Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 3 March 1881 — Page 6

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OUR BAYLESS.

He Writes of the Sights in Hew York and Washington-

A Description of the Obelisk as ne saw it in Hew York-

Stock Gambling—Beecher—The Press —and Washington.

A Very Readable Letter From a Terre Haute Traveler-

NEW YORK AND WAWirNGTON. WASHINGTON, Feb. 22,1881

To the Editor of the GAZETTE: Have just arrived here from New York. I promised you while there to draw a few pen pictures of what could be seen and heard. But there was not a moment of time allotted lor the purpose. The business and political centers of the country diffeijrchietly .in this: There no one has half time enough, here the aim of all is to kill time—there the sole purpose is to make money, here to spend it in every possible foolish way. As the little bovs would say in gleeful emphasis "New York is boss." Just now the hotels there are iul from ground to roof. Whence they come, or what they want "no fella can find out." The market was Burging all last week in every department. Wednesday the bulls and beAr$ were at a dead lock, and stood like two great beasts on their hind feet, neck fo neck, with equal strength and determination. What cut throats they are! I think about the saddest folly on earth is to see some plain looking fellow from an honest country region looking around there to "deal in stocks." They look like a farmer boy in his store clothes used to look at a big muster, and get clear of their money just as soon with no value received. I can't perceive any difference between stock gambling and faro gamllipg, only one is legal and the other under the surveillance or law. From all signs of the times another monstrous

FraAHCTAI, CRA8H

a

inevitable—$nd it is near at hand. I won't stop to gijro the details of my feajjons, but make! the prediction for all it worth.

THE AMUSEMENTS

at New York are not first class just now. •'Olivette" at the Fifth Avenue theatre and "100 Wives," at Booths are the pre vailing theatrical feutuves. The "100 Wives" was written by a son ot "Dave Runnion,"' in his day well known Terre Haute. He is now one of the editors of the Chicago Tribune. It is a fine drawing of Mormon monstrosity, cruelty and crime. As thut subject is just now attracting the attention of Congress, the play is opportune, andwithin the scope of public inquiry. The play in tone is justly American, and its^ style is marked by such a wild, bold, effective character, it cannot fail to win the allmiration of lovers of the drama. It contoins situations of the most powerful description, surpassing those of any popular success that' has been presented to the American peoplofor a long time. Its pathos is pure, delicate and homely, "while the comedy element is most humorously treated, and is a marked feature of the play. It lacks the bluster and harsii rasp of Bret arte'a creations. There is not a vulgar line in it. I tray tied from Chicago to Harrisburg with Mr. Runnion. lie is so modest that he never saw it played. He asked me to see it and I am glad I did. I hope it will oon appear at Terre Haute. By the way, in all my rouuds at different places constant tly visiting strange theaters I have founjd no management that excels that of o^r own Charley Hostord. I say this because I mean it fis all know Charley ^scrupulously keeps out of sight anything like a free list, except for The t'ress," •who Hare up, get mad, make asses of themselves and say all manner of uglv things about people when they are left out. They would do that thing about the administration of the Lord's Supper, if they were denied a front seat, without paying anything for it. "The Press" is a lively old set of common gouges.

BEECHEU.

Sunday morning I went over to Brooklyn to hear Beccher not so much because .lie is a preacher as that he is one of the most masterly orators of the whole English speaking race. His theme was taken from Qalatians V. 1#. "Now the works of the flesh are manifest, which are these: Adultery, fornication, uncleanness, lascivlousness, 'JO. "Idolal try, witchcraft, hatred, variance (emulations, wratu, strife, seditions, hererale*. 21. .'Envying*, murders, drunkenness, "revelling*, »uid such like of the which I tell you before' as I have also told you in time w^paet, that they which do such things shall vaiot Inherit the kingdom of God. #3 22. "Bat the fruit of the Spirit la love, joy, Jtepeace, long-suffering, gentleness, good new jy faith, 'A. "Meekness, temperanoe against such here is no law.

He first read the whole chapter—by the way one of the most powerful statements j*ithe great Paul uttered—which he read feiwith all the tragical effect Booth would liread the finest soliloquy of the mighty flinan of universal thought. His performpance was electrical from the start. ^His oration extended nearly 'through an hour-and-a-half, and then it \was paintully short to every listener. )What an intellectual giant he is truly!

