Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 6 January 1886 — Page 2

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Iici"-1 Cars 'attache(j denote Buffer /is marked thus •or trains rrui d*»

UMeys excepted.

VAN BALI A LiNE. T. H. fc I. DIVISION,

Ar. from East—Pad Go-Ex *(S)..-.. 1-30 a J® 1 0 1 2 an Ki *(H) 2.06 plL lr" oils Ac... 6.45 pa i/ve for West—Pa Kf *(8) ^42 a irain. 10.] 8 a n. -1 ,i Ft *(S) 2.13 pnr

MalWS) 1213 am

Ar.irom West-^Day iJx*(i±) 2.18 pir Fast Ex •. 1.42 a ic

ClndsLouisV,last 12.40 nc Fast Mair(S) 12.03 am

L've" for East-Day Ex »H) 2.8J pa Fast Ex ».. L51 a rr Mail and Acc 7.16 an

Cln fe Lodisv, fast 12.55 ir Fast Mail*(8) 1.30 am T. H. A I» DIVI8IOH.

Ar. from N'th—Mail Train 18.80 Accommodation.. 7.36 pa L've for N'th—Mail Train 8.00 a

Accommodation- 3.4-5

W EVANHVJ7LLE & TEKRE HAUTi'. NA8HVII.I.B LINK. Ar. from S'th—Nash A Bx*(8&B) 4.55 an

E 4 S E 1 0 0 0 a Kv & IndEx *(P)... 2*5 Ohl & Ind Ex »(S)«.10:25

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Ev & Ex *(P). 3.20 pa A N E & 9 2 0

T, H.4B. DIVISION.

Ar- from B'th—Mall and Ei. ....1L00 a Accommodation .. S.15ar. li've for S'th—Mall and Ex. 3-00 ir

Accommodation... 6.00 a

CHICAGO A EASTERN ILLINOIS. DAJrVTLMC LINK. Anfrom N'tB—T. H. Acc'n ....10.03 a

Ch. & T. H. Ex 3.15 O. Ss Nash»Ex *(8).. 4.16a 1AB) 9.15 N. & C. Ex,*(8AB)

L've for N'th—T. H. & Ch. Ex.t..,.10.05 a ic vVatsetea Ac.. Nash. & 0. Ex*(B)..ll,(K)

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2.27 pa LOO

N. & C. Ex.*(8&B).

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ILLINOIS MIDLAND.

Ar. from N W—Mail & Ace'n 5.(ffi p» L've for N W—Mall and Acc'u 6.20 a no

BEE LINE ROUTE,

'-/v rSTDIAFAVOIiTa A ST. IOTJIB. Depot Corner Sixth and Tippecanoe StreeU. Ar from East-Day Ex *(8) .".10.06 am

Limited «(B) 2.00 pm Mattoon Acc'n... 7.48pm N Y«f3tLEx»(S). 1.03am (S)..10.08 a Limited *(H) 2.08 ns

LTB for "Wfcst—Da Express *0 lted*(H) Walloon Acc'n... 7.45pm

N A 84 Ex *(8) 1.05 a lis

Ar from West—N Sxpress *(H)... Indianapolis Ex..

26 a rr

7.11s a nc

N Limited *{*).. 1.2S li Day Fmross *{S).. 3.45 ress' oils N Limited •(&). 1.30 Day Express *(fi). 3.47

L've for East—N .1. India

1.27 a n, 20 am n?

SAMUEL HANNAF0RD,

ARCHITECT,

Ginoinnati," O

--^*Te™!8-'#ifgag6d on new court house, Haut?, is prepared toisive attention Towork in this vicinity. Address home oCloe direct, or M. B. Stanfield, euperintendpnt of new court house, Terre Haute,

Indiana.

Su\Ci

ths Lonisrllle and JefferBonvlllo Ferry Co., MB. J.' O. DOMEI, who lirea on Wall tit., JeSenonvills, lad., saffered severely from Neuralgia in the face, nnd was quickly cured by ATHLOPHOBOS.

