Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 6 October 1881 — Page 7

DR. CLARK

JOHNSON'S

ra co

oo

It neutralize.-] «.he ho red it,air taint, or poison in tho blood, which generates Scrofula, Erysipelas, anil all manner of skin ilinnasen and internal lmiuorH.

Thorn Are no spirita employed in it* mnmifacturi'. and it can b« taken by th« rno*t •li-lifHto babe,or bj the a«ed and feeble, care

unly

kl

in

ilirectiuiu.

Temberl rm of said court, in the year 1881. Attest: MKKRILI- N. MM mi, Clerk. A. M. Black, P. Q,

KIDNEY-WORT

DOES

IWONDERFUL

CURES!

|llecnnsn it nets on tlio I.IVKR, 110WELS and KIDNEYS at tliesnmo time.

Because it oieanses the system of thepoisonloua hu-.nors that developo in Kidney and UrlI nary Diseases, Biliousness, Jaundloe, Constt. I pattern, Files, or in Rheumatism, Neuralgia, INcrvoua Disorders and Female Complaints.

SEE WHAT PBOPLB BAT

Eugene 11. Stork, of Junction City, Kama* I tiny a, Kidney-Wort cured him after regular PhyIsicians had been trying for four years.

Mrs. John Arnoll, of Washington, Ohio, says her boy was given an to die by four prominent slcians tnd that be was afterwards cured by ney-Worb

I plural iKIdn

M. H. B. Goodwin, an editor in Chardon, Ohio says he was not expected to live, being bloated |beyond belief, but Kidney-Wort cured him.

Anna L. Jarrett of fioiith Salem, N. T., aayt Ithatsnvcn years suffering from kidney troubles land other complioatlona was ended 1y the use of |Kidnry Wori

John B. LMrraiioe Jaekeon, Tenn., s«Sered I for years from Itver and kidney troubles aad I after taking "barrels other medkelJMa,"

Kidney-Wort made him well. Mich**! Ooto of Montgamery Cente*. Vt.. with udner difficulty and

I,

Dyspepsia, Liver

1

Disease*, Fever $, A yue, ltheiunatisin, Dropsy, Heart Disease,

Hil'umsness, Nervous Debility, etc.

Tho Best EEMEDT KNOWN to Man I

12,000,000 Bottles

SOI.J) HI\« 1M70.

This Syrup possesses Varied Properties.

It Stimulate* the Ptynllno In the Hnllvn, which cimvcrU tbe

Stiirt

Kidney-wort mad* him

I suffered eight years was enable to work. well as ever.

KIDNEY-WORT

PIMIANKNTLY CUIUS

KIDNEY DISEASES, LIVER COMPLAINTS, Constipation and Piles.

OT It Is rut sp In »ry Vegetable Fi •, one package icine. Also In tad. for thoM pmlt.

I tin oans, one lot medicine.

Or It is put up

In IL-,

package of which makes six quarts Also fn UaM Psns, nnOta*

eeeitruted, for those that cannot readily pre-

|tr /lmct»wft» fjval fieUnet in titktr farm.

OKT IT ATTHR PRI OQISTS. PIUCE, LL.M

WELLS,

UICHAUDSOXACO.,

1

2 3C25

v.

-s a: pa

(TRADE MABU.i

and .Htinar of* (he

fomt ftifo ilticoM. A (Ivflclciicy In Ptyullne WHIM1"! Wind un«l Wonrlnt: the food In the tuinui'.li, II' in.-*111-1ti- In taken Immedliitfly nl'Wi* «utlng (he IVraicDlatloil uf food 1M iii'I'vciilt'il.

It ut-lit upon the !.!vcr. It r.t-lM u|iwn tb« Klilnryi. It K«'»:ilati'»t the Itnwels. It I'lirHlcn tlic Blood. It Wiili'l* the IVervoiift System. Bt l'niiio(«» lllgri'Mlnn. It .\ourl»h«(«, Nlrcnuthen. nnd InTlgnpnlri, It currlen off*tlir Old Hlood mid muk*« new. It the pore* l' tlio skin uud luduccs Ilvulthy Piiriiilratlaii,

rto'Mrtd in tti

Iifi(?nnsi)ort. Cass Co., Intl.

