Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 4 March 1883 — Page 2
I
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DP-BULL'S
the Cure
faes8enes3,Brono Asthma,Who.
fr^'aesft Consamptio
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«rtjfzw&vjnptive pt ffi' tSTt ?£sreg of the Dis® clnl pa^s
Ume rate
",n. «ne Dally Ex•lGclub pays for, tlis. all cases when sent
,riptions payable lu ad-
erm» for tlie 'Weekly.
LisSy,
one year, paid in advance...tl 25
^•/py, six months 65
Advertisements
^inserted In the Dally and Weekly on reasonable terms. For particulars app'j' at or address the office. A limited amount advertising will be published ill the
Weekly.
All six months subscribers to the Weekly Express will be supplied FHEE, with "Treatise on the Horse and His Diseases." Persons subscribing for the Weekly for one year will receive in addition to the Horse book a railroad and township map of Indiana.
If an extra session of the senate is called there will be one seat vacant on the Republican side unless the governor of New Hampshire appoints a successor to Senator Rollins.
After congress is gone, the legislalature has adjourned, the collector appointed and with Judge Scott on the bench there will be a dearth of news, unless the star route trial and the Gouger-Mandler case will suffice,
The forty-seventh congress expires at noon to-day, the legislative day of Saturday being continued until that time if congress sits through the night, as it gives promise of doing at the hour of going to press. It has been an eventful congress in many respects.
The governor yesterday appointed Judge Scott for the new court and has thus ended the protracted contention •orcrthe matter which has of late been the all absorbing subject in all circles in Terre Haute. It is now exceedingly advisable that the bitter feeling engendered in the contest be allowed to die out.
The convention of the Episcopal diocese will meet in the cathedral at Indianapolis, on Wednesday next, to elect a successor to the late Bishop Talbot. Tn tliis connection several ministers in this and adjoining states have been mentioned, but none have been talked of enough to warrant any prediction as to who will be the next bishop"
Wiggins insists that we will have that terrible storm between March 9th and l.'ith, and says it will be the most severe of which there is any record. Wiggins, no doubt, is basing this renewed prediction on the fact that this year has started out with the promise of hAina fliJ^djHotljLxkilent occurrences una—nierefore sucn a storm as lie prophesies*would be in the natural order of things.
The meteorological office at London does not think well of Prophet Wiggins. This is the way it disposes of him in respose to an underwriter's inquiry: "The prophecy to which you allude eminates from some man in the finance department of tlie Canadian government. Tt is utter nonsense. No living man run predict the •wentlirr two days beforehand, i.:ich less six months. The idea that the admiralty have ordered ships to be in port is also absurd and utterly false."
The eastern press and preachers are now busy discussing the strong movement being made to have girls admitted to Columbia college, New York. The Rev. Dr. Morgan Dix, rector of Trinity church, has called down upon himself a perfect tirade by delivering a lecture in which he held that fitness for the family is a better and higher aim than "higher education" for women. He has been denounced as a man fitted for the middle ages, and no doubt has come to wish that he liad never been born, so fierce is the onslaught upon him.
A law is proposed in California which is aimed to prevent the frequent release of murderers on the plea of insanity. It prnvi-les that if a man accused of muiticr pleads inanity he is first to be examined on that point. If his insanity is made evident he is to be confined in an asylum for life. But if his insanity is not proved the plea is to be considered as an aggravation of the crime of wlijch lie stands charged.
1
I
It further provides that after being confined in an asylum his release can be secured only on proof that he was sane at the time of his commitment and then he is to be released and tried for the crime of which he was charged.
Mayor Harrison, of Chicago has resolved on heroic treatment regarding the telegraph wires in that city. Friday evening, by his order, all the wires of the Mutual Union company were cut. The reasons given for this action are that in 1881 the company was allowed to enter the city with its poles with the understanding that if by March 1, 1S83, the wires were not under ground the city would have the right to put them under ground. Since the Western Union company absorbed the Mutual Union company joany additional wires have been put up, and the mayor says the companies were openly defying the city and he is „ot
a
I
man to be defied. It can also be
added
that Mayor Harrison is a good
deal of a demagogue, and that a spring election is approaching at which his honor hopes for a re-election on an
anti-monopoly
platform. The West
ern Union company's permission to enter the city, expires May 1st, what will happen tell.
but
then no one can
Turned Inside Out.
3oston Post- [jus linishc I
A
a sketch Probably
out of Herself.
lulled I»»*_ out yachting and got the heroine went seasick. "Mather."
National ^^"^j^urnals are busily enThe Now origin of the word saged hunting
whe
"masher.
re it came from
pe0
pie it is how to get
that concerns most PW
popular
Courier-Journal. Band, iu EuThe Society of
rful
tion. Snch s°cl®t,e*
organiza-
rope, evidently t~ureto
gprhl(t up
A
governments to
where there are des^W* ^d say that a matt shall not have half for his vote.
THE OLD CANTEEN.
hangs charm?
Had its day, to be sure mat/,v thingshere Shall I sack the
is que»""~
Thiuf
FT.'-'
/On,
^n.
fUirl,
and his girl.
dainty pose,
•i'rcle shows: weltered nook is gained, jjose is still retained. the senioric ray, dy lights her blushes play, ads within her eyes of brown itzing is better sitting down.
A brilliant gathering-minster diamonds. No matter large the amount gas bills ara always lighs ones.
Mount Vernon parties are plentifully organized in Washington. Four turbaned Turks are working on a railway at Amsterdam, N. \.
A lover's pur.sle—How to get the market money after the wedding. The public works erected by the Italian government last vear cast over $50,000,000.
The average boy, when sent on an errand, develops wonderful "staying qualities."
Because he has worked as a heeler the shoemaker can not set himself up as a doctor.
Gruff voices are said to be heard much more readily at the telephone than squaky ones.
Sensible Man: I think it not best to dispute where there is no probability of convincing.
The recent very successful book "Vice Versa," was rejected once, it not twice, before being accepted.
Workmen say that it is common to find human bones on premises that have been occupied by a doctor.
A handkerchief may be generous. Says Shakespeare: "Thathandkerchief did an Egyptian to my mother give."
The Pennsylvania railroad company will present'the city of Altoona, with a plot of ground upon which to erect a hospital.
A St. Louis man whose house took fire, saved the greater part of the building by breaking open liisice house and hastily throwing up a wall of ice.
Commercial pearl, as well as ivory, lias increased enormously in.value during the past few years. In three years ivory has advanced 100 per cent.
How quickly a liinb of the law branches out.—Indianapolis News. And how often lie has to be pruned before he bears fruit.—Philadelphia News.
