Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 4 July 1884 — Page 2
ie Largest Stock
-AND-
BEST GRADES
--OF-
AND
IN THE STATE,
-AND—
Decidedly the Best Bargains
-AT-
644 MAIN ST., TERRE HAUTE, IND.
82 & 84 N Pennsylvania St.,
INDIANAPOLIS.
The province of OWEN, PIXLEY
& CO.'S CLOTHING STORE is to
supply the wants of the male sex in
the matter of apparel, from the time
the child assumes Kilt Skirts up
through all the succeeding stages of
his existence from Kilts to Knicker
bockers for small boys from Knick
erbockers to hardy and enduring
garments for larger boys followed
in due order by the styles and quali
ties suited to Youths, to Young Men,
to the Middle-aged, to the Senile
Our province embraces not only
Clothing (in the restricted sense of
the word as it is used by the trade),
but also all the belongings of the
wardrobe comprehended in the term
Furnishings. To supply these in-
dispcnsables at all times in the
largest, best and completest variety,
and to rcduce the cast thereof to the
consumer to a minimum, by Retail
ing them at Wholesale Prices (which
we are able to do because we are
large manufacturers and jobbers) is
the useful and important mission
and function of
&
CLOTHING STORE.
DAILY EXPRESS.
GEO. M. ALLEN, 1'ROPRIKTOB.
PUBLICATION OFFICE—No. 1« South KlfiiO Btveet, Printing tronira-Hnunre. [Entered as second-class mutter at the Post Office, tut Terre Haute, Iurt.
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Advertisements
Inserted In the Dally and Weekly on reasonable terms. For particulars apply at or address the officc. A limltod amount of advertising will be published In the Weekly.
Bos-All six months subscribers to the Weekly Express will be supplied FREE with "Treatise on the Horse and His Diseases" and a beautifully illustrated A1 manac. Persons subscribing for the Week ly for one year will receive in addition to t'ie Almanac a railroad and township map of Indiana.
WHBKK THE EXPRESS IS ON FILE. London—On file at American Exchange in liurope, 449 Strand.
Parts—On file at American Exchange in Paris 35 Boulevard des Capucines.
TERBE HAUTE
I't'rrs TTnexcene(j Advantages as a Site for MANUFACTURES AND COMMERCE,
it lis the Center of a Rich Agricultural and Timber Region.
Nine Railroads Center Here.
is on the Great BLOCK-COAL FIELDS. f-^yd Steam Coal delivered to Facloriet of IF1
r.
EX2 S PER. TON.
NATIONAL REPUBLICAN TICKET.
For President, JAMES G. BLAINE, of Maine.
For Vice President, JOHN A. LOGAN, of Illinois.
STATE TICKET.
For Governor. WM. H. CALKINS. For Lieutenant Governor.
EUGENE BUNDY. For Secretary ROBERT MITCHELL.
For Auditor. I5RUCE»CARR. For Treasurer.
R. R. SHIEL.
For Attorney General. W. C. WILSON.
For Superintendent Public Instruction, B. C. HOBBS. For Heporter Supreme Court.
W. M. HOGGATT.
For Judge Supreme Court. E. P. HAMMOND.
Republican Congressional Convention. Notice is hereby given that a Republican Delegate
Convention
Fourth
for the liJightli
Congressional District will bo held at Crawfordsvllle on Thursday, the 10th day of July, 1884, for the purpose of nominating a candidate for Congress for this district.
The ratio of representation will be one delegate for each two hundred votes and fraction of one hundred and over, cast for Albert G. Tortcr for Governor in 1880, viz: Clay Fountain it Montgomery Parke tg Vermillion Vigo 2o Warren 9
JACOB D. EARLY,
Chairman Eighth Dist. Com.
Why do
they call it the "gloriouB"
Speaking of Blaine, didn't he try to kill his mother by pouring molten lead into her ear
Ex-Superintendent of Public Instruction Smart is to be appointed superintendent of the Indianapolis public schools.
Col. Gray, of the four months' service, seemB to have dropped out of sight. It devolves upon the Democracy to produce him.
