Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 5 February 1885 — Page 2

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*st Yirar Bating Potto Way!

Brands advertised as absolutely pure *p% vjwtjjvxtb* TWIWOKTIA,

THE TEST!

ftace ft enn top down on a l«t *tw» witll jHSted.then remove the corerand smell. Achom4) wf not be required to detect tJUo presence of

g.

C^K '-i

it'

£ftlES HOT CONTAIN AMMOTSIA.

i-j

lir Jthfalneas H-« NEVER Doen QnnUoBtd. imUlion homes for a quarter of a century I« '3U stood tbe consumer's rell able test,

THE TEST OF THE OVEH. Co., s?rice

Baking Powder

1UKEBS07

%mz

Sac'V &

Price's Special Flavoring Extracts, The strongest, most delicious and natural flavor known, and

Dr. Price's Lupulin Ysast Gems

S0-

For Llaht. Healthy tread. The Beit Dry Hop Yeast In thowor^.

FOR SALE BY Cft&CERS, i.dlCACO. 3T. LOUIS.

LYON'S KOZOTHIUM.

BEF0HEUS1NQ. AFTER U51UG* ?WJ

A

GIFT JO THE GRAY.

•'.YON'S

KOZOTHIUM is ret a dye, but a clear frs-

•Jmt oil, and acts purely as a tonic to the hair foil!'

,md

capillary circulation of the scalp, whereby «s aires tne natural action, and as a result restores -aural color to the hair, leaving it soft and „ufifuL Unlike all other so-called restoratives, it •ntirciy free from Sulphur, Nitrate Silver, and noxious and deleterious chemicals. It is an ele~ *A Hair Dressing, depositing no sediment upon *catt does not stain the akin, nor soil the most ir Ucaf fabric. Address A* ITOEFBB & CO.

Indianapolis Ind.

I rom a Well Known and Prominent iS{® Clergyman. 8HELBYVIX.I.E, June 12,1884.

Messrs. A. Kiefer & Co.: Gentleman—A rpar or two since I begap to lose myjmlr, if prescription from aDarber temporarily shecked It, bat after a brief time it again oocame to coroo out by handfuls, and iwimt prescription by a physician again m%: jhecked It. During the last winter and

Spring it again became dry and harsh,and %•. anally left the top of my head bare. My I ittention was called to your Kozothium. was afraid to use It, dreading sulphur, "-""mead or nitrate of silver. But matters \X were growing worse dally, and the fly season was close at hand, so I procure! a oottie of Kozothium. The result is an ex ellent growth of hair, and strange to say itB original color, soft and pliable, a

1

«lean scalp and no Irritation, and this on Ihe head ox a man over fifty. I have no aesltation in saying it is the best hair re fU 'V atorer extant, and from trial I do not beiieve there is a particle of anything dan serous in It. Yours truly,

JttEV. B. MlliliS.

HANAM1

MARK

IV YQP-

How few understand what a perfect fit is? That painful period of "breaking in" Is deemed ^essential to every new outfit. This is positively unnecessary. The scientific principles appliod to the numerous shapes and sizes of the'/'Hanan" shoes, insures perfect fit, and tfcelr flexibility, absolute freedom from the tortures of "breaKing in," as they are easy and comfortable from the first day. Sold every where. Ask your shoe dealer for p, them. -J HCA-ISTA-N So SON. N. BOLAND, ACENT, 500 Main St., Terre Haute.

ff*

F^LLKUNSWIOK, BAI.KE. COLIJEN DEB & CO.'S

rSilliard and Pool Tables

,ji all sizes, new and second-hand.

All Kinds of Billiard Materia

To he had the same price as per .UN8WIOK and B/VIJKE & CO.'S PRICE-LIST,

In Terre Haute.

JACOB MAY, Agent.

DAILY EXPRESS.

wao. M. AliEN, PROPBIETOB.

PUBLICATION OFFICE

South Fifth St., Printing House Souaro

tered as Second-Class Matter at the TostiwtSf- office til Terre Saute, Indiana.

TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. lly Express, per week 15 cts 5..WS per year *7 50 .» six months 3 75 J"'' ten weeks 150 Z2i- issuea* every morning except Monday, id delivered by oar flers.

TERMS FOB THE WEEKLY. Jne copv, one year, paid In advance..$1 25 neoopy, six months ... 65

Kor clubs of five there will be a cash dlsjuntof 10 per oent. from the above rates, jr If preferred instead of the cash, acopy the Weekly Express will be sent free 'or the time that the club pays for, not (ess than six months,

For clubs of ten the same rate of als'onut, and In addition the Weekly Exase Iree for the time that the club pays r, not less than six monlhs. -r clubs of tweuty-flve the same rate discount, and in addition, the Daily Ex--•iress for the time that the club pays for,

A

A

it less than six months. i'ostaee prepaid In all cases when sent oy mail. Subscriptions payable In advance. yl

AOVERTISBMKNTS

r-i.-ted in the Daliy and Weekly on rea•?f aal le terms. For particulars aPPjy aj ii ^^dress the office. A limited amount advertising will be published in the oekly. «-All six months subscribers to the

JVeekly Express will be supplled FREE A-jtti "Treat!ce on the Horse and his Diseases," and a beautifully illustrated Almanac. I'ersuns subserlbing for the Weekly for one year wUl receive in addl*1 a the Almanac a railroad and town it lap of Indiana. .Vhere the Express Is on Kile.,.

Jjondon—On file at American Exohange in Europe, Strand.

