Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 14 July 1881 — Page 2

SENSE AND SENTIMENT.

Bpensth1: The ContentmoDt has

noblest mind the best

must become w:ae

Montaigne: Amis at his own expense.

Edwin Arnold: The grief which all hearts share grows less for one.

Anon: History chronicles perfect loves it leaves marriages alone.

Pope: Every man has ju.°t as much vanity as he wants understanding.

Von Ardenburgli: The artist belongs to his work, not the work to the artist.

Heine: In these days we fight for ideas, and newspapers are our fortresses.

Emerson: Music pours on waters its beautiful disdain.

Dundreary: Somethings can be done as well n3 oilier—better, I dare say

Eastern Proverb: Contempt pierces even through the shell of the torioise.

Trublet: To select well among old things is'almost equal to inventing new noes.

Droz: Old women are sillier than young otitis. V('cnuse they have been so longer.

Hugo: When you know, and when you lo\e, you shall still suli'er. The day dawns in tears.

Robeit Browning: *Tis an awkward thing to play with souls, And ma.ter eirougti to save one's own.

Octa-j Feuillet: But, after all, peace is not tlie last word of life, not the highest symbol of happiness.

Anon: Marry in haste and repent at leisure is no truer than to marry at leisure and repent forever.

Buhver: There are inscriptions on our hearts which are never to be seen except al dead low tide.

Soulhey: Be brief for it is with sunbeams, the more they are condensed the deeperihey burn.

Anon A pretty woman's kindly look is particularly grateful only because it Hatters one's good opinion of one's self.

Belot: To try and prove to a fool his lolly, is to assume that he has what you are trying to demonstrate he has not.

Edgar A. Poe: "Gentlemen of elegan leisure" are, for the most, part, neithe men, women, nor Harriet Martineaus.

"Wordsworth: As high a* wc have mounted in delight In our dejection [do we sink as low.

Barry Cornwall: "Building the lofty rhyme" is a good thing, but our present buildings are of a low order, and seldom reach the attic.

Plato: If any one desire, or is fond of another, lie could never desire, or bo fond of, or be a friend, unless he in a manner "W. Seeker: Usually the greatest boasters are the smallest workers. The deep rivers pay a larger tribute to the sea than shallow brooks, and yet empty themselves with less uoise

Tennyson:

Hot die but live a life of truest breath And teach true life to fight with mortal wrongs.

Land or: A woman's love is essentially lonely and spiritual. It is the heathen* ism of the heart she, herself, has created the glory and beauty with which the id a a an in

Damas: The talent of turning a compliment in society may be defined as the art of evoking something from nothing it is a t.ileut which always reflects more CTedit on the artist than on the subject.

Longfellow® Our passions never Wholly die, but in the last cantos of life's romantic epochs they rise up again and do battle like some of Ariosto's heroes, •who have already been quietly interred, and ought to bo turned to dust.

Adah I. Menken: Through my earnest pleadings for the true, I learned that the mildest mercy of life was a smiling sneer and that the business of the world was to lash with vengeance all who dared to be what ilieit God had made them.

Mrs. Bi owning: I marvel people choose To stand .stock-still like fakirt, till the moss Grows on them, and they cry out, admired, ^How verdant and hiw virtuous!"

vamm or

self-

HE SUFFERED FOR !5 YEARS Guilford, Ct May 15th ld68. For thirty five years I have been the ictirn of that terrible disease, Dyspepsia ave consulted eminent physicians, and lied almost every remedy. My family Physician finally told me I could not cured. THE FIRST DOSE OF COE'S DYSPEPSIA CURE helped me, and, today, I consider myself cured, and am ready fcoatlirm that it is the most valuable medicine ever placed before the public- G. 11. Richardson. jfc Paducali, Ky. May 10th 1867

Daring confinement of eleven months in Libbv Prision, I was attacked with DYSPEPSIA in its worst form, for two years I have goffered with it. I tried doctors a great many times wit hot relief

This Spring I became so debilitated as to be unabb' to wilk one square. After taking two doses (JOE'S DYSPEPSIA CLiRE I ale of every thing on the lai.le, felt no distress afterward, and have an excellent appetite. F. T. GILLILANI). Late Lieut. U.S. .A.

