Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 20 January 1881 — Page 3

to Years before the Public, THE CENAJINE OR. C. McLANE'S LIVER PILLS

xre not recommended as a remedy for Mi the ills that flesh is heir to," out ir. affections of the Liver, and in nil Bilious

Vnnplnints, Dyspepsia, nnd dick Head* •{•ha, or diseases of tlux' character, fcaey ic'jinl without a rival.

A E A N E iSo better cathartic can be used pre.aritory to, or after taking quinine. As simple purgative they art unequaled.

BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. he genuine are never sugar-coated. Each box has a red-wax seal on the lid, 9-ith the impression, McLANE'8 LIVER 1LL. Each wrapper bears the signatures of C. MCLAXK and FI.EMINO BROS.

Insist upon having the genuine m. C\ McLANTS'S LIVER TILLS, prepared by FLEMING BROS., Pittsburgh, Pa., the market being full of imitations of the name JfcLane, spelled differently Hit samo pronunciation.

TIIVE11

Prepared frulU

tropical plant*.

Is the Best and Most Agreeable Preparation in the World.

For Constipation, Biliousness, Headacbe. Torpid Uver, Hemorrhoids, Indlnposltlon, and all Disorders arising: from an obstructed state of the system.

Ladles and children, and those who dislike taking pills and nauseous medicines, are especially pleased with Its agreeable qualities.

TROPIC-FRUIT LAXATIVE may be used ud of

In nil cases that need tho a: cathartic, or aperient medicine, and while

purgative, iillelt pro­

«F

duces the same result as the agents named, It Is to them. Packed In brona^d tin boxes only.

entirely free from the usual objections common

Price 25 cts. Large boxes

6oc.

SOLD BY ALL FIRST-CLASS DRUGGISTS.

A Compound Tincture of the most valuable remedies known to the medloal profession, prepared upon strictly pharmaoeutloal principles.

An experience Of twenty-fire jears proves it to be greatest Antidote to Malaria and all other Ague aenoes known to the world. he only

abiolutg curt

qgloaciout,

for all Affections of tho

Kidneys. In Liver Complaint, Oyepcpgla, ul Disorders of tho Bowels, and all Affections of the Throat nnd Langs, it is equally

while as a roraodj for complaints peculiar

to the female sex it has no eqnaL

NOT A BEVERAGE

But an old reliable Household Remedy, (hprtwghlr adapted to assist nature. It supplies tone to the stomach, reinvigoratea the Digestive organs, stimulates the secretions, and promoting a regniar aetioc of the bowels, enables every

iiave used it longest an£ kas™* ***%. Nowhere so popular afc in I«ncHstm Pa., where it has been in use for more than a quarter at a century.

Highly commended as Uenenu Tonic Uld Appetizer. Sold byDroggisto evecywhera. THE MESSENGER OF HEALTH A large sized paper descriptive of disease, its origin and cure, will be mailed free to any address am ippUe&?!«n to

THE MI8HLER HERB BITTERS CO. Lancaster, Pa. JtU~ Wo strongly recommend to mothers Pro f.

AS

ier^J

is easy to tako, and no aftor-p^rsio* is require^?

rker's Is easj ,25 cent"

TUTT'S

AS AN ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE,

are Incomparable. They stimulate the

TORPID IJIVER,Invigoratethe NERVOUS SYSTEM, give tone to the DIQE8tfVTB ORQAJT8, create perfeot digestion find regular movement of the bowels.

An

I

ANTI-MALARIAL

fhey have no equal acting as a preventive and cure for Bilious, Remittent, Intermittent, Typhoid Fevers, and Fever and Ague. Upon the healthy action of the Stomach and Liver depends, almost wholly, the health of the human raoe.

BYSKPSIA. ail!

ft is for the cure of this disease and Its sfcjendants, SK3^-tiftlAl)AOHE. IttlftVOUBNiUBU, I)JUaK)MDBNOY, OONgl'iPA'liON, FILES,

ftp.,

that these

Pills have gained such a wide reputation! No remedy was ever discovered that acts speedily and gently on tha digestive organs, giving them tons and vigor toy atmilate food. This accomplished, the SERVES are~BRA5Irb, tha BRASS NQtJRlfigKD, and the BODY feO fiUST. Try this Remedy fairly and you will gain a Vigoroua Body, Pure Bloody Strong iServes, and a Cheerful mind.

