Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 8 February 1885 — Page 2
I
IV
1% V,
9
O POISON
THE PASTRY IF„
AJSUB "creTm.
VanlllIi«Bioii,Oraigt,
etc., lavor Cukea,
ftnamiPaddta|ii4tc.iU delicately and natArKlIy iu the fruit from which they are made,
fcOJt STRENGTH AND TKUE FRUIT ,, FLAVOR THEY STAND ALONE.
7( WIMMO BY THI
Price Baking Powder Co.,
(hicagOt III. St. Louis, Mo ttAKKRS or
0r. Price's Cream Baking Powder
—AND—
fir. Price's Lnpulin Yeast Gems, Beat Dry Bop Yeaat.
& »OSe BAUE STT O-EOCEEa.
jf WE MAKE BUT ONE QUALITY.
LYON'S
BETOflEUSINQ. AFTER US1KQ» A GIFT TO THE GRAY. dye, but a clear frajnic to the hair fornix .. Tad capillary circulation of the tcalp, whereby natural action, and as a result restores
e£l°r
to
nair, leaving it soft and
-rftajtlfiH. Unlike all other to-called restoratives, it it rarely free from Sulphur, Nitrate Stiver, and v' aoxjous and deleterious chemicals. It is an ele- $ Hair Dretiin^-depositing no sediment upon
Jit sealpf does not stvintbe skin, nor soil the most jhllcsfi fabric. AddtvVs A. KIEFER & CO. Indianapolis Ind. jFrom a Lady of Clay Comity,
BRAZIL, Ind, July 7,1884.
4 dssrs. A. Klefer & Co., IndlanapollB 4 -utlemen—Having bat little faith in »a restoratives, I was, after much hesl\*t on and with great reluctance, induced J* «.ry a bottle of Lyon's Kozohtium. My 7"air was gray, coarse and harsh, and so Virittle tbat for years, whenever combed iur brushed, It would brealk off. Upon twine the Kozothmm a speedyiand de&lra--Tiange took place. My nalr became it raid lustrous, regained the natural tr, Vo»\, ceased to break off, and is HOW as *i*ii, elastic and glossy as anyone need deplre. As a hair.dressing I now flad lt^nfllspenslble, and indorse it heartily for all purposes for which it is recommended
MRS. FANNIE B.(WALMSLEY.
^tL*s0
"^1 RADfc^s. 'f HANA
Ai .t
How few understand what get fit Is? That painrul period"breaking In" is deemed lessentlal ta-'every new outfit. This is positively unnecessary. The scientific principles applied to the Inumerona shapes and sizes of the "Hanan" shoes, insures perfect fit, and tbeir flexibility, absoluto freedom from the tortures of "breathing In," as they are easy and comfortable from the first day. Bold everywhere. Ask your shoe dealer for them. HANAN & SQSx. N. BOLAND^CEWT, v-aptTKfain St., Terre Haute
if?S
SSpNSWICK, BALKE, UOLLEN DER & OO.'S
Billiard and Pool Tables,
,jf all sizgs, new and second-hand.
All Kinds of Billiard Material had the same price as per
W »UNSWldK and BALKG & OO.'S PRlOEOilST. In Terr© Ha/uto. j-
JACOB MAY, Agent.
GEATBPUL—COMFOBTING.
EPPS'S COCOA.
4f BREAKFAST. "By a thorough knowledge of the natu laws whioh govern the operations «. 'CBtion and nutrition, and by a carefu» lication or the fine properties of well--ted Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided our ?S -fast tables with a delicately flavored ee whioh may save us many heavy bills. It is by the judicious use
reaT*tlcleS
of dietthat a constitution
xe gradually bum
up until strong
Made simply with boiling water or nlilk. Sold only in half pound tins by Grocers, labeled thus
JAMES EPPS & C0.,B™®aSt
London, England.
"DAILY EXPRESS.
VTIX). M. ALLEN, PROPRIETOR.
PUBLICATION OFFICE South Fiftlf St., Printing House Souare.
lered lass goiter at the office at Ttrre Kaute, Indiana.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Hy Express, per week IScte "r per year *7 60 six months 3 75 it ten weeks 150 Issued every morning except Monday, ad delivered by carriers.
TERMS FOR THE WEEKIIY. One copy, one year, paid in advance..II 25
Kor e?uis of there will be a'caish dlsinntof 10 per cent, from the above rates,
.r tf
oreferred Instead of the cash, a copy tf'the Weekly Express will be sent free -or the
time that
"the
clu
le2?„lbJinbsX5°tenltlie
pays for, not
same rate of dls-
knd8 in addition the Weekly Ex-
ireefor
the time that the club pays
for, r.aMess than six monihs. clabs of twenty-five thei «Rine rate of discount, and in addition the Dally Ex -ress for the time that the club pays for, a it less thau six months.
Postage prepaid in all cases when sent oy mail. Subscriptions payable in advance.
ADVERTISEMENTS
.nPCTtfed in the Daily and Weekly on rea(H nalle terms. For particulars apply at ax tidress the office. A limited amount ladvertlslng will be published in the 1 eekly.
My*All six months subscribers to the Weekly Express Will be supplied FREE Ijjrith "Treatloe on the Horse and his Disases," and bcaattfaiiy illustrated AIv. janac. Bnb&eriblug for the
*Uer® tbe Expr^U on *11®. «&- cm file at American K*oh«j«« &*A merican Kxohn&«ate
*«^«^Capocl»es»
JBfelin AT
ECCENTBIC CHABACTEBS- arrangement, anything may be contained The greatest men that history records in the envelopes, excepting hard subhave not been without their little weak-
nesses, somewhat flattering to humanity, because roving them to be simply men and not demi-gods. Thus Sir Walter Raleigh, in his best days, was a consummate dandy, and it is said appeared at court with six thousand dollars worth ol diamonds in his shoes, while his swordhilt and baldric were studded with precious stones of great value. Bruyere, whose written lines were all aglow with poetry and wit, was coarse, heavy and vulgarly stupid in society, and as a contemporary declares, was in consequence, the subject ef many a practical joke. Next there occurs to us that great philosopher, Descartes, who had a perfect passion for wigs, not uulike Sir Richard Steele, who would sometimes spend forty guineas on a black peruke. Corneille, the French Shakespeare, spoke in language so ungrammaticai as 16 mortify his friends constantly, while his conversation was the acme of stupidity. What was said of Descartes might apply also to him, viz: that he had received his intellectual wealth from nature in solid bars, not in current coin. Whoever thinks of Goldsmith without calling up that irrepressible peachcolored coat? It is as immortal as its master, and one never forgets the German flute that fed and lodged the itinerant in his* wanderings over half of Europe. Yet -the man who wrote The Deserted Village, Citizen of the World, etc., "couldn't talk," .it is said, "any more than a parrot." '1
According to Johnson, Pope had such a high opinion of hiaiself as to think he was one of the pivots of the system of the world the little deformed satirist was pride personified. Vanity builds its nest and hatches its brood in high places. Napoleon prided' himself on the smallness of his hands and feet. Sir Walter Scott was prouder of being sheriff of Selkirkshire than of his reputation as the auther of Waverly. Byron was vain to excess vain of li?s genius, his rank, and vain of his vices. What contrasts present themselves, as the panorama of the mind unrolls the imprint of memory. Dryden, the illustrious poet, was yet all that he described himslf to be: "Slew in conversation, dull in humor, saturnine and reserved." The trite saying that no man is a hero to his own valet, has abundant illustrations. The Count de (Jrammont once surprised Cardinal RiChelieu jumping with his own servant to see who could leap the highest, and by joining in the ridiculous sport, and permitting the Cardinal to beat him a "few inches, he gained his fixed friendship and great political preferment. Salvator Rosa was full of fun and frolic, after play ing in impromptu comedies, and was more than once detected by his friends in the streeis of Rome dressed as a mountebank. Mediocrity i» ever voluble, and genius oftenest reticent. Addison's conversational deficiencies are well-known nor was the great master of English literature himself ignorant of the fact, as he used to declare that he had a good bank at home, but didn't carry small change with him.
