Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 7 January 1885 — Page 2
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Mch they are made. 11 jr Strength and True Fruit 'v Flavor They Stand £J°ne*
PREPAREO BY TH*
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Prlco Baking Powder Co.,
V3L1 Ohioago, IIU St. Louie, Wlo. MAKERS Or '4 ft Prices Cream Baking Powder •.41*$ —AND— *1- Dr. Prlro's Lupulin Toast Gems, •ISeat Xhry Hop Yen«t.
FOXi SALE) BY GROCERS. WIS MAKii BUT OMK QDAUIT.
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fcYON'S KOZOTHIUM.
*4 idea
BCrOnCUSINQ. ,{ AFTERllSlMtt. A GMT TO THE GRAY. *.jtV ".YEW'S KOZOTHIOW is not a dye, but a «tftSr frit. ^. an', oil, and acts purely as a tonic to the hair folli--«sc-. capillary circulation of the scalp,1 whereby .Kijires the natural action, and as a result restores •Ir"* t/uurai color to the hair, leaving It soft and u-tiiul. Unlike all other so-called restoratives itntirely free from Sulphur, Nitrate Silver, and
Mxious and deleterious chemicals. It is an tie.s: v» Hair Dressing, depositing
HO
sediment upon
scalp does not stain the skin nor soil the most fabric. Address A. KIEFKR & CO* ,(SF'jlcaf
.. Indianapolis Ind.
'i .0 from a Laily of Clay Connty. BUAZXI., Ind, July 7,184. jS' iSsrB. A. Klefcv & Co., Indianapolis -iit.leruen—Having but little faith In «*t4 restoratives, I was, after much hesicut an and with great reluctance, induced i.r.v a oottle of Lyon's Kozohtlum. My •-.iirwas gray, coarse and harsh, and so icHtle that, for years, whenever combed ...-i brushed, it would break off. Upon jvins the Kozothium a speedy and destraiianpje U( place. My hair became •e rud lustrous, regained the natnial ceased to break off, and Is now as selastic and glossy as anyone need de•kro. As a hair dressing now flad ltinlispenslble, and indorse It heartily for all .-"irpoRes for which It is recommended.
Mits. FANNIK U. Walmslky.
A v— iBihhX S\
IRAD^
hana «K W yO'P
How few understand what a perfect lit is? That painful period of "Breaking in" Is deemed essential to every new outfit. This Is positively unnecessary. £.The scientific principles applied t- 1 the numerous shapes and sizes of the"Hanan" shoes, insures perfect fit, and tteir^^f^ff flexibility, absolute freedomj^ygJ from the tortures of "breaK-^** Ing in," as they are ensyj^p and Jcomfortable from first day. Sold everywhere.^^ Ask your shoe dealer for^:,. them. HA.TSTA.TSr & SON. Rg?f N. BOLAND, ACENT, fig 50? Main St., Terre Haute.
BRUNSWIOK. BALiKE. COIjIiKN & oo.-s j-v
Billiard and Pool Tables,
r^taSit
Of atl sizes, new aiiH second-hand. Ail Kinds of Billiard Materia To lie had the .same price as per .UVSVVIC and BALKR & CO
PKlCB-lilST, 7%«r
In. Terr© Haute
JACOB MAY, Agent
DAILY EXPRESS.
vu o. M. Alien, PROPRIETOR.
PUBLICATION OFFICE
16 South Fifth St., Printing House Souare
ntvred a-s Second- Class Matter at tfwt -Past office at Terre Uaute, Indt na
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Kor clubs of ten the same rate'of dls. (osnti and iu addition the Weekly Ex]i jsr free for the time that the club pays r. r, i.ot less than six monihs. clubs of twenty-flve the same rate •i iiiscount,and in addition the Daily ExhKS for the time that.the club pays for, ii st less than six months. i'osiage prepaid In all cases when sent mail., Subscription payable in advance.
A1VKKT1SK»KNT8
».•*-. ted' In the Daily and WeeKly ou reat- anile terms. For particulars apply at •n "".Jress the office. A limited amount i» Advertising will be published iin the eekiy.
"WTAll six mouths subscribers to the Weekly Express wlll.be supplied FREE with "Trentlce on gie Horse and his Dis(asts," and a beautifully illustrated Almnnac. fersonK subscribing for the WorBly for one year will receive in additi n» the Almauoc a railroad and town lip of Indiana. 4h«ro th« Express in on File. §|j| •f Ijouiton—On file at American Exchange .u Kurope,«9Strand. ?v, lUris—On Hie at American Exchange in Wlr ar'".--® Boulevard des Capncines.
VARIETIES.