Prlco 25c. 35 Mai-ray St~« N. Y.

TUTT'S HAIR DYE.

'JNAT HAIA on.WatsKXBs changed to a GLOSSY BLACK

by a single a\ pUoatkm of tins

DYE.

It im.

#arU a Natural Color, and acts Instantaneously. Sold by Dro wristsor sentby express on receipt of 81.

Office, 35 Murray St., New York*

Coal Office!

N. S. Wheat is prepared furnish all grades ol coal and wood—both soft and hardcoal, JS cheap as the cheapest To accommodate his friends and the trade generally heXas a telephome placed in his office, so thkt orders can be received or sent from any part of the city, and receive tlw* same attention as if left at the officc. Thantoog the public for past patronage lie gtt^antees to He as prompt in supplying tl*m wrtlr best of coal in the future.

Coal Office Mian St.

Jii

O it re a is

A Tennysonlan Retrospect. (Atlantic Monthly.)

3

It must come with a shock of surprise most readers to learn that Alfred Tennyson has reached his seventieth birthday. Some of us can remember when The Two Voices and Locksley Hall and In Memoriain struck a symphethatic cord in our fresh souls, and placed their author, for us, on the highest pinnacle of fame and it seems as if ii were only yesterday that this impression- was made. He has led his own generation with such success, he has so voiced his mood, he has so imparted to men his own moral conquests and spiritual victories, that we can not think him old, or easily estimate our indebtedness to him.

No poet of the age has been so intimately associated, recluse as he is said to be, with thoughts and feelings throbbing in the life of the time. He has interpeted the nineteenth century on its social and spiritual side, with sufficient breadth to take in its many-sided activity, and with sufficient sympathy and insight to give a manly tono to its spixitual cnarao ter.

Looked at from his seventieth birthday Tennyson has survived many reputa tions which for the moment were as brilliant as his own. It is not necessary tc dwarf others to make him great, but some who began with him have already disappeared. Alexander Smith and Philip James Bailey awakened expectations which they did not fulfill. His friend, John Sterling, has utterly faded fcut of sight as a poet, and lives only because Thomas Carlyle wrote his biography. Algernon Charles Swinburne, though a much younger man, has so divided his strenght Between prose and poetry that his fame is at a stand-still and much as we delight in Browning, he has never mastered his idiosyncrasies sufficiently to give us the full strength of what is in him. Clough and Arnold are rather the exponents of a phase of thought than the inspired enterpreters of life.

When compared with his contemporaries, Tennyson may be said to have failed again and again in what he early aimed at, but with every new volume he has shown a clear advance upon what was his best before. His genius was at first as wayward as Browning's but he has had the patience and industry to overcome the obstacles which stood in the way of success, and has shown himself worthy to be not only the first among his peers, but the poet laureate of hi* time.

Some Modern Improvements. [London Telegraph.]

The author of a series of papers on "Young London" records some of the changes of the half century. When he first began to remember things there were only two railroads in the united kingdom. It took the best part of four days to get to Paris and the postage of a letter to that city was one and eight pence. There were no ocean steamer, and five weeks were often consumed in a journey to New York.

There were no lucifer matches lighting on or off the box and flint and steel .- -x_i —3(j -n itch-

of rosvenor sq uare. There w6re no electro telegraphs, no post office money orders, no steel pens (in common USB), no envelopes, no perambulators. There were no cheap newspapers, no shipping magazines no post cards, nor perforated stamps and counterfoils, and no paraffine candles. There was not a hotel in England where a lady could dine in a public room. There were ohly two decent French restaurants in London.