The favorite recreation of Pestavius the learned Jesuit was, after application^ to study and writing for hours, to twirl his chair steadily for five or ten minutes. Cujas, the famous lawyer, studied lying upon the floor with his books about him. Odd enough certainly are the fancies of genius. Spinoza took a strange and absorbing delight in seeing spiders fight,, aturning to this strange amusement fre quently during the day, while a singular contrast and yetjaptihl resemblance was seen in Mu'gliabecchi, the famous libraries" of the Duke of Tuscany. He was passionately fond of spiders, fed and pro tected them, had his rooms filled with them, and would not permit of their being disturbed. Cowper, while a prey to the deepest melancholy, wrote that famous burlesque, John Gilpin, and passed his leisure houid in makiug bird cages and breeding rabbits, »,*,j y£
Mina, the justly celebrated Swiss paint er always had a room full of cats, and one upon his shoulder while he was drawing. On the contrary, it will be remembered that Henry HI., of France'could not remain in the room with a cat. Sometimes the idiosyncrasies of great men are repulsive for Goethe, the noblest German of them all, had a fondness for snakes, and petted a tame adder, while, at the same time he had a most unaccountable aversion to dogs. Erasmus, the profound scholar and philosopher, was terrified and would almost faint at the sight of a fish. Thackeray felt so sensitive at the diminutive character of his nose, that he never forgot to present a full face to his companion when talking. Lamb stuttered so as to nearly stumble over his half uttered sentences, yet the pen of Elia glided like a fairy wand as it recorded lines now so tenderly cherished.
Cromwell, who was said to "live on stilts," sometimes came down, laid aside his puritanic gravity, and played at blind man's buff with his attendants, showing
uo'ugh fo resist" every tendency to dls\we. Hundreds of subtle maladies are oatlng around n6 ready to attack wher- all the eagerness of earnest and frolicsome L»a (a a w«fllr nntnL w© may
6 8
ver there is a weak point. ctlpe many a fatal shaft by keeping our wives well fortified with pure blood and ireuperly nourished frame."—Civil SerVnb©3a86tl©.
boyhood. And, in the same connection we might add a hundred other characters, all prominent from recognized talents and many from great achievements, but to whose memory still cling certain eccentricities, which at times brought out prominently elements of ludicrou^ness. Some one has said there is no genius in which there is not an element of madness, and what more striking proof can there be than the instances mentioned above?
The city of Khartoum, rendered famous by recent events in Egypt, lies on a plain near the point where the White Nile and the Bine Nile unite. The resident population is generally estimated at from 50,000 to 55,000 souls, of which twothirds are slaves. There is also a floating population estimated at from 1,500 to 2,000 souls, consisting of Europeans, Syrians, Copts, Turks, Albanians and a few Jews. The free resident population are mostly Nakhas, or aborigines Dongola wees, from Dongola Shaghiyes, from a district along the Nile, north of Khartoum, and Rubatat, a district north of Berber. The slaves belong mostly to the Nuba, Dinka, Shulook, Bert a and other negro tribes. Both the free population and the elaves are Mohammedans of the Mahik school of the divinity, afid are also followers either of the Rufar, Kadri, Hamdi and Saadi sect of dervishes. They are very superstitions. Their political creed is to side with whichever side the strongest. The free inhabitants are mostly engaged in trade or commerce, and the slaves in agriculture, or else hired out as daily laborers by their mas4
In Paris letters are now sent by pneumatic tubes throughout the city at a cost of seventy-five centimes. They must be contained in envelopes supplied by the postoffices. Hitherto only open telegra cards, charged thirty centimes, and closed centimes, of a Ka.all size, ^dVa tai^itteA Under the
stances, provided the weight does not exceed a quarter of an ounce. At Paris, also, telephone boxes have been opened at the postoffices, for the use of which a charge of fifty centimes for five minutes' conversation is made.
WIT-PAST AHD FBE8EX i*. We, of course, mean that subtle play of the intellect whose essence all but defies analysis. Of humorits we have a full share, but of wits scarcely a noted representative. Punsters are prevalent enough but utterers of bmi mots seem to have passed away. So in art, caricature has taken the place of comic characterization. On the stage, what is called a comedy is not more than an elongated farce. The wit which was the staple^of old English comedy is no longer an essential in its miscalled successor. Take the "School for Scandal," which is a casket ot brilliant sayings throughout, in which wit is so liberally lavished that even the servants in the play have their share of it—an intellectual duel, if we may be allowed the expression, fioni beginning to end. It has lost its magic for the average theatregoer the most sparkling instances of repartee fail to be appreciated while the broader points are always received with roars of laughter.
There were formerly wits in the national legislature -now buffoonery is far better relished there than wit, while sensational speakeis and exhorters find it necessaiy to qualify their gravities by touches of humor, rarely by flashes of wit. It seems undeniable that the race of professional wits is extinct. Those dinners-out who were won't to "Set the table in a roar" arte no more. The law of demand and supply has been enforced in this direction as well as the more mercenary ones of trade.
T.
Who in this practical' age will take the pains to qualify himself to shine as a wit, when only punsters and jokers are called for? We know very well that wit is spontaneous, but it is also a diamond which requires laborious cutting and elaborate setting. Why delve the mine and turn the polishing wheel when a handfull ox California pebbles is readily accepted by the masses as a cluster of gems from Brazil? Sheridan's ideas were native products, but the elaboration of his bon mots cost him infinite toil. The fact is, we are too busy a people, we have too many pressing interests to engage our thoughts and faculties, to allow of our cultivating the elegant trifles which have such an importance in a less grave and exacting period.}
We .need and demand recreation and amusement, to be sure, but it must be of that character which makes us call'on the intellectual faculties. The eye must be amused and the ear tickled, but the brain must rest meanwhile. It requires no mental effort to appreciate the lay of the negro minstrel, or the flip-flap and contortions of the modern stage clown, but to grasp a flash of genuine wit is an intellectual tax. Sydney Smith libellously said that "it requires a surgical operation to get a joke into a Scotchman's head," and somebody else said that "some people couldn't take a joke if it was shot at them out of a gun." Certainly, only an active brain can appreciate true wit busy people must have more facile pleasures.
