Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 27 October 1884 — Page 2
LYON'S KOZOTHIUM.
BETOREUSINC. ATTER usm.8* A GIFT TO THE OKAY. 5JVON*S KOZOTHIUM is not a dye, but a clear fraE&mt ofl, end acts purely as a tonic to the hair foIUMtaad capillary circulation of the jcaljj, whereby restores the natural action 1 a result restores restores the natural action, and —, 2t$ natural color to the hair, leaving It "eautifuL Unlike all other 10-calIcd ttttoratng, it ntliely free from Sulphur, Nitrate Silver, ttd 4. noxious and deleterious chemicals. It is an iMU Hair Dressing depositing no sediment upent trait: does not stain the sVin, nor soil the roost MJau fabric* Address A. KIEFEB CO*
Indianapolis Ind.
SHELBYVJLLE, June 12,1884. Messrs. A. Kiefer & Co., Gentlemen —A year or two since I began to lose my hair. A prescription from a barer temporarily checked it, but after a orief time it again became to coma out oy handfuls, and a prescription by a physician again checked it.
Daring the last winter and spring it jgain. became dry and harsh, and anally left the top of my head bare. My attention was called to your Cozothium. I was afraid to UBe it, 'reading sulphur, lead or nitrate of silver. But matters were growing worse daily, and the fly season 'was close at hand, so I procured a bottle of Kozothium. The result is an excellent crop of hair, and strange to say of its original color, soft and pliable, a dean fcalp and no irritation, and this on the head of a man over fifty. I have no hesitation in saying it is the best hair restorer extant, and from trial I do not believe there is a particle of anything dangerous in it. Yours FCRULYT REV. B. MILLS
DAILY EXPRESS.
?BO. M. AUDI,
PROPRIKTOB.
fUBLICATION OFFICE-No. 18 South inn Street, Printing House Square. as seoond-class matter at the
Terre Haute, Ind.]
I entered as Vi*. Office, at Terms of SubscriDtion tfgiiy Express, i« gix months 3 ti ten weeks —....... 00
..16 ota
Issued every morning except Monday, gad delivered by carriers.
Terms for the Weekly.
0»e oopy, one year, paid in advanoe...fl 25 One oopy, six months
Nine Railroads Center Here.
til 1 on the Great BLOCK COAL FIELDS. Steam Coal delivered to Faclorict at tlF2 CEN18 PBJt TON
REPUBLICAN TICKET.
For President,
JAMES G. BLAINE. For Vloe President, JOHN A. LOGAN.
For Presidential Elector, State at Large, M1LO 8. HASCALL. For Presidential Elector, State at Large,
JOHN M. BUTLER.
For Presidential Elector, First District, JAMES O. VEATOH. For Presidential Elector, Second District,
WILLIAM B. ROBERTS.
For Presidential Elector,Third District. JOHN G. BERKSHIRE. For Presidential Elector, Fourth District
WILLIAM D. WARD.
For Presidential Elector,.Fifth District, MARSHALL HACKER. For Presidential Elector, Sixth District,
JOSIAH E. MELLETT.
For Presidential Elector,Seventh District THADDEUS S. ROLLINS. For Presidential Elector, Elgh District,
ELIAS 8. HOLLIDAY.
•For Presidential Elector, Ninth District, JAMES M. REYNOLDS. For Presidential Elector, Tenth District,
TRUMAN F. PALMER.
For Presidential Elector, Eleventh Dis.t, JAMES F. ELLIOTT. For Presidential Elector, Twelfth Dtst
JOSEPH D. FERRALL.
For Presidential Elector,Thirteenth Dist LEMUEL W. ROYSE. For Governor,
WM. H. CALKINS. For Lieutenant Governor, EUGENE H. BUNDY.
For Secretary of State, ROBERT MITCHELL. For Auditor of State,
BRUCE CARR.
For Treasurer of State, RODGER R.[SHIEL. For Attorney General, WILLIAM C. WIL8ON.
For Superintendent Public Instruction, BARNABAS C. HOBBS. For Judge Supreme Court, Fifth District,
EDWIN P. HAMMOND. For Reporter Supreme Court, WILLIAM M. HOGGATT.
For Representative in Congress, Eighth —Tklni•)At
Congressional District. JAMES T. JOHNSTON.
For Judge Circuit Court, Forty-third Judlolal Circuit, GEORGE W. FARIS. For Prosecuting Attorney, Forty-third
Judicial Circuit, DAVID W. HENRY. For Senator, DICK T. MORGAN. For Representative, FREDERICK LEE. For Representative, FRANK C. DANALDSON. |For County Sheriff,
WILLIAM H. FISK. For County Treasurer, SAMUEL T. JONES. For County Coroner,
PETERKORNMAN. For County Surveyor. FRANK TUTTLK,
For Commissioner, First District, LEVI W. DICKERSON. for Commissioner, Second &AWRBKQ8 BSlKIh
Sly Thomas is trilling to at quietly on a platform with a public speaker who tries to excite turmoil in the affairs of the state and country if he is sore that he will 'fte kept from taking sides in a contest the result of which he hopes might be to hifi personal benefit.
