Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 14 February 1884 — Page 4
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W. a BALL COJIPAHT.
MmUrad at the Poetojtce at Terre ffamtt,Jnd. Smond»etan maU matter.
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Daily 16 oenta per week 66 cents per
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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14,1884.
THE Mahone gerrymander of the state of Virginia was done away with by the legislature which redistricted the state in accordance with justice and common sense,
SUNSET" Cox has been chosen chairman of the Democratic congressional caucus and Republican representative Lamb is one of the tour secretaries oftlie .• same body.
1
tl'
4
WM. H. KBRNAN, the political lunatic,
wlio formerly edited the Okolona States* is now at the head of a Sunday paper in Leavenworth. In opposing prohibition in Kansas he talks as he did while in Mississippi, concerning the negroes. "Let it be fought with ballots, and il' ballots fail, let it be iought with bullets till it is blotted forever from the statute book."
ONE of the features of the flood along the Ohio river and its tributaries will be the destruction of many hundreds of miles of fences. In this way thousands ot dollars will be wasted. It will be perhaps one-half the lotal loss. And yet tie fact remains that it our laws on the subject of fences were rational, requiring owners of stock to keep them up instead of letting them run at large and requiring others to keep them fenced off of their premises, half this loss would have 'been saved.
THE people of the (Tnited States will contribute very largely to a fund which shall enable the people ot Lawrenceburg to rebuild their town on high ground, above any possible flood. They would do this most cheerfully as it would end this annual recital of the woes of that amphibious village. AJB to the site of the town, let it be turned over to Seth Green as a pond for breeding fishes. But the people should get away from a place which in the matter of being subject to overflow is second only to the bed of the river and worse than a sand-bar in the channel. r-'"
CALKINS,.Congressman from this state, wants our navy built up so that wc may not be combelled, as he says we have, to pocket insults from all other countries. That is the ostensible reason as given by Calkin?. The real reason is to be found in the pocket of John Roache and his organized band of plunderers. We have very little of a navy, and we need less. We have no foreign possessions to protect and we need none. In promoting the welfare of the people living in our own land Congress will find ample scope for the exercise of its powers, and if we leave others alone we shall have no occasion for fights.
THE Young Men's Democratic Club organized for the campaign of '84 Saturday nigbt. A report of the proceedings will be found in the local columns ot today's GAZETTE. In the election of Mr. Edwin O'Eoyle as President and of Mr. John Kelley as vice-President two men have been put at the front who have never been identified with politics as candidates. Representatives of the business and industrial interests of Terre Haute, citizens and tax payers whose inters are identical with that .of the great body of people of this and every community, their acceptance of these placcs 4s an indication of the deep-seated and far-reaching feeling pervading the yanks of the people and demanding a change in the management of federal affairs. These tw" are specially mentioned because they are at the head of the organization but what is true of them also holds good of the othei officers chosen. And indeed the most significant fact in connection with the club is the character -of the members as well as their number It is bringing out this year men who hitherto contented themselves with merely casting a ballot on election day. Now hey show a willingness to do some of he work neccessary in getting ready for hat event.
MEASURES of relief for the aid of the suffers by the Ohio river flood cannot be too prompt or too extensive. A flood now holds that unfortunate strip oi thickly populated territory in its grasp with a tenacity which gives no immediate hope of being loosened. A'.l precedents in the way of high water have been surpassed. The water is higher than it was ever known before at Cincinnati and points above and below there. Nor has the end yet come. Each succteding dispatch records a higher notch on the river gunge, and with each inch of increase wide areas are brought beneath the turbid tide. When it will stop no one may venture to
predict. Flourishing towns of last month 'money to charitable objects is a
—r I* ^r
may be washed out ot existence before the waters go down, and the receding current may carry away on its remorseless bosem the last vestiges of wrecked tad rained homes. Want, suffering, sickness and death will be the awful epilogue of this dreadful tragedy, where trouble, as is its wont has not come singly but wave on wave. If ever there was need of Christian charity it ig at this present time. Bat there is no need to fear that the appeal will go unheeded Everywhere the response is being made in no uncertain tones. Money and supplies are being sent with all dispatch. It is the one cheering thing in this chapter of woe. And it is a beautiful thing to witness the universal kind, liness of a great people exhibited on an oocasion of this kind to their brethren in distress.