Wit is no longer the fashion therefore we have laid it oeide with the bag wigs, small clotfies, and rapiers of a former generation. Whether the season of these things will ever come around again is matter of pure speculation. But such revolution as it would necessitate must be a distant cycle. Not until we have completed this epoch can we hope that the lost Pleiad of wit will return to shine once more in the social fiimament.
In its consequences the Khartoum calamity is not unlikely to be as wide spread as the British empire in Africa The hundred million British subjects who swear by the name of Allah and his prophet will learn of the triumph which the arms and the arts of Islam have achieved and the spirt of discontent will be stimulated throughout the ten tory which they occupy. ^4
President ^Cleveland since his arrival in New York City has been holding his receptions in one hotel and boarding at another—a sort of Europeaitplan arrangement.
Jay Gould has abandoned his southern trip for the present, owing, it is Baid, to the unsettled condition of the stock mar ket.
The Oregon legislature balloted for United States senator again yesterday without choice.
Sara Bernhardt, in addition to her other sins, has become a newspaper correspondent.
The present is a gloomy period for the British nation in every part of the world
President-elect Cleveland will bly return to Albany to-night.
proba-
President-elect Cleveland will probably return to Albany to-night.
Gordon's fate is still in doubt.
YOICE OF THE PEOPLE.
A Doctor Answered.
To the Editor of the Express. TKBBE HAUTE, Ind., January 25, 1885. li. S. BriggB—Please do a considerable number of tax pfijers the kindness to arise and tell then why yon, as a republican representative to onr city council, gave your vote to create a monopoly ot the board of health by appointing four of the same school of medicine There are three other schools of medicine here with men capable and who pay taxee, all republicans. loan for
FAIBPLAT.
My asaal custom when receiving eaoh commanioations as the above is to ignore notice thereof. But as it appears personal, and reflects aeriomly upon the judgment of seven good and well meaning councilman, I will rentore a reply. When eight of us were in caucus each was allowed to present his choice for the offices in question. The position being deemed by sozre of the first-class physicians undesirable, it was fonnd they would not accept if elected. I belieTe all of us wanted to elect the beet that would accept, regardless of schools. I for one acknowledge ignorance of the existence of eo many schools, bat supposed it was one aim to heal the sick. Since receiving Fair Play's epistle I have enlightened my mind slightly, and find there is no end to schools. Namely: Alopathic, Homoepathic, Eclectic, Physiomedicalic, •Hydropathic, 'Vetaernaryic, Oculistic, Dem-ing-Siteic, and so on, icn-to endless extent. Notice! There were -but three places to fill, consequently to have satisfied all schools we would have been forced to place two or three at least, in each place, end it might have been deemed wisdom to do in order to get the necessary amount of skill. As for myself, I had but one name to present. And sincerely regret that he failed of sufficient support, for he is an eminent physician, a republican, and a gentleman not ashamed to attach his anthograph to his own communications. If "Fair Play" will announce Uis reel name, his chaness are excellent to obtain a situation on tha Deming site, whereby he might develop into a "Big Sun Flower." Let him "an^hfidfand come to the frost.
L. 8. BBIOOS.
1 Stampede Them. ion. the dynamiters on this side disafter them, they
fei
fi&dttHfa. ^V „»**4J
"PAUL ASSAILED."
TOPIC OP 1 HE SUNDAY St?HOOI* 1 IjESSON TO-OAV.
A Good Lesson Well Told—General Beligioos Kr.vi Throughout the it
"Paul Assailed," is the subject of the Sunday school lesson to-day. The lesson is from Acts xxL, 27-40. We find Paul assailed by those who knew not Christ for whom he spoke, for whom he lived. Paul found himself before four distinct parties 1. Those who understood and approved his course among the gentiles, this party including James and the more enlightened members of the church of Jerusalem. 2. Judaizing Christians as they have been called, who formed a kind of aristocracy in the church. 3. The Pharisees bitterly antagonistic to Paul. The Sadducees, who opposed the Pharisees, and who were probably "at first Phostile to Paul until his appeal to the Ph&risees. It was to these two latter parties that his arrest was due. Paul is said to have been in the temple in the holy place. It is given by Josephus that as one passed from the external parts of the temple to the holy place proper there was a railing or parapet three cubits high built along, in which pillars stood at equal distances, on which notices were given in Greek and Latin letters, that, beyond that space, persons of foreign birth—such as -were not Jews—must not go onward within the holy place, but outside of the holy place proper gentiles^might move about freely. .In another passage the same ancient author says: "Such was the first inclosure, and a second, within, was not far off accessible by a few steps, and inclosed by a fence of stone, on which an inscription forbade a person of foreign birth to enter within upon pain of death."
In the twenty-eighth verse is indicted the feeling of the Jews upon this, to them, sacred place, and their ability to arouse their fellows by the statement that one of foreign birth had occupied the holy place, is shown in the subsequent context. But it does not appear that Trophitaus, the companion and friend of PPUI, had been found in the holy place—though he could, had he wished, h«ve entered certain parts of the Temple—and the Jews, having merely seen Trophimus in the city, concluded without investigation that he must have been in the holy place along with Paul. In dire distress and danger of his life the faithful apostle is beaten by those whose intent is to th^n and there kill, him but temporary succor comes. The Jews at the temple were kept in awe of the Supreme Power, and when the military power came to the rescue of Paul he was released to the soldiers. The name of this "castje," or fortress, was the "Tower of Antonia," or the Castle of Antony, so named by King Herod, after the noted Marc "Antony.
In that simple expression in the twen-ty-ninth verse, "they supposed," what a lesson we may find, what a sermon we may preach to ourselves. They suppose that so fnd so was ture, not knowing it, not having outside proof, not looking for a fair explanation. "They supposed" from what they had seen that Panl was an enemy to his nation "they supposed" that he was an enemy to the law "they supposed" that he was a defiler of the temple, and the chief captain supposed that Paul was an evil man because the populace so hated him. Many and deep and lasting and death-dealing are the injuries that men and women inflict upon their fellows by supposing from such and such appearances that so and so is true. Lack of common-sense, or rather, a superabundance of the scandal-loving element their make-up, causes many a man, well as a woman, to become an instrument of untold misery and agony, and, it may be, of death. "Putting two and tyjo. to gether" is one of ,the things in the world to4o. "The're must be some fire where there's so much smoke" is an expression that has been made use of to bolster up many a baseless supposition The plan of the lesson may be studied as follows: Lesson topic: Suffering violence for Christ. Lesson outline: 1. Suffering assault, verses 27-31. 2. Suffering arrest, verses 32-36. 3. Suffered to speak, verses 37-40. Golden text: "I am ready, not to be bound only, but also to die at Jerusalem, for the name of the Lord Jesus."™-Acts xxi. 13.
Faded Flowers.
Chicago Inter-Ocean. Hath the lily no sweetness When folded in sleep
Have rosee, when dying, No fragrance to keep
Love, pure as the lily, Is swee' er, and throws The fragrance of rose,
Where ever it grows.
'Tis the gift of the Father, And ffd by His breath. Oh 1 what he hath planted
How can it knon death
Though lips may bo silent, Closed be the eyes, v' And folded the pale hands,
Yet love never dies.
