Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 22 March 1884 — Page 2
AILY
PY.
:'jne
EXPKESS.
**. ALLEN, ..... PBOFBtETOB.
R'.iOATJON
'Z
OFFICE—No. 18 South
i*tb Street, Printing House Square.
jifintered as second-class matter at tbe it Office, at Terre Haute, Ind.]
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tin«
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copy, six months 66 For clubs of five there will be a cash dlsaiount of 10 per cent, from the above rates, »•, if preferred instead of the cash, a copy
Jthe Weekly Express will be sent free _\ir the time that the club pays for, not Mstban six months.
Weft dubs of ten the same rate of disennt, and in addition the Weekly Express free for the time that the club pays Tor, not less than six months.
For clubs of twenty-five the same rate if discount, and in addition the Daily Express for the time that the olub pays for, not less than six months.
Postage prepaid in all cases when sent oy mail. Subscriptions payable in ad
vanced
Advertisements
inserted in the Daily and Weekly on reasonable terms. For particulars apply at or address the office. A limited amount of advertising will be published in the weekly.
M~AU six months subscribers to the Weekly Express will be supplied FREE with "Treatise on the Horse and His Diseases" and a beautifully illustrated Almanac. Persons subscribing for the Weekly tor one year will receive in addition to the Almanac a railroad and township map of Indiana.
WHXBK TBS KXPBES8 IB ON FILE. Lc ddon—On file at American Exchange i.i. Europe, 449 Strand.
Paris—On file at American Exohange in 86 Boulevard des Capuclnea.
TERSE HAUTE
Offers Unexcelled Advantages as a Site for MANUFACTURES AND COMMERCE.
It Is the Center of a Rich Agricultural and Timber Region.
Nine Railroads Center Here.
It Is on the Great BLOCK COAL FIELDS. Good Steam Coal delivered to Factoriet at •i FIFTY CENTS PER TON.
REPUBLICAN TICKET.
FOR TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE, JOHN C. REICHERT. FOR CONSTABLES,
*Y BENJAMIN F. REAGAN, "DAVID W. CONOVER, LEVI BOGARD,
JOHN DOWNEY.
The spring advertising is beginning to come in and as Sunday issues are always in great demand by the advertisers the Express asks the favor of those who intend advertising in the Sunday Express to hand in their copy as early in the day as possible.
The number of business failures reported weekly is growing less each week and there are many signs of a general revival ot trade.
Anew daily paper has been started in Evansville. A brass band was present when the first numbers were put upon tbe street. The services of the band will be dispensed with on that other important ©ccasion in the career of spasmodic newspapers.
We are-pleased to notice such remarks in our contemporaries regarding the Express as "it is Republican inpol itics and edited with ability" which we find in the Charleston, Ills., Plain dealer, or "the brightest daily outside of the great cities" in the Paris Republican Beacon.
Paris Republican-Beacon: "The city of Terre Haute, for a period of five years, will exempt from taxation the new wagon workB to be located there. This is certainly aright move, and Paris might imitate the example thus set. It is Republican doctrine, too, put into practice, and is the high est kind of protective tariff in fact if not in form."
Chicago is complaining of muddy streets. Of late we have been growing into the habit of boasting of Terre Haute, and claiming many things in which it rivals the cities of the west. While Chicago is the undisputed metropolis of the west, still we have the hardihood to claim she cannot begin to compare with Terre Haute in respect to muddy streets.
It should be borne in mind that the circulation of the Express is larger than the combined circulation of all other daily papers in the city. The Express is the only paper that has a regular circulation in the surrounding towns. On Sunday mornings between 900 and 1,000 papers are delivered by carriers to subscribers in the neighboring towns. The advertiser should remember these facts when he is determining upon a plan for his spring advertieing ___^__^^^M
Major Barksdale, who represents the Copiah county district in Congress, was before the investigating committee yesterday. He had a great deal to say about the unsullied honor of Copiah county, but what is his evidence worth when he says he can not remember whether the men on horseback, to whom he made a political speeb, carried shot guns. The carrying of shot guns to political meetings in the south is such a common thing the major couldn't remember about this particular meeting. The chances are the men on horseback did have shot guns, and the strong probability is that the horsemen were what are known in the south as "night riders," in other words Ku Klux.