Detroit Mich. Jan. 3rd 1868

I would like to add one ,morc testimonial to your list. I have been a vie tim of Dyspepsia tor the psv five years havctried a great many .cines, a«d find relief only CoE'e DYSPEPSIA CUKE

PfioeJJe Coodrich died at Newbury, Vt., W«dnestlay, June 29, aged 101. She kept her facultiesfand talked with her family till tie last.

LOHC JM

Wh«* I (it ia tfc# twilight gtaaafa Ant th« BUIY I tree* ptvMl, I drwa «(the wi4«, (rtw Mi

Aad tk* aM torn tk« ML I caa Me tk« roMt blMaaag £1 A boat th« d«orw»y low, I* CAmis my hMrt |i»M greeting

To the fheads of l«a( ag*— Dme agot

I can tea aiy Mtkar aiMiaf, With tife'a aaawlakea Itltf And she sailea akere her kaittiaf,

Audi Iwr face Uaaiatfy Mr. Aad I sea ny fauer raadiag From the Bible em hie h**e, Aad again I he» hm ptajiag,

As he nMd to araT nr Se loag ag*l

I see all the dear I Of the boyi aad rirll at haM, As I saw the* ia tkt dear aid

Before we learaed MB. Aad I aig the aid eaags aver With the frioads 1 a aad ta kMV, And my heart forgets ia MUM ta iu dream of loag aga I

Oev ioag afal

PLANNING A CAREER.

BY HORACE GREELEY.

judge that most human beings float cr drift through life. They aim at nothing, and hit it." They may have desires, or hopes, or impulses, at one time of another, but no definite, coherent, symmetrical plan, formed in early youth, matured with growing knowledge and ripened judgment, and tenaciously adhered to, through favoring or seemingly adverse fortune, to the end.

Vague aspiration is common enough. Nearly every youth desires and hopes in time to win fame or fortune—often both. Nearly every one would be a Girard or Astor in wealth, a Webster in intellectual might, if wishing would make him so. But the would-be Astor has other desires as well as that which wealth will gratify he covets ease, luxury, and divers sensual gratifications, as well as riches and Nature says to him decisively: "You may achieve something, but not everything: choose!" He does not choose but, aspiring to everything, attains nothing. He falls a victim to his own anarchy of purpose, just as the fowler who fires a bullet at a flock, but at no particular bird, well generally hit no one.

The crulest mistake of Youth is neglect to acquire skill and dexterity in some useful calling. Many fancy the®» selves too rich (prospectively) to noed proficiency in some handicraft they expect to live on what others have earned before them, not what they shall earn themselves. But Nature sternly vetoes this miscalculation—sends tornadoes, earthquakes, Chicago fires, to baffle it. Were I an Astor or a Vanderbilt, I would have my every child taught a trade, even though ever so confident that he would not probably need it. If (—l- arm him for the remote contingency

uciug

caau

.1,, uuld Xurilfy

him against disaster by imbuing his hands with skill, and his brain with resources and provisions for defying want.

Carlyle says the saddest sight on earth is a man able and willing to do useful work, yet needing and vainly seeking employment. I realize that this is sad but saddar far to my apprehension ic the too familiar spectacle of men and women seeking work in vain, not because there is no work to be done, but because they know not how to do it. For the skillful artisan or tiller of the earth, who has no work to-day, may find it in plenty tomorrow: at all events, he is ready to do it when required, and does not feel that he is essentially a pauper. But for that vast, forlorn multitude, who tells us they are willing to do anything," but who really know how to do nothing that others or themselves stand in need of, what hope can exist? What alternation of seasons, what improvement in the money market, what melioration of the times, can relieve their sore distress? Especially if they will crowd into cities, where living is so dear and competition for employment so superabundent, what can be dene for them?

