Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 24 November 1881 — Page 3
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Our Goods
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PRICES CORRESPOND
Every JDep'tm't
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Ready Made or Made to Order
Men's, Youths' or
Boys'.
J. T. H. Miller,
522 iriAlK STREET.
CLARK
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(TRADF. MARK. Dyspepsia, Liver Diseases. Fever t€
A{fucf 1'!numaisnt., Jjropsy, Jlc'yt Disease,
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Debility, etc,
'KNOWN to lion I
Bottles
ROI.D NIXCE 1870.
This Syrup possesses Varied Properties. lit Stimulate* tho Ptynllne tn tho Sallvn, viiklk convert* the Htnroh and Supip of tlie IVihI tiito aliicono A dcllclcncy in Ptynllne nunc* Wind nnd Hottrltiff of the rood In tlie kimtiuoh. If h» motllclno taken fntiiiedl* Mi'lv iidtrr callus the tVruicatutlon l" food i» i«i vvcult'd. «»....
It net* tiiinn tho I.tvop. a:la uinn thu Kliincrt. (il* It TiScti^'iucs the to\vel». it fiiritici llir lilood. -U It iiuioj* tli« IServoiiH Syitem. it rmmo'i-s ft NntHsU«'s, MrritctliciiN nnd InTlitorntci. ii i'lt'* ifl"the (Mil Oilixttl and nuilie* new.
IIIICIIN th ot' the akin and Induce* I'lrtiilruttun. iho heroditury tAint, or iwison in thi* -ueratt-rt boiofuln, lirj'Bipeln", all
*. uoutraiixc whicli !:orof skin (IISOMPH ntnl intrnml hnuiors. -i' am no ttpintH omployoil in its uianufaoturc, and v. b« taVcn by the most dolicnto hnbe, or by tbo and fuoblc, cam only Uing r&rjirtd attention en
nrinlnu.s(,C«rroll Co., Hid.
1 hnvo used Or. Clark .Iohnson's Indliin Blood synip for Idver Com])liiSnt of long stnudins, nnd am hnppy to Niiy It lias effected A coinpleto euro DANXKIJ BELL.
Lebanon.Boo no Co., Ind.
Logansport, Cass Co., Ind.
TUIH IK tocortiryltiat Dr. Clark Jolinson I Iddlun Blood Hyrup, hnsiurod myself and moat of my family of Chlll|p and Fever. I can truthfully recommend your valuable mediolne to all similarly aftllctcd.
WILLIAM DONALSON.
''^"ort Wayne, Alien Co., Ind.
A fair trial of Dr. Clark Johnson'B Indian Blood syrup cured me of Scrofula, when all other medicines failed. I have also tound it a valuable remedy for kidney disease.
HENRY KLBINSTII.LBK.
I was afflicted with heart disease for 10 years, and after everythioc «l«o failed, I tried Dr. Clark Johnson^ Injlan Blood Syrup and it has proved most beneficial to
i&MiLY Viwxi?
Ageuts wanted for the Bale of the Indian Blood Syrap in every town or village, In which I have no agent. Particulars given 00 application.
DRUGGISTS SELL IT. boratory 77 MTest Srdat, N. 7- City
$he $$e*kii! {gasetfc.
THURSDAY NOYEMBEB 17,188
TIIKRE are fifteen cases of smallpox at at £i«9on, 111. f*. _2'v 1
A Party of Three Lost. ,..r
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 10.—Wednesday morning W. C. Partlow, keeper ofthe Faraltine Light House, with four fishcrmeu and a boy left the port in a plunger for his station. Nothing has been heard of them since. The weather is stormy. Wreckage identified as belonging to the plunger was pickcd up yesterday inside the heads, it is supposed all were lost.
IP you are tired taking the large old's fashioned griping pills, try CarterLittle Liver Pills and take some comfort. A man can't stand everything. One pill
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Good For The Women.
Many ladies suffer from an extreme nervous, semi-hysterical condition. They have disturbing dreams, exciting muscular starlings, peculiar painful symptoms of nightmare. They lie awake- and suffer the brain to be flighty when that weary organ ought, according to jpaturc, be asleep. Brown's Iron Bitjers give sweet repose and quickly removes all such nervous disorders.—[Home Physician
GULICK & BEB*T,A
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COOK & BEIJ., KIQ
•ue.:i/,ibni Amm* Wholesale agents
The court (austerly—Prisoner, how did you have the audacity to brfeak into this man's house at midnight and rob him Prisoner (piteously)—But, your honor, last time I was before you, you wanted to know how I could have the audacity to rob a man on the highway at high noon! When do you want me to get in my work ?—[French Paper. i:, I f'i' £l
The Popular Oemand.
