Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 10 May 1884 — Page 2

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4 l\

I

WHY SOT

-BUY A-

PIA.N0 OR ORGAN Now and save money Our instruments are purchased direct from the manufacturer, and we shall continue to sell at such prices and on such favorable terms that no family need be without a fine instrument

CALL AND SEfi US, WHETHER YOU WANT TO BUY OR NOT.

TIB. PFAPFIIN«CO,

644 MAIN STREET,

TBRRB HAUTE.

82 & 84 N. Pennsylvania St.,

INDIANAPOLIS.

DAILY EXPRESS.

otRO M. ALIIILTK, PBOPBIKTOK.

PUBLICATION OFFICE—No. 16 South fifth Estreat, Printing House Square. (Entered as second-class matter at the r1/ st Offloe, at Terre Haute, Ind.]

Terms of Snbtori tion.

ally Express, per -week 15 ots per year 87 60 six months 8 76 ten weeks 1 GO •sued every morning except Monday, delivered by carriers.

Term* for the Weekly.

.me copy, one year, paid In advance...Jl 26 »ne copy, six months 65 For clubs of five there will be a cash dlsjount of 10 per cent, from the above rates, i* if preferred instead of the cash, a copy jthe Weekly Express will be sent free »ir the time that the club pays for, not esthan six months. /or clubs of ten the same rate of dlscunt, and 1-n addition the Weekly Express free for the time that the club pays 'or, not less than six months.

For clubs of twenty-flve the same rate tf discount, and in addition the Daily Exoress for the time that the club pays for, act less than six months. postage prepaid in all cases when sent oy man. Subscriptions payable in adranoe.

Advertisement!

inserted In the Dally and Weekly on reasonable terms. For particulars apply at or address the office. A limited amount of advertising will be published In the Weekly. •WA11 six months subscribers to the Weekly Express will be supplied FREE frith "Treatise on the Horse and His Diseases" and a beautifully illustrated Almanao. Persons subscribing for the Weekly "or one year will receive in addition to the Almanac a railroad and township nap of Indiana.

WHKRK THE EXPRESS IB ON FIU. Lc tidon—On file at American Exchange tii Europe, 449 Strand.

Paris—On file at American Exchange in 85 Boulevard des Capucines.

The Indiana Delegates to Chicago. DELEGATES AT LARGE. Hon. Hichard W. Thompson, of Vigo. Hon. Benjamin Harrison, of Marlon. Hon. John H. Baker, of Elkhart. Hon. Morris McDonald, of Floyd.

Alternates.

Edwin F. Horn, of Marlon. John H. Roelker, of Vanderburg. Moses Fowler, of Tippecanoe. O. B. Ward, of White.

EIGHTH DISTRICT.

W. C. Smith, of Warren. VV. R. McKeen, of Vigo. Alternates. M. L. Hall, of Vermillion. IS. A. Rosser, of Clay.

TERRE HAUTE

Otlfri Unexcelled Advantages as aSite for MANUFACTURES AND COMMERCE.

Jt js the Center of a Rich Agricultural and Timber Region.

Nine Railroads Center Here.

Jt on the Great BLOCK COAL FIELDS. Steam Coal delivered to Factories at FIFTY CENTS PER TON.

Henry Watterson was overheard re marking to an intimate friend that the star eyed goddess is a hussey and that she had been fooling him.

Col. Robertson, who will address the Young Mens Republican Club at the hall this evening, is one of the most eloquent public speakers in the Btate. Many of our citizens have heard him heretofore and will be glad ot the opportunity to hear his address to-night. He is a man of rare ability and should have, as he undoubtedly will have, a large audience.

The pope has issued an encyclical letter against Free Masonary. He has been particularly set in his opposition to the order, but as far as can be learned he has accomplished nothing in his crusade. Those in the order who should know, speaking of this last assault, say the pope can accomplish nothing by his warfare and receive the news of his last opposition without any fear of disaster to the order.

The city council will be reorganized next Wednesday night, and soon thereafter the city departments will be placed in charge of Republican officials, who, however, will be free from the charge of using their positions for purely political purposes. The change is much desired, and the public breathes easier at the prospect of the city's affairs being taken from the control of those who have failed in their trust. The Express feels warranted in saying that no mistake will be made in the selection of the heads of the departments that no incompetent man, nor one whose integrity may be now, or will be hereafter, questioned, will be appointed. With such a splendid working majority the Republicans can select men who will not at some future time jeopardize the interests of the party.

