Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 2 December 1880 — Page 6
V7-
DONN PIATT
He Writes an Open Letter to his Friend, James A. Garfield,
In Which a Very Great Deal of Sound Advice is Given,
An*l t!io President Elect is Warned Against the Grant Gang
A ?ry Bemarkable Letter.
[The following remarkable letter was published in the Washington Capital on Kunday, November 14th. It will be found unusually interesting and we ad rtee no one to miss reading it.]
MYDKAU GKNEIUI,: NOW that this HsnseleBS political row is over, and you are the President-elect, I venture, lefore you are buried in that mansion through the thick walls and plate-glass of which, no word of truth ever reaches the incumbent, to write you a few words in the same intimate and friendly spirit that marked our intercourse when we both occupied a cheap boarding-house when carried my fortunes on the slender rib of a pen as a newspaper correspondent, and you sought to support yourself and family on the meager pay of a Congressman.
IN BO doing I ignore the fact that while I remain a private citizen you. by a turn of fortune's wheel, have been thruwn into the highest and most potent position known to this or any government. I go hack to the time when you gladly accepted my aid and sympathy in your troubles, and my heartfelt cocgratulations in your triumphs, and I yours. You know keenly as I do what that past list* been, and returning in spirit to it, I feel satisfied that you will receive what I am about to say as at least the words of one deeply attached to you, one wh.) was a friend when friends were few, and not afraid lo show that friendship when the few fell away with only whispered words of encouragement and sympathy. 1 feel more anxiety* about you, my friend, now that you are fortunate, than in the darkest hour of your life, when life itselt seems so horrible that an escape from it wa» a temptation. You have pushed from the hands of friends to the keeping of enemies, to pluy the part, of a Chief Executive for four years and it is my anxiety for the good of our common country that these four years may be extended to eight that I venture to thus address you.
You are no politician, my dear friend You have sadly confessed the same over and often, when, giving way to your generous impulses, you have brought upon your unhappy the wrath and dis-gUi-t of your party associates. Sueh men as you have appeared at long intervals for a short time in public life but they were casualties, ami disapneared as suddenly as they came into view. No district save tha't of Ashtabula, that kept Joshua II. ({hidings all his lite in Congress, would have returned you to the House of llepresentatives, or, having done so, kept you there. Ashtabula widened itself when you were made Hcnator while a', Chicago you ere nominated by accident, ind then elected from necessity.
You are not only no politician, but you arc hated by the politicians. As every man is better in the estimation of his associates than in his own. we are much given to sustaining our selfrespcct upon the good opinion of others. And so we guard against a knowledge of our inner shortcomings with jealous care. The most tuvred tiust of a man is his own meanness. A very mean man—and one has to le very mean to be a politician —noi, only guards with anxious watchfulness his real self from being known, but. he hates anyone whom he believes purer than himself. In the presence of sueh he rises at once to a privileged question, and makes war on the man whose cxi.-tencc is a rebuke to his own, aud, as Nai ire gives 11 animals one instinct by which to know its enemies, declares war. j-Iow, then, could on.' who preferred his library to a restaurant, his home to a brothel, and the intercourse of refined, educated people to the senseless clamor of a caucus, keep terms with men whose little lives were bounded by the low rewards of office, where intellect and character lent no luster to position? You were a living rebuke tp such, and so Oakes AUKS and LIIF guilty associates turned on you with the*, fierceness of en trapped beasts: and, while men who openly acknowledged their guilt lived forgiven or cd lamented, you have been hounded down night uhd-day.
Had yonr honored name be*n canvassed in advance tUnt. convention I doubt •whether you woald Inrvt n'cefc'cd a vote In the fierce contest between the men who songht to perpetuate the Presidency in one familv. and they who were quite as illing, but feared the attempt and so Tallied under James G. Blaine, your name opened a door to an escape for both sides and in the wild hurrah that followed the show of such relief you were nominated.