So great has been the popular demand for the celebrated remedy Kidney-Wort, that it is having an immense sale from Maine to California. Some have found it inconvenient to prepare it from the dry compound. For such the proprietors now prepare it in liquid form. This cau be procured at the druggists. It has precisely the same effect as the dry, but is very concentrated so that the dose is much smaller.—[Lowell Mail.
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"Ma," she said, confidingly, "Harry has asked me to many him." "And you accepted?" was the query. "No," was the reply, "1 didn't, and neither did I reject him. Tf I can keep him on the string till Christmas he'll make me a handsome present to induce me to say 'yes.' You know I've been wanting a gold watch for alone time."
CATARRHAL POISON.
Catarrh poisons the mucous membinne, jioisons the blood and vital fluids, poisons the lungs, liver and kidneys. From a simple cold to the rotting, sloughing and death ofthe senses of smell, taste and hearing, Sanford's Radical Cure for Catarrh is supreme. Complete treatment $1.
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LAVACA, AKK., Nov. 9.—What "triule dollar' woith? J. C. ifASSIE.
The trade dollar contains 420 grains of standard silver, whereas the standard silver dollar contains 412 1-2 grains. But the trade dollar is not a legal tender, and is, therefore, only worth its bullion value, which lluctuates and is some 12per cent, less than its face. uinn-v Ite
~BEAUTIFIERS SC.".
Ladies, you cannot make fair skin rosy cheeks and sparkling eyes with al) the cosmetics of ranee, or benutiflers ®t the world, while in poor health, and nothing will give you such good health strength, liouyant spirits and beauty as Hop Bitters. Atrial is^ certain proof. See another column. —[Telegraph.
James Gordon Bennet is more than six feet tall,erect and somewhat slender, although his shoulders have good breadth, and few men have as brisk and elastic a step as he.
Honrv's Carbolic Salve. The Best Slave in tho world for cubrtiises, sores, ulcer a, salt rheum, tetter chapped hands, chilblains. Corns and all kinds of skin eruptions, freckles and pimples. The salve is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction in every case or money refunded. Be suro you get Henr ry's Carbolic Salve, as all others are but imitations. Price 25 cents. For sale byall druggists. Dr. Green's (Jxyflensted itters A.re Are ft cheap .and sintple remedy fo dyspepsia and biliousness in all their worst forms. It is a well known preparation, and has been known and endorsed by physicians for many'.yeftrs, and has icen used by thousands of sufferers in all iiarts ofthe world as a Standard and reliable remedy.
DR.MOTTS LIVER PILM ure the best Catarrh Kegulators DURNO'S CATARRH SNUFF cure Catarrh and all affections of the muc membrane.
There are .still five British officers living who participated at Trafalger seventy-six years ago. Two of them are ninety, two are ninety-one and one is ninety-two years of age. ir. A
FIVE HUNDRED DOLLARS RE, WARD. We will pay the above reward for any case of Liver "Complaint, Dyspepsia, Sicfe Headache, Indigestion, Constipation or Costivcness, we cannot cure with West's Vegetable Liver Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with They are pure Vegetable, and never fail to give satisfaction. Sugw Coated. Large boxes, containing 80 Pills, 25 cents. For sale by all Druggists. Beware of counterfeits and imitations. The genuine manufactured only by John C. West & Go.r •'The. Pill Makers," 131 and 138 W. Madison street Chicago, 111. Free trial Packages sent bj mail prepaid Qn receipt if a three mit stamp. Co6k ft Bell of Terre Hauto, Intd ABasseit, Wholesale agent, Detroi.t .&••
A Charleston firm will distribufe $li0,000 in confederate money at the Atl^pta cotton exposition with their advertisement printed on the back of the bills.
