Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 5 November 1885 — Page 2
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jP* Weekly §tzetle.
THUR|DAY, NOVEMBER 5,1885.
Mother Theresa, mother superior of all the Franciscan sisters of the world, arrived here last Suuday from Olpha, Westphalia, and is stopping at the St. Elizabeth hospital. She is making a tour of the United States, and the various branches of her order.—[Lafay
PHINCE FREDERIC
Heir ApDarent to the Crown, in Whose Favor King- Christian IX W'll Probably Be Forced to Abdicate*-
What is now going on iu Denmark reminds one of the quarrel between the English King Charles I and his Parlia ent, in the seventeenth century. The mDish Diet or Parliament is in session, and the Folkesthing or Lower House, is greatly incensed againtt the King, who is, however, supported by the Lands' thing, or Upper House, in the unpopular policy which he has pursued almost Bince ever his reign began. An attempt will be made to force him to comply with the vote of the Diet at the previ ous session to dismiss Estrup, President of the Council of Ministers, and Minister of Finance. This hated Premier has held office since Jjjne 11, 1875. The detestation in which he is held appears strongly in the news that Rasmussen, the young compositor who attempted to assassinate him on October 21, as hurriedly taken to prison by the two detectives who arrested him, and had been in attendance upon Estrup, because these officials feared that an attempt at rp»ue would be made. Supported by his Minister the King has levied taxes by royal decree when the Diet refused to vote the budget, and has '^expressed the determination to continue to do so until the representatives of the people returned to a sense of what he "conceived to be their duty. The people throughout Denmark are greatly •excited at the arbitrary action of the
King, and public opinion so strongly "favors the cause of the Folkething that a revolution is imminent. At any time "we may hear that King Christian IX has been forced to abdicate in favor of his son, Prince Frederik, the heir apparent.
The Prince is of the age which, in the •event of his early elevation to the throne, is promising of great usefulness to his country. He has attained almost the prime of life, having been born June 3, 1843. On July 28,1869, he was married to the Princess Louisa, daughter of King Carl XV, of Sweden and Norway. He is the father of six children, offspring of this union. The Princess of Wales, Alexandra, is a sister of the Prince, and the Empress Maria Feodorovna, wife of the Czar of Russia, is another. King
Georgios I of Greece is his brother, Prince Frederik has illustrious connections, and, better than this, is believed to be in harmony with the progressive and liberal spirit of the age: The intelligent people of Denmark, than whom no nation in the worlg is better, if as well, instructed, think that under his rule they would enjoy the degree of political and social freedom which is their right, and condemning the administration of his father will probably demand, within the next Iter days, his elevation to the supreme oifice.
VIGO COfflfTlCHEBS-
Full List of the Teachers in This
1
County.
t* &
Who Will Wield the Birchen Rod.
The county schools are all in session. Supt. Curry says there is a much laiger attendance than heretofore. The following is a complete list of all the county teachers:
RILEY TOWNSHIP.
No. 1, Chas, Meighen.) No. 2, Harrison Fagg. ,,« No. 3, Ellen BaH. 4 No. 4, W. T. Sanford. No. 5, T. J. Scott, Geo. B. Rumbly and Maggie Hassinger.
No. 6, Warren Light. No. 7, Ella Rumbly. No. 8, Millie Collisterr^l No. 9. Ida Jackson. A. A. Gorden, trustee.
SUGAB CREEK.
No. 1, J. W. Rollins. No. 3, Anna fiannegan. No. 4, Malissa Caseaday. No. 5, Ola McQuilken. No. 6, W. A. Sanford and Jennie Ward.
No. 7, Burton Cassaday. No. 8, Kate Moran. r-
LINTON. 5
No. 1, Cassie Moore. No. 2, Eliza Pound. No. 3, Josie Weeks. No. 4, Chas. P. Miller. 2 No. 5, Chas. B. Davis, *r No. 6, Emma Boyl. No. 7, Geo. B. Sipe and Belle Bledsoe.
