Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 26 July 1883 — Page 4

THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1883

Subscription Rates.

DAII.Y GAZETTE, 15C per week. WEEKLY OAZITTK, S1.50 per year "ix months, 7oc, lour months, 50c. No reductions cause. One man's money is just as good as and no better than any others. ©do not give prizes to get Butfecribers, but proceed xipon the theory that it we make an honest frwri the beBt local and general newspaper people can not do without it, and our increasing subscript'on warrants us in be. Jieving that this is the pioper policy..

Call on or send money to Wit. U. BALL Co., 26 south Fifth street, Terra Haute, Ind

ARABI was a mere private in the ranks -compared with Cholera Pasha.

ECKERT AND GOULD ought to meet in the prize ring, Marquis of Tewksbury Tules, and fight out this strike question 2etween them.

CONSIDERING the character and career of the late Coal Oil Johnnie, his relict in Jier sudden spasm of insanity did the community a greater service than she frftB ever done in all her sane existence

GEORGIA'S watermelon crop for this year is estimated at 6,500 car loads, two thirds of which has already been gathered *nd shipped. After awhile Georgia will "be a rival ot Vigo coaaty in the "watahmillion" business. *r

THE promised boom ot the TildeDHendricks ticket for 1884, has vanished into thin air. This was the necessary result of two apparent causes: 1. The Sage of Greystone, could not reasonably be ex--pected to lie on a litter four consecutive years, in the Executive office. 2. Hen dricks was not a candidate, had peremptorily declined to be a candidate, .and could not be forced to be a candidate on the tail end of any such sepulchral ticket.—[Crawfordsville Review.

And yet when the old ticket is renominated and a delegation ot statesmen are -sent east to notify the Sage of Greystone ©f his nomination, the GAZETTE trusts the spokesman ot the delegation in '84 may 3e the distinguished editor of the Crawiorclsville Review. He performed that Tduty very handsomely in 1876.

OLD Phineas T. Barnum is something of a philosopher as well as a showman. Being in Montreal with his "monster agjgregation of worlds' wonders" when the news of the death of Tom Thumb reach him, he telegraphed at once to the =widow: "Dear Lavinia: Yourself and family iiave my warmest sympathies. Death is as much apart of the Divine plan as -birth. The avenly Father finally overcomes all evil with good. His will he done."

It is no more than Barnum's due to say that Tom Thumb owes more to him than to his size for the celebrity he attained. Without Barnum he would never have risen abeve the dignity of side show and would have ranked along with the fat woman, the living skeleton jthe Circassian girl and other monstrosities. Barnum made him famous, as he is making Jumbo famous, though he is not by any means the biggest elephant an captivity.

NAME YOUR CANDIDATES. Our reporters were turned loose on the {town last week to find the preferences of Democrats for presidential candidates, "What they learned can be seen from the areport. We now desire our friends in Jthe country to make their preferences known. Write a postal card, giving your choice for the Democratic nomination for President and Vice President, sign with _your name, postoffice aDd the township in which yon live. We will publish the Jesuit. Tuis is the way we have of taking politics out of the hands of the politicians and lodging it with the people, 'Whose preferences must and shall pre Tail over any packed caucuses or conventions or the trickery of politicians. We should also be pleased to have our Republican and National friends, hundreds of whom are readers of the GAZETTE, state 3heir preferences for candidates in their party, and we will publish that also.

WALK UP TO THE CAPTAIN'S OFFICE AND SET1LE. Next week, or at the latest, the week alter, bills will be sent in the GAZETTE to -all persons owing for their paper one year or more. Before that time we should be pleased to have all who are indebted lor their paper call at the office -aad settle or remit through the mails.

It takes a great deal of money to run a paper like the GAZETTE and we must rely on our subscribers paying up promptly. It is only proper to say in connection that the great majority ot our subscribers are paid up in advance, for which, and their kindness in securing us their neighbors for subscribers, many thanks.

he is terrible to the Catholic swain. The road which led to Solomon's idola try still leads to many a ^Catholic's apostacy. fo this it is sufficient to say that Mayor Ewing would have been a gTeat deal less than a gentleman if he had not deferred to the wishes of his bride in the matter of the marriage ceremony. A priest sworn to celebacy should be more modest in his talk about the conduct of a bridegroom. If the rule3 of the church are against this sort of thing they should be revised so as to make them accord with the usages of polite and civilized society.