The Hon. Thos. A. Hendricks did not receive as muc?h applause in this cdty as Judge Clfimpitt of Illinois, whose advice ths.t Democrats arm themselves with pistols to resist the presence of United States marshals at the polls brought out more spontane ous enthusiasm than anything that has been said here by a Democratic speaker.
No one had given much thought to the subject of having United States marshals in Terre Haute or in Indiana until bull-dozer Democratic politicians came here and mads inflammatory speeches. Now that they display the fierce aspect the shot-gun Democracy of the solid south, there is created an occasion for the use oE United States marshals. It is demanded that the people be protected against an unfair election.
"New York and Indiana will do it," exclaims the New Xoi.k World. "How many fish have you caught?" euid a man to a youth at the end of a rod. "The one that's nibblin' and five more will be six," said the boy.— [Globe-Democrat.
Judge Lochmne, of Georgia, general agent of the Pullman company, who has just returned from Europe, tells Gath that "everybody in Ireland is for Blaine, and all the Irish in England are for him."
86
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Advertiiementi
inserted in the Dally and Weekly on reasonable terms. For particulars apply at or address the office. A limited amount advertising will be published In the Weekly, «B-AU six months subscribers to the Weekly Express will be supplied FREE With "Treatise on the Horse and His Dls Wises" and a beautifully Illustrated Al tnanao. Persons subscribing for the week. 17 for one year will reoelveln additions •/ie Almanao a railroad and township t$tap of Indiana.
WHERE THE EXPRESS IS ON FILE. London—On file at American Exchange Itl Europe, 449 Strand.
Paris—On file at Amerioan Exchange in #aris, 86 Boulevard des Oapuclnes,
TERRE HAUTE
Ifl rs Unexcelled Advantages as a Site for MANUFACTURES AND COMMERCE,
it is theKCenter of a Rich Agricultural and Timber Region.
Gath is moTed to remark that the perplexities attending guesses about the election make it very difficult for a newspaper writer to tell his readers how the contest stands. "Nearly every day," he says, "I meet twenty to fifty persons, and if I were to go off at half-cock and put down the impressions received in the forenoon, for example, and not await the impressions of the afternoon, I should be entirely one-sided in my estimates." If Gath will come to Terre Haute he will find many persons who can tell ail abont the eloction, and who have not heard or read anything except that which agrees with their hopes.
It is worthy of remark that Mr. Beecher never abandoned the Republican party until he had expressed a belief that there was no hell.—[Peoria Transcript.
Governor Clevelands letter to Mrs. Beecher presents the first instance, we believe, of a candidate for president undertaking to prove that a man's chastity should be estimated by acquaintance with the location of houses of illfame, and that if ho doesn't know where such houses are to be found he must perforce be virtuous.—[Globe-Democrat.
The fact that the Her. George L. Ball, of Buffalo, has just been re-elected for the fifteenth time as president of the Central Association of Open Communion Baptists, of New York, and that resolutions were adopted endorsing his course, will probably act upon the Demo cratic press like a red rag on an infuriated bull.
A Hint as Soft as a Maiden's Sigh. Mount Forest Confederate. Those subscribers who promised us wood will find our rear gate open.
St. John—A NameJWrit in Water. Lire. It is to be presumed that the presidential shoes which Mr. St. John hopes to fill are pump6.
Vermont School Harms.
Courier-Journal. In Vermont school teachers are not allowed to use tobacco. It io supposed that the school trustees have been seen by the gum manufacturers.
Kisses and Caramels a Campaign Cry. Burlington Free Press. It Belva Lockwood would appoint one pretty girl in each community to solit votes at one kiss per vote, our word for it she will be elected in November.
An Appropriate Hymn.
Christian Standard. At a recent Sunday school meeting in Clii cago a long-winded clergyman consumed too much of the time with a wordy address. When he sat down the leader of the meeting unwittingly announced the hymn beginning, "Hallelujah! 'tis done!"
A New Jersey Grand Jury.
Philadelphia Times. It's a great pity that this city cannot secure the services of aNew Jersey grand jury for term or two. The Mercer county grand jury has just indicted three turnpike companies for failure to keep their roads in good condition If such a jury was to get after a lot of Philadelphia street contractors what a rattling of dry bones there would be.
Cure for Jim-Jams-
Texas Northwest. We understand that there has been a missionary society organized in the vicinity of Bowie in order to properly dispense with the superfluous liquor imported to that town Fifteen barrels were miraculously taken away last week. The organization is determined to clear out the bad liquor and stop the numerous deaths from jim-jams.