Poet, painter and orator all in oht man, Erskine|at the forum, SSerid&n lathe Par. liatnent, or Paul on MarsPHiH with' his eyes lit with the fii&fif inspiration as he thundered against Efifldelirf in the great city of its marble templos, could scarcely have been bolder grandee or more majestic. If his »oul wer^ as white as his'genius is great what atnkrvel he would he. In the first sentence of his opening invocation—he poured out the I essential oil of Democracy. "Oh God— with thee nothing is small, with thea qpthin^ is great." That is Democracy.

The spirit of the sentiment must permeate every division of this government or the Republic must totter to its fall. I want to say that much, just because I have a a chance to say it%

CLEOPATRA'S NEXDLX.

But the greatest view I had in New York was the monster Egyptian monolith. Through the kindness of Lieut. Commander Gorringe, U. 8. N., who commanded the steamer Dessoug, that carried the precious freight to this country, I was afforded ample opportunity to pursue my investigation. He gave me full •p port unity, also, to examine his notes, from which I will draw chiefly my statements here given. I found the obelisk standing erect upon its original limestone foundations, but instead of imposing it flash upon its base, four large bronze crabs have been inserted in its corners. The obelisk is one of the original five erected by Thothmes III. before the Temple of Amen, at Heliopolis. The legend of Thothmes is engraved in the central column' of each side. Brusch Bey, the learned Egyptologist, has translated it fuliy, but it is too long to give here. The inscription looked very much to me like the wierd chirography of Lawrence Huoson or Fanny Hamill— only they might fail to draw the three Ibis standing in a row near the top of the column. This bird was regarded as im mortal by the Egyptians, because they destroyed crocodile eggs. The obelisk gains its chief value from the events of the centuries which cluster about it. Thothmes III., its projector, was the son of tiie first Pharaoh of that name, brother of the second, and father of the fourth and last- He himself came to the throne B. C. May 7, 1515. As this monolith stood before the Temple of Amen, it was doubtless seen by Moses, himself, the founder of jurisprudence, as in his youth he went there to study the wisdon of Egypt. It is 69 feet 2 inches high, by 7 feet and 8 inches wide at the base. But a greater than Thothmes has associated his name with it. In the eight year of the reign of Augustus dnesar it was removed from, Heliopolis and re-erected at Alexandria, Egypt, in front of the Temple of Caesaroum, in commemoration of his victory over the last of the Ptolemies. On the re-erection at Alexandria, the Romans found the base so much corroded, they, too, put in bronze crabs at the base corners. On one of these crabs were found two inscriptions— one in Greek the other in Latin—the translation was "in the eight year of Augustus' Caesar Barbarus, prefect of Egypt, caused thi obelisk to be placed here, Pontius being architect." Thus the votive monument of three Pharaohs, Egypt's most illus trious monarch?, by remorseless fate was made the trophy of Roman ambition. It seems trange in this connection, the ob elisk should be called "Cleapatra's needle." We know historically that: Cleopatra died in the second year of Augustus— therefore, as it was not removed to Alex-' andria until the eight year of liis reign Cleopatra could have had nothing to do with it. It is a Syenite feldspar, hornblende and quartz and differs from our granite in the single substance of mica left out and hornblende substituted. So much lor the obelisk.

WASHINGTON.

I have not been in Washington long enough to see or hear much, ftave seen Senators Voorhees and McDonald—they ate hard at work, as the near approach of the end of Congress vastly increases their work Voorhees' late speech in favor of th'e funding bill on the basis of a three per cent bond was masterly. He has added much thereby to his 'already advanced reputation. It is generally thought here the bond will float, though some of the bsnks are making a big stir about it.

INAUGURATION PREPARATIONS., Active preparations are going forward for inauguration day. It is said there will be 50,000 militia soldiers here. It is an ugly feature. Senator Hoar, of Massachusetts, made a scorching speech against it the other day. lie rightly thinks it a bad precedent. Suppose there was some doubt about an election, and then none can say where it would end. Why can't, the American people adhere more to simplicity? T.'iey are building arches over all the chief ways and avenues at vast expense to'let a man ride through into the Presidential station. Why can't he go as other people travel, in a comfortable carriage—without display They are in a big muss-about the inauguration ball. The colored element of the Republican party have a corner on tickets—and some of their fiae haired, hypocritical co-electors, say they wont go to such a place. Let them fuss, the wheels time will not stop.

