Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 28 July 1881 — Page 2
BLACK ON INGERSOLL
Continued From Second Page.
purposes, a mere sentiment is when substituted for a principle, is only necessary to recollect that Mr. Ingersoll is {himself a warrior **ho stayed not behind the mighty men tif his tribe when they gathered themselves together for a war of •conquest. He took the lead of a regiment as eager as himself to spoil the Philistines, "and out he went a coloneling." How many Amalekites and Hitites and Amoritee be put to the edge of the sword, how many -wives he widowed, or how atnany mothers he "unbabed," can not now be told. I do not even know how many droves of innocent oxen he condemned to the slaughter. But it is certain that his refined and tender soul took great pleasure in the terror, conflagration, blood and tears with which the war wis attended, and in all the hard oppressions which the aonquered people were made to suffer afterward. I do not say that the •war was either better or worse for his participation and approval. But if his •own conduct (for which he professes neither penitence nor shame) was right, it was right en grounds which make it an inexcusable outrage to call the children of Israel savage criminals for carrying on wars of aggression to save the life of their Government. These inconsistencies are the necessary conse ••quences of having bo rule of action, and no guide for the conscience. When a man throws away the golden metewand •of the law which CJod has provided, and takes the elastic cord of feeling for his measure of righteousness, you can not tell frem day to day what he will think or •do.
As to slavery, Mr. Ingersoll's objection that Jehovah permitted his chosen people 'to hold the captives they took in war or purchased from the heathen as servants ifor life, it is answered that the infallible God in so doing proceeded upon good grounds, and that when a Jew took a neighboring savage for his bond servant, incorpprated him into his family, trained him, taught him to work and gave him a knowledge of the true God he conferred upon him a most beneficent boon. Polygamy is another of his objections to the Mosaic constitution.
Strange to say, it is not there. It is neither commanded nor prohibited it is only discouraged. If Mr. Ingersoll were a statesman instead of mere politician, he would see good and sufficient reason for the forbearance to legislate directly upon the subject. It would be improper for me to set them forth here.
He knows probably that the influence of the Christian Church alone, and with~ out the aid of State enactments, has extripated this bad feature of Asiatic manners wherever its doctrines were carried. Why does he throw polygamy into the face"of religion which abhors itV Be
When Jesus ot Nazareth announced himself to be Christ, the Son of God, in Judea, many thousand persons who heard his wo-ds and kaw his works believed in his divinity without hesitation. Since the morning of the creation nothing has occurred so wondertul as the rapidity with which this religion spread itself abroad.. Men who were in the noon of life when Jesus was put to death as a malefactor lived to see him worshiped as God by organized bodies of believers in every province of the Roman empire. In a few more years took complete control of the general mind, suplanted all other religions, and wrought a radical change in human society. It did this in the face of obstacles which, according to every human calculation, were insurmountable. It was antagonized by all the evil propensities, the tenual wickedness, and the vulgar crimes of the multitude, as well as the polished vices of the kixuiious classes, and was most violently opposed even by those sentiments and thoughts which were esteemed virtuous, such as patriotism and military heroism. It encountered not only the ignorance and supertition, but tho learning and philosophy,the poetry, eloqueuce and wit of the time. Barbarism and civilization were alike it deadly enemies. The priesthood of every established religion and the atuhority of every Government were arrayed against it. All these were overcome not by the enticing words of man's wisdom, but by the simple presentation of a pure and peaceful doctrine, preached by obscurt strangers at the daily peril of their lives. Is it Mr. Ingersoll's idea that this happened by chance, like the creation of the world
I will present some of the considerations which would compel me were I judge or juroi in the cause (the acceptance of Christianity) to decide just as it was decided originally.
First—There is no good reason to doubt that the statements of the Evangalists, as we have them now, are genuine. The multiplication ot copies was a guarantee against any material alteration of the text. Mr. Ingersoll speaks of interpolations made by the fathers of the church. All he knows and all he has ever heard on that subject is that the innumerable transcripts contain ed errors which were discovered and corrected. That simply proves the present integrity of the documents.