The Grant Ward failure will create more sympathy for General Grant than denunciation. No one believes the General to be a man who will connive

at dishonest practices. Everyone kno^s that he is liable to be made the victim of dishonest and scheming men and that his faith in those whom he calls friends cannot be shaken. This trait in his character has before this last occurrence been made manifest and it will be accepted as a failing in a great man. General Grant's services to his country are not to be considered as naught in the present affair however disgraceful some of the details may be. His place in the history of the country maybe dimmed by his Wall street experience but it can not be wholly obscured by a misstep in allowing his name to be used by sharper?.

Missouri Sentiment.

Chicago Inter-Ocean. Governor Crittenden will probably go into mourning for "Charley" Ford.

Suggestions from Tennessee.

Nashville Banner. Perhaps Sullivan is the much-talked-of and lond-anticipated "fool-killer."

What Smashed the Fairohild Boom. Philadelphia Times. The Fairchild boom appears to have been crushed by a falling mustard seed.

The Bed Man's Best Hold.

Cincinnati Enquirer. Lo, the poor Indian, did not make brilliant record for himself in the walking match. Where an Indian excels is in sitting match.

The Ungagged "Saving Eemnant." Chicago Inter Ocean. Some of the wise editors who know Just how every delegate will vote in June will know better after a few ballots are taken. A great many of the delegates come neither bound nor gagged, and in their decision there is safety.

Not By Such Means.

Cincinnati Commercial Gazette. There was one sentence In Watterson Frankfort speech that will not, we think be seriously disputed. The eloquent ed' itor remarked: "We are not going to drive the Republi cans from power with a squirt half filled with soap-suds.

ABOUT WOMEN.

There are seventy lady clerks em ployed in the dead letter office at salaries of $900 each.

Minister West's daughters are seen in Washington dressed in couit black for Prince Leopold.

Lord Lytton's daughter, aged fifteen years, has written "a romantic ghost story," and it has been printed for private circulation.

Washington ladies say they would use the tricycle if Mrs. Belva Lockwood did not. Instead of setting the fash ion she killed it, and the spectacle of a gaunt woman with coal-scuttle bonnet and big feet flying about town has de terred many of her sisters from mak ing the attempt.

Mrs. Caroline Burnham Kilgore has at last been sworn in as a member of the Philadelphia bar. She applied to three of the Common Pleas courts for admission, but was refused by all in turn, on account of her sex. In Com mon Pleas court No. 4 she had a major ity of one in her favor.

The "adjustment rooms" of the United States mints are occupied sole ly by women, who sit in high chairs before tables, marble topped and pro tected at the edges with bands of leather. Their tools are a pair of scales for weighing the money, sets of tin bowls to put it in, and a file. The round pieces of unstamped coins are brought to them in wooden boxes. Each piece has to be weighed three times. A mistake in the weight of one piece of even almost infinitesimal proportion may cause the worker to lose her place. It seldom, if ever, happens, however, that one is charged with incompetency, or worse, carelessness. An expert ad juster handles from 3,000 to 3,500 silver dollar coins. The condemned coins are sent back to be melted over some, being only a trifle out of standard weight, she can file down. For this she is provided with a leather apron to catch the dust, the loss in which can be, and must be, measured by the grain. The water in which the ladies wash their hands when they are through filing is carefully preserved and filtered for the dust.

A MILE A MINUTE.

What a Chicago Lawyer Proposes to Do With a Hundred-Mile Pneumatic Tube. Chicago Special.

An application was made to the commissioners of the Illinois and Michigan canal, at their meeting to-day, by a Chicago lawyer, for the right of way along the canal to Lasalle for a pneumatic tube. He proposes to sink a tube in the ground five feet from the surface, and run it from Chicago to Lasalle, one hundred miles. It is to be eighteen inches in diameter, and is to be used for shipping wheat, bundles and other portable stuff. Commissioner Callaghan asked the applicant how the articles were to be transported whether it was designed to make the tube a highway for mail-carriers. A disgusted expression flitted over the lawyer's face as he answered: "By compressed air, of course. I shall have two engines, one at each end, and stations at Lockport, Joliet and intermediate points. "How fast can the bundles travel inquired Commissioner Brown. "A mile a minute," answered the applicant. 'Wheat and corn will be put in bulk, and will go faster."