B. W. H.

Reprieved.

TOLKDO, F«b. 25.—John Welch whose execution for the murder of Gottscliaker was to have taken place at Fremont, O., to-day has been reprived for one week.

5 King Cotton. ATLANTA, Feb. 25.—The International Cotton Exposition organized by the election of H. J. Kimball, President, and United States Senator Brown, chairman of the Executive Committee.

No Hospital Needed

No palatial hospital needed for Hep Bitters patients, nor large-salaried talented puffers to tell what Hop Bitters will do or cure, as they tell their own stoiy by oertain and absolute cures at home.—New York Independent.

Circumstances alter costumes: "Yes," said the young lady who was going

my

is a careful driver. He never upsets."

Indianapolis Hews:—It may not be generally remembered, bu% one of our best known verses had its spring in the pensioning of Thomas Carlyle. Mr. Carlyle was too sturJy a man to write so as to attract the attention of the gentlemen who held the strings of the nation's purse bat Lei^h Hunt undertook the Aa«k, succeeded in geeting Carlyle a pension of three hundred pounds, and wnen he came with the good news Mrs. Carlyle was se overjoyed that she kissed him. It was the occasion for Hunt's well known improvisation: Jenny kissed me when wc met, umplng from the chair she sat in ,, Time, you thief, who loys to get ,• -,

Sweets into your list, put that in. Say I'm weary, say I'm sad Say that health and wealth have 'missed me Say I'm growing old, bat add—

Jenny kissed me."

*7" :c

Via

*3

the terre haute weekly gazette.

FACTO OF FICTION.

Aire Peopla Naturally Visionary and Ideal?

,• [Harper'c Bacaar.] It is a cariosity of travel that so many travelers, when they are abroad, visit the places and haunts of famous fiction as much as they do those of history and reality, if not even more.

How many people are there who go to Scotland for no other purpose than to follow out the wandering fancies of Waiter Scott's immortal music, who tramp over Highlands to the memory of Rob Roy, see the purple Trossachs for the Bake of Roderick Dhu, for whom Flodden. Field would be barren of interest had "Marmion" never beeia written, and who would never see Dry burgh Abbey, or the ruins of Melrose, or Kennilworth Castle, but for the phantoms that rise to welcome them at the wand of the Wizard of the North? -f. I,

How many are there, "again, who would never cross the limits of the Italian town that knew the history of Romeo and Juliet' if Shakspeare had told us nothing of their love whom neither the heath of Fores, nor Birnani Wood, nor Dunsinane would ever tempt from the beaten path, had not the witches met the Thane of Cawdor on that heath, had not Macbeth seen those woods moving on his stronghold?

Who of the wandering band has not looked for Lord Steyne's mansion in London as much .as for the solid stones of the Duke of Wellington's—does not glance for Mime reminder of the old Colonel and Clive Neweonibe among the Biueeoat Boys far more than for any of the real and famous among the long list those boys?

And for whom is not London peopled with th6 beings created by the fancy of him whom Lady Bulwer—before his death, in common with the crew who busy themselves in hunting out only his follies and blemishes since his deatli— styled the Aristophanes of the Pothouse and the Plutarch of the Pave, but whom the world will know, long after liis defamers are forgotten, as the Lord «.f Laughter and Tears? What is the Court of Chancery to our travelers, but as it gives them Mr. Jarndycc and Miss Flyte? Of whom of all that have entered the gates of the Marshai-seu do they reckon but little