Our Democratic friends are shifting the issue from police and cows to the fire department hose. On that score we'll drown 'em.
The fire cracker and the toy pistol have this for their own day in the year, mayors' proclamations to the contrary notwithstanding.
With both candidates for attorney gozieral from Edgar county, we will probably hear the roar of the battle over here in Terre Haute.
The Terre Haute cow doeB not need a special holiday for the celebration of her independence. She has 365 dayB in the year for this purpose.
Edgar county, Illinois, presents both candidates for attorney general of Illinois. The Hon. Geo. Hunt is the Republican candidate and Mr. Robert McKinley is the Democratic candidate.
The Bartholdi statue will be formally received to-day by the United States minister to France. The New York public will now please pass around the liat again for money to pay for a pedestal.
The senate will meet to-day, and the secretary will read the Declaration of Independence, and Washington's farewell address, while the senators lounge in the cloak rooms. All the same we are patriotic.
The Illinois Democrats have nominated a Protectionist Democrat for governor on a free-trade platform. But that is nothing unusual. The National Democracy will nominate old man Tilden on eny kind of a platform. Principles and men in the Democratic party do not count so much as availibility.
The Democracy of Illinois says the issue shall be a "tariff for revenue only." Do you hear that Mr. Randall and if you do what are you going to do about it? Both Mr. Morrison and Mr. Randall will meet at Chicago as delegates at large. Perhaps we will be compelled to wait until then for an answer.
The southern delegates to the Democratic convention have been In correspondence and it is announced that they will push to the front demanding the temporary and permanent chairmen be taken from the south. This is nothing more than right. The south represents more than five-sixths of the Democratic electoral votes, and by all logic the candidate for the presidency should come from the south.
The senate refused to give even a majority vote for the passage of the Fitz John Porter bill over the president's veto, much less the two-thirds vote required by the constitution. The great patriot ol the Democratic hostp, who was more loyal to McClellan than to his country, will, therefore, be compelled to wait until the confederacy has both branches of congress and the president. How tired he will become in thus hoping for an impossibility
The Gazette calls attention to the fact that Councilmen L. S. Briggs and Wimer have been doing some work for the city. In making the charge the Gazette apologizes, and says: "No question is raised as to the quality of the work by the Gazette as all know Mr. Briggs runs a first-class establishment and Mr. Wimer does good work." The Gazette was never known to take a firm stand but on one question—the hatred of Gen. Grant. By the way, the Gazette is not the first Democrat to curse Grant. The Gazette is looked upon as a "weak sister" in the Democratic ranks, and ha§ tP
say something occasionally real mean about Republicans in order to be able to be classed as a Democratic orgaD. As Mr. Brigqs runs a first-class establishment, and Mr. "VVimer does good work, it is another evidence that the Republicans are dealing honestly by the people. The work was done on the
engine
houses thatthe last "moral"
Democratic administration allowed to get out of repair.
The New York Sun, the recognized organ of Mr. Tilden, denies that Mr. Tilden is throwing the weight of his influence for Cleveland for the Chicago nomination, and says: "In his retirement Mr. Tilden abstains from all attempts to direct or influence ttie conduct of his party, but we do not doubt that the man whose nomination would be most gratifying to his judgment would be Samuel J. Randall, of Pennsylvania." The best opinion formed after a careful scrutiny of all the emanations from the old man of Grammercy Park is that he thinks Samuel J. Tilden ought to have the nomination forced apon him. And it will be.
Referring to an Incident of the War. Globe-Democrat. Ben Butler is the champion of female suffrage. And yet we doubt if as a Democratic candidate he could carry Louisiana by the votes of the fair sex.
This is Convincing and Witty. Indianapolis Sentinel. A good deal is being said about Blaine's early religion. In his youth Mr. Blaine was doubtless devoted to St. Peter, but it is well known that later in life ho renounced his allegianco and became piously attached to saltpeter.