Thin Istocorllfy Hint Dr. Clark Johnson's I mil.m Hlood Syrup, has 'Hiroil myself and four of tny family of Chills and Fever. I can truthfully rmjinmoud your valuable incil hie to all similarly tiiniclcd.

WILLIAM DON^I.HDN,

r-'ort Wayne, Allen Co., Ind.

A iir trial of Dr. (Murk Johnson's Indian Blood Hvrtip cam! me of Scrofula, whim nil other medicines failed. I have also tound It a valuable remedy for itidnny disease.

LLKKRY KL.K, NNH.I.KK.

Brlnithu'st,Carroll Co., Ind.

I bnve is?tl lr. Clark .Johnson's Indian Blood «yrup for Liver Complaint of long standing, and am happy to say it has eil'ecied

A

complete care.

DANIEL BKLL.

Lebanon, Hoone Co., Ind.

I was afflicted with heart, disease, for 10 yoar«. and r.ftr" everything «jlse failed, I tried Or. Clark Johnson's In Han Hlood Hyrup and it IIMH proved mosi iRU'ttojnl to me. ZMi i.v VJ uir"

Agent* wanted lor th» wile of ihe Indian Blood Syrup In everv towr or village, in which I have no agent. funicular* Riven on application.

DRUGGISTS SELL IT.

Laboratory 77 West 3rdst.,N. City

No, 12810. The state of Indiana, Vigo County iri the Vino Circuit Court. Martin It. Whelan Harriet Whelan, in divorce.

Bn it.known th«t on the 8th day of Sept., 1881, said plaintiff filed an affidavit in due "form, showing that said Harriet. Whelan is a non-resident of the state of Iudlana.

Said non-resident is hereby notified of the pondeno.y of said action against Iter, nnd thai the same will stand for trial at the

Prop's,

I fTUl n«i the dry poet-pairl.) IIMUJSTOI.TI.

telte.sot NawIllMlft-tedPrioe-list Ko. 30, for FallandilVin-

t-~ oi l^l.^^rec to any address. tJbnw, dencription of nil kindt

of gotxla

for i»i:rs«: il and fiuuily use. We deal ot- i-i wi the consumer, and sell all p„„N ia any quantity at tokoltsale

prioes

Y,».i cau buy better and cheaper than at huiuc.

E 4

MONTGOMERY WARD A 00. 327 aad 229 Wabash •TMQ«,Chk»rollL

t#-

is#

T»jt.-

So-

•1 -1

GieanirQ8 from Garfield.

Our National safety demands (bat ibe fountains ol political power shall be made pure by Intelligence and kept pure by Vigilance.

It is as much the duty of nil good men to protect and defend the reputation of worthy public Servants as to detect public rascals.

The flowers that bloom over the garden wall of party politics are the sweetest and most fragrant that bloom in the gardens ol '.his world.

There is deep down in the hearts of the American people, a s'.rong and abiding love of our country which no surface storms of passion can ever shake.

The intelligence and National spirit of our people exhibit their capacity for dealing wi'li difllcult problems. Those who saw the terrible elements ofdestruction that burst upon us in fhe fury of the Civil War would have been called dreamers and enthusiasts had they predicted that in 1873 would witness the conflict ended, its cause annihilated, the bitterness and hatred it occasioned nearly gone, anJ the Nation with union and unily restored, smiling aga over half a million soldiers' graves.

The Atlantic is still the great historic sea. Even in its sunken wrecks might be read the record of modern nations. Who shall say that the Pacific will not yet U'comc the great historic sea of the future--the vast amphitheatre around which shall sit in majesty and power the two Americas, Asia, Africa and the chief colonies of Europe. God forbid that the waters of our National life should ever settle to the dead level of a waveless calm. It would 'oe the stagnation of death, the ocean grave of individual liberty-

I look forward with joy and hope to the day when our brave People, one in their aspirations for freec'om and peace, shall tee that the darkness through which we have traveled was but a part of that stern but beneficent discipline by which the great Disposer of. events has been leading us onto a higher ami nobler National life.