Many ladies suffer from headaches which aro of naurilgio origin. In such cases Athlophoros i* invaluable), as it will quickly removo the cause. Thousands are enduring untold agony from iioiiral^ia who might find instant relief by uam? £TUI HDlinDllO

mo8t

A! nLUrnifnUv

delicate need

not fear to use it, as

In absolutely safe audit never fails to drive neuraltna away. Neuralgia and rheumatism are twin diseases. Athlophoros cures both. HunJre3i of people have tried it and now warmly recommend it. Bond for naiuoa of parties in your ...cms State who have been cured by it If you have "iray doubt as to Its merit. .Ask your druggist for Athlophoros. If you -cannot get it of liim we will n»ni it rpress paid on .receipt of-regttlar piioe-CI.OO per bottle. Wo pselwHiat you buy it from your druggist, but if -"lie hasn't it do not be porsuaded to try something elsd, but order at once from us as directed.

ATHLOPHOROS CO., Ii2 WALL ST., NEW YORK.

-AND

OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.

Towc'ey Brothers,

512 AND 514 MAIN STBEET.

strawberry Hill Apiary.

T. H. Kloer, Manager.

Some people who know nothing about a*B*y, tUluK that honey, which granuVMM, Is adulterated. I assert that all ure honey produced in this section of je country granulates and becomes ard in cold weather, if separated from the comb. I offer

$100.00 REWARD

Er any'ene who can prove my proposition untrue^ and the same amount to Sav one who can prove that I ever sold a 6»nnd of impure honey. Try my pure Attracted honey. T. H. KLOER,

No. 426 Gullck street.

Freshest Family Supplies

'3,-f

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-AT-

F. W. SCHMIDT'S

NEW GROCERY,

Twelttli and Poplar St&

i?'"*

DAILY EXPRESS.

Geo. U. Alien,

•art trcm Unldi nth .streets, ex

I'I

PUBLICATION OFFICE

4 South Firth St., Printing House Square

Entered as Seconds Clou Matter at Oie Pottoffice at Terre Haute, Indiana,

IJP TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Dally Express, per week per year six months (i tt t*6n ITB,,

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Where the Express Is on File. London—On file at American Exchange in Europe, 449 Btrand.

Paris—On file at American Exchange in Paris, 35 Boulevard des Capnclne.

WEDNESDAY, JA.HUAEY 6, 1886.

The council authorized the finance committee last night to make another loan of $15,000.

Cold bracing weather ior a month would prove a wonderful stimulous to business throughout the country.

The Chinese in California seem to be adopting American ideas. One of them has sued a San Frapcisco newspaper for libel.

General Hu6ted, wLo step-laddered Piatt and Conkling out of re-election, seems to be once more perched on the top rung.

This is the season for fires, and Ihe regular asylum conflagration comes to band. We do not often hear of asylums being as carefully guarded as an ordinary business house.

A Methodist Organ, the (. hristian 'Ad* vocate, is in favor of local option. Where the local option seems to favor selling liquor, as in Terre Haute, the Advocate would be in favor of a good-by license. Common sense and religion often do, and ought always to co-operate.

Carter Harrison carries an arm in sling and acknowledges that the Lord baa knocked him out of the mayoralty for a week. This is the most remarkable, as well as apparent, interposition of the Lord in the affairs of Chicago in its history. He may visit it the second time.

A new commissioner of police at Indianapolis has_ called "particular attention to the fact that the police were not law-makers, but law-executors." The fact that they should be law-exectitors is worth pasting in police helmets. The discrimination shown in executing laws in one case and suspending them in another, is equivalent to law-making and prevails more than will be admitted in— let us say, Indianapolis.