They love us iii heaven Who loved ns on nrth, And watch over the darlings,...
They left by the hearth.
They wait by the river Of life, and they wait The sound of dear feet
At the beautiful gate.
Oh! souls once united Can never forget. Oh, h« art, cease thy crying,
They love, love us yet. —[MAY HAMTLTOX.
'-i riv Gems.
Flavel: Step aside a little oftener to talk with God and tbine own heart. Lowell: No man is born into the world whpse work is not born with him.
Seneca: Enjoy present pleasures in such a way as not to injure futures ones, Wordswerth: Wisdom ofttimes nearer when we stoop than !:cu we soai
One of the most difficult -i.lertakings in the world for a minister in the pulpit is to scold to edification
Charles Hodge: The doctrines of grace humble a man without degrading him and exalt him without inflating him.
Herbert: He that cannot forgive others breaks the bridge over which he must ass himself for every man has need to forgiven.
Faber: No soul was ever lost because its fresh beginning broke down but thousands of souls have been lost because they would not make fresh beginnings.
Quarles: Give not thv tongue too peat a liberty, lest it take thee prisoner. A woid unspoken is, like the sword in the scabboard, thine if vented, they sword is in another's hand.
Christian Register: Jacob's old dream was not an unreasonable one. His angels did not fly to heaven they went patiently up each round of the ladder, and they began at the bottom.
The Home Church**.
UKrvEBSALiST.—Sunday school* at 9:30 a. m. GREENWOOD PRESBYTERIAN—Services as usual to-day.
GERMAN REFORMED—Services at the usual hours to-day. GERMAN METHODIST—Service*at10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m.
ST. JOSEPH'S.—Mass at 6:30, 8 and 10 a. m. Catechism at 2 p. m. EVANGELICAL CHURCH.—Services today as usual by the Rev. J. C. Young.
THIRD BAPTIST—The R. T. Ford, of Rockville, will preach at this church today.
ALLEN CHAPEL—Services at 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Sunday school at 2 p. m.
GERMAN LUTHERAN—Preaching morning and evening by the Rev. Henry Katt.
ST. PATRICK'S.—Services at 8 and 10 a. m. Vespers at 7:30 p. m. Catechism at 2 p. m.
ST. ANN'S.—Mass at 8 a. m. High mass at 10 a. m. Vespers at 3 p. m., and Sunday School at 2 p. m.
GERMA^T CATHOLIC.—Mass at 8 a-LMF
High ~P-
THE EXPRESS, TERRE HAUTE, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY B, 1885
a m., and 3 and 7:30 p. tt., by the Rector, Dr. Walter Delafield. CHRISTIAN CHURCH—The Rev. H. O. Breeden will preach this morning upon "The Prodigal Brother," and in the evene ing upon "The Failure of a Rich Young Moralist."
PSESBTTERIAJT CHCBCR The Rev. Geo. R. Pierce will preach this morning on "Conditions of Prayer," and in the evening on "Christ in-the House." Sabbath school at 9:45 a. m., and young people's meeting at 6:45 p. m.
BAPTIST.—The Rev. Wheeler will preach this morning upon "He that is not with me is against me, and in the evening, "The Gospel the only method from God to Man." The meetings will continue next week commencing with Tuesday evening.
CENTENARY.—The Kev. John P. D. John, of DePauw university, Greencastle, will preach both morning and evening. A meeting of all probationists will be held at 9 :S0 a. m., in the southeast room of the basement The revival sec vices will conclude with a love feast on Monday evening. The Rev. John also preached last evening at the church.
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH—The Rev. J. L. Corning will preach a very interesting sermon this evening, entitledj "Law, GospeL and Common Sense Applied to Recreation and Sabbath Observance." Preaching also this morning. The new organ will arrive this week. It will require about two weeks to put it in position, however. On either February 26th or 27th, an organ recital will be jjiven by Professor Clarke, of Indianapolis. The organ will not be used for church services until the first Sunday in March.
ASBURY—Mrs. Robinson's morning text to-day at Asburv is Second Kings ii., 2, 4 and 6. Evening text, First Samuel, xx., 21. Young people's meeting, 6:30. Sunday school, 2:30. There have been over 100 conversions and 72 accessions during the revival. Mrs. Robinson will .probably hold her last service Monday night. Those who wish to iear her to-day will do well to attend the forenoon service, as there will not be standingroom at night. The Davis family wul sing to-day at this church.
•1 WISE AND OTHERWISE.
America is the most favored region for frogs and" salamanders. .' .: Twenty food-reform societies aife now flourishing iu England.
A calf with five legs is one of the curiosities to be 6een at Dalton, Ga. Eggs in somq parts of Montana are sold at ten cents eacli, or $1 per dozen.
A blackbird is wintering with the poultry of a Grass Lake (Mich.) farmer. A Mississippi lady grows 350 varieties of roses in her garden every summer.
About ferty million pounds were coined last year and circulated throughout the country.
A French milliner has invented a bonnet trimmed with apses'ears. The effect Is striking.
Artificial teeth are down to $2 in Nashville, and many Tennesseons are looking young again.
A Florida man claims to have a rooster of the Shanghai persuasion that laid an egg last week.
The nearest approach to squaring a circle is anew augur lately invented that bores a square hole.
1
The United States senate, after March 4, will have three gentlemen named Jones, but not a single Smith.
One of the gentlemen lynched in Iowa spelled his name Smythe. He didn't want the mob to get the wrong man.
The Schuylkill river is so nasty that a Philadelphia writer proposes that its ice shall be cut up and sold as a fertilizer.
Some of the newspapers say that Sullivan ought to be sent to the penitentiary, Do they want to see the warden knocked out.
Princess Beatrice has ordered several Irish poplin dresses. Beatie is a good girl and she wants to encourage poor Ireland.
A Dubuque woman swore to the purchase, ownership, and personal use—for medicinial purposes only— of a forty gallon barrel of whisky.
At the university of Virginia there is no prescribed course of study, no entrance examination, no vacation, except the summer one, and but six holidays.
During her voyage to New York, Mrs, Dudley had thirteen fits. Her object in coming to this country appears to have been to give Jerry O'Donovan fits. tf a Canadian coachman, 19 years of age, can charm and marry a wealthy widow, aged 75, who can blame a young, inexperienced girl for losing her heart in the stable?
A Hartford paper printed "Albanarian breed," instead of "Athanasian creed." It is supposed to have been an attempt of the proof-reader to work in a puff of his family tree.
Merchant Traveler: The man who is better to everybody else than he is to himself, always has to look to the man.he. has most neglected when he needs a little help himself.
Thomas Plielan and Jeremiah O'Donovan are doing as well as could be expected, and it's not the United States that's after saying to England, "Come and get your Tom and Jerry."
The man who discovered one of the richest silver mines in Leadville received $40,000 for his find, and the two purchasers made a million dollars each within a year. The discoverer applied recently for a night's lodging in a Leadville station house..
In Virginia a father may be hanged if he consents to the marriage of his daughter when she is only eleven years old. There is many a father who wishes he had been banged before, he consented to the marriage of his daughter when she was eighteen. "Have yon really abandoned the use of slang altogether?" was the question which the profes or asked of the student president cf the Wellesley College AntiSlang society and the young lady answered in strong and pure Saxon, "You juBt bet we have!"
