolies and privileged classes -vere created, whose power and wealth is a terror to popular liberty. In 1874 the people rebuked them ai:d elected to Congress a majority of seventysix Democrats. This rebuke caused them to suspend operations for the third term. The election of 1876 occurred. Tildtn was elected. Grant, Garfield & Co. had Hayes inaugurated, who was to hold power until Grant could be sent around the world and trained by his band and royalty for a third term. At Chicago he was defeated and Garfield nominated. This excited the indignation of the boss politicians of the Grant band. Conkling, Logan, Cameron aud Grant would take no part in the contest until the terms we're agreed on between tlietn and Gar field. Conkling charged that the Ohio crew of Hayes, Sherman and Garfield were hjtfiocritcs, aud not to be trusted without their bond. After much negotiation the* contract was executed. The stipulations were that, in consideration of the support of the Grant dynasty, Garfield, if elected, wiis to make Conkling in his administration the power behind the throne that he could use the power of tho Government so that in 188^ theic should be no mistake about Grant being nominated and elected for a third term. It is a necessity of the Grant dynasty and the monopolies and. privileged classes they created, that, to perpetuate their power and right to plunder, sovereignty should be taken from the people and a strong Government be created. Nearly two years ago these conspirators saw that it was necessary to carry the vote of Indiana, and they commenced colonizing Southern negroes in the State to do it. They have succecded. If in November tho third termers shall succeed in electing Garfield, Grantism in his administration will be revived, and in 1884 Grant will succeed him, "and the people will then understand the difference .between
Same
self-
government and an unrestrained band of public plunderers, with Grant as their chief co-operator, with a powerful money oligarchy and the merciless corporations and privileged classes they have created. The issue ot unrestrained power, sectional hate and plunder, presented by Conkling, Grant, Arthur and Garfield, and of haimOny and constitutional liberty represented by Hancock, is now made up.
A NEVADA CAMP.
Where Wood is $20 a Cord and Water Five Cents a Gallon.
From tho Virginia City (Nev.) Enterpriser Candelaria is without doubt the roughest and most uncomfortable mining camp in Nevada. The houses what there are of them, are poorly built, and the cold wind that has been blowing for the past few days goes through them as easily as it would through a sieve. A great many people still live in tents. Wood costs $20 a cord and is scarce at that. It takes a capitalist to keep a lire going Iwre. Water retails at five cents a gallon and i6 hauled in wagons from Columbus, eight miles. This water is not very good, being impregnated with alkali, but the average Canaelarian doesn't care much for that, the majority of them prefering beer, which, by the way, is sold at the rate of a bit a drink in many of the saloons. The whisky is of good quality, so you can see that we are not altogether without the blessings of civilization At present tho camp is enlivened by the presence of a lot of Belleville people, who are here attending the preliminary examination of Chid Brummett, who killed'Billy Bell in Bellville last Thursday. Tho killing oc curred in front of the Be lville Hotel on Thursday evening. Bell went to the faro
where Chid was dealing Wednesay night, and put $5 on the lay-out. Clikl said: "I don't want io play for yofT" Bell said: "1 have been sifter you for three years and I will get yop yet. I would like to have six bits a dozen for whipping such fellows as you. You think you are a fighter because you liked a drunk in Austin." The next day they passed each other and didn't speak. At 0 o'clock in,thc evening Chid was walking up to the hotel from Jackson's. Bell came up from the other corner of the street, Chid got to the porch four or five feet ahead of Billy. Chid had taken two or three steps on the sidewalk and Billv had one foot on the sidewalk in Ihe act of stepping up when Chid turned and shot him in the neck. The ball went through the collar button-
Die
of the
shirt and was taken out from the shoulder blade at the back. Pick-IIandlc Gulch is the name of the real mining town ofthe section' being located in the ravine directly below the mines.,
The Evil Eye.
Prom the London News.
