Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 20 May 1884 — Page 2
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HAVE
Sluwn the People of Terre Ha«te and vicinity how to save money by purchasing Pianos and Organs of us, and have
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Instruments to persons who have, been soiictcd ridred times or
mtoi^ECIEJ
Sy different firms. If any one wants to purchase and will take a look at our
Pianos aud Organs nd
get our terms and prices, we know Mt can give better satisfaction
THAN all OTHER
Huuses in the city. Our success has excelled our anticipations and no
DEALERS
Here can successfully compete with us.
1* PFAFFUN 4 ft
644 MAIN STREET, TERRE HAUTE.
82 & 84 N. Pennsylvania St
INDIANAPOLIS.
DAILY EXPRESS.
CLKO V.
AILLKN,
PROPRIETOR.
PW3UOATION OFFICE—No. 18 South lftb Street, Printing House Square,
Entered as second-class matter at tbe ft tl Ofllce. fct Terre Haute, Ind.l Terms of Snbaori tion. ally^Express, per week .15 cts per year 17 60 '.1' six months 8 75 ten weeks 1 GO •sued every morning except Monday, delivered by carriers.
Term* for the Weekly.
/ne oopy, one year, paid in advance...II 26 )ue copy, six months 66 for dub* of five there will be a casta dls tonnl of 10 per cent, from tbe above rates, r, ]f preferred instead of tbe cash, a copy ithe Weekly Express will be sent free or the time that the club pays for, not Msthan six months. /or clubs of ten the same rate of dlsoant, and In addition the Weekly Express free for the time that the elub pays for. not less than six months.
For clnl^s of twenty-flve the same rate it discount, and in addition the Daily Ei preWforl/tte time that the club pays for, bOt less than six months. postage prepaid In all cases when gent oy mall. Subscriptions payable In ad' ranoe.
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.
WAil six months subscribers to tbe Weekly Express will be supplied FREE irith "Treatise on tbe Horse and His Dls «ases" and a beautifully illustrated Al manao. Persons subscribing for tbe Week' 'y \'or one year will receive In addition to tne Almanac a railroad and township map of Indiana.
THIBX THE EXPRESS IS ON VII4B, London—On file at American Exohange Ui Europe, 449 Strand.
Paris—On file at American Exchange In 86 Boulevard des Capuclnes.
The Indiana Delegates to Chicago.' DELEGATES AT LARGE. Hon. Richard W. Thompson, of Vigo. Hon. Benjamin Harrison, of Marion. Hon. John H. Baker, of Elkhart. Hon. Morris McDonald, of Floyd.
Alternates.
Edwin F. Horn, of Marlon. John H. Roelker, ol Vanderburg. Moses Fowler, of Tippecanoe. Q. B. Ward, of White.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.
W. C. Smith, of Warren. W. R. MoKeen, of Vigo. Alternates. M. L. Hall, of Vermillion. £. A. Rosser, of Clay.
TERRE HAUTE
Otlrrs Unexcelled Advantages as a Site for MANUFACTURES AND COMMERCE.
it fjs the Center of a Rich Agricultural and Timber Region.
Nine Railroads Center Here*
It is on the Great BLOCK COAL FIELDS, Steam Coal delivered to Factories at FIFTY CENTS PER TON.
Senator Yoorhees thinks the tariff sore will heal. The senator must have great faith in the healing process which is found in the general desire of his party to capture the presidency.
The settlement of the McKinleyWallace contested election case now depends upon the position of the candidates upon the tariff question. The merits of the case have been relegated to the tomb where all issues except office have been buried.
An ingenious statement now comes from the Pacific coast delegation, which is meant to be ingenous, that your Uncle Samuel is a robust and ablebodied man that he will not only accept the nomination but that he is anxious to have the opportunity to do so. The old ticket has the boom and the Tilden people with their usual political sagacity will take the persimmon after a year's amusement in watching the fellowB with the short poles.
