Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 28 September 1882 — Page 4

i* Wcehlrt @azettz

W. C. BALL & CO

Entered at'the Pwtofltc* at Trre Haute 2nd., a* second-dan mail matter.)

RUES OF SUBSCRIPTION:

Dally, 16 cents per week: 65 cents per month *7.80 per year Woekly, 11.50 a year

THUB8DAY, SEPTEMBER 28.1882

THE PROPOSED PROHIBITORY AMENDMENT. Han. l. Tbe manufacture, sale, or keeping for sale, In said at?, uplrllouf, vinous, m»lt liquor*, or any other inloxlcat.Dg liquor*, except for medical, scientific, mechanical, and wine for Macntmental purposes, shall be «nd In hereby forever prohibited In the State of Indiana 8«c. 2. The General Assembly of ihe Hlaie of Indiana shall provide In Whatman ner, by whom And at what place such llq uors Htiall be raxnufactared or sold for tned leal, scientific, mechanical and sacramental purpose*.

THE ST. CLAl BAIL BOND. To the Editor of the Gizette: I noticed in your issue of Monday evening a statement, or rather a misstatement, that does great Injustice to a worthy citizen and public official. It Is in relation to the bond in the matter of the ttt. Clair trial, and believing thnt you would not Intentionally misrepresent anyone, I take it upon myself to give you tne real facto In regard to the case. The charge is that Judge I.ong, contrary to right and justice, reduoed the bond of Ht. Ulalr from five thousand to one thousand do'lars. It Is true that the bond was so reduced, but not without due regard for law and justice. It. is the custom, as all legal authorities will admit, for a bond, in all cases of felony, except murder, to be fixed at not more than one thousand dollar*..

So much foroustom and law The question row arises—why was the bond of S!. Clair reduced by Jui'ge Long to one thousand doll art.?

It was done by agreement of the Prosecuting Attorney, the attorney employed by tbe Adams Express company and the Vandalia Railroad for the prosecution, and upon the following statement of llie President of thn Vandalla Railroad: "I should huve no object Ion so far as this oomi any is concerned, that the ball should be fixed at Jl,0u0 or bucii sum* as you may think right or proper.

W. R. MCKHEI*."

In view of the foregoing fact, I am sure that Judge Long was justified in his action and tnat it will be endorsed by all fairminded men.

Furthermore the witnesses against the accused have left for parts unknown and tneie Is not particle of evidence that can toe brought against him.

These facts »restated for the simple purpose Of rescuing from puuiic condemnation the action of a man who honorably discharged his duty to the best of his knowledge and belief.

Very Respectfully, T. A. FOLKY.

This card of Mr. Fole#S does not give the facts of the case according to our understanding of them, Mr. Foley's state, ments are utterly at variance with our understanding when ho asserts that the witnesses against St. Clair bave left for parts unknown. Chief of Police Ed. Vandever hasn't, that anybody is aware of Larry Hazen, the Adams Express Company's detective, could be summoned by telegraph at any moment and would only be too glad to recpond Allen Hayden, a good citizen, isn't in the habit of leaving for parts unknown, and Richard McIlroy can be found at any time at his store at Msxville. which town was to have been the scene of the bloody butchery and wholesale robbery by St. Clair and his fellow conspirators. The witness who will swear that St. Clair approached Ibim with a proposition to join the gang and become a parly to the infamous work can probably be found, if not right away at least very soon, as he had a talk with the Chief ol'Polico about the case not more ihiin two weeks ago. If tlivse .'••facia be true, and neither Mr. Foley, nor any other defender of the Criminal Court can show differently. th wouldn't it appear that the officials in and around the Vigo Criminal Court are woefully lacking the vigilance whioh the public expects of them, and which, moreover, is part of their duty.