No. 8, Beatrice Kester. No. 9, J. E. Patterson (colored.) No. 10, S. C. Manuel. .. No. 11, Otto Carr. W. D. Weeks, trustee."
PRAIBIETON.
No. 1, Lewis Carson. No. 2, John Boyer, Lizzie Pritohard and Eva Brown.
No. 3,1. F. Pritchard. No. 4, B. F. Reynersoi No. 5, Marion Crews.
H. C. Jones, trustee. NEVINS.4^*\/ No. 1,0. P. Brown. No. 2, J. W. Sparks. No. 3, Miss Marion L. Taylor. No. 4, Miss Lizzie Williams. No. 5, Miss Rose Harpold. No. 6, Missifora Athon. •&, No. 7, D. A. Harpold.
5
N 8 is at No. 9, James Kessel. jNo. 10, Agnes E. Shay. No. 11, Herbert Briggs and Carrie Haberland.
S. P. Webster, trustee. HONEY CREEK. ho 1 MissAhceYeakle.,/^Vrv' No. 2, Herberts. Rose.
4
No. 3, Mary E. Price. No. 4, Wm. R. Mattox. No. 5, Frankie Balch. No. 6, Carrie Neukom. ,5^ No. 7, Amanda Foxworthy. 7 No. 8, Ruth Boyll. No. 9, Mayme Simmons. C. B. Rigney, trustee. 7- '"L OTTER GREEK. No. 1, Marshall Cloyd. -Wi/ -if No. 2, Laura Mercer, No. 3, R. B. Davis. Kf No. 4, Leroy Henry. Na. 5, Alice Burnett. No. 6, Alice Alexander. No. 7, Tillie Boba. 1 No. 8. John W- Simms (colored.) No. 9, Carrie Lockwood.
1
J. H. Evans, trustee. LOST GREEK, No. 1, Holland Dickerson. No. 2, J. W. Jones (colored.) No. 3, B. F. Hamilton (colored.) No. 4, Ida McLaughlin. No. 5, Winifred Connelly. Fo. 6, Chas. McLaughlin.
,t
No. 7, Lewis G. Hudson. No.8, Minerva Coltrin, V," N 9 W S it No. 10, Myley Hartley. No. 11, Walter B. Toner.,, ,% Moody C. Ripley, trustee. -p
FAYETTE. -*4$^ "4%
No. l/Dollio Scott. No. 2, Jas. T. Hunter and Ella Hunter-
No. 3, Gertie Scot€ No. 4, Grant Whalen. No. 5, W. G. Sandford.
1
No. 6, Flora Ward. .' No. 8, Rosa Hay. No. 9, Sallie J. Shirley. No. 10, Ella Whalen. No. 11, Nannie Hunter. L. D. Scott, trustee. ,*
PIERSON. I
No. 1, Wm. MaxwelL No. 2, J. C. Smghurse. No. 3, J. S. Brown. ,« No. 4, B. T. Beard. Np. 5, Albert Pound, No. 6, Clarence Dean. No. 7, C. W. Yancleve. No. 8. Wallace Neet. No. 9, W. M. Tichenor and Alice M. Payne.
John F. Ferguson", trustee. HARRISON. Sugar Grove, C. F. Grosjean and Naomi Glick.
Greenwood, John Gordon and Mary C. Lewis. Fort Harrison, Mrs. Linnie F. Winn and Lizzie Katzenbach.
Rogers school house, Emily Hawtdn John C. Reichert, trustee.
Hf ..
The Favorite
Is Purely Vegetable.
It will cure all diseases caused by deJangement of the Liver, Kidneys and Stomach. Time.and Doctors' Bills will be saved
By always keeping Simmons' Liver Regulator in the bouse for, whatever the ailmefit may be, an active, harmless and thoroughly safe purgative, alterative aod tonic can never be out of place.
If yon feel dull, drowsy, dobilitated, have frequent headache, mouth tn«tes badly, poor
cure you so speedily and permanently as Simmons' liver Regulator.
