Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 13 September 1883 — Page 3

SfSiPiS

Oh,MyBack!

That's a common expression and has a world of meaning. How much suf%ring is summed up in it

The sing* ilar thing about it is, that pain in the back is occasioned by so many things. May be caused by kidney disease, liver complaint consumption, cold, rheumatism,dyspepsia,overwork, nervous debility, SEE.

Whateve- the cause, don't neglect it, Something is wrong altd ~:eds prompt attention. No medicine has. yet been discovered that will so quickly and surely cure such diseases as BROWN'S IRON BITTERS, and it does this by commencing at the foundation, and making the blood pure and rich.

Wm. P. Marshall, of Logansport, tatiana,writes: My wife has for many years been troubled from pain in her back and general debility incident to her sex. She has taken one bottle of Brown's Iron Bitters, and I can trathftilly say that she has been so much benefited that she pronounces the only remedy of many medicines dw has tried."

Leading physicians and clergymen use and recommend BROWN'S IRON BITTE«gt It has cured others suffering as you are, and it will cure you.

Home Hems.

—"All your own fault

If you remain bIck when you can Get hop bitters that never—

THe Wonderful Efflw?y of

DR. SCHENCK'S MANDRAKE PILLS

EM been so frequently and satisfactorily proven that seems almost superfluous to aay anything more in their »vo». The Immense and constantly maKMlng demand for tbem, both in this and foreign conntnee, i* the beat evidenoo of their value. Their bale to-day in the United States is far greater than ^ay other oathartio medicine. This demand .uot spasmodic, it is regular and steady. It Is not of favday or yesterday, it is an increase thai hes been cieedily growing for the last thlxty-ftveyeara. What ate the reasons for this great and growing demand ITr.

Schenek'a Mandrake Pills contain no mercury, and yet Ciey act with wonderful effect upon the hver. They cleanse the stomach aod bowels of aU irritating matter, whieh. if allowed to remain, poisons tbe blood, and brings on Malaria, Chill* and Fever, and many other diseases. They gt~,e health and strength to the digestive organ? They areata appetite and give vigor to the whole s»b. jm. They are In cot the medicine of all others which should be .aken In times like the present, when malarial and liier epidemics are raging, as they prepare tbe sys. tn to resist attacks of disease of every character. nr. Pehenck'a MaiMce Pills are sold by all d/ugrtsts at 85c. per boa, or sent ny mail, postpaid. on receipt of price. Dr. .Schenck's Baok on Osnwsptimt Iir» Mr Complaint and Dyaycpal*, in Fnsttsh tierman, is sent Ave to ail. Address Dr. J. H.

McKeen Bros'. Mill,

Cor- Tenth and Main Sts-,

la one of the largest and finest mills in the State. All tne machinery has been recently put In at a coat of twenty-two thousand dollars, and la of the latest improved pattern.

The flour Is the finest that can be made by any process.

Tbe Blfkcat Cash Price Paid f«r Wheat.

Try their flour and you will never use the product of tha old process again.

McMEOHAN'8 PATENT FOR

HITCHING STRAP,

beet, cheapest, most convenient and oa Hitching Strap ever invented. Bent reoe Id on receipt of 50 cents by the patent and sole manufacturer. Address

a

Fail.

The weakest woman, smallest child, and sickest invalid can use hop bitters with safety and great good —Old men tottering around froji Rheumatism, Kidney trouble or any weakness will be almost new by using hop bitters. —My wife and daughter were made healthy by the use of hop bitters and I recomnr-nd them to my people—Methodist Clergyman.

Ask any good doctor If Hop

jBilters are not the best family medicine On earth. —Malarial A cue »nd Biliousness, will lea«« o»oij uwighborhood as sdod as hop bitters arrive. "—My mother drove the paralysis and neuralgia all out of her system with hop bitters."—Ed. Oswego 8un.

Keep the kidneys healthy with hop oitters and yoU need not tear sickness. Ice water is rendered harmless and morn refreshing and reviving with hop bitters id each draught. —Tbe vigor of youth for the aged and infirm in bop bitters.

W. A. McMcohan,St.ClairsvUle, O.

CLARA LOUISA KELLOGG,

Tbe-career of Clara Louisa Kellogg is one which will ever be a valuable example and trustworthy guide to all vocal aspirants. She was born at Sumter, South Carolina, in 1842, but her parents were from New England, and her earlier years were passed in Connecticut, where she was educated at tbe free schools.