The Republican members of the city xvjmcil deserve the medal for keeping Caucus proceedings secret.
News from "the iron districts grows better each day. The forerunning brteze of a prosperous trade wind is decidedly perceptible.
For a graphic and true to life description of the scenes of the state, capital we* refer to the letter copied from the Cincinnati Enquirer, a widely known and somewhat famous Democratic newspaper.
METROPOLITAN POLICE.
Thecity council last nightpassed an ordinance creating a new system for policing the city, which is in spirit the same as contemplateli by the metropolitan police law that now relates to several cities in the^tate. The full tex: of the ordinance is published in another place, and we feel sure that every citizen in studying its details will agree with us that it attains every good point urged in behalf of the state law, while at the same time it gives us that primal privilege of keeping in home control one of the most important departments of municipal government.
The metropolitan police law as it affects Indianapolis has proved a most ri diculous failure, and the workings were never made more ridiculous than at the present time when the Democratic state officers are standing out for the selection of only such men for commissioners who will yield to the policy that is considered best for the party represented by these state officials. The pretense of a nonpartisan police is maintained with an air of grave sincerity that makes the burlesque the more 1 aughable. As it is now operating, the metropolitan police law simply bestows upon these state officers the arbitrary power to saddle upon a city, with whose affairs the state officers are likely to be wholly unacqnainted, a police force that would not be sustained by one-third of the tax-payers or voters. In the ordinance adopted last night this deplorable situation is avoided. The. people of our city retain their undoubted right to control their OS® affairs and still we are given a nonpartisan police force^thS iattcr desideratum being the only one of any moment urged in behalf of a metropolitan police system.
There can be no reason for continuing in the movement to have the city of Terre Haute brought in under the present law. The council has taken away the last excuse for such legislation, and further attempt to secure it will be regarded as merely an effort to use a party majority in the state government to se cure a partisan police -force' iu Terre Haute.
A CEKTURY OF BALLOONING A resident of this city has received the following: "Dr. and Mrs. Jeffries request the pleasure of your company at the Centennial celebration of Dr. John Jeffries' serial voyage from England to France on Wednesday, January 7th, 1885, Boston."
Who was Dr. Jeffries and how did he come to be sailing the air just a hundred years ago to-day across the Straits of Do ver?"
Reference to the American Cyclopedia shows that the first Montgolfier, or hotair balloon, was sent up in June, 17^83 the first with men in the basket in Novembel', 1783, and the first inflated with hydrogen gas in December of the same year. In 1784 there were fifty-two balloon ascensions, and Mons. Blanchard, the first professional aeronaut, appeared. In January, he and Dr. Jeffries, of Boston, crossed from England to France without accident. In the same year two Frenchmen endeavored to cross from France to England, but their balloon caught tire and they were killed, falling three thousad ieet to the earth. The first ascent for scientific purposas, according to the American, was in 1803, under the dilection of the Ruwian Academy of Science. Later, Gay Lussac ascended 23,000 feet and was the first to bring from such a height bottled air, which proved to be identical with air at the earth's surface.
By fortunate coincidence we find in a private library of this cily, which abounds in quaint, old-fashioned books, an old pamphlet, printed in London, 1786. It is quarto size of sixty pages, with ragged edges and time's yellow stains and f's for s's. It is entitled "A Narrative o*f the two serial voyages of Doctor Jeffries with Mons. Blanchard with meteorological observations, &c.: the first voyage, on the 30th of November," 1784, from London to Kent the second, January 7 th. 1785, from England to France. By Dr. Jeffries. Presented to the Royal Society, April 14th, 1785 and read before them, January, 1786."
Just one year before Jeffries made his ascent, the first seronaut went up in Paris, watched by' 600,000 spectators, so that this and the trip over the sea were, at that time, very remaykable.
A proces verbal, by Blanchard, included in the pamphlet, spoke.of "Mr. Jeffriest Docteur, ft aneien cJiirurgien des Armeet du Roi en Ameriqw, &c.so the Doctor was probably a British surgeon who' settled in Boston. He is entitled to the distinction of being the first scientific aeronaut' as he took up with him a barometer, hydrom eter, electrometer and thermometer, by which he made and carefully recorded observations. He also had a number of bottles filled with distilled water which was poured out and replaced with air in the upper regions. It [seems Jeffries had to pay Blanchard 100 guineas for the privilege of the first ascent, which was made under the observation of the Prince of Wales and other highnesses. Dr. Jeffries went up in the air waving a British flag and had occasion to be annoyed by the papers stating the next day that it was a flag of the American states—which wouljl have been awkward at that time. The doctor was entitled to the credit of the second voyage, to France, as he paid all of Blanchard's expenses, who tried to make the trip alone, using some mean artifices. Dr. Jeffries was determined to go and promised to" throw himself from the balloon if became necessary to save it nnd the aeronaut. The trip was afelv made, although it was necessary to throw every possible article over, including most of the wearing ap
VSfc&Si
March,
.. pARK—Wwket 15@20c lower.
