Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 26 August 1882 — Page 2
.DAILY EXPRESS.
ALLRN & TNOMPSON, PROPRIETORS
PUBLIQATION OFFICE—No. 16 South Fifth Street -Printing HousoSquare.
Terms of Subscription. .'
Daily Express, jier week ...........15 cts per year i:... ...:..$ 7 60 six months 3 76 ten weeks 1 SO
Issued overj' morning except Monday, and delivered by carriers. '•'i vmU -Club Kates or Weekly.
For clubs of 11 vo there will be A cash discount of 10 pgr ccnt.from the above rates, or, if preferred Instead of the cash, a copy «f the Weekly Express will be sent free for the timo that the club pays for, not less than nix months.
For'clubs,of ten the same.rate of discount, and in addition the Weekly Expro RR free for the time that the club pays for, not less than six months.
For clubs of twenty-flve the same rate' of discount, and in addition the Daily Express for the time that the club pays for, not less than six months.
Postage prepaid in all cases when sent Biall. Subscriptions payable in ad-
vance,
Terms for the Weekly.
One copy, one yenr. paid In advance...8125 One copy, six months Bo One copy, three .months, .September
October and November'.: :.... S)
Advertisements
Inserted in the Dally and ifcekly on reasonable terms. For particulars apply ator' address the office. A limited amount advertising will bo published in the Weekly. «WA11 six months subscribers to the Weekly Express will be supplied FREE, with "Treatise on the II,or*eand..His.Diseases." Persons subscribing for the Weekly for oneyear will receive in addition to ne Horse book a railroad ^nud township map of Indiana. .-...r, v•••:) 1 11
REPUBLICAN TICKET. J:i
(Election to be hold Tuesday, Nov. 7,1882. Htnle Ticket. Secretary of State .' V'
E-
R.HAWN.
Auditor of State
7 E. H. WOLFE. Treasurer of State ROSWKLLJ. HILL. .. .-
Attorney General D.P.BALDWIN.
Superintendent of Public Instruction JOHN M. BLOSS. Clerk of the Supreme Court .. .. JONATHAN W. GORDON.
Judges of the Supreme Court. 1st dlst.—WILLIAM P.EDSON, of PoBey. 2d dlst.—J. G. BERKSHIRE, of Jennings. 3d dist.—JOHN F. KIBBY, of Wayne
Congressional.
For Congressman, Eighth District ROBERT B. F. PEIRCE. County Tlclc«t.
Superior Judge HARVEY D. SCOTT. Circuit Judgo, GEORGE W. BUFF. ..
Cleric
MERRILL N. SMITH. Auditor ERWIN S. EltNEY.
Treasurer
CENTENARY A. RAY. Recorder "I."
CHARLES L. FELTUB. Sherlft JACKSONJSTEPJ *.
Representatives EDWIN ELI JH .' 7!.' FRED.I.EE.
Commissioners.
First District—LF.V DfCKERSON, Second District—WEUSTtiR W. GA8T0, Third District-WILLIAM B. COCHRAN.
Coroner.
iUs I SAMUEL O PRESTON. Surveyor •k? GEORGE W. HARRIS.
Persons leaving the city for the summer can have The Ex-press mailed to them by leaving their address in the business- office.
Merchants should bear in miiul that Sunday is the champion day of the week for placing their advertisements before the public. People have time then to take up their daily paper and digest it leisurely. It is not an exaggeration to say that a Sunday issue receives hours of reading where the other issues of the week receive minutes. The Sunday Express, under the new management, has met with unprecedented popularity. It circulates largely, not only in the City, but reaches all the surrounding towns. Hence it is the best advertising, medium in Terre Haute. Applications for space should be made early in the day to secure good location.
It is understood that Mr. Garland, the Virginia duellist, will lecture.
According to the latest quotations the code in Virginia is put down as firm with an upward tendency.
Emory S. Storrs is cutting it fat in Europe. He carried over letters of introduction from Genrral Grant to his brother potentates in Europe.
Those Chicago Prohibitionists covered the field pretty well with their platform. About the only thing un dammed is the newspaper exchange thief.
The Turkish authorities have shut down on Dr. Schliemann's investigations. The Doctor should pick out a Republic if he wants to scratch around in the sand.
The officers of the Milwaukee Light Horse Cavalry have all resigned. There must have been a rumor that certain Wisconsin Indians had concluded to take the war path.
James Gordon Bennett has received from the Sultan of Turkej the decoration of the second class of the Order of the Osmanli. "We don't know what the second class is, but presume it will entitle James to a place in the steerage.
Mahone is becoming a luxury to the Republican camp. Office "holders from Virginia have been "demanded .to voluntarily" contribute five per cent, of their salaries on top of the Hubbell assessment. Perhaps this is not altogether political. Citizens of a State who are permitted to bang away at each other on the field of "honah" should pay for the privilege.
The courts of Australia will soon have a leading question presented. An Englishman there is the executor of a merchant who left $100,000 to be paid for masses to deliver his soul from purgatory. The executor takes the ground that he will not pay over the money until it lias been decided in tho courts that purgatory exists, and that his particular soul has been prayed oat of it and the parties who claim to. hare earned the $100,000 ty their have taksn tho case to courts
Weekly, that patent self acting Reformer, Geoge William Curtis, retries as follows:
The Southern question has really disap-
The BOUtnern question nas reaiiy maup-
wart,''jdld not (liscusp it In his .message, Mr. BlSlne, jwhojsk "ifol'f-Breed," dldn^t emphasize it in his late letter to Maine. Nobody doubts the Democratic crimes agfUnstr a freo vote, luit nobody paid.the leastattention to the Bpee'eiesin Congress upon tho Southern' '"elections. The reason is not. .indifference, but tho fact that all the,natiohal law can do has beoii 'tforid!' ThVv'Ti'rfieR hoiils that the three really important questions are, revision of the laiiff reduction of taxation, and administrative reform. Yet upon all these questions it is opposed to the gen eral tone and teaching of the documents disseminated by the:Republican Congres' slonal Committee. It Is, however, undeniable that the Times is as truly Republican. as Mr., Chairman Hubbell, or Senator Ilale, or Judge Kelley. It is equally undbnfable, despite, the Hubbell docu ents, that protectlon and high taxation and tiie spoils system are not Republican doctrines. In a transition period like the prcsznt,, .when no great, immediate, practical issue -devldcs par ties, although parties, still cohere, their feeling and djlft may bj observed most accurately In the press, Congress and conventions are 'always timid, and try to find a form of declaration which will be the least disputed They a-'e voices of
yesterday
rather than
of to-day., The.actual process of political growth aud' cli'ange must' be studied in the press.! Judged-by that test,.the Tlnfes and not the Hubbell committee most truly represents Republican sentiment. The most Intelligent'Republican demand is not a.tariflfdesigned for protection, but for supplying revenue, with tho least burden to industry it is a demand to re duco taxation so. as to diminish the cost of living, and to place the public service upon a business footing as a measuro of tho highest administrative economy and efficiency.