The lower house of the Ohio legislature has passed a bill to prevent gambling in stocks, oils, and provisions. Section 1 provides that all contracts and agreements to sell or buy, or to otter to sell or buy, any of the above stocks or commodities by the system of ''futures" are illegal and against publio policy, and null and void. Section 2 makes all transactions by margins and futures gambling acts, with penalties of $50 to $1,000 fine and thirty to ninety days in jail. Section 3 provides that not only the seller, but the buyer, or person offering to buy, are guilty of the grime, as well as any
agent or broker in such affairs, and makes persons owning the premises subject to a fine for renting for any such purposes.
The New Albany Ledger published an interview with Postmaster General Gresham on the occasion of his recent visit to that city. The Ledger says: "In relation to presidential candidates on the Republican side Gen. Gresham did not hesitate, when interrogated, to express a personal preference for the nomination of President Arthur. 'He has given the country a clean and able admistration,' said Gen. Gresham, 'and in his high office has been essentially the president of the people, and will therefore, in my judgment, have so strong a following that he will go into the convention at Chicago with more real strength than any other candidate.' Gen. Gresham added, however, that be believed the delegates to Chicago would go there with the purpose of selecting the strongest and best man for the presidential nomination rather than to carry out any scheme of personal preference or political machinery."
International Propositions.
Cincinnati Enquirer. What does Herr Bismarck say to lager, and call it quits.
zwei
3
Head 'Em Off-
New Albany Ledger. "Here we come," "our fool souls, head us somebodv," is what Morrison neck-yoked with double leaded "H. W." will soon be crying,
The Giggling Girl Who Asks Questions. Lowelll Citizen. "Do you suppose eating angel cake will make an angel of me?" asked a eeraphij young lady of the worldly young man. "I've no doubt it will," he answered, "if you will only eat enough of it." Then she giggled, and said, Why
The News From Egypt.
Chicago News. II the Atlantic cable should break, the American papers would go right on printing the news from Egypt. It would be necessary only to make the news en" couraglng for the British one day and for the rebels the next. Yesterday was Egypt's day. To-day must be England's.
Got Him a Goblet.
Washington Hatchet. There is a new waiter in the House restaurant, and yesterday when Representative Blackburn went down to get his lunch, the waiter brought him the bottle and a regulation whisky glass. Mr. Blackburn stared at the waiter and then at the glass, and finally blurted out: "Don't you know who I am?" "No, sir," replied the waiter. "I am a senator-elect from Kentucky," replied the Hon. Joe. '•From Kentuck !"ejaculated the writer. "Oh, I beg your pardon, sir."
And he quickly brougLttheKentuokian a goblet.
The Craze About Actresses and Singers. Chicago News.
The craze that has taken hold of the San Francisco people since Adelina Patti reached their town recalls the enthusiastic demonstrations which pre vailed on the occasion of Sarah Bernhardt's visit to Montreal. The Cana dian populace went almost wild. The actress was lifted upon the shoulders of the mob which greeted her at the rail my station, borne to a large sleigh and dragged in this vehicle to her hotel amid a surging human tide that threatened every moment to break over her and tear her in pieces for very admiration and joy. When asked last season whv he did not take Patti to Canada, Mr. Abbey said he did not care about having her killed on his hands. "I verily believe," said he, "that if Patti were to visit Montreal those excitable French people would simply tear her in ten thousand pieces. They are the most uncontrollable creatures I ever saw. The presence of a great artist seems to drive them mad. My experience with Bernhardt taught me a lesson I shall never forget. I take no more artists to Canada."
Consolidating the World's Quinine Industry. Philadelphia Special.
Soon after the destruction by fire of Powers & Weightman's quinine factory, a week or two ago, negotiations were opened between Dr. Weightman and Alexander Bouehringer, of Milan, Manheim, and' Paris, the most extensive manufacturer of quinine in the world, which havfe resulted in the leas ing by Powers & Weightman of the fully equipped quinine factory in the grand duchy of Baden, Germany. It is not believed that this new enterprise will interfere with the rebuilding of the destroyed factory. Large shipments of cinchona have already been made to Europe for the use of Powers & Weightman, and it is held that, as there is no import duty in this country on the drug, the product of the Manheim factory can Be shipped to this country for less than the first cost of American-made quinine. Those interested in the trade believe that this union of these two great houses indicates lower prices.
Boscoe Conkling Suing for an Attorney's Pee. New York Dispatch.
Roscoe Conkling brought suit to-day against the Commercial Manufacturing company for $10,000 for legal services and expenses during 1882 and 1883. It seems the company objected to the amount claimed, and demanded an itemized bill, which Conkling could not furnish, because he had no precise business methods in his office. He wrote the company a number of rather sarcastic letters from time to time setting forth the service rendered, and Judge Truax decided to-dajr that these were sufficient in lieu of a bill of particulars. The case attracts considerable attention among judges and lawyers, as it will be likely to develop the amount of work Conkling considers worth $10,000.