Our great hope for the Future—our

?oundsafegard

jreat against danger—is to be in the general and thorough education of our people and in the v'rtae wh'ch accompanies such education.

PARTIES.—Parties have an organic life and spirit of their own—an individuality and character which outlive the men who compose them and the spirit and traditions of a party should be considered in determining their fitness for managing the affairs of the Nation.

Over this vast horizon of interests, North and South, above all party prejudice and wrong-doing, above our battle hosts and our victorious cause, above all we hoped for and won, or you hoped for and lost, is the grand onward movement of the Republic to perpetuate its glory, to save Liberty alive, to preserve exact and equal justice to all, to protect and fo»ter al 1 these priceless principles until they shall have crystallized into the form of enduring law fcand become inwrought into the life and habits of our people.

CONGRESS —Congress has always been nnd must always be the theater of contending of opinions the forum, where the opposing forces of political philosophy meet to measure their strength where the public good must meet the assaults of local and sectional interests in a word, the appointed place where the Nation seeks to utter its thought and register its will.

Congress must always be the exponent of the political character and culture of the people, and if the next centennial does not find us a great Nation and a great and worthy Congress, it will be be.cause those who represent the enterprise, the culture and the morality of the Nation do not aid in controlling the political forces, which are employed to select the men who shall occupy the great places of trust ond power.

During the many calm years of the century, our pilots have grown careless of the course. The master of a vessel sailing down Lake Ontario, has the whole breadth of that beautil ul inland sea for his pathway. But when his ship arrives at the chute of the Lacliine, there is but or.e pathway of safety. With a steady hand, a cleat eye and a brave heart, he points his prow to the well-fixed landmarks on shore, and with death on either hand, makes the plunge and shoots the rapids in safety. We too are approaching the narrows, and we hear the roar ot the angry waters below and the muttering of the sullen thunder overhead. Unterrifled by breakers or tempest, let us steer our course by the Constitution of our fathers, and we shall neither sink in the rapids, nor compel our children to shoot Niagara and parish in the whirlpool ..

GOVITRITUBNT.—We are accustomed to hear it said that the great powers ot government is Uiia country are divided into two classes: National powers and State powers. That is an incomplete classification. Our fathers carefully divided all governmental powers into three classes one they gave to the States, another to the Nation but the third great class, comprising the most precious cf all powers, tney refused to confvr on the State or Nation, bat reserved to themselves. This third class of powers has been almost uni formly Overlooked by men who have written and discussed the Atue:ican system..

STATESMANSHIP.—"Statesmanship consists rather in removing causes than in punishing or evading results. Statistical science is~indispenpable to modern statesmanship. in Legislation as in physical science, it is beginning to be understood that we can conlro terrestrial forces only Uy obeying their laws. The ^LegialaU.r must formulate in his statutes not only the National will, but aM those grea't laws of sqcial life revealed by statistics.

WAR.—tialMs all never the end of war for the Dead must be buried and the cost of the Oohfiifet must he paid.

Ideas are the great warriors of uie world, and a war that has no ideas behind it is simply bnitality. a .fi*

8ilP

J#1%t

The Alice Buck Goes Down off the Coast of California

And a Dozsn Men are Lost-

WELL-EARNED PRAISE.

CLEVELAND, O, September 29.—The services of the Western "Union Telegraph Company from the arrival of Garfield's remains until the day after the funeral deserves mention. From the 24th to the 27th its facilities were severely taxed, but met the emergency in an exceedingly creditable manner, and such as called forth unstinted commendations from newspaper correspondents, ond all others who had telegraphic business. Superintendent E. P. Wright was a member of the local pross committee, and, besides securing for the great number of visiting newspaper representatives commodious quarters in the Board of Trade rooms, was of invaluable assistance to tln.m in numerous ways. Mr. II. L. Melton, manager of the Cleveland office, addition to bis telegraphic duties, gave personal attention to the reporter's room, winning warm encomiums for his courteous and tireless assistance. In the operating department the vasi|amount of press matter was under the direction of Manager Marcan, of Washington, and local chief operator Wadsworth. So well was everything managed that no error occurred in transmission, notwithstanding that at one time on Monday night over fifty thousand Jwords per hour were sent on thirty-eight press circuits from this office and the promptness with which the business was dispatched surprised all who knew the immense amount of work being done. On Saturday, the 24th, 74,852 words were sent on Sunday, 82,150: on Monday, the day of the obsequies, 185,597 total for the three days, 292,599. Four-fifths, of this matter was transmitted between 0 at night and midnight. Besides the regular force here 25 first-class operaters were sent on from Washington, Chicago, Indiauapolis, Detroit ana Toledo. In the receiving and delivering department more than double the ordinary number of messages were received and "delivered each day without increase of the regular force. All the employes toak a personal interest to demoustrafe that they could meet any emergency.