A Washington dispatch says: "Members of the senate committee denounce the pretended trial of Wheeler for the killing of Matthews in Mississippi as a shallow farce. There was nothing in the facts, as they were fully ascertained by the committee from Democratic witnesses, to give the faintest basis for the claim that Wheeler acted in self-defense. It is a fact that Dr, Pitta, who absconded rather than testify, would have, had he been sworn, been compelled to say, if questioned on that point, that Wheeler, in a conversation, had explained that there was no trouble of any kind between himself and Matthews, but that he killed him solely because he had been
selected by lot to shoot him by a band of citizens, who had decreed his death for political reasons.
VOICE OF THE PEOPLE.
Republicans of Vigo CountJ^ To the Editor of the Express. SIR: Tour correspondent baa noticed for several years a disposition on the part of a certain class of Republicans to decry and disparage prominent Republicans residing in this county. This fact was clearly demonstrated in our congressional convention-held In this city In 1880. At that time a- gentleman from this county with an unspotted reputation and Bibb attainment was a candidate before that conveptlon. But he was from Terre Haute and therefore In the estimation of this class unfit for the office. And notwithstanding the fact that his qualifications for. ibe position were far superior to that of any or even all the other candidates befort-tbat convention be did not get the support of his own county. Just what these gentlemen expect to accomplish by suen conduct Is hard even to conjecture. Vigo county with almost twice the population of any other county in this congressional district or in any other district that she has been attached to for the last forty years has not bad a candidate for congress on the Republican ticket for near or quite aquarter of a century. This is the fault of her own citizens a part of whom at least seem to be determined to crush their neighbors and build up men who have no interest in the material welfare of our county. This is all wrong and calculated to break down the political influence of our county and to prevent men of ability from coming to the front. And It Is a departure from the rules adopted in every county in the ste te. In the convenvention referred to every county support its own candidate as long as he remained before the convention save Vigo. Let us In the future support our own men. A REPUBLICAN CITIZEN.
Terre Haute, May 19tb.
Timid Honey.
Cincinnati Commercial Gazette. Money is the most cowardly thing in the world yet Its timidity does not always save it.
The Banana Peel.
Exebange. It looks more and more as If Sam Tilden were the banana peel lying in the path of the Democracy.
An Awful Warning.
Shamokin (Pa.) Daily Times. A man had his hair cut on Saturday night, when the shop was full of regular customers waiting to be shaved, fell from tbe chair and broke his neck. A fearful warning.
An On Bit of the Market.
New York Dial. Among the on dits of the market is one that while Mr. Seney was going down his son-in-law, who was short of the market, made all the money his father-in law lost.
The lost Canse located.
Chicago News. Jeff Davis says the lost cause is not lost No, it's in the same fix as the ship's dip der. "Cap'n, am anything lofc' when you knows whar it am?" "No, Eph." "Waal, de dipper am in de bottom ob de sea."
Careful in Seleoting.
Philadelphia Call. "I want to present Augustus with cane," said a young New York lady, "but I don't know what size he wears." "What do you mean by size?" was the question "are canes of different size?' "Oh, yes, and one has to be very oareful in selecting them. I shouldn't like to send dear Augustus a cane with a head big enough to choke him."
A Traveler Inoognito.
Chicago News. A strapping big Appetite meta gigantic Thirst. "Good morning, Brother Appetite." "Don't address me by that name." "What are you not my old friend? Have not you and 1 gone hand in hand through every Democratic campaign for twenty years?" "Yes, yes but this year lam traveling in oog." "Ah!" "Yes, call me Reform."
Dog Teams in Idaho.
San Francisco Chronicle. During the day of my arrival I saw few men sweating under the labor of pulling two sacks of flour on a toboggan, and several dog trains. These dog trains are amusing if not admirable as a means of transporting freight. They are made up of Indian dogs, col lies, mongrels, scrub yelpers, New foundlands and mastiffs, with now and then a bulldog. The driver goes be hind and urges them on with snow balls, now and then finding it necessary to go forward and make a lazy cur work up to his collar by giving him the bight of a packing rope. Poor brute" Probably it is his only bight ef any kind for many hours. I ask one dog team man what he fed to his dogs he said: "Tallow and Indian meal." "Are they trained "No we pick up all sorts of dogs and work them in very soon by putting a good dog on the lead." "Do they never balk "No dogs is the blankest fools in the world, while they is the sagacious est animals. Why, when them dogs near about pull their toe nail off comin' up a steep hill, they bark out their delight when I go up and pat them on the head and call them 'good dogs.' Horses or no other animals won't be fed on such taffy. Why, these dogs will stand it to be cussed for miles and then be tickled to death at a pat on the head."