Protection or Free Trade? New York Sim. According to the census of 1880 there were in Ohio 5,575 miners and 13,419 iron and steel workers. Of the latter 65 per cent, were native-born Ameri1,936 came from England, Scotland, and Wales, 1,436 from Ireland, 1,275 from Germany, and a very small fraction of the remainder from Hungary and Bohemia. The mining district be gins at Youngstown and skirts the Ohio liver from Steubenville (fortythree miles west of Pittsburg) down to Portsmouth, where the Ohio and Erie canal joins the river. The district is pierced about midway between SteuDenville and Portsmouth by the Hocking Valley, rich in ore and industry. Mr. Blaine made, prior to the recent state election, a complete tour of this whole district, and Gov. Hendricks, on behalf of the Democrats, spoke at the most important points. The Bole and accepted issue of the canvass among the miners and iron workers was protection. Here is the result in the counties where the interests are mining and manufacturing, compared with the October election in 1880, when the Republicans carried the state by 19,005 plurality. Mr. Newman, the defeated Democratic candidate for secretary of state, resides in this district, and led his colleagues somewhat on that account but his vote with that of his competitor, Gen. Robinson, is given because It was completely canvassed:
Scioto county chief town, Portsmonth. Iron workers number 1,091. Democratic majority in 1880, 58. Republican majority in 1884, 722.
Gallia county chief town, Galhpo-
lis. Iron workers, 2,092. Repu majority in 1888, 1,097 in 1884,
Republican
Meigs county chief town, Pomeroy City. Iron workers, 225. Republican majority in 1880, 1,226 in 1884, 1,481.
Perry county chief town, Somerset. Iron workers, 603. Democratic majority in 1880, 619 in 1884,125.
Lawrence county chief town, Irontown. Iron workere, 3,278._ Republican majority in 1880, 1,547 in 1884, 1,573.
Jackson county chief town, Jackson. Iron workers, 1,462. Republican majority in 1880, 554 in 1884, 687.
Washington county chief town, Marietta. Iron workers, 200. Republican majority in 1880, 70 in 1884, 86.
Columbiana county chief town, New Lisbon. Iron workers, 703. Re publicon majority in 1880, 2,156 in 1884, 2,218.
Athens county chief town, Athens, Iron workers, 215. Republicad majority in 1880,1,299 in 1884, 1,365.
Belmont county chief town, Bellaire. Iron workers, 864. Republican majority in 1880, 53 in 1884, 242.
Jefferson county chief town, Steubenville. Iron workers, 564. Republican majority in 1880,1,354 in 1884, 1,372.
Mahoning county, chief town, Youn.estown. Iron workers,
A net increase of 2,725 in one-seventh of the counties of the state over the very large Republican majority of 1880 ought to convince the leaders everywhere that "protection to American industry" will be the winning card in the national canvass, and that a similar proportion of gain in the heavy manufacturing states of New York, New Jersey, and Connecticdt will bury Cleveland in each by even greater majorities than were recorded against Greeley in 1872.
The Hangman's Office.
New York Sun. "Tke executioner is the minion of the tyrant." This was the exclamation of Robespierre, when he resigned his office as magistrate of Arras, because he was required to sentence a man to death. That declaration first endeared him to all generous Frenchmen. It was not thirst for blood, but fear for the safety of the new republic that he was endeavoring to establish, menaced as it was by every despotic power in Europe, that led him afterward to belie his own words.
The popular hatred led kings to give the office of executioner to particular individuals. The most b/utal wretches have thus in every age been the chosen agents for putting their fellow men to death. In Germany, for example, there was formerly such a man for every principality. The unhappy culprit was bound to a seat and blindfolded, after which the executioner struck off the head, generally with rare skill, at a Bingle blow. Thus Goethe in "Faust" makes Gretchen say in her mortal terror: "The bell tolls! The staff breaks! How they bind and seize me! Already am I hurried off to the blood seat! Already quivering for every neck is the sharp
_1AO1 /MnitfAWfl
fAW & I"
steel which quivers for me 1 The "maiden" in Scotland, which was the mother of the guillotine, was modification of this method. In France the condemned man was broken on the wheel, a mode of cruelty the thought of which is enough to curdle the blood. One family enjoyed the exclusive distinction of executioner. A man named Sansom was set apart by the Bourbon kings for the office, and it descended like an heirloom to his children. The populace of Paris -.finally inaugurated the great tragedy of the French revolution, quivering wretch was about to be bound to the crossbars when the peo pie broke through the line of guards and rescued him. The guillotine succeeded to the wheel as the instrument of death, and the Sansom family were continued as its ministers.
