Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 1 September 1881 — Page 8
THE TIDE
COMES IJV
NEW
GOODS
Will be Opened This Week—
ug.27, toBept. 3rd)
A delay of one week in'
OUR KEMOVAL to 518 and 520 MAIN ST-
In September.
Compels us to Open New Goods at once!
We Throw Out Best Calicoes, Best (iinghame,
§he ffeekw
CNo
At a reduction.
SPANISH LACES Black and cream, For dresses and millinery
ONLY COMPLKTK STOCK in the city.
We still mike Low prices on Desirable goods
In preparation fo
We have Opened
BLACK VELVETE ENS Beautiful shades and qualites.
Colored Velveteens
In the new shades.
J3F*Th»'y are most desirable.
FOR 2SC
Law trimmed plaited collars Faat color fancy S Handk'fs Lactt tod Lisle gloves Gent's IJ S Linen Handk'fs Very flue Ladies' S H'dk'fs Mmb'd'rcd silk ties Emb'd'red m*lt ties Silk veil tissues Leather belts •Canvas belts, &c. In anticipation of
OUR REMOVAL to 513 and 520 Main St
In September.
Root & Co.
{feydzeifa
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 1881
A Card!
To all yrho are suffering from the er iors and indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, loss of manhood, &c., I will tend a rccipe that will cure you, FREE OF CHAKGE. This great renn-t] WHS discovered !y a missionary
South'Auierirsi. Send a self addressed envt'lope TO TIN* 1?KV. JosKrn T.
otati'iu I), JSew York Ci'v.
INMAN,
ts WHAT AI.II wnu STOJ' THE BOSTON HOUSK SECURE. "Jim" Boston, as all his Iriends call Aim, is one ot the l)est hosts any -nan ever stopped with. He sets a good table, take the best care of your horse, and charge you reasonably. When in town stop with him at his place on the east side of Fourth, just south of Walnut street.
HOWE Scales.are guaranteed in ever, Dftrticular, to be the best made. Borden Sellcck & Co., General Agents, Chicago 111. "v
Dr. Kline's Grea?Nerve Restorer is the marvel of the age for all Nerve Diseases. All fits stopped free. Send to 31 Arch street, Philadelphia, Penn.
ANCER. No Knife. No Pain. No Sickness tearful treatment. Treatise free. Go or send to Dr. KLINE 9.51 Arcli st, Phllada, Pa
Sullivan is living in constant dread Are, as they have DO means of extinuishing it should one start.
TUB fare at the station house must be pretty thin when prisoners striku for something better as they did the other day.
Mr. Frank Sankev, one of the oldest settlus ot Kil^y Umuship, and an uncle of ex-Comity Treasurer jas. M. Sankey, is vt-rv \v niid iii-s death is hourlv expectttf. tie uas b«ftn a resident of iliJey township tor more than fifty years, is m»w n»rt? than teventy years old.
