Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 28 September 1882 — Page 3
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T&TJ&SB AY, SEPTEMBER 28 1882
A SUBMISSION DODGh
In hi* sp?ech at Indianapoli", as in the one h« delivered here in Tcrie Haute and in scvcrwl of the townships of the county, Senator Vo trheea discussed quite fully the proposed prohibitory constitutional amendment and the att'tude of the two patties ii relation to it. What he said is t*. pertinent and so fully exposes much of the vcious sophistry, by whkh the Kr-publican papers and speakers are scekiug to befoA* the issua arid then dodge it, that we cinnot refrain from reproducing agtiiu am. in this p'acs a portion of what he said, as follows:
But while the republican lf:iden of Indiana, 1 have a: ready HmteJ. decline to discutu tlie amendment on its menu-, and in le:ri(if I tones proNv. thai prohibition is not \v an issiu befoie the people, tlify imp invented a fa'so cry «m its huiini.s?i to a popular vote. Kothin^eould illustrate tluir weakness and absurdity ou this ]"int than an incident a tew evenings nirw at Torre Haute. A very estimate citizen of that beuutit'ul city introduced th' Hon. H. Girttz Brown, of Missouri, to tlie audience, and, following the led I of'General Harriisoii mid otlu-rs, took ji'iins to say in substance lixit the issue before the nweting wag not prohibition nor antiprohibition, not whether the amendment ought to be approved or rejected, but solely and entirely whether it should be' voieo on at the ballot box. Having sut liciently, as lie supposed, warntd tlie! speaker as to the kind of speech he whs expected to make, he retired, and the dis languished Minsourian began. Imagine the consternation of the dodgers at 1ms rtirst sentence! "L havo come here tonight," said lie,' t« advocate the cause of piohibition," and he proceeded to do so. I know Governor BrowD, and I could have told the managers of that meeting that he diidains timid tactic,and that, however wrong, he has the courage of his conviction-, which the Tirtpublionn leaders of Indiana have not. The fact is,' it the people do want prohibition, they have but iit'h, il a'iv, interest in prolon injj a :itrovcrsy over it
Bui I us look fairly and septanJy Tor a tew momeinsat tlie right* of the people in a proceeding to amend dieir eouhtitution. There aro three stages in such a proceeding. The first is to bring the propo-ed amendments before the people. Thai hts been done by the last legislature, and U»e amendment, ttneh as it is, ds bei'ire you for your consideration and action. The reason why one legislature shall propose and the next decide upon it i.-i maiiii'e^tlv to allow the peoplencnance to vote KB well upon ila uteri's as upon every other aspect of the question in electing ihe body which has to asrse or dis nuiee 10 it. According to my view of the constitution, before, an amendment can bteome a part of the organic law it must in reality lie submitted twieovto the popular vote. Tne proposed prohibitory amendment. is now, lor the Drst time, suhinitteJ, and will be voted on in November. If the members of the legislature then chosen shall, under their oath to supp rt the constitution,agreetoit, then it will be a second time submitted to a vote of the people. The Republican platform demands that the members of tbe legislature shall so agree who tbe in good conscience they can do so or not. The Democratic platform recogeizet tneir riirht to act according to tneir sense of duty when the time coiues, and to favor or oppose the amendment at. any stage. But if the amendment is airreefl to then the Democrauc, platlorm calls tor its submis.ion at a lime, and under circumsiaucc* which will secure a full vote, and without ex'ra expense. The Republican platform demands an eapecial election, with necesatinly a meaner vote, and at an expense to the people of ar least $10Q,000. VVliich party seems most willing
to
trust
the people? Which party ae»ms most willimr to trust the legislature and the people both There chu be but one answer. The Democratic nnr believes in the right and the capacity of the people to govern themselves, both as to their personal habits, tastes and appetites, as well as at the ballot box.
If the amendment, however, should be submitted at a special election, and ehould be ratithd by a popular vote, au extra session of the legislature, with all its expenses, would have to be called, or something wotse would follow. The adaption of the amendment as apart of the constitution would at once abrogate every license in tbe state, and at the saraetime tiiere would be no penalty for selling without a license. There would be no law, until one was enacted, by wfcich 'A sugar untouched, uwt ubwl u&w'-jwjaUhed some Tears operated Ma prohibiting duty.