•f THE HALL CASE. The'killing of the man Hall, in this city by his wife last week, brings to the surface and places clearly under public inspection a phase of life which is revolting in all its details. Hall was everything a man ought not to be. From his earliest boyhood he has done not one single stroke of work. For the living he has had, the food he has eaten, the clothes he has worn and the shelter with which he has been provided, he has given nothing in return. Ee has been a drone in the human hive, or rather some thing more and worse than that. As idle as a drone in all efforts towards an honest livelihood, he has been inspired with devilish activity in all evil ways. Day after day, week after week, year in and year out he has preyed upon so:iety. Whenever he could find an unsuspecting victim he robbed him without remorse His living he made by pandering to the passions and practicing on the credulity of his fellow man. A thief ever and alwayp, he trod the danger line where all crimes were possible for the accomplishment of his purpose. He was as truly an enemy of society as is small pox or the cholera, or any other scourge which we fight with quarantines and disinfectants.

What a pity some commission of morals and economy could not have laid their hands on this leper anytime these fifteen years back and placed him, on general principles, in permanent quaran tine where he could neither rob nor corrupt the healthful portion of the community Is society to sit with folded hands and see him daily and nightly earn the wages of sin and not pay the debt of death, but leave i.t to be done by the wicked partner of his criminal practices Is society to abdicate its functions of justice and sell protection to the abandoned women whom he consorted with in her mother's bagnio until he finally took her about with him as bis wife? For years and years the public has witnessed his irregularities and suffered from them. What he was and what he was doing was so well known that his biography, full and ample, seems to haye been pigeon holed in the newspaper offices of the city he made his home, ready for an expected emergency calling for its use. And that biography stamps him as something quite as much to be dreaded as a wild animal at large whom it would be everybody's duty to destroy.

But the great public suffered insilence, bound up in the chains of its owo forging for the apparent protection and perpetuation of all the vile and crawling things that infest the earth. It seems to be as foolish as if farmers should be forbidden to dose their potato vines with Paris green without giving each individual potato bug the right of trial by a jury of his peers.

But a Nemesis abided with this man. She was not hidden in the darkness nor did she come from far away to execute her fated work The guilty partner of his wicked ways, he took his executioner with him in his travels. Society had been stupidly staring at him for year*, incapable of stopping a career which, had every one pursued his course, would have removed the question of the existence of a

hell from the realm of casuistry by the!reVvs, near Montreal. instant conversion of the earth into an' infernal region. But this woman killed him for an act of infidelity to her, which is more astonishing considering the fact that she was born to a life of shame iu her mother's brothel and that that interesting household was their usual dwelling place when they were not skipping about the country, oftener dodging his fellow thieves whom he had robbed than the officers of the law it was his steady business to break. Mrs. Hall seems to have pinned her faith to an impossibility and expected fidelity to herself in one whose sole creed was infidelity to everything animate and inanimate.

That she finally killed him, with or without cause, iB really a matter of profound satisfaction. Society could hardly have made way with him itself, but it ought to have locked him up for keeps on general principles fifteen years ago and made him earn in confinement the bread he stole when he was free. But that he is out of existence,that his career is stopped, that there is to be no more Worrying about him of nights, that he hasn't to be hunted up when any robbery is committed, that he has stopped eating unearned bread, and wearing unearned

MAYOR EWING, of St. Louis, was ar. ried in Vincennes last week. He is a Catholic in religion but his wife being a Methodist they were married in her church, of course. Father Phelan, a Catholic priest ot St. Louis, is moved by this fact to the utterance of the following piece of folly: "Mayor Ewing was married at Vincennes on Tuesday last by a is minister. His poor, weak Catholic l«ckbone could with difficulty support theri sit a The devil sometimes clothes c\o:hes, not to mention jewelry and dia

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ml

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TtTV TFBR:R

himself as an angel ot light, but angels monds, is something in which the honest are not troublesome it is only when he folk who ao the world's work and for garbs himeelt as a lady of loveliness tbat

whom tlie ear

This is an obituary of Hall.