If yon lead a sedentary life, or are weakened by the strain of your duties, avoid stimulants and take the Regulator.
If yon have eaten anything hard of digestion, or feel heavy after meala, or sleepless at night, talie a dose-of Regu ator and you will feel relieved and sleep plaesantly.
or food or water does ose of Regulator will re-
If yon are traveling, not agree wth yoii, ado move all the ill effects.
At any time You feel Yonr System needs dpanNing, toning, Regnlnting without violent purging or stimulating withont intoxicating, take Simmons' Liver Regulator. It will save you suffering—it may save your life.
BEWARE OF FRAUDS.
Always ask your Druggist for "DB.
LIVES RKOULATOB,"
The late revolution by which the union of Eastern Roumelia with Bulgaria was effected, and which in al 1 probability will be sanctioned by the great powers of Europe, has produced extraordinary results in Greece and Servia. These both demdhd an increase of territory to offset the advantage which, apparently has been permanently gained by Bulgaria under the state of things brought about by the revolution. Turkey naturally objects to losing territorty for this object, and there Seems to be the disposition on the part of the Powers to back her against the would-be-plunderers, as well as to insist that enlarged Bulgaria shall continue, as before the late revolution, to avow the sovereignity of the Sultan. Austria and Russia particularly are interested in preventing the further breakup of the Ottoman Empire in Europe, in any way which could prejudice their expectation and intention to gain by it. To snub Greece and Servia so effectively as to prevent them making an attack on Turkey or on the states tributary to her, would be at once to prevent either of them gaining advantages which Russia and Austria will attempt to seize for themselves when the time shall come, and thus to prevent an immediate war between these gigantic powers, an event sure to come when the rule of the Turk in Europe shall collapse, and which the United Kingdom and Germany, as well as the powers most interested, desire to prevent at this present juncture. Both Servia and Greece are, however, bent on fighting, and Turkey is preparing to resist any encroachments they may rashly make.
While news, not yet authenticated, comes that Servia has actually begun hostilities, Greece is full of the warlike feeling which has induced King Georgios to order out forty thousand of the reserves, to be fully equipped and ready to move on a moment's notice. Corresponding activity is manifested in the navy. It is rumored, moreover, that Austria is preparing to remind Greece of her international duties, by the dispatch of a squadron to the Piraeus.
While both Greece- and Servia, or either, can refuse submission to the advice given them by the powers and thus provoke jealousies now slumbering and which may result in a great European war, there are reasons why their impetuosity may be checked by consideration on their part. .Both of them are minor powers created by the action of the great powers, and dependent in a great degree on their good-will.
In the case of Greece: After gaining its independence in the insurrection of 1821-9, by the Protocol of London, of February 3, 1830, it was declared a kingdom, under the protection of Great Britain, France and Russia. Since 1866 these powers have each contributed about twenty thousand dollars a year in equal amounts to the income of the king, in abatement of the sum of money to be paid by Greece every year jp consideration of a loan made to her by the powers named, in 1862, and which amounts to about eleven and threequarter million dollars. The total debt of the tiny kingdom is about a hundred and forty million dollars the population is only about one and three-quarter million persons, and the country is poor,
haw*
1
THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY AZETTE
SIMMONS
and be sure to see those
ldentloal words printed on the label. Take no other, f. H. ZEILIN & Co.,
Sole Proprietors, Philadelphia, Fa..! Price, 11.00.
GEORGIOS I. |4:
Kiner of Greece, Who Has Ordered Out Forty Thousand Men Of The Reserves, And Seems BentOn War.
Greece would do well to pause before acting against the wishes of three powers 'to whom she lies under a vast obligation, under the protection of which she exists as an independent nation, and which are desirous, in common with Germany and Austria, to preserve the peace of Europe.