J'aris—On449

file at American Exchaagem

aria, 35 Boulevard des Oapucines*

The Inter-Sta'te Commerce bill the senate yesterday by a vote of 43 to 12.

Chile has abolished the Roman Catholic state religion, and decreed liberty to all forms of Christian faith.

Vice-President-elect Hendricks en-route to the World's Fair at New Orleans, will reach Atlanta this morning.

A fund for the defense of Mrs. Dudley, who attempted to assassinate O'Donovan Rossa, has been started in England and liberal subscriptions are pouring in from all quarters.

Lord St. Vincent, reported killed in the recent battle in the Soudan, is the lineal descendant of that gallant old sailor, Sir John Jervis, created Earl St. Vincent for the naval victory some eighty or ninety years ago.

A proposition is recommended to Congress to include election frauds in the high crime of treason, punishable with death. There can be no greater crime under a Republican form of government than that of corrupting or violating the elective franchise, and the proposition will commend itself to popular approval,

The amount of gold in the National Treasury is rapidly diminishing, while the supply of silver dollars is increasing. At the present rate it is estimated that within two or three month there will be no more than $100,000,000 of gold in the possession of the government, and nothing to prevent a continuation of the reduction. The life of Mr. Cleveland's Secretary of the Treasury is not likely to be a happy one.

Dr. Christopher Columbus Graham, who on October last celebrated the one hundredth anniversary of his birth, died at Louisville night before last. He was born near where the town of Danville, Ky., now stands, in the old fort erected by Capt. Worthington, a soldier under Gen. George "Rogers Clark. His life was filled with exciting and romantic ex periences, and the honors won in early years were borne to the end.

Attorney-General Brewster is getting ready for the Democratic investigators, who will enter the Department of Justice as he retires from it. He is having copies or accurate minutes made of all important papers relating to transactions in his department, so that he will be able to trace and counteract any scandal which stupid or malicious Democratic investigators "may invent regarding his administration of the affairs placed in his charge." _____________

The misfortune of the shooting of O'Donoyan Rossa is that it elevates him to the dignity of a sufferer and martyr. Heretofore he has been merely a. blusterer and braggart, soliciting contributions of poor and ignorant Irish laborers and servant girls under the pretense of prosecuting a dynamite campaign, from which he has kept at safe distance, probably embezzling for himself and his gang the most of the money which was collected. It is to be feared that the attempt upon his life will beget him sym pathy which he would not otherwise have had and help his swindling schemes*

It is now generally admitted that the dynamite plans in England were not of American origin, but that the' destruc tionists engaged in the crusade against life and property over there are quartered much nearer home, the scene of their greatest activity being in Paris and their main agents in England itself. O'Donovan Rossa and his blatherskite gang are acquitted in public opinion of any more serious crimes than false pretenses and embezzlement in collectingjfunds for the dynamite campaign which are not ap plied to that purpose, but are appropriated to their own uses by the home campaign ers in New York. The dynamite con spiracy exists under the very noses of the English authorities, -and, while the police have been looking to America for the den from which the criminals emerged, they have escaped" in another direction.

The demand made by the people of the Western border states that the Oklahoma Indian lands, which no longer belong to the Indians, shall be thrown open to settlement and cultivation is based on reason, and Congress should take action ac cordingly. But these lands, having never been legally opened to settlement, and being still, by solemn treaty, reserved from occupation by white settlers, cannot be seized for colonization or speculative purposes, in the summary manner proposed by the "boomers" who have recently been driven out by the United States troops, Until the public land law shall have been extended over that district of the government's domain, individuals or companies have no more right to invade and occupy any portion of than they have to invade and enpy the lands belonging to an dividual citizen. Those lands should be open to entry by a modification of existing tactics, but ho grab-game should be permitted on the premises, nor should clamor prevail over law in such cases.

form in has recommended the repeal of the loose divorce laws, and it will be done. The legislature is in session, and a bill is before it prohibiting the courts from granting divorces except to "domiciled inhabitants,' of the state "continuously for three years next preceding the application for such 3ivorce." That will end Rhode Island as a divorce resort foT .people from other states. Anybody determined on getting a divorce will not wait three years for it.

AK ABLE PA7EB.

it

ocin-

The population of Rhode Island has been inordinately increased for temporary periods during the last few years, in consequence of a looseness in its divorce laws, which some legal shysters engaged in that industry had discovered, and by the hegira of unequally yoked couples to its territory in order to come within the jurisdiction of its courts. Such temporary changes in the popula tion of various states often occur. Some years ago Indiana was the divorce-seekers' paradise, a brief residence and a shadowy notice only being required under the laws of the state. At a later day, Utah, the land of many marriages, was made the land also of easy divorces^ as its laws did not require even a residence in the territory to give its courts jurisdiction of the parties. But the Mormon policy did not look with lenity on marital separations, as, they would loosen the hold of poly«jamv on its people, and the system of divorces made easy, even for those having only one wife, was abolished. Rhode Island, as we have said, has since been in favor with unhappy husbands and wives and divorce lawyers, but that state is now ""to inauguate a re­

Senator Logan's latest public performance, a paper contributed to the Chautau quan, possesses peculiar significance. He has been termed illiterate the paper referred to defines, in a clear, practical manner, the meaning of the term illiteracy. The impression made is far from agreeable to people who base their confidence in American institutions, on the intelligence of the American people, and the educational advantages they ess. These advantages are neither so great as they are commonly supposed to be, nor are the facilities placed within the reach of the mass availed of.