%DorritV

And do

they know the very house that will presently crack from top to bottom, the man whose moustache goes up and whose nose goes down when he laugns, sitting in the window meanwhile? They walk through High Holborn to look for the. shop of Poll Sweedlepipes and the lodcings of Mrs. Gamp the follow Mr. Pickwick from the city Brighton stands to them only for Paul Dombey and "What are the wild waves saying?" the dialect of Yorkshire has no otTier significance to their ears than that John BrOwdie spoke it Dover is sacred to Betsy Trotwood and the donkeys Yarmouth means the wrcck of Steerforth England and the English are, in fact, only Charles Dickens. Soon they will be following the footsteps of Macleod of Dare, perhaps, or looking up the localities of the next story-writer who stamps his die with such vigorous action as to

4mpress

5

all

hearts with the personality ot nis fancies or his portraits. Certainly this is a great tribute to the power of genius,and to the fact of the existence of genius in the popular writers of fiction. For it is not only persons and places that have thus been made so real, but bygone generations have toeen infused with such afresh life that they have become as vivid to us as to-day's, and scenes and times that would have been but dry bones otherwise have grown animated and human, and full of vital pith and marrow under their hand.

Does not Hawthorne, in the "Scarlet Letter," and other of his tales, make the people of the old Puritanic era, that once had been repulsive to us as ghouls and goblins, creatures of flesh and blood, passions and emotions like our own, so that we can understand them, feel with them, aspire with them, forgive them? Do we not picture to ourselves and realiie more clearly the domestic life of ancient Egypt better than all the tomes o£ history can teach it on reading Theophile Gautier's "Romance of a Mummy?" What should we reck of the barbaric tribes of a little peninsula in the Levant and its rocky islets if Homer had not held up his torch to their struggles? Do we not feel that Homer created Helen? and should we care a straw for all Schliemann's work if Homer had never sung of Achilles and the Xan* thus?

The INnptpar-The Recent Sovereign*. [From an Address by Congressman BeUihoover.] The newspaper greets the eye of the youthful intellect at its earliest dawn and goes with the boy and the man and the old man daily through all the years down to the grave. It is growing faster than anything else on earth.

In 1704 there was one paper in this country with a circulation of 16,000 copies annually in a population of 600,000. In 1880 there are 6,000 newspapers with a circulation of 1,600,000,000 in a population of 50,000,000. In the earlier period an office printed a few dozen copies pet hour, now a good office throws off 100,000 per hour. It is making the air radiant and scintillating with ideas, multifarious, multitudinous and infinite in variety and character and power. The pulpit, the platform the forum, the school, tne college, and every institution for the development of thought and the dissemination of knowledge in the world are not equal to it in power. There is no preacher, no lecturer, no lawyer, no institution which the united emergies of a hostile and adversary press cannot crush and utterly destroy. Well might the great Napoleon declare that a newspaper was the regent of sovereigns and a tutor of nations and that four hostile newspapers are more to be dreaded than a hundred thousand bayonets.

The Baak.

NEW YORK, Feb. 24.—The Post says the drain of money from the bank reserves into the Treasury, where it will remain until paid out for notes of banks giving up their circulation, will have a serious effect on the money markets of the country unless the Treasury promptly releases the surplus revenues, which now amouLt' to about $16,000,000. There are two ways for the Secretary to do this. First, by general purchase of bonds for the sinking fund and second, to give notice that he will prepay $25,000,000 of 5s which have bave been called in for redemption on the 21st day of May. This latter mode of relief the secretary has decided upon.

The following dispatch having been received by Gen. Hillhouse of the sub treasury a little before noon:

WASHINGTON, Feb. 24.

To assistant treasurer U. S. New York: The Department will redeem the bonds embraced within the one hundred and first call upon their presentation at this department at Washington ^with the interest tojhe close of the presentations. signed, .* JOHN SHBRUAK,

The 5 per cent, bonds which will be paid by the above order are selling in the market at 100^(3 %. The Treasury will pay par for them and the accrued interest to the date of presentation. This accrued interest amounts to 037. The price which he will pay is 100(3 37.

Several million of these bonds are now pledged at Washington to secure bank note circulation and if the banks choose they can be presented and money obtained for them at once. The only difficulty which will now be found Will be to get hold of these callcd bonds. The effect of he news was the treasury had to c«me to he rescue and it was electrical in the stock market. The market opened in the condition of a semi panic and during the first hour and half prices tell 1 to 5 percent The change in the news noted was as sudden* as can be imagined and prices wTent back like a rubber strap which had been stretched and one end suddenly released. The recovery ranged fiom one to six joints and where there was something tike a ball panic there was a sudden hangc to the bear panic.