I hold induction into some calling which is essential to the satisfaction of our imperative wants, the first need of every human being. Let the youth be a poet or painter, if he will let his sister become proficient in music or geometry, if her tastes so dictate but let her first be taught how to cool:, or sew, or keep a house in order, and let him be taught to grow corn, or build habitations, or make shoes. Not because manual labor is more useful or more honorable than other, but because it can never be dis-

Now encourage and aid him to choose wisely his pursuit, which need not be 4hat which is to stand between him and starvation, in case of failure in the voca* tion of his choice. Ask him to choose, with due respect for his own tastes and aspirations, but not in entire indifier* ence to the needs of the community, the dictates of the general weal.

I have, more than once, offended a

5

THE TERRE

stranger who inquired of me, Would you advise me to study law?" Jby responding, Yankee-like, with the question. Do you think the country now in need of more lawyers?" I surely had not intended any sarcastic or other reflection on the inquirer's meditated calling I had purposed only to draw his attention to a point which he seemed to have overlooked. Why should any deem this inquiry irrelevant? I am sure that clergymen area useful and necessary jlass yet there are countries wherein they are far too numerous for their own or the general good. Then why not consider, in contemplating the study of law, whether there be or te not a present pu\ lie need of more lawyers?

Perhaps the silliest thing a young man can say is: "lhave resolved never to marry." Even though the resoive were ever so proper, it is one with which others have no probable or obvious concern, and your proclaiming it is a virtual intimation that you are so attractive to the other sex that you are obliged to warn them off from a hopeless quest—a starward aspiration—whereby their peace of mind is likely to suffer ship wreck.

I deem it of the first moment to a true plan of life to give to the acquisition of worldly gear its just position, as an im portant incident, not the chief object, of a manly career. He who has reached his thirtieth, fortieth, fiftieth year, yet is still poor and needy, may possibly have been kept poor by unusual burdens or successive misfortunes but, in the absence of these, the natural presumption is strong that he has been idle, or luxurious, or dissipated, and misused or neglected his opportunities. He had no moral right to become a husband and father without earnestly striving to make that reasonable and just provision for the legitimate wants of his household, in the absence of which, the great Apostle, would regard him as worse than an iufidel."

A comfortable home that does not belong to any other (husband, wife and children excepted) a calling or pursuit whereby a livelihood may to a moral certainty be gained a vicinage which, however rude and repulsive at first, shall at length become agreeable and attractive the approbation of the good and the dislike or dread of the irreclaimably profligate and depraved—so much, at least, should be included in the plan of life of every thoughtful youth. There be those whose hatred honors its object there be some whose defamation is praise. He who aspires to please every one, will be sure to deserve the hearty approbation of none. Let him rather resolve friends ancTTiis enemies alJTte sfe$l such that, whoever is acquainted with both, shall know that his heart is pure and his life noble, and he cannot fail to die conscious and thankful that ha hai not lived wholly in vain.

Courage In Disease. [London Laacet

Many a life has been savea by the moral courage of a sufferer. It is not alone in bearing the pain of operations or the misery of confinement in a sick room this self-help becomes of vital moment, but in the monotonous tracking of a weary path and the vigorous discharge of ordinary duty.

How many a victim of incurable disease has lived on through years of-suf-fering, patiently and resolutely hoping against hope, or, what is better, living down despair, until the virulence of a threatening malady has died out, and it has ceased to be destructive, although its physical characteristics remained? This

Eigh

ower of good spirits" is a matter of moment to the sick and weakly. To the former it may mean the ability to survive, to the latter the possibility of outliving, or living, in spite of a disease. It is, therefore, of the greatest importance to cultivate the highest and most buoyant frame of mind which the conditions will admit.

The same energy which takes the form of mental activity is vital to the work of the organism. Mental influences affect the system, and a joyous spirit not only relieves pain, but increases the momentum of life in the body. The victims of disease do not commonly sufficiently appreciate the value and use of "good spirits." They too often settle down in despair when a professional judgement determines the existance of some latent or chronic malady.