House bill «u a sh%m, and would ,f given littla or no relief to ,« people at large. The manufacture •utohM in this country to now a monopoly tutor the Influeaoe of a protective tariff, which 16 bill did not propose to effect, and the $3,000,10 per year which is now paid into the Treasury ould have aimply gone Into the pockets of those ho manufacture and tell them.
t!
year, aoid t»e people"wouTil pay lor it.
Inger80llrs Talk to Farmers. lu a Into speech to the farmers Colonel Ingerooll, speaking of the old style of! farmiug in the West and South, said: '•Everything was done in the wrong way. It was all work and waste, weari. ness and want. They used to fence 160 acre3 of land with a couple of dogs. Everything was left to the protection of chance, accident and mischance. When I was a farmer they used to haul wheat 200 miles iu wagons and sell it lor tiiirtyfive cents a bushel. They would bring home about 300 feet of lumber, two bunches of shingles, a barrel of salt aud a cook stove that never would draw and never would bake. In thoeejblesscd days the people lived on corn and bacon. Cooking was au unknown art. Eating was a necessity, not a pleasuic. It was hard work for the cook to keep on terms even with hunger."
Referring more directly to the States of the Northwest, he goes on to say: "We had jxxir houses. The rain held the roof in perfect contempt, and the saow drifted joyously on the floors and beds.
kept in rail pens and surrounded with straw. Long before spring the sides would be eated away and nothing but roots wcula be left. Food was fuel. When the cattle were exposed to all of the blasts of winter it toon all the com and oats that could be stuffed into them to prevent actual starvation. In those days farmers thought the best place for the pig p*n was iminedi«ely in front of the house. There is nothing like sociability. Women were supposed to know the art of making fire without fuel. The woodpile consisted, as a general tipng, of one log, upon which an axe or two had been worn out in vain. There was nothing to kindle a tire with. Pickets were pulled out of the garden fence, clap-boards taken from the house, and every stray plank was seized upon for kindling. Everything was worked in tbe hardest way. Everything about the farm was disagreeable. .Nothing was Kept in order. Nothing was preserved. Ihe wagons ttood in the snn and rain, and the plough rusted in the fields. There was no lei-ure, no feeling that the work was done. It wss all labor and weaiiness aud vexation of spirit. The crops were destroyed by wandering herds, or they were put in too late or too early, or they were blown down, or caught by ihe frost, or devoured by bugs, or stung by flies, or eaten by worans, or carried away by birds or dug up uy gophers, or washed away by Hoods, or dried up by the sun, or rotted in the stack, or heated ia the crib, or they all run to vines, or tops, or straw, or r.ut, or cobs. And when, iri spite of all these accidents thai lie in wait between the plough |and the graincradle, they did succeed in raising a good crop, and a high price was offered, then the roads would be impassible. And when the roads got good then ihe pricts went down. Everything worked together for evil. Nearly every funnel's boy to:k an oath that he would never cultivate the soil. The moment they arrived at the age of twenty-one ihev lett the desolate and dreary tarms ancf rushed to the towns and cities. They wanted 10 be bookkeepers, doctors, merchants, railroad men, insurance agents, lawyers, even preachers—anything to avoid the drudgery of the farm. Nearly every boy acquainted with the three It's —reading, 'riling and 'rithmetic—imagined he liai altogether more education than ought, to be wasted in raising pota toes and corn. They made haste to get into some other business. They who stayed upon the farm envied those who went away. "A tew years ago the times were prosperous and the young men went to the cities tj enjoy the fortunes that were waiting them. They wanted to engage in something that promised quick returns. The built railways, established banks and insurance companies. They speculated in stocks in all street and gambled in grain iti Chicago, They became rich.