There was no photography, no benzoline, no chloroform, 110 glycerine, no collodion, and no gun-cotton. There were no preserved meats, soups. or vegetables, there was was but little chocolate, and no cocoa. Sodawater was a shilling a bottle. There were no handsome cabs, and no knife-boards to the omnibuses. There were no refrigerators, and no sewing-machines. There were no keyless nor crystal-cased watches no Albert or Breguet watch chains no electro-gild-ing nor silvering, and no electrotyping. The steel fork in ordinary use had only two prongs "balanced" table knives were unknown. There were no stays that were not instruments of torture, and no walking boots for ladies. There was no Balbnggan nor Balmoral hosiery. There were only a few velocipedes, and there were no revolvers. There was no gutta* percha, and very few cigars.

It Nemr

Comes.

We never have a to-morrow it is tdni* ply a word of prophecies. It has been said that the two great pleasures of living are in having something to love and to hope for, and the last of these is ever before us in the promise of to-morrow. To-morrow we may not know, and it is well that it is thus ordained to be, for beyond the invisible veil that conceals alike its coming joys and sorrows, our fancy may revel only in what is beautiful and fair, nor see the gloom or shadow of coming trials and worldly afflictions, ^that, could wo 'anticipate as fixed realities that were certain to come, would mar all our peace and enjoyment of the present. It is well for us that we can not withdraw the veil which hides our future.

•l-i!

I 'I JS! An fflal TZ/imnn Town.

V*

An Old Roman Town,

Extensive excavations near Waldorf, in the neighborhood of Bonn, Germany, have brought to light the site of an old town believed to be of Boman origin, but the extent of which ia yet quite unknown. The remains of a large Boman villa were discovered in the vicinity, situated a little below the site of an extinct volcano—a circumstance going to show that at the time of the Boman occupation tlie volcanoes of the Bhine Had ceased to be dangerous, v?

Tjftien two women with new hats on

VWVI,U

pass each other on the street there is a

pair of back stares made immediately.—

[Marathon Independent.

gl§!®lp

/. -.M 'A-i J?

1

A TRAMP ON "RESULTS."

What He Wanted to Get At-Hls Wonder ful Statistical Information.

From the Detroit Free Press.

"I want to know whether your paper is run in the interest of a favored few, or pro bono publico."

Thus said a visitor to the Detroit

Press

editorial rooms. He was gaunt and iiungry-lnoking he was ragged and apparently liard up he was unwashed and unkept but he read the papers. "Ever since 'lection," he went on, as he pushed off his hat'and took a chair, "have read of'Vanderbilt on the Result,' 'Jay Gould on the Result,' 'Beecher on the Result,' and a score of others on the result. TTiat's all right, but the poor man wants to be heard" on the result, too. Now, then, I'm a regular built tramp. I'm shot-proof, non-freezable, and have the cheek of a whole session of Congress. I represent one hundred thousand men. I beg I pick up things but I'm a representative of a party. We have no name, and we don't vote, but there's an army of us just the same, and we want to be heard.from on the result." "Well, you can state your opinions." "Thanks. Now then, to begin with

The Democratic party bad no new issue hev had a good candidate, but they could not convince the countrv lhat there was need of a change. We fellers realiz-. ed this sooner than you did, and we talk edit over under hay-stacks and upon haymowt. Lots of wheat, plenty of fruit, big crops ot turnips—'we'vejust grown fat this year. We let well enough alone, and its the same with other classes." "Go on." "Now, as to results. There wont be any more or any less tramps. It's become a regular business, same as any other, and the ranks will keep about so full. The number of shotguns held in reserve for our class will diminish good crops and good times make people more free-hearted. I heven't been shot at but three times this whole year. "That's a falling off." "Guess it is! There won't be thncli fairing off in the number of watch-dogs, but more of them will be tied up in the daytime. I estimate that 25,000 additional dogs will be tied up during 1881, and this will afford us great relief. I think I've seen a change in the last two weeks. "Quitelikely." "I'm sure I have. Thirteen of us had a sort of convention out in the suburbs yesterday, and we agreed that 1881 would be the best year yet for old clothes^-that is, the public will pursue a more liberal policy toward our class. During the past campaign, when the election was in doubt, it was the hardest work in the world to get-an old coat or a used-up hat. In the last two weeks I've got almost enough old duds to carry me through the winter.' "That's encouraging."