Can Knock Destiny Higher Than a Kite. Kennet Square Advance. Colonel Mcltlure-believes that destiny is engaged In rounding up the Democratic national delegates for Cleveland. Perhaps the Colonel is right, but wo will wager a big applo that John Kelly will knock destiny higher than a kite whon the proper time comes.
A Dinner Extravagance-
Exchange. Photographs on linen are the style in some sets. At a dinner the likeness of the person in whose honor it is is photographed on the napkins, and the guests take them with them as souvenirs of the occasion. The pictures are not aflected by washing. Dudes have the likenesses of their favorite actresses placed in the corners of their handkerchiefs. The idea is not born of good taste.
In Desperate Straits.
Globe-Democrat. Nothing could better illustrate the decadence of the poor old Democratic party than its present bewilderment in pursuit Of a candidate. The party that once had all the scholarship and all the intellect of country at its beck and bid—that filled the house with orators and the senate with statesmen—is now so hard pushed for a candidate that its latest trumpet call is for a rally round a tombstone.
Damning Proof.
Ithaca Journal.. Walter Blaine, so& Of tmruVA0'iiuaw~—»* denies that his father had any knowledge of or had anything to do with the printing and publishing of tne aiaaigan circular. Not to be foiled, however, the x«,koiais- tihargo that It WVS printed in the office of the Kennebec Journal "within a short distance of Mr, Blaine's residence." That is pretty con. elusive but it if it can be proved that Mr. Blaine's hired girl knew the Jour nal's pressman the proof will be damning,
Taffy is Kin#.
New York Morning Journal.
The Christian name of the Maori po tentate who is now turning the heads of the London fashionables is pro aounced Taffy. Ladies, like general electors, are somewhat partial to Taffy so that their fancy for this reconstructed cannibal is not perhaps remarkable If Taffy's personal appearance, which is said to be against him, were all, in addition to his name, there was to admire, we should almost wonder at their taste but Taffy chews tobacco and plays the flute. In his unregen erate days he drank whisky. All the ancicnt kings of whom we have any record drank whisky, and even Wales, who is a ting by brevet, takes his "Magna Charta" stiaight. But a mon arch who chews tobacco and plays the flute is scarcely deserving of even decent civilty upon the part of titled ladies. He ought, in fact, to be banished to some far western prairie, where only the dogs could howl in concert with his intolerable melody.
All Abont It, You Know. John R. Reavis. The small cushion bustle stuffed with hair is commended by modistes in preference to all others, as it gives the added size directly at the back, and is so eas ily concealed by the drapery of the costume. The best plan i3 to have a pad of this kind attached to the belt of the foundation skirt of the drees, but the separate-pad bustle is also shown in the furnishing stores, made with strings to adjust it around the waist with any dress.
Naval Chaplains.
New York Sun.
The resignation of the Rev. J. Brown from his naval chaplaincy leaves ten of the remaining twentythree chaplains of the United States navy Episcopalians. Mr. Brown, who is an Episcopal clergyman, was chap lain for ten years. The Presbyterian says that although he did all that was required of him he never went to sea, and he performed duty for only three years and seven months.
A Parliamentary Bulldozer. London News. Yesterday, as is his habit on a Wednesday, Mr. Warton planted himself outside the door of the house of commons at noon, and did bis best to prevent members from entering to make a house. It is understood that the attention of the speaker will be called to what is becoming a consider able nuisance.
Poor Return for Capital. Of ninety-six railroads in the state of New York only fifteen paid dividends in 1883. The total capital
Btock
of the railroads is $628,718,596, and the total amount of dividends paid was $15,034,114, or about2 percent, of the capital. Farm property presents a favorable contrast to such a showing.
Countess Kalomine in linck. London Truth. Mme. de Kalomine (Countess von Romrod), is to receive her annuity of £1,000 a year from the Grand Duke ol Hesse even if sho contracts auother marriage. The Grand Duke contemplates abdicating in favor of his son, Prince Ernest, who is not yet sixteen.
The proper question to ask a young woman who is about to elope is, "Dgea your mother know your route V'
Let the Bage's steed be found. He waves aside the thrice offered prize, With the ancient Cicsar's grace The shameless greed of his hungry eyes
Brings a blush to every face.