In England capital punishment was formerly frequent and cruel in th# extreme. In the reign of Henry VIII, the almost incredible number cf 72. 000 persons met their deaths at the hands of the executioner. The modes of inflicting the death penalty were heart sickening—beheading where the offenders were noble hanging, draw ing, and quartering for high treason burning for herasy, hanging for com mon offences, and pressing to death if the person accused would not plead in court. The goods of a .condemned man were forfeited to the king, and as might be expected in the rule of a bloodthirsty despot, this alone led to frequent convictions. As the man who refused to plead escaped such forfeiture, the penalty was made severe on purpose to affright him from his determination. It may not be amiss to add that this cruel penalty was inflicted upon Giles Corey at Salem in 1692, under charge of witchcraft. He refused to plead, for which he was bound upon
&
a plank and a door placed upon him. which was loaded with stones, till, in unutterable agony, he breathed his last.
Henry VIII., who was fastidious, sent to France for a skilled executioner to cut off the head of Anne Boleyn, his discarded wife.
Jack Ketch seems to have been the earliest professional hangman of England. His name became at once the popular designation of the public executioner, and has been perpetuated from that day to this, wherever English is read or spoken. In our day the Irish hangman, Calcraft, appears to have achieved an almost equal distinction.
The public executioner in every age and among every people has been the subject of universal popular hatred and every execration has been heapec. upon him. Sansom, in France, is virtually a prisoner in his own household Calcraft required the protection of the police, ana it has been questioned whether he died a natural death. It remains to be seen in this country whether the American people, in the person of Grover Cleveland, will elevate a common hangman to the highest office in their gift.
A Canadian Scheme,
Cleveland Herald. It is rumored that the visit of the Canadian premier, Sir John A. Macdonald, to England has for its object the annexation of the British West India islands to Canada. Lord Derby is said to favor the scheme. The islands owned by England in the West India group are Jamaica, Barbadoes, Trinidad, St. Lucia, Antigua, and Grenada. These would add to the Canadian dominion a population equal to that of the province of Qaebec —about 1,250,000. Last year the imorts from the islands were valned at §29,000,000 in round figures, and the exports $31,300,000, while for an outlay of $6,620,000 there was a revenue of $6,835,000. This is a better showing than that made by the dominion of Canada itself. Its expenditures during the last fiscal year exceeded the receipts by $8,000,000.
American manufacturers recently sold steel rails in Canada and Cnbj^ anderbiddiog Sogliib nakeif.
''ii
WISE AND OTHERWISE.
A GANABT AT THE FABX.
Folks has been to town, and Sahry Fetched her home a pet canary— And of all the blame', contrary,
Aggervatin' things alive! I love music—that's, I love it When it's free—and plenty «f it— But I kinder git above it 1
A a do a iv 1
It'» just as I'm a-sayin' The idy, now, o' layin' '. Out yer money, and a-payin'
For a wilier-cage and bird, When the medder-larks is wingin' 'Round you, and the woods a-ringin*, With the beautifullest singin'
That a mortal ever heard! u-
Sahry's sot, tho'—so I tell her He's a purty little feller, With his wings o' creamy yeller,
And eyee keen as a cat And the twitter o' the critter Seems to absolutely glitter! Guess I'll have to go and git her
Abetter cage 'n that!
2,774.
Republican majority in 1880, 669 in 1884, 1,146. Recapitulation: Twelve counties containing 98 per cent, of the miners and 90-per cent, of the iron and steel workers of Ohio gave: In October, 1880—Republican majority. 9,348 In October, 1884—Republican majority. 12,078
—[James Whitcomb Riley, in Indianapolis Journal. Very fashionable pug dogs have croup and the measels.
There is a town in Pennsylvania called Noouledoosey The Chinese cut off the heads of the dead French eoldieiB.
A Mormon centenarian who died lately left 216 descendants. Sir Moses Montefiore, the,,centenarian, has 311 granchildren.
Opium has increased 25 per cent, in price since the Chinese war. Egyptologists have discovered that Cleopatra's nose was short, saucy and celestial,
An Oregon bear wanted to be caught so badly that be swam out and tangled himself up in a fish-net.
The young Sandwich Islander, who can just vote is "wakalauumamakumakki." "That is he is "twenty-one."
The prince of Wales has a superBti tion that his mother will outlive him, and that he shall never be king of England.
The Vermont legislature has a bill to do away with hanging, providing for the execution of murderers by electricity.
A learned professor estimates that during one season over 62,000 gallons of blood are drawn from humanity by mosquitoes.
There is no reason why a polical candidate should not be polite and genial. That is the cheapest campaigning he can do.
Victoria Morosina, of Yonkers and coachman fame, lives around the corner. She looks miserable and unhappy, Poor little fool,
One of the grandest sights in Dakota at this season of the year is to see the wife stacking grain while the husband is off electioneering.
The czar of Russia has ordered his pictures out of the public squares at St. Petersburg on the ground that they are liable to indignity.
Railway ticket brokers are already flocking to New Orleans in view of the near approach of the great exposition and its crowds of travelers.
A French mother is credited with saying: "I could wish my daughters no worse luck than to wish for them to marry handsome husbands."
