Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 23 September 1884 — Page 2
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•e^- n, Mat* ny «£.-»t~.4 hi-f^^S(s^^v!H'i
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304 NAIN ST., TERRE HAUTC, INO.
DAILY EXPRESS.
olKOt M. ALXJtN, FBOPKMTOB.
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TERRE HAUTE
ifltis Unexcelled Advantages as a Site for
A
NU FACTURE8
AND
-Kca^
TO S
,^feto4*
People of Terre Haute
I
A
ve"
bat our basineasiiere will be permanent, and that we will continue to Bell at isctory prices tbe renowned
HA LLET-1) AVIS,
DECKER & SON,
NEW ENGLAND,
EVEltETT
PIANOS.
STORI & CLARK,
CLOUGll & WARREN,
ITHACA
ORGANS
I N. HICKMAN CO.
COM MERCE,
Is the center of a Rich Agricultural and Timber Region.
Nine Railroads Center Here.
8 on the Great BLOCK COAL FIELDS. ~irt steam Coal delivered to Factorie* at ]1P1 CKN18 PER TON
NATIONAL REPUBLICAN TICKET,
For President, AMISS O. BLAINE, of Maine.
For Vioe President, JOHN A. LOGAN, of Illinois.
FOR CONGRESS,
JAMES X. JOHNSTON, Of Parke County.
STATE TICKET.
For Governor. WM. H. CALKINS. For Lieutenant Governor.
EUGENE BUNDY. For Secretary ROBERT MITCHELL.
For Auditor.] BRUCECARR. For}Treasurer.
R. R.'SHIEL.
For Attorney General] W. C. WILSON,
fji'superintendent Public Instruction, B. C. HOBBS. For Reporter Supreme Conrt.
W. M. HOGGATT.
For Jadgfl Supreme Court. E. P. HAMMOND.
COUNTY TICKET.
For Treasurer, SAMUEL T. JONES. For Sheriff,
W. H. RISK.
For Judge of Circuit Court, GEORGE W. FARIS. For Prosecuting Attorney.
DAVID W. HENRY.! For titte Senator, DICR.T. MORGAN. For Representatives,
FRED LEE.
F. C. DANALDi^N. For Commissioners,
First District, L. W. DICKERSON. Second District, LAWRENCE HEINL. For Coroner,
PETERJKORNM AN. For Surveyor,
frank tuttle,
The Democrats have discovered that the people want free trade, and It is on ]«st that Issue that they are going to 4in the election in Indiana.—(.Indianapolis Sentinel, September
6.
"I have no personal grievance with €ov. Cleveland. I shall speak from the record, and I will ask to be ostracized from all decent society if I cannot point to corruption stalking straight to the joor of the executive mansion and knock~:'.ig at the door and coming out of the ioor, with all that corruption sought at
She expense of the people. If I cannot prove that bribes known to fail in the as
sembly in 1883 were placed so near Mr. Cleveland that if he does not have the aoney he ean get it at any time—if I tannot prove that I am not what I profess (0 be."—[State Senator Grady before the Tammany committe, September 8, 1884.
The Hartford Post remarks that the managers of the Democratic campaign have determined to cork him up in Albany. The address to the farmers at the Elmira fair was too much for them. It was there that Cleveland with a wiseacre expression remarked that "the soil remains in its place" and eulogized the stability of agricultural pursuits. As Gath remarked about his letter of acceptance, Cleveland "leaves one groping about in mid-air for the meaning of his words."
There is a better business tone throughout the country and everything points to a revival of prosperous times by the first of the month. The Chicago Journal discussing the outlook says:
It is universally remarked that the tone—to use an expressive word—in financial and business circles has been essentially better and stronger since it has been definitely settled that the immense crops of the country are safely harvested or are out of reach of damage by adverse weather. The low pricee have prevented the sale of the grain, and the wheat is given to a great extent in stacks. The demand is not large for money at the banks to be nsed in moving the crops. The first immediate effect of the vast abundance of wheat and corn has not been to stimulate business to any noticeable degree, or to awaken a greater activity in the industries of the country. As yet, no definite sense of relief has been experienced. The commercial revival has not come. Great and active business movements have not yet commenced. |Bnt the sense of confidence and stability inspired by the business situation is remarkable. Business men, bankers, producers, all feel an assurance of future prosperity. There is a reassured and bracing feeling everywhere. If a man has a large amount of unincumbered and saleable property, though he may have no ready cash, and thongh his business may be inactive, his credit is good. A man may be slow pay, but if it is known that he has a good balance in the bank, even if he hates to draw it out, everybody is willing to trust him.
This is the present condition of the country. The unexampled crops of wheat, corn, tobacco, cotton and other products, constituting a fabulous actual wealth added directly to the invested wealth and ready cash of the people, have created a sense of security and confidence in all classes that is the best foundation for future business activity and prosperity. Prices are low, and those holding the property prefer to keep it rather than to sell it. But the public, moneyed men, men who have goods and manufactures, know that the wealth is stored on the farms, in the barns, in the granaries and in the fields, and that it can be drawn on like a bank account whefi the emergenoy occurs. This creates the firm and confident tone in all the ranks of business and finance.