THE TEKRE HAUTE EXPKESB. FRIDAY MORNING, JDLY 4. 1'84
WISE AND OTHERWfSE
A miracle! 'Twas the Sage's Ghost That we saw in death's embrace. The Sage still lives, and will lead hiSTiost
In this presidential racc. The funeral meats may be kept on!ce Till the wedding day come 'round, Go skim the pond—let the bride arise—-
But half his log, like a coffin, floats Let the sage be propped within— His followers shout till they split their tb roats—
And up pops the ghost of Ben.
One eye is fixed on the waiting bride, While the other shivers Sam His plank floats by the coffin's side,
Like an anchored battering ram. The Bull-rush prays for a free trade breeze,
That may help bold, bartering Ben, And laughs to hear the "Reformer sneeze As he feels Ben's eye again.
Senator Camden, of West Virginia, has sailed for Europe. Queen Victoria has returned to Windsor from Balmoral in good health.
Bishop Doane, of Albany, will sail for Europe in August, to remain until November.
B. B. Hotchkiss, of Paris, inventor of the Ilolchkies revolving cannon, is in New York.
Prince Bismarck is suffering with cold, and has lately been absent from the Reichstag.
An exhibition of 250 of the works of George Du Maurier, the caricaturist of Punch,has just been opened in London.
Mrs. Langtry has purchased more real estate in New York. Her last acquisition is a mortgage for $15,000 upon New York property.
Richard Wagner's heirs have refused an offer of £50,000 from an unnamed American for the exclusive right to perform "Parsifal."
Capt. J. Goldborough Bruff, an old West Pointer, now nearly 80, still works without spectacles as a draughtsman in the treasury department.
A Georgia man calls Mr. Ingalls, of Kansas, "the vinegar cruet of the S. senate." One of the bottles un doubtedly contains a pretty hot article of pepper sauce.
New York, according to its new city directory, contains 300,029 names, representing, on the usual estimate of five persons for each name, a total population of 1,500 145.
Col. E. C. Bailey, the" original editor and proprietor of the Boston Herald, has, after seven years of retirement, returned to journalism as the editor of the Star of that city.
The Rev. James John Hornby, D.D, has been appointed provost of Eton, to fill the vacancy caused by the recent death of Dr. Goodford. Dr. Hornby has been high master at Eton since 18G8.
Mr. Morton, United States minister to France, and Mrs. Morton, are spend ing the summer at Marienbad, in Bohemia. Secretary of Legation Delatour remains in charge of the American legation.
Polk, which was presented by the ladies
Of Tcuuemoo, hao been hung in
the green room of the White House as a companion piece to the portrait of Mrs. R. B. Hayes.
The Chicago Saturday Evening Her aid says the proportion of pure liquor sold in that city is ridiculously small "Three or four thousand saloons are busily engaged every day in the year in selling quantities of fluid stuff com posed entirely of drugs and vicious matter."
Wm. Peterson, of Brooklyn, has written to President Arthur asking him to be godfather to his twelfth living son, born June 5th. Mr. Peter-son-says as this son raises his family to the apostolic number he wants to celebrate the event with proper ceremony, and will on July 4th christen the boy Chester A. Arthur Peterson.
Roswell P. Flower, the New York ex-congressman has been taflied into the notion that he was a candidate for the presidency, is described as "quite a portly gentleman, who weighs about 220 pounds, and was dressed in a dark suit with pearl-colored stove-pipe hat A little tuft of crisp black whiskers on either cheek ornaments his face which is otherwise cleanly shaven."
Since 1870 experiments have been made in this country with several va rieties of apples imported from Russia, It is interesting to note how different some of the apples appear in color flavor, and keeping qualities when grown in Washington and when grown as far north as Vermont. One variety which in Vermont was found to be good winter app'e was over-ripe and soft at Washington in August.