The fact that it is probable they will die of a particular disease casts so de

pensed with or go out of fashion—be- S^00m over their [prospects that throbgh amine, cholera, or ronfla- fear of death they are all their lifetime cause siege of famine, cholera or confla gration, can never supersede or supplant it, do I insist that every child should be trained to efficiency in some inevitable trade or handicraft, as the most indispensable part of true education. Add as

subject to bondage, healthy

persons who wear out their

strength .by exhausting journeys and per-

Lial

journeys

petual anxieties for health is vei and tl exceedingly short-sighted. lar

and the policy in which they indulge is

much Intel,actual or.iterary culture as S you will, but first importance, but not:

less wretched

necessarily in time, be sure to arm and more hopeful. It is useless to expect train your child for that conflict with physical want which is the only unfailing heritage of all the children of Adam.

and live longer if they were

that any one can be reasoned into a Lighter frame of mind, but it is desirable that all should be taught to understand the sustaining, and often even curative^ power of "good spirits." .5 h'li

W a 5" "4! "tBo"on jiJ" tf* A Worcester lawyer got his pretty lady client to weep in the presence of the jury, and thought he had a dead sure thing, but the counsel on the other side told the court that the State was bound to furnish those twelve gentlemen all the

liquor they

-JV

HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.

Her8rty

From the Indianapolis Journal. There are many who cannot understand the difficulties between the factions in New York, also know no difference between half-breeds and stalwarts, and care less who are undecided as to the responsibility for the deadlock in Congress or the trouble at Albany, and who a", times are inclined to blame Conkling, then Garfield, for all this unexpected and unseemly row about the collectorship in New York. It is all a misty maze to them, and they have no patience nor iaclination to dig down to the bottom facts. But there is nobody who did not understand that grief-stricken old lady, fie mother of the President, when she said: "How could anybody be so cold-hearted as to attempt to'kill my baby!" Her baby! The Chief Magistrate of fifty millions of people. Her baby! The grandest figure before the world, the fullarmed type of American manhood, physically and intellectually the superior of any ruler of any people on the earth. Aid yet to her he was not the representative of the people in Congress, not the Senator from Ohio, not even the

President of the United States in all his honors and dignities be was her baby still. How in that the mother spoke. Honors, titles, offices were nothing. His first claim to her consideration was the fact that he was her baby, and she could no more comprehend enmity to him as President than injury to him as a child.

How wonderful, how inexplicable is a mother's love. We call it instinct, but it is the link that binds the world together. Opposed, the shrinking mother becomes a tigress and dies for her offspring rather than desert it. Over disgrace, over crime over home affections and over all other ties it rides aad rules, defying fate and scorning death. It was the art of a master that made Lady Macbeth say: "I have given'suck, and know How tender 'tis to love the babe that milks me."

Before this sorrowing old lady the world stands uncovered in reverence, in sympathy, and in tears, we nad not thought of him as ever anybody's baby, but he was and is, and there is a grief in that fond old mother's heart surpassing all that the Nation feels.

THE GREAT SKIN CURE.

itching and scaly Diseases, Humors of the Scalp and Skin Permanently)

Cured.

RINGWORM.

SKIN HUMORl

ECZEMA.

1

GEO. W. BROWN, 48 Marshall street, Provlidence, R. I. cured by Cuticura Remedies ol a Ringworm Humor got at the barber's, which spread all over his ears, neck and face, ana for six years resisted all kinds of treatment.

5

v-

Bros..TJeTVoit",T»iifc'fl?, 9?«Ut_lor Harper A account of his case {eczema rodent), wliicli had been treated by a consultation of physicians without benefit, and which speedily yielded to the CDTICURA RESOLVENT Internally and CUTICURA SOAP externally.

SCALD HEAD.

H. A. Raymond, Auditor F. W., J. A S. R. R., Jackson, Mloh., was cured of Scald Head of nine yean* duration by the Cuticura Remedies.'"* .iMmi-ja

Hon. Wm. Taylor. Boston, Mass., permanently cured of a humor of the face and scalp (eczema) that had been treated unsuccessfully for twelve years by Many of Boston's best physicians and most noted specialists, as well ad European authorities.

MILK CRUST.

ne. I-

Mrs. Bowers, 143 Clinton St., Cincinnati, speaks of her sister's child, who was cured of milk crust which resisted all remedies for two years. Now a fine, healthy boy, with a beautiful head of hair.