The lawyers in the Star route trials call each oilier puppies and dirt} dogs. The receipts from the Washington dog tax this year are likely to be pretty heavy.
Mrs. Garfield looks ten years older now and more care-worn than when the late president was removed to Long Branch. Her liair is sprinkled with gray.
Grit: Brown said that he didn't fear an attack of the brain fever in the least. He got mad, however, when Straddles said that he did not see wlijlie should.
This notice was posted on the doors of an Iowa bank alter the sudden disappearance of the cashier: "Another pioneer of civilization lights out for Polynesia."
During the year 1882, Germany, including Luxemberg, produced a total of 15,170,057 tons of raw iron as against 2,914.000 tons in 1881, 2,729,038 in 1880, and 2,226,587 in 1879.
Mr. Damala, Bernliardt's husband, says he has renounced his dream of being an actor. Mr. Damala's dream may have been a simple dream, but to people who went to the theater it was a nightmare.
Mean, said tne xexas man ui mo neighbor. "Why, there isn't a drop of the milk of human kindness in that man's body. He's got a dog that's an elegant match for Jenks' bull pup, and he won't let 'em fight."
Two hundred and four New York youths under twenty years of age have married within a year. It is sad to see little children torn from their homes, but New York young women keep reaching for husbands.
Sir H.Davy: Life is made up, not of great sacrifices or duties, but of little things, in which smiles and kindnesses and small obligations given habitually, are what win and preserve the heart and secure comfort.
E. V. Sutter, a son of the discoverer of gold in California, committed sujfide at Ostead, Belgium, last month. He formerly resided in San Francisco, where he did business as a notary public, but was thought to be of unsound mind.
An English author, on being told by an American lady that she came from Missouri, exclaimed "Missouri, let me see, what state is that in "Missouri is a state," replied the American. "Ah, yes, yes, to be sure it is it is Mississippi I was thinking ot."
The News tells of a cruel landlord in Fall River, Mass., who broke the windows in one of his tenements the other night and took off the doors, so as to freeze out a poor woman who owed a month's rent and was too sick even to be carried to the hospital.
During the last thirty years in Califftrnia quicksilver mines have produced 100,222,267 pounds, of which 67,397,800 pounds were exported. California produces one-lialf of all the quicksilver in use throughout the world. The Rothschilds control the Austrian and Spanish mines.
A Taunton, (Mass.) woman relates that she recently sat beside another woman, a stranger to her, in an Old Colony car. As the train passed Quincy the stranger pointed to the crowded burial place so near the track, and remarked in a complacent tone: I've got three of the best husbands layin' there that ever a woman had."
At the closing service of the missioners in St. Patrick's Catholic church at New Haven, Sunday evening, one of the mission fathers asked the 1,600 men in the church to repeat after him a pledge promising not to go into a saloon from 12 o'clock Saturday night, till 12 o'clock Sunday night, for one year. All but half a dozen did as lie wished.
SUNDAY BEADING.
Fenelon: Happy those who fearing God fear nothing else. Madame Swetcliine: Devotion sweetens all that courage must endure.
Rev. E. P. Hammond is spending a month in evangelistic labors in Bermuda.
Fenelon: Be at peace, without thinking of the future there may be none for you!
Lacordaire: We must do what we can for our neighbor, and leave the future to God.
S. Francis de Sales: We must sometimes leave the Saviour's side for the sake of others and for love of him.
Augustine: As water runs down from the swelling hills, and flows together in the lowly vale so grace flows not but into humble hearts.
Pascal: The vast difference between the body and the mind represents the difference between the miud and love, for the latter is supernatural.
And there's no life s& lone and low But strength may still be given, From narrowest lot on earth to grow,
The straighter up to heaven. —[Gerald Massey.
It is stated that Kev. Dr. E. D. Huntlev, president of Lawrence University, Appleton, Wis., will be transferred and appointed pastor of the Metropolitan M. E. Church, Washington City, D. C.
The New York Advocate announces that Dr. W. H. De Puv, for eighteen vears the assistant editor of the Christian Advocate, has presented his resignation, to take effect April 1. This action lias been long contemplated by him. being rendered necessary by protracted overwork.
The successor of the Rev. Dr. Newman Smyth, in uinev, 111., is to be the Kev. Pr. J. S. Hays, who is now profrspov of church history in Danville v.i Theological Seminary. A correspondent of the Chicago Standard
\i&$
Senfl It up to the garret? Well, no" Wbat'aJbost conservative of Presbyterian IIithaS«Ukea horseshoe to«erve»-
thai he comes from one of the
lnariefl-
and is
Hon. J. H. B. Latrobe has been elected president of the American Colonisation society for the thirty-fifth time. His onjjr predecessors in this office were Justice Bushrod Washington, elected in 181? Charles Carroll, of Carroll ton, elected fn 1830 exPresident James Madison, elected 1833, and Henry Clay, elected in 1836.
OLD ERIN.
As Seen Through Irish Spectacles. Oath's Dispatch.