As to the statement that "there is not a particle ol evidence thai would be brought against bim" there Is something strangely peculiar about it. It such be the case, why has St. Clair been dodging the officials so persistently how did it oome that the grand jtry so far foreot itself as to indict him why did Jadge Long fix bis bail at $5,000, and why did Mr. Kelley, the Prosecutor of the Court, faithful guardian of the public that he is, attach so much importance to the indictment as to shake it at St. Clair and threaten lo arrest him on it if he ever came inside of Terre Haute"? "^Vhy sliould. Ed. Vandever and Larry Hazen, whose experience in such mattersentitlos them to the bi-lief that hey kuew what they were doing spend so much time fooling with and and working nj such an insignificant case as Mr. Flry s-vk« to make it out to be. Ami why should the Adams Express Company and the Vandalia railroad pay our lmgc ?nm of money for detective service and attorney's fees. We have the declaration of one of the offioials who worked up the case that there was enough evidence to convict St. Clair. That is all there is to it.

So far as the statement about the custom in fixing bonds, it is sufficient to say that Clay county put Bill Hicks nnder $1,000 bond the other day for a little tobbery. If Vigo county cannot pat such a

fellow as St. Clair under a decent bond for a crime that might have involved a hundred lives, without reducing it the second day after he was arrested, so as to accomodate bim io getting away, then it is a great pity, and the fault ought to remedied, whether it is with the law or the men elected to administer it. We have always thought that the Criminal Court was primarily instituted to punish criminals and not to accomodate them.

Judge Long was not boana by agreements made outside his court. He ought to be able to rtm the court himself and fix the bond to suit himself and in accordance with what he ought to consider the best interests of the public. If Judge Long and Mr. Kelley think the interests of the public were subserved by turning St. Clair loose on $1,000 bond, after re ducing it to (hat from $5,000, that is another thing. Agreements are not always good, anyhow. If Mr. Kelley had at rested St. Clair when the iron was hot, St. Clair might already have the compliments of the season (in the form of a good term in tbe penitentiary), and a reduction ol his bond would then be unnecessary.

We beg to differ with Mr. Foley on the proposition that Judge Long's course will be endorsed by all fair-minded men. Mr. Foley ought not to presume to speak for more than himsolf.

What was the object in reducing this bond a cent? Whom did it benefit, but St. Clair? The purpose of a bond, as we understand it, is to secure the attendance of a prisoner at a certain day or term of court. Now, can the Prosecutor of the Criminal Court assure us that this bond was given for that purpose? St. Clair has some property. He would part with all of it if it were neccssary. His bond has been reduced to $1,000. Is Prosecutor Kellev awaie of ihe fact that St. Clair and his infatnsus wife, the notorious Jennie Wynings, who kept a vile hou&e for vile purposes in this city for several years, has made a deed of property supposed to be worth $1,400 to T. W. Harpt and E. O. Whit«man, Ihe attorneys who went ou his bond? Does Mr. Kelley believe that St. Clair or his attorneys ever expected to fulfill »a single condition of that bond when ho and they made it that he expected to come back and face the charge pending against him, and that it was solemnly understood by everybody that if St. Clair didn't turn up, the bail money should be paid over and turned into the school fund?

It would be interesting to know whetli. er Mr. Kelley intends to take a forfeiture on tbii bond that will stick, for instance one like that taken in the Hunt and Simmons cases. The GAZBTIE will watch this St, Clair case with interest.

The people of Vigo coNnty are weary to the point of exasperation with this defective attorney bond dodge of turning criminals loose, enriching their legal advisers, and robbing the school fund. If our efficient police lorce and all the machinery for detecting crime, which annually absorbs a large portion of our substance in the form of taxes, is to serve no other purpose than to collar criminals and hold them up until they have disgorged to their attorney bondsmen a portion of the money they have made in infamous practices, then to be turned loose to prey upon law abiding citizens, the time has come for heroic treatment of a disease which is sapping the very foundations of our civil liberty. A conspiracy to perpetrate a great crime against the peace and dignity of this people is not to be condoned and the criminal turned loose because forsooth Mr. T. W. Harper or sonle oilier attorney has secured, not for the community but for himself, all the visible property which this fellow and his wife have obtained as ihe price of iniamy extending through years.