Well, gentlemen," said the attorney, angrily, "I didn't think that I should be made the target for your wit when I came here. Will you give me the right of way or not?

The commissioners talked over the matter, and finally decided to let the attorney put down his tube,' provided he would pay the usual toll charges on the canal.

Said to Have Died of a Broken Heart. Toronto (Ont.) Special.

Francis Lewis, aged 70, a superannuated Dominion government official who was arrested a few days ago on a charge of forging a £1,000 sterling Dominion of Canada6 per cent, bond, and whose trial was to have come off at the police court this morning, failed to appear, and his bail, $5,000, was forfeited. It was at first thought he had left foi the States to escape the law, but this evening he was found dead in his room at the Walker House. It is believed he must have been dead since last night, as his bed had not been disarranged. He was found lying on the sofa and his face had a calm and placid expression. A flask was found beside him contained a few drops of something which smelled like paregoric, but the doctor has not yet been able to analyze it. The people about the hotel believe he died of a broken heart.

Isaac Bankston, of Desha county, Ark., has been indicted for marrying a colored woman.

SflL

WISE AND OTHERWJSEi':

The hog doth in the mud root, And blows the enowy blood*root The small boy with a hooklet Goes fishing in the brooklet Beside the gurgling streamlet The satyr hath a dreamlet. This festive ding-a-ling-let Might be called an ode to springlet But the fellow who offered it1

A Washington girl suicided because her lover made his own clam chowder when she wanted to make it for him.

Gould says that no extensive operator can get on in Wall street without some fixed purpose. That is the secret of success in most every walk of life.

About every third-rate literary man in England is now busily engaged trying to prove with his pen that Charles Reade was not a man of genius.

Walt Whitman is seriously ill at his home in Camden, N.-J. The death of his young friend, Taeker Lay, js said to be the cause of his indisposition.

Denis Caddigan, for fifty years a hotel clerk, died in five minutes after the St. Nicholas hotel closed up Thursday. He had been clerk there for twenty-three years.

Ex-State Senator J. H. Morse was pointed postmaster at Morse's Mills, Jefferson county, M., during President Pierce's administration, and has held the office ever since.

A clerk in the Massachusetts State library was so deeply interested in autographs that he cut the signatures of eminent men from the old documents stored in the archives.

Bishop Elliott, of Texas, went to Del Rio a few days ago to dedicate a new church. Just before he reached town a cyclone came along and blew the structure into a thousand bits.

The revenue cutter Corwin is taking on stores and coal at San Francisco, and will sail in a few days for Behring's Straits, where she will spend the summer making explorations and surveys.

Beecher frankly says: "If all the chestnuts that I stole while a boy of thirteen or fourteen in Boston were to rise up before, me on judgment day there would be a pretty wormy time."

Beecher put on rubber clothes the other night and immersed several young men in Plymouth church. He says he does not believe in it, but wants to please everybody as far as he can.

Old John Forbes,-an old-fashioned shouting Methodist, has been driven out of the Asbury church, in East Washington Square, New York, because he made too much noise to suit the brethren.

William Aster's yacht Nourmahal has has satin-lined beds, hot and cold baths in every state-room, and a house on deck finished in mahogany in Queen Ann style, with seats for lounging or observation.

The St. Albans Messenger reports that a venerable and highly esteemed resident of Windham county, Vermont, offered a young woman $10,00(Xto marry him, and the same authority has it that she accepted him and it.

St. Philip's Episcopal Church, Atlanta, objects to Rector Armstrong's accepting the hospitality of Governor Bullock, the ex-carpet bagger, and although he is a good man just "calted," they are half-inclined to oust him.

Charles Reade had a contemptuous opinion of Tennyson, even before the Laureate dropped into a peerage, and pronounced him a mere poetaster, gifted only with the verbal faculty of measuring and stringing musical words.

A cat belonging to a Yaleville, Qonn., woman has shown much affection for a chicken. The cat had a litter of five kittens, four of which died, and the cat bestows as much motherly care on the chicken as the one kitten.