ron Mountain Railroad Robbers Captured. LITTLE ROCK, September 2!).—Information was received to-night which states that all of the robbers who captured and robbed the train on the Iron Mountain road last Thursday night were captured yesterday, one near Sulphur Bluff, Hampton county, Texas, and two in the Indian Nation. The pursuit had been vigorously followed up by Captain Clark Hall, conductor on the Iron Mountain, who followed the robbers with a posse to the village of Ben Lamon, in Tenier county. Here the robbers separated, one going into Texas, two into the Indian Territory. The pursuing party divided and Kept trace, Captain Hall following the Texas-bound robber. Their efforts were rewarded by coming up with him early yesterday morning, when the robber was taking breakfast. Hall pulled down on him with a double-barrel shotgun. The robber surrendered, say, ing: "If you had given me a minute's notice I would have given you a lively deal." The remaining two robbers were followed into the Indian Territory and captured with no trouble. All three were brought to Hope to-night and lodged in jail. No doubt they are the right oarties, having been fully Identified.

NBW|IAVEN, CONN.,

THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.

SHIP DISASTER.

FnvN'cieco, Sept. 28.—A Spanish

Town dispatch sa.vs: The ship Alice IJuck, from New York, with railroad iron, struck Hovian's Rocks, two miles Mow, at ten minutes past 12 o'clock this morning, and is now a total wreck and ten of the twenty-four men on board were drowned. The ship had been leakin" for two days and the captain signalled for a tug, evidently intending to put into fcjan Francisco for repair?. Monday they spoke the steamer Oceanic and got the course to San Francisco. At 4 p. M. Monday "Captain Herman Herminger thought he was southeast of Farellones about fifty miles and started northeast. Shortly after midnight, the sky being clear and starry, and a pretty good sea running, they struck with an awful crash on the rocks not over fifteen hundred feet from a high blufl'. Two of the mates and a part of the crew were instantly panic stricken and jumped from the ship into the waves. That was the last seen of them. The captain and the rest of the crew, with life preseilhTS, only left the ship when there was not enough of her fast breaking hull to stick to. Some reached the shore, assisted by people on the bluffs, and the rest were picked up by the steamer Salinas. Capt. Herminger was picked up after being in the water nine hours, supported by two life preservers. The following were lost: William Barry, first mate 1). Croesker, second mate George Parker, a boy David Black, Charles Reader, Pat Welch and John Gunnison, seamen two Chinamen and the cook and steward.

I

Sept.

28.—An

in

teresting discovery was mmie at theMalley trial to-day. Ou the Bradford Point hotel register was exhibited the name of Cramer of the date of Aug. 5th. Counsel for the defense claimed that it must have been put their recently. King, the clerk, had never seen it there before.' The record, shows that Walter Malley was there with Miss Douglass July 30lh. This record had been erased or re-written under July 31st The clerk had spoken to Walter about the charge. The entry showed that Walter and Miss Doulglasd had supper at the hotel Friday, Aug 5th. Witnesses to-day testified to seeing them on the road thither and one witness on their return to New Haven in the evening about 10 o'tlock.

CARLISLE,PA

1

Nervous pains and weakness- malarial diseases, fever and ague, positively cured by using Brown's Iron Bitter^

., Sep

ate Veterans of the Shenandoah valley accompanied by the band of Stonewall Jackson brigade, were cordially received and. entertained by the A.JR^f this district

TUTT'S PILLS

INDORSED BY

niYSICIANS, CLERGYMEN, Ati.i THE AFFLICTED EVERYWHERE.