This iB the week appointed by the Evangelical Alliance as a week of prayer, and and it will be widely observed throughout the Protestant world. Fhe differences Ln manifestations will be as many as the characteristics of -the sects. That ,the churches find these annnal gatherings, with union of thought and purpose, sources of power and growth does not require credit to occult causes only. The co-operation of a few earnest souls, or of a multitude, in any cause may bring great results. The mental brace which many natures receive by the contiguity of others with identical sympathies is always apparent. It is not necessary a reproach to Christian communities that they defer till-the beginning of the next year a season of stimulation, for it is common to all to attach to fixed seasons development of interests peculiar to certain time3 only. They can not always be at a white heat or even a steady glow but it may seem strange that more striking and permanent results do not follow the yearly convocations when we note the astonishing power flowing from the united action of a number of people. It will not do to overlook the almost equal power of inertia acquired by nearly a year's indulgence, to overcome which absorbs much of the energy expended. The jjbod, however, cannot be measured, neither in the religious excitability worked up by wellestablished methods to wax and wane nor in the quiet, often dull, manifests" tions of the more conservative. There is much propriety in the observance at this time'when it is natural for all to feel like making afresh start.

The popular idea has been that the world contains seven wonders, but the eighth made bis appearance at the Capitol. It was a poor benighted man limping with rheumatism who has never heard of Salvation Oil.. It is sold by all druggists at twenty-five cents a bottle.

"*.. *ra§&

THEEBAW AND

proprietor

,$ 15 7 50 8 75 1 50

Issued every morning except Monday, and delivered by carriers.

TERMS FOR THE WEEKLY. One copy, one year, paid in advance. .#1 25 One copy, six months

00

For clubs of five there will be a cash discount of 10 per cent, from the above rates, or if preferred instead of the casp, a copy of the Weekly Express will be sent free for the time that the clubs pays for, not less than six months.

1

The Kev. Mr. Haweis, an English visi tor who said to the Bostonese that he was sorry he did not. get to Boston before all its great men were dead, shows intelligent perception for a Briton.

It is not necessary to blame Mr. Cleveland for addressing his denunciation of lying newspapers to an editor. Every editor knows the other one who does the lying, and will not be sensitive.

Qrover Cleveland gave $100. to the Grant monument fund and Secretary Bayard gave advice with a benevolent smile. Cf coarse it is the World which takes the bashel from ofi Bayard's light. It loves Bayard.

Mr. Beecher admitted last Sunday that he made a mistake when he said the word "Religion" was not in the Bible, and he added the sensible advice that those who make a mistake should always acknowledge it and never defend it. §iS

constant and in

Leonard Swift, the early, constant an trusted friend of Abraham Lincoln, is

CAPITAL.

Described by a German Traveller who Visited Mandalay. Pall Mall Gazette.

King Theebaw, important as he has become of late, is a somehwhat|mysterions personage, the details known about his personality being very scant. This is no wonder, for the youngest member of the Alompra dynasty reigns in lonely splendor in his palace at Mandalay, and it was probably the firat time that even his subjects were allowed to see the light of his face when recently he was compelled to lead his army against the English. To foreigners he is very rarely visible, and it was by special favor that a German traveller, Dr. W. Joest, in 1880, when on a tour through Burmah, had an andience with The?baw. Dr. Joset related at the time his experiences in the columns of the Kolnitche Zeitung, from which we take the following account of the personal appearance of the king. "Queli joli garcon!" were the first words I whispered to my interpreter—not for translation, of course—and, indeed, Theebaw was a handsome youth. According to the custom of the country, his hair was arranged in a big knot on the top of his head, surrounded by a narrow b'and of white muslin his round face, which was almost white, made a very pleasant impression his eyes are small and slightly almond-shaped, and with his full lips and small mustache he makes the impression of an indolent, blase, perhaps rather sensnal young man. Cruelty is stamped on his features, but not intemperance. Afterwards, wh«i through an opening in his jacket I saw his bare chest, I perceived by the bronze color of his body that his face was very much painted and powdered. He wore a close fitting jacket of white satin, with long tight sleeves, two rows of diamond buttons, and his insignia also in diamonds. In his ears and on his hands

I perceived the glitter of precious stones. A silken putho, in green and yellow stripes, completed his apparel: his feet and legs were bafe. Now and then he Elayed with a yak-hair fan, without, owever, altering his position at all. He neither smoked nor chewed tobacco, and I must repeat that he impressed me sympathetically he is somewhat stout for his age, being 21 years old, but otherwise he is the best looking Burmese I seen.