The merchants say the dog teams spoil goods like the mischief. They are all the time tipping them over and rolling them around.
Schools for Dogs.
New York Letter in Hartford Times. There area half dozen dog schools in this vicinity and you can have your dog taught some very neat and inter esting tricks, but the terms are rather high—at least for poor folks, being from $75 to $150. There are plenty of canine amateurs, however, who are ready to pay any price for the improvement of their pets. I once saw a dogtrainer perambulating the streets ac companied by a number of accomplished animals. He was looking up pupils, and being called into a store he struck up a tune and his dogs immediately rose on their hind feet and went through a cotillion. Dogs trained for public performances are worth from I £00 to $1,000.
Finger-Bowls in Nevada. Virginia City Enterprise. The finger-bowl is tabooed, accord ing to a society journal. Many years ago a distinguished French gourmet declared that the use of this appliance indicated ignorance of tbe art of eating, since an accomplished master of the knife and fork would never soil his fingers at the table. This has always been the Comstock notion. Meadow Lake was the only mining town on the Pacific coast that stuck up for the finger-bowl. The town is now dead. It may be that the finger-bowl killed it It is said that in early days a few finger-bowls were in use in Johntown. Well, it may be so—the town has been dead for many years.
"Ma, are all the presidential candidates musicians? asked Tommy. 'Not that I know of," replied his mother "why do you ask!" "Oh, because I heard pa say that all had organs," was the response.
irSf I®.
WISE AND OTHERWISE.
O vldlet, bine tenderness! O sweet, poetic, hooded Small Venus—nothing, nothing less-
shove
Thee under Doris's dainty nose, Thy breath for her to relish Till smilingly each dimple grows,
Her pink cheeks to embellish. How lost thou art, how faint thy smell, How sad must be thy mood, ,v Close pinioned there on the lapel
Of a slender, slim young dude. *•*. .. The shad season is over. Delaware's peach crop is better than ever.
The Corean consulate is open in New York. The Standard theater, New York is to be rebuilt.
Gen. Grant threatens to sue Ward for their failure. The New York legislature adjourned yesterday sine die,
Billy Edwards got $7,000out of hiB fight with Mitchell. British Columbia lands are open to settlement at $1 an acre.
The Mexican budget for next year appropriates $25,700,000. Experts count 5,000 miles of wires on house-tops in New York.
Seventy-seven candidates for the naval academy reported Thursday. Tailor Miller danced all night at New York ball, then shot himself dead.
The Palmer house, Chicago, has added one hundred rooms for the convention season.
Ohio's ex-Prisoners of War society is well organized, with a large membership.
Tbe Standard Oil company is builda seven-story building on Broadway, New York.
Twelve hundred English emigrants arrived in Winnipeg on Tuesday, via Port Arthur.
Two houses, worth $8,000, were blown down Thursday night in East Saginaw, Mich.
Sugar cane looks well in the West Indies, but planters are down-hearted over low prices.
Earl Spencer has been suddenly summoned to London from Ireland to attend a cabinet meeting.
A bill establishing free trade with the United States has been passed by the San Domingo congress.
Over 100 new doctors graduated this week from the New York college of physicians and surgeons.
The William Penn pension fund in London which amounted to £40,000 yearly, was commuted to £67,000
Louisville's elevated railway along the river is running. C. P. Huntington built that at a cost of $1,000,000.
New York has provided for three commissioners to spend $14,000 in ex anining various state school systems-
Four cold-storage warehouses going up in New York with pipes run ning to butcher shops to furnish cold air.
Mexico pays $65 premium for coolies, and expects 12,000 of them this year. They are wanted for railroad ing.
Mrs. Leland Stanford, in memoriam of her son, lately deceased, has donated $5,000 to the San Francisco kindergartens.
Charles and William Hamilton, mur derers ef Carl Steidle, at Warrensburg, Mo., have been sentenced to be hanged July 14.
