Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 3 March 1881 — Page 2
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Ifci «l ELEGY WRITTEN IN A WHiTE HOUSE PARLOR.
800D March will toll the knell of parting Hayes, The yearn oi fraud will have a doleful end, And heand his tbeirsolitary ways
Home to Ohio mournfully will wend.
Save that perchaneejwme scions of the stock In fat positions may have taken root, Until their heads-be brought to Garfield's ., block,
rbr
\Mt»\ on th'e toeof Conkling's boot.
Back in Fremont, whsnce he should near have come, *f
A TendcrfooV»Ride From the Hostile#.
From the Las Vegas Gazette. The southern country is all excitement over the lait Indian raid. A few days ago voung man from the East took charge"of a locomotive on the construction line of the Santa Fe Road below San Marc.ial. On Wednesday he was ordered to side-track his engine at Gramme, the new .station on the Jornado, and wait fo the passage of the construction train beforo steaming up to San Marcial. He had heard innumerable and conflicting reports regarding the presence of the reds in that region, and was very uneasy. He had evidently been a diligent student of the thrilling narratives of Indian depredations, and regarded his situations as critical.
While side-tracked, he kept a sharp lookout and at labt the price of his vigilance was paid, for coming at a rapid late towards his iron steed, he beheld a party of Indians well armed. Scrambling down from his lookout on the tender, he made one leap for the throttle and grasping it shrieked out to the fireman, "Here they come All her up!" The fireman was startled by the wild expression on the countenance of the engineer, and began shoveling fuel.
Tulling tbe throttle wide open, the locomotive bounded along the iron way, the driver congratulating him-self that he •was leaving the hostiles far in his wake. But. he evidently measured the degree of safety in proportion to the distance covered, and did not for a moment think of shutting off steam. He found food for reflection in a short while, however, for he came up bump against the locomotive of the construction train which he was expected to wait for at Gramme. Both locom otivos wpj-ei. harll smashed but no one-was injured.
It is conjectured that was not Indians at all that he saw approaching him at the station, but only a party ot Mexicans who are in the habit of going there for water. The tender-foot en gineer will probably emigrate to the East.
The German Soldier London News
When one comes coolly to take stock ot the German army from the civilian or intelligent tea-table point of view, it will appear to be the most awful man-destroy-ine machine ever produced by kingly ambition and patience. It was the father of Frederick the Great who first took it in hand, and poetized it with tall grenadiers but ever since no monarch of the liouac of Hohenzollern has neglected it for a day. Even the late plump dinner loving king kept an Attentive eye upon his troeps, though somewhat dimmed by good cheer and Clicquot's champagne. His present imperial and royal majesty, however, was born a soldier, and his very heart is with pipe-clay and discipline. The army regulations as at present understood throughout the German empire may be briefly summarized. It must be absolutely and completely ready for war in its most minute details ready to take the field at any moment, and against any enemy whatsoever.
For Falling, Premature GrayHair Use London Hair Restorer. Insures new growth.
London Hafir Restorer, Restores the color. Xondon Hair Restorer. Exquisite dyeing.
London Hair?* ^Restorer. The only London Hair Restorer, cleanly and London Hair Restorer, effectual Hair London Hair Restorer. Restorer in the London Hair Restorer, market. & A toilet luxury entirely free frotn all obnoxious or unpleasant odor. *H7StCIAN8 USX AND RECOMMRND IT.
Some eight years ago my hair com menced falling the top became quite bald. I applied "London Hair Color Re storer." My liair not only stopped fal ring, but is now growing finely, and a consider it an invaluable article for re storing the hair. J.
1
f. ABEL. M.
