Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 14 January 1883 — Page 2
•'4
*wi
J§
*-A 1
daily express.
M. A.LLKN,
tiJEO
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The Ma' boom booms apace.
It is a jiizzard and arrived by the overland route.
It requires the rigid enforcement
the repressive laws
The Milwaukee horror has directed attention to the laws
I
hsf A
on
in
tegarding
241
_Uuldemor
various states
fire escapes. In this state
tlielaw requirs that all doors of public buildings shall swing outward. Section
requires that in all hotels
and places for the entertainment
transient guests over
height in cities
suitable
•Xfrom $5
lo comply
rv
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"Treatise
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Persons subscribing for the Week
ly for one
of
in Ireland
and
Italy to secure piece and quiet, and
secured it is very much as the Irishman had the flea. The Democratic legislature has refused the offer
of the state librarian to
furnish it with stationery at
10
per
cent, less than the price paid by the state printing bureau to a Democratic contractor.
There is a serious question agitatin.i: social circles in Indianapolis which promises to lead to frightful consequences. Senator
McDonald has given
a reception to the legislature before the governor of the state.
The reader will give a sigh of relief this morning on learning that Mr. Polk, of Tennessee, has comfortable quarters in the jailor's office. The uratifyintr hope is also extended that Sunday only is to intervene before his counsel
bejiin
their efforts to have him
released on bail. The New York city benevolent associations are waging war on the practice of giving alms to street mendicants In
furnishing
reasons for
11
are hundreds
is shown that there
of families
of
two stories in
of upwards of five
thousand inhabitants, there shall be
escapes.
to
he state board
A
fire
$50
fine
tor eacii lay
"with
of failure
the law is imposed.
of health
••.'quiring
.uilding
has
a rule
health officers to report any
being constructed that does
not comply with the law.
Michigan City quit breathing
:ted
..incoln
j13
for a
or two last week when it. heard ir.it Secretary of War Lincoln had •X
in his report to congress that
the. improvement of the harbor
jt
that point
was not a work
of public necessity. Powerful pravers' were immediately sent to Washington to luive the report pass unheeded by congress. If Secretary
has, as he is credited with
having, any purpose of being a candidate for the presidential nomination,
can from this time on, in tho estimate of his strength, omit the names of any delegates to the convention may be selected from the vicinity
~who
of Michigan City,
which
It
seems that
members of the legislature, the banks, and public men have been helping
Polk deplete the public treasury. The committee learned that Tolk had been enabled through tho aid of several banks to increwehis stealings
a
pUite
$100,000.
correspondent the way it was
I'Si done as follows: JV
In otdcr
to accounts last
when
April
he
^Sfl^fjport to
lure, on
the legisla-
|^]s
557,550
books
^S&SPjfcuie
tTTS'ashvllle.
Sit'
on
Merchants' national bank,
This credit also appears
the bank's account with Polk. Both
were
1
false entries, as not a dollar was,in
I
deposited. The president of the
act
bank
claims that
he bank a check on itself for the full
.-unount
vus
b.uik
conspiracy to deceive the
and aid the embezzler. Taken all in all Tennessee stands in pretty light before the country.
repudiates
its
a
ed
It
bonded debt and when
state official absconds it is
that the
discover
prominent
American Farmer. -„rviceable telTo make a good and sorwceable Ml «nl.o»e, good from one torn hou- to
ixes
diameter
jttom
'-1#
is complete. The writer has one that is
yards long and cost
organ is played thirty
forty-fiTO
cents, that will carry music
#hen
GOTHAM GOSSIP.
Country Cousins'
Returning
Bteerers
Making Hay—River»ldeP»rk—A Neglected Drive Its Beauties and Associa tions
Walton tlie American Plun
James
ger to Retire from tlie
—Death
Yohk, Jan.
a
Weekly Expr
copy
ress will be sent
9.—Our
To,
serve as
cicerono for any extended period is apt to become tedious. The one thing that seemed to attract most of their attention was the Brooklyn Bridge. Its massive towers which are a monument to the ingenuity of men to spend millions when they belong to public funds, its swaying
fast will
Those accomplished gentlemen who live by their wits,
swindlers or
The other morning the senior member of
leading banking house, was
a
likewise accosted by a handsome, faBhionably dressed young man who accosted as Mr. Richardson
warmly
with him. He
shook hands so warmly that he gave his wrist a wrench which sent the young man sprawling on the slippery and muddy pavement. before he could recover himself,Then
A
"the
has
only
harbor in Indiana." Marsh Polk, Tennessee's absconding treasurer threatened to make
"other
hearts ache" on his return to that state, and judging from the disclosures made by the legislative investigating committee there were well grounded reasons for the threat.
policeman rushed up to
see what the disturbance
was but
as as
it
the bends
Polk gave him three
checks on other banks to that amount, for which credit was
given
send
but not
collection,hedid in obedi
the checks
for
ence to Polk's request until after
1
lie legislature adjourned. Then Polk canio and took back the checks, giving
balance. Tho same game as
to
j,laved
with the Nashville savings
to' the extent of
833,000
with the
Mechanics' bank of Knoxville, for
830,000,
and the First national bank, of Columbia, for same amount. In all these the falcthe appeared on the bank books,entriesand also, the commiUce charge llmt It was
the forefathers of
tt^gn
men of the state
liave been in collusion with him. Telephones for Fanners.
in the center of the
of each, and then place one in the houses you wish to conthen get five pounds of common love pipe wire, make a loop in and put it through the hole air cigar box and fasten it with a then draw it tight supporting it,
when necessary,
cord- You can easily run
"lhie into'tiic house by boring a through the glass. Support your =i at the ends with slats nailed the window, and your telephone
reminds one
obtain
naaga****~
5
has bid.
I
the
in an
feet atffejr
other room."
,s
of
the esplanades so frequently seen in cities on tho European continent. The land here is particularly high and you
and curves and capes
understand
000.
span which
will
eventually destroy Brooklyn as a distinct city and make it a part of the metropolis as the territory above the Harlem river, and the suggestions of its foundation above the river bed, which cost so many lives combined inspire a species of awe which a Philadelphian would give a great deal to arouse in the Quaker City. The dato of opening it has been so tsfteii postponed that one ceases to believe the announcement of the commissioners. Yet, it is
salary
His Advice
the confidence
"bunco
steerers," as they
arc euphoniously termed in the vernacular of the police, will regret the departure
the out-of-town visitor.
of
so doing
some statistics are given regarding the number of persons who secure a living by this means.
whose only
resource is in professional begging,and that in many instances the so-called mendicants are possessed of a very fair share of this world's goods.
To their eyes he is legitimate prey.