Isn't it, though! I think the number of women who slam doors in our faces will drop fully fifty per cent, before the close of another year. A change is already here. This forenoon I called at ninei different houses and had the doors of ohly three slammed on my toes. A morjth ago eight doors would have hit me Ivith a bang, and the ninth would have: opened to let a man out to kick me through the gate."

New Style Criticism.^] FromNymCrinkle'sFullleton. I It is high time that somebody invented anew style of criticism for such actresses as Miss Fanny Davenport. How would it do to treat her efforts in the "American Girl" in this style Her appearance in the first act was decollete her emotion was well expressed by short sleeves, and there was throughout the quieter incidents a well defined impression of heliotrope satin de Lyon. She rose gradually as the acts wore on to crepe de chine and point lace, and carried all hearts with her to a climax of white satin and embossed brocade with Caucasian epaulets. Her garnet jupon in the act made a profound impression. Her sorrow, which had an edging of chenille and pearl-embroidered fringe, was of that sympathetic kind which touches all hearts, and none but the highest genius could have swayed her audience so completely with a high corsage of black velvet. Miss Davenport has a tendency at times to overdo her tulle, and there 19 no doubt a strong desire to emphasize her train, but the general conception and execution of her skirts, especially in the higher range of drama, are on ,the true line of histrionic art.

THE ball of the St. Caecilla Society

will

^yen

at

even

IllfllllSiS

1 -jr

iW 'V it

fpJ£.

p.

-r )S

THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.

Free

A a

1

"You must feel thankful." ""^Tell, yes though I have alwavs contended that perseverance would, make our business a success. Another result of the election is better food for us. TVo months ago I was glad enough to get a bone^and a' piece of dry bread. Now we get about the same as tho family eats." "Have you been kicked this week "That's another result I want to speak uf. I was in Detroit for a week in September, and I was kicked off of thirteen yards. I've been here just a week to-day coming from Indiana, and not a boot has touched me. The Republicans feel too good to boot me, and the Democrats feel too proud to vent their disappointment by kicking a ragged tramp. My fiscal vear ending November 1 of each year. From November, 1878, to November, 1880. I was kicked 183 times. I've got days and dates right here to show you Taking the past two weeks as a basis, I estimate that I shall not receive over sixty kicks the coming year—perhaps not over thirty. Now, then, have you got it all down?" "Yes." "Well, that's about all. We tramps feel in tip-top spirits, and look forward to fat times. Money is going to be easy, people will feel good-natured, and an era of lots of old elothes aad plenty to eat seems to hare dawned for us. Kinder sorry for your party but you hadn't the issues, did think of striking you for a quarter, but guess I'll let that go. I can pick it up somewhere duringthe day, and il I don't, odds is the difference. Plenty of boxes and hallways to sleep in round here and Sunday is the best day in the week to secure provisions. Well, all day to you. I must be looking around for an old overcoat. Such mornings as this binder give a fellow the cold shake." 'jwi v/

"mssism'

Solomon andthe Blacksmith.

From the Blacksmith nnd Wheelwright. The story goes that, during the building of Solomon's Temple, .wise ruler decided to treat the artisans employed on his famous edifice to a banquet. While the men -were enjoying the good things his bounty was provided, King Solomon moved about from table to table, endeavoring to become better acquainted with his workman: To one he said: "My friend, what is your trade

"And who makes your tools "The blacksmith," replied the carpenter.

To another Solomon said:

Whereupon King Solomon immediately proclaimed him the king of mechanics, because he could not only make his own tools, but all other artisans were forced to go to him to have their tools made.

The Wine Interest" From the California Farmer. tiere have been many great and remarkable changes in the wine interest of our State in the past two or three years Some three years ago, even two years ago, grapes sold for crushing at the vineyards from $6 to $8 and $10 per ton and so little was the profit in raising grapes and wine sold so low (from 20 to 30 cents per gallon) that many vineyards were broken up and the interest was on the wane. Within the last year the new life was infused into it. A large and increasing demand came for California wines, both from the Eastern States and also from Europe. The value of wines advanced in price, and this induced quite a desire to plant new vineyards, which has been done the last year to the extent of probably 2,000 acres. This has caused an increased price to be demanded forgrapes at tke vineyards, so that now the price this year ranees from $20 to $30 per ton, and some kinds even as high as $40 per ton.