PLOWING BT WIND POWER. Rufus Porter, of New Haven, Conn., is the typical Tankee. He is now in his old age and has been from his youth what is called in the vernacular of his home 'a notionate" man. An inventor by instinct he has followed it as a profession. Being endowed with a lively imagination and a hopeful disposition he has been as csrtain that each of his wonderful inventions would revolutionize the world as Ool. Sellers ever was, the missing ingredient for his eye water being found, that he had discovered a gold mine.
Someway or other, however, and it is an amazing pity, he has always hitherto missed his calculations, and the fortune he has been on the point of grasping a score of times has eluded him as it managed to elude the redoubtable Col. Sclera.
His latest scheme is perhaps his most novel one and there can be no sort o1 doubt that if it will only work it will be one of the greatest things imaginable. It is no less a thing than a device for harnessing the wind on the prairies and making it plow, as it has been harnesBed on the waters for centuries and been made to push ships across the seas. A description of the device is given in a letter to the Scientific American of a recent date and from the columns of that paper it is reproduced in this place. It will be found interesting reading. As the reader will notice plowing is only one of the duties about a farm it will be re* quired to perform. It will be a man ot all work about the premises. The description is as follows: "The Planet wind wheel has four square sails,one of which is always square before the wind, while two others are filled obliquely on an angle of forty-five degrees with the direction of the wind, the motion being horizontal so that the action of the wind upon the two oblique sails is equal to that on the one before the wind. The average size of the sails is twenty feet square, so that if the force of wind is equal to one pound per square foot, its force upon the sails will be 800 lb. Such a breeze travels !5 miles an hour or 22 feet per second. A bieeze that travels 26 miles an heur exerts a force of lour pounds per square foot, which would be 3,200 lb. upon the wind wheel sails. If the sails move half as fast as the wind, the force of the wind upon the sails will be only onefourth, or 1 lb. per foot, and the sails will move only 20 feet per second The foroe of 8G0 lb. moving 20 feet per second, or 1,200 feet per minute, works 30 horse power, equal to the common labor ot 60 horses. This wind wheel may be erected upon the center of a triangular or narrow-shaped frame, 85 feet lonjr by 30 feet wide, mounted upon three wheels, each being 5 feet in diameter, with rims 15 inches wide, the front being mounted iu a circular horizontal ring or annular platform, with a tiller extending rearward, whereby the machine is steered. The other two wheels are mounted upou the two ends of a 30 feet axle. The main central shaft of the wind wheel is connected to an equalizer, from which two shafts extend to the two driving wheels, applying equal force to each, whether running in a straight line or in curves. The center post is 25 feet high, and the sails receive the wind from all directions equally but «when required to stop, the sails are all pointed to the wind by a lever, so the wind has no power on them. This machine will travel with a gang of ten plows 4 milea an hour, thus plowing four acres an hour with the attendance of only one man. It will run against the wind, but not quite so fast as before the wind and will ascend hills wherever horses can work. It will harrow, sow, reap and mow, thrash grain, shell and grind corn, carry loads, irrigate lands at the rate of 100 acres a day, or will tiave] 10 miles an hour in any direction, wilh 20 passenger*. But all these things require a good breeze. The cost of the machine of mecium size will be $250, not including plows, mowers, reapers, etc. "A larger machine will furnish 100 herse power. Small wind wheels, with sails only 4 feet square, may be made for $10 each. They are useful for raising water, washing, etc. "The medium size will work with a very light breeze, in which they will do good service in various kinds of work. In cases in which a steady uniform motion is required, they may be regulated by a small and cheap wooden brakegovernor. The gang plows to be used are rotaries, which require less power than the common mould-board. Ope machine will answer for several farms
000 for tbe relief of the Eulferers by the'
tion is immediately available fcr tbe pur-
doubtful one. It opens up another channel in addition to the many already exist* ing by which the money accumulated by taxation is lost to the government.