Seven*men between-the ages of twenty and thirty-five years recently sat down to a dinner in Chenango county, N. Y., and on comparing notes it was found that not one of the seven smoked, chewed or used tobacco in any form, and -never drank, went to the theater or played euchre.
The New York Mail is authority for the statement that one of the most prominent churches in that city compels its female members who confess having sinned to wear next to th^kin a heavy brass plate, on which is a crucifix. The wearer can scarcely move without pain from the pressure Of the plate.
It seems that complaint is made in England of the masher wallflower, who declines to dance, and only puts in an appearance within a short half hour before supper. Edmunds Yates recommends a plan which obtains at Sandhurst at certain balls, where the hostess goes round among the male guests, and according as they have danced or not done their duty, shehancb a blue or pink ticket. The one entitles the dancer to a champagne sapper, while the other restricts the holder only to refreshments of lemonade and biscuits.
ECHOES OF THE* PRESS.
St Louis Globe-Democrat: The misfortune which has overtaken England in upper Egypt should chasten and not enrage her. She is paying the penalty of greed. She fa^ver had amy real business present entanglements, the wicked interference are the direct and ae of a wicked trade, inpnd maintained by
in wl in Anibi's wretched duced b] weakness.
Philadelphia,
txx. Sunday school at 3 p. m. I is fresh] Ifl
»t 8, 9, IticSO
O'Donj
Hmr violence
the loudest of all the loud .advocates of murder and de»true6on, the abettor ol assassination, and the instigator of dynamite plots lie Jkfts lured upon agitation and outrage, aim the. disturbance of the public peaoe, and has made himself a nuisance, to the people of two hemisheres. jj%if.sui a man should in his time fall by thenand of an assassin is BO nattir»l and fit that the attempt upon his life will scarcely cause, surprise.
Detroit Times,: The intent of the constitution is that there shall be no abridgement oi lawful speech. But when speech becomes vagrant, and threatens property, life and social order, it passes into the domain of licentiousness, against which society may properly protect itself. Such protection is not an abridgement of the right of speech such as conflicts with the constitutional guarantee. Sooner or later this must be met—the sooner the better. The conservative forces of society cannot remain passive while the destructives lash themselves with' furious speech until their self-excited passions hurl them against civilization. The right to curb licentious speech is perfect the duty to curb it is no less so. ^-7.
New York "World: Whatever movements in the direction of so-called socialism are occurring, have, in our opinion, qp more permanent force than had the bread riots after the Napoleonic wars, the outbreaks against machinery and the Chartist movement in England, or the railroad riot in Pennsylvania in 1877. They show, however, one important fact —that there is a social question to be settled here either peaceably or by violence that the workingmen are becoming more and more conscious of this, and, nt the same time, of their strength. Instead, thereof, of hooting down and ridiculing honest effort to improve the welfare of our people, it would be wise for legislators and others to study the thoughts and aims of labor and as far as possible to lead its energy in proper lines of action, without the ruts 01 demagogues masquerading as social reformers.
Indianapolis Journal: The house representatives yesterday laid upon table a resolution declaring against a further increase of the state levy. This action may be taken as an indication that taxes are to be made higher. These taxes will be levied upon real estate and such personal property as may be uuable to elude the assessor. Possibly this will be patiently borne by the public ass, but too many burdens and too many stripes may, after a time, cause it to pattern after Balaam's animal, and talk back: Can any democrat in the legislature give a sensible reason why a high-license law should not be passed and the saloons made to contribute to the general expense of the state and municipal governments as they are in a number of other states all around Indiana? The state needs money, the counties need money, the cities need money. Real estate is practically taxed out of the market, and personal property is made to hide itself away under perjury.
of
-GRANT AT SH1LOH.
Gen. Rowley's Chase After Gen. Wallace Farces Him to Oottntermarch—Arrives on-the Field Too Late. Galena (111.) Special to New York Herald.
General B. W. Rowley, of this city, one of the officero referred to by Grant in his article on the battle of Shiloh, in the current Century, as having been dispatched in quest of Lew Wallace, the first day of the fight, was interviewed to-day by your correspondent, as to the accuracy, so far as his memory would enable him to judge of the circumstances connected with that memorable engagement as dedetailed by Grant—at least the facts concerning the alleged failure of Wallace to obey the order commanding him to march from Crump's Landing, his place of rendezvous, to the battlefield the 6th of April, the opening day of the struggle. During the conversation General Rowley remarked that Grant had a fashion of stating things in his own way and recording to his own judgment without consulting others, and that he had not been interrogated by him regarding the Wallace affair. He statea however, that the general had written nothing but the truth, though he had failed to give in detail the facts connected with his (Bowley's) search for Wallace the day in qnestion. In brief, he said that on Capt. Baxter's return from Crump's Landing with the report that Wallace refused to move his division without a written order, General Grant immediately turned to him (Rowley) and said: "Captain, you go down to Crump's Landing as rapidly as possible and tell General Wallace that it is my orders that he move up his division into the field at once. If he wants a written order, write one, and if he does not start at once orders him under arrest and direct General Morgan L. Smith to assume command of the division and bring it in." "As I started," continued Rowley, "the general turned to me and said: 'Captain, yon have a good hoise don't spare him.' I left at once upon the mission, the hour being 12 o'clock, noon, and rode down to ^Crump's Landing, but when I got there I found that General Wallace had left his rendezvous and was marching up thePurdy road, exactly in the opposite direction of the battlefield. I followed the road between four and five miles, pushing my horse to its utmost speed, when I struck {he rear of Wallace's column, which I found at rest by the roadside. I made my way with some difficulty {0 the head of the column, where I found Wallace standing on the ground with his arm over the neck of his horse and talking to Gen. Morgan L. Smith, who was sitting on his horse alongside. I delivered my message to Gen. Wallace, and added that he had refused to move without a written order that I was authorized to write one if he should still require it. In reply he stated that it was not true) that he had not refused to obey the verbal orders given him by Baxter, and he added: 'You see yourself that I am on the road.' I admitted this much, but told him that it was not the road to Pittsburg Landing, but that he had marched twice as far from that point as he was at the time he broke up camp at Crump's Point. General Wallace in reply said that that was the road taken by his cavalry, and the only one he knew anything about. I again assured him that he was marching directly away from the battlefield, and endeavored to impress upon him the necessity of retracing his steps as rapidly as the troops could be made to move, and informed him that I would ride back 10 the battlefield and inform General Grant of the condition of things. He insisted upon my remaining with him and showing him the road/ whereupon I directed .. lieutenant who had accompanied me to return at once and report to General Grant. When the division had marched back to the point from whence they had started in the morning arrived at the place where the Pittsburg Landing road came in, we were met by Col. McPherson and Maj., Rawlins, who had been sent ont by Gen. Grant to hurry up Wallace. Both ui upon the latter the necessity of haste, but it was not until after the fighting teat all over for the day that Wallace's command reached the vAA and were shown into position. Not a man of his division fired a gun that day, which fact was not the fault of the men nor of the brigade commanders, as we had not abetter body of troops in our army, as subsequent events fully proved. "Your correspondent might add that portion of General Grant's article OH Shiloh has aroused some little adverse criticism on the part of those in this section who participated in the engagement but the main facts, as set form By him, are ai the paper
fully endorsed, especially that portion the paper alluding to Wallace gross ce, as they term it, in failing to the army in the first day's fight"
aii
Mr. Col flue as a Story Reader. South Bead (Ind.) Tribune,:? Mr. Colfax wa$an omnivorous reader of novels and indifferent, he read one so wo good thought
band and
^all. "I never Wound some ^5, TJutstajr ned|tnt4ook8, to the and to the irety picked he, didyiiot •tory came
up to his ideal he cut it out, wrote the credit, if original in the paper from which he clipped it, and brought it home. We now have scores of such snort stories hebiought us and have printed hundreds of them in the Tribune the past dozen years. "Short, sketchy stories, he. often said, "are the great need of journalism," and, with the instinct of an old journalist, his eyes were ever in search of them.