We presume this is the last of the St. Clair case in our court. His bond will be forfeited, and forfeited in such a way as that it can not be collected, and the net result of the labor of months on the part of our police and the detectives, and the expenditure of money by the Vandalia railroad and the Adams Express Company, which are so untortanate as to own property in this community, will be that a house and lot, formerly the prop* erty of St. Clair and his vile wife, will be owned by two persons who signed their names for a joke on a piece of paper called a bail bond, and St. Clair himself will be at liberty to conspire again tor the destruction of human lite for the purposes ot robbery.

The people of Vigo county want, and will have ihree things: 1. They want St. Clair brought back andvSpeedily tried. They are not willing to gain and keep the reputation among the other couuties of this and other states of compounding felonies and turning felons loose to prey on them. That is beneath our dignity and apiece of downright scoundrelistn towards all the rest of the people of this county, which, if persisted in, must cause us to lose cast among the respectable communities and be classed among ihe offscourings ot the earth. 2. If St. Clair cannot be apprehended and brought back, that bond must be forfeited in accordance with all the forms of law and the money secured and paid into the school fund. 3. The Vigo County Criminal Court, biding the time when a statute shall be enacted covering the point, must adopt and enforce a rule refusing to accept attorneys as bondsmen for their clients

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There is altogether too much delicacy among attorneys about poshing forfeited bond cases against one another to make the acceptance of them by the court as bondsmen a healthy, or a proper, or -a decent thing for tbe nine hundred and ninety-nine people out of every thousand in this community who are not attorneys.

The reputable attorneys will rejoice at the adoption of such a rule and tbe disreputable ones—well, we hope this community will not be delivered over, bound hand and foot, into their possession.

POOR SISTERS OF THE POOR. Within the past month some Nuns of the order of St. Francis have come to Terre Haute and established a hospital here. At the tirst came two, and within the past week two more came. More are to follow as the work undertaken by those already here grows on their hands beyond their physical ability.

The building on the corner of Second and Eagle streets, at one time used by the Ladles Aid Society for an old ladies home, has been taken by them. Whether it shall be occupied by them only temporarily or continuously depends upon several contingencies which are beyond their control.

The hospital is to be known as St Anthony's. The Nuns in control of it came from Lafayette where, for several years they have been in charge of St. Elizabeth's hospital—an institution that from a small beginning has grown into the occupation of commodious quarters and is in a flourishing condition, if anything can be said to really flourish which has only to do with misery,disease and death At any rate, from quarters furnishing facilities for caring for only a few sufferers they have, by the sagacious enterprise of the citizens of Lafayette, been provided with ample and permanent quarters wherein to prosecute in a larger way their humble but holy calling of ministering to the necessities of afflicted 'humanity. In this way their institution is a flourishing one. for after all that tree has the greenest foliage, bears the best fruit and is truly tbe most flourishing under whose sheltering shade the cup of healing and of comfort is held to the parched lips of the sick and sorrowing in the lowliest way of life. What shall be done by the people of Terre Haute to assist in this enterprise remains to be seen. They came to us, without gomp or ceremony, on a mission which seems half divine, and offer, without hope, or expectation or desire of reward, to devote their lives to the caring for the poor and sick those broken in health and spirit the victims of accident or of wasting disease the stranger in our midst or whomsoever, high or low, may need tbeir nursing or their care. They will do this in the home of the invalid or in their own hos pital and hospitable home their only care for the comforts of which is that it may contribute lo soothe the suffering of the sick or smooth the pillow of those who may be dying on their hands, and for that they would give everything they have in the world. In fact they have done so, for these Nuns have nothing. They are known as the "Poor Sisters oi ihe Poor." They have actually done and are daily doing what the young man ot great,possessions refused to do and went away from the Saviour grieving when he was told to do it, in answer to his inquiry of what he should do to inherit eternal life. They have given up all their worldly possessions, have dedicated their lives to the healing of the sick and are going about in humble imitation of the Master doing the lowliest work in the lowliest way. They have no home save where sickness walks in the shadow and death iurks in the thick darkness. They follow the pestilence as the sunshine follows the storm. For themselves they ask nothing save only the opportunity to minister to all who are afflicted or in distress. This is their selt appointed ^mission. Their clothes are of the plainest a rope for a girdle and sandals for shoes. Terre Haute cannot too kindly welcome or too devotedly cherish these gentlewomen who have come among us to do the Master's work. If we, as a people, are as wise as they are good, we will see that they lack for nothing that may assist them in their beneficent task. For themselves they ask and will accept nothing. Tbeir lives are dedicated to their work, and that is with the sick. -,}*