A Railroad Enterprise.

1

A project is on Dot (for the building of a railroad from here in a southwestern direction to the Missisgppi river. At the head of it is Mr. E. B. McCiure, formerly superintendent of the I. & St. L. railroad. Mr. McCiure is one of the best and most eliable railroad men in the West and -verything he undertakes he makes a uecess. Tie is seconded in this movement by some of the best and most active business men in Terre Haute. It is a road of immense importance to our city. It ought to have been built years ago. It touches a country naturally tributary to Terre Haute and" from which immense amouBtsaof grain ought to be brought here. Mr. McCiure enjoys the confidence of Eastern capitalists and can get anyamount of money. He will undertake the enterprise if our city will do for it what was once voted to that corporation but never used as the road was abandoned at that time.

SENATOR CABPENTER

He Dies in Washington this MorningDEATH OP SENATOR CARPENTER. WASHINGTON, Feb. 24.—Senator Matthew H. Carpenter, of Wisconsin, died at his residence in this city, at 9:30 this morning. k" ir

WASHINGTON, Feb., 24—Three days ago vapor baths were tried upon Senator Carpentor with such apparent sue cess that it was thought he would recover

NEW YORK, Feb. 24.—A Washington special says Senator Carpenter passed away quietly. His wile, son and daughter, Dr. Fox, of Milwaukee, and C. S Williams, of Wisconsin, were present He sank quietly away without a struggle simply dying from exhaustion incidan to the disease that had spent itself upon his system.

MILWAUKEE, Feb. 24.—The news the death of Senator Carpenter created profound regret. It is the one topic in all circles. "Various public associations will meet and take formal action.

vV WASHINGTON.

ENATOR CARPENTER OPPOSED TO CREMATION WASHINGTON, Feb. 25.—The family of Senator Carpenter authorize the statement that the Senator always expressed himself as opposed to ciemation. He made no request relative to the dispositioa of his remains.

REVENUE.

WASHINGTON, Feb. 25.—Receipts of Internal revenue 1477,951 Customs $1,054,121. National Back notes received or redemption. $95,000.

Woman Suffrage-

PROVIDENCE, R. I. Feb. 25.—The House passed a resolution submitting to he electors an amendment to the constitution establishing school suffrage for

Heap La!

WASHINGTON, Feb. 25.—The Senate Committer on Commerce has reported back the bill for improvement of the Wabash river above Vincinnes, with an. increase

Of

|25,000.

Railroad Salts..

BALTIMORE, Feb. 25.—The Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company brought two suits in the Supreme Court against the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, for damages laid at $500,000 each. The declarations have not been filed, but it is learned that the cause of the action is in the interruption of travel and delay* of passenger and freight trains at the junction at Philadelphia on the New York route of the B. & O. Suits have been brought against the B. & O. railroad for damages for delay at the same point in transporting cattle and causing them to miss a higher market than the prices when the train reached New York.

Harry "Wigley has bought the C. F. Rodents job office and will remove it to the room over the Central Book Store. Heintnd bends to lish a railway guide..

Does it pay to have Corn and cob Ground Together for Feed? The Para fred and

to all

W*oodstock(C«nn.) far raer'8 clubs after luveatlgntlon and careful trial show following result: 3% pound of cornineal,when mixed with tne cob, lb*, of clear corn ineal, without the cob produces one poona of

pork, and it requires six pounds of whole corn to make one poand of pork. The "Big Giant corn mill is the "Bos®"—and the only mill that will grind corn with shack on without extra expense or attachment. 18 a rapid grinder. It is the only mill that will grind corn and cob successfully, and grind shelled corn fine enough for family use. For sale by

8 W corner of Seventh and llulman street#

N

OTICE.

The following: order was passed by the Board of Commissioners of Vigo County, In ., at their Decernoer term, ISfcO to wit:

Ordered that from and after the first day of March 1881 no Townahi Trnstee Khali give an order to any poor person for provisions At, or for any otner poor expense not dele-

fndiana.them

Secretary.

ared to by the statues of the State of Attest. ASPREW GRIMES, Auditor igo County.