Senator Logan says that twelve states and' one territory embrace a population "of 10,079,130 of ten years of age and upward, of which number no less than 4,424,513, or over two-fifths are unable to write—forty-three out of every one hundred unable to sign their own names— while of the 26,682,477 persons of like age in the remaining states and territories, the number of such illiterates is but 1,915,446, or a little over seven in every one hundred." The twelve states and territory referred to are Alabama. Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and New Mexico. Out of 10,000,000 entitled to vote in 1880, 2,000,000 were unable to read or write. Census tabulations are quoted supporting assertions which will surprise all who have not given the matter attention. The fact is evident that the balance of power is held by one ignorant voter in five,

It has been the practice of speakers and writers to assume that the illiteracy designed to excite most alarm prevails to a greater degree in the south than in the north. The complacency with which this view is presented is disturbed by the simple statement that, in proportion to their means and opportunities many southern states are doing more to educate their people than the citizans of New England. The correctness of this remarkable declaration is easily demonstrated. The census shows for instance, that in Connecticut of 100 persons 59 are adults and 41 minors, while in South Carolina there are 57 minors to 43 adults. Now, it is evident that these 43 adults must pay more in .proportion than the citizens of Connecticut. In Connecticut the 59 adults would each have to pay $2.78 to make up the $164 per annum required for the education of the 41 children, while the 43 adults in South Carolina would ha^e to pay $5.30 apiece per annum to make up $228. The Senator presents figures showing $2.78 per adult in Connecticut is equivalent to $5.30 in South Carolina to equalize the cost of education, the expenditure in thg latter state being that much greater.

Another statement will surprise the average reader. Massing the whites of the South, Senator Logan shows that of the 6,010,714 native whites ten years of age and upward, within the territorial limits mentioned, there are as many as 1,395,441—being 23.2 per cent., or nearly one in every four of the whites—unable to write. The conclusion deducted from the facts and figures submitted is, in effect, a restatement of the proposition that the remedy for this condition of affairs is to be found in national aid to elementary education "within reasonable limits." The actual mean cost of the schooling of each public school pupil in the United States is about $10. Senator Logan suggests it would be well to ascertain how much the per capita tax would be on the adults bearing this burden in each state and territory, as a preliminary step in the solution of a question that con ceras every citizen of the Republic.

WISE AND OTHERWISE.'

Lent begins February 18. In Massachusetts there are twenty three cities.

The new Chinese dictionary comprises forty volumes. The sultan of Turkey is said to be a very good amateur pianist.

There were nearly 12,000 marriages last year in New York City. A woman of Tuckertown, Fla., is successfully running a saw-mill.

A child recently died in Rye, England, of fright caused by a boy wearing a mask.

Sir Henry Besseinaer, of steel fame, has lately celebrated his ,72d birthday anniversary.

John Ericsson, the inventor, tte father of "the monitor, is now 81 years old and is hale and hearty.

General Gordon is a great smoker, and as he has a good supply of tobacco it is presumed he will stand along siege.

At Wayland, N. Y., a man with an eye for the eternal fitness of things runs a bar in connection with- an undertaking establishment.

Worth, the man milliner of Paris, announces that he is about to retire from active life, and leave his business in the hands of his two sons.

A prohibitory law is tersely characterized by a Philadelphia opponent as "an attempt to protect drunkards against themselves at the expense of sober people."

It is a curious fact that of the 188 members of the English privy council, ninety, or rather more than one-half, are peers. As there are 513 peers, it would seem that about one in every five is a privy councillor.

The grand jury at Harrisburg, Pa., reports skating rinks a nuisance, because they are "detrimental to the health ef our young people, and in a great measure destructive of the morals ®f the youth who frequent them."

To a Philadelphia "note of rejoicing that "the Liberty bell's trip is -through the states where slaves no longer serve," southern paper retorts: "The old bell would toll if it bad to pass through Fall River or the Hocking Valley."

Henry James, the story-writer, is being

thk respect. The Governor severely criticised in Boston because he .1 '1 lil 1.3 A. .1*. !M nici 1A Irtlvf 4A

THE E3JPKE8S, TETtfcE EEBBtJAE"? o. f§8f.

had the bad taste, in his latest novel, to burlesque, in the character of Miss Birdseve, one of the moet lovable and philanthropic old ladies in its Beacon Hill community.

In Des Moines, the namber of saloohs has increased from 60 to 102 since the socalled "prohibition" went into effect As these sellers have no license to pay, they can stand an occasional confiscation of stock, which is kept low in expectation of such emergencies.

Divorces are becoming fashionable in Scotland. Last year eighty-nine petitions were granted, being the largest number on record. The highest number of decress in any previous year was eighty-one in 1880. The average number lor the ten years before 1876 was only thirty-five.

Washington society is in a ferment on the question whether President-elect Cleveland can dance, and, if he can, whether he will open the inauguration ball with his sister, his cousin, or his aunt—or any other eligible female. It is understood that he has consented, but for one night only, to wear a dress coat, but resolutely refuses patent leather pumps and black stockings.

Hezekiah Williams, colored, was exhibited at a Philadelphia museum as "the wild man from the jungles of Africa." He was chained to the floor,and the police interferred on the supposition that he was a maltreated idiot. The removal of his false hair and b^ard revealed a perfectly sane negro. The magistrate said that Williams could exhibit himself as a wild man or any other kind-of a man as long as he hurt no one.

ECHOES OP THSl EXCHANGES.

Indianapolis Journal: It looks like retribution for a woman to undertake to punish the man'inciting others to murder women and children.