From a birdseye view of the above the sober-minded Republican will be able to see that this great reformer, has made two conspicuous blunders. In the first place the Southern question, only a few months ago so dormant, and so happily on the high road to settlement, has latterly been pushed so boldly to the front that Northern indignation will again promptly array itself against the dastardly system of political outrage in the Southern States.., Only A few days ago we had a cock-and-bull ghost story from Ala bama all about the discovery of a negro plot to murder all the white citizens of Choctaw county on a certain fixed date] The chivalrous Southerners, who conceived that they were picked 'for slaughter, took hold of a supposed colored ring leaider and strung him up Such an act of barbarity, hanging a man for an unproved ollense, without the 'semblance of a trial, is said to lie explained by tho fact that the "ringleader". possessed great influence politically with the negroes. The whole story, smells as if it had slept over night in a fish market. It is so thin that even the Democratic journals of the north try to discredit it by the term "sensational." Any one of ordinary common sense understands that ten white-.men stampede fifty poor ignorant darkies at the South, where outrage and indignity liaye. been their portion since tlie war. The Alabama chivalry had a particular reason for wanting that negro out of the way and simply used this "plot" device to spiko the guris of criticism at the North. Yesterday's dispatches bring another outrage, undeniably of a j\olitical nature. Two men who had testified to Democratic corruption in the contested .election case of Bisbee vs. Finley, from Florida, were attacked while in the hands of the law, and literally riddled with bullets, near Madison in that State. Again is the usual attempt made, to throw sand in Northern-eyes by the claim that this outrage resulted from indignation because of a supposed, but not proven, connection of these men with a murder. Instead of their guilt having been shown by testmony, the court had seen fit to grant them a new trial after a trumped-up conviction, and the men were on their way to obtain it. The Southern ques tion cannot disappear ujtiti.l these outrages cease to exist..
The great reformer, in originating a celestially pure platform for the Republican party, will also be good enough to consider the fact that a tariff-for-revenue-only plank may suit the stomachs of the nabob importers of the East, but the commercial constitution of the West and South is not strong enough to stand up under the protective nourishment of such a diet. We don't propose to have freshly planted and growing industries choked by legislation that squints to ward the free trade views of the East. If brother Curtis fancies he can tie any such collar about western Republican necks, he'll wake up and find himself in the rear of the procession.
Possibly our esteemed friend McSweeney, who made such a tear-mov-ing defense of Dorsey, allowed himself to jump too high when he threw out the idea that a man wouldn't naturally be a thief after he bad exposed his bosom to the bullets of the enemy. Some of the most colossal thieves in the whole history of the world have been bleeding soldiers. In the language of the Post Dispatch:
The Duke of Marlborough robbed everybody hecould lay hands on, and actually carried on the rolls of his army tho names of »thousand soldiers who had been slain in battle In ordor that he might draw and pockct their pay. Old MeBsena, one of the best of Napoleon's fighting marshals, was such an unconscionable old thief that the Emperor at one tin\e offored him a magnificent annuity if he would only stop "looting." It Is said that his descendants eVen to this day occasionally dig up on their estates In Francft bits of plunder that the old warrior had secreted at the ttme ho was cementing- the foundations of the country with lils swoat and blood. It Is a well known fact that some of the most rampant gen tinmen in Washington City, who are always on "hand when "tho old flag and an appropiation" are Involved, are ex-Union soldiers Who fought for the country and helped to cement with their sanguineous fluid Its subterranean mural support. "Now," says the Toledo Blade, "comes the test of Arabi's general•Bhip He lias the interior linej as the Rebels had in our war, with a]l the
mg
hfls "his armj
er-ffrir
can. move out from Alexandria, throw its entire weight on Sir Garnet'B turning column,*6rushJji|, a^^and1^1 fragments i&ti^desert and the merciless Bedouins, and be back' to Alexandria" again before Sir, .Archibald Alison knqw s. he is gone.: If the .British have no more than 25,000 troops in 'Egypt, Arab? can handle' them very neatly if he has what would have rated in our war as about third-class generalship. The reconnoissarices, etc., from Alexandria are evidently intended to occupy his attention, until the turning column is-fairly on its way. to Cairo." A special courier has been sent from Toledo to put a marked copy of tile Blade under Arabi's plate at breakfast.