parel. The balloon landed in the Forest of Guinea, in Artois, two hours and fortyseven minutes after leaving the Cliffs of Dover. A marble column, with glowing inscriptions in Latin, was erected on the spot where the baloon alighted, to the honor of Jeffries and Blanchard. The vovagers enjoyed great honors in Paris and elsewhere. Blanchard received from the Frence court 12,000 livres and a pension of i.200 livres a year and the canton where he landed was afterwards called by his name. The balloons used by him were fitted with oars which served to turn them in a circular direction or to retard them in ascending tosome extent.
A centuary has passed and balloons have received few modifications. Experience haa given skill in handling them, but the direction in which they sail, when not vertical, is at the mercy of the winds. They have been applied to a few useful purposes, such as carrying the mails into beleagured Paris in 1870 in making observations for military purposes—and iu drawing crowds to country fairs. Man, having caught ideas from the fish to apply to ship-building, and from the wood-boring worm to shape tun neW, hopes to rival the birds in the air. It is clamed that a Frenchman has discovered the long-sought secret of successful aerostation, and is now perfecting his inventions under the auspices of his government but until perfected the a'ronauts of 1785 are but little behind those of today. Perhaps sometime a lucky experimenter will stumble on a principle that may be so simple, and so near us that the greatest wonder will be that Dr. Jeffries, of Boston, did not think of it a century
Shades of the Hew Year-
Harper's Bazar. The fashionable oolors for the searon are steel bine, grape red, chestuut, maehrnom, autumn meadow greon and twilight pink.
How About Reciprocity?
Galveston News. Why is it that defaulting cashiers from other countries never come to live with us? Is there not room for a reciprocity treaty hereabouts?
All Right Once More.
Boston Globe. Baohelors can breathe easr again. For three years they need not blush and start coyly and timorously when the fair maidens tell them they have somethiag to say in confidence.
Office is Offioe." -.
men. fortv-three applications for the position of adjutant-general, a purely fancy position with no salary attached. But then it is an office
xl— i-—
Poor Horseflesh-
New York Tribune.
1
Horsc-fleeh around Pouglikeepaie appears to be poor in quality. A runaway team dashed into a passing freight train on the Hudson I number of his boarding-house, and River road, near that town and hurled six cars from the traok. The man who would own a team of horses so spiritless and weak as t« b: able to knock only six cars oS a railroad track should be ashamed of himself.
evolved by self-operating forces inherent in matter." He is coming down to Nance county by easy stages by way of Adam and the flood.
WISE AND OTHERWISE.
A PARADOX
•i recollect how grieved 1 was When Cousin Amy married. I thought her very cruel because
For me she had not tarried. She gave to my affection green Encouragement in plenty, lor I was under seventeen
And she was five-and-twentv.
1' air Amy is a widow now, Her sorrow fast outgrowing. 'Tis very singular, I
TOW,
The way the years are ring/ With me, at allegro rate With her a graceful lente— Now I am nearing thirty-sight
And she is eix-and-twenty.
I should be gratified to know How others, like my cousin, A twelvemonth older only grow,.
One year in half a dozen. O, Chronos, toll the secret me, The power superhuman That causes time with man to flee,
But bids it wait with woman. Collector Robertson and wife have left their summer home in Catonah, and taken apartments in the Fifth Avenue hotel.
The consecration of the Rev. Dr. Wm,
Paret as bishop will occur next Thursday I
On a windy, wintry 11 An infallible indication that the great I
Sontb Statu Si^ee*
THE EXFBESS, TEBRE HAUTE, WEE
POLITICAL SASDBAUGEBS.
Graphic Description of the Assembling of the Solons.
Also Something About the Serambling for the Offices Abont the State Legislature.