They lived in palaces. They pitied their poor brothers on the tarms and the poor brothers envied them. But time has wrought its revenge. The farmer has «een the railroad president a bankrupt, and the read in the hands of the receivtr. They have seen ihe bank president abscond, and the insurance company a wrecked and luined fraud. The only solvent people, as a class, the only independent people, are the tillers of the soil. The com torts of the town must be added to the beauty of the fields The sociability of the city must be rendered possible in the country. Farming has been made repulsive. The farmers have been unsociable, and theii homes have been lonely. They have been ^wasteful and careless. They have not been proud of their business. You must beautify your homes. When I was a farmer it was not fashionable to set out trees nor to plant vines. When you visited the farm you were not welcomed by the flowers and greeted by the trees loaded with fruit. Yellow dogs came bounding over the tumbled fence like wild beasts. There is uo sense, there is no profit in such a lite. It is not living. The farmers ought to beautily their homes. There should be trees, aud grass, and flowers and running vine*. Everything should be kept in order. Gates should be kept on their hinges, and about all there should be the pleasant air of thrift. In every house there should be a bath room. The bath is a civilizer, a refiner, a beautirter. When you come from the fields tired, covered witn dust, nothing is so refreshing. Above all things keep clean. It is not uecessary to be a pig in order to raise one. In the cool of the evening, after a day in the field, put on clean clothes, take a seat under the trees, 'mid the perfume of flowers, surrounded by your family, and yeu will know what it is to enjoy life like a gentleman.
There is a quiet about the life of a farmer, and the hope of a serene old age, that no other business or profession can promise. A protessional man is doomed for some time to feel that his powers are
fovanting.
He is doomed to see younger
li^nd stronger men pass him in tbe race of foife. He looks forward to an age of intellectual mediocrity. He will be last £here once he was first. But the farmer Inties, as it were, into partnership with feature—he lives with trees and flowers— breathes the sweet air of the fields
There is no constant and frightful 9train upon his mind. His nights are filled with sleep and rest. He watches his flocks and herds as they feed upon the sunny slopes. He hears the pleasant rain falling upon the waving corn, and the •trees he planted iu youth rustic above him as he plants others for the children yet to come.
I say again, if you want more men and women ou the farms something must be done to make farm life pleasant. One
fleople
reat difficulty is that the farm is lonely, write about the pleasure of solitude, but they are found only in books. He who lives long alone becomes insane. A hermit is a mad man. Without friends and wife and children there is nothing worth living lor. The unsocial are the enemies of joy. They are filled with egotism and envy, vanity and hatred. People who live much alone become narrow and suspicious. They are apt to be the property of one idea. They look upon the happiness of others as a kind of folly. They hate joyous folks, because way down in their hearts they envy them.''
A Farewell Address
It is hard to kick against the pricks. "When in Rome do as Rortans do." This is true in every department, and business. And he that seek to make innovations whether in politics, science or
.5-. ,v yr 5
STTi'S AJJ'
They had no barn*. The horses were»religion, has not only to establish the
new, but a far greated task of demolish ine old ideas and not only beat down ola|theoritfl but beat down opposition and overcome prejudice which is as firm as the hills. Prejudice is one ot the strongest passions of man No one can truth tally say be is without it and he that conquer it in all its forms is able to conquer the world. I have fought against it now faithfully and conscientiously for ten years. At times I thought I had conquered, but I was a mistaken and I am free to say that I am tired of the unequal combat. I have dealt fairly. I have promised no impossibilities aod I have succeeded to my own satisfaction and have always enjoyed the esteem of my patrons but I "have never convinced whole communities. I have promulgated truths and nothing else. 1 took all tne pains possible to understand even' disease before I announced that I would treat such. Yet I have been called a quack tor no other reason than that. I did advertise. In medicine that is an unpardonable nin. And whether that is right or not it is not my intention now to inquire. But 1 wish to give a lesutne of the way I came to advertise and then my reasons for quitting it. graduated in the usual branches of medicine arid located in a quiet way. Not long after doing so a lady had the misfortune to have a small bug crawl into one ear. She sent
fu1
Little bovs sometimes get at it more easily. A bunch of them have been known to hide and mimic the quack.
If 1 could have prevailed on lexicographers to have that word out of the dictionaries mv way would have leen plain, but it is useless to try, and I am now about ready to desert the advertising busirtesa. It is so much easier to go with the current. 1 am only sorry for the news papers for they make their money so easy and are so punctual to call for settlements. I hope, however, that my stopping will not discourage them. They have been very fair in this city They have not spread out ten lines to cover a page aad charged me for extra display, fcut to be serious I am going to quit. I have cancelled all contracts with newspapers*. Some let me off easy some pretty hard. This will be the last in the city or county or state or United States. I have yet a few papers which will be distributed in Terre Haute within a few days or by the 20th.
Henceforth will be as careful of medical ethics as of the kick of a mule Ten years or nearly ten years has given me ample time consider whom I will serve in future I will pay particular attention to public opinion "(which Webster said) is stronger than the wind, and I believe it.