Secretary Folger's Oniy Neglect. Washington Cor. Boston Globe. When the Keifer-Boynton committee sent to the treasury department last week for a few official papers, they were very much surprised to have the venerable secretary come to the committee room in person to deliver them, duty which could have been performed by any messenger clerk, as no subpoena had been issued for anybody. Apropos of this a gentleman who knew about this habit of his, conversing with him one day, remarked: "Mr. Secretary, I see you do everything in this department except one thing." "What's that?" said Mr. Folger. "Why, you don't run the elevator," said the gentleman.
That is about the only thing he does not do.
WISE AND OTHERWISE.
THE OBHHXAI, DIXIE. 3. 5 The New Orleans Ernes-Democrat gives the following as the correct original of the famous Dixie:"
I wish I was in de land ob cotton, 1 Ole times dar am not forgotten In Dixie land Whar 1 was bawn in, Arly on a frosty mawnln'.
Ole missus marry Will de weabet Will he was a gay deceaber When he put his arm around her He looked as fierce as a forty-pounder. "His face was as sharp [as a butcher's
clcft^or
But dat don*'t seem a bit to gread 'er Will run away, missus took a decline Her face was de color ob de bacon rine. "While missus Ubbed she llbbed inclober, When she died she died all ober How could she act de foolish part An' marry a man who broke her heart?
"Buckwheat cakes an' cawn-meal batter Makes you fat, or little fatter Hero's a health to de nex' ole missus, An' all de gals as wants to kiss us.
"Now if you want to dribe away sorrow Come an' hear dls song to-morrow Den hoe It down and scratch de grabbel, To Dixie land I'm bound to trabel."
CHORUS.
"I wish 1 was in Dixie, hooray, hooray In Dixie's land We'll take our stand. To lib an' die in Dixie Away, away, away down Souf In Dixie Away, away, away down Souf in Dixie!"
Eggs are five cents a dozen at Jewett, Texas. A fish storm recently occurred near Lancaster, S. C.
Gr. W. Childs, of the Philadelphia Ledger, walks ten miles every day. The first sleigh seen in Santa Fe, N. M., for years drove around the plaza the other day.
F. Marion Crawford, now in Rome, is completing the la^phapters of still another novel. 3*
Miss Lillian Bayard Taylor
Bhares
her father's fondness for German, and has much of his fine feeling for poetry. "The Poetical Works of Edmund C. Stedinan" will soon be published in a single volume in the Household Edition.
The bullet that killed General. Warren at the battle of Bunker Hill is in the posessionof William H. Montague, of Boston.
A Methodist conference at Philadelphia has refused even probationary membership to a minister of its denomination who has attended the theatre.
Zola's Paris publisher is now advertising "Nana" as being in its one hundred and twenty-seventh edition, and "L'Assommoir" in its ninety-seventh.
George Hammond, a convict in the Ohio penitentiary, has been pardoned, but refuses to leave until cured of an injury received while at work in the prison.
Henry Villard contradicts the story that he recently sold for $260,000 oneseventh of a,piece of property in Portland that had cost him only $45,000 a few years ago.
New photographs of Bernhard just produced in Paris represent her completeiy clad in fur, with even a fur bonnet and gloves. She looks as if she weighed 400 pounds.
A Lancaster, Pa., maiden is the last American girl to capture a title. Miss Florence Beniman will return- from Italy to her Lancaster home as the Baroness Kapetany.
A Minnesota paper has dedicated itself to the abolition of poverty, ignorance, wickedness, unchastity, drunkenness, injustice, perversion of law, oppression and evil."
Four weeks ago there was nothing but a railway station at Belknap, near the new Cceur d'Alene mines. "Now," says a correspondent, "there are .twen-ty-five saloons in full blast."
Postmaster General Gresham re cently entered Philadelphia on the same train with a base ball club, and was met on the-platformashe alighted with: Short stop or catcher.?"
A bartender in a Chicopee (Me.) hotel, who is in the habit of taking an after-dinner nap in the office, awoke the other day to find his only comfort, an elaborate mustache shaved off.
Judge Conway, who died at Fredricksburg, Va., a few days ago, was the father of the noted Moncure D. Conway. The deceased was a man of influence in Virginia during more than half a century.
A Kansas man inquired of a Missouri editor as to the exact spot where the Garden of Eden is located, when he was promptly informed that the said garden is located on the northern coast of Switzerland.