Special Dispatch to the Enquirer. ISDIAS.lPOI.Iii, Ind., political sand-baggere are here "in moderate force, and "still a-comin'," and the way they, are slugging each other proves that the lessons and practices of the late campaign made a deep impression. It is drawing it mild to say that there are several candidates for eaeh office, and every candidate and his partisans are weting all the others in a way that leads to the belief that several bad characters are aspirants for the few crackers and sardines which the legislature has at its disposal. It seems to nie, from remarks that I hear, that only the most depraved men are seeking offices, and that they indeed hungry and thirsty. The speakership, the various clerkships, spittoon-cleaners and watercloset clerkships are fought for as a gang of hungry wolves would fight for a dead rabbit. Two years ago I watched a starving horde who swooped down on the capitol and thought their greed could nevar be equaled but this year they are so far beyond what tliev wore t&en that there is as great a conlrasi as there would be between the appetite of a man just risen from a banquet arid the starving tramp. The hard times, however, have worked a change, as is noticeable in the bar receipts of the*Grarid Hotel and the
Bates House, where the statesmen are congregating. Electioneering seems to be done on the fiat principle—promises to pay in the future. Everybody promises everybody something in the future, but nobody puts up the drinks or cigars. The old hulks, the mosscovered barnacles, who once had "fluence," are here to trade on their past records and secure a taste of the good pap which the legislature will have to give away. It seems to me that half the population of the state has abandoned all thought of earning a living, and hope to be provided for till spring, when they will march in a body toward the dispenser of federal offices.
The new members from the way-back counties area study. No one so much appreciates the importance of being here as they do while their first term lasts- It
Fort Worth Mail. How the itch for office does trouble some I is a surprise to them that the earth is Governor Marmaduke of Missouri has strong enough to hold them up, and "I
think they feel the houses tremble as they walk the streets! When I am introduced
to one of these new members and ask him what he is in town for and how long he expects to stay, he withers me with a look of disgust at my ignorance, and then in 'orms me that he is "a member from some county. One of them to-day gave me the told
rn 0 that if I wanted a first-class' interview to come up and he would give a talk that would sell a ton of Enquirers. Being afraid that the office might be short in its stock of paper I have delayed the visit
Beginning at the Beginning. I until after my employers have Boston Journal. had Jtime to buy the product of a few A Nebraska historian who is writing a his- I paper mills. The candidates are all contory of Nance county, in order to get the begin-I iident, or, to use the local vernacular, ning, has gone back to the creation of the "air head an' tail up," but I hope the world. He cannot decide, however, whether weather will be fair on the 9th and 10th, it was GocTwho created it or "whether it was because mauv of them live. at a distance
and the walking might be very tedious, The township" trustee is a kind-hearted man, and may help a few of the most de serving to their homes. House bill No 1 is already drawn by thirty-five mem bers of the house, and will be presented within two and a half minutes after that body is organized. I have seen each and all of this bill, and reads: "Appropriating $125,000 to defray the expenses of this general assembly." When this bill is passed the boys will have been here week, and that is along time to subsist on invitations to drink.
The legislative poker game, has been I organized, and as soon as the committee Ion committee rooms hires the rooms at the hotel the game will be opened in the usual style. Three of the leading committee chairmen of the last house did rushing business in poker and faro, and it is not likely that this remunerative occupation will be allowed to lag while the hay-mow gamblers receive any pgr diem from the state treasury.
Lieutenant-Governor* Mail son is conI spicious by his absence. As he does not take office until the 12th he saves his buttons and clothes by staying away. The grand old man has grown beyond the scramble Jor office, and is strangely in -contrast with the ?all displayed on a large card in the irrand hotel, which reads: "Judge Good I tag's headquarters, Room No.' 2." A I friend suggested that if he would change
t0
.i_ /,i a -n gang would recognize the man. mormng in the Church of the Epiphany, |s ffai]road legislation is to be presented but, as usual, nothing will come of it. 1Y
Mayor Low, of Brooklyn, spent a por- any class of businesa is considered tion of the holiday, season at the home of legitimate subject of legislative black\rM 1 njrs. Benjamin
The people of Glenwood bprings, (ol.,
m,aU
haveymt seen the sun for a month. It dence .on their part would give them a has raining constantly, and the mud better standing with the honest states in the streets is afoot deep. men.
A member of Harvard's class of 1884 Other Reports, n- -\tti 1 "Ihe caucus the Democrats will be has given Professor J. \\. White $1,000
toward fitting up his rooms in Sever hall end.
to illustrate his Greek lectures. That ever he'll get into heaven we doubt Let none for his happiness pray, Who at the front door of a horse-car gets out
ball season is%pon us is the appearance I cast the complimentary vote forsenator in of that venerable article about scores of I favor of Governor Porter. detectives in full evening dress who are hired to be present at all social tivitiea.
There are in Brunswick, Ga., two flowing wells, one 315 feet, and the other 430
be found at every corner. All the pohce-
the otherwise dull pages of his report with a flash of wit when, in enumerating the causes of fires, he mentions "looking for leak in gas pipe with a lighted lamp and found it—one."