Indianapolis Journal: America has no sympathy for any man or woman "to attempts to redress personal or political wrongs by assassination. Mrs. Dudley should be held to strict account.

Philadelphia Press: There seems to be less assurance about the cabinet to-day than there- was a mouth ago. Then one or two names appeared to be reasonably fixed now, so far as can be judged from the reports, nothing is certain. No man who comes from the president-elect brings any clue, and nobody knows what he will do. The one thing upon which all agree is that he gives no sign. It is possible that thU may be the reserved strength of conscious power: but, on the other hand, it is precisely the course which would be followed by a man who didn't know himself what he was going to do, and who, in his uncertainty, was groping his way along.

St.j Louis Post-Dispatch: The general contempt and odium excited by such a career as that of Rossa show that public opinion is sound and honest, and in this' lies the safety of society, and its security against the clangers threatened by dynamiters, socialists and other enemies. They occupy a great deal of public attention on account of the sensational nature of their proceedings, but the sensations they create are disproportionate to their real importance. Wnen any real test of strength comes, it will be found that the decent, honest, orderly elements form: ninety-nine per cent, of tlie population, and they will have little trouble in dealing 'tf'ith the small fraction who believe in dynamite and murder.

Chicago Inter Ocean: Gen. Crook's opinions are liable to the bias of prejudice, but his nature is too honorable to lend itself to conscious untruth. He may or may not be mistaken when he claims for the American Indian that he is the intellectual peer of most, if not all, the various nationalities we have assimilated to our laws, customs and language. This is saying a good deal, but undoubtedly the Indian would find the ballot of very great assistance in protecting himself in his natural rights. The great need is to make the red man self-supporting and in order to that condition he must be afforded ordinary facilities for securing what justly belongs to him. Voting is not all of suffrage, any more than it is all of death to die. Without political privilege there can be, in a republic, no equality of civil rights, no assurance of justice.

Minneapolis Tribune: A certain school of the temperance reformers has a pro pensity for errors of this kind. They labor under the delusion that the law could suppress as a crime what the people do not believe to be a crime. They give up the work of reforming men"and building up a higher public sentiment, and waste their energies^and spoil their tempers in a vain attempt at a short cut. When they might be doing the world good, they persist in drawing off and_ occupying themselves with silly propositions relative to the United States constitution. Once under this fatal spell of constitu-tion-tinkering, the temperance reformer is in that same hopeless condition as the mechanic who has succumbed to the fascinations of the perpetual motion delusions.

Misplaced Sympathy.

St. Louis Post-Disp itch. The bullet in O'Donovan Rossa's back means a great many dollars in his pocket.

The Boy's Friend.

She smote him with the shingle Till she made him thrill and .tingle Because he did not mind his baby brother, But he soon forgot lis pain And went singing down the lane, "A boy's beet friend is his mother." —[Boston Courier:

Divorced From tbe Wrong Woman. Through several mistakes in serving papers, notices, etc., it is now found, -after legal proceedings covering the greater part oi ft year, and costing $3,000, that an Oswego man has been granted a divorce from another man's wife.

A Short Memory.

Chicago Journal. Senator Bayard, in a recent interview, is reported to have said that "the Republicans have disposed of nothing." Senator Bayard is mistaken. The Republicans disposed of the Southern Democratic rebellion, and of a scheme to take Delaware out of the Union, which was apart of it.

Characteristics of American Audiences. ''f Chicago Journal.

Irving, the actor, has an article in the Fortnightly, a London magazine, describing the characteristics of American audiences. A leading characteristic of American audiences within the past year so has been the zeal with which they have paid high prices for tickets to Mr. Irving's performances.

M.

Blaine Is Not Well.

Washington Letter in Boston Poet. Mr. Blaine's exceeding pallor is commented on whenever he appears in public. It was very marked at the funeral of Mrs. Stanley Matthews, Saturday, when we caught the full daylight in his face. It is a line like that he wore after Garfield had been aseassinated leaning on

his arm. It is the face of a man who has seen the hand-writing on the wall, and in whose breast the most intricate oroblems of mortal fate are revolving. There is not the drawing around him for conference that was at one time predicted during the winter.

Tbe New Oassabiaaca. The girl stood on the roller skat^a, But then she could not go She was afraid to tempt the fates

Because she wabbled so. She called aloud, "Bay! Chawley, say! Do come help me along!" But Chawley went the other way, j,

BefcauA bis legs went' wrong There came a crash—a thunder sound} The girl, oh, where was she? ^-%'i Ask of the eiddy youth around, ••i

Who viewed her hosiery.

—Exchan^4.

A New Western Journal* "f Dry Wash (Ari.) Lyre. We begin with this issue to corral news for the Lyre, and we intend to make things hum. We shall aim to do justice to all and court the favor of none. In this way we expect to please all sensible people. As "tor cranks and bullies, we give a general notice that the editor of the Lyre doesn't intend to get licked, and is equally ready to put up his hands or his weapon to defend his rights. A line of subscribers will be formed at counting-room to-morrow morning.

A Reform Demanded.

Indianapolis Journal. 3The annual report of Hon. Ben. Butterworth, commissioner of patents, shows that the receipts of the bureau of patents for 1884 exceeded the expenditures by $105,219, and that there is a balance in the treasury of $2,781,695 to the credit of the bureau. In view of these facts, it is a great injustice to inventors that the cost of application is not greatly reduced, and the wrong is intensified by. the long delay between the filing of applications and the decision of them. There is need for immediate legislation to correct this injustice.