THE INDIANA LEGISLATURE.
Name and Poatoffiee Address of Each Member of the S»n»t« and House.
The following is a complete and correct list of the senators and representatives composing the Indiana legislature, which assembles on Thursday, together with the postoffice address of each:
1
Tlie Senate. BKFCBUCAKa.
jrrom Delaware and Bandolph counties— Marcus S. Smith, of Muncie. Howard and Miami—Lewis D. Adkinson, Peru.
Johnson and Morgan—Gabriel Overstreet, Franklin. Late and Porter—Julius W. louche, Crown Point.
Parke and Vermillion—John H. Lindley, Bockville. Starke and St. Joseph—Marvin Campbell, South Bend.
Wayne—William D. Foulke, Bichmoad. DeKalb and Steuben—Nicholas Ensley, Auburn.
Delaware, Henry and Randolph—J. W. Macey, Wincheeter. Fayette, Bush and Union—James N. Huston, Connersville.
Fountain and Warren—Andrew Marshall, Harveysburg, Fountain county. Elkhart—W. J. Davis Goshen.
Hamilton and Tipton—Charles C. Duncan, Sharps ville.
Hendricks and Putnam—L. M. Campbell, Danville, Hendricks county. Kosciusko and Wabash—George Moon, Warsaw.
Marion—F. Winter, Indianapolis. Lagrange and Noble—James 8. Drak e, Lagrenge—17.
DEMOCRATS.^
Allen—Lycurgus Null, New Haven. Adams, Blaokford and Jay—John M. Smith, the Portland.
Bartholomew, Brown and Monroe—Columbus Duncan, Nashville. Benton, Jasper and Newton—Frederick Hoover, Bemington.
Cass—RnfrfS Magee, Logansport. Clarke and Scott—David McClure, Jefferson ville. .Crawford, Harrison and Orange, John Benz, Leavenworth.
Davis and Greene—Jacob F. Mcintosh, Newberry. Dearborn, Ohio and Switzerland—Columbus Johnston, Aurora.
Dubois. Lawrence and Martin—James H. Willard, Bedford. Franklin and Bipley—Chester B. Faulkner, Holton.
Gibson and Posey—James E. McCnllough, Pnnceton. Huntington, and Weils—William J.Hilligass, Huntington.
Jefferson—^James Hill, Brooksburg. Knox and Sullivan—Joshua Ernest, Sullivan.
Perry and Spen6er—Heber J. May, Cannelton. Pike and Warrick—Edward P. Richardson, Petersburg.
Tippecanoe—Francis Johnson, Lafayette. Allen and Whitley—Eli W, Brown, Columbia City.
Boone and Clinton—DeWitt C. Bryant, Frankfort. Clay and Owen—Inman H. Fowler, Spencer.
Bscatur and Shelby—F. M. Howard, St. Paul. Floyd and Washington—John S. Day,
Fulton and Marshall—Valentine Zimmerman, Rochester. Grant anB Marion—James S. Shively, Marion.
Hancock, Marion and Shelby—Leon O. Bailey, Indianapolis. Jackson and Jennings—A. G. Smith, North Vernon.
LaPorte—Morgan H. Wier, LaPorte. Marion—W. C. Thompson, Indianapolis. Montgomery—Silas Peterson, Bowers. Vanderburg—William Kahm, jr.,Evansville. Yigo—Philip Schlose, Terre Haute. Carroll, Pulaski and White—E. B. Sellers, Monticollo—83.
The House of Representatives. REPUBLICANS. Benton and Warren—James H. McBroome,— Decatur—Erastus L. Floyd, St. Pan). Delaware—John Linn ville, New Burlington. Elkhart—Cyrus F. Mosier/Bristol. Payette and Union—B. M. Haworth, Liberty. Gibson—Arthur P. Twineham, Princeton. Grant—Hiram Brownlee, Marion. Greene—A. 8. Helms, Worthington. Hamilton—T. E. Boyd, Noblesville. Hancock, Henry and Madison—Joseph Franklin, Anderson.
Hendricks—Jacob H. Fleece, North Salem. Henry—John A. Deem, Spiceland. Howard—Nathaniel R. Lindsay, Kokomo. Jasper and Newton—Isaac D. Dunn, Jefferson— William M. Copeland, Madison. Jennings—James M. Wynn, Scipio. Kosciusko—John W. Wilson, Pierceton. Kosciusko and Wabash—Warren G. Sayro, Waba&h.
Lagrange—Levi L. Wildman, Wftlcotville. Lawrence—James B. Overman, Mitchell. Marion—Ovid B. Jameson, Indianapolis. Montgomery—Huinihal Trout, Morgan—George A. Adams, Martinsville. Noble—George W. Oarr, Albion. Parke—William N, Akins, Montezuma. Porter—Marquis L. McClelland, Valparaiso.
Bandolph—James S. Engle, Winchester. Bush—l'phraim S. Frazee, Orange Postofflce.
Steuben—D. R. Best, Angola. Tippecanoe—B. Wilson Smith and Job Osborn, Lafayette.
Vermillion—Robert B. Soars, Newport. Wabash—S. N. Hopkins, North Manchester.
Wayne—James M. Townsend, Richmond, and John K. Monk, East Germantown—85. DEMOCRATS.
Adams, Juy and Wells—H. C, McGoverney, Portland. Adams and Jay—David Ely, Decatur.
1
Allen—J. D. McHenry, Maples Albert W, Brooks and FredHayden, Ft. Wayne. Benton and White—John G. Timmons, Idaville.
Boone—James B. Jale, Jamestowni Carroll—John A. Cartwright, Delphi. Cass—J. C. Loop, Galveston. Clay—C. W. Bailey, Staunton. .Clay. Hendricks and Patnam—F. T. 8. Robinson, Cloverland.
Clinton—E. H. Staley, Frankfort. Daviess—Samuel H. Taylor, Washington. Dearborn—Hugh D. McMnllen, Aurora. Elkhart, Noble and DeKalb—W. M. Barnet, Elkhart.
Dearborn, Franklin and Bipley—C. B. Cory, Fairfield. DeKalb—D. D. Moody, Anburn.
Dubois and Martin—Marmon Fisher, Hnntingburg. Dubois and Pike—Lemuel B. Hargrave, Petersburg.