CHE GREATEST MEDICAL TRIUMPH OF THE AGE.

SYMPTOMS OF A

TORPID LIVER.

•ipsa of appetite,Nausea,bowela cos tiye, £ainTn the Head, with a dtjl aengationln Che back'part. Pain under the shoulder5Tare, fuUneaa after eating, with a disiaclination_to exertion of body or mirioTi Irritabilityoftemper,LoVspirits. Loss memory, with a feeling of having neglectecl some cTuty, wearlno§«, DTzSneas, Fluttering oT theTTeart,iJotalbefora'tfie ayes, ellowlSkln, ti eadaoherHestleas^ tieoa at night, highly colored Urine. & THESE WARNINGS ABE UNHEEDED, SERIOUS DISEASES WILL SOON BE DEVELOPED.

TUTT'S FILLS are especially adapted to iiich cuaes,ou« done effects suehaehstnge of feeling as to aatoniah the nufferer.

They Inrreiiae the A|ipel lie, and cause tho ,oly to Take on Fltnsh. thus tiie system !s uourlahed, and by tlielrTonlo Action on the Dlffeetlve Ornm, R^jrular Mtoola are proJui i'ii. Price touts. 33 Murray Mt., N.Y.

TUTT'S HAIR DYE,

JUA HAIK or WHISKKRSchanged to a OLOBSY R: AI t7 a Hliicle application of this DYK. It impart.** a natural color, Hcts Instantaneously. 'i hv i*riiK^iln, or mmH liy

cxpresa an receipt

ur. 1AMIAL «f YMiiaHl* lafoniiillra 1 I tUr*||iU will mailed I'KXK ou •|tltffttla».^

LOVELY COMPLEXION8

POSSIBLE TO ALL.

What Nature denies to many Art secures to all. Hagan'S Magnolia Balm dispels every blemish, overcomes Redness, Freckles, Sallowness, Roughness, Tan, Eruptions and Blotches, and removes all evidences of heat and excitement. The Magnolia Balm imparts the most delicate and natural complexional tints—no detectionheing possible to the closest observation.

Under these circumstances a faulty complexion is little short of a crime. Magnolia Balm sold everywhere. Costs only 75 cents, with full directions.

A S E N ID O O N IT O WIX A KORTUNE. VINTH (JRAND DISTIMR IJTiON CLASH AT NEW OttLKANW, TUESDAY, tiCi'. II, 188» 137th Monthly Drawing.

Louisiana State Lottery Companyincorporated in 1868 for 25 ye rs by the Legislature for Educational and harltable purposes—wltli a capital of $i,mi0,M)0—to which a reserve fund of over |120,o00 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., 1879.

Its Grand Single Number Drawing* will tuke place monthly.

II never toalet orpogtpones, /,.i I

Look at the following Distribution:! CAPITAL PRIZE, fW,000. 100,000 TICKETS AT TWO DOLLARS EACH

HALF -TICKETS, ONB DOLLAR. LIST OF FRIZICS. 1 Capital Prize A *30,000

Capital Priws 10,00u 1 Capital Prize 5,000 2 Prizes of fZ.oOU 5,000 5 Prizes of 1.UU0 20 Prize- of 600 00 Prizes of 100. 200 Prizes of 50 500 Prizes ol iW 1000 Prizes or 10

APPROXIMATION PLUZKS.

9 Appro.vlmaltou Prtzea of ItfJO.. a»» 100..

1857 Prizes, amounting to 1110,400 Responsible nm-respoiiding agents wanted al all points, to whom liberal compensation will be paid.

For further information, write clearly, giving full address. i$end orders by express or RegiHtereil Letter, or Money Order by mall, addres ed only to ft. A. DAIPH I,

BaLA. EARLY.

Circular*

29.—The

New Orleaus, La.,

orM.A. IMrPHI!«,Ht ii-» Rriiailwar,5rw V«rk.