Belva Lockwood, according to the Burlington Hawkeye, intends to collect all the ballots cast for her for president and make a crazy quilt of them,
Wilhelmj has built a house at Biebrich, on the Rhine, where he will lodge the students of a school for the violin, which he will open next year.
The buffalo bones which are being gathered from the western plains to work up into phosphates are worth more per hundred at the factories than wheat,
A Boston glove dealer only employs woman clerks whose hands a No. 8 covers. The customers are flattered into thinking their hands are small by comparison
A cat show, at which $1,500 in prizes are offered, is being held this week in Boston, and an unfeeling local paper expresses the hope that the prizes are all poisoned.
A Tennesse man had to be hanged before he could be convinced that there was any law in this country to punish a man for killing his wife's poor relations.
Dr. DeschampB says that the microbe of scarlet fever is shaped like a hair with a swelling on one end. It reproduces rapidly, but is easily killed by any disinfectant.
The report of the agent general of immigration in Fiji shows that out of 7,137 Polynesians introduced into the Fiji Islands from the Western Pacific, 1,270 have died in four years,
Recent statistics as to the employments of women in England reveal the fact that there 347 female blacksmiths, who actually swing the heavy hammers, and 9,198 women employed in nail-making, who make nails for horseshoes,
As a preventive of petroleum fires it is now proposed to place a bottle of ammonia in each barrel of oil on ignition, by accident or otherwise, the bottle would break and the effect of the ammoniacal vapors would.be. to extinguish the flames.
Rev. Father De Marzo, of San Francisco, has invented an altar lamp which will burn for a long period brightly at night and dimly in the day time. The lamp, is Baid to resemble a small engine and to measure nearly four feet in height.
Members of the Boston police force have been forbidden to take fruit and peanuts from street-stands without paying therefor by cash. The proud privileges of the guardian of the peace are being stripped away in a most cruel and common sense way.
Too Bashful.
One wedding as a sequence of July courtship by the seashore occurred this week, writes Clara Belle from New York. It was hurried because the bridegroom had to go to Europe on business, and wanted to take the new wife along. It was a wonder that he spared the time to fall in love, even in vacation time. He hadn't ever paid much attention to girls, especially of the Fifth avenue type and that waa shown at the ceremony. "Now John," she said the day before, "I wouldn't get married at all if I didn't think I'd blush at the altar. An unblushing bride is my pet aversion. But I'm afraid to trust myself. likely
don't scare 1
E E A E E E S S O N A O N I N O O E 2 7 1 8 I
easy and would as
as not go right through the ordeal as cucumber. What I want yon to do is to say something startling, shocking —improper, you know—the instant we are ready to march in. That'll bring a blush and then Fll wha—wha—
be charming." wb*t thall I'
"Bat, fee
BttmbskoU
stammered. "Oh, I mustn't know beforehand, because I wouldn't get red. Only don't be afraid to pat it strong. This is important." Well, when the time came for her to be dreadfully abashed by an improper remark, he gently, hesitatingly whispered: "Are you sure, my love, that your hosiery is suitable to the occasion?" That was his idea of what would shock a Knickerbocker, girl I She was married with a blush on, however, but it was one of anger at his failure to prove himself a man to rely on at an important mo ment. .EM'-
A Wedding Overture,
Boston Herald. A few evenings since, at a fashionable church wedding in the suburbs, a brief and pointed conversation occurred previous to the ceremony between one of our oldest, best known and moBt experienced organists and an "average young man, the latter of whom, making his appearance probably for the first time as usher, felt the dignity of his position to the fullest extent. It may be proper to state that our friend, the or ganiBt, is favorably known in his pro Fession as one free from ostentation and particularly averse to all exhibi tions of airiness, and, from his musical adaptibility to church wedding occasions, his professional services have been frequently called into requisition, and through along term of years. The conversation ran as follows
Usher—Look here! I want to tell you about the order of music. Organist (in surprise)—I beg pardon. What did I understand you to say?
Usher—I want to tell you about the music. I am the master of ceremo nies. ganist iher— structions about the music.
Organist—Ah! Indeed! Usher—Yes, I want to give you in
Organist—But I have my instructions. Usher—Why, when did you get them?
Organist—Before you were bom young man. Exit usher (who at that moment suddenly perceives a delegation of wedding gueBts arrive, who require escorting to the seats.
Two Dangerons Reasons. Spring and fall are timeB when so many people get sick. The changes in the weather are severe on feeble persons, and even thoee naturally strong are apt, as they sey, "to be feeling miserable." Then they are just in condition to be struck down with some kind of fever. A bottle or two of Parker's Tonic will invigorate the digestion, put the liver, kidneys and blood in perfect order, and prevent more serious attacks. Why suffer, and perhaps die, when so simple a medicine will save you Good for bath sexes and all ages.