Oscar Wilde keeps right on in his crusades against modern fashion in dress. He told a Glasgow audience the olhe: night that a Lancashire mill-girl with a shawl over her shoulder and clogs on her feet knew more about dress than a fashionable London lttdy just returned from Paris.'
The pallbearers at a funeral in an Arizona mining town quarreled on the way to the cemetery, and the whole cortege was stopped while they had a rough and tumble slugging matcfton the roadside. A local account states that the only quiet person in the the corpse.
OFFICE HOUBS. FOH. 1885.
Gooding Headquarters,"-the
is the railroads. If the managers
of those corporations are guided by good sense thev will not indulge in the usual
free pas^ C01irtesies.
udoje Gooding, since ir the speakership.
Januarv 5.—The
A little indepen-
held to.morlwof nighti and the agony will
Indianapolis Times: Senator Yoorhees is expected to look in on the legislature next week, and the senatorial*caucus will likely be held on the 15th inst. There seems to be a unanimous intention on the part of the Republican members to
"Burt Kelly, of Terre Haute, in his candidacy for the senate secretaryship, has boasted that he has the influence of Voorhees and hia politics I friends. Green Smith, in behalf of Joe Reiley, has telegraphed tp Senator Voorhees to ascertain
feet in depth. Together they discharge whether he is really interested in the fight 340 gallons a minute, and the water is
one
said to be very beneficial in all. kidney l.v waited for. troubles. The Evening News of yesterday The City of Mexico has an excellent I evening says "Jewett and Gooding are police force. At night a policeman can Prac_tically the_ onl
otL the other* A.reply is patient-
ny candidates for the
a I a or a
noon authorized
men are very polite and will stop a street I his withdrawal from the race. He ascar, and gallantly assist a lady to board I signed no reason for stepping aside, but it with true Castillian grace. I it is understood he favors Jewett, whom
The chief of the Minneapolis fire '3e-1 be thinks will succeeded beyond a doubt, partment grows facetious and enlivens I
The News to announce
and
?re euUhfg no
figure whatever in the fight. NOTES. Pierre Gray, his son, will be Governor Gray's private secretary.
Governor Porter's official term' expires at noon, on Monday next. M. M. Copeiand, of Madisop, continues t« want the complimentary vote of his party forj-peaker.
An occasional mugwump is found in he hotel loDDies, seeking official recognition as a minor clerk.
The third house is understood to have organized with Bell, Sutton speaker, Hughes East doorkeeper, and Eb.Henderson chairman committee on wayss and means. The clerkship went a-begging.
Lieutenaht governor-elect Manson put in an appearance to-day, clothed in fine raiment and a "biled sliirt The meta-
company was morphosia is almost as startling as the" change in the personal appearance of
Without Exception fti&ttbew Arnold go Refers to Mrs. McDonald, ladianapolis Special to the New York Times.
Matthew Arnold, while in this city was the guest of the Hon. W. P. Fishback. After the eminent Englishman had concluded his discourse he stepped from the stage to the floor of the hall, and addressing Mrs. Arnold, who at that moment was communicating with a bevy of ladies, said in a tone of warm eamestnes* peculiar to this speculative thinker and poet: "Wife, come with me. I desire to present you to the most beautiful woman in the worldi." "Who?" was asked. "The- wife of Senator McDonald."
By the accidental departuie of Mr. McDonqjd and his wife the opportunity of an introduction was lost, which the cultivated Briton feelingly deplored in these terms: "So spiritual a creature of transcendent beauty, so fine a specimen of lovely womanhood I never met before."
I faithfully give this as it was given to me by W. P. Fishback himself, believing that it will shCd some light on the romance by which this lady is environed at the instance of those mysterious Washington people of the pen.
Mrs. Joseph E. McDonald is at that period of woman life when a nian may piously adore the elevating memory of a sainted mother in her benign face. On her soft cheek there is the delicate luster of the open rose as well as a glow of girlish strength. Surmounting a brow elegantly molded is a vast wealth of hair, silken in its softness—not gray, but white as the snow drift. Faint lines that Johnson might characterize as beauty-marks chasten and contribute to an expression that Rapba# would surely have loved to paint. Where Matthew Arnold is cited as authority on a subject, even if as sacred, so full of poetry, a correspondent certainly has license to note the exquisite blending of girlhood and grandmotherhood in one glorious presence, though he may acknowledge that to describe^ with anything like justice lies beyond his possibilities.
No Case.
Cleveland Herald. "Prisoner," said Prosecutor Buxton, "you are charged with gambling." "Gambling? What is gambling?" "Playing cards for money." "But I did not play cards for money: I played cards for chips." "Well, you got money for your chips at the end of the game, didn't you "No I didn't have any chips at the end of the game."