PEOPLE AND THINGS.
THE WORLD 18 AABTTLB.
Owen Meredith in l/ucile: The world is a nettle disturb it, it stings Grasp it firmly, it stings not. On one of two things, If you would not be stung, it behooves yon to settle
Avoid it, or crash it. The heart of a man's like that delleate weed Which reqnires to be tramped on, boldly indeed,
Ere it give forth the fragrance you wish to extract. v:y'V God means every man to be happy, be sure He sends us no sorrows that have not some care, Oar duty down here is to do, not to know
Live as though life were earnest and life will be so.
Major John M. Carson, of Washington becomes editor of the Denver Tribune, at (5,000 a year.
It is claimed that John L. Sullivan is making $25,000 a year, and having a good time in the bargain.
Mr. I. W. England, publisher of the New York Sun, has been ill for a few weeks with sciatic rheumatism.
The latest story attributed to Tom Ochiltree is one which makes him the prospective son-in-law of Bonanza Mackay.
Jefferson Davis has erected a fine monument of American marble to his benefactress, Mrs. .Sarah A. Dorsey, at Natchez, Miss.,
Prof. Cassamsjor, of New York, concludes from the red sunset that a ring similar to that of Saturn is forming around the earth's equator.
Chicago mourns the loss of a grocer who did business for twenty-eight years with scales which gave his customers only fourteen ounces to the pound.
Mr. Bjornson, an actor of note at flam burg, Germany, is the son of Bjornstjorne Bjornson, the Norwegian poet. The latter has been living with his family in Paris for about a year.
John Boyle O'Reilly's memoTial poem on Wendell Phillips is receiving flattering notices everywhere. He began it after 6 o'clock Sunday evening, and it was in the printer's hands before 12.
Id win Booth, who has just finished very successful engagement in Phila' delphin, bas declined an engagement in Pittsburg upon a guarantee of $10,000 clear for a single week. He prefers to go to Boston.
Arthur Peel, son of the late Sir Robert Peel, will probably be the next Speaker of the English House of Commons. He is 54 years old and is of stately presence. He is called a "solemn swell." His present position is whipper-in:
Domingo Freire, the Brazilian physician, well known among medical wen because of his theory of inoculation as preventive of yellow fever, writes from Rio Janeiro that all his experiments upon one hundred and seventy-three persons, including himself, have been successful. A decree has been issued by the Brazilian government authorizing him to practice vaccination.".C
The Earl of Aylcsford, who at one time was the greatest spendthrift in Europe and the intimate friend of the Prince of Wales, is living near Big Springs, Texasj on a 27,000 acre farm. His brother, the Hon. Daniel Fincb, is with him. Some time ago the Earl was divorced from bis wit'e, banished from society and limited to $50,000 a year, so he buried himself in Texas. They spend their time riding, hunting, and having fun with the cowboys, with whom they are very popular. The cowboys call the Earl ''the Judge" and bis brother "the Kid."
The Maiquis of Lansdowne, who is tcboganning at Montreal, is thus described by n. newspaper correspondent who attended his reception: "The Marquis wore a black Prince Albert coat and brown trousers. He is just the size and shape of Jay Gould. He is very young looking, but is probably 85. His brown mustaches run into the patches of whisker in front of his ears. The whole top of his head is bald, and he has big, thin, booked nose. He bent his arm in front of his waist when he shook hands, and bowed and smiled at each encounter."
PERSONAL.
C. W. Ross says he wrote $31,000 insurance yesterday. Mr" Isaac Uavolt, one the promioent business men of Martinsville, was in the city this morning.
David Davis, not the Senator, but David Davis, ot Paris, 111., was in the city yesterday. David looked upon the wine when it was red.