Though her voice was rather sweet, it attracted no particular attention, and when singing in a church choir at Lynne, Conn., her pretty voice was quite ignored in the presence of more vigorous organs

In 1858, ter parents were residing in New York city, and knowiDg their daughter's desire to became a public singer, consulted with Miss Eliza Logan, the once distinguished actrtss, and sister ot Olive Logan.

Miss Logan attempted to discourage the young girl by pointing out the haps and mishaps that are inevitably connected with a lite on the stage, and dwelt at length upon the unjust obloquy which attaches to the name of almost every actress, but in spite of the obstacles Miss Kellogg realized that she must do something for sustenance, and preferring the stage to the drudgery of the seamstress or the shtp girl, she made her first appearancfe.

Her tailure was most pronounced, apparently hopeless. But there was plucky spirit still left in the girl's heart, and instead of turning to the sewing machine, she gave her days and nights to carcful and laborious study. Her second appearance, while it was cot a grand success, yet gave her hope and confidence in her belief that earnest labor would meet with its reward.

At last, in 186j, she nade her debut, at the Academy of Music, in "Rigoletto," again meeting with failure. Three times, did this young artist make her appearance, before the public granted her a favorable reception.

Since then she has been more or less ol a celebrity on the lyric and operatic stage. She has, undeniably, a fine voice, face aud figure, but knows less about acting than she does about gracious manners and ladylike behavior on or off the stage, and that is equivalent to saying ^e knows very little. The praise of the unduly enthuthusiastic years ago addled the poor girl's brain, and she has since then been an insufferable bundle of affectation and arrogance, done up, it must be confessed, in dainty dimity. If she could learn something about acting and is not. too old to profit by instruction in some of tbe rudimentary lessons of stage manners and good breeding, she might regain tbe popularity she won as a sweet, young .debui&nte and has lost in these later year' by her petulant temper and bad behavior on the stage.

ROBERT COLLYER.

From the Anvil to the Pulpit.

The riDg of the anvil, the glow of the forge, the wheezing of the bellows and the scattering of sparks under the sturdy strokes of the hammer, were the accompaniments to the early ministerial training of the Rev. Robert Collyer.

Like Elihu Burritt and Lyman Beecher, he kept his book ever beforo him, on a little wooden shelf, the leaves held open with a bit of iron. Thus he could catch a sentence now and then, and ponder over it as he turned tha heated irons on his anvil. His mind and body progressed together through combined mental and physical developmentSuch men touch the hearts of the people rather than those whose gilt edged rhetoric leads them astray from the good, old, expressive Anglo-Saxou into vague and speculative themes, too complicated and crude for the average mind to follow.

Robert Collyer was bora Dec. 8th

1823, at Keighley,in Yorkshire, England. He received DUt fouryears of schooling, and at the

age

In 1847 he was converted to Method* ism, and on Sundays, at the neighboring chapels, gained bis first experience as a preacher, and laid the foundation of his work as a minister.

In 1850 he decided to emigrate to America, and while at Shoemakertown, P»., obtained a licence as a preacher, working at his trade through the week. Later he became acquainted with Dr: Furness, who invited him to preach in his pulpit. He did so, thus incurring the charge of heresy, and losing his right to a license trom tbe Conference. This occurred in January. 1859, and in Febiuary of the same year he was invited to the pulpit of the Second Unitarian Society of Chicago, newly organized, with a membership of only forty, but which rapidly became ore of the most flourishing churches ia the northwest.

Alter twenty years of noble work with this Society, and with much hesitation,he accepted the call of the Church ot the Messiah, in New York City.

Tbe Unity Church tent to Tkley and purchased tbe old anvil in Collyer's smithy, and it is cherished by them as a memorial of the humble beginning of bis life.

The luxuriant growth of hair, streaked with white, which covers his large head, and the general cast of his features, remind one forcibly of Beecher He re sembles him also in his straightforward originality anu force of will, wbioh leads him to break down tbe barriers of sectarian influence and tread the broad track of common sense, unhampered by the restraints of creed. He has th« plain, honest, earnest and enthusiastic manner if speech and flow of thought which appeals both to the feelings and to reason.

ID hiB essays and discourses he uses the Anglo-Saxon words almost entirely, preferring to link his thoughts together with hooks of steel, rather than with elaborate silken syllables.

If the grime ana dust of the smithy and the clang of the hammer upon the anvil tends to mould and shape the lives of men in general, as it has with Robert Collyer, it would lie better to apprentice more ot our youth to the trades and send less of them to college.