The telegraph brings reports of a long engagement at Magdar,,in which General Wolseley held his own with 2,000 men against 10,000 ArabB. The forces of Arahi cracked away for a whole day at the English, and- Wolseley mentions that they finally succeeded in damaging a certain Captain in the leg and a certain -Lord in the hand. Arabi should lose no time in telephoning over here. for a company of Kentucke sharpshooters. 'J
The Democrats of Missouri should advertise' for a harmonizer.1" They agree like a couple of, dogs over a bone,
CURRENT COMMKNT.(j'7V
France, strange to say, lias passed a new law against indecent publications and the literary world is up in arms. It is about time something was done to. curb these sensualists. Things have gono'from bad under the Second Empire to worse under the Third Republic. Modest women cannot look into the print shops in the RuedoRivoll. Youngglrls, Who pick up an innocent novel at the railway bookstands, are pretty sure to. find it abominably foul. M. Adolpho Belot, whose notorious work, "Mile. Glraud, ma Femme," was suppressed when published in the Figaro, is now allowed to put forth "La Bouche de Madame X," which Is not a wlilt less vile. If a writer is poor, he does not, as of old, toil In the Latin Quarter for some obscure paper, L'Echarpc d'Iris or Lc Chapclier hc goes to Dentu orCharpentier with novel based on Incidents in the career of Cora Pearl or Fanny Lear, pockets a few hundred francs, and bea el it In a or
St. Lonis Amusements-
Post Dispatch. Students of Sociology throughout this country will bo amused to learn that a professional detective of J3t. Louis has brought suit in our courts to recover damages for a defamed character. We thus add our contribution to what Carlyle calls "the gayety of Nations."
ITo Politios in It.
Jefferson City Tribune. Gov. Brown has for a long time been a teetotaler and a strong advocate of temperance, but the Globe-Democrat cannot convince any one that he speaks for the Democratic party. Like all men who cannot espouse tho Prohibition cause, they speak for themselvos alone. There Is no politics In prohibition, we understand.
A Great Greenbaoker.
Brunswick Brunswloker. H. Martin Williams Is not the first stentorian voiced patriot whom wo have known to mistake egotism for eloquonce aud lung-power for logic, but candidly we think that he can soar higher into tho fog and come down duller, and dive deeper into the filth and come up dirtier than any other political hireling that we ever listened to.
Those Girls.
New York Mall. "Stuck-up things" is what.the New York glrl6 at Spring Lake Beach call their Philadelphia sisters. And the Quaker City maldons, evcrkind and generous, re-. clprocatc: cordially -when they Inquire: 'Have any of those New York creatures a Tathcr who has not been accused of financial Irregularities?" As a rule th« Philadelphia girl nevergots left.
a
At a recent,"stone-fence" social King Bacchus spied a sheep
h,
Apolitical economist of Cape/Ann remarks that the idea of teaching every girl to thump a piano and every~boy to lie a bookkeeper will mako potatoes $5 a bushel In twenty years.
Somebody inquired how "a name could be changed and what would be the expense Involved. The answer was as follows: If you are a woman you oan have your name changed by simply promising to love, honor and obey some man who has taken outa matrimonial permit, If you are a man, you must apply to tho Circuit Court, and if you oan shoWgood cause you can haye your name shifted for about 820. "Much will depend on the greed of tho lawyer.
Some of the leading hotels have started ft movement In favor of burning their register of names at the end of each month. It seems that they become accusing or defending witnesses In the courts, especially In divorce cases, and the hotel man's time and attendance are required and the hotel men aro tired of the nuisance, if the books wero sold and fell into Irresponsible hands, they might become vehicles of blackmail, and to destroy them Is tho only way to avoid trouble once and for all.
The editor of the weekly paper at Vicksburg, Miss., called the Hornet, crltl^ cized a certain Inhabitant the other day and the aggrieved "pusson" called around to reprimand. A dispatch from there describes the result of tho shaking up of the hornet's nest In thoge painful words: "Lavins' head is swoilen toabout twicc Its natural size, his body stamped black and blue, his nasal organ bitten completely from his face, and every portion of his body more or less injured." If it is not out of place we would like tO'inquire Whether wo are living in Russia!
Mr. David Bianchard, of Boston, announces a $10,000 purse, given by him. for tlie 2:17 class, to be trotte3 at Beacon Park, Sept. 14. This will probably be the greatost race ever trotted In the world. The Jiames of the horses will'not be published un.tll Sept. 1, but there will be thirteen, as that number, of horses have already: made threo payments, and the fourth-Is a.matter of course, chances being ata premium. Among the starters will probably be Clingstone, Edwin Thome, Parana, Santa Claus, Fanny Witherspoon or 8o-So, CIcmmie G., Rosa Wilkes, and, very like Ip, Jerome Eddy, and Black Cloud, besides others.
»it
The Sour-Gr*pe Club.
Baltimore has a "Sour, Grape Club," composed of ten of the most fashionable young married women of the city. They bind'themselves to'present to^each of the babies born of their number,-baby jewelry, clothing, etc., to the amount of J100." One lady has already received two scLs-of prir.es. Committees of three members each on qualification, prises, and records are appointed yearly, and a photograph of the "blessed bafcy" is farnl^hed each of the members. The membership is limited to ton, and all vacancies occasioned by death or resignation are filled by a ballot of the remaining members. It Is said that, tkc number of applications for admission to the club are over 60,
"And so the great convivial king Carefully shut one.eye, .. .fui •Ahdif'smolq"a smile S9 frlendly -f i.\.It made tho,Iamb dr$w nigh. "Begad,",atlcn*gtli'KliigB acchiis said,' "They V[ant, to'stop the sale'' •,
Of anpurcupshllaWousi Wliy.' danimc, thlW friiist fail "Of course It must," the Lamb replied, "And will, for don't you see This liqnoi* traffic's bUsineSsj irtHo't
Stune's keepinJ grocerj ,,//t "Republicans are willing ri That the-people be let loose Oh the'qriestion Which arises
From this-hose-distressing Juice
"But, Bacchus, you kiiojv well as I They mightdq something rash, Forgettingln fanatic real, jj /, .The charms of sour-mash," When tlie Lamb had thus concluded, I
IClng Bacchus warmly-saidj '"Th!sr shecp shall feo id Congress,! By all the noses red!" A LADDIN.
PEES01TAI
A deck load-of Spanish Jackasses was imported to:"Newfi'ork'last'Saturday by a gentleman from Mount' Leonard, Mo. It-will be. segn .that Missouri, instill adding to hex populatlon. to 'inrM
ANew Hampshire young mairstabbcd himself seven times on being imformed that he had fallen heir to a large sum of inoiiey. He probably didn't want to go to the expense'of breaking the will •M.