I \*it to record this fact in your honor. To that same be it said that you l.ave iot a single feeling, through principle ir impulse, in common with the party that has made you it® President. God knows, vou have labored long and persistently to be cf that party, and keep step to the music of its rogue's march to power.
This you have accomplished by keeping vour eyes on the Democracy and ignoring all the insincere dishonesty of or in at on no w— if you permit yourself to know—that, under the guise of*the purest patriotism, it has nearly destroyed the republic, and under the eioak of the hi thest morality it has sunk our civil service uutil it is a stench ill the nostrils of all honest men: while professing to care for our material prosperity it nas plundered the people until the difference "between the rich and poor is as marked and dislr&siag as in any part of Europe.
This horforMs-nqjt the worst. The wealth for which tlas Organization has I striven ha$ deltraueUfd the party that
seems opposed lo it until we have reached whole ytorv. Tlie very Democrats of the a condition, pointed out by you in yonr coinmiluvtbruuk from the tlictateued own thoughtful way, that is fatal to fnX [(.XpoMjni. government, and tha*. is when h-if one] Thf eonnpinitor- who put this raau to partv So fir as the vital ^qutsiiontf phe front «i?h ilria evil design .have of n'form are concerned, questions com- neiztd upon juur campaign as They purhome to and affecting the welfare of
ing thr r^-ople, there has been in the late pi\idt Tii ial canvass no difference whatever. You were elected on a sectional issue, in which the wlid North was arrayed, against the solid South as in the late war. It was in one of your efforts to keep step with youf corrupt party, and against your own conscience, that you said in Maine three yaars since to the voters that "when in doubt, to look along the deadlylevel of their rifles and *ote as they shot in the late war," and this has made all of the platform of the Republican party during the canvass.
History never has and never will prob ably put to record such an infamy as that upon which you were elected. We came up from the late war of brother against brother with but one duty before us, and that was heal as rapidly and tenderly as we could the cruel wounds that armed conflict had made. This not only because of the fact that we are of one family, but that the existence of the Republic depends upon the good will and common interests Of states that, combined, make up the Government. To secure this the fathers putin the original compact called our Constitution a written guarantee securing to the 6lave states their property in slaves. We tore that guarantee from the Constitution with our bayone.s' and robbed our own people of millions in a property the title to which we ourselves had made.
Not content with this, you: party turned upon the ruined country an army of thieves, backed by a horde of brutal negroes, and held them to their work of plunder by Federal bayonets.
We talk about our magnanimity. No greater punishment was ever awarded a rebellious jieople in any part of the earth.
And now, after the South has, under the brutal rule of your party, staggered to its feet in a manner that is simply miraculous. and is striving honestly to rebuild its social fabrVc and legain its material prosperity, a -ry of wrath has gone up throughout the North scarcely surpassed l)v tlie excitement that prccedeu our late civil war. From Evarts down to Conkling, from the highest to the lowest, there has been an outpouring of anger, tinctured with contempt, that is paralleled only by the way in wl ich Ireland is treated by England.
Of course the leaders are insincere. They mean all this only to secure a control of the Government. They cannot look each other in the face without laughing, and enjoy the justification the event gives of their low estimate ot human nature. But the poison thus created lives and permeates the masses, and as fraud breeds violence and the sun heated rot breeds storms, the consequence of the infamy is something graver aud of more importance than the. mere success of a faction in a presidential contest.
It is not, however, of this that. I sat down to write. I want, as a friend, to warn you of a matter not only personal, but of public concern.
We have amons us certain evil-disposed persons, wi'h a heavy backing of plunderers, through class legislation, who are bent upon changing in form, as they have long since changed in substance, our solf-government. Threatened with a loss ot their ill-gotten gains, through the reluming tour years' struggle of a Presidential canvass, thev seek to make of the Presidency a life tenure, and, under the name of a stronger goveinment, escape the return of power to the people, which is yet apparent in form, if it IKJ without reality/
You know the man who is to serve their purpose in this reasonable scheme They bank upon his military record and supposed popularity and certinly he is the fittest tool evil opportunity ever|otiered Trained and taught in a school where an utter indifference to a knowledge of government is irtade the foundation of the so-called education—for to become a soldier it is necessary to cease being a citizen, as blind obedience to the orders of the party that happens to posess the Government makes it necessary the soldier should belong to no party—this man is without information, even had he the intellect to profit from either experience or observation. Coarse ignorant selfish and greedy, he has the courage of an animal, and is as corrupt as it is possible for irresponsible a character to be.