/V,
THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZILTTIS.1
me and I failed to
extract it, and took the patient to my preceptor, some five miles away. We both failed and called in a third, who still more ambitious, did succeed, with forceps, to remove the bug, but he destroyed the drum of the ear. None of us charged anytliing. 1 went to Cincinnati immediately and boueht "Toymb« On The Ear," aud in a couple of months became master of ear diseases that ia those usually curable, and then I could have relieved such case in one minute without the least chance of doing harm with nothing but an ear syringe and water. I next studied diseases of the eye and nose, throat, lungs, heart, kidneys and bladder, diseases of women and children and found a vast neglected field. I procured a catalogue of all medical bojks published in the world, and when I found a disease which I could notuiauage I procured the necessary medical book and never stopped until I mastered that subject. In a word I resolved never tosaake two like mistakes in similar cases. About ten years ago, I began to advertise. First to treat diseases of the eye, ear, nose, throat, lungs and all chronic diseases of women and children. All chronic diseases I found brought me into trouble. That brought all manner of cases to nae aud I was forced to decline. Heart diseases, diseases of the liver, such as hydat«d tumors, waxy liver, Brighi's, disease of the kidneys, irritable bladder fistula and piles, lupus canars, old sores, hydrocele, except taping, varicocele and rupture except by a truss. Opium habit I was ignorant of. Fits, I knew but little about. But as fan as I could I read up, and bough' every formula I could find. A ,physician hard up fjr money left a Ividd^r's Battery ou deposit for borrowed money and never called for it. So I bought Beard and
Rocknell on electricity and galvanism and became instructed with electricity and have now iiiore than $500 worth of batteries and appliances. This advertis ing brought opposition from doctors and their immediate friends. I do not mind to fight the doctors but I have got to fight them and all their friends. I could beat down all prejudice if it were not for one word in the English
language and that
is a stunner. I had as leave have a whole battery of cannon leveled at me as that word. It is a short word, too, but it carries with it more fury, and gall and bitterness than any other forty "(40) words. When the doctor has tried to beat me by fair means and his friends still patronize me, lie then braces himself, for it takes nerve to ever speak it, and.be heaves a sigh and delivers himself, and says one word,
quack.
B. F. TomIjIN M. D.
'"1\ a No. 415J^ Ohio street, Teiro Haute, Ind.
Dr. Russell's House BuroetL -:'a
From Friday'8 Dally.
1
The costly residence of Dr. C. W Russell, at Lockport, was totally destroyed by fire early yesterday morning. Ihe fire started in the kitchen, and is supposed to have been the work of an incendiary. The contents were a complete loss. Two of Dr. Russell's children were barely rescued in time. Tlie loss is partly covered by insurance.
Dr. Russell himself was away at the time visiting a patient. The fife broke out at one o'clock. The house and all its contents was insured tor $2,000 in the American Insurance Company, of Chicago. The loss will greatly exceed that, the residence itself being a total loss, aud the furnitu'-e and household effects, including a valuable medical library, being all burned. When the tire was discovered it waabeyond control, and only went out when everything had been consumed. The total loss canhot be less than $6,000. Dr. Russell and his family rented a small hou?e in Lookport, and were in town today buying furniture and provisions,
THE next meeting of the Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias of the World will be held in New Orleans, the fourth Tuesday in April, 1884.
DO NOT DESPAIR.
Persons suffering from complicated diseases that have a tendency to exhaust and weaken the brain and nervous system, find themselves quickly cured, and perfect tone and real strength given to the affected parts, by making free use of Brown's Iron Bitters. It makes the old feel young, «be young feel buoyant, and removes every symptoms of illness from the human system. Atrial bottle will convince you that it is the best tooic made.
GULICK & BKRBY,
1
a
COOK & BBLL,
Wholesale dealers.
The Galveston News says flienew hotel on the beach will be completed in time for next season's business, will be three stories high aud surrounded with grounds especially adapted to the requirements of S'ich
resort, where both rest and rtcrea-1 tion can be had, and will cost $7.~,OUO.
A LESSON IN EQUESTRIANISM. Horseback ridini as an art, and as a beneficial exercise, is one of the
mo3t
The State Fair Association, which meets at Little Rock, October 16, offers $14,000 in cash premiums. The Cotton Planters' Association of America, meeting in connection with the State Fair, will have on exhibition a plantation cotton seed oil mill, the first one ever publicly exhibited.