Baron Wilhelm Rothschild, of Frankfort, returned his last year's income at 51,197,000, While his brother, Baron Meyer .Carl, returned 81,140,000. They are the "poor relations" of the Paris Rothschilds.
Many Nice Girls: "We notice that Dr. "\yilliamson has been giving a list of the books that young men should read before getting married. What does Mr. Williamson expect us to be perusing all this time?" "Woman's Dress," the Indian chief, has not been arrested. A great many husbands and fathers who have been .trylDg for several years -to arrest woman's dress are waiting anxiously to see Just how strong this Government is.
T. P. O'Connor, M. P., says of Lord Randolph Churchill: "Churchill lsnotan ora tor, and Is so absolutely Illiterate—I mean,' of course,- 'fr'oim the scholarly point of view—that it is reported and believed that he never read a book through in his life but he knows men."
The twin brothers Kepler, aged ninetyone, are living together In Plumstpad township, Pen,nsylvanla. It ipust make them feel mournful to reflect that, bad they been born one person instead of two, they might now bo one ^lundred^ and •ight-y-two years old,
Col. Taylor, of the United'Stktcs Army, Is being tried "by court-martial' at Cincinnati for endeavoring to evade an order which compelled him to reside In Omaha, This Is believed to be the flr6t instance on record In which an Ohio man hesitated about holding'an office in another State.
THE BtraNY SOUTH.
The Portsmouth (Va.) Guards, colored are visiting at Provldenec, R. I.'" Ltiko City, Fla., the highest po'lril Iri'the State. ls only 203 feet above the level of the sea.
Nashville, Tenn., has 1,000 misdemeanor cases on the docket of the Criminal Court for September.
Four distlllerles are starting up in loss than two miles of,Cross Roads, a Pulaski county (Ky.), village.
Norfork, Va., is to have a large establishment for tlie preservation of timber by the creosote process.
Mr. Samuel Harris, a colored merchant of Williamsburg, Va., is reported to be worth 825,009. He handies 550,000 of goods annually.
Cleburne, Texas, has recently made two shipments of 50,000 bushels of wheat each, one to Liverpool and the other to Florence,Italy.
Mrs. Wm. Bearding,' who died recently In Perry county, Aladama, was 107 years old. Her husband, who survives her, is 100 years old.
M. G. W. Baugh, of North Danville, raised a cabbage which had twenty-six heads on the one stalk.—[Richmond (Va.) Whig. And each ligad was as big as a basket.
Clarksvllle, Mo., has raised the cost of a saloon license to SI,210 per annum. There arc but four in the place, and the proba bllltles arc that at least three of these will be closed.
The other day a cockroach got between two of the wheels of the town clock of Dallas, Texas, causing a stoppage of about eight hours. They must growlarge cockroaches down there.
There are about 1,000 acrcs of land on Matecombie Key, Monroe county, Florida, and It has recently been purchased by three Key Westers, who Intend toconvcrt It Into one big cocoanut grove.
A correspondent writes the CourierJournal from Cumberland, Miss., that old "Uncle" Tom Jcmlson, who was 10 years old when the Revolutionary War closed, nas Just died at the age of 117 years.
The Gonzales Inquirer says that Mr. Cunninghnm, living on Canoe Creek, Gon zales county, Texas, has growing in his nursery green tea. He Is convinced that itcan be successfully grown in this coun try.
Atlanta (Ga.) Post-Appeal: There Is no prohibition in Putnam county, and yet. there is no bar-room there. Public opln Ion has stopped the Itqnor traffic In that section. After all, public opinion Is the strongest law.
Mr. Menilaus, of Lincoln county, Mississippi, has raised fifteen acres of Jute. He has sold It for $3 a ton green, but stripped of leaves. He thinks it can be made profitable by the use of suitable machinery to prepare It for market.'
The Southern Pacific railroad has been built eastward frbin El Paso to the 480th mile post. The -gap between It and the westward extension,-of .the Houston fc San.Antonio road is .thirty-nine miles. This gap will be filled up by the 1st of NoVeHiber.
Near Lawrenceburg, Tenn., an elm tree, said to be the largest In the United States, if not in the world, Is growing. It is 105 feet- in diameter and 323feet In circumference from tip to-tip of Its branches. The glze of the trunk ,«nd height of. the ,troe are notglveu*:! t,:
A coach containing sixty German emigrants for Ashvllle, N. C., passed through Richmond, Va., last week. They were a hearty, hale sot of young persons of both sexes. Among tbcm were only, three children. They„w§r«i,'direct from Germany, and well fixed for Immediate work. 1 Z—1
f'
1 i^'
End of the "Blind Pooler."
New York Sun.
1
Five Hnslelans from Rotterdam Who Are Opea to Offer* at -Castle Oarden.
^tfiMg^e^rrivafs?t tastl^Sir-
arrcvepio terdam
ctli4
4
Sir Garnet Wolseley smokes cigarettes while planning a: great slaughter. A Missouri man carricd an arrowhead sixteen years.' An Illinois man has. car1 riek a harrow head three times as long. 9({r.i $bpokt of Now. Jersey,' hjis.ilye* eighty-five years In tiio same house. Mr. 'Shook must have killed, off hls landludy. early in the action.
An official of the Garden said that the selections given by the band were difficult ones and they were rendered in a most creditable manner. They were listened to by a large audiej.ee composed of the immigrants and officials.
Evansvillc & Terre llantc \\. R. Co.
TIMETABLE.
TAKING EFFECT JUNE 11, lS82. Going South. Arrive. 1. 3 5' .- Evansvilie.'.'.'.'"8:46 p.m. 7:10a.m. 3:10 p.'m'J F6rt Branch 8:04 p.m. 0:51 a.m. 2:58 p.m Princeton.... 7:44.p.m. 6:31 a.m. 2:42 p.m. Vlncennes.... 6:55 p.m. 5:44 a.m. 1:50 p.m Sullivan 5:30 p.m. 4:29 a.m. 11:39 a.m.