You know better than any one else that this sketch is not exaggerated- You know that he did more to debauch our Government in his eight years of administration than Jeff. Davis, with his armed hosts, did to destroy it in his eight years of war. The result he brought about is more terrible than a violent ending for it is that decay which not only precedes death, but sickness one of the living, and so fetches a Republican form of irovernv.ient into contempt.
You know that fro'u the fir^t to the last hour of 1 is Administration he was on the make' to use a vulgar but expressive phrase and the association of prostitutes and the patron of thieves, he made the Executive Mansion a resort of plunderers—the civil service so. rotten that Republicanism became a by-word of reproach aud shame to the civilized world, while his constitutional advisers were men upon whom he held a lien in common with the penitentiary.
Now don't frown and turn away. Let us before we are lost to a knowledge of truth, through an inauguration, that will sur round you a thousand deep with sycophantia liars, indulge, a? we have so often in the past, the luxury of expressing our convictions.
I need uot saythat you and I knowwhy that resolution was so suddenly abandoned, the fact that under the cirmi stances it was revoked tells the
the TERRE HaUTE weekly gazette.
posefoM-izt upon your Administration. (irMcr tin prodigious noise they have mthey claim'fee merit of your election, and 'in electing you they* nominate Grant for his third Tepn. and thus make you our last President.
If you arc weak enough to be thus hoocfwinked and used you will justify all that your deadliest enemies have asserted against your chaiacter and of your past career. If you possess the courage vou will have the opportunity. The power given a man as President is immense. There, is no monarch in Europe endowed with the 'irresponsible exercise of the sovereign will with which our President is clothed. The fathers feared the people, and while they secured frequent returns of power to its source, they made that power in the Executive to great that the office itself is despatic. To this the abuse of our civil service, that makes of the offices only rewards for political effort, and the ollicial ngents dependent retain, ers, not of a party, but of party leaders, has augmented the power of the President until he can build up «r destroy, if he so wills, independent of the party* itself that gave him the office.
By depriving these conspirators against the peace and dignity of tuc United States of political patronage you doom them to immediate death. They are made up of (features who, while they have grown rich on politics, would have starved in any other pursuits. Shut off the offices and they die. President Hayes could have killed off Conkling the first year of 'his Administration had he possessed the nerve. It will not do to fight these men with an open hand. Hayes parleyed and palavered, and we have before us the ludicrous result of the man dispossessed of a subordinate office and condemned by the Senate now called upon by a vote of the peaple to preside over the Senate
Were you really a great man, did you possess the moral"courage equal to your intellect, I should expect you as President to kill off the faction that elected you. As a party made up of measures without principles, and each measure shaped to benefit some one class at the expense of the industrious many in its jealous greed it shuts us out from the intellectual progress of the world and while in Europe statesmen are discussing grave questions of political economy, and the people are clearing away such barbarisms as tariffs, land tenures, civil-service reform and corporated monopolies, we are shouting ourselves hoarse ever political differences no man can define, while the combined few are accumulating property through processes scarcely one remove from open theft. The Republican party is a dead weight on and hindrance to the conscience and intellect of the people. It is as void of statesmanship as a faction'of Mexico or a mob in England, it ought to be killed.
But you are not a great man. Yon read in your library of heroic achievements your soul swells over poetic expression you are full of thought and impulse, and all ends in a support of men you despise and a parly with which you have nothing in common.
Wishing you all health.hap pii.rirSand properily, I remain, Yours sincerely,
DONN PIATT.