Wm. Marvin and J. A. Mitchell, prominent citizeus ot Walnut Prairie 111., are in tbe city to-day. They catce up yesterday on the Belle of Fountain.
James Schee has the best defense possible for the charge of cutting no. Bain. Bain himself insists that Jim wns not the m«n and was not preseut at all. To be accused of the crime when entirely in-
CONGBES8 yesterday with practical un- .. v„ inn,, noceiit was pretty tough on Jim and he animity passed a bill appropriating $300,ha8 the 8ymV.athy Gf
saV8
flood in the Ohio and its tributaries. It f-onvention of Sugar Qreek township went to the Senate and was immediately Trustee. pa8std there and a few minutes later was' Messrs. E. iv .u o. -ru I have returned from -New Albany where sigmd by the President. The appropna-
hii iriends. He
he will be a candidate before the
|bey went
as escort for the remains of the
iate £r.
poses in view. Although help is sad!y M. to-day from tbe Episcopal church by needed in the flooded district and the Knights Tern plarof iN ewAlbwiy. Messrs. Somes and Kogers bad quite a money thus voted will do great good, the Lime
Austin. He was buried at 2 p.
geUing
policywf having Congres* vote the public count ot the high water necessitating a
very round
into New Albany on ac-
about trip.
Briefs Frea Mlddletowa aid Vieiaity.
Adra Car is still visiting friends in this vicinity, allot whom would be glad to have her remain permanently.
Nagg Reed's babe waa buried here Wednesday. George Wilson's wife and infant were buried last Saturday.
Francie, the only daughter of James and Amanda Shattuek, is in a critical oondit'.on: also Pearly, the youngest son. Dr. J. S. Leachman, of Prairieton, ia the physician now in charge.
Gideon Foster has been quite siek, but is somewhat better. The widow Morgan is very siok.
Mr. Grubbs is also quite poorly. Samuel Kereheval bas almost given up all hopes of ever being any better.
The roaas are almoat impassable. Caleb Kirkim made out to get to the lodge Thursday night,—he being the only man from the eastern neighborhood who put in an appearance.
Wesley and Judge Johnson have work enough to keep them busy and are making money rapidly since they shut down on the credit system.
Newt Bledsoe is so mueh improved in health as to be able to make rails. Mr. Pounds' daughter Eliza, who has been attending tbe State Normal is at home sick with measles.
Miss Anna Pound, tbe musie teaoher, is atR. C. Elliotts, s'iek with tje mamps. Elijah Reed and Ed 8hoemaker are afflicted with mumps.
Julia Thomas, of the Commercial school is at home, having been exposed to the measles. It might be good policy for the township trustee to leave off visiting schools long enough to see after tbe poor of his township, as we understand that some of our gool citizens have been soliciting aid fr~destitute families.
Dr. Moore is doing a thriving business. Mrs. King, the widow lady living at Maurice Watson's, who broke her leg 'some months ago is now able to hobble around.
Joley Wilson is the proud father of a brand new girl baby. Anna Reed Is on the siok lint.
Lee Phillips and Hiram Mater moved their iamilies to Terro Haute last MOLday.
Link Myers started to Illinois last Wednesday. Allen Shoemaker talks ot starting a huckster wagon soon.
Sade and Kit Drakes' schools will both close on the same day. J. K. P. Goben and wife, Mrs. Thomas, Mrs. Frank Yeager and a few others near here keep Saturday for Sabbath or rest day.
Jim.Hauger, the accommadating salesman at Jim Reds' store is a candidate for matrimony and open to proposals this year. N.'B.—girls.
Clel Fisk wends his way to Janies on Battle quite frequently. AUNTSHKBB.
St. MARY'S AND VICINITY.