Among the interesting subjects of the present time id the Irish cause, socalled, or at any rate the Irish episode in Dublin, with its attendant consequences in this country, which seems to be chosen every few years as a safe basis of warfare against Great Britain I fell in Wednesday with a very prominent Irishman, who has been, I understand, at the very head of the Fenian organization, in past years. He is personally genial and urbane, and I should think would he the last man to hurt any body's feeling's or shed any blood. His name would be recognized in a moment, but on account of the peculiar matters just now in agitation, I doubt if he would thank me in bringing him forward. "But these assassinations in Dublin only embarrass Parnell." "Well," said my friend, "there are plenty of instances like those. When your American forefathers were making conventions to petition parliament, if you will remember, there were men who disguised themselves and went on British merchant ships and threw all the tea overboard. There were others who demolished houses inhabited by British stamp collectors. The hostility engendered extended to Washington himself, who would never raise his voice to spare the property of any American Tory, not even the woman he had once courted in this island of
New
time and man is, or Judge
York and the very cs
tate where he was her guest was taken from her and her children at the close of the war. The Americans adopt the English views of things in Ireland, and lift their hands in horror
when
an informer like Burke,
who has spent his life
selling
his coun
try, is1 killed. That assassination undoubtedly was meant to end with Burke but the agencies were not reas onable, and Cavendish interfered and met his death. But do you mean to tell me that every agitation on behalf of Irish rights has got to stop because these two men were murdered They are mere flies on the surface of a movement ot 4,000,000 or 5,000,000 people. Parnell, we observe, is notdriven from his position even by these unfortunate assassinations, but behaves himself like a man responsible to public opinion—neither American nor English—but Irish._ If Ireland could gain her legislative independence, success would very soon render insignificant the present excitement about the murder of an Irish informer and an English Secretary. The Irish people have no other way but murder to express themselves. If they had a parliament in Dublin, these crimes would not break out but the grievances of the country would be legislated upon there." "What is to be the advantage," said I, "of a country as poor as Ireland having a parliament again, particularly in a time like ours, when every nation is consolidating instead of disintegrating?" "Because the Island of Great Britain cares nothing at all for Ireland, except as a patch of ground. The Irish peo pie are hated. No effort is made in parliament to deal with the concerns of Ireland as if she were Scotland or iir-i-- ciia..—l*. v«o nrt nnnlp.ns in Ireland, because she has no capital, no «fcnter. In the days of the Irish parliament the Irish nobility made a gallant society. Trade in Dublin resembled what it is in London. Fashion called in the aid of art, and literature, painting and sentiment arose. We pre to deal with facts," concluded my friend, "and one of these facts is an eternal dissatisfaction in the Irish race, which no government can put down—no Phariseeism in America, no brutality in England. The public opinion of the world will continue to be called to the fact that there is an Ireland, and' that she has claims and means to press them. The statistics of Ireland recently show that there are more children relatively going to school in that country than either in the United States or Great Britain." "What has become of the Emmet family I asked. "You mean the family of Robert Emmet. Well, lie has a brother, Thomas Addis Emmet, a lawyer, who belonged to the United Irishmen, but came out to this country near the of his brother's execution, was a conspicuous public in New York. There recently lived, a son of that
Emmet, the only one to pre
serve his Irish patriotism—Mr. Richard Emmet. I fear that the other members of his family have become worldly Americans, who pay no attention to matters in Ireland. By -the way, there is a very intimate connection between America and Ireland in families. Gerald Griffin, one of the finest literary characters in Ireland, had his father and mother to come to this country and settle, and Judge White, who was recently living here, was Griffin's nephew. I also discovered, not long ago, a grand-niece of Oliver Goldsmith living in America."
Hartley and Joaquin.
Philadelphia Press.
Bartley Campbell and Joaquin Miller, the poet, are two of a kind, and fast friends. Campbell has been spending a fortnight here supervising the production of "Siberia," and Miller came over from New York to spend a day with him. Meeting them together I learned how they became acquainted. One of Campbell's plays was on the boards at Niblo's about the time when he began to get on his legs as a successful playright. Miller heard that the scene was laid out west, and went to see whether it was true to nature. The two were introduced, and had a drink or two together, for that was before Bartly became a total abstainer. "How did you ever get the local color of this play down so fine?" said Miller. "Did you ever live out west?" "No," replied Campbell, "but I had a brother who lived there for years, was one of the Forty-niners, and knew every inch of the ground. He filled my mind with Western scenery, characters and imagerv and now it is all coming into play, for realistic pictures of Western life are what the public wants." "What!" said Miller, looking over every inch of Campbell's six feet, you don't mean to say that you are a'brother of little Tom Campbell, of Truckee?" "I do, for a fact' "The Campbell who kept the 'Howling Wilderness barroom'?" The very same." Miller actually embraced him. 'Then vou are the brother of one of the best fellows that ever lived. Why, when he kept that bar I went to him bifrefooted and without a cent to my name and he gave me a place, and board and lodging. I staid there, learned how to mix drinks, and became his right bower, before and behind the bar. I'll never forget him until my dying day." Then Campbell remembered that his brother used to bore him to death telling about a certain bar-tender of his "who came out of Oregon, and could write poetry that .. juld beat Byron hollow. The discovery led to a night together, and the fast friendship of which I have spoken. Play-goers will remember the barroom scene in "My Partner" is called
The Howling Wilderness." It is in commemoration of the saloon which Tom Campbell kept, and where Joaquin Miller "tended bar."
Brown—"My dear fellow—two umbrellas! What
on
earth is that for?"
Jonas—"Why*
In
ease
I
where!"
JsIL I
leave one any
jfsssk
iBetii-
»ri8id Gdvxnlst.
X'hrf-?
THE ORATORIO.
1
[Boston Journal.]^
'Twas at the oratorio •Jr', .-,Y Intheittuslbhallayearago (I think 'twas the "Creation"), Two ladies sat in front of me, "iV»i|Who carried on Incessantly
A whispered conversation. Though chorus, solos all were fine, And Gerster's arias divine,
They never seemed to hear them But, breathless, chattered on—I trust Unconscious of the deep disgust
Of all the people near them. -fh-i
At length a movement soft and slow. Changed to aloud prestissimo, The mighty organ shivered— With one tremendous choral sweep .• The music burst then into deep,
Intensest silence quivered.
And in that hush, profound and still, A woman's voice, nigh pitched and shrill, Was plainly heard to utter, In tones adjusted to the roar Of music that had gone before, "Why! we fry ours in butter!"
HIS PA PLAYS JOKES.
Peck's Htm.
"Say, do you "think a little practical joke does any hurt," asked the bad boy of the groceryman, as he came in with his Sunday suit on, and a bouquet in his button-hole, and pried off a couple of figs from a new box that had been just opened. "No, sir," said the groceryman, as he licked off the syrup that dripped from a quart measure, from which he had been filling a jug. "I hold that a man that gets mad at a practical ioke, that is, one that does not injure him, is a fool, and. he ought to be Bhunned by all decent people, That's a nice bouquet you have in your coat. What is it, pansies? Let me smell of it," and the groceryman bent over in front of the boy to take a whiff at the bouquet. As he did so a stream of water shot out of the innocent bouquet and struck li full in the face, and run down over his shirt, and the grocerymafi yelled murder, and fell over a barrel of axe helves and sythe snaths, and then groped around for a towel to wipe his face. "You condum skunk," said the groceryman to the boy, as he took up an axe helve and started for him, "what kind of a golblasted squirt gun you got there. I will maul you by thunder," and he rolled up his shirt sleeves. "There, keep your temper. I took a test vote of you on the Bubject of practical jokes, before the machine began to play upon the conflagration that was raging on your whisky nose, and you said a man that would get mad at a joke was a fool, and now I know it. Here, let me show it to you. There is a rubber hose runs from the bouquet, inside my coat to my pants pocket, and there is a bulb of rubber that holds about half a pint, and when a feller smells of the posy, I squeeze the bulb, and you see the result. It's fun, where you don't squirt it on a person that gets mad."