C. M. Lillian, of Lawrenceburg, Ky., has a four-dollar bill issued by the "United Colonies" of America, bearing date of February 17,1776. It was redeemable in gold or silver bullion or Spanish milled dollars.
George Smith, of Indiana county, Pennsylvania, put $15,000 in bills in a chest for safe keeping. He neglected to look at it for some time, and when he did inspect it he found that rats had torn the bills all to bits.
Pittsburg boasts of the possession of a marvel in a boy who "from sunrise to sunset enjoys good health and romps around like all children of his age, but at dusk becomes entirely unconscious, and remains so till morning."
Theodore Hoffman, the murderer confined in the White Plains, N. Y., jail awaiting execution in April, amuses himself by writing cards bearing the inscription, "Rev. Theodore Hoffman, pastor of the White Plains jail."
A pretty tough customer that Mme, Paul Minck, the Paris anaichist, must be. She named her first son Lucifer Satan Vereingetorix, and now announces the arrival of a second who is to be called Spartacus Blanqui Revolution.
The heathen Chinee may be pscu liar, but he has hiB redeeming traits. In San Francisco the Chinese gave $45,000 to aid their countrymen who were sufferers from the recent great floods near Canton. Several Chinese merchants gave $2,000 each.
The grave of the celebrated Kit Carson is at Taos, N. M., and the Grand Army Posts of that territory are about to take steps to erect a suitable monument to his memory. A son of the old mountaineer is in the employ of exSenator Doreey on his cattle ranche.
The Hollow Square.
The "hollpw-square" formation that won the battle of El Teb and of Tam-al-Wells is undoubtedly a formidable one in these days of long-range rifles, when the assailants can be exterminated long before they evef reach the bayonet-points. But that infantry squares nave been broken by cavalry
W'
jit
on more than one occasion it now matter of history. Authorities are still divided as to whether Victor Hugo
Mont., March 20.—The Tribune correspondent and his companion arrived in this camp yesterday, eight days out from Chicago.. Our party was three days on the trail from Thompson Falls, on Clark's Fork, crossing the summit of the Cceur d'Alene St. Patrick's Day. Hundreds of people are coming by every trail.
There is undoubtedly gold all along the creek. It is impossible at the present time to give much authentic information relative to the richness of the placer diggings. "The Widow" has unquestionable yielded from $12 to $20 per day a man. The aggregate amount of dust taken from the ,claim exceeds $10,000.
The Peter claim only ran about three weeks, and cleaned up from $10,000 to $12,000, according to the statements of Dr. Cambell, who was in a position to know the facts.
W. E. Cole saw one lot of dust weighing $800,- which the parties asserted had been washed out by three days' work, having been performed* in six inches of water.
Eleven claims have lines of sluces, and are said to be down to bedrock. These are The Widow, Ives, jAappenstall, Wyant, Macomber, Campbell Points & Co., McQueen, Moscow, George Murrav, Rockford Company, and Allman & Co. On these claims and many others work is now progressing drainage ditches are being cut and sluces are being placcd in positon. The Widow claim is now in shape for mining, and pay-dirt is being washed. On Bear Gulch, and all numerous tributaries of Pritchard Creek, miners are busy at work.
A few weeks will solve the problem fully, and gold dust will either be plentiful in the various camps or else the mines will be voted a failure. So far as placer diggings are concerned, no fears are entertained of the result by those whose money is invested in older claims. It is boldly asserted that the question has been fully decided, and the answer is, "There's millions in it."
It is estimated that 1,000 buildings are in process of construction in the mining district. Every man who will work finds ready employment at from $5 to $8 per day. There is an abundance of small timber suitable for log houses, and the sound of the ax ana .falling trees can be heard on every hillside. Cabins are costing from $250 to $2,000, every log delivered on the ground being worth $5. Lumber whipsawed is worth $250 per thousand, and finds ready sale. Stakes are $3! per hundred, cedar being best adapted to the manufacture.
Mrs. Prank Leslie.
Chicago News.