It is not to be understood that, especially in Chicago, there is stagnation in either trade or production. There is a great deal doing in business and manufactures, But few men except striking laborers are idle. But things might be greater, wages might be higher. This will all come to time.
The White Rose of the Hippies, Beaton Transcript. The pond lily is the buttonhole badge of the St. John clan.
Just What Bangs, a la Mode, Are Like Fashion Plate. Bangs are arranged in loose ringlets and reach within an inch of the eyebrows.
A Two-Edged Knife..
Syracuse Standard. Tammany folds a Cleveland flag over the hand that holds the knife but the knife is there.
An Echo of Small Vanity.
Life. Clerk—"What do you wish, little girl?" L. *.—"I want to know how much your best pills are. Your 'beet' pills."
Whose Arms?
Springfield Union. A fashion paper states that young ladies' waists are to be increased to twenty-two or twenty-four inches, and arms are to be lengthened to suit. We don't exactly understand about the arms. Whose arms?
Not l)rink Muoh-
St Louis Globe-Democrat. After considerable delay and difficulty Tarn many has been led up to the Cleveland trongh but it doesn't Beem to drink in that eager and gulping fashion that carries delight to the bosom of a Democratic candidate.
Bad Word.
Detroit Times. By the way, suppose we drop the word "ex position," which is a bad loan from the French, and stick to our own word, "exhibition." The English word exposition ir strict sense means something quite different from exhibition.
Praise, the Sweetmeat of Second Infancy. Many distinguished friends having congratulated Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes on his seventieth birthday, the genial Autocrat has written a letter of acknowledgment, in which he says: "Speak as indulgently as you may to one who has crossed the dead-line of the Psalmist's reckoning, he cannot forget that he is sitting amidst the ruins of the generation to which he belongs—himself a monument, if not a ruin, on which all but himself can read the inscription. Let not the critic weigh too nicely the value of the praise bestowed upon him. A few years will chill and quiet all the excited superlatives and overweening fondness has lavished in his honor. In the meah time a little overpraise comes too late to do him any real harm. The breath that stirs his slumbering vanity brightens the fire upon his hearth, but fans no dangerous flame of self-love, as it might have dene in earlier years. And even the shrivelled centenarian loves a word of praise it is the sweetmeat of his second infancy.
The Tariff the Issue.
Gath.
The Republicans have got their address to the southern people already prepared, and I read a copy of it today in proofs and manuscript. It seems very clear to me that the personalties with which the campaign began are to be wiped out daring the next week or two, and the issue will come right down to the business apprehensions of the people for the ensuing four years. In this test the Morrison-Carlisle tariff bill will be much more of a matter of discussion than Blaine's letters or Cleveland's omissions.
THE SADDLE ON THE HORSE.
ftfcw York Tablet.
HIGBT
The New York Tablet, tbe Catholic Church Organ, Puts the Know Nothing SrulrJI**
or
Cleveland.
The wost feature of American politics is the shower of scandal and calumny with which the candidates are assailed from the moment of their nomination. No party is free from this vicious practice. The mott blameless character cannot escape the breath of misrepresentation when an office is in question. Fortunately, the people have learned to look beyond this style of warfare and recognize the fact that our public men are not the unscrupulous miscreants falsifying journals and stump orators paint them to be.
Democratic newspapers and Democratic politicians are notoriously given to scandalous malignant personal im putations against the candidates of the great party that has so long triumphed over them in the esteem of the people.
Upom Lincoln, Grant and others they poured without stint allegations and charges so odious that they were beyond belief.
Taught nothing by the past, and vainly hoping to divert the attention of the people from the vital material questions at issue, the Democracy and their allies have, as usual, begun waging a relentless war of slander against the character of Blaine.
They say he was a Know-Nothing. It is a desperate effort to Btop ths defection of the Irish voters from Cleveland and his pro-English supporters. It is a lying attempt to persuade IrishAmericans that Grover Cleveland, the Herald, Times, etc., are diBguised members of the I. R. B., and that Mr. Blaine is an Orangeman, a KnowNothing, and perhaps a free trader.
But sometimes the gunner is hoist by his own petard. This is precisely the case with the Herald at present.
No paper has made more desperate efforts to blacken the character of the Republican candidate, and whitewash the individual whom the Chicago convention foisted upon the people.
But whether the man of the two journals, "both daily," is in a contrite mood for his former transgressions, and, seeing the error of his ways, wishes to gain the path of righteousness from which he diverged, or that by some mistake on the part of his confreres, the Telegram, the tail end of the Herald kite,-publishes a letter from a genuine Know-Nothing in a recent issue, which knocks all the assertions of the two dailies into pi.
This letter is from Colonel Thomas Picton, formerly editor of The Sachem, organ of the Order of United Americans, and editor of the True American.