Forcing the Game.
N. y. Sou. A Mott street Chinaman has renounced draw poker. He sorrowfully relates his experience: "I get flo acee, bet five dolla, nobody clum in I get tlee kingee, bet ten dolla, nobody clnm in I get filo fllushee, bet fifteen dolla, evly son of gun clum in."
Breakfast Cocoa, as a beverage, is uni
versally conceded superior to all other
drinks for the wejiry man of business or the more robust laborer. The preparations of Walter Baker & Co. have long been the standard of merit in this line, and our readers who purchase "Baker's Breakfast Cocoa" will findftit a most healthful, delicious and invigorating beverage.
Not by any Meanti.
When you ask for Benson's Capcine Platters don't accept any others as "just as good." 25 cents.
DISFIGURING HUMORS
HUM AT ING ERUPIIQjSIS
Itching! Burning TORTURES
have tried for eleven years to have my wife cured of a terrible ssin disease. The Cuticura Remedies (Cuticura Resolvent., the new Blood Purifier, internally, and Cuticura, the great skiu Cure, and Cuticura Soap, an exquisite Skin Purifier, externally) have done in six weeks what have tried for eleven years to have done, You shall have the particulars as soon as I can give them to you, and as we are so well known In tills part of the country, it will benefit you, aud the remedies will cureall who use them.
Maysville, Ky. CHAS. H. WHITE.
BLOTCHES CURED.
1 used your Cuticura Remelies for blctches, and I am completely cured, to my inexpressible Joy. "Catiiiura Soap is the best 1 have ever ed, and to the profession it is invaluable for cleansing the skin, thereby removing all "cork,"grease, paint, andall the stuff used by them, leaving the skin pure and white and soft. My greatest pleasure is in recommend!ngsuoh an article. H. MACK,
Champion Comique Roller Skater. Youngstowu, Ohio.
SALT "RHEUM,
I have "bad the Salt Rheum for about three years, and have spent time and money to have it enred, without success, until I tried theCutiouraRemedies,which are doing the work. a. J, YOUNG.
Marsh field. Cook County, Oregon.
$200 FOR~NOTHI^G. Having paid about $209 to first-class docrs to cure my baby* without success, I •fed the Cuticura Remedies, which completely cured after using three bottles-.
BAY, JAXUART 7, 1885.
Uze race
•THE MOST BEAUTIFUL MAN."
WO-
WM GORDON.
87 Arlington ave Charleston, Mass. Sold every where. Price: Cuticura, 50c. woap, 25c, Resolvent, Potter Drug and Chemical Co., Boston. Send for "How to Cure Skin Disease*."
niJTIOCKA SOAPfor Rough, Chapped
uu
and Reddened 8kt» and Hands.
CifAUl
Complete Treatment with Inhaler,
for Every form of Catarrh, SI. ASK FOR
SANFORD'S RADICAL QURE.
,,Head Colds, Watery Discharges from the Nose and Eyes, Ringing Noises in the Head. Nervous Headache and Fever instantly relieved.
Choking mucus dislodged, membrane cleansed and healed, breath sweetened, smell, taste and hearing restored, and ravages checked.
Cough, Bronchitis, Droppings into the Throat, Pains in the Chest, Dyspepsia, Wasting of Strength, and Flesh, Loss of Sleep, etc., cured.
One bottle Radical Cure, one box Catarrhal Solvent and one Sandford Irthaler. alllnone packape, of all druggists for 81. Ask for SANDPORD's RADICAL Curk, a pure distillation of Witch-Hazei. American Pine, Canada Fir, Marigold Clover Blossoms, etc. Potter Drug and Chemical Co., Boston
0U-lNs OLTAIC
Netr life for Shattered JlNerves, Painful Muscles and Weakened Organs. Collins' Voltaic
Electric Plaster ln-Htant-ly affects the nervous system and bau--ishes pain, nervousness and general debillty. A perlect Kleebutty. A perlect Klee-
ELECTRIC
Ja fTCRbfo-flaltaBic Battery I combined with a hlghnal {Plaster for S cents. All
OTICE TO NON-RESIDENTS.
[No. MS&)
State of Indiana, Vigo county, in Ihe Superior court of Vliro county, itecember m, ISSi. Frederick J. Btel vs. Frederick gost atoecker, account and attachment.
Be it known that on the 5th day of January, 1835, it was ordered by the court that the elerk notify by publication said Frederick August Stoecker as non-resident defendant of the pendency of said action against him.