We cannot close this article without instituting a comparison between the lives these good womln lead and the inspiring cause of it all, and tbe best possible results which could flow from a universal acceptance of tbe doctrines which Col. Ingersoll teaches with so much fervor and with so many of the charming graces of magnificent oratory. Their lives transcend the grandest flights of the most gifted oratory They have dedicated all they have and all they are. their lives in fact, to the care of sick people. Those they nurse are strangers and not bound to them by the ties of blood nor friendship nor mutual helpfulness which are potent factors with most people to make them undertake sacrifices. Work of the most confining, wearying and least pleasant nature takes their time day after day, night after night, year in and year out—among strangers, many of them victims of accident or of crime. This they -w,. tt

TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.

do with no possibility of earthly reward, for their whole lives are taken up with work which banishes all prospect of earthly reward. They do what they do because tbey believe in the existence of a Ood, in immortality and the promises of the Gospel—in a word, because they are Christians. This and this alone makes them do what must challenge tbe respect and command tbe admiration of mankind.

Is it possible to conceive Ingersollism bearing such fruit as this? Onjthe "one world at a time" doctrine can *ny one imagine any person giving all they are and bave of life and property for others, and those others the miserable ones of earth Mr. Ingersoll himself is a liberal and kindly man with a quick and generous nature. Of his abundance he gives with a princely liberality, but after all and for the most part it is ot a showy kind—a sort of vest pocket liberality to the servants about hotels and others who do him some personal service or touch really his tender susceptibilities. But one will search bis writings and his speech in vain to find anything which could inspire a human being to sacrifice the whole of iti» only life, in the only world there is, for the good of a herd of weaklings broken down in the race of existence and on tbeir way to an endless death with all the rest of the brute creation. Perfect self-sacrifice is the maturest and the best fruit of Christianity. There is and can be nothing like it in Ingersollism.

PERSONAL

Mr. Linton "Usher, of Lawrence, Kansas, was in the city this week Cnpt. U. Shewmaker, who has been visiting his sister at Chariton, Iowa, re turned home last nighti

Mrs. Judge Key, of Washington, has sailed lor Europe, to join her daughters, Misses Anua and Haltie.

Mr. Will Allen, ot Indianapolis, formerly of this place, is to be married to Miss Coburn, of Indianapolis, on the 6th of October.

Mr. W. P. Ijams and family will remove to Indianapolis, the 1st of next month. They will 'ako rooms at the Bates hotel tor the winter.

Dr. Worrell, when last heard from, was in Vienna studying the eye with a famous professor there. Before coming home he will take a course in Paris

W. B. (Butler) Krumbhaar, of New Orleans, who has been visiting friends in this city for a faw days past, left this afternoon for home via Chicago.

Drs. Bartholomew and Hall will occupy the second floor over the new Savings Bank building where they intend to fit up the finest dental parlors in town.

Reuben Butz, of Sugar Creek township, who had a valuable horse stolen a week ago last Sunday, has succeeded in getting it. It was fojnd in the lower part of Knox county.

Ransom Rogers, who is now traveling for the St. Paul Harvester Co., through Dakota, is at home on a brief visit. He will return to the northwest the latter part of ihe week and promises the GAZKTTK some letters.

Mr. J. H. Hunter, son of ex-Congress-man General M. C. Hunter, has an office in Washinton City for procuring pensions. Soldiers who entrust their business to him will receive prompt attention. Address P. O. box351.