The United Americans are,and have been, since their inception, simply and solely American Orangemen. Tne only difference between the British Orangeman and the American is that the former is a loyal subject of England and never becomes a subject of this republic, while the latter is to the manor born and a voter.
All his proclivities, feelings and instincts are however, English. It is his misfortune that he was born in this country, and his only aim in life is to eradicate republicanism and popery, for both are anathematized by him, and place as ruler over fifty millions of Americans, a scion of the House of Hanover.
For this purpose the Know-Nothing institution was established. Colonel Picton, as portrayed by Ben nett's organ, was a prominent member, and speaking of the order to which he still belongs, boldly asserts that the same feelings which animated them in their potent supremacy in New York when thoy elected James Harper, of Harper's Weekly, for mayor, still pervades, warms and animates them.
He or they (the Know Nothings) will not voie for any man antagonistic to England. Their oath compels them, therefore, to vote against Blaine, who is recognized as a champion of American right and an enemy of English wrong.
Speaking of Blaine and his Catholic antecedents (in connection with the Know-Nothing society and its principle) the Know-Nothing colonel says: "During the common school exoltement, when It was proposed to omit reading oi the Bible In the popular academies, the Know-Nothings re-organized through limitation of the membership to Protestant Americans born of Protestant American parents, a member to be expelled in the event of marrying a Catholic -woman. He •was, moreover, bound never to vote for a foreigner, for a native Catholic, or for-a native American who had married a Catholic, or whose mother was one. "I have explained this cardinal point particularly, because, despite assertions to the contrary, Blaine, although a recreant Catholic, never could have been a KnowNothing unless admitted under false representations under oath, which he would scarce attempt in Maine, where, for a time, the Know Nothing excitement reigned more violently than ever in this dly (New Yorl- as was illustrated In the outrageous treatment of Father Bapst, an Abnakl missionary priest, by the people of Ellsworth. You see that a Know-Nothing cannot cast his vote for Blaine under any circumstances without deliberately perjuring himself, and as a majority of Influential Know-Nothings are often Freemasons, they are doubly compelled to observe their obligations, although the Masons, as a body, will take no part in the presidential campaign."
There is no ignoring this. The Know-Nothing colonel speaks with authority and cannot be gainsayed.
Mark how complacently and with what ardent zeal he forms in line of battle with his comrades to support the English nominee:
The Know-Nothings will support Cleveland with a right good will as the only candidate in the field for whom they can conscientiously cast their votes, as with them assumption of an obligation to support a principle as to their preferences In selecting men to govern Americans is no idle form, but the tr.kingof a deliberate resolution they will observe to the end of their lives and bequeath to their children, they are naturally, and by force of ancient habits [hatred of American and Irish patriots], as well as by principals, conservative democrats, and as few among them are office-holders or office-seekers, they will vote for Cleveland as a man after their oum hearts.''''
We are further informed by the Know-Nothing Colonel in Bennett's organ, that the institution was almost disbanded about tbe time of breaking out of the rebellion. But the gallant Colonel did not give the true reason The reason, however, was that the cowardly Know-Nothings, when strong in numbers, and in the plentitude of their brutal power, coula burn convents and assault defenceless nuns because they knew their antagonists were not powerful enough to oppose them but when the time came they called all true men to the field in defense of the flag that protected them when infants in their cradles, they shrunk aside, and, like their bigoted prototypes, the English Orangemen, left others to do the fighting.
But, as their mouthpiece observes, the society has been revived again in the interest of Grover Cleveland. The rebellion has longed been crushed, war is no longer imminent, and the reptiles who fled to their holes fcr safety when the alarm of war was blown, now sneak in the sunlight of peace to vent their venom against those who trampled them out of sight in their march to union and independence.
Writing to Bennett (perhaps a brother Know-Nothing) the writer concludes with the following grand flourish:
Now, entertaining the sentiments we do, rejecting Blaine upon principle, there
Sir
THE TERRT! HAIJTB RXPRKS?, TUESDAY, MORNING,SEPTEMBER 23. '«°4
remains to the Know-Nothing but one presidential candidate whom they can conscientiously support. We Intend to elect Grover Cleveland or else die, like true Americans, to the mnslcof that'harp which hang in Tara's hall.'
The concluding part of the last sentence contains a deal of meaning. It conveys to the mind of the British Orangeman the fact that the Cleveland party will act in unison with the Orange party, and by voting against Blaine at the polls, have "a man after their own heartsteat is, an AngloAmerican Orangeman im the white house.
When the Know-Nothings themselves deny that Blaine was ever a member of their order, Bnrely, to say the least, it is mean and presumptious in any journal to endeavor to propagate the falsehood.
WISE AND OTHERWISE.
"OTJB TILLAGE BKLLK.
She was our village belle. Hear me tell How she flirted with the teacher5" And the single village preacher
And the swell.
She said she was eighteen. Was I green Sev'ral slender streaks of gray That through her hair did stray
Could be seen.
And to the church she often went Most intent On all the preacher said. And at his prayers her head
Low she bent.