Druggist, 1034 Beach street, Philadelphia Price 75 cents a bottle, six bottles $4 old by Druggists BUVTIK ARMSTRONG Terre Haute.
r. Of Interest to the Doctors The medical profession throughout the world now regards with much interest the clioical records of the celebrated Charity Hospital at New Orleans, on account of its treatment of yellow fever and other malarial diseases. It is well to remember that the Louisiana State Lottery to sccure the valuable franchise it enjoys, contracted, and has paid promptly so far the instalments of the $1,000,000. The next drawing takes place on March Sth and any information can be had by wri ting to^M. A. Dauphin, No. 819 BroadwayNew York City, or the same person at. Hew Orleans, La. ^THOUSANDS of ladies have found sudden relief from all their woes by the use of LydiaE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound the great remedy for diseases peculiar to females. Send to Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkh 983 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass., pamphlets. -A for 'A .jKfil
1* $*•&*>••le-Jffc
5
^Remote from public naunw nis life will be: The voice of honest praise will still be 2 dumb,
J|And he may court aa earned obscurity.
tfhe fruits of forgery, results of crime, And all that*made a swindled |people bleed, Awake alike tlx* Inevitable time— .The paths oi fraud to dark damnation iead., No more for hlni will conscience be wrong
No mere for him will raM?als freak th« law No more for him will robbers go unhung r-No more will heanother's salary draw.
AN fcXCITtD ENGINEER.
Spotting Wo—I*I [New York Son.]
Many, if not a majority, of the names of the eight or nine hundred girls from the public schools who have been examined for admission to the Normal College give us the impression that they belong to mere household pets rather than to young women who are approaching maturity, and engaged in serious work.
These girls apparently prefer the nicknames by which they are known in the family circle and to intimate friend? to those with which they were christened, and therefore take pains to adopt them in their signatures.
In ao doing the public school girls are not exceptional among our young women, for it is quite the fashion now-a-days for them to grow so enamored of their nursery appellations that they cling to them as their fixed «nd proper names. They may even be offended when they are addressed by their proper names.
The fashion is American but our patriotism cannot make us grow fond of it. The nicknames which appear in so large a share of these public school girls' signatures would do very well for the pets of a dog show. When they are used to express the affectionate regard of near friends and relatives they also may be pretty and appropriate, but they look very silly in a formal signature, and surely do not befit the dignity of womanhood.
We had, for instance, among these 800 names scores of Minnies, Mamies, and only here and there a Mary, a much more euphonious as well as dignified n^me. Jane is transformed usually into Jennie, Caroline into-Carrie, Ellen to Ella, Elizabeth into Lizzie and Bessie, Katherine into Katie, Martha into Mattie, Margaret into Maggie, Anne and Anna into Annie, and Harriet into Hattie. Such absurb names as these appear quite frequently: Chattie, Lidie, Millie, Tillie, Kittie, Rosie, Sadie, Nettie, Bibbie, Aggie, and Margie.
The great aim seems to be to manti* facture a name which ends in ie, and in accomplishing it the finest appellations for women we have, names renowned in poetry and history, and of a sweet and molodious sound, are chopped up into childish diminutives. They convey an idea of pettiness, and do not rightly belong to girls of dignity and character— girls like those who are going to the Normal College, so many of whom will have their living to earn. What would they think to see a college register which gave the young men's names as Jimmie, Billie, Bobbie, Tommie, Charlie, Sammie and Dickie?
This fashion is extending among women, and girls are even named with nicknames only, as if they were always to be nothing more than nursery pets. jLmm-A jcv tills io pttlwl wTicn ^vomen are contending for higher consideration as rational beings, ana when the range of their occupations, outside of the domestic circle, is constantly widening and growing in importance.
The Dying Earth. Proctor in the New York Graphic.,
My friends, even our earth must die. It must go the way of all the earth and other earths. In the course of twentyfive more millions of years, it must deadhead its way among the stars. It must dry up. The bottom of the seas will leak and the water run out. Jyf
Mars and Venus' seas are leaking now. The moon is dead already, poor thing, and no one is kind enough to bury her. When you look on the face of the moon, you look on the face of a corpse. It's all nonsense to talk of the moon's rising or setting, or getting up or getting down, or the "moon's looking down on Us." It is dead and can't look anywhere.