Turning from the young kind, who following the custom of his country, caused all his kith and kin to be slaughtered on his ascension to the throne, Dr. Joest gives a charming picture of the banks of the Irrawaddy and the capital, Mandalay:

The surrounding country, shortly be' fore we came in sight of the hill, on the foot of which the capital is stretched out, is extremely beautiful, and perhaps unique in its way, for on either bank of ihe river the ruins of three capitals are picturesquely scattered about on every little piece of level ground, on the ter races of rocks which rise on both sides, a pagoda or a temple is built, all of the Bame kind, and yet infinitely varied gigantic lions guarding the entrance, and enormous Buddhas sleepily staring at us. All this is overshadowed by old bo trees, under which the priests, immovable anc calm, read the sacred books, while thousand of golden bells from the parasolshaped roofs ring a fitting accompaniment to the grand, melancholy picture. -xt Iw flip, feintra enm-

The few forts, which by the kingrs command, have been built in- the district by an Italian "general," look quite prosaic in this surrounding they might become dangerousJ*but, fortunately, there is no cannons in them, and they are only fortified towards the river.

Ths real town of Mandalay—the citv —in the centre of which stands the kings palace, lies isolated inland, while the majority of the pbpulation have settled down in the plain near the river. The streets are wide, dusty, several mils long, and not over safe pagodas everywhere, and round them large convents with beautiful carvings, here and there a low, rickety brick house and then again long rows of pole dwellings, artistically constructed of split bamboo^ and below them dogs, pigs and vutures in search of food—that is the picure of Mandalay extra muros. Outside of every town gate there is a tree *cith a large bronze plate, bearing the following inscription: "This- is the capital and residential city of Mandalay, founded in 1856 by the Mendoon king, etc." Then follow instructions to those who enter to conduct themselves decently and morally, otherwise the reader is requested to look at a printing on the opposite wall where the tortures and punishments of those are depicted who had not obeyed the royal orders. The gates are painted bright red and richly gilded the town is divided into regular squares by the roads which run from each of the twelve gates to the one opposite. There is hardly a sign of life in the city no temple, no bazaar—nothing but dull, oppressive silence. That is Mandalay within the city walls.

Senator Voorhees for President Lafayette Bulletin. a: We know of no good'reSsofi'^ty Senator D. W. Voorhees, "the Tall Sycamore of the Wabash," should not be called to the front as our prospective candidate for president in 1888. Fer eloquence and power in any form in which he may appear we have no hesitation in saying he has no peer in the United States: or iJ! ho has, no peer has yet developed before the public many section of our country, If this assertion is denied, we call upon the person so denying to name his champion.

But this is bv no means the end of the peculiar qualifications of our senator to discharge the duties of the -great office of president. His great common sense, his sound judgment in all matters of governmental concernment, his splendid social qualities, and his almost intuitive knowledge and appreciation of men, render him peculiarly adapted to, and qualified for, the discharge of such duties.

It is admitted, we believe, on all hands that no senator, when he rises to speak on

We do not think we are mistaken in this estimate of our great senator, and if not, with all these superior qualifications, he is not the coming man ior president, pray enlighten us by telling us who is.

Remains of an Ancient People. New York Sun. Extensive ruins have been disclosed by the boundary survey between Guatemala and Mexico. That region was evidently densely inhabited in ancient times, but is now almost wholly denuded of soil. That the process ot denudation had begun before the abandonment of the region is shown by the walls and terraces evidently built to check it, and which still retain small tillage patches. The ruins consist mainly of stone floors raised above tlw ground, upon which, no doubt, lighter superstructures were built These ruins are considered older than the more familiar ones in Yucatan.

Mortality at the Monte Carlo Tables. New York Sun. The gambling tables at Monte Carlo are about to be made the subject of dip-

Philadelphia to be treated for nervous lomatic actidf\ on the part of an internaprostration, cau.-ed by too rigid applica- tional_ com: tion to his profession—the law. commission

:0?\ on the part of an interna- pt .misSSen. The report of jbftjr5 statest&tt'-feetgjgqp(J \f

1877 and 1885 1,§20 people—more than the whole population of the "kipedom of Monaco—have committed suicide consequent upon loses at the tables of Monte

Carlos WISE AND OTHERWISE.