ii jTj a. •*•8

th and the falness thereof

was made can take genuine satisfaction. If Mrs. Hall herself wasn't a bird of precisely the same feather, deserving of being caged up on general principles, we should almost be persuaded to give her a ticket- of-leave. She has done the world a substantial benefit in ridding it ot a creature whose room is much more needed than his society. If to make two blades of grass grow where only one grew before is am attar deserving of congratulation, to get rid of an animal that consumes one of those blades without cultivating either is likewise a matter of congratulation. If only the crimieal class can be encouraged to leave the- rest ot society alone and begin their operations with knives and pistols on themselves, as Mrs. Hall has done, the country will breath freer. SI

BONDS.

Not many months sgo this communt. ty was very thoroughly aroused at the high handed and disreputable proceed ings by which Simmons and Hunt, two bank robbers, were turned loose to prey upon society. They were clearly guilty of the crime for wkich they were arrested and yet they were not tried. Their attorneys became their bondsman, *hus entering into an agree ment with the community to either produce them for trial when the time came or to pay into the school fund the amount of the forfeited bond. They did neither, and thus justice was cheated of two victims, the schooj fund defrauded of a large sum ol money and two professional thieves turned loose upon society. But it is not necessa ry just now, though it may be before long, to repeat in detail the particulars of that scandulous proceeding-. The whole affair is fresh in the public mind aad the indignation ot the people has not abated, as will be abund antlv demonstrated whenever they may have op portunity for the expression of their opinion concerning it. When therefore it issought by insinuation, innuendo and dark hints, bom of malignancy, to throw upon Sheriff Cleary the odi um attaching to flagrant jail breaking under the formr of law caused by this infamous Simmons and Hunt case, and when this is done at the the instiga tion of a copartner in that outrage, it is time to say tbat all that happened long before Sheriff Oleary came into office. This can be demionstrated by the publication of *a connectcd history of that case, which will be done if there is any doubt on the point. He is in no wise responsible for the turning loose of Simmons and Hunt, (it was before his election) and he has none of the public school money which one of the parties connected with the case says was left behind to pay the bond they intended to forfeit when they left here. If, however, this talk about forfeited bonds means a change of heart, where something of that kind is very much needed, and indicates a purpose, even at this late day, to either produce thost- thieves or pay the forfeited bonds in spite of the carefully arranged irregularities by which either one of the two things they engaged to do was avoided, the people of Vigo county will be more than pleased. It is always pleasant to have all who enjoy the protection of the law, and especially those who pick up a precarious livelihood by its exposition, watchful to the end rather of obeying than breaking its provisions in their own iives and conduct, whether it be in the matter of constructing bad bonds or the reckhss and murderously intended use of firearms.

PEOPLE AND THINGS.

ELKO, Nev., has a Chinese bloated monopolist. Hop Sing haS purchased the water-works.

TOM FIELDS, of Tweed ring fame, is a patent rac-dicine manufacturer at St.And-

TOI'KKA, Ktis., has ten colored preachers. Eight of them are graduates of institutions of learning.

KX-SENATOR and Mrs. Henderson, of Missouri, are on their way to Europe, to remain the rest of the summer.

Ex SECRETARY BRISTOW is on a pedestrian tour through the White Mountains trying to walk off some of his fat.

THE North Adams Transcript hears a rumor that Governor Butler has givea $5,000 to Williams College lor a gymnasium. "TOM THUMB" weighed nine plunds at his birth, and his sister who weighed nine and a half pounds, grew to Weigh more than two hundred.

BISHOP WILLIAMS, of Connecticut, is reported aa saying that the Pilgrim Fathers first fell upon their knees and then upon their aborigines.

JOHN BRACKEN, the man who swam ashore with the Cumberland's battle-flag, after her sinking by the Merrimac, is now in New York City and in want, .m

THE descendants of Rebecca NureS, Who was har gid as a witch near Salem, Mass.,iu 1692, have decided to build a inument to their ancestor's memory.

SAMUEL FBANCTS SMITH, D. D. the.

ff A Tim WEEKLY GAZETTE.

author of our national hymn, "My Coun-

try, 'Tis of Thee,'' now resides, at the age '4 of seventy-four, in Newton Centre, Mass.