a
SITTING BULL. ROLKOX OF THE RED SKIKS
In prcsentintr, to-day, to readers, the portrait of this wily and merciless savage, we an*, ot course, sensible of the fact, that tio |»'ca.-«ing interest attaches to the sut'j^ imt then, as a warjior and strategist, '..eyi-ml the boundaries ot civilizatioo, this rrut-1 and caleulat'ug Sioux is entitled to a place in hiitory, notwithstanding thut his career has ueen so marked liithvrto with deeds of treachery aDd blood, that it were better fi.rgoltcn. "The suivival of the fittest ''appears to be a natural and inexorable law. and such beiug the case, it will be perceived readily that the progress of civilization, and the dominion ofthe supeior races, cannot fail to be up eld atoany cost con* sequcinly while we "sh uld sluink unfeigaedly from any aa savoring of injustice or oppresion, we must expect that the savage obstacles which, from time to time, so mar the happiness ot our citzens in remote quarters, and so obstruct the pe.ceful si'tlhment and cultivation of the public domain, shall be s-.»ept out ot existence as summarily as {may be, whereever those who are the cause of such difficulties refuse to fall into line with the requirements ot humanity and the a°*e. "Sittin.n Bull, ihe son of the chief, Jumping Buli, and the nepjsew of Four Horns and Hunting His Lodge, two chiefs also, was born in the year 1837. near old F«rt George, on Willow Creek, below the month of the Cheyenne rivet. According to hi* own statement, bis father was "a very rich man, and the owner ot a great many ponies in four colors." When he himself'va-* Hit ten years old, he was famous as a hunter, his specialty being "bufialo calves." These he gave to the poor who had no horses, aid was, consequently, considered a good man." On the death of hif father, thirty- one years ago, lie "killed but'ialo, and fed his people awl when he hau reached his fourteenth year, on slaying an enemy, he began to make himseh "great iu battle, and became a chiet for, it wo are to credit his own words, although an Indian may be a chiel by inheritance, tie has to make himself one' by his deeds." From the age often to fourteen, his peo.de callhim Sacid Stand hut after he had slain this foe they cktMi^ed his mime to Tatan-ka-yan-tinka, or Sitting Bui!.
This sullen chic*' a«s two wives, and has had another who has gone to tne Great Spirit." He had nine cnildieu, and what, fortunately for the country, is most rare among his race, two pairs of twins, lie has always been a faithless and troublesome customer and after his participation in the massacre of the brave Custer and those who fell with him, lie escaped with his warriors into Canada, where antil recently he remained beyond the reach of the United States Government In an interview with him, and with one or two other chiefs, reporttd in the Chicago Time#, we find for the first time, the true details ot the wholesale »Hughterof General Custer and his men and although these details have been presented in a fight most favorable to the savages, it can be readily seen that the onslaught was most inhuman asd the deliberate act of overwhelming numl)er$. Now, however, that this favorable and rebellious red t-Uin has been started out of Canada into the clutche of our Government, we have no doubt that lie will be rendered pbwerless for mischief during the remainder ot his natural life, how short or long soever that may be.
Sitting Bull now avers that l.e wants no mere blood spilt and that, through the agency ot a French Canadian, Mr7Lewis Legare, ami ihe piomptiugs of his own desire, he recrossed the borders with his "braves," and surrendered himself a/id them to Major Brotherton, at Fort Buford. in the nope of making his peace with the authorities he had so long set at defiance. He appears, however, to be a somewhat sullen and ill satisfied Prodigal Son, inasmuch as he complains bitly of the treatment he had received at the hands of those in power, and absolutely ventures to dictate the terms on which he shall be received by our Government. His recrossiug the borders, however, appears to have been more a matter of necessity than of choice for prior to that move "he seems to have been deserted not only by many of his followers, but, for the time being, by his favorite daughter. It
19
At the Point of Death- .C'ls
He
AT Seymour this siate Thursday night,
band of masked men got possession of city's tire engine and hose, and taking them to that unsavory part of the town known to local fame as "Smoky ro-v," *. "washed out" two houses inhabited by disreputable characters.
THECounty
Commissioners yesterday
I viewed the route of a proposed gravel road to Prairieton.
hot to be supposed, therefore, that bevond the mere necessities of justiee there will be much regard paid to his demands or bombast for he has caused the flow of too much innocent blood to entitle him to any very special consideration in this relation.
But now, that we have for so far spoken only from a stand-point of American civilization, we must, on a principle of common justice, i^ake some allowance tor that from which the Indian views the hola question. He is an uiu tivated savage, brniirfht ui in the murky liiCtii un en.itle tradition* and taught to believe the while man his natural enemy. ,He has never entertained the idea that* thf-re are no rights su perior to those of civilizatM»u and that barbarism .is only an intruder wherever the light of progress diffuses its glorious beams. Ignorance, superstition and cruelty can have no inalienable rights beyond those pertaining to life and liberty. Hence the barbarous nomads that persistently keep beyond the pale of civilization in this country, have no true right in the soil, it having to the last acrc talien a conquest to the invincible armies of progress. Yet we have DO doubt that
From Saturday's Daily.