ASK kUt ftt DRl'Vbl IMOST

is, o. tsars mwi'

HERBA* REME0IES,

rtr»torativc Asaimilant—Forthe relief r.nd cure of b11 nervone dlseuw. Acucittn Xfatoam—An unfailing remedy in throat and lung com pi a nts.

Klood Piirifi**r—For ttie removal of Scrofula and all Impurities from the system la vcr I iivigrorntor—A certain cure for torpidity of the liver and its attendant diseases.

Herbal Ointment—Invaluable for wounds, bruises, scrofulous ulcers, sprains, rheumatic att'eclion*. Ac. ltcnovating fills—'The host pill ever ni Hl0forbi]ioiisdes4 and constipation. ^lale IVrn Vrrmifnpe A pleasantand effectual remedy for llie removal of worms.

Suppo»itorie»—Will speedily cure the worst cases of internal una external pileR. Woodland Halm—A purely vegetable hair dressing will promote growth of hair and remove all diseases of the sculp.

A full description of these medicines, with nnmerous testimonials, will he found in our Khakesperean Almanoc for 1881, now ready and forwarded

FREE BY MAIL! all who send their address to J. Gibson Brown, No. 21 Grand

St.

QOTUKS SUHR

Jersey City, N. J.

!*. B. Agent* wanted. Send for par* tlcularv.

/K f0 Outfit sent free, to those who wish to l^cngage in the most pleasant and protable business known. Everything new, Capital not required. We will furnish you everything. $10 a day and upwards Is easily made without staying away farm home over nigtit. No risk whatever. Many new workers wanteu at. once. Many are making fortunes at the business. Ladle* make as much as men, and young boys ana (iris make great pay. No one who Is wiling to work fails to make more money every day than can be made in a week at any ordinary employment. Those who engage at once will llnU a snort road to fortune Address H. HALLETT, & Co., Port laud Maine.

APPLICATION FOB LICENSE. Notice is hereby given that I will apply to the Board of Commissioners of Vigo Co., Indiana at their March term for a license to sell iutoxlca ing liquors in a less quantity than a quart at a time with the privilege of allowing the same'to bo drank on my premises for oje year. My place of business and the premises whereon said liquors are to be soll and drank are located on lot No. 1, of White's sub. No. 1., Harrison township, Vigo Co., I ml.

Without I-

•IMI— wamt. or location, "W* trarni mmrrmmtg gimn am mu amr foom.

iwaMBwAiseilouoiirbi A MdMMb Cj/tjtteial fntttru mmd fayiMMWit* for ISO. together with mpirtor IMMKUM tamfructio*mmt MkrU not dmmed

Admiration

A NOtAHLE EVENTt

Mrs.S. A. Allen's

WORLD'S

tr*s

THE

$30 to 51,000 2 to 82 stops. Piano 9125 rp. Paper free. AddressDan Mel

F.

Bealty, WashingtonJ-s'

E. CoORDKS.

NICHCL5 SHEPARO &T0 Battle Creek, Michigan,' wantrjumnmm or omz osaum

THRISHIRS,

Traction and Plain Englnee and

of lw ottar.maken.

roar rin ot Separators, from 6 to If hma CMMCttr./w- mr IUtm Bovvr. Two aty-lM of ICgnnted HcTpe-BffWM*.

•ooatMttr oa baa* from which to MU the is-

TRACTION ENSUES SnMataalAmNa.Mj dMmdfar mmSTi, lOt ISHme rawer.

tjaegMttasasgaassa* Obcokm Mat free. Addreaa NICHOLS, SHEPARD CO.

Battfa Creek, Mlohlcarv

drawing will take place at LOUIS-': VILLE, KY.", under authority of special act of the Kentucky Leglsla ure, and will be under the absolute control of alsin-r-tcrested commissioners appointed by thos ftCt-

LIST OF FRIZES.