W. B. Krumbhaar, an old Terre Haute boy, now and lor the past twenty years a resident of New Orleans, is in the city. His friends include all who ever knew him and thty welcome bim to Terre Haute, their only regret being that his stay will be limited to a few days.

A.J. Thompson, the swindler is no hoc he knows when he has enough. He might have taken the T. H. & S. E. bills on of lading on that car of wheat to anyother road for transfer and received an original and duplicate bills from it and by removing the word duplicate from all of them had enough bills to draw on through about every bank in town. It would have beel more fair, too, to have patronized all the banks in the city.

Earnest Wbiiehouse is now classed amoogour industrious, thrifty and reliable young men. lie has for two years been in the employ of the Vandalia road as "night caller". He has recently purchased a lot of Rockwell and erected a large two story frame house for a lunch and lodging room lor railroad employes and others. It is near the Vandalia yards. He does not expect to give up his place on the road.

Father Weichman, of the Catholic church at Warsaw, Ind.,who was expected to deliver a temperance address at St. Patrick's church next Sunday, will not be able to keep his appointment. He will be present at a spiritual retreat at Fort Wayne at that time and it will not be possible for him to come here. Father Weichman is an eloquent orator and has done and is doing a great and good work in the temperance cause.

Maurice Haggerty, President of the Terre Haute Land League ha* sent a unanimously signed letter to Alexander Sullivan of Chicago, who makes engagements for the lectures of A. M. Sullivan M. P. in the West to have Mr. Sullivan lecture here in Terre Haute. It would indeed be a rare treat to have this eloquent and heroic gentleman address tbe people of Terre Haute on the subject in which he has borne so conspicuous and distinguished apart at his home.

R. P. Gobin, writes to a friend from bis new borne, Gadsden, Ala., that he is well pleased with the place. The follow ing is taken from the private envelope of the house he is

at:' Kittrell House. Gadsden, Ala., The Only Second-Class House in the World, By P. J. Smith, The meanest man in America. Nearest Hotel to Post Office, with Telegraph Office at Main Entrance. It is headquarters for commercial travelers,"and don't you forget it." rsjf Terms Cash to Both Saint and Sinner. (Copyrighted.)"

4

HOW TO SAVE.

FATAL MISTAKE.

How a Blusdering Judgment May Responsible for the MostSerioas Results.

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Mr. Edwin Booth said recently that he supposed his lungs were affected' having a persistent cough until be saw Dr. Mackenzie, of London, who found that this symptom arose from a disturbance of the liver.—[New York Herald.

The above item, which has been going the rounds of tbe press, is of no Bpeciw significence other than to the personal friends of Mr Booth, except that it brings to light a truth of the greatest importance to the world. Few people pass through life without the affliction of a cough ui some point in their career. In most cases this is considered the result ot a cold or the beginning of consumption, and thousands have become terrified at this revelation and have sought by a change of air and the use ot cough medicines to avbrt tbe impending disaster. It may safely be said that more than half the cooghs which are afflicting tbe world do not have their origin in the lungs but are the result of more serious troubles in other organsof the body. "Liver coughs" are exceedingly common and yet are almost wholly misunderstood. Arising from a disordered state of the liver they show their results hv congesting the lungs. In fact, the efforts ot the liver to throw off the disease, produce coughing even when the lungs themselves are in a bealihy state.

But it is a mistake to Suppose that sucb delicate tissues as the lungs can long remain in a healthy condition when they are being constantly agitated by coughing. Such a theory would be'ebsurd. Consumption, which was feared at first, is certain to take place unless something is done t. check the cau«e. This must be plain to every thoughtful mind. It stands to reason, therefore, that the only way in which "liver coughs" can be removed is by restoring the liver io health.

In this connection another fact of great importance becomes known, which can best be explained by the relation of an actual event. Mr. W a wealthy catilc dealer of Colorado, became greatly reduced in health, and came east to Chicago for the purpose of being cured. He consulted Dr. one the leading physicians on pulmonic subjects and be gau treatment for the cure of bin lungs. fiat his cough increased while his strength decreased. Finally he determined to consult (toother physician and applied to Dr. B. After a careful examination he was informed that his lungs were perfectly sound, whi'e his kidneys were in a most terrible condition. He had all the apparent symptoms of consumption, but he was suffrriog from the terrible Bright's disease. Tne symptoms of consumption are often the sure indications of Bright's disease.