The earth it dying. In 25,000,000 years it will be nothing but a cold cinder. No seas, no men, no women, no boys, no girls, no children, no fashions, no newspapers, no politics, no revolutions, no rumors of wars, no theaters, no plays, no critics, no nothing.
All blank, dry, dead, dull, dusty, deserted, doleful and dreadful. The sun will get up every morning for nothing. No life at all, at all. The animal, mineral and vegetable kingdoms all destroyed. They will be deserted and dusty, hung with mould and liuhg with cobwebs.
Rats will burrow everywhere, and all sorts of weeds will choke up our parks and gardens. Now, friends, something should be done before it is too late to raise a monument to our departing earth. Some organization should be formed to see it buried decently and provide for the payment of the funeral expense?.
that n.
[Boston
«.i»cript.]
It is hard to believe that that noisy boy, whose hands are always on the most intimate term?,with all manner of grime and dirt n^ae hair is never combed, save on .^-'mpulsion whose clothing samples y* 'thing it comes near, till "it ia a whose hooting and veniug suv iimr.-/' reminders of aboriginal memoirs, a/ whose whistling is an aggregation three steam bands and a brace of locomotives—it is hard to believe that he will ever become transmogrified into the amiable and tracts tie young gentleman so p3Ttic-':ar in the fit of his coat, the shu.lf »..»kids and the immaculate roiteness of Ms shirt front, so excinciatmgly clean of person and so eminently proper in word, act and deed. Ruth* will be. The answer to this enig.rj? is,
If it be true, as alleged, that there is one church in this country that never had a mortgage on it, why wasn't it brought to the centennial ana exhibited among other curiosities.
Enormoop natural caserns, one 600 feet long, have lately been fonnd near Wells. Somerset, England.
THE TEREE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
Onp It* •—wrrh— (Nineteenth Century.]
4
Dr. Carpenter, the English physicist has recently published some remarkable results of his elaborate studies of the latest deep sea explorations. The work of the scientific circumnavigation expedition in tbe Challenger, though completed in 1876, has not until within a few months, if even now, been fully reduced, and some of its most important discoveries are now announced by Dr. Carpenter, its originator. One of the first questions its labors contribute to solve is the depth and configuration of the ocean basins.
The prevailing notion of the tiea beds, Dr. Carpenter shows, needs considerable modification, none of them having been carefully outlined, except that of the North Atlantic when sounded with a view to laying the first Atlantic cable. "The form of the depressed area which lodges the water of tne deep ocean/' he savs, "is rather to be likened to that of a flat waiter or tea tray, surrounded by an elevated and steeply sloping rim, than to that of the 'basin' with which it is commonly compared and he adds: "The great*continental platforms usually rise very abruptly from the margin# of the real oceanic depressed areas."
The avenige depth of the ocean floors is now ac£t?rtained to be about 13,000 feet. As the average height of the entire land tnas3 of the globe above sea level is about 1,000 feet, and the sea area about* two and three-fourths times that of the land, it follows that the total volume of ocean water is thirty-six times that of the land above the sea level The deductions, seemingly unimportant except to the votary of science, are destined perhaps to serve the highest practical purposes of deep sea telegraphy. The intelligence now quarried out of the enormous collection of later ocean researches shows the modern engineer and capitalist the feasibility of depositing a telegraphic cable over almost any part of the ocean's floor, and ought to give new confidence in the success of all such enterprises properly devised and equipped.
Wnen it is remembered that at the beginning of .this centurv La Place, the great mathematician, calculated or assumed the average depth of the ocean at four miles (of 8,000 feet more ,than Dr. Carpenter uetermines it to be.from actual surveys,) and that La|Place's conclusion was the received views among scientists, until 1850 or later we got some idea of tbe advance made in this branch of terrestrial physics by modern research. Not less interesting is a deduction Dr. Carpenter makes from the deep sea temperature observations in the North Atlantic. In consequence of the evaporation^ produced by the long exposure of the equatorial Atlantic current its water contains such an excess of salt, as, in spit# of high temperature, t6 be specifically heavier than tbe colder underflows' which reach the equator from the opposite Arctic and Antarctic basins and, consequently, it substitutes itself by gravitation for the colder water to a depth of several hundred fathoms.