Then she'd glance across the aisle At the style -That the village swell would fling, And she'd think to win a ring
And his pile.
And then behind her fan She would scan, And the teacher's jealous look, ". As his face rose over his book,
Thin and wan. W
But she wed none of these three, Woes#B to me! For my father wooed another, ft? And 1 have a second mother,
It is she! -+S3 —[From Life.
The' question of the hour—What time is it? It is said that side-laced shoes will be manufactured this fall.
Life: Average railroad dividends in round numbers—000,000. Atlanta is to have a. grand tabernacle for non-regular'church-goers. "Polecat college" is the name of a school situated near Sparta, Ga.
Ohio will send 100 varieties of wheat to the New Orleans exposition. The late Senator Anthony's estate proves to be worth about $600,000.
Female telegraph operators in Germany receive $240 a year with no vacation.
Eyebrows are made narrow by drawing together with the thumb and forefinger.
The wine making season of California is two weeks earlier than usual this season.
Velvet ribbon backed with satin or ottoman is largely used in autumn millinery.
In Mount Morris, Mich., a family, believing its members to be bewitched by an old woman in the neighborhood nicked the ears of all its pigs and cows to drive out- the devil.
You observe this one thing: the erfn didatewho rushes up and down tne land, swinging his arms and shrieking "We must work! "We must work!". is usually a fellow who never did a lick of work in his life.
A Yankee who was recently in Hali fax, Nova Scotia, beard a great deal about a wonderful dish called rodney, that was baked in a jar. At last he tried it, and found that he had tasted it before. It was hash.
Dr. Pratt, of London, states in a lec. ture that in 1,000 mp.rried men between the ages of 24 and 30 there are six deaths in the same number of bach elors there are ten deaths the widow ers number twenty-two.
A gentleman who was about to marry a plain girl said to his friend "It is not for her exterior but her inward beauty thatl marry her." "Then for goodness' sake," replied the friend, "turn her inside out."—rOhiwuyo Tribune.
A philanthropic London Lady has bought land in Manitoba on the Cana. dian Pacific railway, and is to establish a colony of deaf mutes. She will provide an instructor in farming, and is to expend a considerable sum of money in that experiment.
Norristown Herald: "The Modern Bartender's Guide" has just been issued by a New York publisher. The modern bartender doesn't need the guide as bf dly as the modern young man who patronizes the bar. A police officer too often acts in that capacity
It is Baid that only a few years before her death, Miss Catherine Beecher received an offer of marriage from a most worthy and estimable man. In repl. to his letter Miss Beecher sent the following answer: "Dear M: I was born in the year 1800. Yours respectfully."
The remarkable petrified forests of Arizona are being worked by a western stock corporation that manufactures jewelry, mosaics and other ornaments from the siliceous wood. The colors include black, white, red, green, yellow and brown, and can hardly be disi. pronounced a great hit, has been introduced in New York. The illumination is provided by covering the top of the soup with brandy, which is then burned. Meanwhile the diner sits and wonders what is tbe use of wasting any brandy to spoil so much soup.
tingusbed from moss agate or onyj "An "Illuminated soup," whf
An American, writing from an English watering place, asks the reader to fancy a fashionable town without a negro, a mulatto, a quad or octoroon, or even a sexdecimaroon—if there be such a dilution. Of course there are no mint juleps, no whitewashing "wuff mentionin'," no shaking of carpets of any consequence, and no waiting on of really artiBtic description.
Waterbury American: The utility of the bicycle is proved by the Vermont farmer who takes his son's machine, suspends the wheel a few feet from the floor, removes the tire, substitutes an endless rope which he also places on the driving wheels of agricultural machines, then makes his Bon mount and furnish motive power for shelling corn, cutting hay, turning grindstones, etc.
Irish butter seems to be the best At the international exposition held this year at Calcutta, it was awarded a diploma and medal. The samples exhibited had voyaged from Ireland to India, and had withstood several months'exposure to tropical heat The next in merit was a sample of American oleomargarine, but it was thrown out by the judges on learning its nature.
Sandwich Island breeders are shipping blooded hones from this country.
mmm
IW
Belva Lockwood on tbe Otber Canid a Baltimore Son.
"It has been suggested that in the event of yonr election yon wonld tender seats in your cabinet to Cleveland, Blaine, Bntler and St John. Have you any idea of doing bo?" "Well, I don't know about that," said Mrs. Lockwood. "I have not aa yet thought of them in that connection. One thing is certain, if I am elected I will call to my cabinet the most talented men and women I can find. It will not be made up of party men add women. 1 like Blaine very well, and approve of his policy while he was in the state department. He generally sees ahead. As for old Ben, we have been chums for along time. He has a firm hold upon my affections, because he is right on the woman question and on the labor question.. I might do worse than put him in my cabinet. I feal kindly for St John, because he is with me on the temperance question. As for Cleveland, he is a stranger to me, and I-cannot make make much out of him. He does not say much about anything in his letter of acceptance, except that he is in accord with hia party. No I do not think I will put him in my cabinet." "Will you dispense wine at your entertainments at the Whiie House." "I shall not give wine to my guests under any circumstances. I hear that the diplomatic corps will be disgusted if they do not get wine, but if they want wine they can pay for it ana drink it elsewhere."
A Scandal About Belva
Washington Special to the Enqriter.
The scandals on presu^ntial candidates are, it seems, not to be confined to Blaine and Cleveland aldne. Now comes Colonel Wood, who at one time was chief of the secret service, who thus arraigns Belva Lockwood, Washington's petticoated lawyer, perambtilatiag the streets on wheels, with her long, red stockings, trudgingly works her canvass, bobbing up and down the pedal propellers of a tricycle. She is the heroine of this campaign and a trump card in her profession. An instance of her sharp practice will suffice to show the peculiar tendencies of her acute legal mind. Belva was the counsel, or go-between, for a fair Washington female known as Ada who supposed they had a claim against the only native Texan in congress. Belva commenced with doublebarreled epistles upon the victim (Tom Ochiltree), and a settlement was proposed. Belva would not allow the fair Ada to show up or participate in the legal deal, and the only native of Texas compromised by putting up $300 to buy himself off. Belva retained $100 of the $300 paid by Ochiltree as her fee. And now the fair Ada declares that the feminine candidate for the presidency is a fraud, and that the object of Belva's nomination is simply an advertising dodge to catch ladies like herself who have congressional sweethearts. Ada insists that Belva shall return $50 of the $100 she kept out of the "love tariff" paid by Tom Ochiltree.
Tbe National Game a National Danger. Raleigh Biblical Recorder.
Love for our country and best interest of the church of God and the rising generation must sooner or later arouse the Christians everywhere to the danger which is imminent. In the interest of the wives and children dependent on men wasting time and talent on these games, in the interest of the business character of our young men, in the interest of good feeling between neighboring and distant towns and villages which is being torn by quarrels jealousy, and ill will growing out of match games, and for the sake of the financial and religious interest of thb whole countiy, north and Bouth, let's check up a little on the base ball ex citement.
I hear that some sections in the country even the fields are being prepared as baseball grounds which ought to be planted in corn and cotton, peas or potatoes. Farmers say they find it difficult to keep their boys and horses at home when it is announced that a game of base ball it to be played near by. A friend tells us that he was un able to get a doctor's prescription filled in a neighboring town because the drug stores were closed that all might attend the game.
When a game is to be played here handbills are scattered and posted in all directions, gates opened on the grounds, admissien fees collected amounting to from $25 to $60. Was the like ever known before
Easy to See Through. r¥'^
How can a watch—no matter now costly—be expected to go when the mainspring won't operate? How can anyone be well when his stomach, liver or kidneys are out of order? Of course you say, "He cannot." Yet thousands of people drag along miserably in that condition not sick abed,but not able to work with comfort and energy. How foolish, when a bottle or two of Parker's Tonic would set them all right. Try it, and get back your health and spirits
THE
Ideal
CALIGRAPff. The best
smmttma
Eising
writ-
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-ur 78 West Wash
ington Street, Indianapolis. ISBBIIiL & MOiLBR, Agents, Terre Haute, Ind.
Taught and In practical use at the Terre Hante Commercial College.
Agents wanted for authentii edition of his life. Published at Augusta, his home. Largest, handsomest, cheap*
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ALLEN & CO., Augusta, Maine.
C.F. ZIMMERMAN, I5ru.ggist,
SOUTH EST CORNER MAIN AND THIRTEENTH STREETS.
Mount Auburn fOUNCLADIES' INSTITUTE CINCINNATI. «•*_!tmr HefcBnjL BsmUfnl locstlon, (*nragroands.Tlormigh acboUrshtp. BcatMasie tnd
Rose Polytechnic Institute, A SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING.
Entrance Examination, Tuesday, Set tern her 16th. For catalogue address
CKARLB30. THOMPSON,Pre8ident,
lli-^»i»S!^ia^l
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CZEMA, or Salt Rheum, with Its agonand burning, Instantly relieved by a warm balh with ClTilCURA SOAP, and a single application of COTICURA, the great 8kin Cure. Tbia rr pea ted daily, with two or three doses of CUTICURA REsOLNENT, the New Blood Purifier, to keep the blood cool, the perspiration pure and unii-ritatlng, the bowels open, the liver and kidneys active, will speedily cure Ecxema, Tetter, Ring-worm, Psorlosia, Lichen, Pruritus,' Scaled Head, DandrilF, and every species of Itching, Scaly, and Pimply Humors of the Scalp and Skin) when tne best physicians ana all known remedies fail.
Will McDonald, 2543 Dearborn St., Chicago, gratefully acknowledges a cure of Salt Rheum of head, neck, face, arms and legs for seventeen yars not able to walk except on hands a il knees (or one year not able to help himself for eight years tried hundreds of remedies doctors pronounced his case hopeless permanently cured by Cntlcura Resolvent (blood puriAer) internally and Cntlcura and Cutloura Soap (the great skin cares) externally.
Chas. H. Hoaghton, Esq., lawyer, 28 State rt., Boston, reports a case of Salt Rheum under his observation for ten years, which covered the patient's body and limbs, and to which all known methods of treatment had been applied without benefit, which was completely cared solely by the Cntlcura Resolvent, leaving a clean and healthy skin.
F. H, Drake, Baq., Detroit, Mich,, suffered nntold tortures from Salt Rhenm, which appeared on his hands, head and face, and nearly destroyed his eyes. After tne most careful doctoring and a consultation of physicians failed to relieve him, he used Cutloura Remedies, and was oured, and he has remained so to date.
Mr. jr*hnThlel,WUkesbarre,Pa.,writes: I have sufiered from Salt Rheum for over eight years, at times so bad that I could not attend to my business for weeks at a time. Three boxes of Cntlcura, and four bottles Resolvent, have entirely oured me of this dreadful disease.
Sold byall druggists. Price: Cutlcura, SO jents Resolvent, 1.00 Soap, 25 cents Potter Drag and Chemical Co., Boston, Mass. 9end (or "How to Care Skin Diseases."
rilTICURA SOAJP. An eqqnislte Toilet, wu I Bath, and Nursery Sanative.
FANFORD'S RADICAL CURE FOB CATABRH. Complete Treatment with Inhaler for
One Dollar.
fPHE Great Balsamic Dlstillation of Witch Hazel, American Pine, Canada Fir, Marigold. Clover Blossoms, etc., called 8anlord's Radical Care, for tha Immediate relief and ermanent cure of every orm of Catarrh, from a simple cold In the Head to Loss of Smell, Taste and Hearing, Cough and Catarrhal Consumption. Complete treatment, consisting of one bottle Radical Cure, one box Catarrhal Solvent
•and one Improved Inhaler, In one package. may now be had ct all Druggists for ir.00. Ask for SAVfO&D'S RADICAL JORK.
kTheonlyabsolutespecific
Boston.
Test Yonr Bating Powder To-Day!
Brand® advertised as absolutely pure ooxrajfejErr
THE TEST!
Place a can top down on a hot utove until boated, then remove tbe cover and Kroeli. A cbem* 1st will not be required to detect the pretence of
PR I
mm
DOES NOT CONTAIN AMMONIA.
Ila IlMltkftilMU Du NEVER Bora QaMtlonxt. lnamIlllonhomesforaquartCTof*centary it lukictood the consumer's reliable te»t,
THE TEST OF THE OVEN. Price Baking Powder Co.,
HAEKBSOV
Dr. Price's Special Flavoring Extracts, Tbe strongest, roost delicious and natural flavor known, aud Dr. Price's Lupulln Yeas! 6ems
For Llgbt, Healthy liread,The Best Dry Hoji 4*: Yeast in thu world. FOR 8ALE BY CROCERS, CHICAGO. 8T. LOU 18.
1884"
Terre Haute Ice Company.
Notwithstanding the high river and Ice harvest at Terre Hante, we, as usual, will have a full supply for all demands, both local and foreign. We will sell the best lake ice, solid and pure. Orders glvci" .... the office, prompt^
SALESMEN WANTED.
We are In want of a few men to soclclt orders for the sale of Choice Nursery Htock. To men who can maae a success of the business we can Klve steady employment and good pay. (Previous experience in the business not essential.) -PPly for terms with references to
L. L. MAY, CO., Nurserymen, STi*' Rochester, N. *. Our specialties are New Fruit and Ornamental Stock,
PILES! PILES!
Sure cure by using DR. VOLKER'S never falling PILE REMEDY. Have made many cures in this city, to which 1 can refer those interested.
City office with Barker A Alvey, «6I Main street. Home office Dennison, ill. Address all letters to home office.
Your respectfully, L. VOLKE RS
0HRI8T KAISER HENBY AHLBURO.
KAISER & ABLBliEO, s'0
UPHOLSTERERS,
No, 104 Hortk 4tk St., Terre Baate, M. All orders promptly filled at very Reasonable Rates, ana all work guaranteed.
a aa rail a
seminary,
IiKQAXi.
N1
OTICE TO NON-RESIDENT.
To Ahrend H. Luken, or whom It may concern: Where aa. On the 15th day of October, 1883, by order of the Common Council or the city of Terre Haute, Vigo connty, Indiana, the city engineer of said city made an estimate of monies dae to Charles T. Chadwick, assignee of Caleb Jackson, contractor with said city for improving Third street between Oallck and Osborn streets (east side), by grading, graveling and enrblng same, which work lias been done by said contractor as contracted, and, In pursuance of said estimate, an estimate was made on the following described real estate, to-wit: Lot number three (3) In Luken's subdivision of part of oat-lot sixty-six twenty-eight (28), town
N
lying twer
in section ve (12), north
range nine (8) west, in the city of Terre Haute, county of Vigo, and state of Indiana, belonging to Abrens H. Luken, and, whereas, on the 8th day of September, 1881, the said Common Council ordered, that a precept issue to the undersigned treasurer of said city for the collection of said assessment, which precept 1b now in the hands of said treasurer, and, whereas, tbe sum of thirty nine-ty-three one hundreth (S30 93.) dollars Is now due on said estimate from said Ahrend H. LuR$n, and, whereas, said Ahrend H. Luken is a non-resident of the city of Terre Haute. Now, if the amount due aa aforesaid, upon said assessment, is not paid within twenty (20) days after the date of this publication, I, the said treasurer, will proceed to make the same by levy of said lot.
C. A. ROBINSON,
Treasurer City of Terre Haute.
OTICE TO CONTRACTORS.
Tkrkk Hautk,Ind., September 23,1884. Sealed proposals will be received by the Common Council of the city of Terre Haute, Ind., at their next regular meeting, lesday evening, October 7th, 1884.
For the grading, curbing and graveling of Fifteenth street, from the south property line or Locust street, to the north curb line of Chestnut street, in accordance with plans and specifications now on file In the office of the city clerk.
Proposals must be made on regular blank form, to be had at the office oil the city engineer.
Proposals must be accompanied by a bond In the sum of two hundred dollars, (S200) signed by two disinterested sureties, as a guarantee that the bidder will enter into contract within five (5) days after the ftw&rd Is si&dOt
Envelopes containing bids must be en dorsed with the name of the street, for which the tender Is made.
Common Council reserves the right to reject any and all bids. By order of the City Council.
GEO. R. GRIMES. City Engineer.
PPLIOATION FOR LICENSE.-
The undersigned will apply to the Board of County Commissioners, at their regular session, which commences on the 1st Monday in October .for license to retail spirituous and malt liquors in less quantities than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing the saa% to be drank on my premises. My place of business is located at southeast corner of Fourth and Tippecanoe, lot No. 15, block 1, Sibley's addition.
:!5?'s?-
#.
we know of.'
-Med. Times. "The best we have found .li a lifetime of suftering."—Rev. Dr. Wigrln, Boston. "After a long struggle with Catarrh the Radical Cure has conquered.' —Rev. S. W. Monroe, Lewlsburgh, Pa. "I aave not found a case that It did not reileve at once."—Andrew Lee, Manchester, Mass. Pottkr Drug
and Chemical
I It New Life for Shattered L,L IN ClNerves, Painful Musr*(n cles and Weakened Or-
uTAivj,
gans, Collins' Voltaic jClectrlc Plaster instantly aflects the nervous system and banishes pain, nafvousness and aeblnty, perfect Electro-Gal-
ELECTRIO
W A pTCRjvauin Battery com»Av I w' blned with a highly medicinal plaster for 2c. All druggists,
FRANCIS MoHUGH,
Picnic
rl
FOR-
SHOE BUYERS.
a a
Co.,
Before Receiving Our Fall Stock.
We have'marked down every pair of Men's Low Cut Shoes less than cost. To parties in want of Boots and Shoes, we can save youjmoney.
LOOK
Ladles' Toe Slippers, 60c, worth J1.O0 Ladles' Cloth shoes, 50c, worth 91,50 Ladies' Button 8hoes.tl.25, worth $1.75 Men's Boots, 75c., worth S2.00
ALL GOODS DOWN, DOWN. We are offering the remainder of our Furniture, Stoves and Queensware stock at near one-half of their value. It must be disposed of in thirty days, as we are determined to close up that line of our business,, positively.
J. R. FISHER,
325 and 327 Main Street.
Main street fancy prices and leave your measure with
ALLEN,
The Merchant Tailor,
Corner Sixth and Ohio Streets, Best goods and trimmings kept. Good work and a perfect fit guaranteed.
New Advertisements.
ADVERTISERS
By addressing GEO. I'. BOWELL A CO., 10 MpruceHt., New York, can learn tbe exact cost of any proposed line of ADVERTISING in American Newspapers. 105page Pamphlet, 10c.
FACTS FOR EVERY AMERICAN
THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY
Its Political: History aad Iaflaence.'
BY PROF.
L. F. PERDUE, £v
to drivers, or left at attended to. Proprietor and Manager,*^
No. 26 Nortfc Sixth St.
for both sexes
ImCIIIfi |225 per year. Unsurpassed advantages. Address Oso. W. Cook, Ph, President, Amenta. N. Y.
•-i.
J.
XX. PATTON!
A book for every voter. It shows how the Democratic party ban opposed every measure' but one that has been adopted as the permanent policy of the country. Buy it, read it, and send it to some Democratic friend or doubting Repubcllan. It reveals surprlsingand forgotten facts.and must have a powerful Infiuenoa. 16mo., Cloth »1. FORDS, HOWARD A HUL BERT, 27 Park Place, New York.
Orders received at the office of this paper.
NEW COMBINED REMEDY.
SPremature
UFFERERS from Nervous Weakness, Decay, Lost Manhood and other distressing results of youthful Imprudence, etc.. radically cured by the remarkably effective new scientific remedy -by DIRECT APPLICATION^and ABSORPTION—recently discovered by Dr. J- Torres, Paralra, F. B. 8., London, England, Royal Hospital. Highest medical endorsement. Circular free. Address
PAREIRA CHEMICAL COMPANY, Chicago, 111.
WTLLIAX CLIFF. J. H. CLIFF. C. J». CUFF.
Terre Haute Boiler Works CLIFF & CO., Proprietors. Manufacturers of Iron Tanks, Jalls,8moke
Stacks, Breeching and Sheet Iron Work.
Shop oa First St» Between Walaat aad Poplar,
TERR* HAT7TZ, I WD.
Repairing prpmptly attended to.
A
DDI7F
8611
1
six cents for postage
,,,fcl-,and
receive free, acostiy
25c. Weekly!
THE
WEEKLY
Will bel tarnished from this tlifie in unt
November 15th
-FOR-
This will give the subscri
ber two issues of the WEEK
LY after the election on No
vember 4th, in which
returns of
During the Campaign the
Exprte&s will contain in full
all the proceedings of import
ant political meetings as well
as all the important domestic
and foreign news.,
A.D DRB38S
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
PROFESSIONAL CAPPS,
I. H. €. ROYSlC
Attoraey*#Law, No. 503 1-2 MAINlTREET.
Mi. E- Knowles, VETERINARY SURGEON.
Office,Rooml 7 Savings Bank Building
i(
10 to 12 o'clock a. to 5 o'clock p. m. to8 o'clock, p.m.
OFFICE HOURS.
Dr. W. C. Eichelberger,
OCULIST and AURIST, Boom 18, Savings Bank Building TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA."
Office Hours 8
2 to S p.m.
to 12 a. m., and from
IIRS. filCHAKVM & VAN YALZlfl,
3" IDentists, Office, S. W. Cor. Fifth and Main Sta., ENTRANCE ON FIFTH STREET.
Communication by telephone. Nitrons Oxide Gas administered.
DR. J. E. DUNBAR, OCULIST
Late of the firm ef Haley 4 Dunbar. Chronic Diseases of the Eye a Specialty. Office, No. 232 Sonth Fifth streei.
Drf. J. E. DUNBAR,
Box 1538, Terre Haute, Ind.
Office Honra—7 to 10 a. m. 12 m. to 8:90 and 5 to 0 p.m. Dr. DunDar will send one package of medicine by express. Price, $1.00.
THBOHLTTKUB
IRON
[TONIC
and VIOOB of YOUTH. Dn pepsia, want or Appetite, IadlReatlon, Lack or Strength, and Tired Feeling absolutely cored. Bone*, mosolesana
4
K, 111 if
if!
4.
ft*
tiia
ivnei, muawii MM
nerves reeelve new force, ins tbe mind and Enlivens
g— supplies Brain Power. 9 A I Ea 92 Suffering from complaints VI KO peculiar to thvjlr sex will Bod In DB. HABTEK-S IBON TCHIO a wfa.ud speedy cure. QWcs a clear, bealuiy complexion.
Frequent attempts at counterfeiting only add to the popularity of tbe original. Do not expert* ment—gettlie Obioxwalawd BMT. "«jd
toot addrwM
ho
of goods which will help all, of elthie sex, to more money right away than any thing else In this world. Fortunes awi it the porkers absolutely sure. At once drw«TRtr« CJo.,
Aurdo'-
Maine.
LAND ill CEKTRU KENTUCKY
BLUE GRA8S AND TOBACCO LANDS at SlO to S7S. Unimproved timber land at S8 to *10 per acre. Address C. PHILIPS A CJ., Lebanon, Ky.
to The Dr. Hsrter1Cad.Oo.lt
t. Loul*. Mo., lor our "DRUAM BOOK." I 'nil of (trans* and uMtnl Information, fr**.#
W. H. HASLETT,
18 Soatfasrtfth Street.
Unredeemed Pledges for Sale.
F-AJENTTIT G-! HOUSE AND SI6M PAINTERS! Special attention given to bard wood finishing with oil or varnish. EATON & JACKSON, 811$ Mala St., in the Opera Livery Stable. Orders by mall^wlll receive prompt attention.
REMOVALI
Mrs. R. A. Hastings Haa removed her Millinery business from 422 Haln street to 652 Main street. Will have new goods in a few days.
STAR LAUNDRY
NO. 677 1-2 MAIN STREET.
Shirt, Collars, Cuffs & Laee Curtain^
DONE UP EQUAL TO NEW.
U'Ui" and rnU| Washings Taksw
if Ij'
full
I*)* t&iiit'*
the election will
be given.
ill- .*
tV.y
GEO. M. ALLEN,
•j*-*
a
Proprietor of Express,
ph?K':
'/j
th.
i,,-X