The Peninsular Campaign. General George B. McClellan will contribute two papers to The Century war series, oue of a general nature on the peninsular campaign, and the second on the battle of Antietam. General Joseph E. Johnston, who, until the battle of Seven Pines, commanded the Confederate forces opposed to McClellan in the same campaign, will write of the Confederate side, covering the period from Manassas to Seven Pines, dealing with both battles, and with his own relations and differences with Jefferson Davis. It will be remembered that General Johnston was wounded at Seven Pines, and was soon after succeeded in command by General Lee.-

The Current.

In this week's issue of The Ctfrrent (February 7), the third and concluding part of the Italian character study, "Paschiarella," by A. Werner, is given an informing and suggestive paper entitled "The Treaties," is from the pen of F. G. Russell the -Rev. W. H. Thomas, D. D., of Chicago, is the author of the 7th paper in the important "American Type" seriea a most interesting short story by W. G. David, entitled "Was Hobbs Right?" is given Edmund Alton's second paper on "Tartarean Darkness," describing the chaotic condition of District of Columbia laws, appears a brief study entitled "Lawyers," is by J. W. Donovan, himself a lawyer J. W. Phelps, in "Where are the Reports?" propounds an interesting query tlie life and character of Jules Simon is portrayed by Lucy H. Hooper, in her "Celebrated Personages of France Chapter X. of E. P. Roe's great serial, "An Original Belle," is given "Among the Michigan Pines," the unusually interesting and valuable series by Charles Ellis, is continued and John McGovern has a paper entitled "The March Onward."

The poems of the number comprise "Beyond," by H. L. Gordon "Three," by Flora Ellis Stevens "At Night," by Ada Iddings Gale "New Mexico," by E. Hough "Love's Sentence," by James A. Waldron "Taking in the Hammock," by J. N. Matthews and "Life," by Emma Carleton.

His LOBS Was Her Gain.

"Well madam," said a fashionable physician to a wealthy lady patient, "if you don't like my prescriptions, perhaps you had better try Parker's Tonic, or some other quack stuff." "You don't mean it, Doctor," she answered, "but your advice may be good for all that. Sometimes what you call 'quack stuff' is the best»and most scientific medicine after all." She got a bottle of Parker's Tonic and it cured her of neuralgia arising from disordered stomach and nerves. She told her friends, and now they all keep a doctor at home in the form of Parker's tonic.

AMUSEMENTS.

^PERA HOUSjg

0NgffiHT

Monday, Feb. 9.

MADISON SQUARE THEATER CO., •Presenting

CALLED BACK

1

WITH——

ORIGINAL CAST AND SCENERY.

No extra charge for reserved seats. Sale now open, at Button's book store.

HORSE OWNERS

SHOULD USE THE NEVEBSLXP

HORSE SHOES

AND

REMOVABLE CALKS.

CALKS ALWAYS SHARP. An entire setean be changed in five minutes. Costs less than the old style of shoeing. Send for circulars and testimonials, The N. S. WRKNOH, used for removing and inserting these Calks, will be found especially useful for household and stable.

THE NEVERSUP HORSE SHOE C3., 36 India Wharf, Boston.

FRANK PROX,

Steam Fitter, Coppersmith, Flionaber,

And Wholesale Dealerin

BRASS and RUBBER GOODS, STEAM FITTINGS, PUMPS, Etc., 17 and 19 N. 9th St.. Terre Hante.

C.F. ZIMMERMAN, IDrviggist,

SOUTHEST CORNER MAIN AND THIRTEENTH STREETS.

A select stock of drugs and toilet articles. Prescriptions acurately compounded.

NIGHT BELL at side door.

C. B. CHAPMAN'S EAST END DRUG STORE Cor. Main and Twelvth Sis.,

rs headquarters for Pure Drugs, Medicines and Chemicals Toilet. Articles, Liquors, and Cigars. Prescriptions accurately compounded day or night.

tienra

THE ONLY REMEDIES FOR THE SKIN AND BLOOD UNIVERSALLY COMMENDED.

Wm. T. Totten, 672 North Tenth Philadelphia, reports that one of IJstreet, IBcustomers stated to him incidentally that he was felling so well and had gained twentyseven pounds in the last year, all of which he attributed to a systematioeourse I tbe CuMcura Resolvent, which has proved effectual when ali other remedies failed.

SORES OM NECK.

Chas. Brady, Somervllle, Mass., who refers to Dr. J. J. Wood, druggist, of that city, certifies to a wonderful cure of running sores on tbe neck which had been treated by hospital physicians without cure, and which yielded completely to the Cutlcura Remedies.

CUBED BY UT1CUKA.

My skin disease, which resisted several popular remedies, and other remedies advised by physicians, has been cured by your Cutlcura Remedies. They surpassed my most sanguine expectations and rapidly effected a cure. J. C. ARE NTRUE. vineennes, Ind. -.f

KNOW ITS VAI.DE.

A11 of your Cutlcura Remedies give very good satisfaction. Tbe Cutioura I especially recommend for the diseases for which it is used, l.know from experience its value.

DR. H. J. PRATT, Montello, Wis.

^vvi''A CUTICURA ABROAD. Through a home returned Norwegian, I have learned to know your Cutlcura, which has in a short time cured me of an Kczema that my physician's medicines could not heal. CAR. HELTZES,

Bergen, Norway. Agenturforretnihg, THE POKT POWERS. A feeling of gratitude impels me to acknowledge the great merits of your Cutlcura, and I cordially recommend It to the public as a very valuable remedy.