The Journal de Paris accuses Bis mark of lying in his recent report presented at the trial of Krazewski and Heutsch.
Phillips, one of the Berner jury at Cincinnati, has gone back to Cincin nati voluntarily to prove his innocence of bribery.
The American Association of Mechanical Engineers will meet at Pitts burg, Pa., on the 20th inst., the session to continue four days,
Frank James probably will not be able to see any fun in being a train robber in Mexico, where seventeen men of his like have just been shot. It has never occurred to any body to shoot or hang Frank James,
At the Knights of Honor convention Chicago, reports show there are 27,377 members, an increase for the year of 1,048. The number of suboi dinate lodges is 2,580. Daring the year $2,984,558 was paid for benevolent purposes,
Since the establishment of the sys tem more than twenty years ago only nin6ty National banks have failed, and the loss to creditors has not exceeded $9,000,000, the average loss being about 70 per cent, in each case. The average annual loss to depositors by the failure of National banks has been only onetwentieth of 1 per cent,
During 1883 there were made in this country 3,177,860,952 cigars, about forty for every pound of tobacco used About 35,000,000,000 were imported thus making a total of about 3,150,000, 000, or sixty for every man, woman and child in the United States,.and two hundred and fifty for every man over twenty-one years of age.
DROWNED IN DEADLY BRACE.
KM-
Death Struggle in Mid-Stream Between Young Locliinvar and the Father of His Affianced* White Sulphur Springs, (W. Va.), Special.
News reached this point this morning of the sad termination of an attempted elopement in the southern part of this county, resulting in the death by drowning of a fleeing lover and an avenging father and the narrow escape of the young lady concerned. The principals in the sad affair on the side of the lady's family are among the most prominent people in Greenbriar county, and the tragic occurrence has produced intense excitement. On Thursday evening Ellen Farrer, daughter of Hon. James H. Farrer, eloped with her lover, John Beggs, a ne'er-do-weel, who had for some time been paying court to Miss Farrer in spite of the strong opposition and threats of her father and irother. The lovers fled toward Greenbrier Silver in a buggy, intending to cross the stream and be married at the house of a minister, some distance beyond, with whom a prior understanding had been had. The father was absent from home when the couple left, but bis son appraised him of tbe departure of the lovers, and procuring a buggy the two started in hot pursuit. Beggs and his intended bride, unconscious of the chase, arrived at the river, and entered a skiff started across. Hardly had they left the bank, however, when the pursuers dashed down to the shore. Jumping into another boat the father and son gave chase, at the same time calling upon the lovers to stop. This call was unheeded when about half way across the boat containing the fugitives was overhauled, I
HR tERRB HAOTE EXPRESS. TUESDAY MORNING. MAY 20. I'M
and dropping their oars the father and son sprang into the boat, the former grappling with Beggs. A terrible struggle ensued in the moonlight between the two men, in the course of which the skiff vis overturned. The brother, who, in the meantime, succeeded in getting his sister into the other boat, reached the other shore in safety, but the father and lover sank and were drowned. The news of the terrible affair, ot course, spread like wildfire, and the next morning a searching party found the bodvof Beggs lodged against a pile of drift. Mr. Farrer's body has not yet been found.
Darmstadt Prece-
Scandal—Its dents.
That ultra ritualistic paper, the Church Times, of London, preaches a sermon to Queen Victoria, with the morganatic marriage of His Serene of Hesse Darmstadt as a text. It arraigns the wickedness of German princes in general, and her own wickedness in particular, in marryng her episcopally nurtured daughters to disciples of the Lutheran heresy.