Mrs. Frank Leslie, who is soon to be married to the Marquis de Lenville, is said to be the smartest businesswoman in New York. By her sagacity and prudence the estate left by h6r hus band, who seems to have been an extravagant bon vivant, has been raised from bankruptcy into a condition, of great prosperity. She is a wondrously charming lady, of handsome, dignified presence, varied accomplishments, and remarkable conversational powers. The marquis is younger than Mrs. Leslie, and is said to be a most engaging gentleman. He has great wealth, and is closely devoted to literature and art. Not long ago he published a volume of meritorious poems. Last fall he overheard a foreign nobleman make a slighting remark about Mrs. Leslie, and the result was a duel, fought in Belgium. It is believed that tliis incident had much to do with bringing the fair widow to terms. The marquis has the reputation of being one of the best pistol-shots in the world. The announcement of his early marriage to Mrs. Leslie is by no means a sur-
Eintedalthough
rise, it has been variously that the lady was enamored of Joaquin Miller, the poet. The truth is that Mrs. Leslie has always admired Miller, but whatever she nas done for him has been done purely from a desire to encourage a man whose gifts and powers she deemed worthy of encouragement.
Sitting Bull and the Telephone. Sitting Bull, the old chief of the Sioux band which massacred Custer and his gallant company, is now a prisoner at Fort Randall, Dakota, where he behaves well and encourages his people in agriculture. He was taken to St. Paul, Minn.,last weekandshown the sights in that city. None of them seemed to make mur-h impression until he was shown a telephone and permitted to talk with his nephew, One Bull, who was in another room, one hundred feet distant Then he grunted "Waukan" (evil spirit). He afterward said: "I am very much pleased with this my first visit to the white people's homes, I am glad to see so many whites. Your teepees are very big and high. I never saw any so big before. If the Great Spirit has mercy this year my people can raise some good crops on our new farm at Grand River."
Ending a Letter Properly. Paris Letter to the London Truth. It is not every one who can wind up a French note in the exact form which the circumstances under which it is written demand. A son of the late M. Menier (a chocolate bonanza) was placed under arrest for a fortnight, when a twelve months' volunteer, for assuming his colonel of his "high con-
TERRE HATTCS 8ggRS*3. SATURDAY MORNING. MARCH 22. 1384
military
novels.
The Irish brigade had a similar experience at Talavera. "So, my Connaught boys," said Gen. Picton to them after the battle, you let tbe Frenchmen get into your square today, did you?" "Well, your honor," answered a brawny Irish grenadier, with stern significance, "the blackguards got in, sure enough, but, be dad. they never got out again."
CCEUR D'ALENE.
An Immense Hush to the New Mines by All tbe Trails—Gold Alt Along Pritchard's Creek—Two Claims That. An
Yielding Handsomely—A Thousand Buildings Going Up. Special Dispatch from a Chicago Tribune
Staff Correspondent.
EAGLE CITY,
Idaho, via Trout Creek,
dderation." The colonel did not to be highly considered by a yoi fellow of his military rank.
WM
right in affirming or Siborne in denying that the French heavy brigade drove in the face of a British square at Waterloo. But Montbron's curaissiers broke a Russian square at Borodino in 1812, and. Colonel Caulaincourt's horse in the same battle actually charged into an intrenched redoubt. In the course of the AngloArabian war that followed England's annexation of Aden, in 1839, an English square was attacked in the open plain by a mass of Abdali honemen. The Arabs forced their way in so far as to kill several men in the third rank, and were then beaten off with bayonets and clubbed muskets, an occurrence utilized by James Grant in one of his
^deration." The colonel did not want oung
saw ^AOUUL Blanc furious because & i»blell* deputy, with whom he was not well acquainted, ended a scrawled note to him with the word "Salutations," and tagged on to it a po^tacriptnm. The salutations should haye been qualified, and the writer, before addressing a man of Louis Blanc's standing, should have considered well what he wanted to say, and thus obviated the necessity of a P. S. It is extremely difficult for a lady to wind up a letter to a Frenchman of such high station as the president of the republic, she being more worthy of her sex, and yet bound to make nim feel that she is conscious of bis superior rank. In all cases respect shoula be expressed in the wind-up phrase of a note or letter if the person to whom it is written has a gray head ora whitehead.
Naming the Town. •,. ,5
Lincoln (111.) Times.
Many yean ago two old pioneers— Peter Lnkins was the name of one of them—owned the land on which the city of Petersburg stands. Abraham Lincoln, who lived at Salem, two miles up the river, but now entirely abandoned, surveyed the new town. The two old pioneers couldn't agree as to the name of tbe future great. One of them proposed a game of seven-up, the winner to have the honor of naming it. Lukins won, and in honor of himself he called it Peter's Burg.
Nearly one-fifth of all the children in Providence, R. I., of school age, did not attend school a single day during the year 1883.
Disfiguring HUMORS,
SALT
[Itching and iBurning Tortures, Humiliating Eruptions. such as
RHEUM or Eczema, PsoriasisScald Head, Infantile or Birth HU, mors, and every form of Itching, Scaly, Pimply and Scrofulous, Inherited, Contagious, and Copper-Colored Diseases of the Blood, Skin, and Scalp, with Loss of Hair, are positively cured Dy the Cutlcura Remedies.