The material for a life of the late Senator Hill, of Georgia, is in the hands of his son.
Younger and Better.
Benson's Capcine Plasters are not older than all others but they are better than all others. 25 cents.
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IN THE PASTRY, IF
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ECZEMA TWENTY YEAB8
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SNEEZE! SNEEZE
S N E E E your head seems ready to fly ofl*until your nose and eyes discharge excessive quantities of thin, irritatini watery fluid unt: your head aches mouth and throai. a a blood at fever heat. This is an Acute at a rh, and is instantly
relieved by a single dose, and permanently cured by one bottle of SANFORD'P RADICAL CUBE FOB CATARRH. Complete Treatment with Inhaler $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 81.00. Ask for SANFOBD'S RADICAL CURE. "The only absolute speclflo we kno* of."—Med. Times. "The best we have found in a lifetime of suffering Dr. Wiggln, Boston. "After along struggle with Catarrh, the
atat*E3H
HAYFEVER
will
cure you as they have many others. An occasional use of Hops and Malt Bitters gives tone to the blood, strengthens the nerves and promotes perfect digestion. Do not be persuaded to try something else, said to be just as good, but get the genuine. For ale by all dealers.
'-Rev. strug-
RADICAL CURE has
conquered."—Rev. 8. W. Monroe, LewiS' burg. Pa. "I have not found a case that it did not relieve at once."—Andrew Lee, Manchester, Mass. Potter Drug and Chemical Co., Boston.
kLLIA/Cbl For the relief and pre.^1 *ra "v vention, the Instant it is 'applied, of Rheumatism,
WM/IZ/LNeuralg la. Sciatica, ry^. Coughs,Colds,Weak Back, Stomach and Bowels,
Shooting Pains, Numbness, Hysteria, Female Pains, Palpitation, Dyst'pepsia, 1 lver Complaint,
Bilious Fever, Malaria, 'Jand Epidemics, use Col
ASTEW
I
lins' Plasters (an Electric Battery combined with a Porous Plaster) and laugh at pain. 25c, everywhere.
NEW COMBINED REMEDY. SPremature
UFFKKEBS 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, Pareira, F. R. S., London, England, Royal Hospital. Highest medical endorsement. Circular free. Address
PAREIRA GHEMICAL COMPANY, Chicago, 111.
cgJofLM
VEAMBm
Causes no Pain. Gives Relief at
once. Thorough Treatment Will
Core. Not a Liquid or Snuff. Ap
ply into Nostrils. Give it a Trial.
av_pell#e,BS0cts at Druggists I |#Vl ISJ* Bi rf 00 cts by mall registered. Send for circular. Samples by mall 10 cts. ELY BROTHERS, Druggists,
Oswego, N. Y.
Terre Haute Eye Infirmary,
Permanently established by Dr. R. D. Haley, of N. Y., late of Tentron, Mo., who has made the diseases of the eye a specialty the past twenty-eight years, and treats all patlen ts ten days free of charge. Pterygium and Eutropium, or inverted lids successfully operated on in a few moments. Office and rooms southeast corner Third and Ohio streets, opposite St. Charles hotel. Office hours from 6a. m. to 12 m., from 1 to 6 p. m.
The BEST writing machlnein the world. Send for circular. H. T.Conde Gen'i Ag*t, 7d Jfc 78 West Wash
ington Street, Indianapolis. ISBHILiXj Sb UILUSR, Agents, Terre Haute, Ind.
Taught and in practical use at the Terre Haute Commercial College.
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.
PILES! PILES!!
T»TL VnT.TTWR**
Sure cure by using DR. VOLKER'8 never falling JPILE REMEDY. Have made many cures in this city, to which 1 can refer those Interested.
City office with Barker A Alvey, 064 Main street. Home office Dennison, 111. Address all letters to home office.
Your respectfully, L. VOLXER8
STAR LAUNDRY
HO. 677 1-3 MAIN STREET.
Shirt, Collars, Caffs & Lace Cartons,
DONE UP EQUAL TO NEW. MUY WMU*H FLTON
Sew Advertisements.
DO YOU KNOW
THAT
O I A S I A FLjtJO TOBAOOO, With Red Tin Tag, is the best? Is the urest ls never adulterated with elucoso, ytes, molasses, or any deleterious iniients,as is the case with many otfc tobaccos. LORILLARD'S ROBE LEAF FINE OUT
TOBACCO
Is Also made of the fln«st stock,and for aromatic chewing quality is second to none.
LORILLARD'S SAVT CLIPPINGS take first rank as a solid durable smoking tobacco wherever introduced.
LORILLARD'S FAMOUS SNUFFS have been nsed for over 124 years, and are sold to a larger extent than any others.
LADIES
Who are tired of calicoes that fade la sun shine or washing will find the I O N IN S
E S A S A N A E S E S
perfectly fast and reliable. If you wantan honest print, try them. Made in great variety.