Ma--o--hA\ 10th November. 80,
How Union Prisoners Proposed to Capture Richmond Anew story of the war was recently told by Major John I). Simpson, of the Madison (Illinois Star. who was engaged in it. He soys: Desperate at long confinement, and* with the determination of the American soldier, it was planned to escape from Libby Prison, release about, fifteen thousand of our soldiers confined in Richmond and en Beile Isle, capture the arsenal, hold the city, make Jeff Davis a prisonor, cross James River, burn the bridges after us and es cape down the peniusula. This plan was perfectly feasible, and would have been executed to the letter had it not been for a traitor i\i the prison, who communicated our plans to the rebels, and the. game was was checkmated.
About a half block away from Libby Prison were confined in what was known as the Pembleton Building seven or eight thousand of our enlisted men on Beile Isle, an island in James River, opposite Richmond, about the same mini her. In Libby Prison wen: about thousand Union officers. Although there were in the prison Generai Neal Dow. of Maine General Seammon and several officersout-ranking Colonel A. 1). Streight. Streight who had boldlv cut his way into the heart of the Confederacy and first exposed its hollowness. was acknowl edged as the leader. He oririnated the Secret Council of Five, and was choseu commander-in-L-hief. It was a sworn,
cles of five men each, with a leader, and each room had a commander. Quietly,
sworn into the well remembered corner, and as f:it a-* une Circle \,- organized another would be formed, 'until nearly one-half the officers in the prison were members. Every day a new countersign was given out. and the entire command held well in hand.
As soon as a good majority of the officers had been sworn in the break was to have been maoe. The ta!taliou guarding the prison was to In- rushed upon and captured, aid a division of officers,
It was your committee that investigate-uletaikd for the purpose, was to rush ed that national shame called Blacky Fri- when our soldiers were confined and libday, wherein Fisk. Gould and Giaat erate them. As soon as the liberation sought, through a use of the national from the prisons took plat e, which was treasury, to enrich themselves at the ex- [expected to be *'-1 over in fifteen minutes, pense of thousands of honest men. and at the loss o".'but few killed, the pris-
It is not my purpose to recall tin-details oners were to uh to the Capitol Square, of that infaniy. The chief criminal was jjit was the .d.r of the Confederate tracked to the threshold of the Exeoutive authorities to ri.'g the alarm belis whenMansion, and your committee passed a ever the home ge ird was needed, and at resolution calling upon the President t«»! its sounu the mili.ia. who had their arms appear before the committee and defend at home with them, were to rally to the him*elf from the damning proof thati Public Square. It was the intention of made him the chief conspirator. the Union prisoners to disarm these men
The night of the day that resolution as fast as they arrived and arm our own passed
was passeu you called with it upon ihe President, ft was after midnight before you left the White House, amazed and sick at heart, and at your suggestion, that very day, the resolution was revoked.
men with their guns. A force was to cut the telegraph wires, another was to seize the arsenal, another to capture Jeff Davis and the leaders of the Confederacy, and then, armed and organized, to march across the river, burn the bridges after us, and escape, as I have said, down the peninsula. We would only have had about thirty miles to go to reach our lines
This plan was about perfected, all the details made, the different officers appointed, and there would have been no doubt of success—but one night a battery of artillery and two regiments of infantry were drawn up in front of Libby Prison. The guns of the artillery were trained on the building, and the men stood in line before the prison all night. For two or three nights this was repeated, until one morning the Richmond papers, containing full details of the plot, were seat into prison, and we saw that we had been betrayed. Our enlisted men were hastily sent to Andersonville, irof! bars were put up at the windows of Libby. the guard was doubled, and greater vigilance was used in guarding us. Theiewas nothing in the way. of a full and complect accomplishment of this enterprise but treason, and its deadly poison killed it_ The effects of the successful termination of this well planned and daring enterprise may be imagined. The rebel on would have received its death-hurt then and there, and thousands of lives and millions of dollars would have been saved to this country.