$45,000,
a
Home—
—Bunco
to
-pretty
definitely settled now that pedestrians will have an opportunity to cross the bridge by the first of next month People have ceased to believe that the bridge will be a practical benefit to the citizens of either city at any other time than perhaps in winter. Pedes trians by walking
be enabled
to save five minutes toy using it instead of the ferry, but tjiis gain will hardly be sufficient to recommend it generally, particularly as the ascending of staircases means a physical exertion which you are spared by the ferry boat. To sightseers, however, the bridce proper will be invaluable since the view from the center of it down the bay and up the East river to the Sound will be supreb.
but
not yet- been- accepted.
hisjofferiias
Capt. Conner proposei'to give an impetus to the bar trade of the estabHshmentr to which Mr. Walton bag paid no attention He has been for some years
sufferer from the gout
and seldom went inside of the oarroom. Capt. Conners proposes to make the hotel
a
tiotei
—Wealth
of Jockey Barrett
of
Artists in tlie Saddle. Special Correspondence of the Express
country
cousins who generally pay Gotham a visit during holiday Week have gone, and much as we enjoy their company and their admiration and wonder for things in general we cannot but feel relieved over the fact.
headquarters for the
theatrical and racing world and compete against the Hoffman house. With Lis popularity he ought to sucteed should he get the hotel.
William Barrett, once famous jockey, who rode Mr.the Pierre Lorillard's horses when they first ran in England, died at Long on Saturday, of consumption.Branch
He died poor, since
the later years
Teakes Mr.
Lorillard's present chief jockey,, a nice little farm near Deckertown,has
Costello,
New
Jersev, and is worth about
S20,-
ft
youth
een. Gfeorge Lorillard'seight
of
jockey,Mr. about
owns
his usual riding
speculation, however.
property
on Long Island. Hughes, who rode for Mr.James
E.
Kelly last year, got a
$4,000
of
a year and per
cent, of his winning mounts,ten
besides
feei H3
lost
NAT GOODWIN'S NOTIONS.
Beginners in the Dramatic Profession.
Spirit of the Times,
"I have
had iib time." writes Nat
Goodwin,
"to
struggle with grammar
and join McCullough and the other great tragedians in the North American Iteview in publishing my views on the subject of
'Success
Besides,
I
prefer another medium of
cohimullicating the thoughts that are too much for me in the world at large. To a beginner
I
lie will
have
and successful,years.a
fifty If
of them
I
am assured by a police captain that these insinuating swindlers, who recognize an old and dear friend in every contemplative and curious countryman who seems
possess money,
to
have enjoyed a harvest of exceptional richness. So audacious, in fact, did they become that they grew careless and plied their arts on elderly men, residents of the city who are fully up to the snares and delusions of the great city. President Sharp, of the Third Avenue car line, was attacked one day by one of these clever young men. He played with him as long as the game afforded him sport, then he gave him the go by enjoyed the fellow's discomfiture.and
very healthy
an may catch two
and die.actor Second, if be
ginner does not fancy that way,the
he can
join some variety show purchase
it
A "Mere
of
Schoharie,him New York. The old gentleman professed great delight at meeting the son of an old resident and shook hands
Boy of
Peck's
"Why,
he smashed
his shiny silk hat for him, blackened both his eyes, and seizing him by the back of his neck and seat of his pants flung him headforemost into the gutter where he turned a complete som ersault.
of
of twenty
an unobstructed view
as far the Hudson
reach.up
as the eye will
The view is only obstructed
by
of t.ie
opposite side. The tall, steep scraggy masses of the Palisades stare you in the face with their historical sugges tions, dense masses of bluish green pines and firs relieve the expanse ot snow in winter, and beneath the ice bound river sweeps its way with the placid regularity and evenness of a stream in
as
"far
tlie
country
from the
madding strife" of the city. The iiouses at the upper end of the road are all old and nearly of them hare historical suggestions.allShould you be inclined to leave the regular road and diive into the by-ways yom will meet a charming variety of landscape. You may climb up and down little hillocks and unexpectedly light on rich paddocks where you expect to meet nothing but thoroughbred cattle. Now and then you will meet a half buried tombstone, or a vault through which you may peep and see the coffins which mark the places
be
"where
if you are poetically inclined, look up at the expanse of clear sky above you and the sighing branches of the pines and listen to the JEolian harps formed by the telegraph wires and write verses.
Mr. Theodore Walton, who has gained international fame by his plunging on rcce horses, is about to retire from the St. James Hotel, which he owns. His enemies assert that his expedition to England last fall cost him so much money that he can no longer the pace."
"lowever"live
so
the hamlet lay,"and
I
believe,
that the reason is simply
this, that the owners of the building, the Ames estate,
a higher figure than Mr.the
to
000
a year. they want
"whichNow I
price
to the
Conner, well known throughout the racing world as the owner of the famous race mare,Glidelia,
in
of
'is* j.
and equally known
the theatrical world
28."
Siln.
It is that when any one speaks to Mrs.said
and
Freddy is
oayo,
the American boys
the
young man did not stop to make a complaint. He took his mud be-draggle-1 person away
his
acking imnes permitted it.quick Driving fast horses on the road is becoming a passion among New Yorkers. Tho m.m who makes money no longer looks forward to owning a magnificent house, but sets his heart on
a
trotter. Now a trotter in these parts means something that can go better than at least
2:30,
and this means
money. Thus the amount and quality of horseflesh that fills the roads of an afternoon and is put up
for
rest at
such famous roadside hostelries as Gabe Case's Barry's, Judge Smith's
and others represents millions. The most charming road about here is Riverside Drive, yet
for
some reason
or other it is neglected.
It
is not
fashionable, and is used only bp such people who have no ambition to be seen ana who are satisfied to jog along instead of sending the dust flyng at a pace that takes the breath of a tyro away. Riverside Park is one of those monuments of the Tweed re gime in New York. It is beautiful beyond description, but it has also swallowed up millions beyond precedent It is situated on the extreme west side of the city, beginning about One Hundreth street where it skirts the liver for miles. Adorned with handsome granite butresses, and flanked by trees which at present have not yet attained their full growth,
of
three. English bpys £f that age may be mere children that handsome women can use
pets, the same
as
as
they
would use poodles, with no serious result*. The English boys of twentythree may be puling infants that can be held in the lap, but the American boy of that age is not that kind of a hairpin, and a handsome English women who presumes upon the youth and innocence of such a child is liable to wake up to
She has lived all her
life where men have becoms princes before they can say their souls are their own. She has lived where men in the ordinary walks of life think they are in luck if they are allowed to look at a handsome woman, and who never know what it is to love until they so old that the}' wear false teeth.are
She has lived where a boy
is not allowed to
it a duty to
warn her against these boys.
It
to hold this youth in her lap, just as unsafe as it would be to holdagrown person. Because she looks upon him as a mere boy she may be tempted to let him kiss her, and that would break her all up. American boys of
safe
not good for man to be alone with an English beauty. She may not know it, but Amtric&n mere boys have been known to frequent the vicinity of ladies who did not realize that the boys were men to all intents and purposes, until it has been necessary to call in the and wake up the old folks,neighborsthe
and call minister in the night to celebrate nuptials,up
was trouble all
"mere
have raised rent
Walton
cares to pay. He has been giving
$50,000,
the manager"
as
John McCollough, the tragedian
boy"
$40,-
a
am inclined to believe
they will not
get. Captain William
M.
him to keep on his side of the cutter, and
not,.under
any.
a
sparkling comic song from some good writer have it set to music get
W.