Morganatic or left-handed alliances, we hardly need sa, are those contracted between a prince and a.nonroyal woman. The marriage is lawful but the bride does not become a queen or grand duchess—she is usually made a countess—and her children, though legitimate, are not heirs to the throne
If such a union is the only marriage which the bridegroom contracts while the bride is still living, it may be excused as a concession to the necessities, or at least to the prejudices, of royalty. Some German princes, however, have felt that a morganatic marriage was no bar to the taking of a royal wife. The early reformers hurt their cause, and scandalized Europe by permitting one of their princely patrons to commit bigamy out and out, and something like it has more than once being done by the little potentates of the fatherland. If reports do not lie, the British queen has grown squeamish late in life. The father of her beloved Albert married his niece for a second wife. Prince Christian of Sonderburg-Augustenburg, who, when the possessor of the magnificent patrimony $1,500 a year, was selected by her as the husband of her daughter Helena, is said to have had a morgan atic wife and four oFfive children alive at the time. Perhaps, however, he proved to his mother-in-law's satisfaction that the wife was only a mistress
The Queen's grandfather, George the Third, was a virtuous man. Had he lost his equally virtuous wife, Queen Charlott, he would never have said to her as did his grandfather, George the Second, to tbe dying Queen Charlotte, when she remarked that he would probably marry again, "No, no I shall keep mistresses," bursting into tears as he uttered the words. Yet his de corus grandson actually^ married his oldest daughter, the Princess Royal Charlotte, to a known murderer, the Grand Duke, afterward King Frederick William of Wurtemberg. The story has often been told, nsvei more effectively, though with some dis guise of names and with various ro mantic additions, than in Thackeray's "Barry Lyndon." The grand duke, then crown prince, suspected the virtue of his first wife, and so sending for the public executioner of Strasburg, took him to her chamber, where he made him behead her. The official was handsomely paid and pledged to secrecy. It wss announced that the grand duchess had died suddenly, but the facts leaked out and were related by various chroniclers, who were forced to write cautiously while the royal Blue Beard was living.
If Ludwig of Hesse-Darmstadt wants to marry a subject he has aright to do so, and he has saved his new Bpouse from social snubs by not endeavoring to pass her off as a bona fide grand duchess. Still, the widower of such an accomplished woman as the Princess Alice ought to have understood the properties better. Even if he were contented to forego Beatrice, of England, he could have waited until his mother-in-law was out of Germany be fore taking up with an humbler bride, He evidently had "had no bringing up."
World's Industrial Exposition Washington Special. Director General Burke,of the World'i Industrial Exposition,gives the following reasons why application was made to congress: The management claimed that they complied in good faith with the provisions of the act of February 30,1883, and provided for an exhibi tion, national and international in in scope and character, with their own means and without appeal for govern ment aid.
The buildings and accommodations for exhibitors, although less expensive and ornamental than the Centennial, exceed the provisions for that exhibi tion, and are larger than for any expo sition ever held in the world, as will be shown by the following statement showing the demensions of the main buildings heretofore erected:
Date. Sq. feet
London 1851 989,884 New York 1863 249,691 Paris 1855 545,935 Vienna -1873 430,500 Philadelphia. 1876 892,320 Atlanta 1881 107,620 Louisville .1883 677,400 London 1862 1,490,000 New Orleans* .1884 1,656,300 *1,375 feet long, 90a feet wide,
It will be seen that the main building at New Orleans equaled in size the combined main building and machinery hall at Philadelphia, and is larger than the Crystal Palace at London. The Horticultural hall is also the largest conservatory in the world, being 600 feet in length and 194 feet wide in the center, with glass roof and glass tower.
Additional buildings are being provided for art gallery, factories in motion, saw-mills, live Btock, &c.
Mr. Lincoln as a Solomon Century. There is an amusing story, not anew one by any means, of the method Mr. Lincoln adopted to settle a contest over a postmastership which had greatly annoyed him. There were two candidates in the field, and petition after petition bad poured in upon the weary president, and delegation after delegation had rushed to the White House to argue the claims of the rival aspirants. Finally, after he had been bored for half an hour by afresh delegation, Mr. Lincoln said to the secretary "This matter has got to' end somehow. Bring a pair of scales." The scales were brought "Now put in all the petitions and letters in favor of one man, and see how much they weigh, and then weigh tbe other candidate's papers." It was found that one bundle was three-quarters ot a pound heavier than the other. "Make out the appointment at once for the man who has the heaviest papers," ordered the president, and it was done.