How Pianos Are Injured.
There are more pianos injured by im proper tuning than by legitimate use and the consequent natural wear of the instruments. The frame of a good piano, fully strung and tuned, is made to resist a tension equal to about eighteen tons. This severe strain relaxes as the strings recede from pitch, but is .renewed when the piano is tuned, and it is frequently discovered, as a result of this revealed process, that the frame is bent or bellied and, at the hands of a tuner lacking judgment, an instrument of this stage ia soon injured beyond remedy.
With reasonable use, a piano is expected to remain in good condition for seven years, and the best makers will so guarantee their instruments but the incompetence of some tuners injures thousands of instruments in a few years.
In tuning a piano the correct method is to begin in the centre of the instrument, on middle C. Yet many tuners, when' leaving middle C, instead of going down the scale and tuning the lower notes first—thus immediately bringing the greatest tension to bear upon the frame, and forming $ solid foundation upon which to operate—will »go up the scale, beginning with the highest notes, leaving tne bass strings until the last, with the invariable result that, when the tuning of the lower portion of the piano is completed, the upper octaves are decidedly away from pitch. Evety time a piano is tuned in this manner it increases the liability of bending the frame, and renders the instrument more difficult to tune and keep in tune.
Many tuaers do not carefully note the condition of a piano, and adapt their treatment to the circumstances of the case with full knowledge that a bent weakened, or very old frame will not stand the extreme tension or sustain the strings at the high pitch which 'can be put upon and borne by a frame and wires which have never been injured through ignorance or neglect and bear no special marks of time or use.
There are very few pianos, even those of the best description, that will stand at concert pitch. Were the matter generally understood by the owners of the pianos, they would consider it greatly to their interest to have their instruments tuned by persons in whose bands there is the least possibility of accident or injury.
Better than Prajrern. [Burlington Hawkeye.J
A real practical%enevolence, is that of Miss Wolfe, of New York, who has provided for the New York newsbovs, a new lodging house in East Broadway, where for five pennies a day, thev have comfortable beds, meals and baths and the use of a library of 1,500 volumes, and other conveniences at hand. Such deeds as this count far more than many prayers and free distributions.
SPSS*
mm
as'
Itclring PilM. Symptoms and Cure The symptoms are moisture, like pers piration, intense itching, increased tyr 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, veiy serious results may follow. DR. SWATSTK'S AIJ^HEALIXG OISTMKXT is a pleasant sure cure. Also tor Tetter, Itch, bait Rheum, Scald Head, Erysipelas, 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 a until I obtained Dr. Swayne's O intme \t Thomas's drug store, in Br attlebo t., which cured me completely." Sold by BUNTIN A ABMSTRONG Terre teau and druggists generally.
A red-headed maa recently attended a masquerade wrapped from his neck to hi9 heels in brown cloth, and with his head bare. He represented a lighted cigar.' sftj
S O A E
NEW YORK Feb., 24.—The whea market opened a shade lower and dull The stock market opened weak lower and under free sales the entire list fell off sharply. The decline ranging from to
Later the Louisville and Nashville which sold down to S8%. Denver and Rio Graude and Central Pacific declined 2%. Lake Erie and Western 2%. St. Joseph Springfield 24" and Deleware and Lack, and Western and Western Union and Northern Pacific for common and 2^ for Springfield subsequently was recovery to 1%. Later Deleware Lack and Western and Michigan Central.
An Important Suit.
NEW YORK, Feb. 24.—The suit of the United States Cable Company begun in the Circuit Court to-day against tlie Atlantic and Pacific Western Union and American Union Telegraph Companies and Union Trust Company. The plaintiff asksga permanent injunction to prevent the consolidation of' the defendant companies and claims the ompact entered into in 74 between the Cable company and Atlantic and Pacific telegraph company was in nature almost a partnership by which the latter company could not honestly con solidate with any company without the Cable companies consent, i'-/.'-,'. «t $C.