ANew Haven man has invented a new kind of a parachute, \ihich is fastened around the center of the balloon itself and it is expected to bring the whole affair, including the aeronaut, down safely if any accident happens to the balloon.

Springfield's city library has come into possession of a file of the first newspaper published in Springfield, the "Massachusetts Gazette, or the Springfield and Northampton Weekly Advertiser." This paper began publi cation Tuesday May 14,1782.

The Bible formerly used by John Wesley in the preparation of his sermons, etc., has been sent by Samuel B. Waddy, M. P., to Bishop Simpson to be presented to the Methodist Episcopal church in America. The bishop is chairman of a committee which has charge of the volume.

Colonel Mapleson says he has seen the late Sir Michael Costa standing bareheaded in a snowstorm, bowing to the ground, when the Prince of Wales was passing, and sneezing furiously all the time. Mr. Mapleson tbinks that Sir Michael must have accumulated something like the sum of $1,000,000.

Dr. Edgar O. Fowler dropped dead at -a leap year party at Danvers, Mass He had been unusually lively throughout the evening, and Mrs. G. A. Beckford was his partner when he fell dead at her feet. He was thirty years old, and leaves a widow and one child, who were in New Hampshire on a visit.

Randolph and Finerty.

John of Roanoke quoted in the House by John of Bridgeport. John Randolph, of Virginia, in 1824, delivered a speech against the tariff in this house of representatives. He went somewhat further than any gentleman who has spoken in this debate in support of his favorite theory. Speaking of England, he said: "It is in such a climate only that the' human animal can bear without extirpation the corrupted air, the noisome exhalations, the incessant labor of these accursed manufactories. Yes, sir, accursed for I say it is an accursed thing which I will neither taste, touch, nor handle. If we were to act here on the English svstem we should have the yellow fever at Philadelphia and New York not in August merely, but from June to January and from January to June. The climate of this country alone, were there no' natural obstacle to it, says aloud, 'You shall not manufacture!'" That,

V- -v.

"•^rC

jr •*,? _??

went fly­

ing from the window so swiftly and suddenly, and had withal such along wing before reaching thffground, that his flight might be called anything but a wingiet.

Watermelons are as big as hen's eggs in southern Georgia. Six distilleries of Durham, Conn., are making extract of witch hazel.

Lady Duffus-Hardy found the true American republic in Salt Laky City. A Baltimore fire cooked about 1,000,000 cans of oysters one day last week.

Mr. Blaine and his family intend to pass the summer at their home in Augusta, Me.

KSSEB

gentleman, is a quotation from one of your idols. Such, sixty years ago, iwere the words of the sage of Roanoke. Since he blasphemed against our climate as one in which we could not manufacture, the American inventor, the American artisan, the toiler in the blast furnace and the mill, all these have proved their superiority, and the march of the American manufacturer has kept pace with the course of empire, until to-day the smoke from 10,000 factories rise like incense to the god of industry, and brings from the clouds the beneficent rains that make fruitful beyond the fruitfulness cf Egypt the limitless prairies of the West. SOMETHING LIKE A CONJURER.

Bpend the

STARTED IN FUN.

Miles of Country Devastated by Firework of the Flames in Cecil County, Maryland. Baltimore, Md., Special.

For years past it has been the dangerous custom of boys in the spring to start fires in the large tracts of waste lands that form a considerable portion of the northern part of Cecil county Maryland, merely for the fun of seeing the grases burn. For several weeks past little rain has fallen in the region and everything is as dry as tinder. Last Thursday some youngsters, near Charlestown, set fire to a large tract of underbrush. A high westerly wind was blowing and the flames were soon beyond control. The fire has been the most destructive that has ever oc curred in this state. A tract eight miles in length and three in width has been traversed by the flames, and a large number of barns and other buildings were burned. The flames approached dangerously near Elkton, the county-seat, yesterday, but a change of wind last night saved the town.

A dispatch from that place to night states that the fire is again threatening the town. Active preparations are making to protect the place.