Carleton, Charles Gaylor, McDonald or McCloskey to write a plot around the s«ng, and he
will
be engaged
for a
forty weeks'season, and may be longer at a high salary. But, the beginner takes the second way,ifhe must never own that suecess was easy.
I
find that
all the really great actors, who have been boosted to the top of the tree by chance, notoriety or money, are very fond of referring to their days and nights of toil and struggle, and of hinting how very hard they work now.
have had toils and struggles and hard work myself but it was generally after the performance was over, and
I
might better have been home in bed. The midnight oil theory is but
never saw it in practice,beautiful,
I
It is
'w-asy
so
did you
to study and struggle
when you feel the Bank of California at your back.
I
believe that an actor
should study acting attend to his business like other people and, when he he draws a prize in the lottery of the profession, thank heaven for it, endeavor to deserve
cirpimstaBees^o
allow herself to drive the bosses while he puts his arm around her sealskin elbak to gfet his haAds warm.
is a bold, bad man,
Fi-eddy
aBd
we bet
on it. He would admit it,would himself, privately,
we have
no doubt,
1v
MR. CONKIiING AS A SPORT.
An Alleged Instance in Which he ures as an Admirer of Haicle,FigChicago Times.
in
of his
engagement with
Mr. Lorillard, he grew careless in his habits and his riding and lost many races. Had be behaved himself he could have died well off.
Thiebaud Bauer, the wrestler, who is sojourning in St. Louis, tells
a
Mr. Conkling
in the" room, and
first
$35,000
invested
in stocks,has all his own savings.
Mc
Laughlin, the American Auber. is equally off, and Mr. Belmont'well famous rider,HeyWard,
was
him Mr. Bauer
to
was introduced
as professor.
"I
have
often heard of you and your GrfecoRonian wrestling.
I
should very much
like to witness an exhibition of the sport." Bauer replied that it could bo very easily arranged, and a few moments later a party composed of Conkling,
tin
intimate
it all in
friend)
part
Bauer
ajid a
detective, walked quietly out of the hotel and were driven to East Twenty second where Muldoon, the wrestler,streeta
has saloon and gymnasium
of the equipment of which
is a
wrestling arena. Muldoon was willing to give a private exhibition, and he and Bauer at onco retired to dress, or rather undress, for the bout
The only spectators to the twenty minutes of as fine wrestling as was ever seen in the country, either in public or private, were Conkling, friend and the detective. Bauer,his
telling of it, says:
on the Stage.'
"Muldoon
and
and Conkling
should advise one
of
two things. First, may join a good old stock company,he
if he can find one
in the woods anywhere, and remain a member of it for about forty. years. By that time
in
I
wrestled very hard,
was to death
He talked all the.timetickledthrew,
his chest and said
I
and out
-frhat
a vefy fine
young man he was twenty years ago When
I
very much obliged for this grand hibition,' and then he walked out.exI tell you
was hot.
so worked
himself up as to receive a living salary, support stars and be prepared for a testimonial on his fifteenth anniversary, whacking up with the manager, of course. This reward of merit virtually amounts to half-clear benefit every
1
'Bill, I
said to Muldoon,
will strike him for
S100.' 'No,'
said because he know his business.Bill,
Since that time
Mr.
Conkling
has gone to Muldoon's place on the quiet many times to see Bill wrestle. He is very fond of the sport."
SALE OP THE TUILERIES. History of tlie Historic Place. The spectacle of the ruins of the Tuileries sold for less than
summer residence for his mother, Louise of Savoy. The building, whose ruins are now about to disappear, was commenced in
a
1564
I
IY.
sumed, and thence, almost to the time of the scmaine sanglantc, the
addition and
was
and keep quiet
about the price of midnight oil,and his wrestles with the wick. The Review may copy."
to carry
"La
Langtry about her impropriety
in being so familiar with young Gebhordt, nhe looku surprised
Comtesse de Charny,"
which
mere boy. He is
a
only twenty-three years old." We do not desire to give advice where it is not needed, but as an old man we cannot help telling Mrs. Langtry to beware
twenty-
HL
a realizing
sense, when it is everlastingly too late, that the American youth of twentythree is endowed with certain inalienable rights, among which is life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Freddy may appear to be, to the untutored mind of an beauty, a harmless little child,English
good to carry
shawls to a matinee,enough
but unacquainted
with the wickedness of the world, but when she learns that American boys in round-abouts do not permit handsome women to pet them with impunity, without showing that they know what is the matter with Hanner, will keep the twenty-three-year-she
American little boy on the other side of the barbed wire fence. We do not blame the lady. She has simply been deceived the style of the American youth.in
and when ruled
go
in
comp°ny-three without his mother, and where they do not learn to be truly bad till late in life. In acting as a mother to young Gebhardt Langtry is taking many chances,Mrs.
and
an old man who knows much
Man's"
sa wended
is
un
23
kiss
near like grown persons as to deceive the oldest inhabitants and if he is a representative American youth and she allows him privileges far beyond his y«ars, she
them
of
.wentwork
on. It
reserved"alterationlate
to the Emperor
out the old idea
of
connecting the Tuileries with the Louvre. There was some reason in tradition that Tuileries was fatal to its occupant.theOh, Tuileries, Tuileries!" exclaims Alexandre Dumas in
Of these five kings only
one has been dismissed by you to the tomb where his ancestors awaited him and of the fourothers whom history claims of thee, one has been de livered to the scaffold, and the three others to exile!" To this melancholy list there is now to be added Napoleon
THE ALASKA TROUBLES. Version of the War. SanAnother
Francisco, Jan.
12.—A Port
land dispatch says: Paul. Schulze, a prominent citizen of this city, who has large interests in southeastern Alaska, and who is conversant with the character and dealings of
Hoot-
tlie
scliauss Indians, as well as of all circumstances surrounding the recent shelling of the Indian village by the United States man war Corwin, was interviewed to-dayof an associated press correspondent.byMr. Schulze said Capt. Merrimau demand from the Indians
400
blankets for^hav-
of
old
ing threatened the lives of white and having seized the company'sman property, was entirely in keeping with the Indian custom*, and had Mterriman, after making the demand, not taken severe steps to punish the refusal, the lives and property of the white men would have been in constant These Indians respect force,jeopardy.
a
the English navy
firm yet
just hand, behave well.with
They respect
'because
the
Englishmen have dealt firmly with on the British Columbian coast,themthey
but do not know what to make of the"sliilly shally vacillating policy of the
"Boston
"Boston
man"
(Ameri
can.) The effect of Capt. Marriman's action is that the Indians now call him
Man" with
"King
(Englishman.)
Schulze adds:
of
A
but as lady seems to
unsophisticated—the
at
least no ones
knows for certain that she has been sophisticated—we deem
heart. Mr.
I
the
American youth from experience, we advise her to quit. If the English lady only knew of half the damage that lias been done by American boys of twenty-three and under,merewould she have a care, and would not allow this vouth the freedom of her bowdoir. We do not know what a is, boudoir but it is something that belongs to a woman, and Freddy is too young be there. It is none of our business,to
am satisfied the In
dians now respect our authorities, and if false sentimentality be not allowed to nullify Capt. Merriman's action, the respect will continue and will increase.