Said defendant la therefore hereby notified of the pendency of said action against him, and that the same will stand for trial, the same being t4e March term of said court In the year 18S5.
Attest, MERRILL N. SMITH, Clerk.
APPLICATION FOR LICENSE.
The undersigned will apply to the Board of Connty Commissioners, at their next regular session, which commences on the 1st Monday in February, 1885, for license to retail spirituous and malt Honors in less quantities than a quart at a Um«, with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on my premises. My place of business is located IK 3 Main street, lot .No. 2 Rose's subdivision.
JOHN W. TRVON.
THJt, jI TI,A XTIC, dependent alone on reading matter for its success, in brilliant above ail others tn this respect, and never has been so fresh, to versatile, to genial, as it is now.—The Literary World.
The Atlantic Monthly For 1885
Will be particularly noted Its Serial stories, namely:— .1.
THK PRINCESS CASAMASSIMA. Br HENRY JAMES, Author of "The Portrait of a Lady," etc.
II.
A COUNTRY GENTLEMAN. By MRU, OL1PHANT,
Author of "The Ladles Llndores," "The Wizard's Son," etc. III. THE PROPHET OF THE GREAT
SMOKJ MOUNTAIN.
BY CHARLES EGBERT CRADDOCK, Author ol "In the Tennessee Mountains. IV.
A MARSH ISLAND.
BT SARAH ORNE JEWEIT, Author of "A Country Doctor," "Deephaven," etc.
The first of a new series of papers entitled THE NEW PORTFOLIO. BY OLIVEV, WENDELL HOLME*,
Will appear in the January Atlantic. Poems, Essays, Stories, aDd Papers on Scientific, Literary and Social Topics may be expected from Oliver Wendell Holmes, John Ureenleaf Whittier, W. D. Howells, Heury Jamep, F. Marlon t'rawford. Richard Grant White,Charles Dudley Wart»er, Harriet W. Pres on, Henry .Cabot Lodge, r*. Deming, Edith M. Thoma--, Thomas William Parsons, George Parsons Latlirop, James Russell Lowell, Maurice Thompson, Thomas Bailey Aldrich«John Kiske.Mark Twain, Charles Eliot Norton, Horace E. Scudder, George E. Woodberry, W. II. Bishop, Edward Everett. Hale, Edward Atkinson, Phillips Brooks, Harriet Beecher Htowe, Lucy Larcooi, John Burroughs, James Kreeman Clarke, Thomas Went worth Higginson, Elizabeth Robins Pennell,Sarah Orne Jewett, C. Wyman, N.8. Shaler, Edmund Clarence Btedman, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, Ji P. Whipple, and many others.
TERMS: 84.00 a year 1 .! ance, postage fr 35 cents a number Whh superb life-size portrait of Hnwti nr. lOmert-on, Longfellow, Bryant, Whii-ixr. Lowell, or Holmes, S500 each additional portrait,81.
Postal Notes and Money are at the risk of
made by money order, draft or registeree letter, to HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO 4 Park Street, Boston, Mass.
THE
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Fiiterjimiif, Malic.
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The CHICAGO WEEKLY HERALD, eight pages, the Largest and Best Weekly Newspaper in the West. A sermon by the ,Rev. T. DeWitt Talmage in every issue. One Dollar per year. Sample copies free.
The CHICAGO SUNDAY HERALD, $2.00 per year. Address
THE CHICAGO HERALD
JAMES W. SCOTT, Publisher.
TRAVELERS, ATTENTION
If you contemplate a trip to Europe, or desire to bring relatives or friends from th% "Old Country" to America, do not fall to Inquire of
F\ H. BATON, 3a 1 North 13 tli. He is agent for the following well-know: lines of steamships:
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Cabin and steerage passage ratfesof sailing and all information desired can be obtained at my office. I am also agent for the AmtfMcan Foreign Lightning Express, and packages to and from Europe will be sent with safety and despatch.
PROFESSIONAL CA
I. H. C.ROY* Attorney at!
No. 503 1-2 MAIN STREE^y
Dr. W. C. Eichelberk-, OCULIST and AURIST,
Room 18, Savings Bank Bulldit TKRBS HAUTK, INDIANA.
OrrtCB Hotras.-—» to 12 a. m., and fron 3 to S p.m.
PRS. EICHARDSOS & ?AH ¥1LM
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ENTRANCE ON FIFTH STREET..
Communication by telephone, Nitron* Oxide Gas admlnlsterod.
W. K. HASLETT,
-t* Soatb irtfth: Street.
Unredeemed Fledges for Sale.
I880
CINCINNATI WEEKLY 1S85 GAZETTE.