Much of the burned timber is the property of the McCullough Iron company, which loses heavily. The exact amount of damage done it will be impossible to ascertain until the flames are extinguished. Some alarming ru mors of disasters due to the fire are current, but can not yet be verified. Several young men left Elkton to-day to attempt to penetrate the burnt district, to see if a report of a family being caught by the fire was true. They returned shortly afterward. The fire was so hot that they had to give up the attempt. A Paralytic who Can Use a Tricycle Boston Herald.

For fifteen years the city weigher of Salem has suffered with paralysis in both legs, making it impossible ,for him to walk unaided or to lift his legs, and even with the aid of a crutch it was exceedingly hard to drag himself along. As an experiment, he was ad vised to try tricycling. Incredible as it may seem, he became a tricyclist, and can propel his machine as well as many who have the perfect use of their legs. He has sufficient strength to push down the pedals, and as one pedal goes down, the other pedal lifts the other leg.

He rides his Columbia tricycle to and from his office daily, and has ridden all over the city, attracting great attention, for he is one of the old pioneer ship captains of Salem, and is personally acquainted with almost everybody in the neighborhood. Recently he made a trip to Swampscott on his tricycle, a distance, out and back, of eight miles, but he was assisted by a

fyl

1 ii E A I E E S S A I O N I N A 1 0 1 8 4

by an

A Wonderful Trick Witnessed American Consul, "That occurred near Tomnock, in the east. On this occasion I went ashore to

night at a native village

four or five miles inland, where it was said that a famous juggler lived. We were a jolly party, all beside myself being sailors, and having a hard time riding on the native ponies they had provided us with but after many capsizes we managed to reach our destination, where we found the fakir, and made up a purse of about two dollars, without which nothing could be done, Some of his tricks beat anything I ever came across. "He was a tail, thin olive-hued fel low, with long black hair caught behind and tied with a string. He was extremely reticent, and all through the performance neither smiled nor uttered a word. The first trick was to arrange our party about him in a circle of about thirty feet in diameter, and we were so close together that no one could pass out without our«knowingi To prevent such a possibility gave us a cord to hold. This being done he and a smaller native with bundle of wood took their places in the center. The young man arranged the wood in a pile and lighted it when it blszed up the old man seizec him and threw him upon the flames, and held hi down. Immediately there arose dense, suffocating smoke, that seemed a mixture of flesh and sandalwood. rose about their heads and spread about until it completely hid them, and from it came such groans and cries that several of the men called out that we had better take a hand, as the boy was being murdered. But I reminded them that it was only a trick, no matter how realistic. We waited perhaps five minutes, when the yells ceased and the smoke gradually cleared away, and there stood the old fakir alone, the young man having to all intents and purposes been burned. He was scooping something from the fire— evidently ashes—into a flask which was handed to us and passed around the cremated lemainsof the assistant.' "But," interrupted a gentleman at the foot of the table, "didn't he slip out in the smoke?" "There was no place to go to," was the reply, "as W were in a clearing, away from trees or bushes. "But the strangest part is to come," he continued. "After passing the flash around he took it back and placed it in the center of the circle, and putting some wood under lighted it. Almost immediately the flask began to glow before our eyes: the fire blazed, and a rich odor of sandalwood floated about, and in ten minutes the flash had expanded until it was the size of a large keg. The fire was then put out, and we were beckoned to come near and examine. I touched it, and it seemed ajar of earth made of plaster or mud it had a ringing sound as I struck it with my seal ring and to the hand was hot. After looking it over we returned to our planes the old fakir took a ham mer, wav .1 his hands in the air, uttering some, mystic words, and struck the vessel a hard blow that broke it in pieces, when out stepped a boy we had seen—or thought we had seen—cremated, as bright as you please, should like to have the trick solved but have never found any one who could explain it satisfactorily. Some aver that the old fakir concealed the young man about his own person but that was simply impossible, as I felt of the fakir myself, and he had nothing on but a shirt open in the back and pair of trousers.

bicyclist, who, connecting the bidycle ana tricycle by a rope, towed him part of the distance. Tne city authorities contemplate erecting a little house for the machine near his office.

'The Home Angel.