Casting Sins Into the Sea. Leisure Hour.
strange scene was witnessed by an English visitor at Odessa on the first day of the present Jewish year. Late in the afternoon
a
50,000
or
their way toward the sea
with the of throwing their last year'spurpose sins into it, in order to begin the new year with
a
a
in a very few
"toward
and there
arouna. We mention
these things that this lone woman may realize that what appears in America to be a
may actually turn
oat to be the oldest kind of a person, full of guile, who plays the fool in buying diamonds for an actress, while
in
his heart there lurks wicked designs upon her peace of mind. The woods are full of them, and as an elderly person who hates to
see
of
such innocence
placed in an awkward position, we go out
the beaten patn and implore
this woman, who has such child-like faith in
"a
***7
mere boy
23,"
of
to compel
ME TERRE HAUTE EXPRESS. SUNDAY MORNING, JANltAlilf ll, 1883.
CYCLONE.
[iMianapoils Herald.] Tyis-v-'ir
Dark clouds hung low along the sombfr land— The forest moans,as though soma great despair A lA
Amid its shadow* vast bad mads Its
]air__-clad
Like mist gianCs the old mountains stand
—.
And in the valley's sonorous Of stormy trumpeters,withband
blare
"Where
story
nevfeir yet published, which shows how, on occasion, the eminent and austere statesman, Roscoe Conkling, can unbend. During the last campaign Bauer, who has dabbled somewhat in local politics, went with a friend to the Republican headquarters in the Fifth Avenue hotel in search of the sinews of war.
spring,
of
High up where topmast, lithe and strong.^bendsthe
•.•••.-
—[Thos. 8.
The colored population in the south has
increased
about
The mineral output
year
William Black is sup posed to be making the largest income of any English novelist livings
A
threw Muldoon he clapped
his hands and said,
'Gentlemen,I
am
Boston jury has decided that a white husband is not worth
J. B.
sent
wondrous history. The
a
original Tuileries—then a country chateau—was bought by Francis
that the building was re
a New
§5,000
£1,300
to a
contractor, and carted away as old building materials, is a sight to move gods and men. This most historic of palaces had
$20
is now
by Philibert Delo
rene,- at the instigation of Catherine de Medicis. He died before he had
Edward Betts, tho only Republican member of the Delaware legislature, is treated very courteously by his colleagues.
Congressman Abram
M.
"fatah
her
itage, bequeathed by the Queen of Saint Bartholomew to her descendants and to successors! Palace of giddiness,her
S.
de Lesseps is said to be engaged in an effort to devise some mechanical appliances to protect his canal against earthquakes.
The Czar
destroy!
attracts but to
What fascination dwells in your gates! Without doubt, there is in thy stones, chiselled even as the works of Benvenuto Cellini, some fatal malignancy. Without doubt some fatal talisman hath found a refuge beneath thy roof. Look back on the kings thou hast re ceived, and what thou hast done with them?say
dosen'tWsleep
and the New
virtiser advises him
this country, and really threatens to leave them to their fate. An English tavern-keeper considers a man not too drunk to take liquor if he can say
say,"Settumupigin."
A
Washington dispatch to an mirer of General Logan says that
SUNDAY READING.
The Methodists have laid the corner stone of the Little Rock, Ark., university.
Austin: He who loves little, prays little he who loves much,
much. Washington: Labor to
The English revisers of the Old.Testament have completed tho second revision as far as the book of Proverbs.
The Friendly Society of Dissenting Ministers in Scotland has lost
$100,000
through embezzlement,about
acting secretary. Augustine:
A
IT LOOKED -gar"'
thunderous
Wake mighty echos, that upon the air Swept far fast In cadence high ana grand,and
the gnarled boughs of century monarens toss, And brown leaves flutter by,.
the ghost
Ring out the windy tumult of its song, And loud it roars, where tireless petrels cross The track of ships, whose bows the hit# sprays fling
$25
Collier.
WISE AND OTHERWISE.
From singing school the comes. His girl upon his arm,'lover And sitteth by her father's fire
,.
And waitbeth to get warm
A
foot at half-past one is heard, The swain doth quickly scoot For fear of setting too well
By her fond parent's boot.warmed New York htis but
2,500
loons. Chii ago
licensed sa
hangs one in
fifty-four of
her murderers. Princeton now sixty-two endowed scholarships.has
Senator Windonfs friends are confident of his re-election. The Springfield Republican is ing an incipient Edmunds boom.nurs
was
2,000,000
of
exceeded--$10,000,0!'0, valued
New rates. Mr.York
$5,000
MEAN.
TM BO* of a Stage Coa«h Passenger to Cheat the Highwaymen.
A
good
story
of
soon in the pocket
in twen
ty years. Jay Gould is hunting for a family escutcheon. How would a golden fleece do?
$2,000,
Utah last
to a
colored party of the other sex. The Chicago papers are boialy
in
sisting that the murder of a plumber is not justified by law or usage. The question
no
longer is have
Bourbon among us, but
'.
we
off half
cocked, or before he is loaded.
Jermain, of Waterville,
N. Y.,
Year card, wrapped in a
check, to Hamilton college. At Salida, Missouri,
a woman won
in a bet that she could chop a cord of wood sooner than
"White
I.
certain man.
a
Cincinnati is to have a new club house similar in its to the
Elephant"arrangement of New York.
One of the founders of the Cincinnati Mr. John
ings,Commercial^
as
L.
Hast
a compositor
so
much as half finished his task, and was succeeded by Jean Bullant, but ere long the building was left, unfin islied, in deference to some astrological superstition which affected Catherine. It was not until the time of Homy
These be the times that tries men's soles. The slippery pavements and man's anatomy are on visiting
Mrs. Myer, the widow of
we are
Hewitt, of
New York, has a return of insomnia, and at last had not slept for four nights.accounts
well of nights,
Ycm
A d-
Commercial
to join the New
York police force. Governor Butler is to live at a hotel during his administration. The faraway look of the hotel clerk
we all
"veterinarymore
geon." In this country
good conscience is
the palace of Christ the temple of the Holy Ghost the paradise of delight tho
"standing
George
Sabbath of the saints.
F. W.
Faber: Life as it runs out is
daily letting us down into Christ's bosom and thus each day and hour is a
step homeward, a danger over, a good secured.v
A
correspondent
of an
"herring
large number of the
60,000
for moving
The late George
clean soul.
They stood about in groups, closely packed together in some places, looking toward the water, reciting paryers or reading psalms or
portion of
Isaiah. The groups were formed for the most part
listeners, with
a man,
of
and.
instances,
—an
will find that it
is
a
tliam. Some of the
woman
old woman with spectacles on thoroughly Jewish nose—readingher
to
people turned
their pockets inside out and
shook
I
the sea. Others merely
made a sign
in to it. A Breakfast Suggestion About a
Dish.
New York Evening Post.