Jeff Davis denies the published statement that he thought Gen. McClellan could have entered Richmond had he pushed on across the Chickahominy when in front of the place. He says Gen. Lee felt confident that he could hold the place aininst McClellan. ,, t-v.: en ». it
:'*y
I
Ftiqaet in Mexico
Native Mexican gentleman— I deeply regrei to be obliged to inform you, my dear friend, that your actions last night in the presence Of that charming senorita were very rude."
American visitor—- You shock maWhat did I do? I assure you that I tried my best to make a favorable im-
fressionlovethat
on lovely girl. In fact,
am in with her and woold nft offend her for the world." Mexican—"I fear you have dashed your hopes then. 8he now considers you an ignorant boor, too beastly selfish to be trusted with any woigan'a happiness"
American—"Oh! it cannot be. What have I done?" Mexican—"You lighted a cigar in her presence——"
American—"But she assured me that she did not object to it." Mexican—"And you smoked it to the end without
American—"Withoutwhat? Tell me quickly." Mexican—"Without offering her one."
I Ferdinand Ward.
Ferdinand Ward was a domestic model. He loved his wife and was always taking her presents home. He never went anywhere, but he seemed to think of his wife and buy ber some thing. He was one of these old young Inen with no time for foolish amusement. He was strong-willed, believed in himself, was close-mouthed, did not
fivesuch
his confidence unnessarily, and ad mastery oLfigures and sentiments that you left a discusion with him satisfied yet not much informe^.
Tbe Clans Gathering.
Philadelphia Call. ,, "Where he bar?" asked a gentleman hurriedly, as he registered at a Chicago hotel. "Just around to the left, sir..1 "Where is the bar?" asked another gentlemen at the same place a moment later. "Tust around to the left, sir." "Where is the ba "Just around to the left, sir. By Jove," the clerk continued, "the delegates are beginning to come in."
AMUSEMENTS.
BENEFIT CONCERT!
TENDERED TO THEbp
Dick Thompson Zouaves
I AT THE OPERA HOUSE,
Wednesday Eve., May 21.
PROGRAMME.
1
PART I.
Overture Apollo Orchestra
Farce—"Dead Shot" With the following cast: Louisa Miss Alice Fischer Chatter Miss Kate Fischer Captain Cannon Mr. Will Morgan Mr. Hector Timid Mr. John Hager Mr. Wiseman Mr. Geo. Mabare Frederick Thornton Mr. Ira Calder
A
'ius 4
'1 '-J"':
Overture Apollo Orchestra Address Col. R. W. Thompson Quartette Davis Family Solo Mr. John B. Alkman Solo Miss May McEwan Violin Duet
Mr. and Mrs. David Ooldman
Solo—"The Springtime and Robblns have come"?. Frank Howard Tom Davis. Recitation—"The Fate of Virginia"..,
10.
MARVELOUS STORY
TOLD TWO LETTERS.
CDAU TUC CAM "28 Cedar St., New rnUm I ne OUH York,Oct.28,1882. Gentlemen: My father resides at Glover, Vt. He has been a great snfferer from Scrofula, and the inclosed letter will tell you what a marvelous effect
Ayer's Sarsaparilla
has had in hia ease. I think hia blood must have contained the humor for at least ten years but it did not show, except in the form of a scrofulous sore on the wrist, until about five years ago. From a few spots which appeared at that time, it gradually spread so as to cover his entire body. I assure you he was terribly affilctcd, and an object of pity, when he began nslng your medicine. Now, there are few men of his age who enjoy as good health as he has. I could easily name fifty persons who would testify to the facts in his case.
Tours truly, W. M. PHILLIPS."
FROM THE FATHER:
1
Macau ly
Alice Fischer.
Solo—"The Mariner's Song" Ranberger Allyn Adams. Solo—Lucia De Lammermor
Donizetti
Helen Jeffers. PART SECOND.
.Mr.
"It is both a pleasure and
a duty for me to state to you the benefit I have derived from the use of
Ayer's Sarsaparilla.