A mail, says Robert J. Burdette, among men all day long, hears politics, club stories, slang of the street, boot blaak repartee, and junior clerk smartness, the ways and sayings and. doings of men until he wearies of it all, and when he comes home in the evening he wants to see a home angel, with homelight in her face and lovelight in her eyes. deliriously womanly in dress and manner, with a voice as soft as the war of the street is harsh voice that is made for coaxing and getting a face that is dimpled and beautiful browed, so that his heart doth safely trust in her, know' ing that "she will do him good and not evil all the "days of her life," "strength and honor in her clothing," wisdom in her mouth, and "in her tongue the law of kindness," with the beautiful hands that are stretched to the poor and reached forth to the needy whose workB paise her in the gates, so that her husband, also, who is known in the gates and siteth among the elders of the land, he praiseth her because he knows that he owes nine-tenths of his success to such a wife. "Favor is deceitful and beauty is vain," but the brighter qualities of womanhood are fadeless, and are ev»n "as the shining light thatshineth more and more unto the perfect day.

In February 223 slaves, worth $37, 600, «i in Brazil. There are still 1,300,000 slaves in the empire.

lcura

A Positive Cure for Every Form of Skin and Blood Disease, from Pimples to Scrofula.

THOUSANDS

OF LETTERS in our pOB

session repeat this story: I have been a terrible sufferer for years with Blood and Skin Humors have been obliged to shun public places by reason of my dig' figuring humors have had the best phy sicians have spent hundreds of dollars and got no real relief until I used the Cutlcura Resolvent, the new Blood Purifier, internally, and Cuticura and Cuticura Soap, the Great Skin Cures and Skin Beau tlflers, externally, which have cured me and left tny skin and blood as pure as child's.

ALMOST INCREDIBLE.

James E. Richardson, Custom House, New Orleans, on oath, says,—In 1870 Scrofulous Ulcers broke out on my body until I was a mass of corruption. Everythln known to the medical faculty was trlei in vain. I became a mere wreck. At times could not lift my bands to my head could not turn in bed was In constant pain, and looked upon life as a curse. No relief or cure In ten years. In 18801 heard of the Cuticura Remedies, usee} them and was yerfectly cured.

Sworn to before U. S. Com. J. D: CRAWFORD.

STILL MORE SO.

Will McDonald, 2512 Dearborn street, Chicago, gratefully acknowledges a cure of Eczema, or Salt Rheum, on head, neck face, arms, and l^gs for seventeen years not able to move, except on hands am knees, for one year not able to help him self for eight years tried hundreds of remedies doctors pronounced his case hopeless, permanently cured by the G'utl cura Remedies.

MORE WONDERFUL YET.

H. E. Carpenter, Henderson, N. cured of Psoriasis or eprosy, of twenty years' standing, by Cuticura Remedies The most wonderful cure on record, dustpanful of scales fell from him dally, Pysiciansancfhis friends thought he must die. Cure sworn to before a justice of the peace and Henderson's most prominent citizens.

DON'T WAIT.

Write to us for these testimonials in full or send direct to the parties. All areab solutely true and given without ou knowledge or solicitation. Don't wait. Now is the time to cure every species of Itching, Scaly, Pimply, Scrofulous. In herlted, Contagious, and Copper-colored Diseases of the Blood, Skin and Scalp with Doss of Hair.

Sold by all druggist*. Price: Cuticura, 50 cents Resolvent, $1.00 Soap, 25cents. Potier Drug and Chemical Co., Boston Mass.

BEAUTY-1101Skin, "11'

SANFORD'S RADICAL CURE,

Head Colds, Watery Discharges from the Nose and Eyes, Ringing Noises in the Head, Nervous Headache and Fever in stantly relieved.

Choking mucus dislodged, membrane cleansed and healed, breath sweetened, smell, taste, and hearing restored, and ravages checked.

Cough, Bronchitis, Droppings into the Thsoat, Pains in the Chest, Dyspepsia, Wasting of Strength and Flesh, Loss of Sleep, etc., cured.

One bottle Radical Cure, one box Catarrhal Solvent and one Dr. Sanford's Inhaler, In one package, ot all druggists, for 1. Ask for Sanford's Radical Cure, a pure distillation of Witch Hazel, Am. Pine Ca. Fir, Marigold, Clover Blossoms, etc! Potter Drug and Chemical Co., Boston.

Collins' Voltaic Electric Plaster instantly affects the Nervous System and banishes Pain A perfect Electric Battery combined with a Porous Plaster for 25 cents. It annihilates Pain, vitalizes Weak

18 THE CBT

SOffEHM Km

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.