P.
recent publications
man
of throwing something church,having
1
A new way to man cooks to prepare sansages for the table is to bake them. Do not make an objection to this way of cooking them until you have tried it once, and then I predict that you will not think of so doing. Put them in a baking-tin, turning them when necessary, just as if you were frying them. Brown them well they are less greasy than if fried and are altogether more delicate in every way. If possible, apples in some lonn should always accompany sausage orpOrkof any kind to the table.
ground cleared
the old Arkansas
stage line from Fayetteville to Alma, now supplanted by the railroad, is told by a correspondent
of
Orleans Ti es-Deinocrat. His fellowpassengers on a certain night were a mild-eyed college professor and a plain, blunt man in a checkered shirt and trousers to match. At one point in the road the professor's hat blew off and over the precipice, but caught on a bush ten feet below.
of
his
reins, had returned the hat and received his reward, the professor explained that bills amounting to
$1,100
Were sewed under the lining. The stage rumbled on and everything seemed favorable for a quick trip, when suddenly a road stepped out from behind a tree.agentsearched
He
the passengtrs, but found so little to reward him for his trouble that he got mad and swore he would take their clothes and on naked to the next station.sendthem
His revolver
"Lookcheckered
an un
was
answerable argument, and tliey were about to strip, when the passenger in the shirt called out:
in the lining of that fel
low's hat and you will find 6ome money." The poor professor's
$1,100
robber,
of
who forthwith decamped.the
The stage
went on, but such was the rage
of
the
driver and other passengers at his poltroonery that he
of
the checkered
shirt had to walk. The next day he appeared at the hotel in Alma, took the professor aside and made him accept
saying that he knew he ap
peared like a dirty scamp, but the fact was he had
$10,000
at
under false soles in
his boots, and must inevitably have lost it if he had not devised a plan to escape He was a rich broker,beingstripped.
and had donned his rough
costume to avoid trouble in the mountains. Dangers of Chloral Drinking, Chamber's Journal.
Chloral has a direct action upon tn.e heart and the brain, so that when either of these organs is in an abnormal Condition, the dangers to be apprehended from Its use are not a
a
how
much
shall that bourbon be taxed. Cannon, of Illinois, makes pretty good speake
lie driesn't.goa
Its action differs very much from that of
.opiums
for the victims of the latter
seldom die from the immediate influence of the drug, but rath St from some organic disease brought on by its use.
Now*
chloral accumulates in the
system until such
ft
the nervous stimuli—the
of
the death thus being un
nature of
in that city
The Chicago News makes the ominous announcement that the various delegations at Sprinfield are now full.
Chicago,terms.
Professor Tomlins,
of
like that of chronic alcholism.not
made
a remarkable escape from death at the Milwaukee fire. He stopped at another hotel.
"Old
Probs," is building a mausoleum at Buffalo to the memory of her late husband.
glad to note, greatly de
creased during the past few years,
Concorala Has
and
be en
will
tirely lost on olcl Ben. Herr Most is disgusted with the apathy of the
"oppressed
catch it heavy.
sur
to
of
every part
look at her,that
a there displayed in show withher$2o°one
Episcopal pa
per complains because, with broad fields open in the Mrest, many clergymen are stowing themselves away,
fashion, in eastern cities.
The Central Congregational church, of sent to Rev Dr.BrooklynH.has
A. J.
Belirends,aofcall Brooklyn,
as successor to Dr. Scudder, off'erin liim-a
salary of
Odes
Jews inhabiting
$10,000
$1,000
per am
expenses.annum
Hamilton, of
Pittsburg, bequeathed
$5,000
to the
Pr.itestaiit Episcopal Domestic and Foreign Missionary society, and
$2,500
each to the Presbyterian Board of Home and Foreign Missions. Life counts not hours by Joys or pangs. But just by duties done.
—Mulock.
3tep to step lift bad to good, Wlthout4)altlng, without rest. Lifting Better np to Best Planting seeds of knowledge pure. —R. W. Emerson. The Catholic Mirror, alluding the
to Gen.to Sher-
as
joined the Catholic
charge that
the
publications
were made for politieal effect to prevent Gen. Sherman securing the nomi nation for the presidency. Thi3 world has work, for u« we must re
fuse
No honest task, nor uncongenial toll Fear not your feet to tire, nor robe to soil. Nor let your hands grbrr white for want of use. —Thomas Ashe.
The Rev. Joseph Cook says the "seven modern wonders of the world" are: The speed of intercommunication the self-reformation of the hermit nations the parallel advance of education and democracy the world oyer the world wide unity of civilization tlie triumph of Christianity the correct fulfilment of Bible prophecies,and the establishment, on a sure basis, of scientific supernaturalism.
t-
for
a knowledge of the evils of its indiscriminate use has been acquired, and a proper place in therapeutics has been assigned to it.
The Schoolmistress and Stocks. Carson City Appeal.
"Guess I
won't
go to
said a Carson City urchin with an Appeal in his hand.
"Why
not?"
fallen on
I
don't dare show up until
up some."
"What
cordia got to do with your studies f"
"A
good deal," answered the boy.
"My
has
100
stock,teacher
masses"in
I
$2.
he need only
ing
as pie.atI
"ad
my class that
the
general opinion at the capital is that the possibility of his nomination for the presidency in
1884
come a probability." In an old mail car sent to the Washington, Del., shops for repairs was found the other day
$161
bundle let
a
ters mailed twelve years ago.of One contained a check for
$200,
1870.
and an
other an invitation to a party in January,
keep my
I
eye
on the list, and there's break, you bet
don'when go to school.a
I
play
sick. Golly! how she basted me the time Mount Diablo went down to
When it was sell
$20
she was
as
was
good
the first feller that got
on to the break and told the
of
if she sell there'd
be the devil to pay.didn'heardboys
I
Frasier say it was
has now be
Uncle
"agood
short, and
never slept a wink for a week.
saw her kneel down
Bkipped to the hills.
My!
how
she did bang Dobson around that morning!Johnny
I
was in hopes the
blasted mine would pick up, but the water got into the lower levels, and
knew we were in for it. She licked somebody for every dollar it dropped. After it struck
$8
it picked up a little
and we had time to git. My mother', been patching my.pants ever since the big break in the
Sierra Nevada, and if
the market don't take a turn pretty soon
I'm
prays
keep alive in
your breast that little of celestial fire, called conscience.spark At Williomsport., Pa.j Dickinson seminary, fifty-two conversions have taken place among the students.
going to quit the public
school and go to work on a ranche."
Patti Did Not Leav« Her Diamonds in Europe.
Now
York Letter to Cincinnati Gazette. Patti, in the ball-room scene in Traviata, wears
jj250,000
worth
of
'^0
of
diamonds. They around her neck, in her hair,"onwere her wrists, in her ears, up and down her breast, all over the front
her dress—in fact, from
her they glistened and
gleamed so it hurt your
eyes
to
and made more than one
person wish for a piece
gl
by its
of
smoked
wo:lii,makesi.iiniile-
ly a better display. She
grouped and scattered that tliey show for more than they are worth.
heard
more than one lady say that they envied Patti her diamonds more than they did her voice.