I have been afflicted for twenty years, during tbe months of August and Sept. with hay fever, and have tried various remedies without relief. I was induced to try Ely's Cream Balm have usad it with favorable results, and can confidently recommend it to all similarly afflicted. Kobert W. Townley, (ex-Mayor) Elizabeth, N. J.

I have been a hay fever sufferer for three years: have often heard Ely's Cream Balm spoken of in the highest terms did not take much stock in it because of the many quack medicines. A friend persuaded me to try the Balm, and I did so with wonderful success. This recommendation you can use for the benefit of Hay Fever sufferers. T. 8. (Jeer, Syra cuse, N. Y. Price 50 cents.

Mr Storey, the editor and proprietor of the Chicago Times, is nearly 70 years old, and is living quietly while he is building oa« of tbe largest private resi dences in the cenntry.—New York Herald.

WASHINGTON, D. C., May 15th, 1880. Gentlemen—Having been a sufferer for along time from nervous prostration and general debility, 1 was advised to try Hop Bitters. 1 have taken one bottle and I have been rapidly getting better ever since, and I think it the best medicine I ever used. I am now gaining strength and appetite, which was all gone, and I was in despair until 1 tried your Bitters. I am now well, able to go about and do my own work. Before taking it, I was completely prostrated.

T3E TEEitE HAUTB WEEKLY GAZETTE.

of eight or nine went to

work at a linen factory,where he remained six years. He was then apprenticed to a blacksmith, his father's trade being be tame, and for twelve years remained at the llkley forge.

To the uuiies of these twelve years he owes, no doubt, the robust frame and sound lungs, which are &o rare in the clerical profession.

MRS. MABTSTTJABT.

A Springfield (Mass.) man has found his runaway wife after a search for her lasting three years, and dou'itless feels very bad about it. She went away with auother man.

Prof Hereford's Baking Powder

Maintains Health.

Dr. Samuel Jackson, late Professor in Pennsylvania University, says. ''While it ma*'es a light, sweet, nutritious and palatable bread, it restores the phosphates which bad been separated from the flour, and thus adapts as an aliment for the maintenance of a healthy state of the organization."

Vl

The diseases that the London Lancet says may be conveyed by books are measles, scarlet fever, diptheria, sore throat, whoopiDg cough, bronchitis, and perhaps, phthisic.

IS PHYSICAL PERFECTION WORTH STRIVING F?H? Do yon 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.

How shall we stop the great evil ot' lying •—New York Observer. Don't now, give it up. It's a habit you ought never to have lallen into.—Cincinnati Saturday Night.

A'GARD.

To all who are suffering from the errors and indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, loos of manhood, &c., I will send a recipe that will cure you FREE OF CHARGE. The great remedy was discovered by a missionary in South America. Send a sell addressed envelope to tne

Kbv. Juskph

T.

Station D.. New York City.

uNew

Isman,

Democracy," exclaims an es-

teomed contemporary, "won't wash." Good heavens, man! who said it would? —[Indianapolis Journal.

Cured My Wife's Weakness. From Evansville, Ind., the home ot our correspondent, Mr. Jno. R. Patterson, comes the following: "Samaritan Nervine cured my wife of a case ot female weakness." It's an extract from Mr. Patterson' letter. $1.50.

A Loss Prevented. ./^

I Many lose their beauty frcm the hair falling or fading. Parker's Hair Balsam supplies necessary nourishment, prevents falling and grayness and is an elegant dressing-

Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Eaion go to Terre Haute next Tuesday to visit their daughter, Mrs. R. H. Catlin. [Sullivan Timee.

IMPROVEMENT FOR MIND AND BODY Brown's Bronchial Troches for Coughs and Colds: "I cannot very well do with out them. There is Homing to be com. paied with them."—Rev. O. D. Watkins, Walton, Ind. Price 25 cento a box.

Mr. ard Mrs. M. B. Crawford, of Terre Haute, spent last Sunday with her parents, Dr. and Mrs. J. Thompson. [Sullivan rimes.

Horsford's Acid Phosphate.. A Necessity. Dr. C. O. Files, Portland, Me., says: "Ol all the samples of medicines sent me during the past dozen years it is the only one I have ever found which has become a necessity in my own household."

The

watch will take place Monday evening at Frank McOue's residence, corner of Fourth and Tippecanoe streets All holders will please be present.

Enterprising local agents wanted in this town tor an article that is sure to sell live druggists and grocers prelerrei. Address Humist^n Food Preservative Co., 72 Kilby street, Boston.

mgm

A Wrestler Arrested.

New York.Sept.

Books 2 Tons a Day.