Brooklyn has about 140 letter-car riers and about 35 substitutes. As there are carriers who thiuk five days' work a week is enough, the substitutes have a fair show for work, but there are some carriers who seldom miss a day. One of them last year put on a substitute for a single trip. This surprised enerybody, for he was one of the steady ones. But, his father had died and he went to the house to see the funeral started for the cemetery
Forests and Climate.
The effect that the disappearance of forests has upon climate receives fresh illustration almost every day. In Italy the clearing of the Apennines is believed to have seriously changed the climate of the Po valley, and now the African sirocco, never known to the armies of ancient Rome, breathes its hot, blighting breath over the right bank of the river in the territory of Parma. The removal of the pine forests near Ravenna induced the same desolating wind and the same destruction of the old forests of Vosges and of the Cevennes has had like deteriorating influences upon the climate. In Egypt, where, during the French occupation in 1792, not a drop of rain fell for sixteen months, and where from time immortal the country has been a rainless bed of sand, Momammed Ali, by planting his millions of fig and ©range trees, has seen his country blessed with an annual rainfall of several inches.
Paris Sport.
Havre Letter to Philadelphia Press.
The latest sport in Paris among the young gommeaux of the day is to offer a supper inBomeof the swell restaurants, where the room and the lights are given by the host for a costly sum, while the guests are only allowed the food which they bring, and they must steal on their way down to the rendezvous. correspondent says: '"The young fellow who bad invited me to see the fun stole some three pounds of cherries as his share of the programme, while a mutual friend oined us with a jambonneaux-under lis arm, wrapped up in his handker-
chief. Not being considered intelligent enough, I was allowed to come in as an unproductive outsider, with precise stipulation that mum was the word. The table Bhowed a most thorough aptitude on the part of young France to the power and possibility of helping itself. The fashion was set some years since by the Dnke de Moray. It is to be presumed that any flagrant act of appropriation to the needs of the moment would in the end be paid for, but for the time being the viands, wines and flowers have all the flavor of stolen sweets."
A WORD FOR THE CRANKS.
Burdetle's Planative Plea for His Fellow Original.
Cranks, my son, says Bob Burdette. The world is full of them. What would we do were it not for the cranks? How slowly the tired old world would move did not the cranks keep it rushing along. Columbus was a crank on the subject of American discovery and circumuavigation, and at last he met the fate of most cranks, was thrown into prison, and died in poverty and disgrace. Greatly venerated now? Oh, y.es, Telemachus, we usually esteem a crank most profoundly after we starve him to death. Harvey was a crank on the subject of the circulation of the blood Galileo was an astronomical crank Fulton was crank on the subject of steam navigation Morse was a telegraph crank all the old abolitionists were cranks. The Pilgrim fathers were cranks. John Bunyan was a crank any man who doesn't think as you do, my son, is a crank. And by and by the crank you despise will have his name in every man's mouth, and half-completed monument to his memory crumbling down in a dozen cities, while nobody outside of your native village will know that you ever lived,
Deal gently with the crank, my boy. Of course some cranks are crankier than others, but do you be very slow to sneer at a man because be knows only one thing and you can't understand him. A crank, Telemachus, is a thing that turns something, it makes the wheels go round, it means progress. True, it turns the same wheel all the time, and it can't do anything else but that's what keeps the ship going ahead. The thing that goes in for variety, versatility, that changes its poisition a hundred times a day, that is no crank that is the weather-vane, my son. What? You nevertheless thank heaven that you are not crank? Don't do that, my son. Maybe you "couldn't be a crank, if you would. Heaven is not very particu lar when it wants a weather-vane almost any man will do for that, But when it wants a crank, my boy it looks abont very carefully for the best man in the community. Before you thank heaven that you are not crank examine yourself carefully and see what is the great deficiency that debars you from such an election.
The Drinkers of Blood.
Cincinnati Commercial Gazelle.
They haunt the abattoir every week and drink the warm beef blood by the cupful. It is caught as it flows from the animal's throat. It benefits thin blooded persons. Some-tune'sinea. womin came"~Co llie stock yards who said her physician had told her she must drink beef
folotrl.