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injuring him. The OKM of tWw^lempt on Silverman's life is the legal dispute now before the New Orleans courts about the ownership of the lottery ticket which won the $15,000 prize in the Louisiana State Lottery, Silverman claiming it to be bis, and a MTS. Clark claiming that it had been purloined from her. The ticket was taken from him at the muzzle of [the pistol, and he has instituted suit for the money. It is supposed that the attempt on his Hfe was made to keep him from prosecuting the suit—[New Orleans Picayune, Oct. 19. %t
STTLL another indictment againsfHowgate. Either he is one of the most sorely oppressed of men or the worst old sinner in .forty states and all the territories. Ilowgate has had his indictments almost as regularly and often as his daily papar. This last one is for the embezzlement cf $23.00Q. Embezzlement was his favott*
gin
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as tcC the best methods and remedies foT the cure of constipation and disordered liver and kidneys. But those that have used Kidney-Wort, agree that it is by far the best medicine known. Its action is prompt, thorough and lasting. Don't take pills, and other mercurials that poison the system, but by using KidneyWort restore the natural action or all the organs.—[New Coveuant.
The fart trains between Chicago^arid New York now make an average run of about thirty-five miles per hour.
IMPORTANT.
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GEMMED WITH PEARLS.
A mouth gemmed with pearls flashes radiance evefy time it opens. The contrast between the,ruby of lovely lips and the pearly teeth they enclosed has winged the fancy of many a poet. SOZODOHT, fair ones, is the thing that most contributes to adorn the feminine mouth. It is pure, is aromatic, it retains the natural color of teeth incrusted with yellow tartar. No gritty or other objectionable ingredient contaminates it, its odor is balmy, and its purifying operations thorough. "'1:' L*"**
A Dispute Abont a Lottery Ticket
A special Dispatch trom from Henena, Ark., says: Night before last (Oct 3rd), an attempt was made to assassinate Sinyn Silverman while on his way to this city. Five shots were fired at him from behind a tree, with no other effect than to frighten the horse ridden by Silverman, which threw its rider without I
ri: V.
Mr. Archibald Forbes will write,a book on "The South ot To-day."
ALLEN'S BRAIN FOOD—Postively cures Nervous Debility and all weakness ofthe generative organs. Price $1—6 for $5— All druggists. Send for circular to Allen's Pharmacy, 815 First Avenue, N. Y. For sale in Terre Haute, by E. Bindley &
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A NICKEL mine has been discovered in Williamson countv, Tex.
THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZmn
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When you visit or leave New If ork city, save baggage expressage and carriage hire, ana stop at tho Grand Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central depot Three hundred and fifty elegant rooms, and fitted up at an expense of ono million dollars, reduced to $1 and upwards per day. Elevator. Restaurant supplied with the best. Horse cars, stages and vated railroad trains to all depots.
Spurgeon's health is still very dclicate, and he will spend most of the winter at Mentone.
THE simplest and best regulator of the disordered liver in the world, are Carter's Little Liver Pills. They give prompt relief in sick headache, dizziness, nausea, &c. prevent and cure constipation and piles remove sallowness and pimples from the complexion, and are mild and gentle in their operation on the bowels. Carter's Little Lirer Pills are small and as easy to take as sugar One pill a dose. Price 25 cents.
Seth Secord ran down a Gladwin, Mich., deer, and brained it with a hoe.
The Wabash ^Esculapian society is in session at Paris. On Wednesday Dr. J. R. Link read a paper on the subject The effects of the Mediate, Immediate and Remote action of the Parental Mind upon the Offspring." It is the same paper which he expccts to deliver at the Baptist church this evening. Dr. Worrell read a well prepared paper on Strabismus. During the meeting Mrs. Dr. Forsytlie will ^tiake^a report on Infantile Dirarrhoea.
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THOUSANDS of ladies to-day cherish grateful remembrances of the help derived from the use of Lydia ^E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.- It positively cures all female complaints. Send to Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, 238 Western A.vcnue, Lynn, Mass., for pamphlet.
THE Yorktown celebration cost the government $40,000. ffWt
Brain & Nerve.
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Walls' Health llenewer, greatest reme dy ou earth for impotence, leanness, sexua/ \Jebility,&c. $1, at druggists. Depot Oulick, Berry & Co., Terre Haute.
Bishop Perry, of Davenport, is preparing a memorial history of the American Episcopal church, to be ready for that church's centennial, in 1883.
Mr!*"
A Card.