Second—I call the statements deposi tiin8, because they are entitled to the kind of credence which we give to declarations made nnder oath—but in a much higher degree, for they are more than sworn to. They were made in the immediate prospect of death. Perhaps this would not affect the conscients of an atheist—neither would an oath—but these people manifesfly believed in a judgment after death, before a God of truth, whose displeasure they feared above all things.
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Third—'The witaesa could not hare been mistaken. The nature of the facts percluded the possibility of any delusion about them. For every averment they had "the sensible and true avouch of their own eyes" and ears. Besides, they were plain-thinking, sober, unimaginative mea, who, unlike Mr. Ingersoll, always, under all circumstance, and especially in the presence of eternity, recognized the difference between mountains and clouds. It is inconceivable how any fact could be proven by evidence nore conclusive than the statement of such persons, publicly given and steadfastly persisted in through every kind of prosecution, imprisonment and torture to tfee last agoaies of a lingering death.
Fourth—Apart from these terrible tests, the more ordinary claims to credibility are not wantiag. They were men of unimpeachable character. The most virulent enemies of the cause they spoke and died lor have never suggested a reason for doubting their personal honesty. But there is affirmative proof that they and their fellow disciples were held by those who knew them in the highest estimation for truthfulness. Wherever they made their report it was not only believed, but believed with a faith so implicit that thousands were ready at ooce to seal it with their blood.
Fifth—The tone and temper of their narrative impress us with a sentiment of profound respect.
It does not appear that tLo statements of the evangelists were ever denied by any person who pretended to know the facts. What we call the fundamental truths of Christianity consist of great public events which are sufficiently established by history without special proof.
From the facts established by this evidence it follows irresistibly Unit the Gospel has come to us from God.. 1 hat silences all reasoning about the wisdom and justice of its doctrines, since it is impossible even to imagine that wrong can be done or commanded by that Sovereign Being whose will alone is the ultimate standard of all justice.
But Mr. Ingersoll is still dissatiffed. He raises objections as false, fleeting and baseless as clouds, and insists that they are as stable as the mountains, whose everlasting foundations are laid by the hand of the Almighty. I will compress his propositions into plain words printed in quotations, and, taking a look at his misty creations, let thein roll away and vanish into air one after another. "Christianity offers eternal salvation as the reward of belief alone." This is a misrepresentation simple and naked No euch doctrine is propounded in the Scriptures, oi in the creed -of any Christian Church. On the contrary., it is distinctly taught that faith avails nothing without repentance, reformation and newness ot life. "The mere failure to believe it is punished in hell." I have never known any Christian-man or woman to assert this. It is universally agreed that
cause he is nothing if not political. The children too young to understand it do Mormons believe in poligamv. and the1 not believe it And this exemption Mormons are unpopular. iTiiey are guilty of having not only many wives, but much property, and if a war could be hissed up against them its fruits might bo more '-gainhtl pillage than we do now conceive of." It is a cunning muneuvre, tiiis of strengthing atheism, by enlisting anti-Mormon rapacity against the God of the Christians. I can only protest against the use he would make of these and other political interests. It ia inn argument it is mere stump oratory 1 do not enumerate in detail the positive proofs which support the authenticity of the Hebrew Bible, though they are at hand in great abundance, because the evidence in support cf the new dispensation will establish the verity of the old— the two being so connected together that if one is true the other cannot be false.