All »ur (Jrand Krtraordinary Drawings are under the titpervution and management of

GENERALS G. T. BEAUREGARD

Qtxe

and

JU-

A

the Public/

The Public are hereby

a» authorized by the

Louisiana Slate LoUery Company to well itv ticket*. They are flooding the country with llMM

Purporting to be oj The Louisiana

State LoUery Company, and are

Confeder­

MO

purpose.

frasds*

Imntty repretenUng themieive* a* iU Agentt. They hhit*

uuihorit)/ from thii Company to

tett v* ticket«, and are not it* agenln for

M.A. AUPHIN,

Prei. Louisiana State Lottery Co.

Dew Orleans, La., July 4,1881. ..

Wholesale and Retail Dealer in

Mould eitl the attention of Fanners of Vigo and surrounding counties to their lirge stock of Farm Implements for 1SH OtfBOKNK A CO. HAHV*EsTKRS with Twine and Wire Binder Droppers, Self-rakes and Mowing Mnehlnes IIUGHKx, 1). B. JOHN DKERE and MOLIXE nULKY I'LO WS, all tirst-closs steel and chilled Breaking Plows, One-Horse I)uuble^ nud Mugle JgPlows,Corn Planters, with orwuliout check R«wers.

Russell, J. I. Case and Springelrf Threshing Machines.

Horse Power. Plain and Traction Engines, the Celebrated SCHUTTLEIt and other wagons Kimt-ola.-s stock of Buggies, Phaetons Carriages and .Spring Wagons, ('ail and see us. No trouble to show goods and will be pleased to give you our Lowest Prices.

a tJksVch aad Portrait of MRS. OABF1ELD. Territory being rapidly taken. FOR8HEE & McMAKIN, Cincinnati, O.

THE

MOST

RELIABLE

-^000^

INTH EWORLD

of

fl.

Otflco, 35 Murray St., New York.

fiA'Tl'TT-S

y^OUD DRUGGISTS ,iAAAAA4

Bald sale will take place at the Court House door, in tbe city of Terre Haute, Vigo Count* Indiana, on Saturday, October 15th 1881. betwaen the boars of two o'clock p. u. and four o'clock P. M.of said day.

The terms

caatlsaei a-

5eriteKiKtiSJcGO.,naney

aia«t k«ndia« any er Or* SSKaipartSt., New Y*rk Gltjr,

ot

SsCO.

IStiS

II. ROGERS &CO.

SUPERIOR

SOLD BY

CALJJ AT

THE IDAHO IMPLEMENT HOUSE

AND fcJKi: THK

MILBURN HOLLOW AXLE WAGON-

A NOVELTY IN THAT LINE.

Jflilburn atui Coquillard Farm and Spring Wagons, Improved Indiana Grain?

'brills, Furst & Bradley Ad-1 instable Harrows, Itig Giant Feed Mills,

Eagle Feed Vlitters, &c, &c.

COORDES & COv,

Southwest Cor. Seventh and HulmanSts.

CHEAP

Joseph Briggs

Place, corner Fourtn and Cherry street Is your best market if you have any poul try, eggs, country produce

*-r

other thingsol

that kind for sale. He pays the best prices in the city. The traders in this city who wish to keep regularly supplied will find it to their interest to deal with him.

GREYL0CK INSTITUTE,

Pknith Wllliametown, Berkshire Co., Hass ^tabllshed in 1842. Prepares txys for college or for business. Location healthful, no malaria. Careful attention to individual pupils. Bend for circular to

BENJ. F. MILLS, A. M., Principal.

Administrator'sSale of Lard.