-i.:u
TERKE HAUTE
ICE COMPANY.
MORNING,AUGUST. 26^882.
uch attention. .They tt^d|ra iroipRptfer landing tfiey drew
up in line and sang-several selections from^eras, 1hey(,pre^enteia most romantic annearancd,' 'esriedially th^ leadinj^tfenor. ~'"tte?fifaSi ar&sed as if he had justfitepfad^ih&stogejduring the performance oi$n Italian opera. He is a tall broad-shouldered man with a handsome German countenance anduia'f/big. imustache: ..wore a pealfed th reefcornered hab .frith a bright feather stuck in'tjfie biiid.' His coat wa^'' ^iaHroidBred Witti'-gSla, and on the lapels- iwb'1i?mall'' hhrps were embroidered as^vmboliai)i his profession. .Other designs were .embroidered on1
"Sleeves.* -He' looked £he'!beau
ideal itsWa''
!roihantic
ti®ibr.' His.T6ice
was strong jandr. he rendered his pieces with spirit and adroitness. The other singers" were not so imprt8ing'in appearance, but they were dressedoiin. similaB: uniform and possessed very fair..vqi,jes.
The World reporter sought an interview with the Iirst tenor, which was granted with as much -graciousness as if he were^C/ijijranJniy or, some otber popular'siriger detailing his pliin^ and engagemente for tliD-seafloiii
He said that he-was, a native of Ba-' varia, and had come to this country to seek more profitable engagements than he could obtai ri 'at h'oine. He and his comrades had:' sung in Munich and a "What are your plans, for the future?" f, "We have none. We have no engagements yet and are open to offers. We shall sing wherever we go till we get engaged permanently." "Axe your comrades related to you?" "No onlv chance acquaintances." '.'Do you intend to separate "No we shall hang together.", "What is the name of your leader "Carl Lanbes."
Leave.
Terre Haute.. 4:35p.m. 3:30 a.m. ,10:40 a.m. Indlanap'iis.. 12:35 p.m.11:00 p.m. 7:30 a.in. Cincinnati 8:45 p.m. 8:00 a.m. Louisville 7:30 p.m. 8:20 a.m. St. Louis 8:00 p.m. 8:00 a.m. Danville. 2:15p.m. 1:00 a.m Chicago....^.... fla*) a.m. 8:00 p.m.
Coming North.
-'nioii'! Xieave. 'P' 2 4 6
Evansvllle.... 6:25a.m. 7K)0p.m. 10:00a.m. Fort Branch. 7:07 a.m. 7:40 p.m. 10:42a.m. Princeton 7:23a.m. 8^)3 p.m. 10:58a.m, Vincenriis.....' 8:17 a.tn?0 07 p.m. 12:10p.m. Sullivan....... 9:17p.m.10:15 p:m. lU4p.m
Arrive.
Terre Hautie. 10:15.a.m.llS0 p.m. 2:10 p.m Indlanap'l's 4:05 a.m. 5:00 p.m, Cincinnati 7:00 a.m. 6:30 p.m Louisville 6:55a.nii 6:25 p.m. St. Louis 7:10 a.m. 6:20 p.m Danville- 2:00 a.m. 4:33 p.m Chicago!..'..'...:. 7:15 a.m. .9:45p.m
Trains 1 and 6 run daily, with Parlor Car, between Evansvllle and Indianapolis, via Vandalla Line, and also between Evansvllle and Chicago, via Danville.
Trains 3 and 4 run dally, with Woodruff's new elegant Sleepers,.between Evansvllle and'Chlcago.
Trains 2 and 5 run dally except Sunday. Trains 1, 2,. 3 and 4 connect at Fort Branch for Owensville and Cynthiana.
G. J. GRAMMAR, G. P. A.
C. J. HEPBURN, Geh'l Supt.
1868. 1882.
i»!-. "i.'i 't •-.*. .-••y
Pure Lake and River Ice. We havf a large supply for the coming season. Special attention given to orders outside, the city. Ice boxed and shipped on short notice.
L. F. PERDUE,
This great specific cures that most loathsomedisease
SYPHILIS
Whether in its Primary, Secondary iK! or Tertiary Stage. Removes all traces of Mercury from the system.
Cures Scrofula, Old Sores, Rheumatism, Eczema, Catarrh or any Blood Disease. Cures When Hot Springs Fail!
S. 8. S. lias given better satisfaction than any medicine I have over sold. J. A. FLEXNER.
0till)E^LITY 9Ji
A Core Guaranteed—Dr. E. 0. West's Kerre and Brain Treatment A specific,fpr Hystecla, Dizziness, Conjeiuslon4 Nervous 'Hcafl|ichc Mental Do--prtssibn. Loss -1 of iMem'ory, Spermator-
tlon.seU-abusej or over-indulgence, which leads to' niisery decay'atid death: One box will cure recent cases.__ Each box contains one m,ontb's treatment One dollar a box or six boxes for fivedollars, sontby mall, prepaid,-on receipt of .price. We guarantee six boxes to cure any case. With each order received by us for six b'oxfcA. accompanied with five dollars, we: will sendtne purchaser our written guarantee to return the money if the treatmentdoes not effect a cure. Guarantees Issued only when the treatment Is ordered direct from us. Address JOHN C. WEST &.CO., Solo Proprletere, 181 fc 1S3 W. Madison St. (.Chicago, 111. Sold by Cook & Bell, of Terre Haute, Ind..
&
Proprietor and Manager.
Office 611 Main street, between Sixth and Seventh streets.
Malvern, Ark., May 2,1881.
We have cases In our town who lived at Hot Springs and were finally cured with 8 8 8
McCAMMON & MURRY.
'r' 'Memphis, Tenn., May 12,1881. We have sold 1,296 bottles of S. S. S. in a vear. It has given universal satisfaction. Fair minded physicians now recommend it as a positive specific.
S. MANSFIELD & CO.
Louisville, Ky., May 13,1881.