Cutlcura Besolvent, the new blood
fiurifier,
cleanses the blood and persplra-
ion of Impurities and poisonous elements, and thus removes tne cause.
Cutlcura, the great Skin Cure, instantly allays Itching and Inflammation, clears the Skin ana Scalp, heals Ulcers and Sores, and restores tne Hair.
Cuticnra Soap, an exquisite Skin Beautifler and Toilet Requisite, prepared from Cutlcura, is Indispensable in treating Skin Diseases, Baby Humors, Skin Blelhishes, Rough, Chapped or Oily Skin.
Cutlcura Remedies are absolutely pure, and the only real Blood Purifiers-and Skm Beautiflers, free from mercury, arsenic, lead, zinc, or any other mineral or vegetable poison whatsoever.
It would require this entire paper to do Justice to a description of the cures performed by the Cutlcura Resolvent internally, and Cutlcura and Cutlcura Soap externally.
CATARRH
Eczema of tbe palms of the hands and of the ends of the fingers, very difficult to treat and usually considered incurable small patches of tetter and salt rheum on the ears, nose, and sides of the face.
Scalled Heads with loss of hair without, number, heads covered with dandruff and scaly eruptions, especially of children and infants, many of which since birth had been amass of scabs.
Itchlng, burning, and scaly tortures thai baffled even relief from ordinary remedies, soothed and healed as by magic.
Psoriasis, leprosy, and other frightful forms of skin diseases, scrofulous ulcers, old sores, and discharging wounds, each and all of which have been speedily, permanently, and economically cured by the Cuticnra Remedies.
Sold everywhere. Price: Cutlcura, 50 cents Resolvent, 81.00 Soap, 25 cents. Potter Drug»and Chemical Co., Boston, Mass. Send for "How to Cure Skin Diseases."
COMPLETE TREATMENT $1.
A single dose of Sanford's Radical Cure instantly relieves the most violentSneezing or Head Colds, clears the head as by magic, stops watery discharges from the Nose and Eyes, prevents Ringing Noises in the Head, cures Nervous Headache, and subdues Chills and Fever. In Chronic Catarrh it cleanses tbe nasal passages of foul mucus, restores the senses of smell, taste, and hearing when aflected, frees the head, throat, and bronchial tubes of offensive matter, sweetens and purifies the breath, stops the cough and arrests the progress of Catarrh towards Consumption.
One bottle Radical Cure, one box Catarrahl Solvent and Sanford's Inhaler, all in one package, of all druggists for SI. Ask for Sanford's Radical Cure. Potter Drug and Chem. Co., Boston.
Collins' Voltaic Electric Plaster instantly affects the Nervous System and banishes Pain A perfect Electric Battery combined with a Porous Plaster for 95 cents. It annihilates Pain, vitalizes Weak
IS THE CBT SOFFEBM I CSV!
and Worn Out Parts, strengthens Tired Muscles, prevents Disease, and does more in one half the time than any other plas' ter in the world. Sold everywhere.
NEW
Champion Force Pump.
A GREAT ACHIEVEMENT IN PUMPING.
Taeoam-Chnraber A Air-Cham-ber, Producing a Continnoat Flow of Water la
Suction and Dls- .-J&: charge.
For Hose Attachment, Accessibility of Working Parts, Arrangement to Prevent
Freezing,
Material used In Cylinders, Lightness and ease in Worklug, Strength, Neatness and Durability,
JHE NEW CHAMPION has .. NO SUPERIOR.
BOLD BY
STUBBS BROS.,
BXPAIBUrS A SPECIALTY. BATJSVACnOH ETJARANTXKS. Also, best quality vitrified stone sewer pipe, oulvert pipe, well tubing, fire clay dues, ohlmney lining, ohimney tops,
liEGAL.
^j"OTICE TO CONTRACTORS.
W&AUIX,
TKB
A
IITD., March 21,
lSBi.
Beaied proposals will be received by the common council of the city of Terre Haute, Ind.,at their next regular meeting, Tuesday evening, April 1st, 1884.
For the grading, curbing and cindering of Wilson street, from First street to Third street, in accordance with plans and specifications now on file In the office of the city clerk.
All proposals mnst be made on the regular blank form, to be bad
at the city
ingineer's office. Proposals must be accompanied toy a bond of $300, signed by two disinterested sureties, that the bidder will enter into contract within five (5) days after the'&ward is made.