DR. JULES HOURIETS SWISS AGUE CURE IS A SOVEREIGN REMEDY FOR FEVER AND AGUE
BAKEU'S Pairf Panacea cures pain in Man and Beast. For use externally and internallv.
Poisoned.
Poision in the blood is what causes the Pale, Gl'oomy, Sallow, Head-aching, Pain Racked, Yellow Skinned, Pimpled. Ulcerated unfortunates so often met with. The liver is out of order the. blood is poisoned as a result no medicine will cure them. Dr. Flagg's Liver and Stom ach Pad is the only remedy that will restore them to speedy and 'perfect health.
A Cleaning Out.
At this season the system needs a thor ough cleansing. When the Breath is Bad' Tongue coated, Skin discolored. Head Aching, Back and Limbs Paining, Bowels Irregular, Appetite poor or variable, then take no medicines use Dr. Flagg's Improved Liver and Stomach Pad and IK: made new.
LADY LAWYERS.
The female millenium appears to be dawning. There are women doctors clerks, and jury-men, and soon there will be woman lawyers. Before thev attempt to speak they should use SOZODONT lo give beauty to their mouth which are distined to complete their success as orators.
Female
Lawyers will stick to their SPALDING'S GLUK to wood.
lients.like
Don't shake with chills when Dr. Jules Honriet's Swiss Agus Cure will set you all right.
BLOCK COAL. ANTHRACITE II ITUMUNOUS, NUT
AND SLACK
supplied promptly on order by E. Merrill the Ohio street coal dealer, near Fourth. He solicits your order.
AN especially fine lotofturkcvs, plump fat and nice, elegant fat quails, choicest meats, select celery and apples that are superior to anything usually seen, at Pat ton Bros. Order supplies early.
your Thanksgiving
Prompt Action Uf Compound Oxyger «nn Disease? "flic promptness with which Compound Oxygen acts in throat and lung diseases is very remarkable. Mrs. Alice A. Daniel's, (,of Ramsey's Station, Alabama, sends, with solicition, and for publication, a statement of the results of its use in her case, from which we make a single extract. She says, "In four days after commencing to inhale the Compound Oxygen, chills, fever, and night-sweats were all gone! My appetite, which before was at its lowest ebb., soon became good. My strength increased very rapidly, and improvement has been steadily going on ever since the first inhalation. My c'ougn slowly became milder, and today I can truthfully say that I am almost a well woman." Send for our Treatise on Compound Oxygen. It will be mailed fiee. Drs. Starkey & Palen, 1100 and 1111 Girard Street,Philadelphia Pa
A Qacd Housewife.
The good housewife, when she is giving her house its spring renovating, should bear in mind that the dear inmates of her house are more precious than many bouses, and that their systems need cleansing by purifying the blood, restulatin^ the stomach and bowels to
secret organization, and was organized,, prevent and cure the diseases arising as its name indicates, in Councils or (ir- from spring malaria and miasma, and she must know that there is nothing that will do it so perfectly and surely as Hop night at'ier night, the organization went hitters, the purest and best of medicines, on. Slipping ghost-like, in stocking —C'o.iww/. A',//. Patriot. feet, among* the sleeping prisoners, the* guides would lead those who were to be pjve Hundred Dollars Reward
We will pay the above reward for and case of Liver Complaint, Dyspepsia, 3ick Headache, Indigestion, Constipation of Costiveness, we cannot cure with West's Vegetable Liver Pills, when the directions ere strictly complied with. They are purely Vegetable, and never fail to give satisfaction. Sugar Coated. Large boxes, containing 30 Pills, 26 cents. For sale by all Druggists'. Beware of counterfeits and imitations. The genuine manufactured only by John C. West & Co., "The Pill Makers,*" 181 and 183 W. Madison street, Chicago, 111. Free trial Package sent by mail prepaid receipt of a three cent stamp-
82 JAMES NICHOLH. DEALKK IX AOKKHIE8 AND TKOVISIOXS, FLO UK, FEKD NL NOTIONS. FRESH AND CURED MEATS.
Everything usually found in a first class grocery always on hand. I liaverecently added a
KRKSII MEAT MARKET
where can be found at all times the choicest of steaks and roasts, pork and pork chops, sausages, Bolognas, &c. My prices cannot fan to be satisfactory Give me a call at my new and enmmodi. ous
BRICK GROCERY.