T« all who are ruffering from the error atad indiscretions of yoath,nervous weak uess, early decay, loss of manhood. &c., 1 will send a recipe that will cure you, FREE OF CHARGE. This great remedy was discovered by a missionary in South America. Send a self-addressed envelope to the RBV: JOSEPH T. IKMAN. Station D. New Yotk City.
Jose fly, the pianist, carries four plahoi pnhis travels.
ROCHESTER, Nov. 17.—Director oftbq Warner Observatoiy, discovered faint comet in the constellation of Casr ^iopeia. It is possible the straager is the comet of 1812 which was expected to. appear in the north. The comet is in a line between Polaris and the jgreat cluster in Perseus, a (little nearer Polaris. This is the seventh comet discovered since January.
A San Francisco journalist claims to. have written'*column a day tor* the last eighteen years. This would fill 1,600 octavo pages of solid nonpareil.
AB THOUSANDS DO TESTIFY*. So does Thomas Roberts, Wholesale Grocer, Philadelphia, who tavs: "BORJJKTT'S GOCOAISB allays all irritation ef the scalp, and will most effectually remove dandruff and prevent the hair from falling out."
Burnetts Flavoring Extracts.—The superiority of the extracts consists in their perfect purity and great strength. They are warranted free from the poison* ous oils and acids which enter into the composition of many factitious ruit flavors. 'r',: 1
The English postofflce officials have sent an agent to the continent to study the various systems of sending money by "•S-!:. 1 -v'
THE IMPOSSIBLE.
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1 The Doctors Disagree
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Two I. &St, L. Trains Attempt to Pas$ on the $ame 'fTrack
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With the Usual Result—A Brakeman Killed
I a tM if |t! ir-'IfHIV '"f? Hfl**? Ttr jt' rs''— ij*i id:
Logaasport Division Train Goes 1 Through the Bridge at Otter Creek-Ko one Killed.
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From Friday's dally
~~L* I I 8EBI0U8 WRECK. Two I. & St. L. freight trains met on the main track in the cut near Fern, seven miles west of Greencastle, last night about (ten o'clock. A brake man, Whose name could not be learned, was killed and extensive loss of property sustained by the company: The fault is said to be the train despatcher's. There is no telegraph station at Fern and as the officials here know nothing, the GAZETTE is compelled to go to press to-night with only these meagre ana incomplete particulars.
The trainB are running in on the Van dalia track from Greencastle. THE OTTER CREEK BRIDOE.
Reports of the wreck at Otter Creek bridge are greatly exaggerated. No one was hurt and the loss is light. The facts as obtained from the proper headquarters are these:
The C. & E. I. Company who, in the contract with the Logansport branch of the Vandalia are to Keep tho track I to Otter Creek bridge and the bridge there in repair, the expense being mutually divided have had a new Howe Truss bridge there a few days and and have been preparing to put it up Temporary work has been put under the bridge during the progress of building the new structure which was washed out by the terrible flood to which Otter creek rose last night. The whole thing tell in.
The locomotive on Conductor Murray's freight train, No. 7, which leavs here about 5 o'clock got nearly over but its tender fell into the water, as did also two freight.' cars. The damage is inconsiderable" A forcc of men will erect the new bridge and all will be right in a day or so. At present both the Logansport and C. & E. I. trains run in by way of Brazil on the coal road branch.
The train was in charge of Conductor Murray. Engineer Dorsey and Fireman Davis. No one injured.
THE COMPROMISE .^.{F JT
Yesterday's GAZETTE contained the announcement of the cessation of litigation between Gould and Huntington and the conclusion of the war in the Southwest.
The roads affected are the Central and the Southern Pacific, Texas Pacific, Now Orleans Pacific, Missouri Pacific, and the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern, the Missouri, Kansas and Texas with its old International and Great Northern road. All litigation is to cease and arbitration is to be the rule. Tho Texas Pacific is to stop construction at the junction with the Southern Pacific eighty miles from El Paso beyond this point to be subjected to perpetual u6e by each party to tho contract. Huntington can intersect the Missouri Pacific 80 or 100 miles from New Orleans. All roads affected by this contract are to form a continuous line with pro rata mileage and a division of earning^. The New Orleans and Galveston business will be divided between the companies.