This new life and this increased inter est for California wines has and will call into use a large amount of capital for wine and brandy making for coming years, as this is now firmly established as one of the great and solid interests of California—destined beyond question, ere long to rank with our grain interest in magnitude and value. The quantity ot wine for 1880 is estimated at more than ten millions of gallons, and the quality of the wine now made is of a much superior quality to all former years, the price steadily keeping pace with the quality.

A Practlal Joke.

We heard a good joke the other day told by a gentleman who was an eye witness to the scene, and a victim to the practical joke. Some years ago, while traveling in the west, business called the gontleman (our informant, to a country town th:ough which a new railroad had been built, and on a certain day. the pas senger train was to arrive at ihe place, and all of the village and much of the surrounding country had turned outto see the cars- Though it was raining furiously anfl the little depot could not shelter half the people, they waited patiently the arrival of the train. When at last the distant puffing of the engine could be heard, a sea of umbrellas lined the side of the railroad, and just as the engine was approaching the crowd, and all the attention was centered in the iron monster, some wag in the crowd yelled out, "Down with your umbrellas—scare the engine down with your umbrellasand before any one had time to think of tho absurdity of scaring the engine, half the umbrellas were down and the rain beating down on the devoted heads of the victims. In a few minutes all the umbrellas were up again and not a few of the victims were guilty of saying naughty words.

Itching Piles. Symptoms and

Cure. (•,-

The symptoms are moisture, like perspiration, intense itching, increased by scratching, very distressing, particularly at night, as if pin worms were crawling in and about the rectum the private parts are sometimes affective, if allowed to continue, very serious results may follow. DB. SWAYNE'8 AliL-HEAIiTNG OINTMENT is a pleasant sure cure. Also for Tetter, Itch, Salt Rheum, Scald Head, Etysipelas, Barber's Itch, Blotches, all Scaly Crusty Eruptions.

L. Taylor' Hinsdale, N. H., writes: "For 80 years I have been greatly troubled with Itching Piles have consulted many physicians and tried many remedies, which proved to me no remedies at all, until I obtained Dr. Swayne's Ointment at Thomas's drug store, in Brattleboro Vt., which cured me completely."

Sold by BUNTIN & ARMSTRONG, Terre Haute and druggists generally^

rioV-a

... "SM-

Hall on Monday

ing 24th inst. Tickets for admission will be 50c. :s

fi'

.1 A Losing Joke.

,4'|*

A prominent physician of Pittsburgh said jokingly to a lady patient who was complaining of her continued ill health, and of his inability to cure her, "try Hop Bitters,!" The lady look it in earnest and used the Bitters, "from which she obtained permanent health. She now laughs at the doctor for his joke, but he is not so well pleased with it as it cost him good patient—Horrisburgh

Remarkable Success.

The sciences of medicine and chemistry have never produced such a remedy for the treatment of Kidneys disease as the accidental discovery of the vegetable contained in DAY'S KIDNEY PAD. Its reliable character, desirable qualities and masterly curative power have deeply won upon the confidence of the medical profession and countless sufferers who have

0S•di,•

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it®

#rmrm

DR. HARTXK'S I ROW TOXIC

DYSPEPSIA.!

1

"What js your trade V" and the reply was "A mason." "And who makes yoar tools?" "The blacksmith," replied the mason.

A third stated that he was a stonecutter, and that the blacksmith also made his tools. The fourth that King Solomon addressed was the blacksmith himself. He was a powerful man, with bared arms, on which the muscles stood out in bold relief, seemingly almost as hard as the metal he worked. "And what is your trade my good man said the King. "Blacksmith," laconically replied the man of the anvil and sledge. "And who makes your tools?" "Make 'em myself," said the blacksmith.

H.

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JCIL. VJT»

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