Iter dre°fc8 were elegant, but somehow or another they did not seem to hang gracefully and fit as well as Langtry's or Nilsson's. Upon inquiry
found that her clothes were made in Vienna instead of Paris, and that probably accounts for them not being up to the mark by people who consider Worth perfection.
Business Tendency in New York New York,Letter. A well-known dry goods house goes out of business January 1st, having, after two years of trial, found the jobbing trade unremunerative. The fact is a few large firms are gradually absorbing all the business, and no moderate house can live and compete with the peculiar methods and the gigantic capital of the great concerns. It is so in the boot and shoe and grocery trades a few houses do aH the business. and the small-sized firms, of which there were so many ten years ago, are gradually passing out of existence. Centralization in business seems to be the tendency of the times...
A New Year Incident.
Kantaa CJty Times. One of the incidents of the new eir't carnival was the experience of enator Plumb, who lost his train and almost lost his temper and his dinner. Fortunately tbci Santa Fe furnished a special-car «0i sent him westward reoicing. This is another notable iu stance of generosity on the part of a railroad corporation to the needy and thesnffering.
gl Defended His Home.
Little Bock, Jan. 12.—A man named Lindsay (colored) entered a quarter section of land near Pimacle Springs as a homestead. The survey showed it covered part of the tract of
sad, "squatted
night Hubbard with a party of massed men went to Lindsay'scabin to drive him off.
The party
the New-
were
was
wounded.
The
profes
sor was terribly distressed, and offered
for its recovery. When the driver, who let himself down by one
By the time this was finished
the enterprise broke down pecuniarily and the road was several times sold out by a sheriff. After the war, in
1866,
the enterprise was revived and a loan of
$150,000
1868
The
1868
that
few
by
quantity is pre
sent as will stop all organic
functions
But death in these cases generally results from an interference witii the heart's action, or from a sort of suspension
Many
chloral drinkers have been dipsomaniacs at one time or other, and have drifted from the use of alcohol to the chloral bottle, or have moderated their consumption of alcohol by the conjunction of chloral. Although chloral-drinking not so apparent as dram-drinking,is
yet it
has even a greater power over its victims and-as its immediate effects are not so degrading as those alcohol, they imagine that it is
as
crease, that it was intolerable to him to think of hundreds shivering from cold and hunger while he was sitting in a warm room. Twelve German square miles are submerged at Raab, Hungary.
Liverpool, Jan.
school to-day,"
12.—
tho doocased
10
cents,
it
picks
has the fluctuation of
Con'
easilv have saved their lives if they had obeyed orders and they were lost through endeavoring to their baggage.
A
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
This powder never varies.
"PerhaDS
on by a
white man named Htunbard. The latter demanded Lindsay to abandon
Y.TV.,
his
homestead. Lindsay refused,
^as*
met by Lind
say and friendB with a
VPMey
ketry. Hubbard and one
mus
of
killed and third
mOifalv
THE SOUTHERN PACIFIC.}
Its History—Litigation.
Louisvillk,
Ky., Jan.
project was formed for building the Southern Pacific railroad, to run across Texas to the Pacific coast. The first link in the trans-continental chain was from La., to Marshall, Texas.Shreveport,
was made to the road
by a Louisville syndicate. The enterprise failed in
1S68
and the road was
sold and was bought in by the Louisville in order to secure their debt,syndicate
they assuming to pay other prior mortgages and debts to amount to aoout
$500,000.
the
road
They took charge of
and put about$8,000,000 more
into it, obtained the passage of a number of laws by the national congress and the Texas legislature in aid of the road, and at last succeeded, in
been vig
case has
orously on both sides.fought
they were compelled to pur-
cha®ethat
1°
save
their debt. Me also holds
th.e suit is defective, because
trustees
P* ^e
nc^'e8to)ClSoinf_
an
prevent them from
tlie most Judiciously edited
nagazine in the Nation,N.
Sept.,1882.world."—[The
THE CENTURY For
1882-83.
under the new name,magazine-the
The twelfth year of this
o^erPr,®n
first
ShowiTalarge
-ins
12.—In 1856
a
stance."
"The
in making the in
At the cor
oner's inquest on the body of one of the Italian steerage passengers lost by the of the City of Brussels, the stewart of the steaixier deposed that,|accident
and
"foundsave
verdict
rendered.
was
Limerick,
shares of the
and when it falls
off a few
Jan.
cents
12.—-A
The police are enquir
ing into the affair. London, Jan.
12.—The
bench division granted a rule Nisi for a new trial of libel case of Case boldt vs. Lawrs.the
I
I
grab
bed the Appeal the first thing every morning wnen
I
ROYAL. In'uTcu'
I
A
marvel
phosphate powders. Sold only in Royat. BakingPowdekCo.,106
mil or
cans, street. New York.
has them so
1
Wall
AMUSEMENTS.
PERA HOUSE.
Monday and Tuesday,January 15 and 10.
I
The greatest of all American dramas, successful on account of its and effective scenes,moral
100 WIVES,
(A STORY OF MORMON LIFE.) O 9E HBRMAN
And the Unrivalled
DRAPER- HERMAN COMPANY. A
new American comedy-dramain four acts,
G. A.
is at
B.
Run-
Pierce and James
nion.by,Will
be produced with special
scenery costumes and mnslc. Flattered by the press throughout-the country.
The only cut and eternal damnation to the religion and poligamy of the Mormons. livery American should
and the
with
October number.history,circulationmost
successful in its closed
in the Colonies,"etc., the
Houses,(2) Country Houses.
Geo.
W.
H.
waited till
1873
then
brought suit in the Louisville Chancery court against the Louisville syndicate to recover the road and all the profits the syndicate had made upon it.
"H. H.":
by
It was
argued and submitted in last November. To-day Chancel'or Edwards returned a verdict in favor of the defendants. The chancellor
holds that
there was no fraud on the part
of the
defendants in purchasing'the road in
the
old who
it,corporation,
represent
properly
are not parties to
the suit also that the delay of old stockholders fro.*111868 before suing was such
,e as to
afterws»Td3"
aS
aid of the chancellor to recoVbT from defendants the road which
lattgf
delay,badihe
'•he
free
Fahis,
use. of money, time
and energy. Foreign Notes.
Jan.
13.—A
belonging to a French coasting steamer which is to have foundered, in a storfjl.believed
There
special train
Nice at
-notof
so
ruinous
the latter but it is the result of an insatiable desire, and as such, it become an infatuating and degrading vice. The consumption of the drug has,
were twenty-two
persons on board. Gambetta's remains were reiiio^ed this from Pere la Chaise cemetery.morningfew
Very peisons were present,
and no demonstrations were made.
the
The has
it
cENTUnVbe-
ceding season,gain and Thm
oc
its thirteenth year with an edition of
140,000 Copies.