extends to adults who have never seen the evidence, or, from weakness of intellect, are incapable of weighing it. Luuatics and idiots are njt in the least danger, and, for aught I know, this category may, by a stretch of God's mercy, include minds constitutionally sound, but with faculties so perverted by education, habit, or passion that they are incapable of reasoning. siiucorelv hope that, upon this or some other principle, Mr. Ingersoll may escape the hell he talks about so much. "The ?stery of the second birth is incomprehensiDle." Christ established a now kingdom in the world, but aot of it. Subjects were admitted to the privileges and protection of its government by a process equivalent to naturalization. "The doctrine of the atonement is absurd, unjust and immoral." Ittie plan of salvation, or any plan for the rescue of sinners from the legal operation of Divine justice, could have been framed only in the councils of the Omniseient. Necessarily its heights and depths are not easily fathomed by finite intelligence. Here is a rash, superficial man, without training or habits of reflection, who, upon a mere glance, declares that it "must, be abandoned," because it seems to him "absurd, unjust and immoral." "He does not comprehend how justice and mercy can be blended together in the place of redemption, and therefore it cannot be true." A thing is rot necessarily false because he does not understand it he can not annihilate a principle or a fact by ignoring it The union of a man's soul with his body is not only an unknowable but an unimaginable mystery. Is it therefore false that a connection does exist between matter and spirit? "What," he again asks, "would we think of a man who allowed another to die for a crime which he himself committed V' I answer that a man who by any contrivance causes his own offense to be visited upon the head of an innocent person is unspeakably depraved. But are Christians guilty of this baseness because they accept the blessings of an institution which their great Benefactor died to establish Loyalty to the KiBg who has erected a most bedeficent government for us at the cost of His life—fidelity to the Master who bought us with His blood—is not the fraudulent sub3titition ot an innocent person in place of a crimi nal.
The doctrine of non-resistance, forgiveness of injuries, reconciliation wrh enemies, as taught in the New Testament is the child of weakness, degrading and UBjiist." This is the whole substanee of a long, rambling diatribe, as incoherent as a sick man's dream.' Christianity does not forbid the necessary defense of civil society or the proper vindication of personal rights. But to cherish animosity, to thirst for mere revenge, to hoa-d up wrongs, real or fancied, and lie in wait for the cnance of paying them back to be impatient, unforgiving, malicious and cruel to all who have crossed us—these diabolical propensities are checked and curbed by the authority and spirit of the Christian religion and the application of it has converted men from low savages into refined and civilized beings. "The punishment of sinners in eternal hell is excessive." The future of the soul is a subject on which we have very dark views. In our present state, the mind takes in no idea except what is conveyed to it through the bodily senses. All our conceptions of the spiritual world are derived from some analogy to material things, and this analogy must necessarily be very remote, because the nature of the subjects compared is so diverse that a close similarity caa not be even supposed.
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"But," says he, "Christians nave been guilty of wanton and wicked prosecution-" It is true that some persons, professing Christianity, have violated the fundamental principles of their faith by iaflictiog violent injuries and bloody wroDgs upon their fellow -men. But the perpetrators of these outrages were in fact not Christians bat hypocrites from the beginning or else base apostates—infidels or something worse—hirelings wolves, whose gospel was their maw. Not one of them ever pretended to find a warrant for his conduct in any precept of Christ or any doctrine of his Church. All the wrongs of this nature which s~ tory records have been the work of politicians, aided often by priests and ministers who were willing to deny their Lord and desert to the eaeray for the sake ot their temporal interests. "The Gospel of Christ does not satisfy the hunger of the heart." That depends upon what kind of a heart it is." If it hungers after righteousness, it will surely be filled. It ie probable, also, that if it hungers after the OHhy food of a godless philosophy, it will get what its appetite uemands. That was an ezpessive 'phrase which Carlyle used when he called modern infidelity "the gospel of dirt." '•Christianity i* pernicious in its moral effeit, darkens Hie mind, narrows the soul, arrests the progress of human society, and hinders civilization."