"But I never can do it, never!" said she, shuddering. "But it tastes just like milk," said the gentleman appealed to. "Come, I'll blindfold you, and give you a glass of milk. Then I'll give you some more milk, or a glass or blood, then a taste of milk till you get them mixed up, and you won't know which is which."
She consented, and drank the glass first given her with a relish. "Ah! that was the milk. Now I think I can try the blood," she told them." "But, madam, you have drank it already," said the gentleman.
Frogs sell for fifty cents a dozen, and in eastern restaurants three of them fricaseed in cream bring forty cents. The demand enables sportsmen, armed with shotguns, to make a good day's wages shooting them. From the tributaries of the Chesapeake bay alone the frog yields $100,000 a year.
WITH
MAY
mean "Poisoned with Potash." This is the case with hundreds who have been unwise enongh to Sarsaparillas, Potash mixtures, etc., until digestion Is almost fatally impaired. Swift'sSpeciBc is a vegetable remedy, and restores the system to health and builds up the waste made by these poisons. "1 was suffering with Blood Poison, and treated several month* with Mercury and Potash, only to mako me worse. The Potash took away my appetite and gave me dyspepsia, and both gave me rlioumatism, I then took Sarsaparillas, etc. All these Sarsaparllla mixtures have Potash in them. This made me still worse, as it diove the poison far'her into my system A friend insisted I should take Swift's Specific, and it cured me of the Blood Poison, drove he Mercury and Potash out of my system, and to-day I am as well as I ever was."
GEO. O. WELLMAN, JR.,Salem, Mass. John A. Smith, tlie largest merchant In Gainesville, Ga., say: "I suffered for years from the combined effects of Erysipelas and Eczema. I continued to grow worse under medical treatment and by taking medicine containing Potash. S. S. S. cured me thoroughly and absolutely. My appetite, strength and flesh returned as I was cured with it."
Treatise on BIoo 1 and Skin Diseases mailed free to applicants. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.,
Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga.
N. Y. Office, 159 W. 23d St., bet. 6th and 7th Avs. Philadelphia Office, 1'.02 Chestnut St.
DANIEL DEAN
Ha« taken the shop, 419 Walnu street and solicits your orders for fine
CABINET WORK,
for store-nuiims, repairs of all kinds, and all job work in carpentering andcabinetmaking. tJootl work for reasonable prices
DANIEL DEAN,
419 Walnut. Street*
FKITIT EVAPORATORS.
We manufacture 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 Kvaporators have no equal they sell on llieir merits. We are not obliged to cut on prices to compete with worthless machines. Parties aie glad to get them at reasonable prices. Send for illustrated circular. JOHN WILLIAMS & SON,
Mount Auburn
YOUNG LADIES' INSTITUTE CINCINNATI.
Family and Day Scbaol. Beautiful location. Large groDnds.Thorotigh scholarship. BestMnsic and Art advantages. Fall session opfnn Sept. 84 For
otrcalatMwTressH. "JflAAJIJKffi uJ.ki^frei't.
MARK
BITTERS
Liver and Kidney Eemedy, ICompounded from the well known) Curatives Hops, Halt, Buchu, Mail* drake. Dandelion, Sarsaparill^ Cascara etc.. combined with an agree*ole Aromatic Elixir,
THEY CURE DYSPEPSIA & INDIGESTION, Act upon the Llrcr and Kidneys, I REGULATE" THE* BOWELS, I jThey cure Rheumatism, and all Uri-1 nary troubles. They Invigorate, nourish, strengthen and quiet the Nervous System.
As a Tonlo thejr have no Equal. Take nono bat Hops and Malt Bitters.
FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS.—
Hops and Malt Bitters Co. DETROIT, MICH.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
1.H.C.ROYSE,
Attorney at Law,
No. 503 1-2 MAIN STREET.
Dr. W. C. Eichelberger,
OCULIST and AURIST,
Room 13, Savings Bunk Building TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA.