Remarkable Cure Dy Or Swayne's Compound Syrup of Wild Cher
AFTER AN ELAPSE OF 25 YEAKS.
BUNTIN ST ARMS' IONG. Terre Haute
Burned.
PORTLAND, Feb. 24.—Presumpscot, Puep, Ware & Co's., mill, north of Gorham, burned. Loss, $35,000. Insurance, $18,000.
Fasting and Prayer.
BOSTON, Feb. 24.—The Governoi1 appoints April 7th for a. day of fasting, and prayer.
A Monument of Sold
Should be erected in memory of the inventor ot "Anakesis," the great external Pile Remedy. Mr. James J. Bassett, of Erie, Penn., writes as follows:" Messrs. Neutooedter & Co.:
GENTLEMER—Enclosed find P. O. order for $1.00, for which send box "Anakesis." I have used two boxes and feel it my duty to say to you that by the use of your simple remedy I have been raised from the brink of despair to the joyful hope of soon being able to declare myself entirely curecL One month's trial, at the small expense of the cost of a box of "Anakesis" has given me more relief than two years doctoring with our best physicians here. Surely a monument of gold should be erected in memory of the inventor of Anakesis. Send at once if pos sible. 1 shall be pleased to reply to any one who inquires as to the merits of your valuable medicine, should you see fit to publish this.
Sencerely your servant, JAMES J. BASSETT, Erie, Pa. "Anakesis" is sold by all druggists Price $1.00 per box. Samples sent free to all sufferers on application to "Anakesis" Depot, Box 3,946, New York.
UdiM, W~ With i*k That the old worn out silverware ya have laid away as unfit for use can made as good as new, in twenty minuts by using the "Little Giant Silver Plating Sold only by the manufacturers, Miller & McCorm'ick, Beverly, Ohio. Price, 25 cents per box.
A Little Giant
Sent out through this State a short time ago, has l«en working wonders on worn out silver-plated ware, making it as good as new. It will also accomplish its work on copper, tin, pewter. Zinc or iron. The "Little Giant Silver Plating" will be sent by mail, one box for 25 cents, or by express, 12 boxes for $1.50. Address Miller & McCormick, Beverly.
Free TollTiuri Sad
ALBANY, Feb. 24.—The assembly|has adopted the concurrent resolutions of the senate abolishing tolls on west bound freight on the canals also providing that salt be placed on the free list. 4
Tolls Canals-
ALBANY, Feb. 24:—In the Senate Foster offered a concurrent resolution amending the constitution providing for abolishing of tolls an the canals and the maintainance sale by tax.
V#
""•-If,
TUTTS
9*1?
We have received a letter from Naomi Wilcox, Angola, N. Y-, who was cured of Catarrh Consumption 'by *'Dr Swayne's Compound .Syrup ot Wild Cherry This is convincing proof of the permanency of cures affected by this valuable remedy. For a worrying cough throat, breast, or lung trouble, tightness of the chest asthma and other evils wfciou uadeimSoc the strongest constitutions, We know of no better ana pleasant remedy than Dr. Swayne's Compound of Wild Cherry. Price 25 cents and ,|1 a bottle, or six bottles $o. The large size is the most ecconomical. Sold at tbe leading drug stores. "Swayne's Pills" are the best tor the liver, biliousness, and to ward eff chills and fever. Try them
AS All ANTUIIUOUS MEDICME,
They itfannhh tha
iPbBHD LIVIER,Invigorate the NMtVOua'IRGTRRBM* gfrretob* to vbm DIQJSjffrg OHOAJTS. owats psrfcul illfrtloo plwjBlarisui uuil of thabowla.