KALAMAZOO, MICH., Feb 2,1880. I know Hop Bitters will bear recommendation honestly. All who use them confer upon them the highest encomiums, and give them credit for makiug cures— all the proprietors claim ft*r them. I have kept them since they were first offered to the public. They took high rank from she first, and maintained it, and are more called lor than all others combined. So long as they keep up their high reputation for purity and usetulness, I shall coutinue to recommend them—something I have never before done with any other patent medicine.
J. J. BABCOCK, M. D.
The widow of Lieutenant William W. Hook, of Fort Smith, has lately received tbe back pay of her husband, amounting to $i},b48, and been placed on the rolls as a pensioner for $17 per mouth, according to the New Era.
IS PHYSICAL PERFECTION WORTH &TRIVIN6 FOrtV Do you wish to be perfect in mind and body?" Do you wish to be healthy and strong in all your parts? Use Allen's 'Brain Food. It will surely infuse new life and new v:gor into the whole system it gives perfection to every part, increases the muscles and strengthens the brain.
Virgina has the heaviest mast crop known for years.
Twenty years test proves that Brunkers Carminative Balsam is tbe champion ol all remedies for Colic in Infants, Teething, Summer Complaint, Flux or Cholera Infantum, or for adults for Diarrhea, Cholera Morbus, Congestion of the stomach or any pains of tbe stomach. Its reputation is unparalleled. 25c, 50c and $1 per bottle. Sold by alldruggieis.
The smallpox still lingers in Cliattanooga, Ttnn.
We thins we can curw a bad case of Backache quicker with one of Carter's Smart Weed and Belladonna Backache Plasters, than by any other application, and after the backache is cured, you can still wear the plaster without discomfort for two or three weeks or longer. This combination of Smart Weed and Belladonna is a great hit, and it is hard to find any pain or ache that will not yield to it. Price 25 cents. Sold by druggists everywhere.
Over $200,000 is the yearly revenue from licenses received by St. Louis.
"By asking too much we may lose the little that we bad before." Kidney-Wort asks nothing but a fair trial. This given it fean no loss of faith in its virtues. A lady writes from Oregon: "For thirty years I have been afflicted with kidney complaints. Two packages of KidneyWort have done me more good than all the medicine and doctors 1 have had before. I believe it is a sure cure."
n.'-J
ju-'
dicious habits that one could cultivate.! While it affords the equestrian every opportunity for the cultivation of graceful posing, it comprises all the healthful elements of the most invigorating pleasures. Like all else in this world, however, if indulged in immoderately, the results are extremely painful, and oft times daugerous. Galled limbs, aud piles that itch intensely, particularly after getting warm in bed, are not iufrequently the outcome of excessive exercise in the saddle. In fctich cases, however, the evil can be thoroughly eradicated by applyiug Swayne's Ointment, which, as a cure tor piles—itching or otuerwise, has no equtd
3?'
A new railroad will shortly cross the historical field of Gettysburg.
decline" OF MAN.
Nervous weakness, dyspepsia, impotence, sexual Debility, cured by "Wells' Health Renewer." $1, at Druggists. Depot. Gulick, Berry & Co. Terre Haute, Ind. iS J:
The solar machinery must be run by the belts ot Saturn.
Fast, brilliant and fashionuble aie tbe Diamond Dye colors. One package colors from l" to 4 pounds of goods. Ten cents lor any color.
Plenty of work for all at good wages, and no room for growling by laborers, says the Austin (Texas) Statesman.
"ROUGH ON RATS."
It clears out rats, mice, ioaches, flies ants, bedbugs, skunks, chipmunks. 15 cents. At "Druggists.
Work will begin on the Greenville and Dallas branch of the Texas and St. Louis railroad about Oct. 1.
PEHSONS who exasperate an audience by persistent hacking and coughing, can rid themselves of the annoyance by using Cough Bush. I
The Carlisle (Ark.) New Departure says that a gentleman of that neighborhood has in his cotton patch two stalks which have 673 forms, 167 bolls and 10 blooms.
TEE ROGDIS' GALLERY.
"Hf if 0- -t
nEORUE JVIAVWELI, KODESOS
•rue Record of a Rogue.