Our fair is over, and notwithstanding the inclemency of tbe weather there was a large crowd in attendance. Miss Lizzie Kiggin was voted tbe most popular young lady, and carried off the beautiful china tea set, which was presented by Mr. F. M. Curley, of St. Mary's, and Mr. Theo. 8tahl, of Terre Haute. Mrs. Dr. Belt, of Sandford presented a beautiful pin cushion, which brought something over nine dollars. And those beautiful flowers presented by Mrs. Ed Corneli, of Indianapolis, went off like hot cakes re gardless of price. Our Reverend Pastor, Father Reihle extends his thanks to all those who helped the promotion of the fair in any direction, and the result was beyond all expectation. It amounted in all to over six hundred dollars.
Mrs. William Penniugton, who has been on the sick list is getting better. Lem Shank, of St.ringtown is in St. Mary's, assisting Uncle Lee Thralls in his cooper shop.
The protracted meeting is still in progress at Sandford they are having a lively time.
Alex. Bodine is preparing to burn a coal pit in the spring. Miss Ella Bell will visit her cousin, MrS, Ed Corneli, of Indianapolis again soon.
You have all missed it when you think vou have guessed SQUATTSRS DAUGHTER.
UXJOVS die with Scrofula. Urns would use and Potash
with Scrofula. UOMMffD-
New Goshen Items.
We now see the use of the gravel road. The meal mill at New Goshen is in full blast. It makes splendid meal. It should have a liberal patronage in order to keep it handy to us and not allow it to be taken away. It is located on Main and Miunick avenue.
O. Snip and Y. Schnide have just attended tbe entire course of the fine lectures by Dr Busseil.
a flue time next Saturday at Shanks school house. Let us all go. Let us see who are teaching our children.
The Shepherd school had a fine literary entertainment last week. Walt Shepherd has purchased his son Earl a fine encyclopedia. Mr. S. is up with the times and he intends that Earl may be.
Some ol the girls in our neighborhood^ little west of here, near the •Teams' and Bandys', are waiting for a snow. They want to see which way that bob slea driven by J. C. D. will slide Dick Holliog.- w-rth has just returned from Westfieid, 111., where he bas been on an extended chum-yura. Baxter Koonc^ played toy Harvey Bolton is home on a furlough Several farmers in Fayette do not take a county paper. No wonder ome men will carry a petitiosn against building a school bouse Yes, we have plenty of timber on the Democratic side for trustee We' lay our risht band mildly on Dies: Scott's shoulder, thus indication our preference for the man who took the ra two
yjara
ago without a shadow ot hope simply that our side might have a man in the field, who, throueh 1 is popularity, held the partj vote anil was elecied and who certainly will be the nominee now, it he will permit his name to go before the people. He will ee elected by the best majority ever cast in Fayette Marcus Dyer and C. F. Shirley will make worthy successors ot his in the years toeome The Republicans will have somo difficulty in getting a candidate. W. G. Sandford, O. B. Owen, Dan Barber, W. T. Pittinger, George Lambert, John Koonee, W. H. Robinson, Sitea Wolte, Jim Duck, J. B. Anderaon, Jim Watts, Wm. Faqua, J. B. Johnson and a number of others have been urged to run but they are backward about coming forward and being slaughtered David Kimbero visited Tom Webster Isst Sunday Len. Lenderman has been on the sick list.
O. SNIP & Y. Scrarox.
9o von Indigestion or Nervous Debility II muse wilder* Stomach Bittors.
How to Make Money.