OVER 500,000 VOLUMES READY. The choicest literature of the world, often the bes' rditions published. lOO Page Catalogue Free. Lowest prices fever kaown. Not raid by dealers. 8ent for examination BEFORE paynent. on evidence of good faith. JOHN B. ALDEN, Publisher, 18 Vesey street, i*. T. P. U. Bo* 1227.

CLIFF & 8ON-

Manufacturers of Looomotlve, Stationary and Marine Boilers (Tubnlar and Cylinder], Iron Tanks, Smoke Stacks, Ac. Shops on

lint Street, bet. Walnut 4c Paplar Terre Haute, Ind. WRepairing done lu the most snbstanla manner at short notice, and at as low drlce as any establishment La the stat*.

KIDDER BROS' WABASH MILLS Main treet and River.

Highest price for wheal, ad best flour in the west, made by tiie Gray patent roller.

RVVV9 tend stamp at once for terms and ARM 19 exclusive territory on our new subscription -everybody ten book, wurth MWa* ••WTsttimcB its cost.

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

FAIRBANKS, PALMES A Co., 18B and 185 W«hiwh av.

HOLMAN'S PICTORIAL

FAMILY BIBLE:

Containing both versions of the New Testlment, with the Parables of our Lord and Saviour, handsoneiy Illustrated with 10 full-page Engravings. Our Bibles contain 8,000 pages, 2,500 illustrations. Fine Photograph Albums, elegant designs, handsomely boand. Extra lndacements offered to energetic Agents, Illustrated catalogue sent on application. A. J. HOLMAX Co.,

IV.'

raffle for Thomas J. Power's

8.—Theobaud Bauer

tbe well known wrestler, has been arrest* ed on a charge of obtaining merchandise under false pretences and for having assigned and disposed of bis property with intent to defraud. s'a-

The weak, worn and Idyspeptic sHould take Colden's Liebig Liquid' Beef and Tonic Invigorator. Ask for Colden's, of drugyists.

Nasby, in one ot his recent letters, says a tariff position, which does not have to be explained is "valooless to the Dimocracy".

A man suffering from debility and loss of appetite took two bottleo of Hood's Sarsaparilla, gained ten pounds and got well. -V'

Mary Anderson's favorite amusement now is boating on the Thames, and she is greatly admired, in her, "killing boating costume.

*^*^1

It is the manifest destiny ot Gienn's Sulphur Soap to supersedo oily unguents or salves for cutaneous eruptions.^

jy In the Diamond Dyes more coloring is given for 10 cents than in ano 15 or 25 cent dyes, and they give faster and more brilliant colors.

At last advices Mrs. Langtry was exhibited herself to crowded houses inGlasg°w-

Mr. E. S. Danieli, Pros. Atty. 29th Jud. Dist., Indiana says "Brown's Iron Bitters is the remedy for indigestion."

Free! Cards and Chromos.

We will send free by mall a sample set ot our large German, French and American Cbromo Cards, on tinted and gold ground awith a price list of over 200 different dee signs, on receipt of a stamp for postage. W, will also send free by mail as samples ten ot our beautiful chromos, on recel? of ten cet ts to pay for packing and postage also enclose a confidential price list of our large ell chromos. Agents wanted. Address F. Glkason A Co., 46 Hummer street, Boston, Mass.

Philadelphia.

VIGO Woolen Milts are still in the re tail trade, with 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 njady to exchange goods for wool at net oash prices. U. B. JKFFKRS. Cor. Tenth and Main streets, Terre Haute

Km

A

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WWOISUNACQUAINTKD WITH THE OtOQHAPMV OflMtS COUWTRY WILL SEI SV EXAMINING THIS MAP THAT THE

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Miss Blanch Payne, of Washington, D. ,is visiting ber cousin, Mrs. J. Fish back, of north Fifth and-a-half treet. v,

PTA pint of the finest ink for families or schools can be made from a ten*cent package of Diamond Dye. They color Silk, Wool oi Cotton.

Cars, Pullman's Prettiest Falaoe •, and the Best Line of Dining Cms

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A New and Direct Line, via Seneca and Kankakee, has reoently opened between Richmond. Norfolk,Newportbeen

News. Chattanooga, Atlanta, Au-

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MOW THYSELF.

A Book For Every Man, Young, Middle-aged and Old.