Six months ago 1 was completely covered with a terrible humor and scrofulous sores. The humor caused an Incessant and intolerable itching, and the skin cracked so as to canse the blood to flow in many places whenever I moved. My sufferings were great, and my life a burden. I commenced the use of the SARSAPARILLA in April last, and have used it regularly since that time. My condition began to improve at once. The sores havo all healed, and I feel perfectly well in every vespect—being now able to do a good day's work, although 73 years of age. Many inquire what has wrought such a cure in my case, and I tell them, as I have here tried to tell you, ATER'S SARSAPARILLA. Glover, Vt., Oct. 21,1882. Yours gratefully,
HIBAH PHILLIPS."
AYER'S SARSAPARILLA
cores Scrofula
and all Scrofulous Complaints, Erysipelas, Eczema, Ringworm, Blotches, Sores, Bolls, Tumors, and Eruptions of the Skin. It clears the blood of all impurities, aids digestion, stimulates the action of the bowels, and thus restores vitality and strengthens the whole system.
PREPARED BY
Dr. J.C.Ayer&Co., Lowell,Mass. Sold by all Druggists 1, six bottles for $S.
k-r A-» O
irAHHTlmH BALM.
{Causes no Pain.
Gives Relief at
once. Thorough
Treatment will
Cure. Not a Liq
uid or Snuff. Ap
ply with Finger.
4AY-FJEVER Give It a Trial. cents at Druggists. 00 cents by mall registered. Send for cireular. KLY BROTHERS. Druggists, Oswego, N.Y.
B*ha.rm
acklog oJKWfcpaper, filled With lue serials, stories, choice mischarming serials, stories, cellany, etc., is sent three months ott TRIAL for £5 cents and we send EVERY subscriber FREE oar new Holiday Package! consisting of 10 pleoes popular mn«l& s, 1 pack of age and
10 Interesting games, cards, 1 pack "Hold to pack fnn and flirtation chromo cards, IS new tricks in 5 new pnszlee, game offortuna, t"ie
fortnne-telllng Light" cards, 1 cards, 1 set chroi
sMfesjsaasasfiiSM
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v.
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1
CLEAR! CLEAEI! EFFICIENT!
Lyon's Kozothium!^- Lyon's Kozothium!
BEFORE USING
AFTER USINQ* win ..
Is not a dye, but is a clear, fragrant oii, and acts purely as
tonic to the hair follicles and capillary circulation of the
scalp, whereby it restores the natural action, and as & resul
RESTORES THE NATURAL COLOR
To the hair, leaving it soft and beautiful.
Entirely Free from Sulphur, Nitrate of Silver
And all noxious and deleterious chemicals. It is an
ELEGANT AND DELIGHTFUL HAIR DRESSING
Depositing no sediment upon the scalp does not stain the
skin nor soil the most delicate fabric. It has fast friends
wherever known and used, and is as efficacious in 1
RESTORINCfCRAY BEARD
To its natural color as in its use as a Hair Dressing an(
Hair Restorer. To middle-aged men who are prematurely
bald, or becoming bald, it is specially recommended, and
when fairly and properly used, will never fail in arresting
the falling off of the hair and encouraging a vigorous and
A1
-JBHK
vi
ft
3
V-.1 -r
abundant growth of new and healthy hair. BRIHSWIOK ft BAUM 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 & CO.,
WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS.
General Agents, Indianapolis.
A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY.
All |orms of PILES—external, internal, blind and bleed
ing—yield to the magical curative power of
DR. 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.
SfC r'lr si. rt" *«S
A. KIEFER & CO., General Agents,
WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS, .fj. -v»-'
INDIANAPOLIS, W».
1
For Sale by BUNTIN & ARMSTRONG.)
yAa»lnni"i Ufi'lS*?
las#
New Advertisements.
BICHHOHD 1
Straight Cut No. 1
CIGARETTES.
/^flGARETTE Smokers who are wlllingto VJ pay a little more for Cigarettes than' tbe price charged for the ordinary trad* Cigarettes will find the Richmond Straight Cut No. 1
SUPERIOR TO AU OTHER®. They are made from tbe brightest, aaosti delicately flavored and highest cost fold leaf crown In Virginia, and are absolutely without adulteration or drugs.