This infamous politician, who has come to the surface in our governmental atfairs as the carcass ol a uead dog will rise to the surface of a pond by the force of its own expanding putridity, was born in Belvidere, New Jersey. He graduated at Princeton college and afterwards read law in the office of Cliiel'-Justicc Hornblower. In 1855 he was appointed Prosecutor of the Pleas of Camden county by Governor Newell, and ten years afterwards, in 18G5, was appointed Atior-ney-General by Governor Marcus L. Ward, to till out the unexpired term of Mr. Frelinghuysen, elected to the Senate. That office be iiad ceased to fill and was a struggling and impecunious lawyer, without any money or property of any kind, and living in 9 house mortgaged for nearly its whole value, when Grant, Hiram Ulysse* Grant, picked him up in 1869 and made him Secrttary of the Navy to succeed Adojph Borie. Since then bis record has "been au infamous chapter in the criminal history of this country. Whether Grant corrupted him or he corrupted Grant or they chummed it together is not known, bui it is known that tie suddenly giew enormously rich while the navy grew poorer while the appropriations he a^ked for were growing bigger while there was a reckless and profligate expenditure of public money and immense deficiencies, aud tnaf all tbe while Grant stood by him to tbe end. A Congressional committee examined him aud reported on the enormous swindles he hadjperpetrated, but he was then out otthat office and notning was ne. He sold as scraps tbe materials of ships down to the porthole", and then bought it back at enormous figures to repair the very ships from which it was taken Contractors and mbbers fattened and grew rich and he suldenlv bt-gan to have a bank account, to the credit of which would be put checks of tens and hundreds of thousands ot dollars drawn by naval contractors He bought enough of a certain class of supplies of the ringsters and at their own ligurers to la9t the navy twenty years. During tbe few days he was in ufficj by country, afier the inauguration of President Hayes and previous to the appointment of our own distinguished townsman, R. W. Thompson, Secretary of the Navy, and bis taking the office, this fellov
itobeson,
Willi
au in
decency wuich is without a parallel, made contracts for supplies and work costing several million dollars, a large proportion »f the total annual appropriation, and extending far into the administration of the gentleman whose office he was only holding for a few days. Those contracts, iiidecmtly made and mo.t if not all them reekiDg with fraud, the shameless arted of a lecklcss robber, were all promptly annulled, and Robeson retired tor a time into infamous privacy. But he emtrged as a Rtpifljlican Congressman He is now serving bis second term and has just been renominated for athird. L'ist winter he bought, body and soul, the speaker of the House of representatives,one J. Warren Keifer. He elected Keifer. He elected him by tbe votes of a lot of trading Congressmen, one of whom wa* R. B. F. Peirce from this district, a candidal now for re-elec-tion. Having elected Keifer, he owned him as a master owns a dog. He made him appoint him 8t the head of the committees having to do wilh the navy—the very thing of all things with which he ought on no account to have had anything to do. He shaped legislation aud proposed a really Infamous bill for rebuilding the navy—a bill which no honest man approves and every thief believes in. That bill was largely amended in the Senate and stripped of many objec tionable features, but it was still a bad one as it pa»sed. He hopes, if he is'reelected, with the aid of Keifer, if he is re-elected, and Pcirce, if he is re-elected, to do better in the next Congress and maybe even next winter. During the last session, Representative Whitthorne, of Tennessee, and Hewitt, ot New York, both men of honor and propbity, called Robeson a liar and a thief to his tace, and what is worse proved it.
This is tbe man whose picture we print above. It is a good likeness except that it gives none of the color of the bloated cheeks and bulbous nose. Robeson is a rascal.' His first Lieutenat is Keifer and, we regret to say it, R. B. F. Peirce acted as a high private in his ranks hist winter.
7' Obituary. From Saturday's Daily. Mrs. Cartwright, a widow lady living on the Dickerson farm near the Fair Grounds, died yesterday of congestion of the stomach. She is a sister of B. F. Rogers. She leaves several chiidern. Her remains will be buried in the cemetery south ofPrairieton to-morrow. ".*
rts,i -Y
fMKS. MARY OEISI^GZ-i.
Mrs. Mary Geisinger died yesterday her home east ot tfie city on the Natier* road. She was 53 y«irs (rid, and was Ihe oldest sister of Mrs. G. F. Cookerly. She lived far a long time below Prairieton aqd has been a resident of the county for many years. The remains will be interred at Prairieicn. The funeral services will be held at the family residence at
9
o'clock to-morrow morning.
rt\ itrvji"•.