The King of Greece' (of the Hellenes) is Wilhelm, the second son of Christian IX, King of Denmark. He was born December 24,1845, when his father was Prince Christian of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glucksburg. After the expulsion of King Otto of Greece, in October, 1862, Wilhelm was elected to snoceed him, under the directing guidance of the three protecting powers.
SSfSfSSS1"po"Jwiw SO. 'be'Natoonal Assembly at Athens, elected him King of the Hellenes. On June 4, 1883, his
father, acting as his guardian, accepted the crown for him. He was declared of age by a decree of the National Assembly, on June 27 of the same year, and on November 2, 1863, landed in Greece. His title is Georgios He was married, October 27,1867, to Olga, the eldest daughter of the Grand-duke Constantine of Russia, brother of the late Czar Alexander II. Six children have been born to the couple. By special exception, Georgios I is allowed to adhere to the religion in which he was educated, namely, the Protestant Luthern faith, but his heirs and successors must be members of the Greek Orthodox Church, of which the great majority of the inhabitants of Greeoe are adherents.
In 1884 the nominal strength of the army of Greece was about thirty thousand men and of the navy about twentysix hundred men.
NEWS OF THE WEEK
Gleanings From the Gazette's Loeal Columns. J. J. Daily left with his mother on the 25th for Hot Springs for the benefit of her health.
Last Sunday all of the pastors of the various churches preached on charity by request of the organized charity society.
George Conrath, aged 14, died on Saturday the 24th. at 116 Linton street. Mrs. Shultz, of Greencastle, has rented Dr. Young's house on south Fifth street, and will take boarders.
Phillip Schloss has been awarded the contract for thirty-seven police overcoats at $25 each.
Mrs. Frank Arnold is home from Columbus, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jones, of Washington City, have been visiting M. N. Courtner and wife.
Miss Annie Cleary has gone back to Boston. Miss Mattie St. Clair, after a three months' visit in Minneapolis, Minn., has returned home.
Rev. C. R. Henderson was the guest of J. A. Parker while in the city. Jeff Moore, foreman of the Van freight house, has resigned to accept a position as superintendent of the scuplo at the car shops.
Dr. E. F. Stetson
iwill
soon return to
Maine to live partly to benefit his wife's health and also to succeed an old, established physician.
Mrs. Webb Van Slyke, of Minneapolis,Minn., is visiting her parents Mr. and Mrs. St. Clair.
The Davis concert troupe were in the wreck on the Wabash, St Louis & Pacific railroad going north on the 26th, but none were injured, only badly shaken up and frightened. One concert was omitted.
A son was born to Mrl and Mrs. C. P. Taylor on the 26th. Superintendent Daily, of the poor farm, has a girl five years old and a boy eighteen months old that he wante some one to adopt.
Mrs. Id* Chapman, wife of Rell W. Chapman, died on the 28th, of typhoid fever, aged 39 years.
The 17th anniversary of the order of A. O. W. was celebrated at their hall, on they 27 by a basket social participated in by Terre Haute lodges No. 1, 2, 4 and 66. Mr. Frank C. Danaldson delivered an address on Fraternal sociability.
George Keifner is very sick at his sister's, Mrs. N. Filbeck. The annual meeting of the Society for Organizing Charity was held at the Opera House. Col. Thompson presided. Col. Nelson read Rev. McCulloch's, of Indianapolis, address as he was unable to be present, Rev. C. R. Henderson, of Detroit, delivered an address.
Mr. and Mrs. H. Clifford Smith and Mr. John Bowen, of Philadelphia, and Mrs. J. E. Saxton, of Decatur, HL, have been visiting their relative, E. M. Walmsley.
The policeman's ball on the 27th, was a success. There were policemen from Indianapolis and Evansville present. They realized $700.. The overcoats for wiiich the ball was given to pay will cost $900.
Otto Austermiller will move to Marshall and take charge of the St. James Hotel, which he owns.
The city has contracted with the Electric Light company for three years. Their proposition was accepted by a vote of seven to five.
Chas. Daggett has bought Mrs. Jim Turner's house on north Center and Chestnut streets and will occupy it at once.