Notice Ts hereby given that tfTe 6nJer5^00 signed Administrator of James Case, de10,0001 ceased, on Saturda/, October lolh 1881, by 10,0001 Yirtue of an order or the Vigo Circuit Court, 10,e00 will sell the following real estate of said de10,000 cedent, to-wit: Commencing at the North 10,000 W.est corner of the Soath West quarter of section twenty-five, in township twelve 2,700 1,800 900

north, of Ranee nine west running thence East bixty-eignt and 40-63 rods, thence South sixty-three rods tbence West fifteen and 19-(» rods thence North tblrty-six rods thence West fifty-three and one-third rods thence North twenty-seven rods to theplm-o of beginning: containing fifteen and a half acres, situated in Harrison Townhship, Vigo County, tn the Htate of Indiana. VAlso six aad ooe half acres of land, in the south west corner of the north west qnarter of section eight, township twelve north, of Range eight west In Lost Creek township, Vigo Coaaty in the State of Indiana.

sale: one thira ca»h: one

third In nine, and ono third ia eighteen months, with Interest at six per cent, per annum, with approved security.

RICHAHD DUWITIGAN Administrator of

Dr. A. Drake.

Veterinary lsr(Ma. H7 North Fowrtti.

Traausrsrr distsss known to horse and citttle al moderate cost. Has met wltk large notlee and uniform sneeesa Can he called telephone at Calico's stable.

ik

&

ments

TO ALL

OTHERS

—In CONVENIENCE,—

DURABILITY, ECOHOMY -A3Vr-

GENERAL CONSTRUCTION.

BUY iM BEST!

'WM. LOTZE.

published. much Personal *rit Private OP the: the Whits Mouse, inrltadinpr

A H|P A AGEXT8 WANTED fnr "this th# tnn*t laUr«itln(f bsok of WAOTITWOTOH evtr published. A llintory of erery .. ministration from WMfclsMrtM to 4 Contains much Personal and Private ll.jtorr ourer befors published. Illnstra m^^thaa 10 Bt.sro'ortraits of the Ladles of the Whits House, inrltadinpr Uf^ll

AKTI LOUISIANA, O E S O A

50,000 Laborers can get Immediate Employment, at Good. Wages, on Tarnu and Railroads in Texas alone.

THE SOUTH-WESTERN IMMIGRATION CO.

Will mail on application, free of cost, postage prepaid, books with maps, giving reliable Information ot Texas, Arkansas, or Western Louisiana. Those meditating a change to a new country, please address J. N. TlCT0II, Eastern Manascr, 241 Broadway, New Tint. B. 6. DUVAL, Se«T, Austin, Tex.

Foreign Office:—WM. W. LASQ. iVes. LsadenhaU Houte, IscadmhaU Street, London, K. C-, Eng.

No. 1282K. Htateof mdliina,'County of Vigo In the Vl«o Circuit Court, September term 1S81. Isabelle Fuller, vs James H. Fuller in divorce. 11.* it ltnown that on the 28th day of Sep teniher, 1881, It wan ordered by tne Courtthat the Clerk notify by publication *aid James H. fuller as non-residant of the pehdency of this action against him.

Said defendant Is thereiore hereby notified of the pendency of said action against him and that the same will stand for trial *t the November term of said Court in tbe year of 1881. MERRILL N. SMITH, Clerk. 1. C. Roys*, a ty. for plaintiff.

Jeans and Flannel

U. R.Jefers

&

it

is

SlB®!

lUCg

irr uuTer oerore pumisnsa. iUMast«4 wftt

White House.

THEJ3EST

DIET

OLD PEOPLE

FOUR SIZES .35 .65 L.£S I.7S

OMCVrftY LABEL..

iWr

1

-A-

SM.'

•iwimxn

:.j. ., .. •. «..

,'j„ t, —Is— i'"18

HEADQUARTERS

For these lines of goods. He manufactures them and will guarantee their quality.

Headquarters is the Place to B"y-

,,

Protect Your Children Against the Wintry Wind*'

Mill and salesrooms 1001 and 1003, oorner Tenth and Main.

APPLICATION FOR LICBNSis Notice is hereby given that I will apply to the Board of Commissioners of Vigo County, Indiana, at their October term, for a license to sell "intoxicating liquors," in a rtaf a time, with the least quantity thanaqwu• uw,».«. privilege of allowing the same to be drank •n my premises for One year. My place of business and the premises whereon said liquors are to be sold and drank are located at No. 1014 on Poplar street, Sixth Ward, In tbe city of Terre Haute, Harrison Township, Vioo County, Indiana. WJL. J. RUSMAJT.

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