Mr. Ingersoll, as a zealous apost!e of the "gospel of dirt," must be expected to throw a good deal of mud. When I an.--wer that all we have of virtue, justice, intellectual liberty,moral elevation, refinement, benevolence and true wisdom camo to us from that source which he reviles as the fountain of all evil, I am not merely putting one assertion against another for I have the advalatre of speaking what every tolerably well iuformed man knows to be true
An eloquent peroration on the Christian religion concludes this striking and full souled language "This relion has come down to us througli the ages, attended all the way by righteouiness, justice, temperance, mercy, transparent truthfulness, exciting hope and whitewinged charity. Never was its influence for good more plainly perceptible than uow. It has not converted, purified and reformed all men, for its first principle is the freedom of the human will, and there are those who choose to reject it. But to the mass of mankind, directly and indirectly, it has brought uncounted benefits and blessings. Abolish it—take away the restraints wlrch it imposes on evil "passiors—silence the admonition of its preachers—let all' Christians cease their labors of charity—-blot out from histoiy the records of its 'heroic benevolence— repeal the laws it has enacted and the institutions it has built up—let its moral principles be abandoned and all its miracles of light be extinguished—what would we come to? I need not answer this question the experiment has been partially tried. The French Nation formally renounced Christianity, denied the existence of the Supreme Being, and so satisfied the hunger of the infidel heart for a time. What 'followed? Universal depravity, garments rolled in blood, fantastic criiues unimagined before, which startled the earth with their sublime utrocity The American people have and ought to have no special desire to follow that terrible example of guilt and misery. '•It is impossibe to discuss this subject within the limits of a review. No doubt the effort to be short -has made me ob scure. If Mr. Ingersoll thinks himself wronged, or his doctrines misconstrued let him not lay my fault at the door to the Church or cas: his censure on the clergy. 'Adsum qui feci, in me eonvertile ferrum."
Good Woras irom Druggists. "Malt Bitters are tne best "bitters." "They promote sleep sand allay nervousness "Best Liver and kidney medicine we sell" "They knock the 'chills' every time." "Consumptive people gdin flesh on them." "Malt Bitters have no rivals in this town." '•Best thing for nursing mothers we have." "•We like to reco mmcod Malt Bitters:
Basket Meeting.
At Pisfjab, on the Sand ford ckcHit, July 31, a basket meeting will be held for the purpose ot having a sociable .and especially a profitable religious time.
They may relieve, but they can't $ure that lame back for the kidneys are the trouble, and you want a remedy to act directly on their secretion?, to purify and restore their healthy condition. KidneyWort has that specific action—and at the same time it regulates the bowels perfectly. Don't wait to gei sick, but get a package to-day, and cure yourself. Either liquid or dry for sale at the druggist-.— Binghamton Republican.
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Hospital Heeded.
No palatial hospital needed for Hop Bitters patients, nor large-salaried talented puffers to tell what Hop Bitters will do or cure, as they tell their own story by their certain and absolute cures at home. —New York Independent.^'4^*!»,*
Write to Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, No. 383 Western Avenue, Lynn, Mass., for pamphlets relative to the curative properties of her Vegetable Compound in all female complaints. 71
The best preventive of consumptive diseases of the lungs, bowels or kidneys is Brown's Iron Bitters. It checks all decav. .......... wL
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THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
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\'M9 A Won* to Country Girla.i| a (Youth's Companion.] Our magazines and newspapers are not wanting in good advice to boys with regard to the trade or profession they shall choose but the girls who in a few years must go out and earn their own living are left almost unguided.
One word of counsel, therefore, cannot be amiss. It is, Keep out of the cities. It is true that there is a wider range of occupations open to women in the cities, than in villages but it is also true that th«fy are all now enormously overcrowded.
A few facts will outweigh pages of argument here. The first occupation to which educated women turn is, oddly enough, authorship. Every woman who can write a lovely letter believes herself able to earn a comfortable living by her pen. ,-i
One New York magazine lately stated that it had over three thousand accepted manuscripts on hand another had two thousand four hundred. Reckon the manuscripts rejected in addition to these, if you would find the chance of success for you as an author.
Next comes teaching. The positions in the public schools in the large cities are given to graduates of the high schools and the giving depends largely on political influence. An unknown stranger has absolutely no chance.