Consumption's Master
We positively and permanently cure of Consumption and ninety per cent. Heart Diseases, also Cancer, Catarrh
all forms of Female Troubles. Crooked,. Stiff and Withered Limbs restored. Removes Smallpox Fittings, Freckles, Pimples, Blotches, Liver Spots, Blemishes and makes the skin clear, smooth and natural. If yon want to be Cured oome to ns, If
Doctored go elsewhere. References given in Terre Haute. CURES GUARANTEED, Consultation free.
Call on or address F. B. ROGERS, M. D., 11% South Fourth St.,
Terre Haute, Ind.
Grand Picnic
SHOE BUYERS
General Mark Down
Before Receiving Our Fall Stock
We have marked down every pair of Men's Low Cnt Shoes less than cost. To parties In want of Boots and Shoes, we oan save you^money.
JLOOK!
Ladies' Toe Slippers, 60c, worth SI.00 Ladles' Cloth shoes, 60c, worth tt.50 Ladies'Button Shoes.Sl.25,worth S1.T& Men's Boots, 75c., worth 182.00
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,
Jpositlvely.
J. R, FISHER.
325 and 327 Main Street.
QEATBFUIi—COMFORTING.
EPPS'S COCOA.
BREAKFAST.
"By a thorough knowledge of the natur al laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of the flne 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 use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until Btrong 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 aproperly nouriched frame."—Civil Service Gazette.
Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold only in half pound tins by Grocers, labeled thus:
JAMES EPPS
THE
Ideal
CALIGRAP&.
& CO. Hom-pathic
London, England.
C. D. CHAPMM'S
EAST END DRUG STORE Cor. Main and Twelvth Sts.,
Is headquarters for Pure Drugs, Medicines and Chemicals, Toilet Articles, Liquors and Cigars. Prescriptions accurately compounded day or nignt.
s.
Get prices at Zimmerman's, $48 Main, on
Heating and Cooking Stoves
and aU kjnrt« TTfiHEN SUPPLIES
LOOMIS & GILLETT, DENTISTS.
No. 836%, Southwest corner af Fourth anu Walnut streets, Terre Haute, Ind. Teeth extracted without pun by the new latented process. All kinds of work one.
J. R. DUNCAN & CO.
.. WHOLESALE DEALERS IN Paper, Paper Bags, Stationery, Twlaes. Kte,
6BO AND MS MAIM BTBKFT
At
QPI7P Send six cents for postage nifct-and receive free, a costty mh of goods which will help all, of eltbi sex, to more money right away than any thing else in this world. Fortunes awa tt th* workers absolutely sure. At one* *4 iwuTnuAOo., Auct"* "sin*.
nr -tfTTrn-n
AGKHTB to carry oa
W ilJl AXllS Cottonades, Jean* Oasstmeres, Etc., on oommlsslon, In eon neetlon with their present line for Bnrtnp ad A re O E S 8 W E 4 0 0 MannfartBftw. rtrttt, FhUf MMU*.
N ORDINANCE
.t-'SL
For the government and protection of' Highland Lawn Cemetery. Section 1. Be it ordained by the Com' mon Council of the city of Terre Haute* That the Jurisdiction of the city be ex tended over Highland Lawn Cemetery ground* to the tame extent aa If the same were within the corporate limits of the city, and the superintendent and We sistants shall have all the powers ot thecity police for the purpose of arresting and bringing to trial all persons who may be found vlolatl ng any of the provisions of this ordinance.
Bee. 2. It shall he unlawful for any person to ride or drive In said Cemetery faster than a walk, or to leave any horses unless gf securely fastened, or to hltcn horses to any trees or shrubs, or to ride or drive over any lots, or to fail to turn to the right when driving on any avenue on meeting any person or persons who are riding or driving.
Sec. 3. No person shall throw stones, or hunt, or shoot (except at military funerals) upon the Cemetery gronndr, or bathe or fish in any lake or pond thereon, nor shall any person, while in a state of intoxication, be permitted to enter said Cemetery.
Sec. 4. No person shall leave open any gate, but after having passed in or out shall always close the same, exeept a* fuuerals when It shall be the duty of the sexton or superintendent to open and close the gates. ...
Sec. 5. Any person violating any of the -oon
N
-FOR——
fifty (160) lxuiars and
costs of prosecution. The amount of snoh forfeit or line, when paid, shall be plaoea to the credit of the Cemetery fund.
Sec. 6. An emergency existing for the immediate taking effect ot this ordinance the same shall be In force from and after its passage and publication.