Envelopes containing proposals must be endorsed with the name of the street for which the tender is made.
The Council reserves the right to reject any and all bids. By order of the common council.
GEO. R. GRIMES, City Engineer.
PPLICATION FOR LICENSE.
The undersigned will apply to the Board of County Commissioners, at their next session, for license to retail spirituous and malt liquors in less quantities than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank oh my premises. My place of business is located at 158 Lafayette streef on the southwest corner of Lafayette as Tippecanoe streets, in the fourth ward. Terre Haute, Harrison township, Vigo county. Indiana. JACOB STUMP.
PPLICATION FOB LICENSE.
The undersigned will apply to the Board of County Commissioners, at their next session, for license to retail spirituous and malt liquors in less quantities than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on my premises. My place of business is located on the west half of the east half of lot No. 44, on Main street between Second and Third, on the north side.
URIAH a GREGG,
PPLICATION FOR LICENSE.
The undersigned will apply to the Board of County Commissioners, at their next regular session, for a license to retail spirituous and malt liquors in less quan titles than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on my premises. -My placeof business is located In the Fourth ward, lot number one, (1) No. 619 Third street.
J. F. SUTJLIVAN.
PPLICATION FOR LICENSE.
The undersigned will apply to atj
the
Board of County Commissioners, at their next regular session, for a license to retail spiritous and malt liquors in less quantities than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on his premises. His place of business is located on lot number ninetyone, (91) known as No. 11 north Third street. PETER McKENNA
PPLICATION FOR LICENSE.
The undersigned will apply to the Board of County Commissioners, at their next session, for license -to retail spirituous and malt liquors in less quantities than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on his premises. My placets located at No. 11 North Third stree" th-» east side.
et. on
A HE THEALL.
PPLICATION FOR LICENSE.
Tne undersigned will apply to tbe Board of County Commissioners, at their next regular session, for a license to retail spirituous and malt liquors in less quantltiei than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on his premises. His place of business is located at No. 114 Main street.
FRANKLIN HUNTER.
DMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given that I have been appointed administrator of the estate of Joseph H. Holmes, deceased. Said eBtate is supposed to be solvent.
No. 503 1-2 MAIN STREET.
Dr. W. C. Eiehelberger, OCULIST and AURIST,
Boom IS, Savings Bank Building,
TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA.
OFFICE Houss:a to 5 p. m.
DRS. RICIIARM & VAN VALZAH,
DAVID W. HEN RY. JACOB D. EARLY.
HENRY & EARLY,
Attorneys at Law and" "T (ieiu ral Insorauee Agents.
ROOM 1, BEACH BLOCK.
SAVE YOUR EYES!
Terre Haute, Indians, Eye Infirmary.
DR. R. D. HALKYJOF N. Y., late of Trenton, Mo., and DR.J. E. DUNBAB,of St. Louis, late of Winchester, Mo., Proprietors.
Will treat all diseases of the eye ten days free of charge if ample satisfaction not given. Office and rooms, southwest corner Third and Ohio sts., Terre Haute, where one of us can be consulted at all hours during the day. City referencesJ. T. MasicK, druggist, next door to postoffice N. H. McFerrin, dealer in agricultural implements, west side PublioSquare Hiram Foultc, grocer, Cor. First ana Main.
New Advertisements.
THE CELEBRATED
\NKRCONVERSL
BANJO.
JOHN F.
8TBATTOK
lontber
420 Ohio Street,
TERRE HAUTE, IND.,
Dealers In best make
Iron Pomps,
..g Stone Pumps, Jt
Wood Pomp*.
sat
frt *4
ASA R. SUMMERS, Adm'r.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS. H. C. BOYSE,
Attorney at Law,
3(S~
-9 to 12 a. m., and from
lit,
viTiSlr
ffijf
Dentists,
r:
Office, S. W. Cor. Fifth and Main Sfs.,
ENTRANCE ON FIFTH STREET.
Communication by telephone. Nitrons Oxide Gas adminlster«d.
CO.,
JUHUrACTUBXHS ALSO OF
BRASS BAND INSTRUMENTS, 49 Maiden Lane, New Yerk.
LADIES
or Young Men in the city or
country to take nice, light and pleasant work at their own homes
$2
to $5 a
day easily and quietly made work sent by mall no canvassing no stamp for reply. Please address Reliable M'f'i Philadelphia, Pa., drawer TT.
t'g Co.,
CONSUMPTION.