Situations as shop-girls are eagerly sought for by country girls. Most of these places are held by women who live at home, and are willing to work for three or four dollars per week, which they spend for dress alone. Not more than six or seven dollars per week is paid in New York or Philadelphia stores, except in a few instances, to women who, through long training, have become experts in silk, lace,-etc. Out of this the shop-girl, without other support, must clothe, board and lodge herself. It is done necessarily in a wretched attic. Seamstresses recorve one dollar per dozen for making tucked and flounccd petticoats, one dollar and twenty cents for fino chcmises, and pay out of this the weekly rent of one-dollar and fifty cents for the machine. Ninety cents per dozen is paid for crocheting infants' caps.
Let the country girl, pining to "see life' in the city, count these pittances, and add on the other hand the rates of food and lodging, 'treble those to which she is accustomed, and she will under stand why so many young girls in all our cities give up the hopeless struggle for bread and siuk into death, or into depths when virtue is gone lower than the grave There are very few villages or farmneighborhoods where an energetic worn an with strong brain or skilled hands cannot earn her living much more comfortably among the people who know her, by teaching, sewing, or by domestic labor provided she lays aside false pride, and remembers that work is disgraceful to a woman only when it makes her unwomanly.
"Tne Most Convenient Spot" for Ktcli Men. ... ,. [London Truth.] All real power in England is in the hands of a plutocracy, and there is no imaginable reason why a rich Englishman should desire reforms. Materially speaking, the British islands are the most convenient spot in the world, con sidered as the residence of a rich man.
Our houses, our horses, our yachts, our hunting, racing and provisions are the very best on earth. No French or Spanish vineyard can produce fruit like unto our hothouse grapes no Italian gardens can vie with those of Chatsworth.
Then a rich Englishman has the cream of everything in our delicious country, as the natural outcome of the power which is vested in him. He may buy a seat in parliament, and he is to the manner born a deputy lieutenant and magistrate of his country. He may also choose his own place in our civil and military services.
What can he want more? Nothing which makes life enjoyable and safe is withheld from him, and he practically holds our laws between the leaves of his check book. Not one of them, is ever likely to give him the smallest inconvenience if he will pay the market price for what he wants
The meeting will begin at 9% a. m., at which time a love feast service will be held, conducted by Father David SiniUi. At 10% the morning sermon will begin. Then the dinner will be spread upon some cool green spot, and a rich repast enjoved. At 2% P. M. will be held a children's ineetiog. Let all the parents Si^r'anTkcT^Tou'ldY.Te ve^ see to it that their children are present, certainly any actress, woum nave very present The last service will be preaching at 3 p. m. We shall have an organ and choir to furnish music for the occasion. Plenty of cold water will be found on the grounds.
K. Tindjllb, Pastor.
Don't Die in the House,
Ask druggists for "Rough on Rats." I clears out rate, mice, bed-bugs, roaches vermin, flies, ants, insects. 15c per box.
itfby w-ar plasters?
In France any brilliant journalist or poet or painter, any actor, and still more
much the best of him in a discussion. In Germany his money would not raise him at all in the social scale, and would be absolutely of no account compared with Hoffahigkeit by birth or acquired military rank. He would be spoken of curtly as "Plutus," the moneyed man, yrhen spoken of at all, and he together with his concerns, would be dismissed as an unsavory topic for the consideration of gentlemen.
The idea of making him the Right Honorable Apollo Plutus, and a baronet or baron, would never enter into the head of anybody. However, the rich men who rule us, and who are very long headed fellows, commonly so manage electioneering and other business familiar to them that the sort of politician theypoke forward is never likely to set theInameiton fire. ht
Wot Exactly the Custom Here. Albanian women walk over rotl^h mountain pathways with sixty pounds of fagots on their backs and spinning with distaff and spindle as they go, while the men shoot at a mark and the boys turn somersault races on the gentle slopes of the mountain sides.
"Take the elevator," is inscribed on the fence of an Iowa meadow. A curious traveler who climed the fence discovered in about ten seconds that the elevator is of a dark brindle color, with a curl in the middle oi his forehead.—[Ex.
There area great many church choii singers who receive a good fat salary here, that wifi never get a chance to sing in the angel chojm—[New Haven Register. -—,
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MM. LYDU PMKHAM.
«qgr OF LYNN, MASS*
DISCO!