A SPIJtKDID TXLLOW.

Delmonico'sis where he dines On quail on toast, washed down with wises Then lights a 30-cent cigar With quite a Sourish at the bar.

He throws his money down, so proud, And "seta 'em up" for all the crowd A dozen games of billiards, too, He gayly loses ere he's through.

Oh, he's a splendid fellow, quite He pays his debts with suoh delight, And often boasts of—to his elan— His honor as a gentleman.

But, when this splendid fellow's wifa, Who leads at home a frugal life, Begs for a little change to buy A dress, he looks at her so wry

That she, alarmed at his distress, Gives him a ldss and sweet oareas. AnS says: "Don't worry so, my dear, I'll turn the drees I made last year." Walter Blaine will soon begin thepraotice of law in Chicago.

Ex-Senator Tabor will occupy a $1,000,000 house in Washington. Mrs. Talmage, wife of the Brooklyn divine, lectures every Sunday to a class of 300.

The Indian pupils of the Carlisle school number 494 and represent thirty-dx tribes.

The electric light now enables steamers to pus through the Sues canal at night.

Matthew Arnpld considers Nathaniel Hawthorne the finest writer America has produced.

Pierre Lorillard says he has several 2-year-olds that will crowd the old-timer* next season.

A Chicago item was to the effect that Emery Storm' death was caused by drinking benedictime.

Imports at New Orleans last year amounted to $8,700,000, of which $1,200, 000 was for fruit

Mr. Blaine's second volume of "Twenty Years in Congress" will be issned the latter part of this month.

A Michigan girl is reported to have recently committed suicide on learning that 1886 was not leap year.

The annnal statement of the Girard trust shows the capital of the residuary fund to be $10,549,917. It yields over 8 per cent.

Senators Beck and Eustis are said to resemble each other so much that they might easily be mistaken for twin brothers.

London is said to be the paradise of domestic servants. The paradise of those who employ them has never been discovered.

Profv Bitter, of Vassar, alleges thtrt the girls never before behaved so well as now. They are becoming more sensible every day.

An exchange says the conquest of Burmah adds another heavy burden to the shoulders of that weary Titan, the British empire.

A medical journal asserts that contafious diseases prevail in Fairhaven, lass., that the horse cars carry disinfectants at each end.

Philadelphia Press: The next time Mr. Cleveland wants to writo a letter on the venality of journalism he should hire a boy to restrain him.

Cyrus W. Field says that Archdeacon Farrar talked to him so earnestly of the benefits of total abstinence that he has not taken a drop of liquor since.

Rev. H. R. Haweis, the musical enthusiast, is a diminutive, dark affable man, with black eyes, hair and side whiskers, and usually dresses in black.

Parnell is a bachelor and lives so quietly that he and his sister Anna once lived some weeks at the same hotel without discovering each other's proximity.

The eastern capitalists who purchased the government property at Harper's Ferry are about to erect immense factories there to utililize the unrivaled water power.

Captain Richard W. Meade, who is as signed to command the new dispatch boat Dolphin, was in command of the naval brigade in New York at the time •f the draft riots.

B. F. McCollum, who died a few days since in Laporte, Ind., was the artillery' man who got the range of a group of confederate officers reconnoitring at Pine Mountain, Ga., and fired the shot which killed General JLeopidas Polk.

Dr. Hartwell of Johns Hopkins university says that a' German soldier can scale a twenty foot wall with his arms and accoutrements or jump an iron spiked fence without getting caught. Gymnastics are compulsory in the German schools.

Figaro says that a Yankee maker of sewing machines has offered Mme. Patti $1,000 for each appearance, in addition to her regular salary, if she will sit at one of his seving machines, instead of at the spinning-wheel, while singing the "King of Thule."