MTHMLMUL
fluyhwwBO
rMtaaa.Ba«nltsa.
treandouiefbrj ai»6«it.TypioMiyvera.aad Hwniid Jkgoa. tTpoo tha healthy actfam of tkZ BtoMMh and Ltvar dspattds, annort wholly, thebMlthof tbabomaaraoa.
WWWIA.
Ulsfbr the core of this djwBandtte*» fendanU, SlQK-liilAJiAGH*.
OUMJBB8.
PMPOlTOiarCY.
MlPATklM, MM Sc., thsysn Pills have gained sueh a wkto femiistion. So remedy was evsc JlaoovefdthU sotj •peedllynd gently on the dissolve or•m, giving tham tone and vigor to aa* food. This sooompliahed, the OTCBVB8 are BRACED, the BRA351 and the BOD? RO BOOT, ^frry this Bemedyftdriy and you will gate a Vlgorooa Body, Pure Blood« ttnng tt ervea* and a Gheerful mind.
Price CAc. 3* Nmv St-, N. Y.
TUTT'S HAIR DYE.
UBAY HAIB
OB
WHIRKXRS
BLACK
A SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY TO WIN-A FORTUNE. FIRST GRAND DISTRIBUTION, CLASS C, AT NEW OR, LEANS, TUESDAY. MARCH 8th 1881.—130th Monthly Drawing.
Louisana State Lottery Company
This institution was regulary incorporated by the Legislature of the State for Educational and charitable purposes in the year 1868 tor the term of 25 years, to which contract the inviolable faith of the state is pledged, which pledge has been renewed by an overwhelming popular vote, securing its franchise In the new constitution adopted December 2d, A. D., 1879, with a capital of •1,000,000, to which it has since added a reserve fund oi over (50,000. ITS GRAND SINGLE NUMBER DISTRIBUTION will take place monthly on the 2nd 1 uesday
It never scales or postpones.
Look at the following distribution: CAPITAL PRIZE, 830,000. 100,000 tiokets at two dollars each
Half tickets, one dollar. List of Prizes.
1 Capital Prize 480,000 1 Capital Prize 10,000 1 Capital Prize —. 5,000 12,500 S,000 1,000 5,000 600 10,000 imW ,'ig lit 20 10,000 5 10,000
9tpi
2 Prizes of 5 Prizes of 20 Prizes of 100 Prizes of zoo Prizes of 500 Prises of 1,000 Prizes of
APPROXIMATION PRIZES.
9 Approxlm'n Prizes of 1300 2,700 9 200 1,800 9
L857 Prizes amounting to 110,100 Responsible corresponding agents wanted at all points, to whom liberal compensation will be paid.
For further information, write clearly giving full address. Send orders by express or Registered letter, or money order by mail Addressed only to HI. A. DAUPHIN, New Orleans, La., or 91. A. DAUPHIN, at
No. 319 Broaiway' New York. AUour Grand Extraordinary Drawing* we under th* tupervition and management of GENBRALS G. T. BEAUREGARD and JUBAL A. EARLY.
CREMATED
For sale by all Druggistsnd Dealers ally. generally.
H. HULMAN,
WHOLESALE
GROCBR Attn
THTTRSnAT. ARCH 3d, 1881.
All the personal property which has come into my hands as such administrator, consisting of horses, cattle, hogs, wheat, com. two-horse wagon and harness, one coin mill, household and kitchen furniture farm implements, &c. Ac
TMM or SAUK—A tfredit of twelve rwill he given on all snips over hree dollars, the purchaser giving hir note with approved seeority, waiving valuation and appraisement laws, and bearing inter* est at eight per oent. from date.
DatedThls Sth day of February, 1881. JOHN W. PARRAND, Administrator with will annexed.
ms
"Ill
OR. PIERCE'S
KIDNEY PAD.