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(Weekly edition of the Commercial Gazette) For 1884-85. Single subscription, one year. .81 25 Clubs of 8 and upward, one year each 1 00
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FRANK PROX,
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ST. NICHOLAS
FOR
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has grown famfliar to hundreds of thousands of young readers and their interest and intelligent enjoyrcent have constantly Inspired the editor and publishers to fresh effort. To-day, Its rtrength ig In Its wholesome growth, its sympathy with young life, Its hearty recognition of the movement of events, and- its steadily Increasing literary and pictorial resources. The following are some.jf the good things already Recured for future numbers of St. Nicholas: ,"Hl8 Own Fault," a serial story for boys, by the popular author, J. r. Trowbridge. "Personally Conducted," illustrated apers on famous places In Europe. By 'rank R. Stockton.
Girls," a companion series to
istorlo Boys." By E. S. Brooks. "Ready for Business": suggestions to boys aboat to choose an occupation,— based on personal interviews with prominent representatives of various trades and professions. By G.J.Hanson. "Driven Back to Eden," a serial. [By E, P. Roe.
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Davy and the Goblin," a very funnj serial storj by a new writer, Cbas. Carry! Short stories by Louisa M. Alcott. "The Progress of Invention": "From Palanquin to Parlor-car," "From Cross bow te 100-ton Gun," etc Descriptive papers,bv C'haa. E. Bolton "Art Work for young Felks": papers decorative handicraft, by Chas. E. Leland.
Stfeep or Silver?" a story of Texan life, by the late Rev. William M. Baker. "A Garden of Girls," being six short stories for girls, by Six Leading Writers. "Tales of Two Continents": stories of adventure, by H. H. Boyesen "Cartoons for Boys and Girls," funny pictures by St. Nicholas Artists. "F,'om Bach to Wagner'': brief, pointed biographies of great musicians. By Agatha Tunis. cln
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The illustrations will be the work of the very best artists and engravers,—and there will be plenty of them. In the November and December numbers are beau tiful
COLORED FRONTISPIECES.^ Buy the November number for the children. It costs only 25 cents, and all book and news dealers sell it. The subscription price is S3 00a year, and now is lust the ilme to subscribe.
A free specimen copy of St- Nicholas will be sent on request. Mention this ftaper. ^FtK CENTURY CO., NEW YORK, IT. Y,
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•-I
M»ed la 18S1.
ige McNutt rehad been said
Judfl
Ideal the Vigo court, but county in the stste I well administered. It, like many others, was made in casual not the slightest intdant. He said that prosecution was unso that it was diffiargument against sd the objection, nd the defense re* ho denied Black's the conversation^-
0 to present their ing, and court ad-
JRT8.
No*. 204 and Ho. 112 Fifth.
oneit jriut,try viety.
ol the Murder
red 1b the Humthere is little courts. Geo. W. the circuit court
Josephus Col-
that $5,000 is due *ke began suit in f. S. Simmons on~ court Agnes Y. •ainst J. D. Conslosure. In the
Dnnnigan has setGchaei Kennedy Cramond againrt *.85. iMh j. Wingo, which jeme court day out of the tact
THE
The Best metal. N No smok plosive. like Superior lug. If I we will send lured by8i/rr, CO., (Incorporiilrt held it was town. N. Y. Hoceny. He was
Wingo who had sold Bob
BmokV
Win£°
wh
oHive. el avid Pug] :e gas. A\ iertor fo\ L*° V0/ z. It not wy- Aft*
After ho
Iwo he was- -ar---,
4 that be had nse. Judge McLean
GM89W1=
have »posltlve r»mody ftir the shore bits been QM thousands of ewes or the worst kl&tD6 OR for •tandtaghaveboencared. Indeed.80ttro^ In Its efficacy, that I will send TWO BOT. together with a VALUABLE TREATISE on
1 have fcuoslttve remedy ftir the abore
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American Agriculturist.
From the Tenth Census, vol. 8, Just published: "The Ame»lcan Agrleulurist is especially worthy of mention, because of the remarkable success that has attended the unique and untirlne efforts of its proprietors to increase and extend its clroulatlon. Its dontentsnre duplicated every month for a German edition,.wjjjch als«p circulates very widely."
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FACTS FOR EVERY AMERICAN
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A book for every voter. It shows how cratio party has opposed every but one that has been adopted
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HAT AND B0NNETT BLEACHERY.
M. Catt, Proprietor, I No. 3SJ6 South Third Street, Terre ITante, Ind Ladles and Gentlemen's staw. felt and beaver hats resnaped by machinery to look as good as new.
Plaster bat blocks for sale. Mi'lt-— 'i»tfoilv solicited
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