NEW ROAD TO IOTISVILLE. In railroad circles it is thought that Ibe project of building another road from Cincinnati to Louisville on Itho Indiana side of the river will be carried out as Gould and Hutington both favor the enterprise, and are ready to give it financial aid. Were it built, Mr. Gould would secure more than he would have done by the capture of the Ohio and Mississippi. •E. B. MCCLURE.
Announcement of the death of Mr. E B. McClure appeared in these columns yesterday, but an obituary notice was crowded out for want of space and is given herewith:
At the tinieof his death Mr. McClure was about fifty years of age and was one of the best railroad Superintendents in the West. He began his career as section hand in Wisconsin, afterward served as roadmaster on the Illinois Central He left the Illinois Central many years ago and accepted a place as general roadmaster of the I. & St.
L. Nine years ago
he was promoted to the position of Master of Transportation, and two years later was made Superintendent, a position he resigned last Januorr. He Waves a wit'e and five children all in good circumstances. He was an honest, straight forward, high-minded man.
Mr. R. B. Woolsey, train {dispatcher of the Vandalia, was associated with the deceased for twenty years and cannot speak too highly of him after so longand intimate an acquaintance. Mr. McClure had just matured his plans for the new Springfield & St Louis Ry., and as he. was a man of means as well as energy, the project would certainly have been pushed to completion.
OOT FOB THE WEST.
Mr. Todd Erwin, blacksmith at the Vandalia shop, "will leave this evening for Pueblo, Colorado, to seek his fortune in the far West. Mr. Erwin will leave many young friends who wish him success in the mture.
A T: THE eABTBBSBOBO BRIDOE. -vU liie bridge at Oartersburg, on the Vandalia, sixteen miles west orlndi&napolis, is considered unsafe oq account of the flood. Trains are running in from Greencastle on the I. & St. L. track.
CAVED IN.
The heavy masonry at the deep cut near the to^m o( Vandalia caved in this morning.
The T. H. car works recently received over the E. & T. H. nearly 150 car loads of lumber..
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^EATM-RATTLEr
Hot of the Throat, But in Insurance
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Alarming Increase of the Rascally Business in the Hoosier State
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Special Dispatch to tlia Cincinnati Enquirer INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 15.—From the letter received by the Auditor of State, it is evident that the "graveyard insurance" business is being extensively conducted in this Commonwealth. The laws of the State are strict concerning Insurance Companies,and takes many precautions to warn the people against swindling concerns. All companies desiring to do insurance business in this State are requested to produce satisfactory evidence ol sufficient capital stock, assets, liabilities and other exhibits as to their financial condition. They must conform to all the very strict requirments ol the Insurance La'w before they can legally operate in Indiana. Now it appears that in spite of this a number of wildcat or death rattle Insurance Companes 'have sneaked into this State and are doing an amount of infamous business that is startling, and|rapidly getting to be universally prevalent all over the Commonwealth.
To-day parties from Sullivan County inquired of the State Auditor about the Agnew Mutual Life Association, of Pennsylvania. and the Southern Ohio Relief Association, of Xenia, Ohio. Other per sons from about Brazil want to know as to the true status of the Standard Life Association of Mansfield. Besides these, Senator Grubbs, of Morgan County, recently aeked by letter concerning the Mahoney Mutual Life Association, of Pennsylvania, and was told that it was nulla bona. The Auditor of Stato has told all these anxious inquirers that none of the Companies mentioned above have complied with the insurance law of Indiana, nor can any of them comply, for the plain but forcible reason that they have not the necessary capital. He says all business being done in this State by these and other similar Companies is unlawful, and the Auditor gives warning both to the public and the offending companies to desist from offense against the law, under penalty of prosecution. There are, no doubt, many of these fraudulent concerns doing business in different parts of the State, besides those mentioned above. There are indications in abundance that the rascally insurance is being carried on heavily tn cei tain counties of the Stale, and it is hoped a strict enforcement of the insurance law may prove effective in sup pressing and driving them away
W-1 .A' nl
OBITUARY.
'0 i4 -•i.a "4 81IULER »if.
From Friday's dajly. MBS. BARAII
Last night's GAZETTE contained a notice of the death of Mrs. Sarah Shuler at 4:20 P.M. at the residence of President W. R. McKeen. With the demise of this lady is removed from Terre Haute anotlv er of the eye witnesses of its early struggles as a country village. One by one the chiet actors in our past become pathetic dust, and the history of Terre Haute can no longer be given to us by the wonl descriptions ot living witnesses, but muBt be gathered from published record.