LYDIA £. PINKHAM'8 mtnixkvra nnvTnm?T
I„ TktPedtinCvi
For all Temale Complaints.
.ItfspwpenUioe, tta mm sIcalflM, somMs of 'agaUWa Properties that are harmicM to tba moat d«lcfttolnvnlhL Upon one trial Ute merit* of this Com xmnd will be reco^rnixed, as relief immediate and Then it* oae ia continued, In ninety-nine caaea in a htm. irod, a permanent cure if effected,u thouaanda will taaIfjr. On account ot it* proven merit*, it I* to-day reiommeiMled and preecribed bjr the best jthyriajaaa In lb* country.
It will can entirely the worst form ef falKiig ot the uterus, Lcucorrhcea, Irregular and painful Menatroation, ail Orarian Trouble*, Inflammation and Ulceration, Flooding*, all Displacement* and the consequent aftinal weakness, and ia especially rdnrfrfrU to As Change of Life. It will dissolve and expel tumors 'rom the uterus in an early stage of development. The endeney to cnmr«* humors there 1* fhecfcsd vsry iDeedily by it* use
In fact It baa proved to be tbe greatat and best remedy that ha* ever been diaeorer)L It permeates every portion of the system, and gives v»w life and rigor. It removes falntnus, flatulency, de«troys all craving for stlsnnlants, sad relieves wnafrnsss the stomach it eures Bloating, Headaches, Nervous Prostration, general Debility, Sleeplessness, Depression and Indigestion. That feeling of bearing down, causing pain, rclgh. and backache, Is always permanently cured by tsuse. It will at all times, and under all cfrcumstaniea, act in harmony with the law that governs tbe emale system.
For Kidney Comalalnta of either sex this compound unsurpassed. .vdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound prepared at 333 and 236 Weetern Avenue, Lynn, Mass. A-ice $1.90. bottles for fS.OO. Sent by mail in the •orm of pills, also in the form of Losenges, on receipt A urice, $1.00, per box, for either. Mrs. PDflCHAM reely answers all letters of inquiry, tond fer painablet. Address as above Mention thi* paptr.
No family should be without LYDIA E. PINKHAM' tlTOR PILLS. They cure Ooa-'lpation, *1 Torpidity ot Liver. *6 cents oer bos.
Sold by Dimtin & Haute. Richardson & (Jo., gists,St. Louis.
Armstrong lerre
Wholesale Drug
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k'opMt.ir monthly Urawing^^
OF TJHJfl
dmmoriwealth Distribution CoV
In the City of Louisville, on Saturday, inly 38th.
These drawings oemr monthly, (Sunday*! excepted,) under provisions of an act of th general Assembly 01 Kentucky, incorporating the Newport Printing and Newspapei Co., approved April 9 1878: WThii iu a special set, and Imi never been repealed.
The United States Circuit Court on March 81, rendered the following decisions: 1st—That the Commonwealth Distribution Company is legal. 2nd—Its drawings a*e fair.
The company has now on hand a large reserve fond. Read the list of prizes for the
July Drawing.
1 Prize 1 Prize 1 Prize 10 Prizes 91,000 eaoh
490,001 10,006 5,000 lo,0GC
""20 Prizes 600 10,000 100 Prizes 100 10,00b 200 Prizes 60 10,000 600 Prizes 20 12,000 1,000 Prizes 10 10,000 9 Prizes 600 Appro* 2,700 9 Prizes 300 1,800 9 izes 100 906 Whole tickets, two dollars, half tickets, one dollar. 27 tickets, fifty dorlars, 66 tickets, 100. S
Remit money or bank draft in letter, or •end by express. DonT sknd by regisTKRID LITTER OB POST-OFFICE OKDER. Orders of five dollars and upward, by express can be sent at our expense. Address all orders to R. M. Beurdman. Courier-Journal, Building,Louisville, Ky..T. J. Commerford, 309 Broadway New York. Or P. J. Hogan, 505 Main St., Terre Haute lnd.