U. N. POWERS, Bridgeport, Conn.

For sale everywhere. Price Cutlcura, the great. Skin Cure, 50c. Cutlcura Soap, an exquisite .Skin Beautifier, 25c. Cutlcura Resolvent, the new Blood Purifier, 81.00. Potter Drag and Cheml cal Co., Boston

P11T 8 COB A SOAP, an exquisite Toilet wU 11 Bath, and .Nursery Sanative.

SANDFORD'S RADICAL CURE For CATARRH.

Wltcli-Hazel, American Pihe, Canada Fir, Marigold and Clover Blossoms.

A single dose of Sanford's Radical Cure instantly relieves the most violent Sneezing or Head Colds, clears the Head as by magio, stops watery discharges from the Nose and Eyes, prevents Ringing Noises in the Head, cures Nervous Headache, and subdues Chills and Fevers. In Chronic Catarrh it oleanses the nasal passages of foul mucus, restores the senses of smell, taste, and earl eg When affected, frees the head, throat, and bronchial tubes of offensive matter, sweetens and purifies the breath, stops the cough, and arrests "the progress of Catarrh towards Consumption.

One bottle Radical Cure, one box Catarrhal Solvent and Sandford's Inhaler, all in one package, of all druggists Ask for SANDFORD'S RADICAL CURB.for81. Potter Drug and Chemical Co., Boston.

£QLLf A/©* For the relief and preMOUTAiny vention, the instant It Is applied, of Rheumatism,

Neuralg la. Sciatica, Conghs,Colds,Weak Back, Stomach and Bowels, Shooting Pains, Numbness, Hysteria, Female Pains, Palpitation, Dys-

LECTRL C\\ pepsla, Liver Complaint, b/ '.'JUAb*!Bilious Fever, Malaria, "-fcASTHW'and epidemics, use Collins' Plasters (an Electric Battery combined with a" Porous Plaster) and laugh at pain. '45c, everywhere.

I1EQAI1.

J^PPi-ICATION FOR LICENSE.

The undersigned will apply to the Board of County Commissioners, at their next regular session, which commences on :the 1st Monday in March, 1885. for license to retail spirituous and malt liquors In less quantities than a qu&rtat a time, with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on my premises. My place of business is located on the south half of lot No. forty .eight (48), at the northeast corner of Fourth and Walnut streets and known at No. 130 south Fourth street, in the Second ward.

THOMAS L. JOHNSON.

Haruer's Young People

(AN ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY.

The serial and short stories In'Harper's Young People have all the domestic interest that juvenile fiction can possess, while they are wholly free from what is pernicious or vulgarly sensational. The humorous stories and pictures are full of Innocent fun, and the papers on natural history and science, travel, and the facts of life, are by -yrlters whose names give tbe best assurance of accuracy and value. Illustrated papers on athletic sports, games, and pastimes give full information on these subjects. There Is nothing cheap about it but Its' price.

An epitome of everything that Is {attractive and desirable in juvenile literature.—Boston Courier.

A weekly feast of good things to the boys and girls in every family which it visits.—Brooklyn Union.

It is wonderful in its wealth of pictures, information, and Interest.—Christian Advocrte, N. Y.

TERMS: Postage Prepaid, $2 Per Year. Vol. VI. Commenced November 4,1884,

Single numbers, Five Cents each, Remittances should be made by Postoffice money order or draft, to avoid chance of loss.

Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement without the express order of HABPKR & BBOTHBBS.

Address. HARPER & BROTHERS. New York.

WHY "IDLE?

THE COTTAG E'fiEARTH Is a beautifully illustrated magazine, costing only 81.80 a year and publishes stories and poems by tbe best American writers, fcuch as Louise Chandler Monlton, Edward Everett

Hale, Susan Warner, ioaqnin Miller, Francis Mace, Mrs. Abby Morton Diaz, Rose Terry Cooke, Celia Thaxter, Luoy Larcom, Rose Hawthorne Lathrop, Sketches and articles upon noted.Dersons and places, departments for mothers for children ane for Sabbath reading, music, vocal and instrumental prize puzzles, fashion and fancy work hints on floriculture, and valuable tested receipts for household use. "v-

The publishers desire local

1

A E N S

in every town, to whom liberal pay will be given. An experienced canvasser can earn from 830 to 840 a week. Any smart man or woman can do well. Send at once for free sample copy and terms to agents,

THE COTTAGE HEARTH CO.. Boston, Mass.

REST

not, life IP swee go and aaie before' ycr die. something mien $ ana sublime leave beau 1 to conquer time." 886). week in your own town.

15 outfit free. No risk. Everything new Capital not required. We will fur cist vou everything. Many are making fornnes. Ladies make as much as men, ar* ooys and girls make great pay: Reaf you want business at which you «& make great'pay all the time, particulars to

H.

ualne.

HAI.T.KTTACQ.,write

Portland

NO SURPRISE:

THE GOVERNMENT ENDORSES^

TXZSS

American Agriculturist

From the Tenth Census, vol. 8, just pah* llshed: "The Ametican Agrlculurlst 1b especially worthy of mention, because of the remarkable sueeess that has attended the unique and untlrine efforts of Its pro* arletora to increase and extend its circulation. Its contents are duplicated every month for a German edition, wbloh also circulates very widely.

This tribute is a pleasanglnoldeot In tbe marvpUotiB nearly HALF

A CENTURY

Career of this recognised leading Agricultural Journal of the world.