Shortly after the opening of 1824 Mrs Shuler came to Terre Haute from Vincennes with her husband, Dr. Lawrence Shuler who entered into partnership with Dr. E. V.Bali now long since dead. A writer in the Express says of her:
Theresidence of Mrs Shuler with her parents, the kindly and genial Mr and Sirs. Francis Cunningham at the old Mark's House and later at Van Buren on the National Road, will be recalled by those who remember when First street was Terre Haute, md on it lived the Demings, Warrens, Balls, and others of ©ur old families. The subsequent years of her life passed with her biother-in-law, Samuel Crawford, to whose motherless children she gave a tender mother's care and with her children, Col Lawrence Shuler and Mrs. John Matlock and with Mrs.W. R. McKeen, between whom and her children there was no distinction of love, were years of usefulness and content, marked by the tender regard of all these relatives who appreciated and sought her gentle and affectionate companionship. To many of us she will bo remembered as the 'Aunt Sarah* so often thought of, so often the subject of the loving care of the late Mrs. Ana McKeen.
The survivors of Mrs. Shuler's immediate family are her Bon and daughter, Lawrence Shuler and Mrs. Julia Matlock, and her sister, Mrs. Margaret Scott, who alone lives of the twelve children of the late Francis Cunningham. •'u
Mrs. Shuler was a member of the Congregational church and owofthe few whose connection with It goes'back to its organization by Rev. M.-' A. Jewett in 1835. Now preceded by nearly all she knew in those early days, friends and kid, she comes to her "grave in a full age, like as a shock of corn cometh in in his season."
Kidney Disease Cured.
S* CHSUSTUBSBURG, VA., 1881 Suffering from kidney disease, from which I could get no relief either from medicine or the prominent physicians of our country. I tried Brown's Iron Bitters, which cured me completely. A child of mine recovering from scarlet fever, had no appetite and did not seem tube able to eat at all I gave him Iroa Bitters with the happiest results. 4, J. KYLE MONTAGUS.
Money to Loanr
Riddle, Hamilton & Cot, corner of Sixth and Main streets, represent the best companies in the United States for insurance and loans. They loan at the lowest1 rate on long time and give the borrower the privilege of paying all or part before maturity if he desires, or of renewing at maturity. It is no Eastern)cut-throat business. Go there i/you want to borrow or for your insurance.
THE 28th birthday of Deputy Clerk Alexander Mullen was pleasantly celebrated at his residence last evening.
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THE FLOODS.
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The Sixth Ward Almost
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merged.
The River and Otter Creek on a Tear-
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The Sixth warders are out-swearing the army of Flanders. Whenwe think of it they fairly snort. They first put oa overshoes, th«n boots, then rubber boots ana now they want life preservers and Paul Boyton's swimming suits.
Letter carrier John Byers looks like he has bwn fished out cf a well. He saye much of the southeastern part of town ia impassible. South Tenth, Eleventh, Thirteenth, Thiiteenth-and-a-halt ana Fourteenth streets are under water. There is a regular lake at the corner of Fourteenth and Poplar, Thlrteeath-and-a-halt and Oak and Thirteenth and Franklin Avenue.
Two sinks were lately dry one at tho Car Works and the other at the corner of Fourteenth and Oak. Both are full and over-flowing. A sewer is the universal -Ilfr 3i IJ'
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,, OTTER CREEK
cirgel on a bigger tear than a Paris man with a |1,50 lu his. pocket. Ite damage last night is elsewhere reported.
,THE RAGING RIVER.
The rains of the past few days can have but one effect upon the river—a rise that will in all probability submerge a good portion of the bottom#. The river camo up thirteen inches last night and was rising rapidly this morning.
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The undersigned, executors of the last wil of C&auncey Hose deceased, will on the lOtJti day of December, 1881, at tbeoffice of M. 8 Durham, No. 505J4 Ohio street, lu Terro Haute, Indlftna, sell at private sale the following described real estate in the city ot Terre Haute, Vigo County and state of Indiana, to-wlt:
Lots numbered eighty-two [82] and onehalf of the brick wall on the east side of said lot, number eighty-three [831 and eigh-ty-four [841 and one-half of the brick wall on the weBt side of suid lot, uumber eightyfour [84], in Koseto addition to Terre Haute, ind.