Minneapolis Tribune: A democratic contemporary reminds us that this has been the first democratic holiday season in twenty-five years. We were laboring under the impression that the long holiday of the democracy closed on tne 4th of March last

It is said that Henry Bergh did not quarrel with the disciples of Jenner as long as they confined their practice te human beings, but when Pasteur began

speak on [extending his experiments on animals,

any question under discussion in the sen- ^tr. Bergh became president of the Anti-

ate, attracts such quick and absorbed attention, both on the floor of the senate and in the galleries, as does the gifted "Tall Sycamore," and we know of no man in the country who can draw the crowds -at the hustings of political discussion that Mr. Voorhees universally does whenever he speaks and holds them spellbound, rain or shine, to the end.

Vaccination society. Pittsburg Dispatch General Rosecrans seems to have finally settled down to the conclusion that "Grant was not a military man." The conclusion is undoubtedly correct from Rosecrans point of view. Grant was not a military man of the Rosecrans variety. "Piute Jim," the Indian poker sharp, says a Nevada paper, "lately beat the champion. Chinese gamester of Bullionville out of $75 in cash, an ivory-handled pistol and a gold ring. During the game it was laughable to see the Piute box the cards on the unsuspecting Mongolian."

Boston Advertiser: So long as politicians of thej class of Morris Thomas, of Maryland, are deemed fit men for Indian inspectors, and agencies are treated as prises of partisan service, the Indian will be cheated and abused, and will get little aid in his progress to civilization.

Denver Tribune: To those Indians who are not yet far enough advanced to discard the use of blankets for clothing, the plan of giving them their lands in severalty would prove ruinous. They would be incapable of taking care of their property, and (hey would soon fall a prey to the wolves in human form who go about from place to place seeking whom they may oevonr.

Mr. John News, our neighbor^ was very bad with rheumatism last winter, and was not able to work or even to get out of his room. One bottle of Atbihoros cured

THREE HUMAN

Hake an Assault on a Young lady, Who With bar Fathor Wound£ and Pats Thwakto Flight.

4

SpecislDispatch to the Enquirer. MOUNT SXEHLTNG, Ky., January 4.— News has just reached here of a brutal effort to outrage a very respectable yonng lady of Wolfe county named Miss Sallie Vtacleve by Cnt and Clelland Cassidy and Wesley King, three Breathitt county desperadoes, on the night of the 24th ult, near "the home of the young man's father, near Campton, the county seat of Wolfe countv.

Miss Vancleve was accompanied by her father on her return from a neighbor's whom she had been visiting. The would-be ravisher made a desperate onslaught upon the father and attempted to wrest the girl from him with the unmistakable object of satisfying their lustful passions upon her. A severe struggle ensued, during which Mr. Vancleve was forced to the ground. The daughter's heroism, however, at this critical juncture interposed, and, seizing a stick which lay at her feet, she gave the assailants such a beating as to cause them to unloose her father. The old man thus freed from their grasp, drew his pocketknife—his only weapon—and almost severed Crit Cassidy's head from his body. His accomplices made good their escape, bearing their wounded companion with them.

They have not yet been apprehended, although a vigorous pursuit will be made. Should they be overtaken the commonwealth will not be at any expense for their trial and conviction. The righteous indignation of the young lady's friends will save all trouble and expense.

Wonderful Invention, if Sneoessfal. ST. LOUIS, MO., January 5.—A resident of this city has filed a caveat and applied for a patent for an invention by which passengers and ft eight may be taken on and discharged from railway trains without stopping, and if it proves what its model would indicate it will be an important factor in the rapid transit problem, xhe working model Bhows the main track on a level and an elevated track ln froiit of an elevated depot with inclined tracks leading to it The idea is to start a t*ain from one terminus and net to step or slacken speed until it reaches the other. At the same time passengers may be taken up and discharged at any station. As a train reaches a station on the main track the rear car switches ofi and runs up the inclined plane to the elevated depot. At the same time another car runs down the other inclined plane, is caught by the other passing train, whirled into the main track and becomes part of the train. The passengers who desire to stop at the next station pass to the rear car which is sidetracked as was the previous one and another car load of passengers is taken on. By a contrivance which acts auternatically when a train gets within a certain distance of the depot, it releases the car there in waiting which runs down the inclined plane just as the last car of the traiq, is switched off and starts up the other side.