Floyd—Thomas Hanlon, New Albany. Fountain—E. S. Booe, Veedersburg. Franklin—S. S. Harrell, Brookeville. Fulton and Pulaski—Albert D. L'oner, KBwanna.
Green, Knox and Sullivan—Gerard Beiter, Vincennes. Hancock—David S. Gooding, Greenfield.
Harrison—William D. Mauck, Corydon. Huntington—John H. Barr, Roanoke. Jackson—George A. Robertson, Oourtland. Knox—S. W. Williams, Vincennes. Lake—Aug. Vilass, Crown Point. Marion—Edward Sohmidt, Michael C. Farrell, R. C.J. Pendleton, John Schley, all of Indiaaopolis.
Marshall—Charles Kellison, Plymouth. Miami—Henry V. Passage, Peru. Ohio and Switzerland—George 8. Pleasants, Vevay.
Owen—Wiley S. Ditmore, Spencer. Posey—James W. French, Mount Vernon. Sullivan—James B. Patton, Sullivan. Vanderburg—John M. Pruitt, Armstrong P. O. Christopher J. Murphy, Evansville.
Vigo—Eugene Debs, Reuben Bute, Terre Haute. Warrick—Thomas 5L Smith, Stevensport.
Whitley—Martin D. Garrison, Columbia City. Bartholomew—Jeff. B. Beeves, Columbus.
Bartholomew, Marion and Shelby—Louis Donhorst, onesville. Blackford and Wells—Levi Meek, BluSton.
Brosra and Monroe—William W. Browning, Nashville. Clark, Floyd and Scott—Charles L. Jewett, New Albany.
Clarke—Willis L. Bams, Solon. Crawford and Orange—Clark T. Crecelius, Leavenworth,
Johnson—William T. Rivers, Providence. Madison—C. N. Branch, Anderson. Bipley—James B. Loyd, Versailles. Perry—Philip Smith, Bristow. Putnam—John R. Gordon, Greencastle. Shelby—Thomas Hogan, Waldron. Spencer—Cyrus D. Med calf, Dale. Starke and St. Joseph—L. D. Glasebrook, Ban Pierre.
St Joseph—William C. McKiohaei, Mishawaka. Tipton—Absalom M. Vickrey, Tipton.
Washington—Erasmus W.. Shanks, Salem. LaPorte—Martin D. Kreugs.r, Michigan City. —65.
Should Go to Meet Watterson, Atlanta Constitution. Brother Beecher is evidently cof the opinion tliathe faaa-a long career before iiOk-^He tSbegunafree tradecampaign, in watch lie says be is Ixmnd W
Brofptr Beecher Should remote tMf to Louiflv ille, wbwoh* *sc imm imiariidia with p1
lieadqnarl be
3- JT9t--
A Retteed German Bible. New Tork Mail aad Express. It is, perhaps, not generally known that the Germans, as well as the Tgnglwh and Americans, are to have a revised translation of the Bible. Luther's Bible has been in use ever since his day, and there are many who deprecate any change but a revision committee haa been at work and has now finished a so-called Probe-Bible, or specimen Bible, which will be submitted to the Protestant churches of Germany for their criticism. It is said that very few changes have been made in Luther's version, the main objects of the revision being to get the best Luther text extant and to improve those pt&ages where the great reformer was
impi refo
manifestly at fault. It has, therefore,
•'Iyn»mitenrs."
New Tork Life. We notice that the Tribune speaks of these destroyers of property as "dynamiteure." This is a better word than the others we are accustomed to use. Dynamiter is too American. TLe .profession of the dynamiteur is one which the beau monde delight in following, and the elegance of this new term fills an aching void in our language.
We congratulate that able editeur, Misteur Wniteleur Reid, upon the disco veury of this long and eageurly looked feur weurd. As a coineur of teurms Whiteleur is a regleur corkeur!
W by Hendricks Was Wanted. Boston Evening Record. Mr. Hendricks reports that he enjoyed his visit with Mr. Cleveland, but Bays that he's blessed if he knows what he was invited for. Perhaps the young man at Albany wanted to find out if the Indiana statesman has really discovered who was elected president.
Open the Books
Indianapolis Journal. 7 If reports be true, there isn't money enough in the state treasury to pay the school fund due some of the counties. Where is the money Open the hooks. 7
Before and After.
Logansport Journal. If the treasury farce of last week had been enacted before the campaign the weakest man in Indiana coula have beaten John J. Cooper.
It Wasn't the Mahdi.
St. Louis Globe-Democrat All over England the impression seems to be that some one has blundered. Evidently it wasn't the Mahdi.
Cleveland's Slick Trick.77^
Philadelphia Record. 7i, 7 Mr. Cleveland is like the mediums he insists on doing the cabinet trick in the dark.
1 7 *A Fasclnatln® Report.
The forty-second annual report of The Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York, for the year 1884, which appears elsewhere, is an interesting study for the general public, and most gratifying to the numerous policy holders of this largest life Insurance Company of the world. The assets cf the Mutual, under management of President F. S. Winston, are now nearly $104,000,000, the exact figures being 103,876,178.51, an increase of nearly 3,000,000 over last year's figures. It paid during the year $13,923,062.19 to policy holders, and by the New York standard of 4J per cent., it surplus exceeds $12.000,000.
His Loss IVasBer 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 HOUS
0
Monday, Feb. 9.
MADISON SQUARE THEATER CO., Presenting
CALLED BACK
WITH
ORIGINAL CAST AND SCENERY.
No extra charge for reserved seats. Sale now open, at Button's book store.
PURE and WHOLESOME.
do. It restores to the floor the hla-hly important coostltuenta rejected In the bran of the wheat.
majee better and liatterMtooli tfaaa 107 otoer baklaff powder.
MARTIN KALBFLEISCH'S SONS,
KMaMtalied 18». S3 FULTON ST., N. Y.
For sale by all leading Grocers.
late red. Send for circular. Sam pies by mall 10 cts. ELY BROTHERS, Druggists, Oswego, N. T.
Terre Haute Eye Infirmary
Permanently established by Dr. R. Haley, of N. Y., late of Trenton, Mo., who has made the diseases of the eye a specialty the past twenty-eight years, andjtreats all patients ten days free of oharge. Pterygium and Eutroplum, 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 6 a. to 12 m., from 1 to 6 p. m.
THE 0NLT REMEDIES FOR THE SKIN AND BLOOD UNIVERSALLY COMMENDED.
Wm- T. Toiten, «72 North Tenth street Philadelphia, reports that oaeof hls ru«tomers stated to bim incidentally that he was felling swell and had gained twpi ,(v seven ponnds in the last year, all of wii toh he attributed to a
s«temaUcoSuwWf
Address
WHEAT BAKING POWDER.
r»DU XDZJ-Y-'S CREAM BALM CLEANSES THE
HEADr~ALLAYS
Inflammation, Heales the Sores,
RE8T0R8 THE
iSenfe ot Taste I ft SmellTA Qalek
Positive Core.