Also lots numbered twenty-five [36], twen-ty-six [26], twenty-seven fiftl, twenty-eight [281, twenty-nine [29], thirty [»], thirty-one [81], thirty-two [82] aod thirty-three [881 In Ohatiucey Roses subdivision of teal estate formerly occupied by the Wabash and Erie canal and west of tbe laBds of the Evansville and Cfawfoidsvllle Railroad Company as appears en the plat of said subdivision made and recorded January 27th, 1877.
Terms of sale:—Cash. FIRMINNIPPBHT -NHFTVNT/IRA JOSBPIIUS COLLETT EXOCUTORS Nov. 9,1881.
Free! Cards! I-reel
We will send free by mail a sample set of our German, French, English and American fancy cards, with a price list of over a hundred different drsignes, on receipt of a stamp for postage. They are not advertising cards, but large, line picture chromo cards, on gold, silver and tinted grouuds, forming the finest collec tion in the world. We will also encloso a confidential price list of our large aad small chromos. Address F. Gleason & Co.,40 Summer street, Boston, Mass.
APPLICATION FOR LICENSE.. ,r Notice is hereby given that 1 will apply to the Board of Commissioners of Vigo Co., Ind., at their Deoember term for ft license to sellflntoxlcnUue liquors in a lorsquantlty than a quart at a time with the privilege of allowing th«same to be drank on my premises for one yoar. My place of business and the premises whereon said liquors are to be sold and drank are located on the southwest corner of Third street nnd Vandalia ratlrood in the Fourth Ward, Terre Haute, Harrison township, Vigo County. Ind. t#*
APPLICATION FOR LICENS^. Notice Is hereby given that we will apply to the Board of Commissioners or Vigo Co., Indians, at their December term (or license to sell intoxicating liquors in lees quantity than a quart at a HUM with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on my premises lor one year. My plane 01 business and the premises whereon said ilquers are to be so la and drank are located No. 214 south Fourth street, in part of In-lot No. 50 In Terre Hante, Harrison township, Vigo County, Ind.
APPLICATION FOR LICENSE ~s Notice is hereby given that I will apply he Board of Commissioners of Vigo County Indiana, at their December term, for a license to sell "intoxicating liquors," to* lees quantity than a quart at a time, withitne privilege ofallowing tbe same to be drank •nmy premise* for one year. My plaee of business and the premises whereon said liquors are to be sold and drank are located on northwest corner of the southeast quarter of section 85, township 13, range 9 west, in Otter Creek township, Vigo County, Indiana.
CLIFF & SON,
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Locomotive, Stationary and Marine Boilers (Tubular and Cylinder,) Iron Tanks, Smoke Stacks, Ac. Shop on First street, bet. Walnut and Poplar
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XECUT0R8' SALE OF REAL ESTATE
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THOMAS WILSON.
APPLICATION FOR LICENSE. Notice is hereby given tli»t I will apply to Kio Board of Commissioners of Vigo Co., Indiana, at their next term for a license to sell intoxicating liquors In a less quantity than a qtmrt at a time with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on my premises for ono yoar. My place or bus ness and the premises whereon said liquors are to bo soul nnd drank are located at 11 1 Main in First Ward of Terre Haute, Harrison tp., Vigo Co., Ind.
APPLICATION FOR LICENSE. Notice Is hereby given that I will apply to the Board of Commissioners of Vigo Co., Ind. at their December term for a license to sell intoxicating liquors In a lessqnantlty than a quart at a time with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on my premises for oae year. My place of business and the premises whereon said liquors are to be sola and drank are located ni No. 112 south Fourth street, Jn the Second Ward diy of Terre Hante, Harrison township, Vigo Co., Ind. H. B. VOOES.
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H. H. MCKBKZIK.
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C.C.FLHATTUCK.
MICHAEL QTXIWLAH.
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Gf. F.Bledsoe,
DENTIST,
Corner Twelfth and Poplar streets.'
Twenty years' practice is a guarantee to all my patron* 01 getting first-clase work. Prices moderate.
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Terre Haute, Ind..
•^Repairing done in tbe most substantial manner at short notice, and as liberal In price as any establishment in thertate. Orders solicited and punctually. atteiWeoito.
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