BI3HOP A:CLEVELAND COXE has written a letter the the Buffalo Commercial -Advertiser praising the English bishops lor their votes on the "deceased wife's sister bill iXltt

FEL 'J?/..

IT may be interesting to Dr. Hammond to learn that the brain of a circus employe, who died recently, was found to weigh fifty-six ounces The same size as that of the first Napoleon and of Daniel Webster. &

11

THE mother of Secretary Chandler,who died at Concord, N. H., recently, was a ladyjof great force and earnestness of character, radical in her anti-slavery views and a leading member of the Unitarian church.

PERSONAL.

Dr. Joseph R:chardson and I. N. Pierce left this afternoon for Muskegon, Mich., on a fishing expedition. They expect to be gone about a week.

Mrs. Hannah Griffith, mother cf H. Griffith, of this city died recently at Pontiac, Ills., at an advanced age. Mr. Griffith and daughter were present at the time other death.

General Bayless W. Hanna wili remove his family to Crawfordsville as soon as he can secure a house. Houses of the right size and location are very scarce there, but many are being built and they will be all right this fall.

New Goshen News.

New Goshen is situated about two miles west of the Wabash and ten miles north of Terre Haute. (Jrossiuir Coal creek to the north, the first farm you see is the Barbour farm, now owned by Daniel Barbour, whose father was one of the earliest settlers. Dan. keeps the farm in tolerable repair. His residence is one of ancient, mould. On the Paris road, going north, you will next see the line tarm of J. N. Bolton. This farm is in fine condition so much so tbat the wheat crop is a success there this season. J. N. has one hifndred and thirty tons of tine new timothy hay. To say the least, it is the finest grain and stock farm in this country, and is run by a practical farmer. "Jim." has a line barn and dwelling. In the barn are plenty of hay, oats and good horses. The dwelling has lately been refitted in the most approved style, and inside the house you are impressed that neatness, plenty and sociability abound. "Jim." is a strong Democrat and would run as goad a race for any office, if he would accept, as any man in Vigo. He never changes, but steers straight for the success of the good old Democratic party. The next thing we come to of any consequence is Hurt's store, above which is tbe Masonic ball (lodge 557). Huff is a lively fellow and tiis face is always a emiii'n^ oue. The lodge, we understand, is in good condition, with C. F. Shirley W. M. Next comes Dr. Morgan. We will tell about him next time. We expect to go on uo toward Paris. All should send for the GAZETTE, and not borrow, '-just to see." Jobn Singhorse has applied for tbe iSanford school.

It is the Tritt school district wbicb has been abandoned. Marcus Dyer is tbe best road supervisor No. 2 has had for quite awhile. He understands his "biz." Wolsey Hay is working ours up to a fine point. We see that the commissioners have granted us two new bridges-. Now we want just one more that is at the Peters' ford. Some of our lads h^d a difficulty at Minnick's last Saturday night. Boys, keep cool these hot times. The thermometer stands hizh enough now don't raise it.

Tbe Masons mutt have bad a fine time on last Saturday night at N G. L. 557, judging from that crowd of strangers. All looked happy. E. S. Owen, of the firm of G. B. & E. S. Owen, visited McCulloch's on last Tuesday eve. Sixteen applicants are striving for the ten schools in Fayette. Scott's policv is to hire those who have been tried and found worthy. Jake Smith, our popular thresher, says that the wheat is proving to be but poorly tilled. It is 20 per cent, below well 'filled wheat. Jobn R. Gr»fl', Past Master of Social Lodge No. 86, visited No. 557 on Saturday nigbt. Rev. Jobn Burtner will finish Rev. Bringle's term on the N. G. circuit.

FROM ANOTHER CORRESPONDENT. We stand in need of anew side walk. William Hansel is entitled to the honors of congratulations of anew boy six pounder. John Martin is oontetoplating building a large and commodious dwelling house this fall. William Wbitlock also has tbe foundation of a neat little cottage laid. We are having considerable contention over our gravel road. I think our contractor H. M. Shores is building as (rood a road as the material will admit of. New Goshen has two beautiful churches but alas we have no Minister of the Gospel at present there is a dark vision bro*dinff over one of our churches at this time which we trust will soon be effaced in the minds of the people at this place. W. A. Shores has seventy-five acres of as good corn as ever grew on Indiana soil. John H. Morgan came out second best in bis trial with the Layman Bro's the Dr. seems to be unfortunate in law.