FALLING HAIR.

Frank A. Bean, Steam Fire engine 6, Boston, was cured of akpecia, or falling of the hair, by the Cuticura Resolvent Internally and Cuticura and Cuticura Soap externally, which completely restored his hair when all said he would lose it.

Thomas Lee, 2276 Frankford Ave., Philadelphia, afflicted with dandruff, which for twenty years had covered bis scalp with scales one-quarter of an inch in thickness, cured by the Cuticura Remedies.

TREATMENT. I

The Cuticura Treatment consists in the internal use of the Cuticura Resolvent, the new Blood purifier, and the external use of Cuticura and Cuticura Soap, the tireat Skin Cores.

For Sunburn, Tan and Greasy Skin [use Cuticura Soap, an exquisite toilet, bath and nursery sanative, fragrant with delicious flower odors and healing balsams.

CUTICURA

teespa

The multitude of

REMEDIES are for sale by all Drugists. Price of Cuticura, a Medicinal elly, smull boxes, 60 cents large boxes, $1. Cuticura Resolvent, the new Blood Purifier, 51 per bottle. Cuticura Soap, (the queen of medicinal toilet soaps), 25 cents. Cuticura Medicinal Shaving Soap, 16c. Principal depot.

WEEKS & POTTER, Boston, Mass. S9F*A11 mailed free on recciptuf price.

GOWNS'

VOLTAIC

very great, "Ulg( ost of the

and won the

More continuous and powerfull electrical ac

ctMiifttion is obtained from

tUB,wlCollins'

Voltaic Elec­

tric Plasters than any |2 battery made. They

area speedy and certain enre for pain and Weaknessof the Longs, Liver,Kidneys, and Urinary Organs, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Hysteria, Female Weakness, Nervous Pains and Weaknesses, Malaria, and Fever and Auge. Price JJ6 cents. Sold every where.

WEEKS & POTTER. Boston, Mass.

HAVE YOU

SI

EVER KNOWN

Any person to be seriously ill without Ill weak stomach or inactive liver or kidneys? And wh' these organs are In good condition dr» yiKi not Una their possessor enjoyng good health? Parker'sGingerTonicalways regulates these Important organs, and blood rich and pure rtof The system.

never fails to make the and to strengthen every It has cured nundreds of despa'rlng" invalids. As* your neighbor about It.

Ki

VkJ a

'f I

ill

A S E N O I O O N IT O

WIN A FORTUNE. SEVENTH GRAND DISTRIBUTION, CLASS G. AT NEW ORLEANS, TUESDAY, Jl'LV I*, 1881134tli Monthly Drawing Louisiana State Lottery Company.

Incorporated in 1868 for 25 years by the Legislature for Educational and Charitable purposes—with ft capital of $1,000,000—to which a reserve fund of over $420,uOO has since been added.

By an overwhelming popular vote Its franchise was made a part of. the present State Constitution adopted December 2d, A. D., 187».

Its Grand Single Number Draw inffs will take place monthly. .Jl never scale* or postpone*,

Look at the following Distribution: j: CAPITAL PRIZE, $30,000. 100,000 TICKETS AT TWO DOLLARS EACH

HALF-TICKETS, ONE DOLLAR. LIST

or

PRIZK8.

J{\

1 Capital Prize $30,000 Capital Prise 10,00o 1 Capital Prize 5,000 2 Pmea of $2,600 5,000 5 Prizes of 1,000 5,000 20 Prizes of 500 10,000 100 Prizes of 100 10,000 200 Prizes of 50 10,600 500 Prizes of 20 10,000 1000 Prizes of 10. 10,000

APPROXIMATION PRIZES.

9 Approximation Prizes of $300 2,700 200 1,800 100 900

1857 Prizes, amounting to $110,400 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

1

Rl. A. DAUPHIN, New Orleans, La.,.

or 1TI. A. DAUPHIN, at No. 812 Broadway, Now York,

All our Grand Extraordinary Drawings ar under the supervision and management GENERALS G. T. AEAl'REGARD and JUBAL A. EARLY.

UARDIAN*S SALE.

uardlan of Richard K. and Jessie C.