Denver, Col., May 2,1881.
Every purchasor speaks in the highest terms of S. S. S. L. MEISSETER. I suffered from Scrofula 17 years. My shin bones were covered with large Ulcers and one mass of rotten flesh, and the odor almost unbearable All remedies Andtreatments failed until I began taking s. s. Previous to taking It I at times co.uld.scarcely walk. Now ean walk, all diiy, and I have to thank S. S. S. and it only for my cure. ..
THOMAS McFARLAND. Atlanta, Ga.
-Mi O
it-.-iK—
If you wish, ,w'e wiil -take your case, TO BE PAID FOR WHEN CURED. Write for particulars •1,000
KEWAKI) will be paid to any
Chemist who will find on analysis of 100 bottles of S. S. S. one particle of Mercury, 'Iodide of Potassium, or any Mineral substance.
SWIKX SPECIFIC CO., Proprletorsr Atlanta, Ga. PER BOTTLE. Price of small size, 81.00 largo size, 1.75. ^^^^QLDBYALLD^UGGIOTS^^
H- S. Bichardson & Co.,
Qneensware, Gbfts,
U'uu
That Is a very bad story which Mr. Jay Gould tells about Gov. Cornell, and, unless 'the Governor can disprove it, wo should say that in politics, at least Wr. Cornell is a gone man,
a as in
Fruit J#r», Wax and Stoneware at jjj- Wholesale. ir ijtl &iMAIL OtBDl^S SOLICITED. DO? )iaat«« lndf
HUB
"PUNCH.
rfilT
Heady oil Opening. Just tho thin r#
for nsc in
CLUBSi
J? HOTELS, ji PARTIES, lit» and at
a
PEIYATE J3PEEADS.
Put a Case in your Wine Cellar. Sold by all Grocers, Druggists and Wine Merchants. flarSce thatthegcnuinealways bears the facsimile of the proprietors on the capsule over the cork of each bottle.
C. II. WAVES & SMS, Prop's, Boston.
Trade supplied at manufacturers' prices, by
^BARKER & ALVEY,
.. ..i, .. jfain street. Terre Haute. Ind.
"•J 8500 KEWAKI). We will pay the above reward ror any case of Liver Complaint Dyspepsia,: Sick Headache, Indigestion, Constipation, or Cost!vencss, wo cannot cure with Wests Vegetable Liver Pills, when the directions arc strictly complied with. They are purely vegetable, and never fail to give satisfaction. Sugar-coatcd. Large boxes, containing 80 pills,.25 cents. For sale by druggists. Beware of counterfeits and Imitations. The genuine manufactured by JOHN C. WEST fc CO., "The Pill-Makers," 181 and 183 W. Madison street, Chicago. Free trial package sent by mail, prepaid, on rcccipt of a 3-cen t. stam P.
New Advertisements.
SELTZER
Nature's Sparkling Specific for indigestion and biliousness, the. water of the famous Seltzer- 'Spa, is "duplicated In a moment with a spoonful of Tarrant's Seltzer Aperient, which contains every valuable element of the German Spring. The greatest physicians of Europe pronounce thut free gift of Providence the most potent of all known alteratives, and its fac-ximile, fresh and foaming, Is now placed within the reach of every invalid within the western world.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
APFNTC Send -for free list of latest "UCH I O
ant
.E.SELLERS &
PROPRIETORSfrt-^"
PITTSBURGHvRA.
AfMhn upMially IrulM on •clentlQc^ principle#, villi sale and snre renwdlen. Call or writa tor Lilt of Qoe» ttona to be answered by than dMlrlng treatment bj mall, /hum alkrli* fro* Kaftan aboaM seat tkalr a44naa,% land hanaMntblag to their adraatace. Itliaotatra*.# AMim DK. BDTTS, 1« X. git Bt^ SU Ma, I* pTimmmm OTIB TH1KXV VKABS.
Stockholders' Meeting.
I. R. Co., i' 22, 1882.
OFFICE OF THE
TERRE HAUTE & LOOANSPOKT TERRE HAUTE, July 22, Notice is hereby given that there willbe a meeting of the Stockholders of theTerre Haute A Logansport Railroad Company held at the office of the President., No. 8J^ North Sixth street, Terre Haute, Indiana, on Saturday, August 20, A. D., 1882, at ten (10) o'clock a. m., totransactsuch business as may come before the meeting, including the matter of extending thecompany's line north of Logansport.
By order of the Board of Directors. GEO. E. FARRINGTON, Secretary.
BEfDHE-AND-AFTER Electric Appliances are sent on 30 Days' TriaL
TO MEN ONLY, Y0UNQ OR OLD,
11 HO aro suffering from NKRVOUB DEBILITY, W LOST
VITALITY, LACK
or NERVR
TiooRt WABTINTF WBAKNSSSBS,
srrandest
FORCE AUD
and all thoso diseases
of a PERSONAL KATURR resulting from ABUSES AND OTHER CAUSES. Speedy relief and complete res to. ration of HEALTH,Vioon and MANHOOD GUARANTEED. The
discovery of tho Nineteenth
Send
Oentnrjr.
at once f6r Illustrated Pamphlet free« Address
VOLTAIC HIT CO.. MAHSHAU. MICH.
HARRIS REMEDY GO.,% RTf Cbrntib «nd Bole Prop'* of PR0F.HARRI8' PASTILLE REMEOY
Yoaa* Xfn ud others wbo tnfTer from Ntrroos «ad Fbjiical Otbll* ity, Preznatoro Kihaqitioo and their msnr gloomy conteqaenoet, are qoleUy and radically cored.
Tic Seoody ia put op in boxet. Ko. 1 (lattlng a month), |L Ha.fi (eaoafh to effeet a core, unless in aerere eases,) |i| l*.l (lasting three month*), $7. Sent by mail in plain wrappers.
IMreetSMtffcrCelaf aeeompaayeaehBo*. Pamphlet desertting tMi disease and znode of cttro sent sealed on application.