THE TERRE HAUTE -WEEKLY GAZETTE.
our Government may, in ite generossty take the low moral and intellectual status of the red man iDto consideration, and look upon ercn the erimes and treacheries of Sitting Bull with tome degree of leniency.
It will be perceived from our engraving, or ratlur from tb« grotesque sketch incorporated with it, that although this refractory Sioux may be a great warrior, he is but a very poor artist. This sketch is afac simileo{ one made by his own hand, and '3, as may be divined, a representation or memorial ol some act of his prowess. Evidently,*lie here represents himself in the light "of a conqueror, who contemplates with fierce pride and savage complacency the silent windrows of his fallen enemies. But all such representations must be taken cnm gram for like his eastern progenetor, the Indian is full ot hypocricy and exaggeration.
RAPP'S MILL BURNED
The flouring mill owned by Charles RapD- and Christian J. Deaner, on the southeast corner of Lafayette and Scott streets, was totally destroyed by fire between 6 and 7 o'clock yesterday evening. Three distinct alarms were sent in, and as a result considerable confusion prevailed at the engine houses—some ot the bells tapping a general alarm The long tun worked against the firemen, and beore they could arrive on the tcene the firre was beyond control. The north, south and west walls of the building tumbled iu, but happily no one was injured.
The mill was not running at the time of the fire, though is was in operation a few honrs before and preparations were being made for a night run. Over 4,000 bushels of wheat and about 300 barrels of flour were burned.
The insurance is distributed as follows: $1,500 on the building and macbiaery in the Westchester, of New York and ihe Lancashire, of England, with B. F. Havens $2,000 on the building and machinery in the German, of Rochester, and the Mechanic, of Milwaukee, with J. C. Reichert $1 ,500 on the stock, flour and grain in the Western, of Toronto, with Riddle, Hamilton A Co. Mr. Rapp's loss ont-side of the insurance will foot up at least $5,000. The proprietors have the sympathy of the public in their misfortune.
FREIGHT CARS.
Afeout 12 o'clock last night three freight ears on the side track near the fair grounds were found ito be on fire and would have been totally destroyed had it not been for the timely intervention of the yard men.
BURNING GRASS.
The residence until lately occupied by H. Keyes near the Hub and Spoke factory came very near burning this afternoon. Some one had thrown a cigar stump in the dry grass and it had caught fire. Several men from the factory seeing the danger in which the house was placed by the burning grass, rushed over to the premises and after hard work succeeded in putting out the fire.
EXPLOSION.
A can of alcohol exploded in the second story of E. H. Bindley & Co's. drug store, at 10 o'clock tliis morning. Loss about $80.
Wives! Mothers! Daughters!
BE YOUR OWN PHYSICIAN. Thousands of ladies suffer all the agonies of death itself, day after -Jay, year after year, from weakness and troubles incident to their sex, rather than go to a physician and tell their troubles, or from a belief that they cannot be helped. Still they are obliged to drag themselves about their work when every step is a torture There is no need for all this. You CAN be cured. You CAN cure yourself witheut the aid of your physician and Ihus "be your own physician." Thousands have been cured and are to-day happy. If you send you.* address, I will send by return mail,"securely sealed, private work to ladies, called "The Stepping Stone to Health," being a concise treatise on diseases and troubles peculiar to ladies, ar their cure, containing information of great value to every lady.
Addrss, DR. M. E. CASS, 12.17 Washington St., Boston, Mass.
DIED.
CALSB PRICE.
Caleb Price, son of John and Millie Price, aged twenty-two years, died last night at 1:30 o'clock at taeir residence three miles south-east of the city, of congestion of stomach and brain. He was well known acd highly esteemed in his neighborhood and a large circle of friends will regret to hear of his untimely death. He leaves a wife and one child.