A sore, pleasant and speedy remedy for all forms of Diabetes. Profuse. Mcaa* IT or High Colored trine, Inflamation of ikeKiiaevs,£«rly stages of Oravel and Bright* Disease, Pain la the Back, ana Weakrets of the
SUV ATLLVLKS V* FWAF KlerToas and Urinary Systom. Eighty one thousand of these Pads were sold In the first year of their introduction, and their scales reached the enormous number of 225, 000 the .post year. They are vorn over the kidneys without inconvenience, and cure quickly and permanently. Six thousand certificates of cure, many of them sworn affidavits, in possssion or the proprietors. It has cured when all other remedies have failed. For sale at SI.00 each by the leading druggist in every town in the United Stat** and Canada. Cheapest specific remedy in the world.
DR. PIERCE'S
LIVER PAD.
PRICE at.oo.
Positively and permanently every form of FKVBR AND AOPB. DUMB AGUE, BILIOOSNKSS, JAUNDICK, DYSPEPSIA, FATTY, TORRID OH IXACTIVB LLVKR, INFLAMATION AHN ALL DRRAKOLMKSTS Or THK LLVBK, STOMACH AND BLOOD. Worn without Inconvenience: does away with all nauseous medicines. Highest testimonials from peo-
Sworn
channd to*
GLOSSY
by a single *i plication of tin DTK. It imparts a Natural Color, and acts InsUntaiwooslv. Sold by Drftntistsor aantbr express on receiptor $1. Office, 35 Murray St., New York
5
le of all classes habits and vocations— affldavltts by the hundred. Dr. Pierce's Liver Pad has cured hundreds of cases glveh up by physicians as incurable There were 180,000 thousand sold last year. Nothing in the history of specific medleuie has ever equalled it—Always helps nearly
Cheap,speedy, effective. For
always cures.
town in the United States ancf8Canada. If your druggist does not keep Dr. Pierce's Pads, send one dollar In a registered letter to the PIERCE PAO. CO., Chicago, III., and receive one by return of mail. Ker sale only by tiROVER & LOWKRY
GRAYS SPECIFIC MEDICINE
reatTRAOB MARK is An
TRADS MARK The E remedy. Ai unfai11 euro for sem inal weakness, spermatorrhea, impotencv, and all dis-• eases that BEFORE TAKIR8. follow as a AFTER TAKIN8. sequence of self abuse as loss of memory, universal lassitude, pain in the back. Dimness of vision, premature old age, ami many other diseases that lead to insanity or con,, sumption and a premature grave. MTFull particulars in our pamphlet, which we desire to send free by mall to every one. •®~The Specific. Medicine is sold by all druggists at SI per package, or six packages for, So, or will be sent free by mall on receipt of tbe money, by addressing
9
•.
TrfE GRAY MEDICINE CO., 3 No.lOtt Main St. Buffalo, N. Y.
Sold in Terre Haute Wholesale and Retail by GUL1CK & BERRY.
APPLICATION FOR LICENSE. Notice Is hereby given that I will apply to the Board of Commissioners of Vigo County, Indiana at their January term for a license to sell intoxicating liquors In a less quantity than a quart at a time with tho 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 sub division of four acres and two rods East side of the west half of section 22 in Township 12 north. In range 9 west on Main between Twelfth and Thirteenth streets In the city of Terro Haute, Vigo County, Indiana.
CHARLES W. STANLEY.
ADMINISTRATOR'S LEASE NOTICB
Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an order of the Vigo Ctrcnlt Court the undersigned, administrator of the estate of William R.Gardner, deceased, will lease on tbe premises on Saturday the Sth day of March, 1881, for three years the following described land:
The southwest quarter and tho southeast quarter of the southeast quarter of scctiun SB, township 10 rforth, of range 10 west In VIgo county, Indiana.
TERMS
E
If Time be LotSe ul4
If thestomach, liver and bowels are affected toadopt the sure remedy, Hoe tter'a Stomach Bitters. Diseases of tbe rgans named beget others far more serious, and a delay is therefore hazardous. Dyspepsia, liver complaint, chill and fever, earb rheumatic twinges kidney weakness, ring serious bodily touble if trifled with Loss a time *nu«ingrthis effective sals and lohg known meuiciue.