A curious story is told of the late M. Offenbach. It is said that a very large numb', of persons believed he had the evil eye, the terrible Jettattura of the south of Italy. The well-known poet and critift, Theodore de Banville, whom an admirer in the Nineteenth Century recently styled the "illustrious de Banville," is said to have alwavs carefully avoided mentioning flic name of M. Offenbach in any of his articles for tear of evil consequences. The story may not be true, but tho mere fact that it is told is a curious example of the power of this strange su^rstition. In all Southern countries, and in all countries, where Southern blood is strong, some measure of belief ih the evil eye is always to be| found, and it lias been made the subject of all manner of stories ad romances.! But it certain^ does seem as if M. Offenbach was the last person likely to possess the fatal quality of evil eye. It would indeed be an ud freak of fate to couple with such gif of amusement as M. Offenbach possessed the awful power of Jettattura. It is not easy to imagine the author of "La Belle Helene" casting a very baleful influence upon anything except a classic stor», or the composer of the music of "Madame Favart" having the disagreeable gift of the hero of one of Tneophile Gautier's most. unpleasant tales.
A ship left New York the other day laden with eight hundred gallons of rum andone missionary! Why so much missionary?
SttfETHIHG STARTLING.
Cheeri'g Hews for Laboring Hen
A Company Already Organized With a Capital of Ten Million Dollars,
To Construct Twenty Iron Steamships For the Importation of Chinese I Coolies-
Sunday's New York Mercury quotes the following as an interview with a Pennsylvania Congressman now visiting head-quarters .. "A steamship Company with a cifiital of $10,000,000, the Congressman says, has been formed to bring Chinese! laborers to the United States, and one year hence the Chinese population in this country will be increased four-fold, and five years hence there will be a million Asiatic mechanics and skilled artisans at work among the factories and rails of the Atlantic coast. The six Coolie companies^' San Francisco some time ago made "rangemcnts with John Roach to build twenty iron ships, each of which will pack and convey three thousand Mongolians to this country, to work for twenty-live orthirty cents a day. Desir ing to enlarge their field of'operations they sent their agents East to interest silk, cotton, stove and other manufacturers in their schemes, and the result has been the formation of the Company I speak of. "The stock was all subscribed some time since, for capitalists saw that it would pay from the start but it has been kept very "quiet in order to avoid influencing the political campaign, John
Roach has already gone to work on the ships, and six of them are in a forward state of completion. I do not know the names of the incorporators, who are principally wealthy New York gentlemen of Republican proclivities together with a few Connecticut and New Jersey manufacturers but I know from my own personal knowledge that the ships are being constructed at Chester, Pennsylvania, ana that Mr. Roach is building them especially for the the yellow slave traffic. I do not scruple to call it a revival of the slave trade. The Cooles ill work for only nominal wages, and the employers will reap his profit in hiring heathen workmen at $1.75 a week instead of having to pay, as now, from $9 to $18 for American labor. The owners of Fall River now receive 25 per cent, dividends on their in. vestments but under the new Chines^ arrangement they will clear 50 per cent, and the Mongolian will never daro to strike for higher wages. "Under the Burlingame-Rcpublican Treaty these men are allowed to come into this country without becoming citizens, retaining their allegiance to their own ImperiapGovernment, and yet have all the benefit ofthe laws of the United States while driving out American labor. The scheme will pay em)rmously, of course. As soon as the numopolists have secured, as they expect, a new lease of power through Gaoleld's election, with a promise of a third term of Grant in 1884, they will give themselves up to the task of plundering labor."
A Dog's Clever Acting. From the London }Vorld.