HAY-EEV£RJSS*.Jisxr
A week made at home ness now before the public, Capital not needed. We wil
the industrious. Best busT
ly I start you. Men, women, boys and girls wantedevery. where to work for us. Now Is the time. You can work In spare time, or five yotu whole time to the business. No othei business will pay you nearly as well, one can fall to
mentt. New York Hwiith A Broadway. New Xorlu^
N«
make enormous pay, by
ng at once. Costly outfit and terms qee. Money made last, easily, and honor v. Address TBUB A Co., Augusta, Main
CANVASSING AGENTS.
nergetic and reliable (male or female) wanted to sell onr new Medical Chest Protectors and Abdominal Bands. Cure and
rotect from Coughs, Colds, Pneumonia, -ironehitls, Pleurisy, Rheumatism, Inflammation ot Liver, Stomach, Bowels and Dyspepsia. Will aid treatment and relieve distressing symptoms of Oomwrn-. turn. Nothing elteof thtojdndin thenv^Tnattr. Good* and price* popuktr. UbanU
,he
CutlcuTA Resolvent, which b&s proved if. fectuai when all other remedies failed. SORES OH NECK,
a
better chance of adoption than our own revised version.
J.1! Wood, druggist, of iat ci ty, certifies to a wonderful cure of rau«n the neck which bad »4n «mS^?ni?whl^hPl^aL?^y8lclana *'th
lUt
compietelyto the
CORED BY CUT1CT7M*.
Myfkin disease, which resisted several tr..re"i.
1,®^'
*ud other remedies ad
vised bj physicians, haa been curt] by your Cutlcura Remedies. Theysurpai-sed expectation*andr^pidfy eflfected a cure. f. C. ARKJTTRV b. ,vincennes, Ind:
KNOW ITS VALOK.
All of your Cutlcura Remedies give very satisfaction. The Cutlcura I espec1.
or
lta Mini "8e1-
ih® diseases for
1
know from experience
DR. H. J. PRATT, Montello, WU. CCTICPR4 ABROAD.
1
Tbrough home returned Norwegian, I have learned to know your Cnttcura, hortuUnSe
Bergen, K6rrt-ay. Agenturfoyretn ng THK POKT TOWERS. A feeling of gratitude impels me to acknowledge the great merits-or'your.Coti-cura, and I cordially recommend It to the public as a vel^-
exqhlfrtttf'
euro Resolvent, the hew..
nilTICURASOAPi an exqulsltdv Toilet v** Ii Bath,'and auraery Sanatlvfe
1
oar«*
me or an
SANDFORQ'S RADICAL CURE For CATARRH.
fvj'4 »,
0
H.N. Conn.
Brtdgepor
.Purltler,
Potter Drug and Chemical Oot^, Boston
Wltck-Hasel, American Pine, Canada Fir, Marigold and Clover Blossoms. A single dose of San ford's Radical Cnrn instantly relieves the most vlcgent Sneezing or Head Colds, clears the Head as by magic, Btops watery discharges from the Nose and Eyes, prevents Ringing Noises in the Head, cures Nervous Headache,, and subdues Chills and Fevers. Iri^ Chronic Catarrh it cleanses the nasal pas--sages of foul maons, restores the senses of smell, taste, and hearing when affected, frees the head, throat, and bronchial tnbes 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 for ?i. Ask for SANDFOBD'S RADICAL CURS. Potter Drug and Chemical Co., Boston.."
For the relief and preit Is
,«OLTA!V^ ventlon, the Instant ':/7/applied, of Rheumatism, Nourale la. Bciatlca,
Zt&Z Conghs.CoTds.Weak Back, k«rStomach and Bowels, Shooting Pains, umbness, Hysteria, Female
Pains, Palpitation, Dysusla. Liver Complaint, lious Fever, Malaria, id fcp!d emics, use Col
lins' Plasters (an Electric Battery combined with a Porous Plaster) and laugh at pain. SSe, everywhere.
New Advertisements, re-
Navy Clippings
When I say cure I do hot mean merely to stop them for a time and then have them return again. I mean radical cure.. I have made the disease of. FITS, EPIL- ~-'J EPSY or FAILING SICKNESS a life-long study. I warrant my remedy'to cure the^
mm
I CURE FITS yS
or as a us he ha a is no reason for not now receiving a cure.tit Send at once for a treatise ana a Free Bottle of my Infallible remedy. Give ex- a press and postoffice: It costs you nothlngfej for a trial, and I will cure you. if $
-J.
DR. H. G. ROOT,
188 Pearl St New York.
CONSUMPTION.
Th»T»a apcultlTB rwaate Srfe itmffllini »y Us
poilttrs raoady fcr Iks sbe** 61*mm Iw 1
n. tbonunds of cans or tb* wont kind and of long •tsndlosbsnbMBCsrSd. iBdsedjaoMrOBrtomrMti in Its emoacT, tbat I wiu md TWO BOTTLKS FHKS^ together wttti VAH7ABLBTBBAVI8S «e thla dlssss^ to any sufferer, pits BMIIMSsua P. O. adflrew.
DR. T. A. 8LOCUJC, in Pearl 8t. S«w York
(HABE
UNEQUALLED IN
Be.MVsrtmiaiii&MOttT VmXIAX KXABX CO. *os.9U«lidX» West Baltimore Street,Bsltfiaor*
fo WflMi Avwras.K«w Yerib
GOVERNMENT OFFICES.
HOW TO GBT THEM.
Indole 2c itamp. W. B- MABOHE, Look box 644. Washington, p,
FREE
.trANTED LADIES THAT CAN Vy knit, crochet or do fancy work to make goods for ourtradeat their homes in
sample, postage and particulars. HUDSON M'F'Q CO., an Sixth Ave. N. Y.
ADVERTISERS.—Lowest rates for 7 advertising In sent free. Address CO., 10 Spruce St., If. Y.
li
W 1/
li
A book of 100p. on| Alir and Co rtshlp,m/f sent Wee Union Publishing Company, Newark, N. J. Send 5c. for postage.
by the •list
500i^C^?nSSK,m
MIITEBTISEBS toy addressing GEORGKP. A BOWKU 00., 10 Spruoe St. New York, can learn the exact cost of any pro-
Sosea
llnex)f ADVERTISING in American ewspajpers. *v~100-pags Pamihlet 10c.
969 good newspapers GEO. P. ROWEL" iL
SUM WHIIE All Hit FAIU.
BostCough Byniji. Tjwwsfcerxl. Use in time. Soirt by drngglxtr
LSQAIa.
N:
OTICE TO CONTRACTORS. site rats'- Church Building. Sealed proposals to erect achurth hulldig for the German Lutheran congregating for the German Lutheran congregation of Terre Haute, Ind., according to
Saughandspecifications
lans prepared by VryA Sons, acehlteets, will be received until p. IU. the 28th of February, 1885. Said plans and specifications may be seen, in the basement of the ehureh, corner of Fourth and Swan streets, eaeh day of the week exoept Sundays, and during the hours from 9 a. m. to5 p.m., and from the 9th until the 21th of February.
The committee reserves the right to reject any andall bids. THE BUILDING COMMITTEE.
F. P1EPENBRINK, N-KAD&MAN.jTr01,U,W-O.B.Z4MMI
J^PPLICITION FOB LICENSE.
»*ot ttm
Jnsu