Southeast corner First and Swan streets Goods delivered to aty part of the city free. .......
ADMINISTRATRATORS' SALE OF REAL ESTATE, Notice is hereby given that we willselat public sale on Saturday, the 6th day of November 1880, at 2 o'clock p. M., at the door of the Court Howe 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*Ssubdivision of 46,60 acres as per recorded plat thereof, in Tern: Hautev Indiana. 2.—50 feet off the east Old original inlot No 148 in the city of Terre Haute, In diana 3.—Lot No. 5 in Barton place, said place being a sub-division of lot No. 1 in Chase's su&division of 160 acres off iae north end of the northeast quai ter of sec. tion 22, T. 12 north, of range 9 west. 4.—The N. E. qr. of the S. W. qr. of see. 21 in T. 13, N. of R. 8. W. r».—5 acres to sec. 33. T. 12 N. of R. 9 W. lying W. of the Yineennes Road, and N, of 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. 6 degrees 'auul 10 seconds) 24,08 chains to a jHist, being the N.W. cor. of the Nicum land, from which a red bud tree 9 inches in diameter bears N. 2 seconds E. 5% links, thence 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 WT., 16 links, t'leneeeast 24.20 chains to said Vincennes Road to an iron peg, from which bears a hickory tree 9 incites in diameter, N. 44% E. 12 links, thence S. along the W. side of svid Road. 2 chains and 87 links to the place of be, ginning, upon the following
TERMS:
One fourth of the purchase money shall lie 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 sold at private sale any time after the 21st of Oct. 1880, but anv parcel of said real estate, the appraised value whereof does not exceed $1,000,00, may be sold at any time, at the office of the auditor of said county, upon the same terms as at public sale. 2iith Sept. 18b'0.
Wtl.MAM P. Ar.MSTitO.Nvi, ANIJKKW (JKIMEH, Administrators Est. James B. Armstrong, dec A. M.
BU\'K,
Atty.
APPLICATION FOK LICENSE. Notice is hereby given that I will apply to 1 tie board or Commissioners of Vigo Oounty, Indiana, at their Dec"iriber term, for a lleen.se to seir'intoxicating liquors," in a lesa quanti than quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing the same to bo drank on my premises for one year. My place of business #nd the premises whereon .si liquors are to be sold nud drank are located on Rose's add, 21) feet front on Maiu street, in lota l(£i and 104 in Sixth waid.
JOIIN HE1SS.
IS STRONGL Rev. E. F. GAUSS, Galena, Ills., writoa—" For over ten years I bad been a great sufferer from paina in the em&ll of the back and region of the Kidneys, which waa most excruciating and at times almost Insufferable. Doctoring brought no reliof, and I w«s ftnaUy advised to go abroad and seek the climate of my youth. In Germany and Switzerland, eminent physicians, aftor close examinations, declared my Bufferings to arise from diseaso of the Kidneys, of long standing, and could do me no good. I was, however, benoated by the climate and consequently rourued. No sooner bad I been back and resumed my pastoral work, when the old trouble grew again so intense as to make life a burden. A few months ago I came in possession of one of Day's Kidney Pads, put it on, and the effects wore truly wonderful. Tho pains at once grow less and are now, after wearing the second Pad, ontirely gone, and there can bo no doubt that I am entirely cured, as I write this somo weeks after its use, and am strong and look again tho very picture of health. I writo this perfectly voluntarily, and it is dictated only by truth and gratitude. Indeed, I consider the Day Kidney Pad Co.
God's agents and
great benefactors of mankind. May all tho suffering be helped as I have been is my oarnest wish."