THE untold miseries that result from In] discretion in early life may be alleviates and eared. Those who doubt this assertion should purchase tbe new medical work published by the Peabody Medical Institute. Boston, entitled THE 8C1KNCE OF LIKE OR. SELF-PRESERVATION. Exhausted Vitality, Nervous and Physical Ueblllty, Premature Decline in Man, or Vitality Impaired by the Errors of Yoath or too close application to business, ma) be restored and manhood regained.. 258th edition, revised and enlarged, published. It is a standard medical work, the best in the English language, written by a physician or great ezperlenoe, to

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VATIO*.

Is beyond all comparison the most extraordinary work on Physiology ever published. There Is nothing whatever that the married or single can eltner require or wish to xnow put what is fully explained—[London Lancet. THB SCIBNCB OP LIPB OB, SBLF-PBBSBB-

VATION,

is a marvel of art and beauty, warranted to be abetter medical book in every sense that can be obtained elsewhere for double the price, or the money will be refunded in every Instance.—[Author.

N. B.—YOUNG and MIDDLE AGED MEN can save much time, suffering and expense by reading tbe 8clenceof Life, or conferring with the Author, who may qe consulted on all diseases requiring skill and experience. Address

Peabody Medical InstituteOr,

W.

H. PARKER, M. D.

4 Bulflnch Street. Boston, Mass.

Mason & Hamlin

flRC A MQare certainly best, having been unannvgo decreed at every Great World's Industrial Competition for Sixteen Years: no other American organs having been found equal at any. Also cheapest. Style 109 octaves sufficient compass and power, with best quality, for popular sacred and secular music in schools or families, at only $22. Oue hundred other styles at $80, $57, $66, $72,178 $93, $108, $114, to $5110and up. -The larger styles are wholly unrivaled Dy any other organs. Also for easy payments. New Illustrated catalogue free. This company have commenced the

ty of tone and durability. Will not require tuning.one-quarter as much as other pianos. Illustrated circulars free.

The MASON A HAMLIN Organ and Piano Co., 154 Tremont St. Boston, 44 E. 14th St. New York, 149 Wabash Ave. Chicago. Agents Wanted

Innedlately

TAKE!

for

the Life ef

The World Watch Stationery Package ia the fastest selling ar­

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SSJSf&NOTICE

PATENTS

Obtained, and all other business in tbe U. S. Patent Office attended to foi KODKRATX PBCS.

Our office is opposite the U. S. Pateut Office, and we can obtain Patents In let* time than those remote from WASHINGTON.

Send MODKL OB DRAWING. We advise as to "patentability free ol charge and we make NO CHABOS UNLESS WB OBTAIN PATENT.

We refer, here, to the Postmaster, tbe Superintendent of Money Onler Division, and To officials of tlie U. 8. l'aient Office. For circular, advice, terms, am reference! to actual clients In your own state or county, address

C.

A.

SNOW

4c

CO.,

Opp. Patent Office Washington, D. O

I

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To meet the demands of farmers and dealers for reliable seed, we offer in lots to suit, a limited quantity of CAREFULLY SELECTED ASB THOROUGHLY TESTED Seed Corn, purchased and eolected by our own special agents.

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DIPHTHERIA!

dOHNSON'S AMODYMI LIMMtllT (Maturely prevent this terrible dllseaae, and will post Sivetyeurenlne eases oat of tea. Tnfninialli ii tM wfll aave many Uvea, swrtfteu by mall Don't dalar a ^SSf^JMSSSSRibjffjgrasm cure. 1 &JOH»

STOPPEOFREE

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OIL KLU£B GREAT INCSVERES AraBBaaor ai

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I CURE FITS!

Vhea I aay care 1 do not mesa merely te stop them time aad then hare tbem return again. I mean a radU cal euro. 1 bar* mads the dlaease of FITS, SHLSrer or PALL1MO 8I0KNCS8 a llfo-long atndy. I warrant my remedy to ear* tbe wont oaaea. Becenao otbera bar* falledlanoreaaon fbrnotnowraeelrlBgaeera. SeedaS once tof a traatiae aad a Free Bottle of jay tafttltHe lemedr. Otre IxpM and Fee* Offlea It oaata ya• BottOnir R»r a IrtaL aad I will car* yoa. --v

SJdieaa Dr. B. O. BOOT, ln rearlSt, ItawToik,

OMSUBrriM.

bare a posltlro retnedy fur the abo^e dlaease by Its Baa tbonsaada of caaea of the worst klnl and of lone •tacdlne bare been cored. Indeed, ao atroor 1* rayfaltfi JaTiU afleaey, that I wiU eend TWO BOTTLES KRKK. to•ether with a VALUABLS TREATISE on tbla diaaaae, te ear nflknr. Qlre faprea and P. O. addroaa b.

TR^W, N A TOOCC*,

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