We bear it rumored that John H. Huff, oar retired merchant, is goineto leave town sorry to bear that we are to lose so worthy a citizen. D. F. Strole and wife ot Horace Ills., are dowa visiting bis father. Myrtie Shores had four dollars and fifty-three cents taken from her purse last Friday. The shew on last Tuesday nignt failed to put in an appearance qiiite a number of blooming youths were disapointed.

1

WILD BILL.

Cabinet Officers.

To the Editor oi the Gazette: Will you please publish the names of the present cabinet officers, and oblige

A READER.

Secretary of State—Frederick F. Frelinghuysen, of New'Jersey. Secretary of the Treasury—Charles J. Folger, ol New York.

Secretary of War—Robert T. Lincoln, of Illinois. Secretary at the Navy—Wm .E.Chandler, of New Hampshire.

Secretary of the Interior—Heniy M. Teller, of Colorado. Attorney General—Benjamin H. Brewster, of Pennsylvania.

The E. & T. H. is doing an immense business in the way of transportingJ watermelons from the south.

..." ,/

ALT RHEUM

I?

Wonderful Cures of Salt Rheum JHhen Physicians, Hoepitals and all other

Means Failed.

Salt Rheum.

I have been a great snfferor with Salt Rheum for thirty yenis, commencing in iny head and face and exteniilDg over tbe greater part of my body I have taken gallons of mediemes for the blood of different binds and tried good physicians, all of which did no good, and 'I came to the conclusion that I oonld not be cured. Bat a irleno called my attention to Cuticura remedies. Got tnem and used them until my skin is perfectly smooth and I consider myselt entirely cured. Xuurs truly,

B. WILSON LORD.

Agawam, Mass.

Salt Rheum.

mif

Chas. O. Ebel & Co., have in press their Danville, Ills., Directory. Mr. Richard Thompson jr., was improving when his father lelt him at Dallas, Texas.

Cuticura Remedies are the greatest mea icines on earth- Had the worst case Halt Rheum in Ih.s couniry. Mv mother hau it twi *fcy years, and in fact died from it. I believe Cuticura would have saved her life. My arms, breast and head were covered for three years, which nothing relieved or oared until 1 used the Cuticura Resolvent (blood purifier) internally, and Cuticura and outicura »oap ftt Kreat tkin cures externally.

Newark, Ohio. J. W. ADAMS.

Salt Rheum.

1 hftk tried everything I had heard of in the East anil West for fealt Rheum. My case was considered a very bad one. My face, head, and some parts of my body were atmos raw. Head eovered with scabs and sores, buffering fearfuL. One very tkilled physiciaa said be would rather not treat it, and some of them think now 1 am only cured temporarily. 1 think not, for I have not a particle of Salt Rbe-.m about me, and t$y case Is considered wonderlul. Thanks to Cuicura Remedies.

Decatur, Mien. MKS. 8. E. WHIPPLT:.

Salt Rheum. VLV't

Nosystem of remedies ever compounded so thoroughly eiadicatc the diseases for which tney ave intended as the Cuticura Remedies. Many remarkable cures have come to my knowledge, aud I feel sale in warranting sati^fac ion if directions are followed. Medicines that' infallibly cure Salt Rheum, as Cuticura Remedies do, will cure any kind of skin diseases.

CHAS. H. MOKSK, Druggist, Proprietor Morse's Dyspepsia Cure, Holliston, Mass.

Price: Cuticura, 50c. and ?l.f0 per box, Resolvent, $1.00 per bottie. Cuticura Soap, 25c. Cuticura Shaving Soap, 25c. tiofd everywhere.

Potter Draj? and Cbemical Co., Boston.

niARIA'CBATn

for

Head Colds, Watery Discharges from the Nose and Eyes, Ringing Noises in the Head Nervous Headache and Fever instantly relieved.