DACKLOG onSrUTCHKS'pageloarge pape charming serials, stories, choice miS' eellany, eta, is Bent three months OK TRIAL for 25 cents and we,send BVER\ subscriber FREE our new Holiday Package, consisting of 10 pieces popular music. 10 interesting games, 1 pack of age and fOrtune-telling cards, 1 pack "Hold to Light" cards, 1 pack fun and flirtation cards, 1 set chromo cards, 18 new tricks in magic, 5 new puzzles, game of fortune, t.'ie myotic oracle, 25 ways to get rich. Heller's wonderful delusion card*, etc.. etc. Kndless amusement I AGENTSWANTED. Sample paper for stamp. BACKLOG PUBLISHING Co.. Augusta. Me.

Hair Restorer.

ed and

Oily Blackheads

and Skin Blemishes, use Cuticura Soap.

CATARRH

filled with

STAR LAUNDRY,

NO. 077 1-2 MAIN STREET.

Shirt, Collars, Caffs & Laee Curtains,

DONE UP EQUAL TO NEW. Mdin V'lMid Taken

Babv Wagons

AT-

H-A-iFfVErsrs UPHOLSTERING and REPAIRING.

Hi vln* remo a to

and oomroom, 1X30

jrpenter Jobbing, in the very best style. SPECIALTY of npholsterlng'and furniture repairing. 1. W. HALBV.

MIR! CLE.ULV! EFFICIEST!

Lyon's Kozothium! Lyon's Kozothium!

BEFORE USING. AFTER USING*

Is not a dye, but is a clear, fragrant oil, and acts purely as

tonic to the hair follicles and capillary circulation of the

scalp, whereby it restores the tiatural action, and as a result

RESTORES THE NATURAL COLOR

To the hair, leaving it soft and beautiful.

Entirely Free from Sulphur, Nitrate of Silver,

And ail noxious ami deleterious chemicals. It is an

ELEGANT AND DELIGHTFUL HAIR DRESSING,

Depositing no sediment upon the scalp

skin nor soil the most delicate fabric.

wherever known and used, and is as efficacious in

RESTORING GRAY BEARD

To its natural color as in its use as a Hair Dressing and

abundant growth of new and healthy hair.

does not stain the

It has fast friends

To middle-aged men who are prematurely I

bald, or becoming baid, it is specially recommended, and

when fairly and properly used, will never fail in arresting|n0Tneviinbed^raloboutaeigil

the falling off of the hair and encouraging a vigorous and

On application will furnish One Bottle, Free of Charge,

to any Physician, which will enable him to test its merits.

Ask Your Druggist for LYON'S KOZOTHIUM.

A. KIEFER &

General Agents, Indianapolis.

A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY.

All forms of PILES—external, internal, blind and bleed­

ing—yield to the magical curative power of

)R. DEMING'S NEW DISCOVERY FOR PILES.

On its first application pain vanishes, and from this be­

ginning recovery is rapid and thorough.

Send 2-cent postage stamp for sample box.

KIEFER & CO, Agents,

IrLdia,na.polis,

For Sale by BUNTIN & ARMSTRONG.

'Shfitii

CO.

Ind. ..

*K*2u

IB DAYS.

So Cure! No

Pay!

Knowing that the Unfortunate have been Imposed upon by unprincipled pretenders, who charge largely In advance.

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TDT^. WILBUR has adopted this plan: That he will charge nothing for advice consultation or treatment until the patient pronounces himself well. The only charge being made la for medicines used during treatment.

DR. WLLBUR. Specialist. treats successfully Chronic and long standing diseases, such as Diseases of the Head. Throat and Lungs Liver, Kidney and Heart complaint Inveterate Diseases of the Stomach (that have defied all other methods) those fearful diseases of the Nervous System (arising from whatever causes,) Scrofula, Dropsy, Paralysis, Fits, Fever Sores, Contracted Coras, Enlarged and Stiff Joints, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Bone Deformities, Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Scald Head, Ill-conditioned Ulcers, Syphllas, Nasal Polypus, Asthma, Hay Fev*r, Rose Cold. Winter Coughs, Chronic Diarrhea, and Diabetes. All may be cured by this wonderful system, if not too far advanced. Bone diseases cured when all other methods have failed.