'ollowingare
the leading featuers:
Tlio JJQVEIj BY W. P. HOW ELLS, A NEV "ibis
to eucce'efl
author Modern In
will bo an International
Woman's Reason,*'
story, entitled
[RTEEX COLONiES,
LIFE IX THE? -8TON,—
BY EDWARD EGK51.
th.
historical feature of
forming
w»v
Mfe in the
a complete history of early -v will be United States. special
attention
paid to accuracy of illustratioB.
by
by
A NOVELETTE OK MINING LIFE, MARY HAI,LOCK FOOTE,
"Tu
entitled
Led-Horse Claim,"to bejlllustrated by the author.POINT
THE OF VIEW, BY HENRY JAMES,
Jr., a series of eight letters from
Gladden. An account of practical co-op-fration in Christian work, showing
a league was formed in a small town in Connecticut, what kind of worlt it attempted,and how it spread throughout the whole state
"BRUDDER GRANGE ABROAD,"
"IRudder
1877,
in
selling the property to the Texas Pacific Kailroad compum for three million dollars in land grant bonds. Gould and Vanderbilt afterwards put about twenty-eight million dollars more into the road and it is now completed and forms a great trunk line from ocean to ocean. The stockholders in the old company who sold out in
being laid
Cit
(3^
devoted to
City
(3)
Churches,
ises
(I)
and (4)
Public
Chun
Buildings.LOUISIANA,
THE CREOLES OF
Public Buildings
S1Y AD VENTURES IN ZUNI,
by
"Old
Days,"etc.Cable, a fresh and graphic narrative, richly illustrated.
author of
Creole
by Frank
Cushing, government ethnologist, an adopted member of the Zuni tribe of Indians. Illustrated.
ILLUSTRATED PAPERS ON THE NATIONALCAPITAL, "The
tol.""The.Supremeincluding"The
,"
House
three or four
an exceedingly interesting character,ofpapers richly illustrated.
MISCELLANEOUS.
II. H.
$4.00
SPECIAL OFFER.
/ear
year,
made valuable during theii"
subscription from November,
18/i,iird'the
twelve numbers of tire past
unbound,S0.00.
A
"cT VroI'OkAS
produce in
boat has been
found ofl'tiio harbor Of Celte containing the dead bodies
of
persons
four
PARENTS
body
9
Berlin, Jan.
started for
o'with clock.the
Several personal
friends ef the deceased accompanied the remains, which will reach Nice early to-morrow.
12.—Emperor
subscription and
the twelve back numbers bound in two
elegant volumes with gilt top,§7.50.
THE CENTURY CO.,
New York,
N. Y.
is above anything we
,the
Ka,ne
Times.
Une.''-London
ST. NICHOLAS FOR
who riCSinJ
wholesome reading for Land voung folks who enjoy travel alid adventure, historical
America, as
William
at his own instance has increased the contribution from the imperial fund towards the relief distress by floods. The emperor said,of
THE BEST ANfi ilUEST
MAGAZINE
Tinkham Brothers' Tide-Mill."
A
J. T.
formerly editor of
"The
Au
hif? friend
fon
Id.
"A
drowned"
parcel contain-
taining dynamite was posted at the Limerick postoffice to-day. Not being addressed it fortunately escaped being stamped, whereby a terrific explosion was avoided.
Trowbridge,
new serial story by
"Our
Young Folks,-
"Tne
and author of
An historical novelette girl and boy life In the 13th Century.olBy Frank
Brand-pictures. New Notion."
A capital AUu novel play. By William M. Baker, author of "Ills Majesty, My self," etc.
"Swept
"Elizabeth
A
Queen's
Thompson."
biographical paper regarding this celebrated painter of battle-scenes. Illus trated with pictures prepared for St. Nicholas by Miss
'•WheraThompson.?"-Turkish
was ViUierB
A
storv of the Russo
war.thrilline By Forbes, War-Corre-spondent.Archibald
"The
at the White House."
Boy
etc., and including
A
M.
ments Price,
J. II. FISHER'S
Bargain Store
WHY EvctfUi^ii!
Boots and Shoes cheaper than any house in the city. Furniture of every description. Parlor and Chamber Suits. Platform Rockers. Easy Chair Rattan Rockers and Camp
Rockers.
Wardrobes and Sideboards. Bed Lounges and Single Lounges. Wall Pockets and Brackets.
aUEENSWARE.
Decorated Tea Sets and Chamber Sets. Library and Fancy Lamps. Fancy Cups and Saucers. Fancy Mugs and Vases. Majolica Tea Sets and Plates. Table Castors and Knives and Forks. Silver-plated Table and Teaspoons. In fact, Fancy Goods in endless variety, but not fflncy prices.
325,327 329
play.
see this
Reserved seats at Button's Book Store at usual prices.
A WBEK. $12 a
TO BEBIH THE NEW YEAR
/V.
Bight, you ought to have a new suit of
Clothes, and the best place to buy them
SOL GOODMAN & BROTHER'S.
^511 Main. bet. Fifttt and Sixth J|
GOLD MED AX, PABIS, 1878.
GERMAN
Tho most popular sweet Chocolate in the ma jket. It is nutrifjoua and (datable a particular favorite with children, and mCTBt exesllent articlo for family use.
The genuine is at*imped S, Oernuin, I)orthe*U rr, JIaes, lieiraro of imitatlo tu.
Sold by Grocers eve: tyiihera.
f. BAKER & CO.,
the leading
year: to consist
such topics as
of a number of papers,p..
." "Social
The Beginning of a Natiffn.
Life
^le
to
Jack Hazard Stories
"RudderGrange,"etc
Nicholas author of
"The
account of the famous yeoman. By Maurice Thompson, author of The Witchery of Archery
Dorcliefe, Mass.
MALA RIA. A Germ Disease.
on «•.
Malaria
natlonall-[I
imaginary persons of various
ties criticising America its people, sccie ty,,manners, railroads,, etc.
THE CHRISTIAN LEAGUE OF CON-. XECTICUT,
the Rev. Washington
MALA&'k ASh
how
Frac from
able
by
Frank t. Stockton, a continuation of the droll
Grange" stories, the scene
in
Europe.
NEW ERA IN AMERICAN
HTHEnow OU SE-BUI LDING,
a series of four
pers, fully illustrated,
pa
(1)
Guvxar.-.i-isayingDisoaso"c
is
oy
lro.t
arising
JDcainage
Vegetation, eJower
3m, a::d
.sell,
,"
If
Story of Viteau."
you
K.
Stockton, formerly assistant editor of
If
Story of Bobin Hood.''
."
''Tho
Story of the yield of the Cloth-of-Gold." ijy S. Brooks. To be illustrated with many remarkable
ijlf
Away."
A
serial story of the Mississippi floods
18S2.
E. S.
of
Ellis, formerly editor
By
"Golden
."
Days
or
"Tad
An account of the life of
Land of Nod
Christmas Masque:"The False Sir Santa Claus." Prepared expressly for holiday times. There will be short stories by Louisa
Alcott, and manv other well-known writers for young folks papers on duties and recreations, out sports,home occupation and instruction--door
girls,
-with
$3.00
a year:
25
cents a numher.
Subscriptions should begin with the No vember number. The. succeeding issue,
"The
other
local sottivjes.
HAMILTCH'3
jyh.
6PCCBFBO,
•i? S'reparatlcn.
"L:rr
Qu..-
objection,-trouble
ii
an-. Tur this
.teg caiv
suteiance
''Kr.