Intelligence and Integrity are the first elements ot success bat these alone will net I ha young man to the front. To stimn1 te energy and Intensify application, a well defined purpose ia necessary. It was not by waltiag for something te tarn np that Cyras MoCormiek ooia«d his ideas into grain papers, and from being a poor boy, [became the possessor of ten million dollars, or by following a beaten track, that Samuel Pitcher made fame and wealth oat of a medical prescription. Gold hidden the California Sierras was useless. Bo mere merit not backed by energy and application is fruitless. By the' utilization of labor-saving machinery we produce more, and each individual is enabled to consume more of other's labor than was possible with oar fathers. In 1830, Beth Thomas sold wooden clocks for forty dollars apiece at which price bntfew families eonld afford a clock now his firnr furnish a superior metal clock for five dollars, and from the increased number sold, larger profits are realised. Sewing machines so mUch betterei he condition of women that they have been enab'ed to pay the proprietors fifty million of dollars profits. Col. Celt picked np an abandoned breeeh-leading gun, but with it he decided the battles of Solferino, Sedan, and Gettysburg, aad finally, clothed in velvet robes fastened with diamond buttons he stood before kings, doctor Pitcher's simple prescription,now ai familiar to the world under the name of Castoria, was only tbe resalt of a conscicatious purpose, and being waat it purported to be, has been adopted by a majority ot intelligent mothers throughout the world, and turned another golden stream into worthy hands.
The starting point of Dr. Pitchei's success was accident the fruition, sagacity. Daring the epidemic of cholera infantum, which prevailed with such fatality in the Eastern States in 1860, Samnel Pitcher came into prominence as "the Children's Doctor." HUsuc:essinBavingthe lives of children, and in treating their numerous complaints, induced him to formulate a prescription for general nse. Then the keen Doctor saw his opportunity. Putting aside hie saddle-bags he compounded Castoria with great care, and soon did a large business. His kettles gave way to caaldrons, and subsequently his cauldrons were supplanted by the immenee steam Tats now 10 be seen in the Laboratory opposite 8t. Paul's churchyard in the city of New York.
Doctor Pitcher intelligently combined his own interests with those of
hiB
patrons in
making a pare, harmless and superior preparation. Under no circumstances would he permit unripe, decayed or inferior ingredients to be used in Castoria. Finding it difficult to obtain the quantity of material rendered necessary by the increased demand, an agent was sent through parts of Asia and Africa, to seieot, gather, and tsaeh thena* tlves how to care senna. Being opposed to secret remedies, and particularly to the use
Natives Gathering Herbs far Casterla. of minerals and opiates, Dr. Pitoher boldly published his formula broadcast, thus chal longing the attention of physicians every, where. This was such an innovation upon the practitioners who believed that we should be content with Latin prescriptions, and of empirics who were enabled to impose apon a credulous public extravagant statements of the mysterious power of their remedies, that It gave rise to much vituperative criticism. Bat this common sense course of infdrmingu8 just what we were giving our children, appealed so directly to intelligence, that it brought, advanced physicians upon the side of plain dealing, many of whom began regularly to prescribe Castoria in their practice,
At Pharmaceutical Conventions assembled in Boston, New York, London, and elsewhere, Dr. Pitcher caused his preparation *o be analyzed, and its therapeutic properties to be discussed. Thus were its merits endorsed, and the reports published in medical journals. Each of these things added to
The teachers of Fayette expect to have the rapidly increasing multitude of consum
ers, until at the present time, when the second generation of mothers are using Castoria, and showing their confidence in it, the aggregate of its sale is almost incredible. "The sale last year," said the manager, "were about three million bottle*." These woald? if plaeed end to end, cover tbe traek from New York to Washington. By comparison with children made feeble, nervous and irritable by the use of paragoric, laudanum, soothing potion*, panaceas, and other dangerous morphine preparations, mothers and physicians have eome to talk and write about Castoria, with the wholesome effect of extending a knowledge of it throughout the world. By these simple methods of professional skill, honoraole dealing and mercantile enterprise, has this Massachusetts doctor won bis gratifying success.
Parker's Tonic.
Make? firm and fast friends of all who nse it. Invigorates the Kidneys, Liver Rowels and Hromach and purities the Blood. P.enceB the palate, stirs the circulation and chears tlie mind. To women and aged persons tt imparts strength and hopefulness. Thebrst kniwn antioote to the liquor habit 50c and Si sizes. HI8COX A CO., New York
New A dvertisements,
FlRII^Os James River, Va., in a northera settlement. Illustrated circular free. J. t. ANCHA, Clarenoat, Ta.