What it is To-Day,

Six months ago the American Agrloul turlst entered upon anew career or pros-

or any« country.

strength richer in engravings, printed on finer paper, and presenting in every Issue 1QG columns of original reading matter from the ablest writers, and nearly 100 11lustratins. Dr. George Thnrber, for nearly a quarter of a century the edltor-in-chiel of tbe American Agriculturist, Joseph Harris, Byron D. Halsted, Col. M. C. Weld, and Andrew S. Fuller, the-other longtime editors, together with the other, writers who have made the Ameircan Agriculture 1st what itis to-day,are Still at their posts,

WHAT, FREE

Every subscriber,-whose subscription i$ immediately forwarded us with the price 8L50.p6r year, and 15 cents extra for post age on Cyclopedia, making 81.65 in all•will recleve the American Agriculturist [English or German] for all of1885. and be presented with the American Agriculturist Family Cyclopedia (lust out),

Send three 2-cent

700

pages

and over 1.000 engravings. Strpngly bound in cloth, black and gold. This entirely new volume is a remarkable storehouse and book of reference for every department of human knowlea including an Agricultura. Supplement Dr. Thurber.

stamps

for mailing

pages

of onr Family Cyciopedlsu' Canvassers wanted every where. Address Publishers American Agrioaltnrlst. DAVID W. JUDD, SAM'L BURNAM,

President. Secretary. 1 Broadway, New York.

1885.

Harper's Magazine.

ILL US THAT ED. •rif. __ Wlth' the new Volume, beginning in December, Harper's Magazine Will conclude its thirty-fifth year. The oldest periodical of Its type, it is yet, in each new volume, a new magazine, not simply because It presents fresh subjects ana new pictures, but also, and ohlefly, because it steadily advances in the method itself of magazine making. In a word, the magazlne becomes moreand more the faithful mirror of ourrent life and movement. Leading features in the attractive programme for 18S5 are: new serial novels by Constance Fenlmore Woolsou nrt W.D. Ho wells: a neve novel entitled "At the Bed Glove 'descriptive illustrated papers bv F. D. Millet, B. Swain Glfforf E. A. Abbey, H. Gibson and others Goldsmith's "'She Stoops to Conquer," 11 lustratedby Abbey Important papers on Art, Science, etc.

HARPER'S PERIODICALS.

Per Year:

HARPER'S WMEKLY -....84 00 HARPER'S MAGAZINE......... 00 HARPER'S BAZAR 4 00 fiARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE 2 00 HARPER'S FRANKLIN SQUARE

LIB RARY, One Year (52 Numbers)10 00 Postage free to all subscribers in the UnltedStates and Canada.

The volumes of the Magizine begin with the numbers for June and December of each year. When no time is specified, it will be und'erstood that the .subscriber wishes to begin with the current number.,

The last eleven semi-annual volumes of Harper's Magazine, in neatcloth binding-,' will De sent by mall, postpaid, on receipt of 83 per volume. Cloth cases, for binding, SO cents each—by mail, postpaid.

Index to Harper's Magazine, alphabetical, analytical, andciasslfled, for volumes 1 to 60, Inclusive, from June, 1850, to June. 1880, one vo), 8vo, cloth, 84.00.

Remittances should be made by postoffice money order or draft, to aVold chance of loss. '-r-:-

Newspapers are not to. copy this advertisement without the express order of Harper & Brothers.

Address HARPER & BROTHERS, New York.

THE ATLANTIC, dependent atone on reading matter for Us success, is brilliant above all others in this respect, and never has been so fresh, so versatile, so genial, as it is now.—The Literary World.

The Atlantic Monthly For 1886

•-.r .y Will be particularly oted Its Sierial stories, namely:—

I. M.'iC!

THE PRINCESS CASAMASSIMAi ', BT HENRY JAMES, Author of "The Portrait of a Lady," etc,

II-

'A COUNTRY GENTLEMAN. A BT MRS. OLIPHANT, Author of "The Ladles Lindores," "The

Wizard's Son," etc. III.

THE PROPHET OF THE GBEAT SMOKY MOUNTAIN. BY CHARLES EGBERT CRADDOCK, Author of "In the Tennessee Mountains.

BY SARAH ORNE JEWETT,

Author of "A Country Doctor," "Deephaven," etc.

he first of a new series of papers entitled THE NEW PORTFOLIO, r: BY OLIVEK WENDELL HOLMES,

Will appear In the January Atlantic. Poems, Essays, Stories, and Papers on Scientific, Literary and Social Topics may expected from Oliver Wendell Holmes, ohn Greenleaf Whittler, W. D. Ho wells, Henry James, F.Marion Crawford, Richard Grant White,Charles Dudley Warner, Harriet W. Presion, Henry Cabot Lodge, P. Doming, EdHh M. Thomas Thomas William Parsons, George Parsons Lathrop, James Russell Lowell, Maurice Thompson,-Thomas Bailey Aldnch, John Flske,Mark Twain, Charles EllotNortom, Horace E. Scudder, George E. Woodberrr W. H. Bishop, Edward Everett Hale, E ward Atkinson, Phillips Brooks, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Lucy Larcom, John Burroughs, James Freeman Clarke. Thomas Wentworth Hlgginson, Elizabeth Robins Pennell,Sarah Orne Jewett, L. C. Wyman, N. 8. Shaler, Edmund Clarence Stedman, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, E. P. Whipple, and many others.

TERMS 84.00 a year in advance, po8lage free 85 cents a number. With

PROFESSIONAL ^RPS.

I. H. C. KOY8W,

Attorney at Law,

No. 503 1 -2 MAINT$TREET«

Dr.

W.