WILSON FOBTKR.
Wilson Foster, who lived near Lockport, died Wednesday morning at four o'clock. He had just risen from his bed and dropped dead on the floor. He had been eomplaining some for several days but was at work in the field the day be fore his death. He leaves a wife and six children.
THE White House doctors seem to have double duty imposed on them—or at least, they do double duty. They prescribe not only drugs for the President but soothing news for the people they have to doctor not only the patient but the bulletins.
TIIKRE is a stalk of corn in the G. A £. I. office on Mam street which ii twelve feet high. It was cut July 15th from a field at Summit Grave. It has two ears, shuck ud all about the size of a lead pencil. Pi.aiaocouli see lean ears now by going to lie field instead et going to sleep.
DENVER,
Aug. 25.—A News south Ar-
kausas sptc.al savs: The body of a man named McCorkcv was found at Mears last *ight. The evidence points stron, to Charles Stone, a notorious despera* as the murderer. Stone came over to south Arkansas shortly after the murder and was arrested en route. A number of McCorkey's friends came after him but the officials spirited him away. Fifty armed men are to-night scouring the country looking for the murderer, with the intention of lynching him.
a
1
WONDERFUL DISCOVERY.
A-f
MKTALTIP LAMP WICKj Pat'd Dec. 7,1880. Lufcuimaaaaaftg .Gives a BriDJa&t, White and Steady light, requires no trim tiling and la*ts for months. Sample wick 10c, 3 wicks 25c, 12 wicks 75c, postage paid. Have 3 sizes. A, and D. Agents wanted. Address METAL
IP LAMP WICK CO., 70 Cortlandt St, N.
E
XECUTORS'SALE OF REAL E6TATK
The undersigned,executors of the laat will of Chauneey Rose, deceased, wilt on the29th day of September, 1881, at the office of M. 8. Durham, Ho. 604^ Ohio street. In the «ity of Terre Haute, Indiana, soil at private sale the followiagdeflcribed real estate in the city of Terre Haute", Vigo County and state ot Indiana, to-wit:
Lot number ten [10] in Channcey Rose's subdivision of real estate formerly occupied by the Wabash and Erie Canal, between Main and Poplar streets and east of the former line *f said canal and west of the lands of the ETansvllle and Crawfordsville rail road Company.
Terms or safe: Two hundred dollars January 1st, 1882. and the remainder in four equal annual payments, the notes to bear seven [71 per cent interest from date, the same to be paid annually.
PLRHIN NIPPBBT, JMKFHDS CO1iLETT'
EXCCU,ORA-
Terre Haute, stSCrd, 1^1
TART LING DISCOVERY!
LOST MANHOOD RESTORED. A Tietim of yoatbfnl imprndenee causing rranatare Decay, Mervoua Debility. Lost Manhood, etc., having tried in vain every know* remedy,has discovered a simpla self cure,which be wiu send FBKB to his fellow-safferers, ad dreos J. H. BEEVES. 43 Chatham St. N.T.
TEXAS
ARKANSAS AND LOUISIANA.
tiealtliful, genial climntc an exceKllngly productive soil, where, with common indusry and prudence, a sure and certain competence can be had.
lis Insigntim Co.
Will mail freeoi cost on application, free of cost, postage prepaid, boolcs with maps giving authentic snd reliable Information, In detail, oft he State of Texas. Arkansas or Western Louisiana. We desire to confer with those wiali'ng to better their.condition and are meditating a change to anew country. Address
O DUVAIJ, Secretary Austin,Texas. N NICTOR, Eastern Managei, 213 Broadway, New ork. Foreign Offloe:—WM W LANG, President
Leadenball House
T.eadenhall st, London, E C, England
Upliam's Asthma Cure never falls. Sold by all dealers. Only 50c box By mail fiOc. 8. C. Upliam, Pa
8EATTYS
ORGAN 17 Mops 6 set Golden Tongue Reeds only $85. A-irtress Dan'l F. Beatty, Washington N.J
Jonas Strause,
over,
Corner Second and Msvin. Farmer's trod* especially solicited. Highest price paid for woolnnd farmers' produce
Out.fltsent free, to ttios« who wlshto engnge iu the most pleasant and profitable business known. Everyliing new. Capital not required. We will furnish you everything. 810 a day and upwards is easily made without staying away farm home over night. No risk whatever. Many new workers wan tea at. once. Many are making fortunes at the business. Ladie6 maico as much ax men, and young boys ana great pay. No one wlv fails to
$5
,irls make great pay. is'o one who is wil.ing 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 find a short road to fortune Address H. HALLBTT, & Co., Portland Maine.