The groceryman said he would give the bov half a pound of figs if he would "lend the bouquet to him for half an hour to play it on a customer, and the boy fixed it on the grocery man, and turned the nozzle so it would squirt right back into the groceryman's face. He tried it on the first customer that come in, and got it'right in his own face, and then the bulb in his pants pocket got to leaking and the rest of the water run down the groceryman's trouser's leg, and lie gave it up in disgust, and handed it back to the boy. "How was it that your pa had to be carried home from the sociable in a hack the other night," asked the groceryman as he stood wouIa^tryl^'A^has not got To drinks ing again, has he?" "O, no," said the boy, as he filled the bulb with vinegar, to practice on his chum, "It was this bouquet that got pa into the trouble. You see I got pa to smell of it, and I just filled him chuck full of water. He got mad and called me all kinds of names, and said I was no good on earth, and I would fetch up in state's prison, and then he wanted to borrow it to wear to the so ciable. He said he would have more fun than you could shake a stick at, and I asked him if he didn't think he would fetch up in state's prison, and he said it was different with a man. He said when a man played a joke there was a certain dignity about it that was lacking in a boy. So I lent it to him, and we all went to the sociable in the basement of the church. I never see pa more kitteny than he was that night. He filled the bulb with ice water, and the first one he got to smell of his button-hole boquet was an old maid who thinks pa is a heathen, but she likes to be made something of by anybody that wears pants, and when pa sidled up to her and began talking about what a great work the Christian wimmen of the land were doing in educating the heathen, she felt real good, ana then she noticed pa's posy in his button-hole and she touched it, and then reached over her beak to smell of it. Pa he squeezed the bulb, and about half a tea cup full of water struck her right in the nose, and some of it went into her stranglejplace, and, O, my, didn't she yell. The sisters gathered around her, and they said her face was all perspiration, and the paint was coming off, and they took her in the kjitchen, and she told them pa had slapped her with a dish of ice cream and the wimmin told the minister, and the deacons, and they went to pa for an explanation, and pa told them it was not so, and the minister got interested and got near pa, and pa let the water go at him, and hit him on the eye, and then a deacon got a dose, and pa laughed, and then the minister, who used to go to college and be a hazer, and box, he got mad and squared off and hit pa three timeB £jght by the eye, and one of the deacons he kicked pa, and pa got mad and said he could clean out the whole shehang, and began to pull off his coat, when they bundled him out doors, and ma got mad to see pa abused, and she left the sociable, and I had to stay and eat ice cream and tilings for the whole family. Pa says that settles it with him. He says they haven't got any more christian charity in that church than they have got in a tannery. His eyes was just getting over being black from the sparring lessons, and now he has got to go through the oysters and beef-steak cure again. He savs it is all owing to me." "Well, what has all this got to do with your putting up Bigns in front of my store, ^Rotten Eggs' and 'Frowv Butter a specialty,' said the groceryman as he took the boy by the ear and pulled him around. "You have got an idea you are smart, and I want you to keep away from here. The next time I catch you in here I shall call the police and have you pulled. Now git!"
The boy pushed his ear back on the side of his head where it belonged, took out a cigarette and lit it, and after puffing smoke in the face of the grocery cat that was sleeping on the cover to the sugar barrel, he said, "If I was a provision pirate, that never sold anything but what was spoiled so it couldn be sold in a first class store, who eheated in weights and measures, who bought only wormy figs and decayed codfish, who got his butter from a fat rendering establishment, his cider from a vinegar factory, and his sugar from a glucose factory, I would not insult the son of one of the first families. Why, sir, I could go out on the coner, and when I saw customers coming here I could tell a story that would turn their stomachs, and send them to the grocery on the next corner. Suppose I should tell them that the cat sleeps in the dried apple barrel, that the mice made nests in the prune box, and rats run riot through the raisons, and you never wash you hands except on Decoration day and Christmas, that you wipe your ROW on your, shirt-eleeves, and that you have the itch, do yon think your bnalneM wo«!«l be improved 8nppoae I ifctoold tell1 the customers that yo» laayawr kiMit
».i|i n"' II, MM
.v X-
**»-j
5
THE TERKE HAUTE EXPRESS. SUNDAY MORNING. MARCH 4.1883.
er, who makes gets by thatatoff
7°
gatbei to respectable your rent? It you put lozengera in the collection plate at church, and charge the minister forty cents a pound for oleomargarine, you would have to clese up. Old man, I am onto you, and now you apoligize for pulling my ear."
people, conld you pay It I should tell them that
The groceryman turned pale during the recital, and finally said the baa boy was one of the best little fellows in this town, and the boy went out and hung up a sign in front, "Girl wanted to cook."
PARTED. •.
Senator Tabor Divorced From tho Wife Who Helped Him Build His Fortune— A Chicago Widow Said to Have Captured the Millionaire—His Remarkable Life. Chicago Ihter-Ocean.
A Washington dispatch yesterday 6tated that Senator Tabor, of Colorado, was engaged to be married to a pretty Chicago widow named McCourt. A reporter could find no tiace of such a lady in Chicago. The only widow of that name is one in humble circumstances residing on West Twelfth street. Thinking that perhaps there might be a mistake a canvas was made of the widows approaching that name, but none of them were willing to acknowledge the corn.
It has been known for some time among Senator Tabor'6 friends in this city that he was matrimonially clined, and several ladies in Denver have had the distinction of being enengaged to him according to rumor, A prominent actress has also been assigned to him as a wife, and his attentions have been of a marked character.
Senator Tabor has had a remarkable matrimonial experience, and its sensational denouement onlyfrecently gave a great deal of material to the public tongue. He married in Maine when a young man, and in 1859 was seized by .the Pike's Peak fever and went to Colorado in a prairie schooner accompanied by his bride, who sliafed with him the perils and exposure of that long and tedious journey. They camped for a time at the present site of Denver, which was then a bleak prairie, where he kept a sort of eating-house and supply store, in which Mrs. Tabor participated as his chief assistant and cashier to the establishment.
He then moved on to Pikes Peak, joining the inumerable caravan in search for gold. He settled at Colorado City, which is now a town of de serted shanties at the base of the mountain. He there opened a supply store which his wife kept while he joined the prospectors in the gulches of the mountains hunting for treasures.
When the Pike's Peak excitement died out, Tabor took up the line of march and went over the mountains following the prospectors, his wife driving one team of mules and he another. After twenty years of drifting about from one mining camp to another, enduring all sorts of hardships, even the lowest ebb of poverty, ana sometimes threatened with starvation, he settled down in a log cabin near the present site of Leadville, where he kept a store and boarding house for miners, his wife acting as cook, clerk, and postmistress for the camp. Tabor's caoin was a famous resort in those days, and was the scene of many incidents that are now apart of the history of mining life in the Rocky Mountains.