ItlfiUUJiT
UNFAILING FORALLSKIN Remedy
such as
Diseases
TETTER. ITCH. SORES. PIMPLES ERYSIPELAS^ WRING WORM Lc.
mmma
THE GREA
CURE FOR
Symptoms are moistnrp, stinging, ttclifnf ,vrorMaC night wemsu if pin-worm# wero crawling abotrb the rectum ihe private p*rt'»ro often affected. As* pleasant, economical anil ioeitire cure.JSwATNB'M OiNTMesT is pnperior to any article In the market, gold by druggists, or send SO cts. In 3-ct. Stamps. S Boies,$1.25. Address, 1)a.Swains & Son,i'hila., Pfe
flOSMFElfc
Bitter5[Wi
The terrible oooarge fever and ague, and* its congener, bilious remittent, besideR affections of the Btomaeti, liver aud bowels, produced by miasmatic air and water, are ooth eradicated and prevented by the use of Hosteller's Siomach Bitten, ft purely vegetable ellxt-.
1
horsed by physician*,
and more extensively iv-ed as a remedy for the atove class of disord-r*. as well as for rnano others, than any medicine of the age. for sale by all Druggets and Dealers generally.
DR
DYES
BEFORE AND AFTER 1?
Electric Appliances are sent on 30 Days' Trial,
TO MEN ONLY,
YOUNG
OR OLD,'
\\T HO are snfferlnir from Nanvocs Dkbiutt,, Yf Lost Vrr*t.rrT, Lack Nkbvk Forok awi*' Vioo*. WastixoWeaknesses,or an 1 ull those disease* of a Personal Katvbk resulting from Aur*Ks and Othbr Causes. Bpcoljr relief .nJ complete rcsto- 1 ration of Health,vioonand Manhoodui"aiia*tked. The grandest discorcry of tlie I inetcenth Centt:ry. jM*.Send at once for Ulu»traUidPain )Ulct free. Adcirusa
VOLTAIC BEIT CO., MARSHALL, MICH.
KIDNEY-WORT
KIDNEY-WORT
|1»-.slit*
HAS BEEN PROVED The SUREST CURB for KIDNEY DISEASES. Does Urns baok or adlaoftendurlne Indicate that yon aro vlotimf TEEN DO NOTHXSITATBj hm KIDIHY-WOHT »t ouoo (drctftrista recommend it) and it will speedily overcome the disease and restore healthy action to all theorems.
I Tor oomplalntapeculiar isClVIICOe to your .'ex. such as pain and weakaeesea, BXDNXT-WOBT la tmanrpoaaed, as it will net promptly and safely.
Either Bex. Inoontlncace, retention of urine, brick dnat or ropy deposit*, and dull dragging pains, all speedily yield to its curattve power. (*3)
BOLD EY ALL DHT7GKJI3TS. Price $1.
a
KIDDER BROS WABAfcH MILLS
Main street and River.
Highest pricc for wheat, and best flenr in the|west, made by the jGray patent rcller.
"W[
CLTJbl & SON,
Manufactures of 1
Locomotive, Stationary and Marine Roller* (Tubular and Cylinder,) Iron Tanks, Smoke Stacks, Ac. Shop on First»treet, bet. Walnut and Poplar
Terre Haute, Ind.
•V*Repalrlngdone in tbe moat substantia) manner at sbort notice, and as liberal in price an any establishment in tbe state. Orderssolicited «nd punctuall Attended to
PARKER, MARTIN & CO, Commission Merchants,
No. 120 Washington Street, room CHICAGO. Grain, Provisions, Seeds,'Ac., bought, sold' and carried on margins. Correspondents solicited. Agents wanted to represent as In all im nortant place-.
£3g"lF you are not a subscriber already this copy of the WEEKLY GAZETTE is presented to yoa with the hope that you will look it over. It contains each week a complete review of all the transactions of tbe seven days just past. The GAZETTE is a member of the Associated Press, an advantage enjoyed by but one other weekly here, and prints all the dispatches, beside full local reports, and miscellaneous matter. It gives a tele, graphic market rerort, the Indianapolis live stock market and the Teree Haute market, and they can all be relied on as correct.
It contains mrre reading matter than any Terre Haute competitor. If you like tbe paper we request that you call and. give it a trial.