C. Eichelberger

OCULIST and AURIST. Room IS, Saving* Bank Building

TERKE HAUTE, INDIANA.

Omam HODBS:—s tolls, m., and from StoSp. m.

RICHARDSON VAN VALZAI Dentists,

Office, S. W. Cor. Fifth and Main Ste, ENTRANCE ON FIFTH 8TREET,

Communication by telephone. Nitrons Oxide Gas administered.

yrr.T.TAir CLITW. J. H. CUTS'. O. S. ChXWW

Terre Haute Boiler Works

CLIFF & CO., Proprietors.

Manufacturers of Boilers Smoke Stack Tanks, Etc. Shop on First St.. Between Walsat and Pep

TKRBI HAtTTK, 1KB.

r* Repairing promptly attended to. "W

GB ATE FUII—CO FORTIN G.

EPPS'S COCOA.

BREAKFAST. I

"By a thorough knowledgeof the natir al laws whloh govern the operations digestion and nutrition, and by a careia. application of the fine properties of wellselected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided our breakfast tables with a delicately flavored beverage whloh may save us many heavy dootors' 'bills. It is by the Judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong Enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of Bubtle maladies are floating around us ready to attack^wherever there is a weak point.' We may escapemany a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with pure blood and aproperly nourished frame."—Civil Servuse Gazette. ...

Made simply with boiling water or milk. Sold only in half pound tins by Grocers, labeled thus:

JAMES EPPS & C0.,Hom®a

London, England.

W. S. CJCJFT, J. H. WILLIAMS, J. M-CLITT

GLIFT, WALL'AMS & CO.

MANUFACTURERS OF

Sash, Doors, Blinds, &c.

AND DEALERS IN

Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Glass, Paints, Oils and Builders'

A

Hardware.

Mulberry SI Cor 9tli, Terre Saute.

£9 BJ XjY'S

CREAM

B,and

IV. irr-.

A MARSH ISLAND.

SLI

erb

life-size portrait of Hawthorne, Emerson Longfellow, Bryant, Whlttier, Lowell, or Holmes, 8500 each additional portrait,81

Postal Notes and Money are at the risk the sender, therefore remittances shoutdSt •made by money order, draft or registeree, let tar, to

HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN CO., 4 Park Street, Boston, Mas*.

MRU WHERE All ELSE FAILS. Best Congh Syrop.' Tsswe Rood. Use in time. Sold by 1 rogjeist*. tMSLAWAz

TBI

''Vrl nn,1

CALIGRAPH.

The BK8T writlngmachlnein the world. Bend for eireular. H. T.Comde Gen'l Agt,7tlfc 78WestWash-

ington Btreet, Indianapolis. ISBBILT 3a MT .T -nrp. Agents, Terre Haute, Ind.

Taught and In practical use at tbe Terre Haute Commercial College.

BALM

CLEANSES THE HEADrALLAYS

ESMB^b

Inflammation.

Heales the Sores, RESTORS THE

Sense of Taste j& Smell. A Quick

& Positive Core.

50 cts at Druggists mail re ilei

60 cts b'

lstered. Sendforcircular. Samplesbym 10 cts .J ELY BROTHERS, Druggists,

Oswego, N. Y.

TRAVELERS, ATTENTION I

If yon contemplate a trip to Europe, or desire to bring relatives or .friends from the "Old Country" to America, do not fail to Inquire of

F. H. EATON,

SS I Korth ISth.

He is agent for the following well-known lines of steamships: White Star, Canard, America, Bed Star, Aackor, Inaan, Solon, national, Allan (from. Baltimore), north German, Lloyd and Hanbnrg.

Cabin and steerage passage rates of sailing and all information desired can be obtained at my office. I am also agent for the American Foreign Lightning Ex-

packages to and from Eu

press, Surope

will be sent with safety and despatch. F. H. EATON,

321 North Thirteenth St.

Terre Haute Infirmary.

Permanently established by Dr. R. Haley, of N. r., late of Trenton, Mo., who has made the diseases of the eye a specialty tbe past twenty-eight years, and treats all patients ten days free of charge. Pterygium and Eutropium, or inverted lias successfully operated on in a few moments. Office and rooms southeast corner Third and Ohio streets, opposite St. Charles hotel. Office honrs from 6 a. to 12 m., from 1 to ft p. m.

W. H. HA.SLETT,

lft£8o«tfa ruth Street.

Unredeemed Fledges Sale.

BLAiEU

entswantedforauthent.lt tion of hlB life. Pubilshat Augusta, his home. Largest, handsomest* cheap­

est, best. By the renowned historian and biographer, Col. Conwell, whose life of Garfield, published by us. outsold the twenty others by 60,000. Outsells every book ever published in this world manj agents are selling fifty dally. Agents are

All new be beginners sucthem. 848.ee

making fortunes. All new I eessful grand ehanoe for made by a lady agent tbe first day. Terms most liberal. Particular? free. Better send 25 cents for postage, eto., on free outfit, now ready, including large prospectus book, and save valuable time.

ALLEN & CO., Augusta, Maine.

CANVASSING AGENTS.

Energetic and reliable (male or female) wanted to sell our hew Medical Chest Protectors and Abdominal Bands. Cure and roteet from Coughs, Colds, Pneumonia, bronchitis, Pleurisy, Rheumatism, Inflammation of Liver, Stomach, Bowels and Dyspepsia. Will aid treatment and relieve distressing symptoms of Consumption. Nothing else of this kind in the market, Goods and prices popular. Liberal inducements. New York Health Agency, 25$ ad a N