Why the Irish Do Not Marry,Decatur Herald. James Veale has just received a letter from Patrick O'Connel, a friend of his boyhood days in old Ireland, who describes the troubles of the Irish peasant and the land-owners. He says: have had four writs served upon us and expect twenty-five more. I can be charged £4o or £20 for costs above my rent, making in all £105. I propose to hold- out until the last day. We have low prices for every kind of produce, and so we are urged more than ever to make a fight for fair rents. I am still unmarried. There are no marriages in Erin now the people are in a fever of excitement over what is to be done. The great, struggle for fair rents and to be rid of landlordism is upon us and absorbs all other thought."

The Henvy Bains.

ELMTBA, N. Y., January 5.—The Susquehanna river here has risen ten feet in as many hours,, causing a great deal of damage. At 10 o'clock to-day the rain ohanged to snow, but the water continual to rise. In this city cellars are flooded and merchants are moving their

foods.

At Oswego the Erie railroad bridge as been carried away, and trains are run on the track of the D., L. & W., between Oswego and Elmira. The Tioga branch of the Erie road has been abandoned. Considerable damage is reported also on the Northern Central railroad, abridge having been carried away at Trout Run.

a The Musical Boarder, Lynn Record.

4*8how

the gentlemen to No. 548," said the

hotel clerk to the bell boy, pointing to two new arrivals. "Can yon tell me," mused one aloud to his companion/ aa the elevator promptly bore them up, up, "why our room is like Gin the tonio scale?" "Haven't the least idea. Why is itf" "Merely that it is on the fifth above.".

A Glimpie of Human Nature.

Boston Globe. Pretty girl—Oh, I do so wish I was homely! Homely isirl—Why, prayf

P. G.—Because Then the horrid people wouldn't talk about me. H. G.—Oh, I do so wish I was pretty I

P. G.—Why, dear? H. G.—Because then the horrid people would talk about me..

Hot Mnoh of a Philosopher. "I see an Indiana man has Benjamin Franklin's watch." "Franklinf Benjamin Ftanklinf I thonght he was a philosopher." "What has that to do with the case t" "Why, he ought to have known enough to button his coat over his watch pocket when an Indiana man was about."

The Heathnnish Mikade*

"That's strange," muttered Mr. Dobbin, as he laid away his newspaper. "What's stranger' asked his good wife, making him-get up while she dusted the chair under him. "Why, the mikado of Japan never wears a garment that has been washed." v: 'The nasty heathen!" -a.

Medieval locks were ameng the most elaborately and delicately contrived Specimens of these articles overproduced.

No matter by what pain is caused, St Jacobs Oil is a sure antidote. Fifty cents. r..

Compressed paper is said to have been successfully experimented with in Germany for piano cases.

KRManIK

Cm* Mammtium, 8g

ForPan

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4tPrM»m»mdrn»l«rm. cSattffiwwra,

T" i-WMBE Itt,

Its CAUSES and CURE, 1

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one who was deaf twenty

ue years. Treated by moaVof oted 8DeciaJfit°.ni the day with znon others pie and sno-

benefit..

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MOST PERFECT MADE

Purett and stioagelt Natural TnM Vunltta. Lemon, Orange, Almond. KM*. «teJcvor as delicately ana naturally as tha nuU

PRICE BAKIH9 POWDEH CO.. CHICAGO. UOUI8. •iMaabiiirntSnLmmm, I II

AMUSEMENTS.

0

PERA HOUSE.

FOB TWO NIGHTS.

Wednesday and Thursday January 6 and 7.

The greatest and grandest of all speotaoular dramas,

ZO ZOj

THE MAGIC QUEEN.