Mr John Hare, tho actor, may be described as inbabiting tlie locality known as "round the corner," his duelling being situated in one of those pleasant nooks of Kensington just out of the hurly-burly of traffic. At the top of Ilornton street, beyond the large mansion just built, is a house, if of any order, then of the chalet order of architecture. It is one of those houses which appear to have dropped down where they are is without reference to alignment or the Severities generally. Externally it is of a fine Venetian red inwardly it is decorated after the fashion which has received the.name of a proverbially defunct queerf
For the moment the tenants arc Smut, a biack collie, with the proper quantity of tan distributed about his person, and a small terrier, swathed in a dog's ccpt and ensconced before the fire. Smut makes friends at once with a friend ofthe drama, for he is a theatrical dog—perhaps rather amateur than professional. While "New Men and Old Acres" was being rehearsed at the Court Theater, Smut, who went to the theater every morning with his master, followed liiin about cliligcntly on tho stage, and in the ruins scene threw himseH at his master's feet in the most picturesque of all possible attitudes.
On the first ni jlit of th* wonderfully successful revival of the comcdy, which he wrote with tho collaboration of Mr. Dubourg, Mr. Tom Taylor was struck by the want ot the dog in the scene just referred to. To him the grouping was imperfect, and after seeing UH comedy again he spoke to Mr. Hare on the subject. Now Mr. Hare was doubly sensitive, as actor and as manager, to the possibility of some ridiculous contretemps, and demurred altogether lo the presence of smut upon the stage, Mr. Tom Taylor insisted, and Mr. Mare protested, until, the success-of the piece 1 icing assured, lie yielded to the author's importunities and Smut was allowed to follow his master onto the stage in the important scene. The saga? cious beast walked on as quietly as possible, took not the slightest notice of the audience, and flung himself down at bis master's feet, just as he had so often rehearsed" the part. After this—as playgoers will recollect—Smut played eveiy night during the long run of New Men and Old Acres," with such perfect success that he became a prime favorite with the audience.
Mr. Bartlett and the BaronessFrom the Londcfn World. It is now generally understood among the Baroness Burdett-Coutts' friends ana near relations that she has quite resolved to carry out her intention of marrying Mr. Ashmead Bartlett, but with the proviso that the settlements shall be all on her own side, and her money (such as remains to her) safely tied up. It is also believed that the marriage will not take place till all legal difficulties with regard to the Duchess of St Albans* will »re cleared up.
W.C. Means & Son,
PROPRIETORS OF THE ST. CLAIR HOTEL Offer rare advantages to the traveling public. Street cars pass the door every few minutes, connecting with all the depots. Rates very low, by day or we«k.
Seller's— 'Cough vv- Syrup
50 Tears Beiore the Public Pronwuncfd by all to be the mo Pleasant and efficacious remedy now u«r. tor the cure of coughs, colds, crou ho?*M:nee*, tickling vernation of th thrx. whooping couvh, tc. Over millior boirlm sold within Ue last few Aeara. It gues eli*f er used and ha« o*rer to imptii ei efit that cannot b* hud Irom the u$*h ixtures now in us Sold by all Dr-im^ts at 2^ cent* per b^ le.
SELLERS LIVEU PI LIS are also highly recommn ded tor rtning liver complaint, constpttiiun, .bick-headlfcl es fever and ague, an r» I diseases »t° the stomach and liver, Sold by all Druggist*iat_2qcenh*perbox.
A Compound Tincture of the most valuable remedies known to the medloal profession, prepared upon strictly pharmaceutical principles.
An •zmrian co of twonlr-FLVE yean prrmm it to bo th* ipwlMt Antidote to Malaria and all other A«no
MMMM
known to the world.
The only abtolute mra (or all Aflfoctions ofthe
deas ef the Throat and Lanipk it is "iwtfly while ae a remedy for complaints peculiar lo the female sex it haa no AqnaL
NOT A BEVERAGE
eld reliable Hoaaehold Remedy*
Umoaghlr adapted to aasiat nature. It mppUee tone to the atomaob, rein rigors teethe ntg—Htb oryana, atimnlatea the secretion*, and pro. motiaff a reguiar aottop of the bowels, enables every orsan of the body «o perform its allotted work regularly and without interruption. lis highest oommebJatlone «cno from thoee who nave naed it longest and knowi. it beat
Nowhere so popular aa in Lanonster, Pa., whan it haa been in use for more than a quarter ef a centuir. Hlahly commended as a General Teafe aad Appetiser. Sold by Druggists everywhere.