—One-half of the yearly rent to be
paid every six months the lessor to furnish approved personal security for his performance of the conditions of the lease.
NICHOLAS YKAOKK,
TURKS
LIQUOR DEAfcBJt
Main street, corner of Fifth,
Administrator
HORACH B. JOKES,
Attorney.
ALICATION FOR LICENSED Notice Is nereby given that I will app the Board of Commissioners of Vigo Oonnty, Indiana at their January term for a license to sell intoxicating liquors in a less quantity than a quart at a time with the pilvllego of allowing the same to be drank on my premises for one year. My place of business and the premises whereon said Uquorsare to be soldand drank are located in south half of lot 65, Sibley's sub north Sixth la the Fifth ward.
OF SALK:
one: th
1
*RRE HAUTE, IND.
ADMINISTRATORS. SALE. Notice Is hereby given that the undersigned. administrator, with the will annexed, of Eli Harmon, late of Vigo County, Indiana, deceased, will sell at public auction at the late residence of said deceased, in Linton Township, Vigo County Ind. on
ly
JOHN W. BATLOR.
OTICR TO HEIRS.
OF PETITION TO SELL REAL ESTATE. Vigo Circuit CoinNotice is hereby given tha'Elizabeth Price Administratrix of the estat* of Abram Price deceased, has filed his petition to sell tne Real Estate of the decedent, hLs personal property being insufficient to pay his debts ana that said petition will be beard at the next term of tne Circuit Court of said County
Attest: THOMAS A. ANDERSON, A. M.BLACK, Clerk. p. p.
XECUTORS' SALE OF REAL ESTATE.
The undersigned,executors of the last will of Chauncey Rose deceased, will on the 24th day of March. 1881, at the olnce of M. B. Durham, No. 506)£ Ohio street, in the city of Terre Haute,sell at private sale the follow Ing described real esta'e in the city of Term Haute, Vigo oonnty and State of Indiana to wit:
Lots Nos. seven (7) and twenty (20) In Chauncey Rpse'ssubdivision of that part ectlon' north, _..ireen 8 and north of Chestnut street. Also lots Nos. six (6), seven (7) and nineteen (19) in Chauneey Rose's subdivision of real estate formerly occupied by the Wabash & Erie canal between Main and Poplar streets and eusl ot he forteer line of said canal, and west ofr, lands of the Evansville and Crawfordavlller* Railroad Company. ,,
of section twenty-two (22), township twelve (12) north, of range nine (9) west, which lies between Seventh street and Eighth street
Lot No. 7, one-third ln|
tne year, one-thinl in two years and one-jg hird in three years of lot No. 2o, one-third^ in three years, one-third in four years, and one-third in five years: of lots Nos. 8 and 7, in subdivision between Main and Poplar streets. one-third cash, and onethird in one year and onethird in two years of lot No. 19 in samesubr division, one-fifth cash, one-fifth in one year, ooe-flfth in two years and one-flfih lit three years and one-fifth in four year*.
All notes for deferred payments to draw inbMest from date, and payable annually* FIRMIN NIPPERT, lvx.«itors
JOSEPUS COLLETT, kxecuiors. Terre Haute, February £kl,lS81.
No. 12^05. State of Indiana, county of Vigo in the Vigo Circuit Court, February term, 1881. Boras P.
Spalding, Edwin D. Dexter.
Samuel Allen, Herbert G.Cofflnand •Bennett R. Allen, executors of the last will of Wlllison 8. Pierson, vs. Mary M. Jewett»
James W. Scott, John K. Graff and Robert, P. Scott foreclosure. Be it known, that on the 22nd day of Feb., 1881, it was ordered by the Court that the Clerk notify by publication said Mary M. Jewett, as non-resident defendant of the pendency of this action against her.
Said Defendant is therefore hereby notified of the pendency of said action agwnst her and that the same will stand for trial at the next term of said court C. E. Hosroan MKBRILL N. SMITH,
P. Q.
Clerk
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