We use tbe Oannlne French luce Paper, of our own direct Importation, which la made especially for as, water marked with the name of the brand Richmond Straight Cut No. 1, on each Cigarette, without which none are lenulne. Base imitations of this brand nave been put on sale, and Cigarette smokers are cautioned that this Is the Old and Original brand, and to obeerve that each packngo or box of
Richmond Straight Cut Cigarettes,
REARS THE SIGXATURK OF
ALLEN & GINTER, Manufacturers,
RICHMOND, TA.
AGENTS WANTED Reader, your name printed on etrenlars, show card, wood signs, etc., to establish you permanently in selling onr SAFETY
LAMP BURNER it's long needed fits all lamps, gives large light has nickel cone reflector lever puts it out no blowing or explosions or turning down wiek pnta itself out if upset can fill it without removing bnrner or cblmney no wearing out screws or collars it lasts ten yeara. Sells at sight exclusive territory given sample, postpaid,35c. For illustrated circulars, testimonials, agents' reports, etc., address THE PHOENIX M'F"Q Co.,« Mechanlo Street, Newark, New Jersey. Please mention this paper.
CONSUMPTION, I have posUlre remedy for the ebote dlawe br lt» tbotmadi ofeMM of tbe went kind ftbd of lone Handing here been cured. Indeed.eo etwwgtoay ftUtfc in Its efflescT, that I will aend TWO BOTTLB8 FMK, tetetber witb a VALUABLE TBBATISB on tble dlseas* te aai suffferer. Oive Xxpreaa and P. O. addreaa.
DK. T. A. 8LOCUM. ifl Peart Bt, New Yorfr
AAof
DVERTISERS! send for our Select List, Local Newspapers. Geo. P. Rowell Co., 10 Spruce street, N. Y.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
I. H. C. BOYSE,
Attorney at Law,
No. 503 1-2 MAIN STREET.
Dr. W. C. Eichelberger,
OCULIST and AURIST^^
Boom 13, Savings Bank Building TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA.
OTFIOB HOURS:•-# 8 to 5 p. m.
to 12 a. m., ana from
DBS. RICHAKM & fffi TALZAD,
Dentists,
Office, S. W. Cor. Fifth and Main St*.
ENTRANCE ON FIFTH-STREKT. '1
Communication by telephone. Nitrous Oxide Gas administered.
DAVID W. HENRY. 3 ACOB D. EARLY.
HENRY & EARLY, Attorneys at Law and General Insurance Agents.
ROOM 1, BEACH BLOCK.
Bj||iard and
p00|
Tab|eS|
Of all sices, new and seoond-hand.
All Kinds of Billiard Material To be had the lame price as per
BRUNSWICK and BAliKE ft OO.'S PRICE-LIST,
In Terra Ha/ut«.
I JACOB MAY, Agent. W. H. HASLET,
18 Booth Fifth 8treat.
htyg a liberal pri/*
oast-ofT clothing.
tot vwtoai made
STAR LAUNDRY,
NO. 077 1-2 MAIN STREET.
Shirt, Collars, Cnffs & Laee CirtaiM,
DONE VP EQ.DAL TO NSW. huiur «n* **aalT Takaa •wie
Holly Tree Mills
SHIRTING, CAMBRIC,
PERCALE
L0N« CL0TH-
FINEST COTTONS MANUFACTURED A BLEACHED EQUAL TO FRENCH. FOR SALE BY HAVENS, GEDPE8 & CO.
Zb. DUNCAN & CO. Wholesale Dealers In Paper, Paper Bags,
Stationery, Twines, Etc.,
NO. eSS MAIN STRBjaiT Will move about February l£th. to
660 AND 662 MAIN STREET.
upholstering
Lnd
Hiring removed to the new and oommodloni room, lit*
REPAIRING.
EAST MAIN STREKT, 1 am prepared to do npholstering, furniture repairing and carpenter lobbing, in tbe very best style. A. SPECIALTY of uphoUtarlngnl furntI tare repairing. J. W. BUBV.
MERCHANT TAILORING.
ve fitted np Room No. 3, over Bay. ik and am now prepared to dr tailoring In the higest stylec the art. Bait* costing from 120 to MO, cau be bad on short notice.
More than SOU samples to
m.
I /. KXJ1BRIV
'V
1
11
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