Ladles who are suffering with complaints peculiar to their sex, can consult the Doctor, with every assurance of speedy re ief and permanent cure.

The Doctor particularly invites all cases that have been given up by other physicians.

The Dootor will remove one tape worm free of charge, also straighten the first case of cross eyes that presents Itself to the hotel, free. CONSULTATION AND EXAM­

INATION FBEE.

The Doctor can be consulted from 10 a. m. to 0 p. m. Office at the

NATIONAL. HOUSE.

TESTIMONIALS.

Mrs. De Zevallos, 90 south Cherry street, I Nashville, fell and hurt her limb—could not move It for three months. Dr. Wilbur cured her.

Mr. O.Goodrich, "48 South Cherry street, Nashville, was cross-eyed for forty-five years. Dr. Wilbur straightened them, in one minute.

Mr. V. O. Cook was crippled for years had a sore two and a half inches long by one and a half wide. Dr. Wilbur cured him, and to-day he works and earns tS.60 a day. He lives on the corner of State street and Douglass avenue, Nashville.

Mrs. J. R. Hall, Nashville, corner of Spruce and Bilbo avenue, had cancer on forehead and nose for years. Dr. Wilbur cured her with a plaster, no knife.

Mr. Chns. Farrar, 108 University street, Nashville, was given up with consumption: terrible cough, night sweats, lost all his flesh, could not. sleep nights, etc. Dr. Wilbur cured him, and he gained two pounds a week and is now at w.oi k.

Mrs. John Hodges, corner JackRon and Front streets. Nashville, was stone blind for ten years was led to Dr. Wilbur's ollice. He cured her, and to day she does all her own work and can see as well as anyone.

Mrs. Maggie Patton, 525 Church street, Nashville, had female troubles for three years spent over #1,000. Dr. Wilbur cured her in four months, sound and well.

Miss Laura Henderson, 16 Leonard

and an ulcer on arm was told by doctors

in Cincinnati, Atlanta, Lynchburg, Rome and Nashville to have it cutoff, or she would die. Dr. Wilbur cured her In four months.

Mrs. S. F. Shtpard, 380 Broad street.

months. Dr. Wilbur cured her. Mrs. W. W. Lanford, 121 Florida ktreet. Kuoxvllle, had paralysis of one side, and the" other side was gradually becoming affected. She also had ehronlc diarrhea, with a dozen stools during the night. She was pronounced incurable. Dr. Wilbur treated her, and now she is a'frell woman.

Mr. Thomas Long, Hall's Cross roads, Knox county, Tenn., was as deaf as a post for neven years. Dr. Wilbur cured him.

Mr. C. L. Benson, of Lexington, Ky., was deaf for fourteen years. His father was a physician, and took him to see some very eminent M. Ds., but did him no good. Dr. Wilbur made him all right in a short time.

The above testimonials are all sworn to and are fadts. The doctor invites correspondence from people at a distance, but never answers any letters unless they contain two stamps.

These are only a few of the many testimonials obtained by Dr. Wilbur all over Kentucky and Tennessee.

J. M. BRUNSWICK & BALM

Billiard and Pool Tables,

Of all sizes, new and second-hand.

I All Kinds of Billiard Material

To be had the same price as pw

BRUNSWICK and BAliKE CO.'S PRICE-LIST, In Terre X3a.ute.

JACOB MAY, Agent.

1888.

TerreHaute Ice Company.

I

'j W

S*-

Notwithstanding the high river and no ice harvest at Terre Haute, we, as uBual, will have a full supply for all demands, sign. both local and forefi We will sell th«. best lake ioe, solid and pure. Orders given the ofilce, promptly

L. F.

PERDU*.

to drivers, or left at attended to. Proprietor and Manager,

No. 28 North Sixth St.

CHOICE

GROCERIES

-ANI

Fresh Country Produce,

-AT-

J. F. ROEDEL

M. K. Oar. of Vint and Ohio Sta.

AGENTS to carry our Cottonades, Jeans,

WANTED.

Caaslmeres, Etc., on commission, in con I nection with their present line for Spring trade. (Address M. CRE8SWELL A CO..

Manufacture!*. 440 Market street, PhilaI Calphla.