Mrs. Tabor was a sort of "Daughter of the Regiment" among the miners, being the only woman for miles around, and possessing the confident on-' card of everybody. She was a sort of a feank of deposit "for the rusty old fellows who did not spend their dust as last as they washed it out, and it is said that she often carried many thousand dollars in gold dust in her bosom, wrapped in little buckskin bags with tlie name of the owners attached. During all this time, and up to 1875, her husband was a prospector, meeting with little or no luck, while she kept the wolf from the door selling supplies, keeping boarders, and acting as laundress in general for the camp Carbonate Hill.
Good luck came at last, and a fortunate strike made Tabor one of the wealthiest men in the west. His name was one of the first of the famous group in Corbert Hill, and he soon became the possessor of others quite as rich, from which he has taken millions of dollars. He now owns in Leadville and in other portions of Colorado more productive mining property than any other man, and Irqm some of his mines his income is as "high as $50,000 a month. Others pay nearly as much, and it is estimated that his annual income from his mining property cannot be less than $500,000, and liis entire fortune is estimated as high as $10,000,000. He has used his money in buying real estate in Denver and erecting upon it the liandsomeat business blocks west of tlie Mississippi.
His Opera house, which cost $750,000, is iio doubt the finest in this country, and is surpassed in its appointments by few in the entire world. His residence in Denver is one of the most coaspicuous and costly in that city, and it is one of the sights for tourists who visit his buildings as samples of western enterprise.
Several months ago Senator Tabor, having tired of the companion of his poverty and humble life, endeavored to secure a divorce from her in one of the back counties of Colorado, using methods which the papers of Denver claim were not strictly honorable. Mrs. Tabor went into court and asked for a division of the property and a separate maintenance. As" a compromise Tier husband offered her $250,000 and liiB residence in Denver, providing she would consent to the divorce. This she refuted to do for some time, but finally the divorce was granted on terms that were much more advantageous to her, and appeared to be satisfactory to him. This family difficulty affected his candidacy for the United States senate very seriously, occurring as it did during the canvass befose tne legislature, ami lie was compelled to content him self with a short term of thirty days in that distinguished body, but secured the title of senator, and now has Honorable written before his name.
WASHINGTON, March 1.—Senator Tabor, of Colorado, was married to-night, to'Miss Elizabeth B. McCourt, of
LbESS* SP2S
OBh-
kosh, Wis., by Father Chapelli, pastor of St. Matthew's. The President, Senator-elect Bowen, Secretary and Mrs. Teller, Senator and Mrs. Hill, Representative and Mrs. Belford, Senator Sawyer, Senator Chaffey, General Chas. Adams, ex-minister to Bolivia Hon. Otto Mears and William N. Bush were among the guests. Mr. and Mrs. Tabor will remain in Washington until the dose of the session. They will then proceed to New York for a brief viBit, and thence go to Colorado. The marriage took place in the private parlor of Willard's hotel, which was magnificently decorated for the occasion, and an elegant supper was spread in an adjoining room. The presents were numerous and of great value. President Arthur remained an hour after the ceremony, and the other guests until late in the evening. Among the relatives present were Maxey Tabor, son of the senator, the father and mother, two sisters and two brothers of the bride, and Miss Lizzie McCourt, of Oshkosh, Wis.
One
of
the senator's presents to the bride was a diamond necklace, valued at $75,000.
Bullock's blood is used on a lai^e stale as a manure, but chiefly for mixing with other fertilizers. In its natural state blood contains about 3 per cent, of nitrogen when dried it contains 12 per cent. It makes an excellent manure for turnips when mixed with bone-dust or phosphatic guano. Mixed with peat or mold it may be applied aa a top-dressing to wheat crop* and to grws landr
rcr
WITHOtT A RAZOR.
A SmyrBlote Lady's Peculiar Business tn New York—HOTT She fUtaTOS Hirsute Belles of Gotham With a Thread—The
Peculiar Operation DeierlM. 4' New York Special. A novel phase of social life came to the notice of a reporter, details of which will afford interest and possibly some profit to ladies who are troubled with hirsute appendages. Through the courtesy of an acquaintance an introduction was given the reporter to Signora Helen DeGeorge Ides, a female barber, who shaves without a razor. She resides on the first story of 112 Hester street. The Signora is a buxom-looking brunette, with pleasant features and apparently 40 years of age. She has two handsome-look-ing hoys, one of whom acted as interpreter. "Mv mother is a native of Smyrna, Asia Minor," one of them said in very good English. "Can you describe the process "Certainly but my mother does not use any rigors, and she confines her attentions exclusively to ladies. She uses a thread instead of a razor, and the process is not only more speedy, but more satisfactory." "Does the lady object to giving ine an illustration other skill
After some coaxing the "Professor" consented, taking tlie reporter into another room. He was requested to bare his arm. Takiking
A STRONG LINEN THREAD,
she placed one end between her teeth, and with a peculiar see-saw motion of both hands she piled the thread tip and down the arm, the hair being caught up in what appeared to be a small ship-knot in the center of the thread. This motion was continued for several seconds, and with remarkable results, the hairs being quickly removed by the process. "Of cour3e, you will understand," continued her interpreter, "that my mother does not pretend to shave gentlemen. Their beards would be too hard and rough but she has been very successful with ladies and has quite a large number of customers who visit her regularly."
How long does it take to cfiectually remove a lady's mustache?" "Well, a brunette will get shaved by her process once a month. Blondes come in once in three weeks. The first stage is to anoint the skin witl ointment, the preparation of which is a secret. The object is
TO SOFTEN TIIB SKIN THOROUGHLY,
so the hairs may be removed withotft discomfort to the patient. Then the hairs come out very easily and the preparation checks their growth for several weeks." "Do you find many ladies who are afflicted with beard and moustaches?" "Oli, yes there aie dozens of them in this big city. Brunettes are more troubled than blondes, and the older the patient is the more difficulty in removing the hair."
The Perfect Marriage.
From One of Theodore Parker's Sermons.
Men and women, and especially young people, do not know that it takes years to marry completely two hearts, even of the most loving and well sorted. But nature allows no sudden change. We slope" very gradually from the cradle to the summit of life. Marriage is gradual, a fraction of us at a time.
A happy wedlock is along falling in love. I know young persons think love belongs only to brown hair and plump, round crimson cheeks. So it does for its beginning, just as Mount Washington begins at Boston bay, But the golden marriage is apart of love whush the
hridal
rlav knows
nothing ot. Youth is the tassel and silken flower of love 5 age is the full corn, ripe and
solid in the ear. Beautiful in the morning of love, with its prophetic crimson, violet, purple and gold, with its hopes of days that are to come. Beautiful also is the evening of love, with its glad remembrances and its rainbow side turned toward heaven as well as earth.