Indiana University,
BLdOMINGTOW, HTD. College Year fecgina SEPT. 7th, 188%. TUITION FREE. BOTH SEXES ADMIT
TED ON EQUAL CONDITIONS. For Catalogue and other Information address IDJ^KL MOSS, yr, W. SPANGLEB, President
Se«r«Uir^.
StaUMta
Hostetter'a Bitterfr: cxtirp«U^ dyspej»i» wiU» gre*tcr joertainty, jnd grbmpUtude than any known remedy, and nwt genial InTltroirant, appetiser and aid to:secretion. The#e are not empty assertions, as thousands-of pur oonntrymen and women Who hive experienced it* effect* are aware,' but are 'backed ~up illy irre-
NJA\IJ
XVi ii
best goods. Bigpay to
agents. Either sex. J. LORENZO BROWN, Kalamazoo, Mich.
ADVERTISERS,send
for our Select List
of Local Newspapers. Geo. P. Itow11 & Co., 10 Spruce street, New York.
O E S S O IN A E A E O N E DRUGGIST S/Sj
rO-,'
Tlve
orgona
ft
THIS .standard article is compounded with tlie greatest care. Its effects are as wonderful and is satisfactory as ever.
It. restores gray or faded hair to its youthful color. It removes all eniptions, itching and dandruff. It gives the head a cooling, soothing sensation of great comfort, and the scalp by its use becomes white and clean.
By its tonic properties it restores the capillary: glands to their normal vigor, preventing baldness, and making the liair grow thick and strong.
As a dressing, nothing has been found so effectual or desirable. A. A. Ilaycs, M. D., State Assayer of Massachusetts, says,'' The constituents are pure', and carefully selected for excellent quality and I consider it the BEST PREPARATION for its intended purposes." !hw "'VmPrice, One Dollar. iili (.»?• .'
Suolrl'n ghnm's Dye FOR THE WHISKERS. This elegant preparation may be relied on to change the color 6f the beard' from grayr or an}* other undesirable shade, to brown or black, at discretion. It is easily applied, being in one preparation, and quickly and effectually produces a permanent color, wJijGhjWill neither rub nor wash ofu-~
Manufactured by R. P. HALL & CO., NASHUA, W. H. SoU by all Emjsists, ul Ceiltn in UtilelBH.
ANKING.:
TREASURY DEPARTMENT,
OFFICE COSIPTROM/EB OF THE CURREVCY, AVASHENGTOS. Julie 29,1882. "Whereas, By satisfactory evidence, presented to the undersigned, it has been made to appear that::the Eirst{National Bank of Terre Haute, in the city of Terre Haute, in the County of Vigo,and State of Indiana, has complied With all the provisions of the Revised Statutes of the United States, required to be complied with be fore an association shall be Authorized to commence tho business of Baliking:
Now, therefore,. I Jolj'n J. Knox, Comptroller of tlie'Currency, do hereby testify that the First National Bank of Terr re Haute, in the city of Terre Haute, In the county of Vigo and Stiite'of Indiana, is authorized to commence the business of banking as prescribed in section fifty-one hundrod'and sixty-nine of the Revised Statutes of the United-States.
In testimony wherepf witness my hand and theseal of office lhftf29th day of June, 1882. '.' [SEAL] ~r~"" JOHN J. KNOX,
Comptfoller of thoCurrency.
No. Z74£
/GST mrtu
U-DUI !o
long•xperlencein curiogdiReueaof the Blood* fikia aal
FREE!
RELIABLE SELF-CURE.
A fcvoi
A favorite, prescription of one of tha
moat noted and'successful «pccl»llsts in the V. S. (now retired) for the cure of jernwn JtWUf. Msomt SanhM, Weaknemm ati(l Oemy, Sent In plain sealid envelopej^ee. -Drugglsts'tanfllllt.
Addren DR. WARD &CO. Lemiaiia.- M«.
BRUMFlEL'S
Is Headquarters for jy
Guns, Revolvers, Ammunition, Fis iiiing Tackle, Pocket Cutlery.
A Fine and Complete Line of
HI NTIXG SIITS
Locks Sepaired and Keys Made and fittedFISHINO TAOKLiB.
Mr. Brumficl has the finert stock of fiihlng tackioever displayed in tho city. Rods, Reels, Lines, Hooks, Trot Linet, Minnow Selni, etc.
Special Bargains offered in
English Twist Breech-Loading
Gr TUN'S. All kinds oC Gun Work done in the beat of style and at reasonable rates..
Minnows always on hand for fishing parties. AGENT FOR THE'
VICTOR SEWING MACHINES. No. 328 Ohio St,Terre Haute, ind'
SIGN OF THE BlG GUN.
WITJENBERG COLLEGE,
Springfield, Ohio, will begin .its: noxt session Sept. th, 1882. nieologlcil, Classical, Phllosbphicnt,' Preparatoi'y, and Normal Courses. Instruction: thorough. Bnauty of location unsurpassed. Tuition -andincidental fee 531.50. Send f6r ctttftlOgUe:
for loss "t or rapticrvur^ojo veins or any DbfMe. Thoauuiihr -of pvAritam-uni •oldier««ntttled to IKCK^AJSEJMKLJ^ITKTY. PATENTS prodnrU foi lsveBt«ir *^o1dl toBdwnoUprocaarM^booKbtftkdxfl anA Wr« DTt tor JrbttrriffhUat ilMM for '•Tho Oiiit&rMHieriviii] ui Bo«BI7, Uwa« 9tta1is*ftad iui
MOORE &
FACTS
3* ,-v
tPJi'
iy.. —.
...
a if
fjm ESTABLISHED?