THE ME88CN0iR OF HEALTH A large died paper deecriptlve of disease, ite origin and cure, will be mailed nree to any addrsea on application to
THE MI8HLER HERB BITTERS CO. Lancaster, Pa. t3T*We strongly recommend to mothers Prof. Parker's Pleasant Worm Syrup. It nevar fell*, is easy to take, and no after-physio la required, wioe, 20 cents.
Illinois Midland Railway
Tiic Terre Ilautc,.Dccatur and Fcoria Short Line. TRAINS LEAVE TEBUE HAUTE. No. 2 Peoria through Kx. (5:VTam No. 4 Decatur passenger 4:07 pm
TRAINS ARRIVE TERRK HAUTE.
No. 1 Peoria through Ex. 9:H7 am No. 3 Decatur passenger 1:07 Passengers will fin.l 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 p. M. wiili C. B. & Q., T. P. & W. and A. I. & P. trains for Burlington, Quincy, Keokuk, Omaha, Hock Island and all points in Iowa and Nebraska. Emigrants and land hunters will find this tho most eesirable route for points in Kansas Color ado aad Nebraika. Suecial excursions to Kansas are ruu eveHp mouth via. this line, in connection with the Chicago & Alton Ry. Excursionists are carried tnrough to Kansrs City in elegant reclining chair ca*s without extra charge. If you arc going West or North-west, write to the undersigned for rates and any information you desire. We offer you the decided advantages of quicker time, lower ratcv and better accommodations than can be bad elsewhere.
ADM INI STIt AT ATOHS' SALE OP REAL ESTATE.
Notice is bercbV virenthat wc willselat public sale on Saturday, the 6th day of November 1880, at 3 o'clock p. M., at the door of the Court House of Vigo County, Ind the following described real estate, belonging to the estate of James B. Armstrong deceased: 1—Lot No. 8 in Walter and Wein'ssubdiviMon%t 4G,60 acres as per recorded plat thereof, in Terre Haute, Indiana. 2.—-50 feet off the cast end of original inlot No 148 in the city of Ttrrc Haute, In diana 3 —Lot No. 5 in Barton place, said place being a sub-division of lot No. 1 in Chase's sub-division of 100 acres oft' .be iiorth end of the northeast quaiter of sec. tion 22, T. 12 north, of range fl west. 4.—The N. E. qr. of the S. W. qr. of see. 21 in T. 13, N. of R. 8. W. 5.—5 acres to sec. 33, T. 12 N. of It. 0 W. lying W. ofthe vincennes Road, and N. ot a tract of land once owned bv Mr. Nicum, beginning at the N. E. cor. of said Nicum'land on aline with the west side of said Road, thence W. (var. 0 degrees and lOseconds) 24,OS chains to a post, being the N. YV. cor. of the Nicum land, from which a red bud tree 9 inches in diameter bears N. 2 seconds E. 5% links, thcnce N. 2.03 chains to. an iron peg, from which bears a hickory tree one foot in diameter N. 72% degrees W. 9. links, also an elm tree feet in diameter, 8 63 degrees W., 16 links, t.'»ence east 24.20 chains to said Yincennes .Hoad to an iron peg, from which bears a hickory tree 9 inches in diameter, N. 44V£ E. 12 links, thence S. along the W. side of stid lioad. 2 chains and 87 links to the place of be, ginning, upon the foil wing
TERM8:
One fourth of the purchase money shall be paid in hand, and the balance in three equal installments, due 6,12 and 18 months after the day of sale, the purchaser giving notes secured according to aw.
PRIVATE SALE.
Any or all of said rial estate may be •old at private sale any time after the 2lst of Oct. 1880, bat any parcel of said real estate, the appraised value whereof does not exceed f1,000,00, may be sold at any time, at the office of the auditor of said county, upon the same terms as at public sale. 29th Sept 1880.