Edward Insley, a reporter on the Express, has gone to Chicago to take a position on the Inter-Ocean.
Brentlinger & Mendle, tobacco dealers, have dissolved. Mr. Mendle will go to St Louis. The former will continue the business.
As six men took machines at the nail works on the 2vtb, they were attacked by a mob of strikers and four of them driven home Two escaped into the mill and went to work. The four who ran home have been since afraid to go back to work. Special police have been appointed to guard the mill. The strikers declare no imported workmen shall take their places, and yet the end is not yet.
The Terre Haute Literary society held a meeting on Monday night the 25. Judge Mack read a very witty paper on the philosophy of Kant.
Mr. Mehrhof, a son in-law of Mr. Peter Katzenback, died at Hackensack, N. J.i on the 29th.
Miss Bell Rankin will spend the winter in Sullivan. Mrs. C. A. Waldo has returned from Massachusetts.
Mrs. John Torrence is visiting in Marshall. President Parsons has been in Ft Wayne this week attending a teachers institute.
Miss Mamie Bement, of Evansville, is visiting her uncle G. W. Bemenfs family.
Mrs. A. L. Crawford, of Newcastle, Pa., is visiting her son's A. J. and J. C. Crawford.
Judge Mack sentenced Dick Mortz to fourteen years. Mortz plead guilty to stealing the oow from Daniel Larkins.
Mrs. Wm. G. Davis, the mother of the Davis family, left on. the 29th for Michigan City to visit her family and see how the injured ones are getting along.
On Tuesday night, the 27th, an animated debate was held at the A. M. E. church on the relative advantages of free trade and protective tariff to the country. The free trade side was taken by Prof. Joseph Jackson, Burton Stewart, CharlesButler and protective tariff was argued by Simon Daniels, S. W. Stewart, and F. M. Anderson. The jury hung in the decision.
Ida M. Harrison has sued John D. Harrison for divorce. Miss Minnie Weed is very sick.
Grand Secretary Debs and wife and Frank Arnold have returned from New Orleans where they have been attending a joint meeting of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen.
The sensation of the week in court circles has been occasioned by the bringing of Henning, a Rockville murderer, here for protection from a mob in Parke county. Henning shot and killed on Sunday the 25th, a Mrs. Yol ~ie peop looded in which the crime was committed that it was feared he wou'd be lynched. Sheriff Musser brought the criminal to our jail under cover of darkness for safe keeping. The press of Rockville are very indignant at the Sheriff for bringing Henning here and at Judge Mack for retaining him. They claim that the prisoner would not be (disturbed in their jail.
ney, of Rookville and the people were so incensed at the cold blooded manner
The following marriage licenses were issued this week: Jas. R. Blackburn and Millie Ghunn
Jas. M. Robertson and Milleea E. Kruzan. Theodore Strain and Josephine Grace.
Sylvester Gehman and Ollie Washburn. Ira Adkinson and Italy Bradley.
Wm. McKee and Melvina Weaver. Edward Elliott and Bell Compton. Alex. Con! and Louisa Kuphens. Lennuel Norton and Mahala Bryant.
VINCENNES.
Matters Matrimonial—-Robbed in the Court Room—Minor Mention
VINCENNKB, Ind., Oct 31.—[GAZT^TTB special.]—Several marriages occurred in this city this week which have caused uite a flutter among the eligible canidates for matrimony. Among the most noted, mention is made of the union between Mr. E. J. Reel, a former prominent citizen of this county, now mayor of Orlando, Florida, to Mrs. Cordelia Small, a handsome and wealthy widow. Also, Prof. Crosson, principal of the Cathedral schools, to MissJUmma Veneman, a favorite society lady of Evansville, and Mr. John Setzer to Miss Grace Coulter, a St Louis lady. And last evening, at the LaPlante House parlors Mr. J. E. Johnston, of Montezuma, Ind., to Miss Laura Belle, daughter of J. H. Cochran, proprietor of the LaPlante House.