The above truths regarding coughs have been known by tbe leading physicians for several years but the public have never been informed of them. They are serious facts, however, and should undi rstood by all, so that dangers which might otherwise prove latal may be avoided. Tliey clearly prove one great truth which is, that the kidneys and liver are such vital organs that their health should be constantly guarded. The distressing, hacking cough, which is often dread, as the forerunner of consumption and the wasting strength which accompanies it, in all probabilily may arise from weakened or diseased kidneys or liver, to restore which would cause returning health. How this most desirable end may be attained has long been a problem, but few people ot intelligence at the present day have longer any doubts that the popular remedy known as Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure has done more to correct, relieve and restore these organs than any other preparations ever before known. There are hundreds of instancts which have occurred within tbe past three months where individuals have believed ihemseivesthe viciimsof consumption, when, in reality it was deranged kidneys and liver, which this remarkable medicine has completely cured, as witness tbe following i-tatement:

BUFFALO, N. Y., July 6, 1882.—I believe it in lobe a fact that thousands of cases if so-called consumption can be successfully treated bv simply using Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cjre as directed. I was one of the "given up to die" persons—had every symptom of the last stage of consumption—bad cough of four years standing, night sweats, chills, etc. etc. A season south did no good, and the fact was the case looked discouraging. I :ook Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure, and in three montbs I regained over twenty poundp, and my health was fully restored.

ENVE

IUPE

MAN,

0

All hard workers are subject to bilious attacks which may end in dangerous illness. Parker's Ginger Tonic will keep the kidneys and liver active, and by pre-

times means danger.—See other column is at 420% Main street.

W. C. BEACH,

Foreman Buffalo Rubber Type Foundry. There are thousands of people in America to-day who believe they are the victims of consumption and destined to au early grave and who are trying to save themselves by the use of consumption cures but are growing worse each hour. Let all such persons stop, and calmly consider whether they are not seeking to check a disease in the lungs when it is located in the kidneys and liver. Let them then .treat the disease in its original stronghold and by tbe remedy which haspandbeen proven to be tbe most effective and then look for the return of health and happiness which such treatment is sure to bring.

'Furniture and Stoves. Persons desiring to purchase anything imhe furniture line or stores snould not tail to call at 325 and 327 Main street, if they wish to find the largest and most complete stock in both lines that there is in tbe city ana tbe most reasonable prices. Remember the place, Nos. 325 and 327 Main street. J. R. FISHER.

WE learn that Dr. Croweby has lately performed most remarkable cures in eye diseases, curing many who bad given up all hope of ever receiving any benefit

venting the attack save much sickness,' almost daily he performs one or more loss of time and expense. Delay at soch difficult surgical operations. Hia office

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be

(EN1MR|INIMEJ4T

The Great Healing Remedy.

*1 prescribe it at superior to any known remedy." Dr. H. A. Archer, 83 Portland Av., Brooklyn.

7astoria is not narootio. Mothers, Nurses and Doctors acres that for Sour-Stomach* Flataleoey, Diarrhoea, mad Constipation, nothing is so prompt as old Dr. Pitohor'i

Castoria* Br assimilating the food, Caatoria (ires robust .health and nat* Ural aleep.? /, 4

(MlWljmiMENT

The Great Healing Remedy.

An Infallible cure for Rheumatism, 8cl* itlca. Neuralgia, Wounds, Burn*, Sprains, Stiff Joints, Spavin, and Lameness from »njr cause.

P.T.Barnnm,the treat Showman, says:— "Among my vast troupe of Equestrians, Teamsters, Horses, Camels, and Elephants, some are always strained, bruised, or wounded. My Surgeons and Yeterinaries all say, that for casualities to men and aalmala, nothing is so efficacious as Centaur Liniment." 4 3 8 if A N or a O 1 S 7 5

FARMERS SLEEP COMFORTABLY

To do this carry an insurance policy in the Homo Insurance Co. of New York. Has nearly $7,000,006,06 cash aosets. All losses promptly paid and adjustments equitably and liberally made.