OFFICE HOURS:-9 to 12 a. m., and from 2 to 5 p. m.
|)KS. RIGHARM & VAN V.4LZAH, XDerrtists,
Office, S. W. Cor. Fifth and Main Sts.,
ENTRANCE ON FIFTH STREET.
Communication by telephone. Oxide Gas administered.
Nitrous
DAVID W. HENRY. JACOB D. EARLY.
HENRY & EARLY, Attorneys at Law aud General Insurance Agents.
ROOM 1, BEACH BLOCK.
T.
C.
HOOD, M. D.,
(WITH DR. SPAIN.)
Office: Ef. W. Cor.Third and Main Sts.
ROOMS THE SAME. TERRE HAUTE, IND.
KW Night calls promptly attended.
SAVE_Y0UR_EYES!
Terre Haute, Indiana, Eye Infirmary.
DB. R.D. HALEY,of N. Y., late of Trenton, Mo and DR. J. E. DUNBAR, 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, Musics, druggist, next door to postofflce N. H. McFerrln, dealer in agricultural implements, west side PubllcSquare Hiram Foulta, grocer. Cor. First ana Main.
DOCTORS
United States Medical and Surgical Institute and Eye and Ear Infirmary.
PERMANENTLY LOCATED
Cor. Fourth and Cherry Sts.
TERUE HADTE, IND.
2,000
Patients cured since the institution was opened last winter in Terre Haute. The officers return thanks for the patronage received from Indiana and surrounding states. This is the 18th year since the establishment of the United States Medical Institute, first at Cleveland, now there is a branch office in most every state in the Union and Canada. They employ only skilled, experienced, and successful physicians and surgeons, they must be graduates of some first-class college of tbis country and members of the royal college of physicians and surgeons, England, because the institution is in both countries. Persons who have not succeeded to get cured by other physicians, should apply to us at once either personally or by letter, for most of the diseases that have been hitherto considered incurable we have in mose cases been successful in curing, for we cure cases every day that has beeo pronounced incurable by the bestof physicians, both in this country and other count ries. We are graduates of A llopathy. Homeopathy and Eclectic schools of medicine, but follow no creeds or isms. Our motto: "Cure the people and build up the constitution."
Female complaints and piles aspecialty Ladies' waiting parlor, room 12. rjentlemen's waiting room, 11. Surgical operating room, 29. No charge for examination, and no charge except the wholesale price of medicine until the patient Is satisfied they are cured.
IiEGAL.
A
IMPLICATION FOR LICENSE.
The undersigned will apply to the Board of County Commissioners, at their next session, which commences on first Monday in June, for license to retail spiritu ous and malt liquors in less quantities than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing the same to be jrank on my premises. My place of business Is located on. In lot seventy, (70' J. Slbbley's subdivision twenty-four, (24) north side of 823 north Sixth street.
A
Patentees and Manufacturers, Kalamazoo, Micb.
A
.-V IN TP II.
Ladies and Gentlemen can flno a profitable employment at their own homes. The business is light
and pleasant. You can make from 83 t5 day. No cauvassing work sent mail any distance. No stamp for reply. Please address Crown Manufacturing Co 890 Race St., ClnptRpatl.
SAMUEL J. LOCKARD.
PPLICATION FOR LICENSE.
The undersigned will apply to the Board of County Commissioners, at their next regular session, which commences on the first Monday in July, 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 my lot, in Uarrlson township, on the Lafayette road.
W. B. SHERBURNE.
DMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given that I have been appointed administrator of the estate of Joseph H. Holmes, deceased. Said estate is supposod to be solvent.
ASA R. SUMMERS, Adm'r.
REIMAN
DEALER IN
FLOUft, PROVISIONS
And all kinds of Building Material, Delphi and Greencastle Lime, Newark and Michigan Plaster, Lath, Hair, Cement, Fire Brick and FlreCI.-iy, Piping, Draining Tile, Etc., No. 815 Mitfn street, Terre Haute, Indiana,
INVITATIONS,
STREET BILLS,
ROSSMJ«WICKHAM&CO,
AGENTS
Commercial Union Assurance Corn y,
OF-
A«sels January 1st, 1884 Capital re-inssurauce fund and all other liabilities 8 i37,4o«.2i Net surplns 3,148,317.92
SHIPPING TAGS,
ETC., ETC.