Young people marry their opposites in temper and general character, and such a marriage is generally a good one. They do it instinctively. The young man does not say: My black eves require to be wed to blue, and my overvehemence requires to be a little modified with somewhat of dullness and reserve." When these opposites come together to be wed they do not know it,but each thinks the other just like their self.
Old people never marry their opposites, they marry their similars, and from calculation. Each of these two arrangemnts is very proper. In their long journey these opposites will fall out of the way a great many times, and both will charm the other back again, and by and by they will be agreed as to the place tney will go to and the road they will go by, and become reconciled. The man will be nobler and larger for being associated with so much humanity unlike himself, and she will be a nobler woman for having manhood beside her that seeks to correct her deficiencies and supply her with what she lacks, if the diversity be not too great, and there be real piety and love in their hearts to begin with.
The old bridegroom, having a much shorter journey to make, must associate himself with one like himself. A perfect and complete marriage is, perhaps, as rare as perfect personal beauty. Men and women are married fractionally—now a small fraction, then a large fraction.
Very few are married totally, and they only, I think, after some forty or fifty years
of
gradual approach and
excitement. Such a large and sweet fruit is a complete marriage that it needs a winter to mellow and season. But a real happy marriage of love and judgment between a man and woman is one of the things so very handsome that it the sun were, as Greek poets fabled, a God, he might stop the world
in order to feast his ey spectacle.
Glass is otherwise 'non-conductor of electricity, and houtM with then roofs will need no lightning conductors. Although the kind of glass intended to be used in these shingles is nontransparent, yet spaces for sky-lights maybe filled with transparent guns. The exposed part of the shingles are corrugated to increase the strength and carry off tne water. The filth will construct the Bhingles in handsome diamond shapes, and they can be supplied in any color required, or of no color if preferred-. A roof with colored border and opalescent body is said to be very handsome.
airtsjilw
BLUEBEARD.
fkiB Lni1
and
Matrimonial Venture
Hla Beta*.
The story of the savage Bluebeard, who had acquired the habit of butchering a wife now and then and hoarding her up until he had quite a collection, has been handed down from generation to generation in a very incomplete state, for although the record is retained of his ultimate, well-merited destruction by the brothers of his last wife the worst trials that he was called upon to undergo remain unclironicled
He was getting well along in years when he married the next to tho last, a vigorous, muscular young and when the proper time came to do away with her he found that it put him up to all that he knew, and he was compelled very reluctantly to admit that he wasn't the man that lie had been once. "No," thought lie, fatigued and tremulons with the exertion of putting lier in her proper placC, he made out her tag. "I can't undertake another job like tl.at hereafter I muat pick out smaller women." So he looked around for some time before finding one that he thought he could manage easily, finallv selecting a thin-liped, sharpnosed little woman, who weighed about 65 pounds.
The day of their marriage he gave her the usual cantion about keeping out of the mysterious room, and then left chuckling to himself: "She'll probably stay out, but if she don't, I'll make short work of her. It will be the softest snap I've had yet."
Well, he had not been gone two minutes, before she had penetrated the apartment and made a complete inventary of its contents. "Oh, the monster!" she exclaimed, as she deftly stripped the late Mrs. Bluebeards of their jewels. "He'll want to kill me next," she continued, as she stooped to examine critically a dress with a view to turning and making it over, "but I'd like to see him do it, she added, not at all terrified, and with eyes flashing ominously.
When the old man came home, she didn't wait to be questioned about the fatal chamber, she jumped right in on him, and gave him a tongue-lashing that made his head swim. Then she sailed in on her muscle, jabbed one of his eyes out with a pair of scissors, pulled out a double handful of his blue beard, and finally knocked him over a coal scuttle into the fire place, where he lay unconscious while she telephoned for her brothers.
Before they arrived Bluebeard had recovered consciousness, and she flew at him again, but ju6tas she was getting well warmed up to her work the brothers broke into the room with uplifted swords "Thank heaven," murmured Bluebeard,"! am saved." And as his head rolled over the floor his lips broke into a peaceful smile.
As Others Might See Us. If an inhabitant of Mars, after admiring the starry beauty of the earth seen from a distance of many millions of miles, could approach near enough to get a bird's-eye view of what is now floino mi upon its surface, lie would be astonished at the scenes of devastation and ruin which had been concealed in the serene rays of his evening star. All quarters of our planet appear to be suffering from extraordinary displays of the destructive forces of nature. While the thickly populated valleys of the Rhine, the Danube, and the Ohio have been desolated by greal floods, a severe drought has prevailed in the central part of South America, Lake Titicaca, on the borders of Peru and Bolivia, famous for its great elevation above tlie sea and its islands, containing some of the most remarkable ruins in the world, is reported to be drying up at an extraordinary rate. This has claused consternation among the Indians in the neighborhood, who are reminded of a curious tradition concerning the subterranean channel connecting the lake with the sea which has come down from the days of the Incas.
The disturbance of the earth's crust, which was manifested by sharp earthquake shocks iu Europe, in New England, and in some of the Western states a few weeks ago, is yet felt in various parts of the world. News lias lately reached us of great destruction of property, and the loss of many lives, by earthquakes in the isjand of Formosa, and of a volcanic eruption on the shore of Lake Hakono, fifty miles from Yokohama, during which neighboring villages were damaged by lava ana falling rocks. The mountain from which the lava burst forth had not been known as a volcano, and this fact is all the more interesting because no volcanic eruption has occurred in that neighborhood since the eruption of the celebrated Fusiyama in 1707.
China, too, is suffering from floods. The Yellow river burst its banks near Wooting recently, and about 10,000 square miles of territory were inundated. If Mother Sliipton's evil prophecy had been aimed at 1883 instead of 1881, how well all these events would have chimed in with the men acing jingle of he* rhymes.
Money and Fame.
Washington Correspondence Cleveland Tender.
"No, don't want the governorship, said a leading Ohio congressman this week. "There is not money enough in it Thirty-five hundred a year and board yourself. Great God I It don't pay. I have had enough of the thankyou business in politics, and I am now inclined to take Iago's advice and put money in my purse. The glory of fame is an empty thing, and I would rather leave my children the Iraacy of a good education and a comfortable competence than that they should sleep under the shadow of the finest
a
Glass Shingles.
Brick, Tile and Material Review.