Boudinot, Bigelow & Co., Opera House Building, Agents. Tbe State of Indiana Vigo Cotiniy In the Superior Court of Vigo County

Leopold Goodman Jr and Simon Hirsciiler, vs. "William E. MoGrew defeodantand Andrew Grimes, Garnishee. Beit known, that on the 24th day of May, 1882, said plaintiff filed affidavit in due form showing that the defendant. Wil"iam McGrew's, residence is upon diligt nt Inquiry unknown to plaintiffs, and that the cause of this action is to enforce the collection of a demand by proceeding in attachment and garnishment. Said defendant is therefore hereby notified of the pendcncy of said action against bitn and that the same will stand tor trial on tho 17th day of July 1882 during the June Term 1882 .of said Court.

rupon iroold

Defore for a

A CARD. 5"

To all who are suffering from the errors and indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, loss of manhood, &c., I will send a receipt that will cure you, FREE OF CHARGE. This great remedy wtts discovered by a missionary ,.- in South America Send a sclf-address-boarding

to the RKV. JOSEPH T. IN-

Station D. New York City.

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sis

Old Dr. Pitcher** remedy for Children's Complaints.'

ASTOR,A

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11

Old Dr. Pitcher's remedy for ClAldren'e Complaints.

EtpvAaUy adapted to children." Dr. Ale*. Robsrtaon, 1067 2d Av., N. Y. 'PUaiant, HarmUtt and Wondtrfuiiy £fflcadou».*

Dr. A. J. Green, Bojrerton, lad,

W0. iSSS

Spa

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With the Full Knowledge That Fire Cannot Ruin You.

MERRILL N. SMrrn, Clerk. $

Buckeye,

The best in the World, the finest line of harvesting machines, binders, droppers, mowers, etc., is at S. B. May's 321 north Fourth,

-fruu'J

Joseph H.Briggs,

Place, corner Fourtb and Cherry streets la your bent market If you have any poul« other thinof tfy, egxsi country produce that kind for sale. He pi In the city. The traders

He pays the be»t prices ..oders In this city wbo

wish to keep regularly supplied will find It to their fnternst with htm ———a

VIG Woolen Mills are sull in tue re- |s tail trade, with a number one stock of ft goods ot their own make and a number 1= of pieces that bave been cat which we will sell at reduced prices. We are always ready to exchange goods for wool at net oash prices. U. B. JKFFBBS. (Jor. --,r.-TrTJ,

Dr. Horace

V.

NorveU, of

GIMM'C

Held. 3, L. Riley, of Jennlnn County, Ten •. B. Annlncton, of Deeatnr County,

John W. Buiklrk, «f Monroe County, Hot ton. John S. ftefT, of Randolph Oottntjr, Wind

James M. Cropsey, of Marlon Gouty, 1 apolla, & Now Is The Timeli j3 sfciT'Sfe Every farmer ought to fertilize his grounds and increase his crops by using '•Bone Phosphate" for wheat, oats, coru, rye, grass, etc. Will be sold by the ton or single bag, at E. Rtiman's, agent for P. Fols & Son's celebrated Economizer and Bone Phosphate, southeast corner of Ninth and Main streets.

'-Township Trustees W ill-please take notice 'hat I will have now on hand the largest an finest stock of school house stoves ever brought to Terre Haute, which I intend to sell lower in price than anybody. Call at 303 Main street and see for yourself.

TBY the Home Insurance Co., reprig-" sented here by Boudinot, Bigelow & Co., Opera House building.

Go to Emil Bauer, the leading millinery i-v house, for your hata and bonnets. Sign $ of the big bonnet. •-.}

f.

iil

R. L. BALL.

THE Home Insuiance Co., i* the best. Have Boudinot, Bigelow & Co., write your insurance in it.

W

v. J. -J0V-'(ft, 1 -,