Choking mucus dlolodared, membrane oleanned and and healed, breath sweetened, smell, taste nod hearing restored, and ravages checked.

Couah Bronchitis Droppings Into ihe throat, Pains in the Chest., Dyspebsla. Wasting of strength and Flesh, Loss ol Sleep, etc.. cured.

One bottle Radioal cure, one box Cataarhal f*olvert and one Dr. San ford's Inhaler, in one package, of all druggists, $1. Ask for Sanford's Radical Cure, a pure distillation of Witch Hazel, Am. Pine, Ca. Fir, Marigold, Clover Blossoms, etc. Potter Drug and Chemical Co.. Boston.

'tffOLLIAffh for the relief and pre 'SOLTAJn/ vention, th6 instant it is \\v ,i /applied, of Rheumatism, 0^\MfllN£4£2XNeuralsrio, Sciatica, Coughs "N^V 1* Cold?, Weak Back, Stomech 'X-J^c.and Bowels, Shooting Pains {ri£±£)YcvNumbness, Hysteria, Female Paius, Palpitation,

Dyspepsia, Liver Complaint

/E LECTW C\\ Bilious Fever, Malaria, and Epidemics, use Collins' Plasteis (an Electric Baiyiercombined with a Porous Plaster) and acigh at pain. 2 5c. everywhere

KIDDER BROS' WABASH MILLS

Main street and River.

Highest price for whea'^ *nd best fl®ur in the west, made by iae Gray patent roller.

CLIFF & SON,

Manufactures of

Locomotive, Stationary and Marine Boilers (Tubular and Cylinder,) Iron Tanks. Smoke Stacks, Ac. Shop on First street, bet. Walnut and Poplar

•WRepalrlngdonelu the most substantial manner at. short notice, and as liberal In price as any establishment in the state. Orders solicited and punctually attended to

CIVIL,

MECHANICAL AND MINING Kngmeering at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, N. Y. The oldest engineering school in Amcrlca. Next term begins September 13th. The Register for 1883 contains a list of the graduates for the past 56 years, with their positions also course of study, requirements, expenses, etc. Address

DAVID M. GRKBVB, Director.

CLIFF & SON.

Manufacturers of Locomotive, Stationary and Marine Boilers (Tubular and Cylinder], Iron Tanks, Smoke Stacks, Ac. Shops on First Street* bet. Walnut & Poplar

Terre Haute, Ind.

WRepairing done lb the most substanial manner at short notice, and at as low drice as any establishment In the state.

VIGO Woolen Mills are still in the re tail trade, witn a number one stock goods ot their own make and a numbei of pieces that have been cut which we will sell at reduced prices. We are always ready to exchange goods for wool at net cash prices. U. B. JEFTERS. Cor. Tenth and Main streets, Terre Haute

See! See Here!

What the south end wants. They have it now—a new grocery and a new feed store. Call at Mark Schwartz's, and you can be accommodated in new goods. You can buy your wood and coal all at the same time, at 1700 south First St.

MBiWBfcilffl'fti

Price only $125

iBMllywwtfc 9450 conIpuad Wtth other raakerft' caUlocna pifcM. $na tana for only

JBu Bnactil lutilu ou Orcua and PUnofortM. Send for mkUmnner prlc*

CATALOGUE

ClMt tadannMti offtrod. VISITORS WILCjMI coach mMU tnlM, or* dollar* allow*dfortr»TeUng axpciiM*, «h«th«r yoa boy I or Dot yon are waloome anj1 way to vlatt tha largest

OrraaWorlnlaexltttaM* Shipping one enrj lomlnstM. AddreM or call npon

OMR F. IEATTT, WKHWSTOH, HEW JERSET.

DR.

DYES1

Li

BEFORE-AND AFTER I

flectrir Appliance# ere sent on 30 Days' Trial.

0 MEN ONLY, Y0U:n OH OLD,

WHO are stitTorlntf from

NERVOUSFPKBIUTT,AXD-ORCENcnvn

COST VITALITY. LACK

7no«, A A5TINO IVEACXESSCSOF

Rough,

MJIMIIM chapped or Greasy Skin, Black Heads, Pimple, Skip Blemish-' es, and In(anciio Humors, is Cuticura Soap, an eiquisite Skin Be.*utiller aad Toiltt, Bath and Nursery Sanitive.