A "-PLICATION FOR LICENSE. Notice is h»reby jgiven ihat I will apilytoiheBoard oiCommissionersof Vigo Jo., Indiana, at their next term fora license to sell intoxicating liquors in a lessquantity than a quartatatira.e with the privilege of allowing the same to bedrank on my premises for one year. My place of liusiuess and the premises whereon said liquors are to be sold and drank are located on lot No. 14, Centervllle, Piorsoii tp., Vigo County, Ind.
ML'NSOJ*
GOSSKLL.
SHEPARD & CO
Battle Creek, Michigan, HAJrCTAOTtmEBS OT THE OVhX OJCKUIFTLL
THRESHERS,
Traction and Plain Engines and Horse-Powers. BNtOosvMtTlrakdVHtMr 1 EltabHihMl (•AtWwM. 1848
HI o/ conMnvou* md ipMurful burL I
|KJUK9»«M,
Amman market .. ftatmrm wJ HwrwwwwW
&aiSS6L«S52Sg^i^^
Four Mmat BepaiytoM, worn 6 to IS htm Htujis-rowais. 8cleece4 Lanka*
oompambto wood-week tt cat maeUaa^
TRACTION EN8INES
l££3C«S3&S&££ sentfna. AddreM NICHOLS, SHKPARO A CO.
Battt* Creefc, MIofclsarw
Sold W N. McFerrin •=•.
VEEY EASILY MANAGED, ECONOMICAL IN FUEL,
AND GUARANTEED TO
Give Perfect Sitisfaciios farjwhn.
Buy
iCHARTEROAK
MALE ONLY BY
ST. LOUIS, MO.
IMPORTERS AND SEALERS IN
TIN-PLATE, WIRE, SHEET IRON
—.A-STD
ETBBT CLASS OF GOODS TOED OB SOLD Bt
TIN AND 8T0YE DEALERS.
SEND FOB PRICE LISTS,
Wl LLJAM CLlfT HE»RY CLIFF I
CLIFF & SON,
Manufactures of
Locomotive, Stationary and Marine Boilerr (Tubular and Cylinder,) Iron Tanks, Smoke Stacks, &c. Shop on First street, bet. Walnut and Poplar
Terre Haute, Ind.
JOVRepairiugdone in the most substantial manner at short notice, and as liberal ID price as any establishment in the state. Orders solicited and punctually attended to.
»reliable Grain or Ft mils«• Drill please examine the
GREENCASTLE GRAIN DRILL,
Built by J. B. Crowell fc Co., Greencaslle, Pa Sold in nearly every couuty in the state. Made either plain or spring hoe, with or without grass seeder. Has a positive force feed tried and found satisfactory for more than 20 years. The Fertelizer Attachment stands withouta rival, and with recent imrovementof Automatic Cut-Oft" wi 1 s-ive illy. durable. If there Is no agent in your vt-
per cent annually. It Is well built and
cinlty please write to W. K. Hproule, Washington st., Indianapolis, Ind.