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TheVPaiefttand Beat Xedlcine everXade. A eovBbination of Hops* Buohu, Man1 drakls and Dandel ion, ^ith&ii the best an: moot cWura Uve properties of all other Bitters, makes\the greatest Blood Purifier, Liver Hu ntor. and Life and Health Restoring Agent No i".' c^kan powdh] long exist where Hop Bitters are varied and perfect are their operate Tb»j girt uw Ultk n& rijorto theijpdud iafln.
To an whose ewepioyments oausa irregularl' ty oftbel»ow«l* urinary organs, or who require an Appetisar^^Tonlo and mild Stimulant, Hop Bitters are inva^Wuahle, without lntOX~ looting* nik
No matter what jour fe%eling* or aymptoma are what the dieease or allw»ent i« use Hop Bitten. Don't wait until you a»r® aide bat if yon only feel bad or miaerable,an** them at ow» It may Bare yoorlife.lt hail** hondreda. $800wffl be paid for a oalM will aot sore or help. D« not Waidi Better,bat use and ante them%*oaaa HOP II
Reaaember, Hop Bitters la no^.TlJe» dragced irankea nostrum,bat the Pttrest^^ a edictaeorermade the UTIU
BOW and no ptnea or be without them. iD.lfO. Isaaabeotateaadirreetible forCraaheneaa,«ua of opium, tobacco nareotlaa. All sold by drogrtets. Send or Circular. Bttan fktg.
BocheaterJt.Y and Toronto, Ont.
/^(IVTL, MECHANICAL AND MINING V^ENGINEKRING at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, N. Y. The oldest engineering school in America. Next term begins September 15th. The register for 1880-81 contains a list of tbe graduates for the past 54 years, with their positions also, course of study, requirements, expenses, etc. Address. DaVID M. GREEN E, Director.
Manhood Restored
A victim to early Imprudence, eausing nervous debility, premature ecay, etc. having tried in vain every known remedy has discovered a simple means of self cure, whleh he will send nun to his fellow-suf-ferers. Address J. H. RBEVES, 43 Chatham treet, New York.
RIVERVIEW ACADEMY, a POUGHKEEPSIE, N. T,
with U. S. Military Dept. A thorough-going wide-awake school for boys, combining tudy, military drill,and recreation in da* proportion. Catalogue with chart of College misitions, sent on application. OTIS
A. M., Principal.
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at I'M UT "*r*t* £icSlgKw
For tho euro of cthor
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T, -mt wr-ii IIUJE.
Dr. Joy's Electric Devices
Fvi Examination tEd Tri..l Before Purchasing,
mffprinff from Nrrvoua AVcukaeavea. Gea« ern.1 IebiUty. low ol nerve force or vtpor, or any disease resulting from JW rsKS und Othxr Caurks, or to nuy owe ai'J.cted wtth Rhea* nmtisni, Xoaralrfa, rsralytils. bpiaal Difficulties. Kidney or LIver TronWm, I-aine Back and other iMsra es of the Ttial Organs. Also woan fe*u ration to health
Speedy relief and rcarsntoed. Thtnc arc iiit n)i Devices or Appliance* that inva «yg| 'jfcn contracted ritu cinnMrtr »rt»ripl«i|i ''hnr tho. oukU e.nuency Iiej been practically •ro ven with tbe moat wonaerfal swcocm,nni tarr have the hlghi-nt iidprnaKiiti from t'luineut medical ud acieatllo .-.r-v J«wr5cit. Send nt once forbook firing is ion tree. Addrcts tbe manutactur«i«,
IT KWrfe »n\
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A Liberal offer.
FOB MAN
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Wagner Co, Michigan Ave. Jaeksoa Bt. Chicago, offer to send Electric Beltfu Bands, etc., for the cure of nervous debility and other diseases, free, for examination and trial before piwiiHwing. These electric devices are the iuveiuion of Dr. D. A. Joy, of the University of Michigan, and ars claimed to be the only electric devices or appliances for the cure of diseuses that have yet been constructed upon f-ciehl Ific principles. See their oilveri tfcement in this paper
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AMB
BBAST.