SANFORD'S RADICAL CURE.

and all tho*e diseases

1 PW-SOVAL NATTKR mralUntr from ASVSES •N'T IVHKB CAfSKS. SneBdy relief nn conr-.etc restu.non O* HKALTH.VIOOK and MANHOOD JAKANTEKD. T. y.f grandest discovery of tho Nineteenth Oniury.

1

once lor Illustrated Pamphlet free. Addreaa

»0lTAIC HIT CD.. MARSHALL, MICK.

BOOKS.—125 Tons

Of Standard Books, many ot them the best editions publisoed. "iour choice sent for^ examination before payment, on reasonable evidence of good faith, the books to be I eturued at my expense If not satisfactory. Special btireains this month. New pubfiontions every week. Prices lowt-r than ever before known, ranidng from two cent! for Tennyson's "Enoch Anlen," unabride'C'1 large type, to $15 for the largest and ..est" American Cyclopedia. Mot sold by dealers, —prices too low. Circulars free. Mention this paper.

JOHN B. ALDEN, Publisher, N°, 18 Vesey sireet. New Vortf.

McKeen Bros'. Mill^

Cor- Tenth and Main Sts,

Is one of the largest aDd finest mills iai tbe State. All ine luactunery haw been recently pot in at a cost of twenty-two Vthousand dollars, ard is of tbe latest im-'" proved pattern.

The flour is the finest that can be made by any process. t" Tbe Hiffheait Cavil Price Paid for*'-

Wheat.

Try their flour and you will never use th»l-' product of ttie old process again.

Naval Battles of the World..

By EDWARD SHIPPED. Medical Director U.' 8. F. A thrllliug Pictoriui Ills tory of the' World's great yea Flgh:s, with specimens of Naval Arcditeeture of a»l ag*sf. A record of W'onOerfnl Exploits more interesting than fletion. Price only $3. It sells everywqere. Annritc make $100.00 per montn. Address NYCLLLO JT MCCCRDY & Co., Cincinnati.

MoMECHAN'd PATEN FOR

HITCHING STRAP

ifiest, cheupes?7mc8t convenient and oa Hitching Strap ever Invented. Sent reoe Id on receipt of 50 «ents by the par­4 ent and sol' manufacturer. Address

W. A. MCMECHAN,St.Clalrsville, O.

DIPHTHERIA!

JOHNSON'S ANODYNE LINIMENT WIU. •osltlvely prevent this terrible disease, and will positively core nine cues oat ot ten. Information th&t. /rUl save many live?, sent free bv mail. P^n't delay a •moment. Prevention Is better tcon cure. I. S. JONT^ 'ON

A CO.,

BOSTON, MASS., formerlv BANGOE,

PABSOR*' PUBSATXVB

JSM

FILLS make new rich hlooc

I fLfWfft send stamp at once for terms and Allan tV exclusive territory on our new Rnbscrlptlon n._ia .—-..everybody ten book, worth ftstllj •aWjSrtimcH its cost.

We have the best line of subscription books in the market, and solicit correspond tence with experienced canvassers.

FAIRBANKS, PALMER & Co., 183 and 185 Wabash avenue, Chicago.

CONSUMPTION.

I bave a positive ramady for the above diseaso by It*. jj' -j* thousands of ease* of tbe worst kind and of long Handing have boon cured. 1 ndced, so strong Is my fsitQ In Its efficacy, tbat I will send TWO BOTTLES FREE, to.her with TBE ATI 8K on this dlsoase, M.

III im iu»» a niitDciiu

Terre Haute, Ind.

Eraolltear.aVALUABLE

P. O. address. Itl Pearl St. 3few York,

ther with a VALUABLE TBE A GiveBxpressand! T. A. SLOCUM,

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Stat**, Von roe Sts., Chicago. Wfllftnd prvwiM totnv sdrfraa tb«lf

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DENTIST. 839, s6uthwest cor--ner of Fourth and Walnutstreets,. Terre Haute, Ind.

Teeth extracted without pain. All work

from 19 south Sixth street. -,f

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