A manufacturing firm in Pittsburg has made a new departure is the use of glass, a patent having recently been granted to them for the manufacture of glass shingles. It is claimed for this material that it is more durable, stronger, and more impervious to rain than slate or any other substance now used. The manufacture of these shingles will also be comparatively inexpensive, and they can be placed in position by any ordinary workman. They can be used for weather-boarding or siding houses, and will be especially serviceable for conservatories or hothouses, as they can be made of transparent as well as of opaque or translucent glass. These shingles have the advantage of slate in several particulars. In consequence of their shape they lie solid on the roof, and so can be used on comparatively flat roofs, and they will admit of persens walking on them without danger of fracture, a quality which slate does not possess. They are interlocked so as to leave the interstices between them, and no rivet holds each air of shingles, so that they cannot be breed from their places by wind or other atmospheric disturbances. They are also maae so as to have very little waste material. It takes 300 slates,1 each eight by twelve inches, to cover which is technically known as a "square" of roof (a space measuring ten feet each way), but 150 of these shingles will suffice for the same space. Slates lap on the ends in the roofing, bat the shingles lap on the sides. It has been proved by experiment that of two adjacent houses, one covered with slate and the other with translucent glasb, the heat of a room near the roof in the former building will exceed that of one similarly situated in the latter, during summer, by thirteen degrees, rooii are aba warn in wiater.j
monument ever erected by the adulation of mankind. What have the wife and family of a great statesman after ho has died a pauper? What would Mrs. Garfield have to-day had she not been favored by peculiar circumstances? What is Garfield,8 clory to-day? I tell you the world is forgetting him already, and the funds for his monuments are growing very slowly. The day after he was dead I could have raised a sum of $50,000 to make a statue in his honor in my native city to-dav I could not raise $1,000. It is so with the glory of fame. The great man dies the world
Btops
The Effect oflilqnor Prohibition In Kansas. Kansas City Times.
Col. Carpenter, the Collector of Internal Revenue, furnishes the following figures for the year ending April 30,1881, the year before the law took effect, and the year ending April 30, 1882, the first year of prohibition:
From May 1,1880, to April_30,1881, there were issued 1,977 retail liquor stamps, 32 brewers' permits, and 30 wholesale liquor dealers' stamps. From May 1881, to April 30, 1882, there ware iaaued 1,787 ntaUJiqaor dealers'
•tamps, 24 brewers' permits, and 17 wholesale liquor dealers' stamps The number of retail liquor dealers stamps issued from May 1,1882, to Feb. 6,1883, is 1,895, wholesale dealers' stamps 23, and brewers' 13. It will be seen by this statement that, although there was a falling off in the first year after prohibition, yet the second bids fair to entirely outstrip the at previous to prohibition the number of stamps issded.
There cannot be much doubt but that the true way to enfore temperance by law lies more in the direction of high licenses and strict supervision than in aiw attempt at suppression altogether. This has been the experience everywhere in striving to control intemperance. Grant licenses only to men of undoubted character, make them pay a license that will shut out the low groggsries thatdo themisch'ef, put tJiem under strict supervision, and enforce the law absolutely.
How Forrest Regained His Property. Philapelphia Press, Feb. 25.
A singular fact has lately come to light in connection with tho late Edwin Forrest, which possesses more than ordinary interest. Pending the proceedings between Mr. and Mrs. Forrest, the great actor deeded all of his estate to his three sisters, giving each an equal share. Subsequently one of them died without issue, and her share of the estate reverted to her two Bisters and Edwin. The second sister died shortly afterwards without issue, and her snare of the estate, with what had been left her by the first sister dead, reverted to Edwin and the remaining sister. Not long- after this the third sister died and Edwin was the only heir, he, by her death, again became possessed of the property he had deeded away. This fact was discovered when the administrators sold the Broad and Master street property. The purchasers, in hunting oyer the records in the register's office discovered that Forrest had come into possession of his property the second time by inheritance, and through the aud-itor-general's office, at Harrisburg, learned by calculation, after the department had been placed in possession of the facts, that the estate was indebted to the state about $4,300 collateral inheritance tax, whicfc was paid.
ROYALKtnn
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
This-powder never varies. A marvel
of
purity, strength and wholesomeness, More economical than the ordinary kinds, and cannot be sold in competition with the multitude of low test., short weight, alum or phosphate powders.
O
PER A HOUSE.
ONE NIGHT ONLY.
Monday, March 5th.
THE FAMOUS COMEDIAN,
Mr. FRANK S. CHANFRAU.
Supported
by
powerful company, in the
greatest American comic drama,
The Arkansas Traveler.
Especially written for Mr. Clmnfmu by K. Spencer and C'. W. Tuyleure. Prices as usual.
Reserved seats now on sale at ISut lons.
PER A HOUSE.
O Tuesday, March 6th.
First.and only nppcurunre of Madame
MINNIE HAUK
Leading Prima Donna of
Her Majesty's Opera COMPANY.
And grand operatic concert company, including
W. C0NSTANTIN STERNBERG,
The great Russian pianist and com poser. Mile. Pauline Bali, Contralto Signer MontegrlfTo, Tenor Mr. G. Gottschalk, Uarrltone
PART I.—Programme Miscellaneous. PART II.—Scenes of Grand Opera. yy
A E N
(Mme. Minnie JHauk's original creation) in full stage costume. Reserved seats, $1.50 Admission, 81 and 7oc Gallery, Sic
Sale of seats begins Saturday, March :id, at Button's book store.
WHAT CAN BE FOUNJ)
-AT-
J. It. FISHER'S
Bargain Store
WHY EVERYTHING!
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.
a second, and
then rushes madly on. In a short time he is forgotten, and often, if he dies poor, the people say, 'yes, he
Wardrobes and Sideboards. Bed Lounges and Single Lounges. Wall Pockets and Brackets.
was
a great man, but he never laid up anything. He worked all his life and left his family poor.' And Boon the praise at the time of his death is turned into blame, and sometimes into calumny,"
QUEENSWARE. Decorated Tea Sets and Chamber Sets. Library and Fancy Lamps. Fancy Cups and Saucers. Fancy Mugs and Vases. Majolica Tea Sets ard Plates. Table Castors and Knives-and Forks. Silver-plated Table and Teaspoons. In fact, Fancy Goods in endless variety, but not fancy prices.
325,327 tU 329 Main Street.
DOCTOR 8TEINH ART'S
ESSENCE OF LIFE:
Kor Old and Young, Male and Female. It is a *nre, prompt and effectual remedy for Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Intermittent Fevers, want of Appetite, Nervous Desllltyin all its Stages, Weak Memory, boss of Brain Power, (Prostration, Weakness and General Loss of Power. It re-
Kdedlntellect,
iirs nervous waste, rejuvenates the strengthens the enfeebled vrnln and restores surprising tone and vigor to the exhausted organs. The experience of thousands proves it to bean invaluable remedy. Price, J1 a bottle, or six for
to.