LARinORG & DEAN,Dni(Wlst8,7rilw, Mieh.—(30 years in business)—" DAY'S KIDNEY PAD is having a large sale and gives better general satisfaction than any remedy wo over sold."
CASPER VTEITZEL, Policeman, Lancaster, Pn.—" I havebeen a great sufferer from Kidney complaint, and after wearing yonr Pad 25 days I feel better than I have In 15 years."
DP. A. J. STOXER, Decatur, His.— "Your Pad is doing great good here. It sells every day and gives universal satisfaction."
For sale by druggists, or sent by mail (free of postage) on receipt of the price—Kegnlar Pad $2.00 Special Pad (extra size), $3.00 Children's, $1.50. Our book," How aXife was Saved," giving the history of this new discovery and ajiarge record of most remarkable cures sent free. Write for it. A ldress, DAY KIDNEY PAD CO., Toledo. O. A A IITinil Owing to the many worthlesa (jAU II Una Kidney Pads now seeking a salt on our reputation, wo deem It duo the afflicted to v.-.irn them. Ask for DAY'S J£U9XEY PAD. and tako no otUer.
APPLICATION FOLL LICENSE. Notice is hereby given that I will apply to tlm Board of Commissioners of Vigo County, Indiana, at their December term, for a license to sell ••intoxlenting liquors." in a less quantity than a quart at a time, with tlie 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 at 214 south Fonrth street, on the east side in the Second ward in Terre Haute in Harrison Township, Vigo County Indiana.
F. M. BURNS.
APPLIOATON FOR LICENSE. Notice is hereby given that the nnde«ign ed will apply to the Board of Couhty Commission ers of Vigo county, at their next December term, for a liceme t* sell spiritous or intoxicating liquors In a less quantity than a quart ata time, with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on the premises for one year. The place of business and the premises whereon said liquors are
THE
be
sold and drank are locatid in In-lot 175, in the original sdrvey of the town, now city of Terre Haute, on the west side of Second street, between Main and Cherry streets, in the Fourth Want, in Terre Haute, Harrison township, Vigo county, Indiana,
APPLICATION FOR LICENSE.
Notice is hereby given that I will apply to the Board of Commissioners of Vigo County, Indiana, at their December term, for a license to sell "intoxicating liquors," ifl a less quantity than a quart at a time, with'lhe privilege of allowing the same to be drfnk on my premises for one year. My place of bosinessand the whereon said liquors art to be sold and drank are located at No. 114 Main street north side between First and Socond streets. In the Fourth ward In the city of Terre Haute in Harrison Township Vigo county Indiana.
Admiration
of rax
WORLD.,
1
A NOTABLE EVENTf
Mrs. S A. Aliens
Pictures, Frames and Mouldings No. 100 Main street, Torre Haute Ind.
SSfS
WORLD'S
Hair Restorer is
jpjcrfuctwjs:
Nobferecortl: near half nCentury. Established 18S2. •mprovctl 1WJ. The nature of the greatimproveincnt is in its wonderful life giving proportlen to faded orfallinghair, and MOKK QUICKLY CIIAHOINO ORATOR WHITKHAIK to its natural youthful CPLOB and BEAUTY.
ITI.V'OT A DYE.
And requircsonly few applications to restore gray hair to Its youthful color and ustrousbcanty,and induce luxurian growth and its occasional use in all that is noetlod to preserve it tn its highest perfection and beauty. DANDRUFF is quickly aud permanently removed.
Sold by alt Druggists, SI.25 per bottle. M.VNUKACTOUIKS ANDSALKHUOOMHU lit'and 110 Southampton Row. London England. 8 Poulevan! 1 laussman, Par is, France. 76 Barclay street and 0 Park Place. Now York.
OPERA HOUSEflOO CK SiDRE
E. L. GODEGKE,
(8UCClC830KT0A.il. DOOLKY)^ DEALERIN
Sipsp
ZImMERMAN, WALSH & CO., BANKERS & BROKI'IKM, 19 Wall .St., New York, Members of the Nrw York Htock ami Mining ExenanneM. Buy and sell Htookn and Bonds stnrlly on Commission for eash, or on marKin.