A lodge of the order of Knights of Labor has been organized in this city, and starts out with a membership of about one hundred.
The required sum of money has been secured as a donation toward rebuilding tbe heading and stave works in this city.1
A county justice of the peace attended court in this city a few days ago, and while standing in the crowded hall way, had his pants pocket cut and rifled of over $80 right in the court room while court was in session.
The war against the kind of gas furnished and the price paid for the illumination of the streets, has again revived.
The funeral of the father of City Marshal Calloway, took place yesterday afternoon. He was ninety years old.
The Baltic Mills which were sold by the sheriff last Saturday, will again resume operations, and the wheels go round and round, the proprietors having raised the money to set them in motion. 7
The new Bierhatis Wholesale jafroce'ry building will cost $25,000, and no less. R. P. Mayfield, surveyor of Knox county, has been appointed to a lucrative position in the treasury department at Washington.
A number of Terre Haute hunters are up in the Wabash or Busseron bottoms several miles north of this city, where there is said to be an abundance of game.
i•••••=
"No Physic, Sir, in Minei"
A good story comes from a boys' boarding-school in "Jersey." The diet was monotonous and constipating, and the learned Principal decided to introduce some old-style physio in the applesauce, and await the happy results. One bright lad, the smartest in school, discovered the secret mine in his sauce, and pushing back his plate, shouted^ to the pedagogue, "No physic, sir, in mine. My dad told me to use nuthin' but Dr. Pierce's 'Pleasant Pugative Pellets,' and they area doing their duty like a charm!" They are anti-bilious, and purely vegetable.
Phoenix Foundry.(
An o^der for sixty iron cars, three transfer cars and two thousand feet of track for a steam brick yard in Kansas City, Mo., has been received. The Phoenix will put two gangs of men at work on the new court house Monday,
Sie
utting up the cornices and orestings on eastside.
SKINIBLOOD
DIMMM
from Pimples to Sorofulft Cured by Cuticura.
Hundreds of letters in our possession, copies of which may be had by return of mail, repeat this story:—I have been a terrible sufTerer foryears from diseases of the skin and blood have been* obliged to shun ptibUo places by reason of my disfigoiing humors have had the best physicians have spent hundreds of dollars, and got no relief until I nsed the Cuticura Remedies, which have cured mey and left my skin and blood as pure as a child's.
COVERED WITH Mt,l' RHEUM, Cuticura Betnedien are tbe greatest medicines on earth. Had the wor«t case of Salt Roeuin ic this country. My mother bad it twenty yeara, and in fact died from it. I believe Cuticura would have saved her life. My arms, breaot and head were covered for three years, which nothing relieved or cured until I used the Cuticura Heeolvent, internally, and Cuticura and Cuticura Soap externally.
Newark. O. J. W. ADAMS.
HEAD, FACE AMD BODY KtW. I commenced to use your Cuticura Remedies' last July. My head and face and some parts of my body were almost raw. My head was covered with scabs and sores, and my suffering was fetrful. I had tried everything I had heard of in the East and West. My case was considered a very bad one. 1 have now not a particle of Skin Humor about me, and my case is considered wonderful.
Decatur, Mich. Mrs. 8. E. WHIPPLE:
ECZEMA
rnon
HEAD TO FEET
Charles Eayre Hinkle, Jersey City Heights. V. J., writes: "My son, a lad of twelve years, was completely cured of a terrible case of Eczema by the Uuticnra Remedies. From the top of his head to the soles of his feet was one mass of scabs." Every other remedy and physicians had been tried in vain.
NOTHINCi LIKK CVTTI"URA. The half has not been told as to the great curative powers of the Cuticura Rbme^les,
I
have:
paid hundreds of dollars for medicines to cure, diseases of the blood and skin, and never found anything yet to equal the Cuticura Remedies.
CHAS. A. WILLIAMS.
Provlddnce, B. I.