Shellady, miners, will sell #it privaie sale the following described real estate In Vigo County, Indiana, to-wit:

Commencing 40 teet 8 Inches north of tbe southwest corner of out-lot number twelve, in the citv of Terre Hau4e, running thence north 46 feet and eight inches, thence east 140 feet, thence south 49 feet and 8 Inches, thence west 140 feet to place of beginning.

TERMS or SALE: One-fourth casn, balance in three equal notes due In 6, 12 and 18 months respectively, secured by mortgage on the lot sold, bearing 8 per ceot. interest, waiving appialRement laws and with attorney's fees.

Application maybe made at the office of Horaoe B. Jones, attorney at law, 417% Main street,Terre Haute, until Saturday, the 10th dry of July, 1881, on which day said sale will be made.

JOHNC. MKAKS, Guardian.

No. 11. 261The State of Indiana, vlgo county In the Vigo Circuit Court, of the April term 1881. The Atlas Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut v«. James M.

Bolton, Sarah Bolton, James M. Bolton A.dminlstrators of the estate of James Bolton deceased, Meredith S. Owens, William

It.

Shuey, Henry Rhyaa, Harriet

Van Wyck, Benjamin F. Swafford In Foreclosure. i88i it" wm *5ra^iB

h«.l6tM?y

OMMISBIONER'S SALE.

12

Clerk notify by publication said Meridtli Owens, William L. Shuey, Henry Rhy and Haniet R. Van Wyck as non-resident Defendants of the pendency of this action against them.

Said Defendants are therefore hereby notified of the dependency of said action against them and that the same will stand for trial on the 5th day of September lttl the same being September term of sale Court in he tyear 1881.

MERRILL N. SMITH, Clerk.

By aflbrdef of the VlgoOircuit Court, the undersigned commissioner will on Saturday, the 2nd day of July, on the premises, sell at private sale the following described real estate in Vigo County, Indiana, to-wlt:

Thirty-two (32) feet off the west side of lo? number thirty-one (31) In the town of Mia dletown.

TERMSOP SALE:One-third cash, one third in six and one-third in twelve months, de ferred payments to be evidenced by notes with approved personal security bearing seven per cent Interest, waiving valuation laws and pro vidlne for attorney's fees.

NICAOLAS YEAGER, Commissioner. HORACE B. JONES, Attorney.

No. 74. The State of Indiana, Vigo County in the superior court of Vigo county. So phia J. Sumpter vs William H. Sumpter in divorce.

Be it known that on the 6th day of July 1881, said plaintiff filed an affidavit in due form, showing that said William H. Sump ter Is a non-resident of the state of Indiana

Said non-resident defendant is hereby not fled of the "pendency of said action against him. and that the same will stand for trial at the September term of said court In the year of 1881.

Attest: MERRILL N. SMITH, Clerk.

OPERA HOUSE

E. L. GODECKE,

S E S S O O A O O E I

DEALER IK

J. C. Mff'TTRET Jt Co. Cincin nOhin,

Jonas Strause,

Grocer,

Corner Second and Matn. Farmer's trade especially solicited. Highest price paid for wooland farmers' produce

REVISED N£ W TESTE ME NTS!

Illustrated. Cheapest fcml »cst. Sells at sight

HObMAN* PICTORIAL BIBLES!

Agents wanted. A. J. Holman & Co., Phila

Toixn. Ha.ra.le37No. 28 north Fourth Street,

manofactnres all styles of

AWNINGS

I

From the best materials. Get in your order early. He takes orders also for tents, ham mocks, Ac.

b$t

PKBKT, HOUSTON OOUXTY, GA-

We have known "Swift's Syphilitic Speoiflc" tested in hundredsof cases of Syphello Mercurial Rheumatism, Sctofula,. It is has made the most perfect and permanettf cures in every case.

HUGA L. DKNWARD, SAM D. KIXILEV, Judge Co. Ct., J. L. WARREN,of J. L. Lathop A Co., Savannah, Ga., ED. JACKSOX, OeptCl'k 8np'r Ct., WM. BRUNSON, ELI WARMEST, J. W. WIMCKRLY,J. C. GILBERT, Dr»gt, J. W. MANN, Co. treas., WM. D.

signatures

appear In the foregoing certificate. They are men of high character and standing. A. H. COLQUITT,

Governor of Georgia.