Dealers in Bullion, Specie, and Foreign Bank Notes. Night Drafts on all parta of Kurope.Int6rest allowed on DeitosiLs.
FRANKPRATT,
IMT'OIlTKIi AND DKAI.FR IN
ITALIAN MARBLE AND GRANITE
MONUMENTS,
Statuary, Vases, &c.
Removed to new Building Corner Fifth and Wuluiit Street*.
IIOWTO CI'KE
Consumption, Coughs,
COLDS. ASTHMA, (MiOUP,
All ilt.seaaen of the throat, lungs, and put monary Organs.
USK ACMRWSO TO 1HKKCTIONH
Allen's Liing Balsam.
CllVlli,
Mechanical, mid JTIining lluffiiiceriiiKat the Ilen**«*lue* I'olytcclinfc Institutes Troy, N, V, Theoldest engineering school in America* Next term begins Heptemlier, Hlth. The Register of 1880 contains a list of the graduates for the pust.51 years, with their ponllons also, c«u .,e of study, requirement* xpeusen, eU Address.
CVVIDM. iJKBRN K.Directo
Opera
W
El
-AN D-
l)«,,v
Four of the best billiard and 10 ball poo tables in this city also the best liquors whiskies and brandies. Wines of oil kinds such as—
s*r--
Callfornia IteaMling,^.%ii...»...7T»e per bottle. French Claret, Mc Keokul Ives, ""e Keokuk iown Claret 75c V~ botlle Iowa Claret, wc Piper Iloldslcck Champaign ttlX©" Imperial Domestic Champaign 75c" 'jf-'V Monopole Domestic Champaign 1-00
Also the llnest Imperial port sherry wines for medical purposes.
For Paper Hanging, Calcimining or Interior Decoration go to TEAQUAIR 629 JMain Street., oldest jpracttea «"«•!*tlie city
V'. &.«'/ AW .. -v.-*. I tftl 'i- ». J-f-r itm an-f *i«i 1. wvri /tv»rrhea, ininolpiM/ if iiict^ri(r, at
Ur.
HK». fij fetter, twj Vtftk. iMustratr'i. CO cU- Finest i!lo» exunf. SJb prui**, potr|*jrJ, phv»Kua \u ritv who wmA
M0UiRT ,'f COD-LIVEB Oil
1* perfectly pore. Pronounced the eettb^ tbs highest medical authorities in tba world. Ufrtn liigbrM award at IS World'* Expositions, snd at I'arls, 1874. Sold by Druggists, w. w. no.. r.
lULL-trAlt HU.
to
trod. Ouift''
JAMKS MADIGAN, EUGENE KEEFK*
rr
M/.IL AfidJU'TfrjrwIijn to *11 Tnt
l- ilrt. htkmf Powder, (Utormg fcx»tt.. br umpte. to haiiMf. Pratt Pr*.plr'- Ti» Cfc. «a» WX». M. 1-ouw. M»
Twenty ari'Bxperfeii*
1
in the ire-ituicnt of alt PmfrAT* from *11 partte* •le Creek. Mic
Tbr
E
pnt inwonmw PoiTKK-mrs
'uhImM B«"TTVr»e» n#r»f.u» timUKir Impoieify. ana
trxsift. doClfltjr smi rftorr? the. -.erffy »nd riifnt 01 routMn iwentv mir.nt»». Yrtce.H'*&rn •udrfx 'oth* SFVT KTC0I«AV!» NgSiCAU IKPP1T! K. 1I*»
.rtarf
MPIOYMEWT—V.SflSSS "U.SSlabvk""-1"' adTaswA WAGES pronr—'«y paid. SLOAI
A Co 3Q8 Bforr« -'Innatt.
DIVORCES
H. S. MOKKNJIE.
UI \j 11M UvJ Enclose stamp for tdvlc*. Sof'. "g* «.«.