OTICE TO NON-RESIDENT. J^OTICE,TO NON-J
To Ahrend H. Luken, or whom It may Whereas, On the 15th day of October. 1883, by order of the Common Cotmcll of the city of Terre Haute, Vi*o county, Indiana, the city engineer of saidclty mad* an estimate of monies due to Charles T. Chadwick, assignee of Caleb Jackson, contractor with said city for improving Third street between Gullck and Osborn streets (east side), by grading, graveling and curbing same, which work nas 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 (8) in Luken's snbdlvUlon of part of out-lot sixty-six (66), lying in section twenty-eight (28), town twelve (12), north range nine (9) west, in the city of Terr® Haute, county of Vigo, and state of Indiana, belonging to Abrens H. Luken, and, whereas, on the 8th day of September, 1884, the said Common Council ordered, that a precept Issue to the undersigned treasurer of said city for tne collection of said assessment, which precept is now in the hands of said treasurer, and. whereas, the sum of thirty- nine-ty-turee one hundreth ($30 93.) dollars is now due on said estimate from said Ahrend H. Luken, and, whereas, said Ahrend H. Luken Is a non-resident of the city of Terre Haute. Now, if the amount due as aforesaid, upon isala assessment^" 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.
A R0BIN80
All proposals must be made on regular blank forms, to be had at the city engineer's office.
Proposals must be accompanied by a bondinthesnm of two hundred dollars (8200)slgned by two disinterested sureties as a guarantee that the bidder will enter into contract within five (5) days after th* award Is made.
Envelopes containing proposals must be endorsed with thelocallon of thealley for which the tender Is made.
The Common Council reserves the right to reject any or all bids. By order of the Common Council.
N'
GEO. R. GRIMES, City Engineer.
OTICE TO CONTRACTORS.
CITY CLBRK'8 OFFICE^ J.
TKBBE HAUTE, IND., October 20, Sealed proposals will be received by 'th* Mayor at his office on the northwest oorner of Fourth and Walnut streets, on th* 31st day of October, 1884, at 9 o'clock a. m. for the removal of dead animals from the city limits as regulated in the ordinances providing for the same. The person to whom the contract is awarded must file a bond with the city clerk within five (5) days thereafter in the sum of five hundred (500) dollars for the faithful carrying out the same. The party so contracted with shall have aright to and may convert to his own use the hides, tallow, horns and bones of such dead animals. The Mayor is authorized to award the contract and reserves the right to reject any and all bids.
W. H. ARMSTRONG, Mayor.
Attest: GEO. W. DAVIS, City Clerk.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS*
I. H. C. KOY8K, Attorney at Law, No. 503 1-2 MAIN STREET.
H3- Knowles VETERINARY STJBGEON.
Office,Rooml7 Savings Bank Building
10 to 12
OFFICE HOURS.
to 12 o'clock a. 'clock p. m. 'cloek, p.m.
.A 3 to 5 O'I 7 to 8 o'c
Dr. W. C. Eichelberger, OCULIST and AURISTf
Room 18, Savings Bank Building TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA.
Omen HointaM) to 13 a. m., and from 9 to 6 p. m.
MS. KICHJRKSOS & Til VA1ZAH,
Dentists,
Office, S. W. Cor. Fifth and Main Sts., ENTRANCE ON FIFTH STREET.
Communication by telephone. Nitrous Oxide Gas administered.
DR. J. E. DUNBAR, O I S
Late of the firm ef Haley A Dunbar. Chronio Diseases of the Eye a Specialty. Office, No. 232 Sonth Fifth streei.
Drt. J. E. DUNBAR,
Box 1688, Terre Haute, Ind.
Offioe Hours—7 to 10 a. m. 12 m. to araB ad 6 to 6 p.m. Dr. Dunbar will send one
and 5 to 6 p.m. ibar will send one package medicine by express. Pflce, 11.25.
THsmmoi
ONIG Err&ssEi
and RXSTOBM
*dfj?csfoon, Kftek ftndTlredFeeUngtbsotu oared. Bones, itmi
SnUTcns the ml
L'ADIES
les Brain
"ngfrom eom
Bod lo SB. HABTKB1 «jeeay cure, aires a clear, heali
'peculiar to'their •8IBOS IBON^
jeqnent~attempt« at connlerfi to the popularity or the original. 1 ment-Ketthe OBIOIXAI.aud BEST.
Vnllofstfaiiasaad ratal.Information. frM^
Rose Polytechnic Institute,
A SCHOOL or ENGINEERING. Entrance Examination, Tuesday, Sep tember lftth. For catalogue addrwa
CKABUS 0. raOMfWWtFntttMiV
I
N,
Treasurer City of Terre Haute.
OTICE TO CONTRACTORS-.-
TEBRE HAUTE, IND., October 24,1884. Sealed proposals will be received by the Common Council of the city of Terre Haute, Ind., at their next reeuler meetine, Tuesday evening, November 4th, 18B4.
For grading and cindering the alley exdlng from Oak to Sheet street be-Be
tending from Oak to Sheet street tween Second and Third streets, in accordance with plans and specifications now on file in the office of the city clerk.
(I
•1
I
if*
."WS