For sale by all druggists, or
•ent nectiro from observation on receipt »f price, by Ir. Wteinbart, P. O. Box D,*#, .Louis, Ma.
ATTEND
Oint GREAT SALE
it
OF-
ODDS AND ENDS
ALL OVER OUR HOUSE.
Must be Closed Out. Room Required for Spring Stock.
Wepresent prices at which we marked our Boots and Shoes down to sell them rapidly:
Price 83.50, former price $I.V. ladies' French kid extra high cat button boot. Price $3.00, former price H.00. indies' Cnsso kid, broad toe and low broad heel.
Price S2.S0, former price $3.50. Ladles' pebble goat button boot, small round toe. Price 82.50, former price J3.50. Indies' glove kid button boots, sensible last.
Price $2.50, former price S3."i». Indies diagonal cloth top button boot, kid fox logs, low i»»mp, high heel.
Ladies' calf button shoes, $1^55, il.sfl. 1.7,1 and dOO former price, 32.00,82.50, S8.00 aad 83.60.
Misses' shoes from 81.00 to $2.50. Men's shoes from 81.00 to 84.00. Men's boots from 81.50 to 85.00. Boys' boots from 81.50 to 83.50. Any goods not satisfactory may be returned.
Recognis'.ne the importance of not having a shoe in the house but a quick mover, 1 have made a general reduction on all (toods.
My ihotto is that "to stand still is to go. backwards."
DANIEL REMOLD,
No. 300 Main Street.
MALARIA A
Germ Disease.
Malaria is ca-n by Gsrnvs of Disease arising fv&.f' Sao Praiuaso, Decaying Vegotation, tJewcr Uasi, end other local aourijcs.
DR. HATvIILTON'S
MALARIAL SPECIFIC, A Stricily Vp^iuiile Preparation,
Freo from Quia.iw able substance?, .J' .«
lc mi'! nil other objection n'g ciirc for this trouble.
Steveni or Technology. HOBOKKN, N. .1.. Juno 19tb, 1882. THIS IS TO CKRTIFT, Hint I bavo m.i'l" an analysis of the Antl Malarial Medicine, known n» "Doctor Hamilton's Malarial Spool tic," and find that it Is 1 purelv vegetable preparation, is absolutely frw nrom arecnic or anv other llko sul-sinm-e, doos not conWIa any quinine or similar body, or n'hor ohjcctlonabu material, and is undoubtedly bunnies.-.
HKXl'V M0r.T()S', Hi. D.
Testimony from fndiannpnlU. Dear Sir: IlarinR suliered In.m M.l.irin, was ad is a a a a I have done with the most satisfactory result*, ana will cheerfully recommend it to all nnSerlng Irorn that disease. Very truly youis,
CHAS. !. YOIIN, I ?yli-nnJvWis. Ind.
McKESSON ROHHINS, N. V.. Wl.eb wilo Agents. For SMe
by
Orudis
yl
WIFT'S SPECIFIC CURES SCKOI ULA.
WIFT'S SPECIFIC! CURES ULCERS.
WIFT'S SPECIFIC CURES CATARRH.
SWIFT'S SPECIFIC
CURES SORKS
SWIFT'S SPECIFIC
Sold only in
cans. ROYAI.HAKltfO rowDEiiCo.,106 wall street. New York.
AMUSEMENTS.
CURES liOlLK
SWIFT'S SPECIFIC! CURES ERUPTION*
NS
WIFT'S SPECIFIC CURES ECZEMA.
WIFT'S SPECIFIC CURES RHEUMATISM.
SWIFT'S
SPECIFIC REMOVES ALL TAINT.
Swift's Specific
IS TU E
Great Blood Remedy
Age
Write for full particuli
SWIFT SPECI1 jfV.tla.xil Bold liysill Druggists. SI tojlj
Pbyslcls un office 1 for (be co
(ill anil fii CHKSTNirf Pllll.AIKI,rilIAj|
Inc. i, P.
Philadelphia, Hon. T. K. Randolph, Norrlstown, N. J.
CONSUM
I have aposltlro remedy for| QU thousands of cases or tbtj •tandloehave been cored In4| ID Its emcacy, that I will senij together with a VA LCTABLB "i to any safferer. Giv* Kxprsi
DK. T. A. 8L0CUM
ADVKKTISKBK by adi ROWELL & CO.J York, can Jearn thej proposed ilno of American newsDiipef 9.100-I'aff® ramf
LY0NJ
State A Moa et, Will send any addf
BA.M1 cr for 1KXM, Engravjr ments, Pomgon
Lumps. Stun Huts. Sundry terials, also inc! ercises for Ami logue of Choice
J. R.D1
whoV
Paper, Paper
No. 628
fl
loo.
rbottlt.
New Advertise
its.
A lies
ri«k
EPILEF
rFrmn
Am. Joi
.CSTKcs-rolollat* of London),4 elaUyof Rpllopay, l»aa without doubt tj •nore cues than
any
other living I'hyi
•Men* nmetort of
c89 liu slrajily boen Astonishing cases of over «0 YEARS* standing BUCCCI Mm. He has pimllnhod »work on thU ho fiends with a largo bottlo of hts *"ow lr» any sufferer who may send their ei Addreaa. Wo ftdrlse any ono wishing
ImtM
Dr. Aa MESEROIJB, NO.
Joi
THE UNION TRIM
MF,
Capiial, $1000,000 Char
Arf.i ax Errcninr, Aininix Rrcrivrr, (jtuiyid'ili, Attnrne tec and Cnmmillrr, atone with an indiviihi'il ai)/nintrei
Tnkcs chaiKe "f Pf sen tecs and non-rcsldiTi lsK mils income promptly, faithfully tlie tin ties of trust and ngcue.y known
tty of irerMttdraj
Safes for rent, wlthll vaults of the most app^ tion.
Wills kept In fire anf safes without rharue. antl ail other valuables moderate anntiMl charge I speelllc Indemnity. t:ar trusts and other a| for sale.
«WUt«
L'J^tou F'Wnrnor
a«emitl«
Interos-t Iillowed oil for definite periods, orl ttc.e.
"tojroo.
W. PATTERSON IIIKSTKRCI.YMKllJ JIAHLON K.KTOKEH FRANCIS BACON,f Officer. 1)1 KEC \V. C. Patterson, James Long, Alfreds. Glllett, Hon. Allison White, Dr. C. P. Turner, D. R. Patterson, John T. Monroo, Jos. I.. Kcefe, Thomas R. Patton, W. J.Nead, James H. Martin, Dr. D. Hayes, Agna H. H. Houston, John G. Heading
of the
Olerk.
.£61.
irofes
sfactio
atom.