THE SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, Proprietor*. Atlanta, Ga. Bold bjrQnlick A Berry.

Call for a copyof "Young Men's Friend YAN SHACK, STEVENSON A CO., Wholesale AgMit& Sold by Gnllck

A Berry

/), if.

and all druggists.

Toltnan & Co,

161 Randolph StM Chicago, GRAIN AND PROVISIONS Bought and sold, or carried at regular board of trade rates. Or margins of 1 cent per bushel on wheat, corn or oats,25o per barrel on pork and 80c per tierce on lard accepted. Profits and losses limited to exUut of margins deposited less commission, no further liability Incurred. Operators will find it tothefir advantage to correspond with us. Agents wanted.

GRAYS SPECIFIC MEDICINE TRADB MARK The greatTRADS MARK E 118 li remedy. An a 1 cure for sem lnal weakness spermatorrhea, iinpotency, ana all disas a BEFORE TAIII0. follow as a AFTER TAKINB. equence of self abuse as loss of memory, univeraal lassitude, pain in the back. Dimness of vision, premature old ago, and many other diseases that lead to insanity or consumption and apremature gravo. WFull particulars in our pamphlet, which we desire to send free by mail to everyone. •VThe Specific Medicine is sold by all druggists at SI per package, or six packages for $, or will be sent free by mall on receipt of he money, by addressing

THE GRAY MEDICINE CO., No. lOfl Main St, Buffalo, N.Y.

sold in Terr Haute Wholesale and Rebv GULICK & BERRY.

DR. SINFORDS

V-Ji

NVIGORATOR

The Only Vegetable Compouni that acts directly upoii the Liver, andcures Liver Complaints Jaundice, Biliousness, Malaria, Costiveness, Headache. It assists Digestion', Strengthens the System, Regulatesthc Bowels, Purifies the Blood. ABooksentfree. Address

•Dr. Sanford, 162

Broadway,N.Y.

S^vTHE

E LD RE

,£'T

IB

IT

I

I, IMHturn nvirr

pictures, Frames and Mo alding* No. 40# Main street. Terra Haute In

J.

ARMERSAND ARMKRS SONS $4Sto$100 Per month during Fall and winter, in every county. Interesting and valuable information, with full particulars, free. Address at once,

Si

jSYn.' 1

THE BEST!

SURPASSES ALL IU WORK MANSHIP. ITS SIMPLICITY UNEXCELLED!

fIts Durability Never Questioned-

Is Elegant in Appearance.v

The world challenged to produce its equ a I

W. H. FISK,

Gen. Agent, soath Third, between Ohio Walnut.

Bill* Arehimtdtas lan Horn Ctmpuj

Of Hartford, Conn.,

J\, MANUFACTURER* OF THE

NEW ARCHIMEDEAN ,, and CHARTER OAK .awn Mowers.

These Mowers have become cele' rated throughout the World, where lawns are cul tlvated, as being the most perfect and desirable Lawn Mowers ever made. They stand at the head of the list of lawn mowers in the U. 8. and Europe. The contain all the Improvements that experience in their manufacture can suggest are beautifully finished, thoroughly made and do splendid work on every variety of lawn.

Hand Mower Sizes, from 8 to 18 inches. Pony and horse sizes, 24,28 and 32 inches. Send for circulars.

Also manufacture the Daisy Mower. Sold by our Agents Everywhere^1 A. G. Austin fc Co., Agents, Terre Haute

n»:w t'licn?•

EATON & COMBS

Successors to N. 8. Wheat, dealers in all grades of

HarA and Soft Goal. Wood and Coke, Bl*ck and Block !«nt a Specialty.

Orders for any part of the city filled with romptnees and desnatch. Tele] ectea with office.

promptness and despatch. Telephone con-

Omoi—MAIK STKKET, OPPOSITE TBBBE HAUTK HOUSE.

lite®at