Stcvcm tel.* o- T®c'm»V •sg£'
1IOPOKE1*,
Thisis
to
'-sis
ISJtil
CKttTirr. tl-.s! U-.v rwado Tm as*!*
of tho Aiti-Maliirl.l Me-'.icin«\ k«owu as Hamilton'* Malarial Si« c:!io.'- uil tad that it le DBWlv-vcsruMe prer-wHoa. isa!*o!tit«ly mo from arcen'c or any other like cut's wife, doc* cot eon hi in. ativ quinine or similar or o'l.- oojocU-nablfit materia!, and a undoubtedly harmless.
nENBY MORTON",
Dear Sir: Having
Capi
Court," White
etc
MISSIONS OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA,
ROSE WMTCfSSIO A
E. C.
Further work is expected from
Stedmun, Thomas Hughes Joel Chandler Harris Uncle Remus"),, Warner, John Burroughs,CharlesDudley
E. V.
Smalle.v,
Boyesen, and a long list of others Entertaining short stories and novelettes will be aniciig the leading features of The Century, as heretofore,and the magazine will continue its advance in general excellence.
a year:n:
The subscription price is
cents a number. Subscriptions begin with tho November number,should
and to
enable new subscribers to commence it the new series under The Century name, we make the following
Ph.
TV»tlinwf SVctK
Terre Haute, Doc. 30, 1SS3.
inc..'je°"'!1
stories, pictures, household amuseme and harmless fun,
A
will
Ht.
find these in
Nicholas. Which is recognized by the press ancl public, Of both
If
Kng 1 aj I a"jl
yi\u
If
for ever
The new volufne,children
wlu:
which begins
D.'.
£iiiferelIn^lanajcti*.
M.iUrl.i I
frura
was
advlseil to take jou? *'iftua a! eci::-, rhica bavo done with the mo"*t7-v'
r5
"n^',
•Bill cheerfully rcrnnnno in all ttom tUat disease. T«rv tvu-" yours,
aim- o. yohs, lo-
iiaaapolls, Inl
McKESSOX & K0B3IHS, N. Y., V-T.&lesile Agents. For Sola by Erugslsta G' iic ia"v-
school o? Practical soK"cCe'
Terr© I-Sa/ivt©, InCW Will open for the reception of class o« twenty-five students in Mechanical Engineering, on Tuesday, the litli of March, if®, when candidates for admission will be examined. On Wednesday, 7th of March, dedicatory exercises will be held at the Institute, and ou Thursday, March Sth. the school duties will begin. The opening class will be graduated Bfter a course of three-and-a-half years, and will be selected from the most proficient among the applicants. The course of study, which will, in general, require four years, will comprise all branches necessary to thorough training in either of the practical sciences, and will embrace Mathematics from Algebra, beginning with Quadratic Equations, to the IntegralCalculus, Chemistry, general and analytical Geology, Mineralogy, Metallurgy, Mining, Civil, Topographical and Mechanical Engineering, Physics, Drawing, French, German, English Literature and History. Ample facilities will he afforded for laboratory and other practice in all departments demanding it, Including a completely equipped manufacturing shop for training in Mechanical Engineering. Applications for admission, and all inquiries should be addressed to DR. CHARLES O. THOMPSON. President of the Faculty, or to SAMUEL S. EARLY, Secretary of the Board of Managers.
want help,
you a
the
November number, and opens with
a
col
ored frontispiece, will be much the finest ever ir-sucd, and the attention of all parents and all reading young folks la invited to the following partial list of at tractions:
tion,
If
you
situa
SiaTo anything
to
you have
If
you
I
of
If
l)uy
anything,
st.
lost^W-
thing.
you have found anything,
want to rent
a
house or rooms,
you
have
a
house
rooms
"Theyn-
coln. By Noah Brooks, author of
Boy Emigrants."
"Comedies
A
for Children."
fine series of juvenile plays. By
Brooks, author of
,"
Wonderful Christmas Number
will have, also, a colored frontispiece and many unusual attractions.
THE CENTURY
New York,CO.,V.
N.
WHAT CAJV BE FOUND
-AT-
"to
rent,
TRY THE
EXPRESS.
Five lines for
E. S.
"The
,"
25c.
1883.
Harper's
for boys and
popular features and depart
Young
People,
An illustrated Weekly—16 Pages. SUITED X0 B0TS AND GIELS OF FBOii SIX TO SIXTEEN YEAES OF AGE. Vol.IV. commences November
1»82.
The Yount: People has been from the first successful beyond anticipation.— Y. Evening Post.
It has a distinct purpose, to which steadily adheres—that, namely, of supplanting the vicious papers for the young with a paper more attractive, as well as more whoiesome.—Boston Journal.
For neatness, elegaiieeof cui, n. :, ana contents generally, it Is uosurpasfud by any publication of the kind yet brought to our notice.—Pittsburgh Gazette.
TERMS.
HARPKR'S YOUNG i'KOPr.E, Per Year, Po.stan Prepaid, Single Numbers, Four Cent* eaoh.
-rr'
Specimen copy sent on receipt-of Cents. The Volumes of Harper's Young PeOl'ltfor 1881 and lSt2, handsomely bound*?Q Illuminated Cloth, will be sent by mail, i--p prorff?l. on rcceipt of JS 10 eaei..
:'r
JteuiiUiiiK-ea sin.aid be nm.V.j by I'ostofflce Money Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss.
Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement without the express order of Harper & Brother*.
Address HARPER & BROTHERS. New York,
IIP YOUR,
COOK STOTO:
NEEDS REPAIRING, CALL ON
PL. X_i. IB-AJLiHi
303 MAIN STREET.
Sole Agent for Newby's i.d ustab'»r SStove Repairs.
PAY'S "SPECIFIC MEDICINE." ,*•
TRADE MAF.'K
TRASS
The
uij'Great 8
ill
remedy
\n
nil
unf
a
for
re
se^iiiA 1
fffikui-ss, Fuertfnatori'lltl3,llD))l)-. leiK-.v, and all diseases)
AFTER TAJW83. thafr-foiiow^'/snETAK!
sequence
ifeif-abnse,
as a
of
age,andm
Main
Street.
at
S5,
ages for
as loss of
memory, universal lassitude, pain In the back, dimness of vislony premature
e!d
disease*
a
other
OWKuIl
day At home easily
made. Costly outfit fr»». Address IieA V».. Aneasta. Mulr
that
insanity or consumption and a premaotlead ture grave.
pamphlet,,tomail
particulars in our
which we to send free, by everyone.desire
B®The
Medicine sold
druggists,Specific
Si
per package,is or six packallby
or will he free by mall on
receipt of tho money,!eutaddressing
by
Gray
Modicine fo., Buffalo, N. Y."
Tho
On account of counterfeits, we have dopted the Yellow Wrapper—the only genuine. Guarantees of cure issued.
Sold in Terre Haute at wholesale and reUil, by Qulick 5t Berry..
:-i-V
W. H. HASLET^
as
IS South Fifth Street,
a liberal pnto#
OIOUUMJ.
I n-it «s
,:
