Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 18 October 1884 — Page 2
31 I
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ft'mtrn
Yonr Bating Powder To-Day!
Brands adrertlscd ats absolutely pare
f*l g/ THC TOTI^^ /U«#
a
WM
^MdfiheBnaKrfttla#floveruu)mseti.
!$
MD
ofl,and
Aehem-
will no* be required to detect tbe preeenoa of
DOES HOT CONTAIN AMMONIA. ik •i.lltM.m Em NEVER Bmb Qa«Umd.
(a
a
million home, for
a
Jpi win nil
AETS
DAILY EXPRESS.
'-.i-
of
?iress
ss®# -Nine
if.
PB
quarter of a century it
UM
consumer". reliable teat,
THE TEST OF THE OVEN. Price Baking Powder Co.,
Ok Price's Special Flavoring Extracts, SbsvtroagMt,most deHdoaeand
_,
natural
flavor known,and
Br. Price's Lupulin Yeast fiems
hr U.U,
Drr H°P
FOR SAITB BY OROCER8, BT. LOUIS.
LYON'S KOZOTHIUM.
Krone USINB. JI-A-EM TO THE GRAY. ijtOtft
KOZQTHIVW
is npt a
DVE,
but aekarfri-
purely as a tonic to the ha.r
I. /**DacaettUjy
-AOXKIUS
.i-to^abrie.3
ening
one
FBLLF'
circulation of the icalp, whereby
festwss the natural action,and
as a result restortt
Hdtvral ivbr to the nair, leaving It soft and
AUIUUV{
Unlike all other so-called restoratives,
btirSy bee Irom Sulphur, Nitrate Silver, and
and ideleterious chemicals. It is an
W«-
..}ifttiair Drtuing, defositinf no sediment vfa» does HOT stain the skin,
nor soil the 'moA
Address
A. KLKFBR & CO. Indianapolis Ind.
Ttom One of the
Best Known
A."Klefer'&
Insurance
Hen In Indiana. iNDiANAfOWS, Julv 5, jm.
Co.: Gentlemen-For som
tlm«my
hair basbeen
falling out, threat
with baldness.
TTtttr
otntr
I used Ayer's
Vigor, Hall's Hair Renewer and
remedies, with no effect. My scalp baa always given me trouble, being covered with scales, the result of a sorofuloiis affection. Kecentl I was prevailed upon
td t^yxyon's Kozothlum. The effect
'lialr stlmulated In
"natur eolor,and is
'tiatow using
•*.4s.
was
wonderful. Not only was the falling off of tbe hair.arrested,and a new gro wth
Its stt ad, but
scale!
removed from the scalp,the
which Is
no longer feverish and uncomfortable, but oool and healthful. My hatr which 'wag exceedingly gray
has resumed its
soft and glossy.
I am
it upon iny beard, to which It
restoring Its former natural color though more slowly than to my hair,
•Recommend It
with confidence as a med,
iclne for thescalp and a hair tonic and a hair restorer. R. E. BKAKD3LEY.
1
#KO. M. Aiiro, PHOPHIICTOA
i*UjBLIUATION OFFICE—No. IS South fiftb Btreet, Printing House ttqu»re €nUrcd seeond-class matter »t
the
onloe,as at Terra Haute, Ini
1
*«riaui UK ouDiCnotion
^iliy Express, per woci per year
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six months 3 75
it ten weeks 1 60 issued every morning except Monday, »rid delivered by carriers.
Terms for the Weekly.
ae copy, one year, paid In advance.„8i 35 ae copy, six months 65 for olubs of flvo there will be a cash dlstint
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jt,
the above rates,
if preferred Instead of the oash, a copy the Weekly Express will be sent free the time that the club pays for, not
'iss than six months. For of ton the same rate of disant,elubsIn and addition the Weekly EX-
:./esa free
for tho time that the olub pays
ir, not less than six months. For clubs twenty-live the same rate A discount,of and in addition the Dally Kx-
for the time that tho olub pays for, less than six months.
POBtJl
UiT f'BUoe.
Weekly.
dWAtl
aid in all casnti when sent Hcrlptloiis payable
In
ad-
Advertisements
Parted lu
the Dally aud Weekly on reas-
anblo terras. For particulars apply at address the office. A limited amount )1 advertising
will be pnbilRhed
in
the
six months snbsorlbors to the
"Weekly Express
will be supplied
"Treatise on
jjiaes"
FREE
the Horse and His
Dls-
and a beaatlfully illustrated
u^anao. Persons snbsorlbing
Al-
for the Week-
for one year will receive in addition to Almanac a railroad and township
map of Indiana. WHXftB TRIE kXPRBSS IB ON ILK. Jjondon—On flle at American Exchange .u Europe, M9 Strand.
Paris—On Hie at American Exchange In tiris 36 Boulevard des Capuclnec.
ATI0NAL REPUBLICAN TICKET.
For President,
JAM ICS O. BLAINR, of Maine.
For Vie® President, JOHN A. LOGAN, of Illinois.
FOR COKGUBSS.
JAMES T. JOHNSTON, Of Parke County.
STATE TICKET. For
Governor.
WM. U. CALKINS.: For Uautansnt Governor. EUGENE BUNDY.
For Secretary
IROBERT MITCHELL. For Auditor. BRUCE CARR.
For Treasurer.
R.R.SHIEL.
For^Attorney General]
W. C. WILSON."
t.((^superintendent
Public Instruct
B. C. HOBBS.
For Boporter Supreme Court.
W. M. HOGGATT.
For Judge Supreme Court.
E. P. HAMMOND.
COUNTY TICKET.
For Treasurer,
SAMUEL^T. JONES. For Sheriff, W. H.F1SK.
For
Judge of Circuit Court, GEORGE W. KARIS. *For
Prosecuting Attorney.
"DAYID:W. HENRY. For tate Senator, DICK. I. MORGAN.
For
Representatives,
.P. FRED LEE. F. C. DANALDSON. -T For Commissioners, First District, L. W. DICKERSON. Pooontl District, LAWRENCE HELNIi.
For Coroner,
PETER KORNM AN. For Surveyor, FRANK TUTTLE,
5
*.'
TERRE HAUTE J.- I
•dels f'uexcelled Advantages
It is
top down on hot store nattl
a site for
MANUFACTURES* and COMMERCE. Thfc Center of a Rich Agnqjji'aW and Timber Region.
Railroads
Center
4 \b on
the Great
BLOCK COAL FIELDS.
Steam Goal delivered to Fuctorie* at tlFl CEN1BPB& TON,
The Democrats have discovered that be people want free trade, anil It is on iast that issue that they are going to vin the election in Indiana.—[Inditnapolie Sentinel, September 6.
"I have no personal grievance with tor. Cleveland. I shall speak from the •ecord, and I will ask to be ostracized fan all decent society if I cannot point co corruption stalking straight to the Joor of the executive mansion and knockjg at the door and coming out of the Joor, with all that corruption sought at Uie expense of the people. If I cannot jrove that bribes known to fail in the asiembly in 1883 were placed so near Mr. Cleveland that if he does not have the (toney he can get it at any time—if I tannot prove that I am not what I profess CO be."—[State Senator Grady before
l,he
Tammany committe, September 8, 1884.
There should be a rousing meeting at the wigwam to-night to bear Mr, Johnston.
Mr. Blaine yesterday put on record a very conclusive denial of the KnowKothing charge. ,.V1
The London Times speaking of the Ohio election says free trade is to be the dominating and prominent issue for the remainder of the campaign The Times is mistaken. Protection is to bear. that, relation to the campaign
Thomas A. Hendricks, Indianapolis. Ind.: The people don't want a change. Yours truly, Ohio.
Thomas A. Hendricks, Indianapolis lad.: There are indications that the people want a change. Yours truly West Virginia.
The New York World on the day before the election said Col. Oliver Payne, son of the Senator elect and the political representative of the Standard Oil company, had wagered $20,000 that Ohio would go Democratic yet we are told that the Democrats did not expect to cany the state.
A cable from St. Petersburg says the chief of police has ordered the proprie tors of hotels, restaurants and similar places, to remove the portraits of the Czar from public rooms, because disrespect is shown them by the public To one in this country this informa tion leads to the belief that it is about time the Czar's usefulness had been exhausted.
Some of the Democratic editors are more seriously affected by the result in Ohio than others. Watterson, for in stance, has an attack of the rabies. After alluding to the Republican victory as "au infamy of the most damnahl« ,lacn»:.r-:—» V-- —^"5 "-"is highly intelligent style to convince people that something has "gone wrong":
When the devil wants a gala day he goes to Ohio. Tuesday he found the element there prepared to give him royal reception. In the peison of the Plumed Ananias his nuncio had preceded him Black Jack, his coalheaver—and made after his own image—had been there too. What won der that he enjoyed himself, and left a curse that will stick behind him!
At this moment throughout Ohio the cry is: "Long live the Devil! All honor to Hell! 1,
The basis of rates for advertising in a newspaper is circulation. The Express has not raised its rates for a year, but in that time the circulation lias greatly increased. Beginning with November 1st new and higher rates will go into effect. Local notices that heretofore have been charged at ten cents a line for the- first insertion and five cents for each subsequent inser tion will be charged at the rate of fifteen and ten cents. This ratio of ratee
will be made on all space advertising. The Express is frequently asked to make its charges the same as prevail with other newspapers iu this city. This must not be expected. When the Express fixes a price it is for value given and all advertisers are requested to examine our books to the end that they may be satisfied on this point. Were the Express to fix its rates on a basis of comparative circulation with other newsapers it would make a greater increase than announced.
"BULLDOZING.''
Under this heading the Gazette of Thursday published a statement that Dudley Kester, formerly of this city, had arrived home from Dayton, where he had been in the employ of the "Western Car and Soiling Stock company." The Gazette's story of Kester's wrongs was so fall of highly wrought-up indignation that we give space to it as follows:
He [Kesterl is a Democrat, and at the election there on Tuesday voted the Democratic ticket. For so voting he was discharged Tuesday afternoon by the managers of the company, who, finding they could not bulldoze him into voting the Republican ticket against his convictions, determined to and did discbarge him. This is a fine specimen of partisan bigotry ana oppression. And yet when one considers that this Dig corporation is standing in with Blaine, who always was the friend, and no dead head either, of corporations, it is not to be wondered at that they should be so anxious to help along the gentleman who is making a great tour in special trains and on private palace cars. But it is carrying the thing something too far when they attempt to bulldoze and intimidate their employes and discharge them because they maintain their manhood. This is the sort of thing that must be rebuked next month.
The Express ascertained from the commercial reports and from the Car
'.
"r"V*
i.
rv
Works companyln this city that the only iristiMit.^Hi of the. kind was the Barnev a Smith manufacturing company. A telegram was sent to this ouipany inquiring about the story and the following is the reply which we submit witnout further comment. To the Express.
DATTOW,
O., October
17.—Dudley
McSweeny is to-day a British subject^ He was practically a British subject at .the timewlien he complains that the state department failed in'its duty to rescue'bim from prison, ile had been in Ireland for some time, had accepted the office of poor law guardian and is now a candidate for parliament, lie has necessarily taken the oath of allegiance to the English government.
Mr. Alexander Sullivan, Mr. John Finerty, Patrick Ford, and others whose loyalty to the Irish cause has never been questioned, have found no difficulty in convincing all who have heard them that Mr. Blaine did all that could have been expected of him in McSweeny's case. When such men as these declare that they are thor oughly satisfied with Mr. Blaine's course in the matter, there surely is no ground for any other ardent advocate of Irish nationality to misjudge Mr. Blaine.
In another column will be found extracts from Mr. Blaine's letter in reference to the Walsh case and from his letter of acceptance which are certainly good evidence that he is a staunch adherent of the doctrine that the American citizen must be secure in his personal and civil rights every-
where-\
THE TAEIFF ON WOOL.
If tariff raises the price of wool, course it raises the price of -what made of wool. The wildest tariffite out of bedlam will not deny that. And there are forty times as many who buy woolen goods as there are who sell wool. If the one votes for his interest in dear wool, why should not the forty vote for cheap wool?—[Rockville Tribune.
We have two woolen mills in Terre Haute and the Express reproduces the above to show how fallacious is the theorizing of these free [traders. The emphasis on the one person benefitted is especially commended to the attention of the men and their families who are supported bv emn]nvm»ni in mills, to tne merchants who furnish them tlie necessaries and much of the luxuries of life and to the farmers who find this home market for their wool.
This point tho Tribune would make is like most of those that are evolved by the free traders—based upon an erroneous statement of the facts, is like the rot that Gray is telling the people in this state when he narrates the incidents of a man's daily life, and gives the amount of tariff on each article of clothing, his working tools and his household goods. It is nonsense when all the facts are consid ered as in the case of the tariff on wool No mention is made of the benefit in wages to the workmen in theBe industries, to the community in the multi farious channels that distribute the money thus earned, or to the farmer finding a good homo market. Every thinking man in Terre Haute knows that a protective tariff on wool would not benefit alone Mr. Ellis and Mr. Jeffers, the owners of our woolen mills, as the Tribune- endeavors to make its readers believe.
TELEGRAPH FACILITIES. There is ground for the belief that we are to have what will surpass all former efforts to establish a competing telegraph company. There is alwayB the fear that no matter how promising the competition may be the Western ¥nion Company will at the most opportune time absorb its rival, rudely destroy the hopes of the public and proceed to make that public pay for whatever losses have been incurred in the short lived rivalry, together with the amount of capital required by the absorption of the competitor.
But the Baltimore and Ohio company is daily furnishing evidence that it has come to stay. It has the best of support in the substantial railroad corporation of the same name, and it is extending its service in a manner which leads to the conclusion that in it the long sufiering public will find a friend indeed.
There is no city where a competing company will receive a heartier wel come than in Terre Haute. The office of the Western Union in this city is one of the most profitable the company has in the country yet there is not thelslightest desire manifested to treat our people with the ordinary reciprocity that is observed in business relations. Accommodation is so far beyond the purpose of the company that our business men have ceased to expect anything in the shape of business courtesy. The Express believes it is stating a positive truth when it says that there is not a merchant or manufacturer in the city whose business requires frequent nse of the telegraph, who will not acknowledge, at least in private, that he is anxious for the time to come when there will be a competing line. Com* plainte by the traveling public ol the failure to keep the office open later at night and litre failures to meet the wants of the people are of daily occurrence.
By all means let as help any One who evinces a desire to help us.
®i r^«
&? K-ssj. 'ift?
Heater
has neither been employed or discharged by us.
BARNKYA SMITH MANOTAOTDBIKOCO.
THE ItoS WEENY CASE-
McSweeny is now in this country to take the stump for the Democratic ticket. His supposed availability to the Democratic cause lies in the fact that he claims to have been neglected as an American citizen by Mr. Blaine, when the latter was secretary of state under President Garfield.
yL
.: i-
SATURDA
Away TTjl
Burlington Free Press. "Is land high in Vermont f" asked a speculator of an old Green mountain farmer. "You just bet it is!" was the reply. "If t^ie trees wasn't so stunted the clouds couldn't get bj^ at all!"
What Theatrical Managers Want. Bob Burdette. "What do we want in our theaters!" asked a dramatic paper. As nearly as we can get at it, the managers seem to want more light and leas clothes.. Perhaps, however, we don't exactly get the proper drift of yonr question.
A Fnnny Typographical Error. Providenne Sunday Star. One of the funniest typographical errors ever made was in a reoent exchange. A reporter, in writing an account of a ball, said that Uie belle of the evening "looked an fait." The types put it that she "looked all feet." Now neither the lady nor the reporter is happy.
Pumpkins that Get Discouraged. St. John Counciling with New York Grangers. "I have seen a great many large pumpkins and watermelons since I came here to-day. We don't raise snch big ones over iu Kansas^ for there the ground is so rich that the vine grows so fast that the small pumpkins are »nm nnt. in being dragged over the ground."
It
is with considerable effrontery that he comes to this country under these cir cumstances to convince Irish-Ameri-cans that they should not vote for Mr. Blaine. What Irish-American who hopes for the independence of Ireland will put any confidence in the utterances of a man who voluntarily returned to that country and became a British subject.
Lots of Fun in This W orld*
Mew iork Sun. Wife—I notice a statement to the effect that in this city every year $32,000,000 are spent for liquor, but only $7,000,000 for religion. That's significant.
Husband—Significant of what}" Wife—That you men are having a plessanter in this world than you will in the next.
•.
Where Uncle Was. .iw
Philadelphia Press. The remains of an English traveler had been exhumed for interment in the family vault. When the coffin was opened the spectators started back in affright. "Why, these appear to be the remains of a lion." "Yesj" replied a nephew of the deceased, with a Bigb, "that's the lion ttat ate him up uncle's inside of him.. An Old Epitaph Up in the Granite HU1* Washington Capital.
Here is an epitaph which I transcribed from a tombstone in aNew Hampshire graveyard a few weeks ago. There was no lack of candor in that part of the granite state, evidently:
Here lies old Caleb Ham, By trade a bum. When Caleb dyed the Devil cryed: "Come, Caleb, come."
THE McSWEENEY CASE.
Tbe Facts In the
.Case—MeSweeney IJ»
the Kmploy of the Democratic Com mittee. New York Tribune.
McSweeny has-been engaged by the Democratic managers as a campaig speaker. He is now freely advertise 1 as an Irish patriot who lay in a Brit is dungeon when Mr. Blaine was secretary of state, and who was not released untilv Mr. Frelinghuysen interested himself in his behalf. He will now take the platform "to give the proofs of Mr. Blaine's insincerity and Republican cowardice."
It is to be hoped that McSweeny will also give the proofs of his own sincerity and good faith in presuming to lay claim to American citizenship after he had practically resumed citizenship in Great Britain by accepting the office .of Poor Law Guardian. This was ,tpje chief difficulty which Mr. Blaine en countered in negotiating for his re lease, namely, the u„,i ii/ abondoned his American citizenship and taken an office in Ireland Nevertheless, on the strength of this ambiguous claim to citizenship, Mr. Blaine succeeded tin securing for him from' the British govern* ment an offer of immediate release, he would agree, to leave Ireland and resume his residence in the United Spates. Mr. Alexander Sullivan has discussed this case in detail before Irish audiences, and convinced them that Mr. Blaine did everything in hijs power in behalf of McSweeny, and also of Boyton and Walsh. In fact, no bolder or more outspoken doctrine in regard to American citizenship could have been enunciated than was defined by Mr. Blaine in his letters of May 24 and June 2,1881. The following extract from his letter in reference to Walsh ought to silence McSweeny and the political tricksters who are UBing him iorhire:
If American citizens while within British jurisdiction offend against British laws,this got-' ernment will not seek to shield them from the legal consequences of their acts but it mnst insist upon tho application to iheir cases of those common principles of criminal jurisprudence which in the United States secures to every man who offends against its laws, whether he be an American citizen a foreign subject, those incidents to a criminal prosecution which afford the best safeguard to persona liberty and the strongest protection against oppression under the form of law, Which might otherwise be practised through excessive zeal. That an accused person shall immediately upon arrest be informed of the specific crime or offence upon which he is held, and that he shall be afforded an opportunity for speedy trial before an impartial court and jury, are essential to every criminal prosecution, necessary alike to the protection of innocence and the ascertainment of guilt. You will lose no time in making the necessary inquiries into the cause of Mr. Walsh's arrest and detention, in which it is probable Mr. Barrows, the consul at Dublin, may be able to aid you. And if yon shall find that the circumstances of the case, in the light of thiB and previous instructions, are such as to call for interference on the part of this government, you will make such temperate tat earnest representations as in you judgment nance to
will conduce to his speedy trial, or in case there is no specific charge against him, hia prompt release from imprisonment. It is desired that yon will report the result of your proceedings' to the department, with as little delay as convenient.
Where is the Irishman who can reasonably complain of the policy outlined in that masterly dispatch Mr. Blaine was not unmindful of the obligation of the state department to protect American citizens in their rights wherever they might be on the face of the earth. His public acts during his short term of office strengthened the popular conviction that he
was'a npmmtative Americanlut^lg?1ontin/h®
man. One of the finest passages of hiB letter of acceptance is wholly in line with his career in the state department:
The American citizen, rich or poor, native or naturalized, white or colored, mnst everywhere walk secure in his personal and civil rights. The republic should never accept a lesser duty, it can never assume a nobler one, than the protection of the humblest man that owes it loyalty—protection at home, and protection which shall follow him abroad into whatever land he may go on a lawful errand.
f||A Political Discnssion. Texas Lantern. They met on the piaza. Said one:r "What's your politics?" "Got none."
Who you going to vote for "Ain't going to vote." "When did you vote last?" "Never voted in my life." And then he went off aud said to another man: "See that fellow over their in the duster? Well,he's the biggest curiosity of the age. Ain't got no politics, never voted and aint never going to vote." "Duster! That ain't no duster. That's a woman tied up in a Mother Hubbard."
V« 1
WISE AND OTHERWISE.
iriFratskr ucr
Bound and deep her liquid
I
tell her
1
adoreT
Dare 1 stroke her hair?
Yes her faoe is dcee to mine— Breath like new-mown hay Pans ray cheek. My arms I'll twine
Bound her neck and say: LOy.dear, thon'rt mine for life. Tell me, Lily, now, What though I may
have a
The Vera Cruz government has economized by suppressing the private secretary to the governor.
Whalebone Jack," since the death of Rabbitt Hole Smith, is the most prominent Stockton, pal., citizen.
The governor of Zacatecas, Mexico, has forbidden gambling in the state under pain of the severest penalties.
A negro confined in the Stockton, Cal., jail tried to escape by butting his way through the wall with his head*!
The correct young man this winter, in place of the dude, will be stately, intellectual looking and quietly dressed.
New York intelligence offices a^e overrun with well dressed women who want to be governesses or ladies' companions.
A farmer in Ohio county, Ky., has tobacco measuring 43 inches from the stock to the tip of the leaf and SO inches in width. I
The strike of th# foti&i6yihe'fc ftorap^ shoers in New Orleans has come to a close by the employers acceding to the demands of the men.
A Lehigh Valley newsboy squee^dd a billiard ball into his mouth on a wager, and it required the skill pf three physicians tq'get it out,
The peasant farmers of France have about $200,006,000 on deposit in the government savings bank, upon which tliey are paid 4 per cent, interest.
Twenty-nine young bachelors of Foj-t Dade, Florida, have organized a club, each taking a binding and solomn obligation to get married in one year.
The brewers' metropolitan distrust, including New York, Brooklyh, Queens, Westchester, Staten Island, and Jersey .City, produc^d 180,000,000 gallons of beer last yea»tif"'
There is decided alarm agaih at New Orleans lest the capricious Mississippi
NISf OCTOBER 18 3 4."
eye-
Window of the heart. Looking in
I think I-spy
My own
counterpart.
Silken lashes, drooping o'er., ,s ... Dare
wife—
Can'tIibve my
cowf
—[Chicago News.
A Brooklyn grammar school has furnished two elopement cases. Only six women matriculated at Columbia college last year and only three this.
beetle, but the productiveness of ttje aad they have cured me. soil is impaired by the use of arsenic:' HKBRON.
'tfc io omJ lliQfc ymng widow, described aB "dashing," will give a ball during the coming winter at which no ladies but widows tliirfy
ye?arsop.f age or under will be present,
^'1 Mi CAMPAIGN CHAFF, i"' 'J
The Fanny Hen of the Press on Ohio Election. Chicago News: "Maw, what made paw buy that white plug hat "Your pa is a Democrat my child.?' "Be white plug hats fur Democrats?"
Yes, my child, they wear them to show that they are proud to belong to the great party of reform." "Why didn't paw wear his white plug hat to-day?" "I presume, dear, it is because white hats do not conform to the present weather. Your pa probably noticed that it is very cold to-day." Ajt-n
Chicago Herald: Over on Sangamon, street, at a .breakfast table, the wife observed as tlie husband took his seat: "The Republicans seem to have got away with Ohio." "How do you know He inquired."Have you seen the papers?" "No, not yet. Only I noticed that
Chicago Herald: "It's all very easVi to talk about putting your opponent's on the defensive," said a man at Democratic headquarters last evening, "but supposing they won't be put? I've just got back from Ohio, and I know what I'm talking about. Did any of you fellows ever engage in a prize fight? No, I presume not Well, I have. That is to say, I've seen prizefights. Once down in seuthern Illinois, wnen we had a mill, a fellow named big Jake Macomb, was matched against a countryman named Brown. Macomb had all the betting men on his side, aud the spectators were nearly all his friends, whether they{ had money on him or not. After the mill opened we noticed that the coun-1 trymen seemed to be forcing the fighting, and that whenever Jake undertook to get on top of him he got a terrible jaw-breaker. Finally some one yelled out: 'Put him on the defensive! Put him on the defensive, Jake!" Jake
nof
i^tthenthat
"him about four feet in the air,lifted a.
when he came down he gasped once or twice and exclaimed: 'Tain't no nse,' boys. He don't defense worth ad That is jnst the way it was in Ohio."
Chicago Herald: The Republican managers in Chicsgo are very mnch pleased over the enthusiasm shown by some of their agents throughout thej state. One man in particular living in Macoupin county greatly admired for his zeal. "If everybody in the state was as wide awake as that old man," said the secretary yesterday, "we would carry Illinois by 100,000. He keeps up posted on the situation of affairs each day, and he knows to a certainty how every man in the township is going to vote. He came in here the other day and introduced himself. I knew him at once. Said he: 'If nothing happens Bear Creek will give you eighty-seven majority.' 'Is anything likely to happen?' says I. 'Oh, no,' he replied, 'nothing special. You cant always tell, though.' After talking matters all over lie went home,
and the next day
I
uus townabip. Two
days
comer. At the end of the week we got a postal card saying: Takeoff three from Republican poll in Bear Creek. That there new man has eloped with old man 8mithere' young wife and Smithers and his son have taken the trail aud won't get back till after the election. We've got to stop this sort of thing or we're a goner. Wilkins and Uncle Josh Adams (Democrats) are getting well, the doctor says, and I don't know where we're going to make any gain now.' If all the workers were like him we wpuld have smooth sailing."
Tbe Schemer Practically IIInstrated. Buffalo Commercial Advertiser. "What do you do when people come in and bore you?" a warm personal friend asked of a merchant. "When they stay too long the office boy, who is very bright and knows just when to interfere, tells me that a gentleman is in the counting-room waiting to see me on important buei ness." "Hal Hal That's a capital way to get rid of bores who don't know—"
Just then the boy opened the door and sang out: "Gent in the countin'-room waitin' to see you on important business."
The municipality of Bondy, in France, got up a fishing match the other day. Ninety men and women took part in it, each of whom paid an entrance fee. After angling three hours the time was called, and the man who had caught the most fish received the grand prize.
The Western Union down-town New York office has just opened a pneumatic tube line up to Twenty-third street. It take two minutes and ten seconds to send a pouch the length of the tube.
A POSITIVE CURE
For Every Form of Skin and Blood Disease, from Pimples to Scrofula. I
have had the Psoriasis for nine months. About five months ago I applied doctor near Boston, who helped me,toa but unfortunately I had to leave,but continued taking medlolne for nearly three months,his but the disease did not leave.
saw
The latest*'inveiitifi'n is an electric
Mr. Carpenter' letter In the Philadelphia Record,audshis ca3» perfectly de scribed mine. I trUd theCUTICURA REME
DIES,
Using two bottles of
fan which is warranted ."to lower the |CuTictrHA and ConctrRA SOAP in proporI linn, and nallmvn«lf oompletelvcurea. L. F. BARNARD.
weeks, owing to the inability of the stone-cutters to prepare the delicatelycarved stones in time. I
tion and call myself comj WATXRVORO, N.J.
temperature of a room from ninety-five to sixty degrees in a few minutes.' Wotkon the Washington Monumeit I ECZEMA TWENTY YEARS haS been suspended for about tbr^e I Cared. Not a81gn of Its Reappearance
Your
CUTICURA has
shall always speak well of
,, ., -j, I
may go rusmng to the Gulf througp Burns,
the Atchafalaya and. leave the ci^y stranded as arr inland town.
According to the Drugman potatoes do not absorb the arsenics! preparations used for destroying the Colorado
THATKR JS,™.
Every species of Itching, Scaly, A]R~-
--..-J.
Scrofulous,Inherited and Contagious mors, with Loss of Hair, cured by CUTICURA RB80I.VBNT, the new Blood Purifier Internally,and CUTICURA and CUTICURA SOAP,
the
great Skin Cures,externally.
Sold everywhere Price,
Ji
BEAUTY
of."—Med. Times.
.,. found
you got in and got to bed in civilized I Dr. wiggin, Boston. "After
shape and that never happens when ele with
the Democrats elect anybsdy." "You are quite right, my dear, in your conclusions, if not in your premises. I'm mighty sorry £or the Republicans this morning. Democrats mav be sad, but they can get their hats on.
burg. Pa. "I have not found a case that lit did not relieve at onoe."—Andrew Lee,
Manchester, Mass. Potter Drug and Chemical Co., Boston.
r.-.r
CUTMJDRA.
sell a great deal of it. FRANK. O. SWAN, Druggist, HAVERHILI,, MASS.
BEST
FOR
ANYTHING,
Having used yaur
CUTICITBA REMEDIES
for eighteen months forTetter. and finally cured it,
I am anxious
to
commission.
any remedies
getitto sellon
1 can
recommend It beyond
I have ever for Tetter,
Cuts,
etc. In
fact,usedis
it thebes
medicine 1 have ever tried foranythlng. R.S.HORTON. MYRTI.E, HISS.
SCROFULOUS SORES.
I had a dozen bad sores upon my boly, and tried nil remedies I could hear of, and at last tried yonr CUTICURA REMEDIED
For the relief "and prevention, the instant
A E
A QUE AT COMPANY!
-v.".,
CUTICURA, 50
ots SOAP, 25 cts RESOLVENT, 11. Folter Drag and Chemical Co., Boston, tfaei
For Chapped and Oily Skin, CUTICURA SOAP.
SNEEZE! SNEEZE!
SNEEZE until your head seems ready to fly offjuntil your nose and eyes discharge excessive quantities of thin, irritating, watery fluid until yonr
fluid unt eod aches,
mouth and throat
Sarched,
and
1 od at fever heat. This is an Acute Catarrh, and 1» ins tan tl
relieved by a single dose, and permanent ly cured by one bottle of SAN FORD'S RADICAL
CURB
FOR
CATARRH.
Complete Treatment with InRaler $1.00. One bottle Radical Cure, one box Catarrhal Solvent, one box improved Inhaler, in one package, may now
be had of
all druggists for|1.00. Ask for
SANFOED'S
RADICAL. CURE. "The only absolute specific
we
knov
"The best
we have
in a lifetime of suffer
In sr."—Rev.
a long strug-
Catarrh,
RADICAL
conquered."—Revthe S. W.
CURE has
Monroe, Lewis-
it is
applied, of Rheumatism,
OUTALOB
en alg
llns' Plastars (an
1% Sciatica,
Conghs.Coids,Weak Back, Stomach and Bowels, Shooting Pains, Numbness, Hysteria, Female Pains, Palpitation,
Electric Battery
AMUSEMENTS. TO-NIGHT
a
-AT THB-
t'Ur
I^PERA HOtJSTin
Delighted and Enthusiastic Audiences.
The Grandest Play Ever Seen in Terre Haute.
E
BOSTON STORE?
-x.
I
J*
RF.SOLVENT, ^nd
it
done a wonderful
cur6 for me more than two years ago. Not a sign of Its reappearance slnoe. ft cured me of a very oad Eczema which had troubled me for more than twenty years.
Ladies*Toe SUppers, 60c,iworth 81.00 Ladles' Cloth]shoes, 50c, worth S1.50 Ladles'Button Shoes.S1^5,worth tl.75 Men's Boots, 75c., worth ^2.00
QBATBFXJL—COMFORTING-.
EPPS' COCOA.
BBEAKFAST.
"By a thorough knowledgeof
JAMES EPPS & CO.
com
bined with a Porous Piaster)and laugh atpain. SSc, everywhere.
S
E
N
-OF-
A I S
^WONDBRFVL SCENERY I
.n
A REAL STEAM ENGINE!
MATINEE SATURDAY AT 2 P. M.
Adnission to Matinee, 25 and 60 Cents.
Last performance to-night.
got a telegram read- W AlfTTZU eanr on
fa MSA
later along nection with their present line for 8,
letter was received telling us all about iP"1®-. Address M. CRESS WELL it. The one vote was tnat of a new '*3ISaywSctnreT*' strs«t,
CO
Phlll
London, England.
Terre Haute
FT?*
Ft*'*. 'ft
.j.'"*!
'W., T. SLria.uA..
J!
SHOE BUYERS.
*1, Sis i. ffJnjii.
•jfH
«JV
General Mark Down
,, .. ,V
1
if«
Ladies will do well to examine our Fall and Winter
We give good value and guarantee satisfaction.
:TT
:RL
O N E I E
vn
SSeo4
Walker, Trankla & Anderson,
Grand Picnic
jjr «.w.8R:
Before Receiving Our Fall Stock.
We
have marked down every
pali| of
Men's Low V'ut Shoes less than cost. To parties in want of Boots and, Shoes, we ean save you money•i '.Mfel'
itr LOOK
levy
frl
V- -V '.-p"
ih-.v -i
oY •H IMt una
J. R. FISHER.
3 &! ,4" "-rtt «J -J» x&rH&wilt"*aisci 325 and 327 Main Street.
tbe natur
al laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the fine properties of wellselected Cocoa, Mr.Epps has provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavored beverage which may save us many heavy doctors' bills. It Is by the Judicious nse of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack wherever there Is a weak point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with pure blood and a properly nOurlihed frame."—Civil Ser-
JTF
$
2-'
Our stock is entirely new and fresh,* no last season's goods, but they are in the latest styles, best material, finish and fit.
"a !*&<
ia -«4iogr.r.. i«r«&
main streetf^
IiEQAIi.
•J^OTICE TO NON-RESIDENT.
To Ahrend H. Luken, or whom It may concern: Whereas. On the 15th day of October. 1883, by order
of the Common Cocnoil
the city of Torre Haute, Vigo county, Inof diana, the city engineer of said city made an estimate
of
of said lot.v
the
$
vice Gazette. Made simply with boiling water or milk. only in pound tins by Orocers,Sold labeled thus:half
Infirmary,
3SS
Permanently established by Dr. R. D. Haley,of N. Y., late of Tentron, Mo., who has made the diseases of the eye a speclal-
successfully operated on In a Omo
few mo
ments. Office and rooms southeast corner Third and Ohio streets, opposite St. Charles from 6a. m. tol2 m.,hotel.1Office.honrs
from to
6 m.
&*<•,
Main street faney prI6ei and leave yon measure with
The Merchant Tailor, 1"
Corner Sixth and Ohio Street*. Best goods and trimmings kept. Good work and a perfect fit guaranteed.
WILLIAM
CLirr.
I.B.curr. C.N. CLIFF
Terre Haute Boiler Works
CLIFF & CO., Proprietors.
Manufacturers of Iron Tanks,Jailg,8moke Stacks, Breeching and Bheet Iron Work. Shop Oa First 8U, Between Walaat aad Porte,
TKRRX HAUTX, IND.
Repairing promptly attended to.
J.H. DUNCAN & CO.
WHOLESALE DEALERS IK
Paper, Paper Bags, Stationery, Twlass. StM* s«9 AUD 6flS*MAI2f BT&KKTj
T.,„ C. A. ROBINSON,
Treasurer City of Terre Haute.
J^OTIOE TO QUARRYMEN^
TERRE HAUTE,
*.SI
ALL GOODS DOWN, DOWN, We are offering the remainder of our Furniture,8tovesand Qneensware stock at near one-half of their valnc. It mnst be disposed of in thirty days, as we are determined to close up that line of our business, positively.\ «t
I
'JC-J*.*,
monies due to Charles T.
Chadwi6k, assignee of' Caleb Jackson, contractor with said otty for improving Third street between Gullck and OBborn streets (eastaids), by grading, graveling and car Ding same, which work nas been done by said contractor as contracted, and, in pursuance of said estimate, an estimate was made on tho following described estate, to-wit': tot number three'(8)realLuken's
in subdivision of part of
out-lot sixty-six
(66), lying in. section
twenty-eight (28), town twelve (12). north range (9) west,in city of Haute,nine county of Vigo,the
and state
diana, belonging to Abrens H. Lnken,ofInTerre and, whereas, on the 8th day of September, 1834, the said Common Conncll ed, that a precept issue to the underordersigned treasurer of said city for the collection of said assessment, which precept is now in the hands of said treasurer, and, whereas,'tbe sum of thirty nine-ty-three one hundreth (980 93.), dollars in now
due on said estimate from said
Ahrend
ilr
H. Luken*
and, whereas, said
Ahrend H. Lnken Is a non-resident of the city of Terre Haute. Now, If the amout due as aforesaid, uponfsald assessment.Is not paid within twenty (20)
days after
date this publication, I, the said treasthe urer,of
will proceed to make tbe
same^by1
Ind., Oct.
9.1881.
The Common Council of the oity of Terre Haute, Ind.,
will
receive sealed bids
at its next regiilaV meetingTuesday, October 21,1884.
For furnishing the city with stone for the city stone yard for one year from date of contract.
Tbe stone shall be of good hard limestone, what is known as bastard limestone,or
and furnished In such quantities as tbe city may reqnire. Tbecontractor may bid to deliver at the stone yard or on the cars, the ton, the contractor paying for weighing.by
Samples of the stone
the
contractor In
tends to fnrnish shall be delivered at tbe office of the Street Commissioner on or before the date of opening bids.
The city reserve#tne rignt to reject any or all bias. Each bid must be accompanied by a bond of Two Hundred (8200) dollars to secure
the
filling of contract if awarded to
bidder. J. E. VOORHBKS, Street Commissioner. jq'OTICE TO COAL DEALERS.
CITT CLERK'S OFFICE,
TKKKK HATTTIC, IKD., October 9,1884. Sealed proposals will be received by the Common Conncil of the city of Haute, Ind.,at their next regular meeting,Terre Tuesday evening, October 21st, 1884.
to
furnish the city with all the coal that may be required for tbe various departments from November 1st, 18S4, to November 1st,1885.
Bids are to be for the beat quality Brazil Block ooal per bushel, to ered wherever the same may be requlrad.delivofbe
The conncll reserves the right to reject any or all bids. Proposals must be aoeompanied by a ond in the sum of two hundred (BOO) ollars,to guarantee
bond in the sum dollars to guarantee
the
entering Into or
enterin
contract by person to wnom the same is awarded.the. By order of the common counetl.
the
GEO. W. DAVIS, City Clerk.
THfi0$,?lK0B
IRON ONI0
Will purity the BL( late tfi» LIVER and and RKSTOBK TUK
AND VIGOR.
ed. Bones, mtuoie. ana nerres receive newforee, Snllvens tbe mlad and supplies Brain Power. I Bafferingfrom complaints peeelUrto their sex will
Bod blSIU BABTB&'SIBON TCHIO a lab and •peeaycure. Gives a clear, healthy complexion, Frequent attempts at eoafettMtfelUng only add to tl4 popularity of the Do not axperi. Bient—«et the OAIOCHALoriginal.
AMP BKST.
of HnupulaHhliat«aittiiia,IML#e£
P-AJTISTTINGH
HOUSE AND Sl«l PAINTERS I
Special attention given to hard wood finishing with oil or varnish. EATON ft JACKSON, 811} Main St., tn the Opera Livery Stable. Orders by mail will receive prompt attention.
C. F.ZIMMERMAN, ..XDnaggiat,
SOUTHEST CORNER MAIN AND THIRTEENTH STREETS^ A select stock of drugs and toilet articles. Prescriptions acUrately compounded. aarNtGHT BELL at side door.
LOOMIS & GILLETT,
DENTISTS.
N o. 888X, Southwest corner af Fourth an~i Walnut streets, Terre Haute, ind. Teeth extracted without pain by the new patented process. All kinds of work done.
Ar
PRI7P Send six cents for postage 111*. E,-and receive free, a costiy ex a of goods whioh will help all, of eltbi» aex, to mor* money right away than any thing else la this world. Fortunes aws tt the workers absolutely sure. At onoe a Vi drwwTara Oo., AtSww^MalnoT
If
•f.
1