78 E.
It is the result of SO jenrn* e.-qjeTlence and e.i-xirtmeEtfl in Sewingr alschinca. it eomUnet '/o'dpoi-.it* of allpreff.it and former make, ni i* not a one man "or one idea macliir.e oth. in ro. It avoids the ilcfects of oihcri,-jd pcf n««o and raluabU features cmi convenience It is large, light-running, noiselr**. handfom«, ranient, durabfr, and simple. VV'nrmntCll U1' I put 1 repair free for years. Circulars with iHlde»criition pent free on request It is rarely tho best A trial will prove it Don't fail to ei ir brfow ymi buv MANUFACTURED BY FLORI I MACHINE CO.,Klorence, Mans. WHOI.ESAI.7:ID0.
BUY A
without change ax name,
I management, or location, to "sack iip MS ikll
HOME IN MICHIGAN.
$5 TO $10 PER ACRE! Strong Soils! Sure Crops! Ballrosd Hi rough Center of Lancb. Healthy Climate Krbools and Cliurebea. Intelligent Population. HICHEST REWARD TO FARMERS. These lanto area ion? distance East of the Mississiprf River. Large amount saved In travel and transportation of crops. Descriptive pamphlet in English and German.
Addrws W. O. Ill'fJIlABT, Commissioner, Orand Rapids, Michigan.
gr\ AOutfU furnished free, with full m1L 11 Istructions for conducting the most /ra IHprofitable business that anyone can "engage in. The business is so easy to learn and our instructions are so simple and plain, that any one can make great proits from tne very start. No one can fall who is willing to work. Women are as successful as men. Boys and girls can earn large sums. Many have made !at the business over one hundred dollars in a single week. Nothing like It ever known before. All who engage are surprised at the ease and rapidity with which they are able to make money. You can engage in this business during yonr spare time at great profit, Yon do not have to Invest capital in it. We take all the risk. Those who need ready money should write to us at once, All furnished free. Address TBUE* Co., AU^uaU Maine.
Pgrlror'cCINCER «ti ltd TONIC
Oing»r, Buchu, Mandrake afad many of the best mediclnes'known are here combined into a medirine of such varied powers as to make it the greatest blood purifier and the
Best health and strength restorer used
It cures complaints of women and disease ofthe stomach, bowels, lungs, liver and kidneys, end is entirely different from bitters, ginger essences and other tonics, as it never intoxicates. 50c and 81 size.
HISCOX A CO., Chemists, IN. Y.
PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM
Cleanest and most economical hair dressing Never fails to restore youthful color to the hair. 50c and SI sizes.
REVISED NEW TESTEMENT Illustrated. Cheapest and best. Sells at sigh
HOCJMAN* PICTORIAL BIBLES
Agents wanted. A. J. Holman fc Co., Phila
THE BEST OF ALL
LINIMENTS
FOB KAN ANB BEAST,
For more than a third of a oentnry the I Mexican Maataag Liniment has been known to millions all over the world its tlit! only safe rellanoe for the relief ot Hccldents and pain. It is a medicine! I above prion and praise—U»« best of Its I kind. For every form of external pain
MEXICAN
Mustang Liniment is xvithoutan equal. It penetrates lull and mosele to ,the very bone—making the oontinujanco of pain and Inflammation imposistblc. Its effects upon Human Flesh and II In: Brnte Creation are jqually wonderI ful. The Mexican
MUSTANG
Liniment Is needed by somebody in very house. Every day brings news or (the ngony ofan awAal scald or buru jpubdued, of rheumatic martyrs restored, or valaable bora« or ox I anvtd by the healing poifer of this
LINIMENT
which speedily cures tuch ailments of tho HUMAN iXESH as I 1theumatlim, VwelllnffS. Stiff\
Joints, Contracted Mnietti, Buna nnd Scalds, Cats, Brsliti and Nprnln*! Poisonous Bites and Ntlnga, StUltacss, JLamcncss. Old Sores, Fleers, Frostbites^Chilblains. More Nipples, Caked Breast, and Indeed every form of external disease. It heals wlthont scars.