A
BY TESTIMONY.
airf rifKv *rrtr$' 'to z-br-i^ I*1 :f'~ an .'-ii-ic-s "S
'ty 15.
r.ytwii
wish''^ 'AntW the attention of'
tho reader to:a few facts winch we will afterwards*confirm by the most unimpeachable testimony First, it is a fact thai? in this' everchanging climate 'iwoH are one And all exposed to sudden heat and cold, bringing on'chills, coughs and colds, which in their turn produce Asthma,. Bronchitis, Ulcerated Soref Throat or Consumption. It is a fact that Rheumatism is getting more prevalent every day, and has become chronic with many sufferers. It is a fact that Neuralgia renders the exist-, ence of many tlionsands a life of martyrdom. It is a fact that Catarrh has horrors that no one can form any conception of, except those who suffer.? It is. a fact that'Croup carries more children to the grave than any other infantile disease. It is a fact that we are all liable to accidents, and may get hurt or cut, burned, scalded or bruised, however careful we may be and it is a fact that we are at all times subject to organic derangements of a serious? nature, which too often terminate: fatally. These are facts which bear no? dispute. But the next fact is one oi serious importance to the public, for: every one should know it. It is this, that .i ..
Thomas' Eclectric Oil
is a positive, reliable and certain cure for all tho ailments enumerated, as well as for many others incident to the constitution, such as Stiff Joints,' Swelled Neck, Sprains, Chapped Hands, Lame Back, Blind and Bleeding Piles, Chilblains, Frosted Feet, Pains in the Back or any part of the system. In fact, it is a remedy that stands paramount above all others. Ib is equally effective externally 'or internally, and all who have ever used it are never "without it. "j
These are facts which are proved by the following testimony, which wo challenge the world to contradict:
ojtA Baptist Minister's Experience. I am a Baptist minister, and before I eyer thought of being aclcreyman, I graduated in medicinc, but left a lucrative practice for my profession, forty years ago. I was for many years.a sufferer from quinsy:—"Thomas' Kclcctric Oil cured me." I was also troubled with hoarseness, and Thomas' Eclectric Oil always relieved me. My wife and child had diphtheria and "Thomas Eclectric Oil cured them," and if taken in time it will cure seven times out of ten. I am confident it is a cure for the ihost obstinate cold, and if any one will take a small teaspoon and half till' it with the Oil, and then place the end of the spoon Into the head by sniffing as hard as they can, until the Oil falls into the throat, and practice that twlcc a week, I don't care hoWoffensive their head may be, it will clean it out and cure their catarrh. For deafness and earache it has done wonders to my certain knowledge. It is the only mcdicine dubbed patent medicine that I have ever felt like recommending, nnd I am very anxious to see it in every place, for I tell you that I would not be without It forany consideration. I am now suffering with a pain like rheumatism in my right limb, and nothing relieves me like Thomas' Eclectric Oil.
DR. E. F. CRANE, Corry, Pa.
What a Near Neighbor Says, who Speaks from Experience. AKRON, Erie County, N. Y.,
wonderful success. Pamplets sent free to all. Write for them. and get full particulars.
SAilUEIi A.rORl\D..D.
PENSIONS
-Setid™
nt •,
•s-rtf/ in jot-lav
BOOK AND JOB PRINTERS
SOUTH FUTEl 8TREET,.
DAJIiY XXPSB88 BUILDINQ
•.
County, N. Y., December 0, 1881.
To the proprietors of Thomas' Electric. Oil: ENTS—Last March I took a severe cold, and, being negligent in doctoring it, brought the Asthma on me very severe. I could not not lie down or sle«p for wheezing and shortness of breath. I took this thing and that, and tried different doctors, but found no relief. Six. months ago I saw an advertisement in the papers recommending Dr. Thoma's Eclectric Oil, so I thought I would try that, and wonderful to relate, yet nevertheless true, the first dose I took relieved me In a few mlnutes.and before I had taken xnefourth of a oO-cont bottle I could breathe freely and sleep as well as ever. It is equally as magical forcuts, bruises, burns and rheumatism. I woke up a few mornings since with such a pain in my chest, that I could not draw a long breath, My wife said, "rub on Thomas' Eclectric Oil." I did so, and in a few minutes the pain was gone, and I h«*e not felt It since. My wife,'also,
HAD
a severe attack of rheumatism in the arm and sido. She applied the Oil with tho same result. I would not be without it if 1 had to walk ten miles for It, and then pay J5 for a 50 cent bottle. I send you this testimonial hoping you will publish it, so that suffering humanity may be relieved of their achos and pains. v'Si
Yours respectfully,
S. S. GRAVES,
•jj.: ,Vj/ Akron, Erie County, N. Y.
Foster, Milburn & Co.,
Proprietors, Buffalo, If. Y.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
To Kervous Sufferers—The Great European Bemedy—Dr. Simpson's Specific Medicine.
It is a positive cure for Spermatorrhea,4 Seminal Weakness, Impoiency, and all diseases resulting from self-abuse, as mental anxiety, loss of memory, pains in the ... £]e
Price, Speclflcjll.oo per package, or 6«noki»ges for «. Addrem all orders to
J.'B. SIMPSON MEDICINE CO., Nos. 104 and 106 Main' street, Buffalo, N. Y. Sold Id Terre Haute by Groves A Lowry.'
lADIES*,
Vie
I The ONLY Book ll of the kind 11 ertr pafc'4 •MEW EOIXIOM.A LwitningtM to lUqpnsent lime, wttb orer*S«*l fortrthl lot the Ladle* of the
White Houae. with Ticwnfmlnyof the
I Hoinesofthe Prefldeat*. AOaaUMtmare.botli very l^^a^^AKentsWantcd rOMHEE A M^MAKTN. PmW
I" (IMIIMU. 0U*.
DIVIDEND NOTICE.
f/!i u-U
TERRBHAXJTE & IKDIANAFOLIS R. R. Co.") lof A -r SECRETARY'S OFFICE,
f.-
TERRE HATJTE,Ind., July 22,1882. Tne Board of Directors have this day declared a semi-annual dividend of four (4) per cent., payable to stockholders on and after August 1st, 1882. Western dividend payable at the office of tho Treasurer, in Terre Haute, Ind.
GEORGE
fj, FARRINGTON, &eorot*rjr,