CUTICURA BE1EDH9
Aie sold everywhere. Price, Cuticura, B0c. Resolvent, $1.00 Soap, 25c. Prepared by the Potter Drug and Chemical Co., Bon ton, Mass.
Send for "How to Care Skin Diseases." I2RIIRQ Pimples, 8kIn Blemishes and Baby ™HU DOjHumors cured by Cuticura Soap.
SNEEZE! SNEEZE!
SNEEZE until your head seems ready to fly off until your nose and eyes dls-| charge excesslvev quantities of thin, ritating watery fluid until your head aches mouth and throaty parched, and blood' at fever heat. This"' iisan Acute Catarrh, F|and is instantly re-r-•S J*' lieved by "a single dose,and permanent ly cured by one bot
tie of 8anford's Badlcal cure for Catarrh.
Complete Treatment With Inhaler. $100., One bottle Badlcal Cure, one box Catarrhal 8ol vent, and one improved Inhaler, in one packagemay now be had of all druggists for $1.00. Ask for Sanford's Badlcal Cure. "The only absolute specific we know of."— Med. Times. "The best we have found in a life-' time of suffering."—Rev. Sr. Wiggin, Boston..» "After a litag struggle with Catarrh, the Badlcal Cure has conquered."—Rev. S. W. Jfunroe, Lewisburgh, Fa. "I have not found a case that it did not relieve at once."—Andrew Zee, Manchester,\ Mass.
Potter Drue and Chemical Co., Boston.
BOWS TOUR RHEUMATIZf is a question that appeals to every tortured victim of Bheumatism, who finds the ordinary plasters
Hi and liniments powerless to relieve him. MJ To such tbe Cuticura Anti-Pain Plaster Jal Is an elegant and never-falling sources of relief, banishing rheumatic, neural-t
JL* \gic, sciatic, sudden, sharp and nervous Pains as by maglo. New, original, speedy, safe. pt druggists, 25c five for one dollar, mailed free. Aotter Drug and Chemical Co., Boston.
MATHEY CAYLUS'
Used for over 25 years with great success by the physicians of Paris, New York and London, and superior to all others for the prompt cure of all cases, recent or oflohg standing. PutupsOnly in Glass Bottles containing 04 Capsnleseucb. PRICE 75 CENTS, MAKING THEM THE CHEAPEST CAPSULES IN THE MARKET. Prepared by CLIN&CIE,CAPSULES
Paris.
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Manhood Restored.
BKMKDY FREX.—A
victim of youthful impru
dence and Premature ijecay, Nervous Debility Lost Manhood, &c., having tried in vain every known remedy, has discovered a simple means of) self-cure, which he will send
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sufferers. Address 3. H.
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BEEVES, 48
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Chatham
tm
desire to obtain a Hioroisl and Practical Business Education, attend
M. WATTERP'
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Where the Science of Accounts is taught by practical accountants and experienced teachers.
Course of Study:
Book-keeping, Business Arithmetic,1 ^Business Correspondence,Penmanship,\ and the Forms and Application of
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Write for Circulars, and mention this Paper'
J. H. CLIFT. F. M. CLIFT C. N. CLEFT,
Terre Haute Boiler Works.
CLIFT
& CO- Prop'rs.
Manufacturers of Locomotives, Stationary and Marine Boilers (Tubular and Cylinder), Iron Tanks, Jails, Smoke Stacks, Breeching and' Sheet Iron Work.
Shop on First street, between Walnut and Pop.' lar, Terre Haute, Ind. pg-Repairing promptly attended to.
CORE
DEAF!
FOB THE
Peck's Patent Improved Cushioned Ear Drums P«rf*-tlySiatsie
ike Hearing
and perform the work of the Natural Dram.'' Always In position, but Invisible to others and' comfortable to wear. All conversation and even/ whispers heard distinctly. We refer to those using them. 8end for illustrated book with tee-* timonials free. Address ISCuX, 649 Broadway, N. Y. Mention this paper.