For the BRUTI CBKATIO.* It cures Sprains, SwtnnT. StUT Joints, Founder, Harness Sores, poof 1laeaaee, Foot Rot, Screw Worm, Scab, Hollow Horn, Scratches, Windaalls, Spavin, Thrash, Ringbone, Old Sores, Poll Evil, Film npon the Sight and every other aliment to which tbe occupant* of the Stable and Stock Yard arc liable.
The Mexican Mas tang Liniment always cures and nover disappoints ant] it Is, positively,
THE OF ALL
LINIMENTS
FOB MAM OS BIAST.
..*.ILJ
No. 12,504. State injao nounoui«io IT go, In the Viao Circuit Court, LsaCvj Hamlett vsUriah E. Hamlett in dlvoro
Be it known that on the 23th day of Jun 1881,it was ordered ny the court that tha the clerk notify by publication said Uriah E. Hamlett as non-resident defendant the pendency of this action against him Said defendant is therefore hereby notified 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.
MKBRIJ.T, N. SMITH, Clerk Circuit Court.
No.!)2. The State of Indiana, County Vi in the superior court of Vigo coun Catharine li. Keith and Shephard C. Kot vs Albert DP Vere Butr, Mary V. Bur
Klchard H. Burr mid Marlon M. Bnrr, com uiaint frir dof-«i and to riuiet title. lie it known that on the 9th day of August 1681, said plaiutitf filed an affidavit in due form, showing that «aJd AlbeTt De Vere Burr, Mary V. Burr, liicbard H. Burr and Marlon M. Burr ar non-residents of the state of Indiana.
Said non-resident defendants'arc hereby notified of the pendency of said action ugainstUiem, and that th«sarae will stand for trial on October 10th, 1881, being at the September term of said court in the year of 1881.
Attest: MERRILL N.SSMTIT, Clerk.: Blake A Dunnfgan, Pltfs' Atiys.
E
v.y
iKO BKNT, 81 and 83 Jackson St.. Cbiratr". Tl
XECUTORS' SALE OF REALESTATE
The underelgned, executors of the estate of Chauneey Itose, deceased, will on the 1st day of Sejit,, 1881, at the office of M. 8. Durham, No. 505% Ohio street, in the city of Terre Haute, Indiana, sell at private sale the following described real estate in the city of Terre Haute, Vigo County and State of Indiana, to-wit:
Lots numbered one hundred nnd fortyeight (148t, one hundred and forty-nlne(149), one hundred and fifty (150) and one hundred and fifty-one (1.1) in Chauneey Rose's subdivision of 47 fij-100 acres ofl'of the east side of the west half of section twenty-two (22), township twelve (l'2j north, of range nine (9) west.
TKRMS OFSAI„E:—Foui hundred andfi fty (1490.00)dollars cash, and the remainder of the purchase money in one, two and three yeais, the notesto draw seven (7) per cent Interest per annum from date of sale, the same to be paid annually.
Also lots numbered eleven (11) and twelve (12) In Chauneey Rose's subdivision of real estate formerly occupied by the Wabash and Erie canal between Main and Poplar streets and east of the fermer line of said canal and west of lands of the Evans ville and Crawfordsville Railroad Company.
TBRXH OF SALE:—One-fourth of the purchase money cash and the remainder in five equal annual payments, the notes to bear seven per cent interest per annum from date of sale, the same to be paid annually,
FIRMIN NIFPERT1
E-«.„TONI
JOSEPHUS-COLLETT ^"CUTORS. July 27th, 1881. is
HAVE YOU
ing
}l» 'VeTett»re
wlfell
EVER KNOWN
.j, jJ?
Any person to be serlouslv ill without a weak stomach or inactive liver or kidneys? And when these organs are in good oondi3o you not Una their possessor enjoy
good health? Parker's Ginger Tonic always regulates these important organs, and sake the blood:" gtl It has cured hundreds of despairing lnva-
never fails to make the and to stren
rich and pure
hen every part of the system.
lids. As* your neighbor about It.
A
frets*
A