WILLIAM P. ARMSTRONG, ANDREW GRIMES, Administrators Est. James B. Armstrong, dec A. M. BLACK, Atty.
THR
Admiration
or iaa
WORLD.
A NOTABLE EVENT/
-Mrs. S. A. Allerfs
WORLD'S
Hair Restorer.
IS MXLFECTIDN.
&
N oble record: near half a Centur) Established 1S32. Improved 1879. The nature of the great improvement E is in its wonderful liftf-giring properties to faded or falling hair, and MORE QUICKLY CHANGING GRAY OR. WHITE MR to its natural youthfu COLOR and BKAUTY.
IT IS NOT A DTK.
requires only a few applications toentnre gray hair to its ycutnfiil color and tiatruus beauty, and induce luxurian 55 growth, and its occasional use is all tha is ne« (!ed to preserve it in its highest perfection an.i beauty. DANDRUFF is quickly and permanently removed Sold bv all Dmggits, $1.25* Per Hottle
MANUPACTOR IKS ANO SALESROOMS:
r14 116 Southampton Row, London? Eng. ft 3 Pouievard Haussman, Pari*. France, 7S" Barclay st. and 40 Park Place, New Yoak. *,
UNFERMENTED
MALT BITTERS
TRADE MARK
MALT AND HOPS.
Tli
most
?t
urifles
A. E. SIIRADER,
/I Tratie Manager, •Terre Hante. Ind.
$
71XHAU8ED VIALITY.—Tho purest safest, and
powerful rontorntlvoj
In medicine may be found in MALT BIT-' TER8, prcpiircu without fermentation from? Cnnivlinn Itarlcy Malt and Hops. This lnntohleRS
Nutrient
is
richer in Ixtno and
Muscle Producing Mittcrlais tluin alt other forms of mutt or mcdiclnc, whilo. frr«o frornL tho objections urged ugHinst malt liiiuorx. It nourishes, strengthen*, vitaitr.es, and-
every orgun and fluid of the ix»dy. dissolves and mwiinilntc* ovory kind of® food. It loads tho blood with lifo-giving principles, refreshing and invigorating the mind and body, and arresting mental and physical decline. For Diincult Digestion, Loss of Appetffo, Sick Headache, Bronchitis. Consumption, Emaciation, Dropsy, Mental and Physical Debility. Nervousness, Wants of Hloep, Ulcerative weaknesses of Females Exhaustion of Nursing Mothers, of the Aged nd of Delicate Children, the perfect Itenoator is truly wonderful. as
The undersigned will pay the hlghettt cash price for
FUXiTZ WHEAT!
And Market Price for Red Wheat.
Wei^hla?
Dono
on the Cit Scae*
Office: Corner Third and Cherry Streets.
J. F. ROGERS.'
CHARTER OAK„
COOK STOVE,
For coal,or wood, or botli.
LEVEL BEST..
Wc arc sure it pays to do yous 'ievc," best" at all times, as whatever is worths doing at all is worth doing well aa amillustration, the manufacturers of the fam1.1 ous Charter Oak Stoves have always aimed to buy the best material, employ the best workmen, and make the beet/ COOKING STOVE that* could be pro duced, and the result is, the CHAHTEIi OAK has attained a popularity unprece dented in the history of stoves.
They are the cheapest to bay, They bake evenly and qnickly, They are made of best materia. They have always a good draft, They roast perfectly. They require bat little faei, They are very low priced. They are easily managed,
ui ed to all localities.
4 1 Every store guaranteed to be
Absolutely Perfect!
FOR SALE ONLY BY
E.L. PROBST
No. 26 South Fouth- Street
•—r
I New ORGANS, SIQ 1 up New PIANOS
150 up. WARRANTED 6 years. Second! Hana Instruments at BARGAINS. Agent* wanted. Illustrated CATALOGUE FREE, JtfORACE WATERS 4 CO., K» BroadjCwa YCN.'
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