I hare ft positive remedy for the above dleeeee br lta thotts&nds of eases of tbe worst kind and of long
to any sufferer. Glre Bi.pi ess and P. O. address. DR. T. A. SLOGUK, 1S1 Pearl 8t, Hew Tork
O ADVERTISERS.—Lowest Rates for advertising In OTO^ood ^gage™ sent free. Address 8 CO., 10 Spruce St., N. Y.
STAR LAUNDRY,
NO. 677 1-2 MAIN STREET.
Shirt, Collars, Cuffs & Lace Certains,
DONE UP EQUAL TO NEW. tadtW and Family VMklail
i§f
TAkcn
ktJbt
j»-S" k-lrfe.
i.St
fflUI, fUUTiCO,
808 and 510 Sain St
AS PER PREVIOUS ANNOUNCEMENT
Invoices of Spring Goods are now daily arriving from our Manufactory at Utica. Among many lines of new designs and Stylish Patterns, in Children's^ Boys', Youths' and Men's, we have only space to mention a few of the many, viz :n
One lot desirable Pattern in Children's, at $3.00. One lot desirable Pattern, all wool, in Children's, at $4.00.
Various other Fancy Pants, new designs, all wool, $6.00 to $8.00.^ In Boys' Suits we offer new styles, (Fay patent) all wool, $4.00 to $10.00.
In Men's we have to show of the latest patterns and most improved styles and nobby make-up, all wool, warranted solid colors, from $6.50 to $15.00. ft These suits were never before shown at less than faom $8.50 to $18.00. \|EING IttANUFACTURjllS, taifit WholMalft Trices?
*vS ,,
-i
m" &
OWEN, PIXLET & CO.
-1508 and 510 Main Street, Terre Haute.
BEMEHIBEB OlIB GREAT
CLOSING OUT SALE
OF-
BANKRUPT STOCK
BOOTS & SHOES.
Bought at Sheriff's Sale. We are Selling Boots _and Shoes at^early .Half. Price.
FARMERS, ATTENTION! $ss
Save Your Feed.
FEED STEAMER,
Jurt the thing for Farmers or Dairymen.
RQMAIN & DAILY FEED STEAMER
can toe Been at Fonts & Hunter's livery stable, or at corner of Seventh and Poplar streets. It will save you money—call and sect It, A. B. WILLIS, 928 North Seventh 8t.
J.F.McCANDLESS,
Dealer in all grades of hard and soft coal,
BRAZIL BL0CK,Scl BLOCK NUT, Slltr and BITUMINOUS
COAL.
WOOD AND COKE.
Office, IS and 20 South Third Street.
(Telephone Connection.)
FRUIT EVAPORATORS.
We mannfactnre the Williams Fruit and Vegetable Evaporators for factory use. We also make the Bidwell Patent Fruit Evaporators for a medium size we make two sizes of the latter. These Evaporators have no equal they sell on their ments. We are not obliged to cut on prices to compete with worthless machines. Parties are glad to get them at reasonable prices. Send for illustrated circular. JOHN WILLIAMS & SON,
Patentees and Manufacturers, Kalamazoo, Mich.
PRI7F Send six cents for postage
1
»M«fc»»and
"7?
M—" yf
R. FISHER 329 Main St.
jr-vt
receive free, a costly box
of goods which will help all, of either sex, to more money right away than anything else in this world.. Fortunes await the workers absolutely sure. At once addrqs* TRUE 4 Co., Augusta, Maine.
it
we re-
s'ttf ii
*C
in&jf re
-if.v
The Largest, Best and Most Complete" Newspaper ever sent
One Year For $1.00
EIGHT LARGE PAGES,
Containing the News of the Day, Agricultural and other matter interesting to the farmer and his family, complete Market Reports, Stories, Sketches, etc. Sample Copies free. Address
CHICAGO WEEKLY HERALD^
Address THE CHICAGO HERALD,
J.
4
Chicago, III. Vy-
»if you want a dally paper try
THE CHICAGO HERALD,
An enterprising, fearless and reliable Chicago daily that has been a great sucess because of it excellence in every particular. It presents all the news every day on four large pages and at a price that permits its being taken regularly by everybody. For sale by all Newsdealers. Sent on trial by mail, postage paid, six days in each week for TWO MONTHS FOR ONE DOLLAR.
T. J. PATT0N & CO.,
DEALERS IN
Olioioe Meats.
Southdown Muiton and Lamb. •ovtbeMt Corner Fourth tad Ohioi
5,
120 & 122 Fifth Ave., Chicago, III.
JAMBS W. SCOTT, Publisher,
ft5
%2"