CONSUMPTION:
FRKK, tocotlMr w^n a this diiSMt, to »r AddiMB. Da. T. A.'
VALUABLE 1 RKiTIB* 0*
this diMMM, to »r suflerer. GintnrvKadP.OiXXU II, 181 Pearl Yctk.
RUSKIN'S WORKS,
Sesame and Lilies, paper, 10 ots cloth, at ets. Crown of Wild Olive, paper, 10 ets eloth, a&oents.
Ethics of the Dust, paper, 10 ets cloth, 3S eents. Sesame and Lilies, Crown of TVlld Olive and Ethics of the Dost, in one volume, half Russia, red edges, SO ets. Modern Painters, Stones of Venice, etc., in preparation. Large catalogue free. JOHNB. ALDEN,
Publisher, 18 Veaey 8t. Mew York.
An Only Daughter Cured of Consumption.
hen death was hourly expected, all remedies having failed, and Dr. H. James waa experimenting with ibe many herbs of Calcutta, he accidentally made a preparation which cured his only child ot Con sa motion. His child is now in this country, ana enjoying tbe be«t of bealth. He has proved to the world that Consumption can be positively and permanently cured. The Doctor now gives this recipe free, only asking two a cent stamps to pay expenses. This Herb also cures NightSweats, Nausea at the Stomach, ana will break up afresh cold in twenty-four hour*. Address CKADDOCK
A
Co.. 1,083 Race
Street, Philadelphia, naming this paper.
E A I FLOWERS
IIFRUITS!
Ill of test, both new and old. Planta, Trssa VliMShSescuLte.brmall,aspeeiatty. StftmiSmt HW—m* SOchdioe^heap.gl ssts.farezsaiils:
12 ROSESS$l
30 PACKETS
Tat the other St Seta sod 1.001 things to sides, send for oar illiutratod Oataloru* of orsr 1M
npm
mssmsimm
be mailed CBBC**
WILDER'S SAhSAPARlLLA
Believed and cared without surgical operation, truss torture or labor by Dr. J. A. Sherman system. Patients from abroad can receive treatment aad leave for home tame day. Rupture and trasses cans^mbago, kidney and bladder affections, affect the nervous system, impair manhood and bring on lmpo tency and other deplorable ailments. All theae troubles removed and primitive soundness restored by Dr. Sherman's treatment. Book, with continuous indorsements for the past thirty- live years from physicians, mei chants, clergymen, farmers and others who have been oared, maiied for 19 cents. One Smy the, of the •ienna, institute, St. Louis, Mo., has altered tne likenesses of cared patients in Dr. hired men to personate them, publishes Shermsn'i illustrated pamphlets, nirea men 10 personate "S"
thw aa patients he baa cured. This bold fraud to dupe the afflicted is rully ex posed in an illustrated circular which 1* sent to any one who writes for it, Since the reduction of terms patients are daily coming from all parts of the country for treatment. Days of consultation at New York office. 251 Broadway, Monday, Tuesday and Saturday each week,
Eon*
customers of last »HSS year without ordering it.
It contains illustrations, prices, descriptions and directions for planting all Vegetable and Flower
D.M.FERRX&C0.D2S&all«toInvaluableetc.Plants,Seeds,
fiUABAMTEEDCURE FOR SCROFULA,
SYPHILIS,
RHEUMATISM, HEURALGIA, AND ALL DI8EASES
OF THE
BLOODandSKIN
THE
HOST POWEBFTJL
BLOOD fUNFIER
A N
CONSTITUTIONAL
POTASH
ALTERATIVE
EVER USED.
BLOOD
V. PAINE,
LOUISVILLE, KV.
STEWART'S HEALING POWDER.
SOLD BY HARNESS AND DRUG BTORES. Cures all open*ADCC onAWIMALSSUlK* from, any cause*
Vioo Woolen Mills are still in the r» tail trade, with a number one stock goods of 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. JKFFERS. for. Tenth and "Main streets, Terre Hautf
1!aad