For more than a third of a century tho Mexican Hnataaf Llnbneat hasbeen known to millions all over the world as the only safe relianoe for the relief of accidents and pain. It is a medioino above price ana praise—the beat of Ita lnd. For every form ot external pain
MEXICAN
I Mustang Liniment is without an equal. I It penetrattea fleah and muocle to the very bone—making the continulunce of pain and Inflammation impo*I slblc. Its effects upon Human Flesh and tho Bruto Creation aro jqually wonderIful. Thu Mexican ..e
MUSTANG
Liniment Is needed by somebody in every house. Every day brings news of the agony of an awful scald or Imrn jHubdued, of rheumatto martyrs restored, or a valuable horse or ox saved by the healing power of this
LINIMENT
tlch speedily cures such ailments of the HUMAN FLESH as Rheumatism, Swellings, Stiff Joint*, Contracted Hosdea, Bnrna and Scalds. Cats, Brulae* and Sprains, Polaonona Bites and Stings, Stlffiiessf Lameneas, Old Sores, Ulcers, Frostbites, Ohllbialna, Sore Hippies, Caked Breast, and indeed every ftrm of external dlaease. It heals without scars.
For the Bbdtb Cbbatiox It euros Sprains, Swtnny. SUIT Joints, Founder, Harness Sores, Hoof Diseaaea, Foot Rot, Screw Worm, Scab, llollow Horn, Scratches, wind* •alls. Spavin, Thruah, Ringbone, Old Sores, Poll Evil, Film npon the Sight and every other ailment to which the occupants of the Stable and Stock Yard are liable.
The Mexican Hoatang Liniment always cures and never disappoints and It is, positively,
THE BEST OF ALL
LINIMENTS
70B VAN 0B BEAST.
Ipfl7|C^T^l^rdlna^Co^^erIin|Jon^P* ItfaSrMklac. Ac., Through tbe Tilth to I Nsrrea of Hearing, br tToiulrrfnl Sdrntl
S
BEATTY'S
,li\ t5
1
,P»bth«
Heat-In*, by tTonrtrrrnl Hclntlfa
|UT«aUoa, tfc* 101DJN0 IENTAPM0KE. I Trrk Btrald, Sept. 45, A«. 9mall Sue—Carried •lath* Packet. Orer ll.OOO la use. Urn filmI trail! Paapfclct, with Haadred* of TeatiaianUh I Aran Um DmT ia wnr State—often In ronr own laaMiborhood—Sent Free. AJlEKIfMY DKSTl. IriOJE CO~ 1«S W. 4th St., Cincinnati. O.
COLD MEDAL AWARDED THE AUTHOiV Anew A great Medical Wor£ warranted the boat and cheapest.
tiV»
mniiin, emboated, fa) 1rilt, 300 pagea,containsbeaatiral steel engravings, 135 prescriptions, If. price only 1.26 sent bj mail: illustrated aample, 6 o.: Bend Vt1 now, Address Peabody Medi- V"' cal Institute or Dr.
W.H. Pab-
TARTLING DISCOVERY!
LOST MANHOOD RESTORED^ A rictim of youthful imprudence causing Premature D«vay, Nervous Debility, Lost Manhood, etc., having tried in vain every known remedy .has igcovered a simple self cure, which he wUl send ITBEE to his fellow-sufferers, ad* dress J. IT. RZKVE3. 43 Chatham St.. N. Y.
ORGAN-1,17 stops 5 set Golden Tongue Reeds onlv 885. A irfress Dnn'l F. BeiUty, Washington M.J
APLJCATION FOR LICENSE. Notice lb hereby given that I will apply to the Board of Commissioners of Vigo County, Indiana at their next term for a license to sell intoxicating liquors in.a less quantity than a quart at a time with the 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 in the rear bonding on lot 7, Gilbert's sub,. OL51, in the city of Terre Haute, in Har-. rlson tp., Vigo Co., Ind. .. N RALdtCO. *•3 Sfc
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