The TCIIlard Hotel with all I Itsiurnitureand flxtnrea One residence on Green street One residence on Ureen rtreet II, Two cash prizes, each 5,(IGO lO^XN^ Two caah prizeK, each 2,000 4^)09Five ciu»h prieea, each 1,000 54WO Five cash prize*, each uOO 2^09* Fifty cash prizett, each 100 SflOO One hnndred cash prizes, each 50 5,WOFive hundred ciwli prizes,etu'h 20 10^00 One set of bar fusliurc 1,009 One fine piano 910 One hanusome silver tea set 109 400 boxen old Bourbon wui*ky,Htf 14,409 10 baskets Champagne, 85 2B0 Five hundied cash prizes, each 10 5, 400 boxes fine w.'nes, 80 200 boxes Robei tson Co. wh isky, 80 tt,OGO 400 boxes avana C-para, 10 4,000' Five hundred cash pr.zes, each 10 5,000*

Amounting to $369,850.

Whole tickets, $8 Halves,$1 Quarters,

Rcm.ttartccs may be made by bank eTieck,, express, postal money order, or registered mail.

Hespouslble agents wanted at all points. For circulars giving ful! 'information and for tickets, address \V. c.

To Vervout Snlform-TlieOreat Baropean Bemedj-Jr, J. B- Simpson's Specific Medicine

It is a positive care for Spermatorrhea, Seminal weakness. Impotency, and all dia-, eases resulting from Belt Abuse, as mental' anxiety, loss of memory, pains in the back or a id a diseases that lead to conanmption.in sanityandan early grave. The Bpeclflt Medicine i» being uaed with wonder ful ancoeaa.

Pamphlets sent free to all. Write for thetH and get full particular?. Price. Specific, 81.00 per package or six packages for 86.00. Address all orders to

J- SIKP80V XXDI&HE CO No. 108 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Sold in Terre Haute by UROVEH A LOWKY..

Union Baker v. —ANDONFECTI Oh ii 418 KOKTH TW1LRH 8TKEET:

T""»"7r I

of xmt '. %.

WORLD.

I -V

Hair Restorer]!

'A

E. COOKDKS & Co.

IS PERFECTION. a

Noble record: near half a Century. Established 1882. mproved lhT!). The nature of the great improvement is ts wonderful life Riving properties ti# ff or falling hair, ana MORE QUICKLY CI GINO GRAY OH WHITK HA 111 to 1U youthful COLOR and BEAUTY.

IT IS^NOT A DYR.

And requires only a few application* restore gray hair to its youthful color and, ustrousbeauty,and induce luxuriau grtrwVfc and its occasional use In .all that i» n«edfl(tto preserve it in its highest perfection beauty. DANDRUFFisqnickiy aud parau^^ nently removed.

Sola by all Druggists, %1 JK per bottle. MAJFUFACTORIKS AXD SALESROOMS: 114 and 116 Southampton Row. LondonEngland. 3Ponlevard Haussman-Paris,Frnneo. 76 Barclay atreet and 40 Park Place. N0W York. w.

0 4 1 •"}j

THE '4

E LD RED E Sewing

f* ''jl, fc. C*

|»--f

8 -f^*s

IS THE BEST!

IT SURPASSES ALL IN WORK. MANS HI P. IT8 SIMPLICITY UNEXCELLED!5

fits Durability Never Questioned. 1 I

Is Elegant in Appear at ce. ^7" Tne world challenged to produce its eo®'

?W. H.F1SK, Gen. Agent, south Third, between Oulo -aa Walnut.

WILLABt HOTEL LQTTSE.7 FOSIPW "«*. TO APRIL 7, 1881,

For a Full Drawing*

fs

15

T^

1

Machine

Pll 'A,fig.

VS-ft Jf-J W"

h1'

I. HEIN1G, PROPKIETOK

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T'3^1 •J

D. WHIPS,

W1LLARD HOTEL. I/1L'I8VILLE. KTt Or Louw D. SMITH, 601 Main street, Terre Haute, Ind.

COLD MEDAL, PARIS, 187ft, AAXER'S

BROMA

la a combination of the OocoaNnt with other ingrediento, Invigorating and agreeable alike to invalids and persona to bealtlu To ttoe sick it yfelda a delieata and tempting beverage, jrben' other BoarUbment ia unpalatable and indigestible. Aa a diet fot children it ia Invaluable* geld by Bitewi ntrpil«w» W.BAKER A COh.

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