CATARRH
rHtfFEVER
HAY-FEVER
Assets in United States lie-insurance fund and all other liabilities 1,387,134.il Net surplus invested In Government bonds. 960,501.8')
Losses paid carh without customary 60 days discount. OFFICESavings Bank Block, Sixth and Onto streets, Terre Haute, Ind. ROSS. M. WICKHAM, State Agent and Adjuster.
NEW AND COMPLETE
THE EXPRESS
JOB OFFICE AND BINDERY!
All Important Addition to the Newspa per Establishment.
Several months ago a Job Printing Department was added to the Express establishment Since then the work has increased to such a7A extent that it became necessary to add a Bindery. The latter is now in order and tlnx demands of the public are thoroughly pr« vided for in all that comes within tl?.& requirements of
A FIRST-CLASS JOB OFFICE,
A FIRST-CLASS BINDERY, and
The office is prepared to furnish
CIRCULARS,
qtle^it attacks of
blinding headache, a watery and inflamed state of the eyeR. Ely's Cream Balm is a remedy founded on a correct diasnosis of this disease and can be depended upon. 50 cts. at druggists 60 cts. by mail. Sample bottle by mall 10c. ELY BROS., Druggists, Oswego, N. Y.
W. H. HASLET,
IS Sonth Fifth Street,
Fays a liberal pdm made oast-off clothing.
Baby Wagons
AT-
tt A T^-y-B-srs.
LANDS
AND FARMS SOLD, OR EXcods or changed for stocks of goods or ufoperty. Address wltn stamp ars, JNO. F, MCGU1RE fc CO.,
business for circulars, Clinton, Iowa.
A FIRST-CLASS NEWSPAPER,
None but thoroughly competent men ar«f employed, as it is the intention that no work shall leave the office except that which will be up to the highest standard.
LETTER AND BILL HEADS,
BALL PROGRAMMES
CARDS,
STATEMENTS,
BRAY TICKETS,
ETC., ETC.
BESIDES, AX-jL. ICINXDS OF1
LEDGERS, JOURNALS, CASH BOOKS.
AND BOOKS RULED AND BOUND FOR ANV MANNER OF BOOK-KEEPING.
The re-binding of books, the binding of magazines, and newspapers will be made a special feature of the business. All work done prompt ly and at reasonable rates.
HA?FMR
avlng pe
culiar symptoms. It is attended by an inflamed condition of the lining membrane of the nostrils, tearducts and throat, affecting the lungs. An acrid mucus is secreted, the discharge is accompanied with a painful in a tion. There are severe spasms of
"a* US*.
THB0HLYTR0B
IRON
[TONIC
"Will pnrlftr the BLOOD, mm. late tlie LIVER and KIDNEYS. and RESTORE THE HBAIJTK and VIGOR of YOUTH. Dr»pepsia, Want of Appetite, Indigestion, Lack or Strength, and TlredFeellngabsolutelr cured. Bones, muscles ana nerves receive new force.
Enlivens the mind and
1
supplies Brain Power.
3 A I f2 Suffering from complaints La tJ I CiW peculiar to their sex will Dad In DB. HAKTER'S EBOH TOWIO a rate and speedy cure. Gives a clear, healthy complexion.
Freqnent attempts at counterfeiting only ads to the popularity of the original. Do not experiment—£et the ORIGINAL AND BEST.
Send your address to The Dr. Baiter MadJOe.V St. Louis, Mo., for our "DREAM BOOK." XFnJIof stranse and useful information,
CHOICE
GROCERIES
-ADD-
Fresh Country Product,
•AT-
J.
BOBDEL
F.
K, K. Cor. of Flret and Ohio St
YOUNG PEOPLE'S GUIDE
rLd hy
young people will save a life of misery gives the secret of my success or how to win in business. Pi ice 25c., postpaid, Address 8, WEAVJ5R, Pottstown, Pa,