Two Cars of Magnificent Scenery, Beautiful "Costumes and Gorgeous Paraphernalia, Making an. array of dazzling splendor unprecedented ln the annals or the stage. The Celebrated Pantomlmlst and Comedian,

GEORGE H. ADAMS,

Supported by the Acknowledged Queen of American Stage Beauties,

ADELAIDE CHERIE,

And a powerful Dramatic and Comedy Company of Over Fifty People. Prices, 25, 60 and 75 cents.

No extra charge for reserved seats.

Saturday, January 9th. "THE BANDIT KING,"

James Walliok and Company and the wonderfnl acting horses, Roan Charter and Bay Baeder.

QRAND OPERA HOUSE.

ONE WEEK, COMMENCING

January 4t,3a, 10 MORTIMER 10 and 20 WEAVER'S DRAMATIC CO. 20

Change of Play Nightly,

30

Admission—10c, 20o, 30c*

CALICO PARTY FRIDAY NIGHT, January 8th. No one allowed on skates until

9:16

without some article of apparel

made of calico. Music every night. Excellent instructions at all times and an orderly place.

Admission,

10

cents

NEVEftfm

Opium Bating,

••You elaim'to* msoh for SAXABITAX N*BVI1TS,1 saysaskeptlc. "How can one medicine bo a specific for EplIepey» Dyspepsia, Alaahollsni.

thn, or Seminal Weahneea, and fifty othci eomplalntst" We claim It a tpec{fle, simply, because the virus of all diseases arises from theblood. Ite Nerrine, Resolvent, Alterative arc Laxative propertiesmeetallthe conditions heroin referred to. it's known tcorfd vide aa

It quiets and composes the patient—not by the Introduction of opiate* and drastic cathartics, but by the restoration of activity to the stomach and nervous system, whereby the brain is relieved Of morbid fancies, which are created by the causes above referred to.

To Clergymen. Lawyers. Literary men, Jierchants, Bankers, Ladies and all those whose sedentary employment causes nervous prostration. Irregularities of the blood, stomach, bowels or kidneys or who require a nerve tonic, appetizerof ttimulant,

HAUABITAX NBBVTNB

is invaluable.

Thousands proclaim it the most wonderful inrlgftrant that ever sustained the sinking system. |1.S0L

Sold by all Druffflats.

be DR.8.A.BICHPND H8RTISE CO,SUeMph,toi

giT.T.TAir aurt. j. H. CLinr. c.». OUST

TERRE HAUTE

Boiler Works,

CLIFF & CO., Proprietors.

Manufacturers ot ~":V

Boiler^ Smoke Stacks, Tanks, Etc.

Hop on First street, between Walnut and Poplar, „v.

TXBSE HAUTE, IKIJLANA.

Repairing prom tly attended to.

W. S. OlOT, J. H. WiT.T.TAim, j«M.Ci.xr

CLIFT, WILLIAMS & CO.

MANUFAOTUBKBS

OF

Sash, Doors, Blinds, &c.

AND. DEALERS IN

Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Glass, Paints, Oils and Builders Hardware, Mulberry St., Corner Ninth,

XEBRB

Idress T. S.

HAUTE.

[IROtNM FARMS FORSMJe.

£00 farmi, SO to 10,000 acris at to S*a par acre. Good markets. Healthy cuniata. Favor* abisproipecta. Write tor circular* containing description. Sent tin*. FYLX A DBHAVKN,

w*

ACTUM!

ACTIHA BATTEEYPatent appl.ed or.

80

COMING—HARRY WEBBER'S CO.

PRAIRIE CITY INK,

First of a Series of

1

R.A.O £3 S

Wednesday night, January 6th. One mile for championship of city snd prise of a gold medal. Former prize winners positively barred.

AND

THE WEEKLY EGRESS

Both For On© Year, $2.50.

Each month for 1886 GODEVS LADY'S BOOK, "the oldrellabl contain a betttlfully engraved frontispiece illustrations of evading

15

colors and hiaok and Wtille, designs of the latest novelties In fan work in oolorsor black white of Berlin work, ehroohet, drawn-thread ora, embroidery, knitting knotting or maoranie, lact-, netting, Poonah painting, and tatting, with complete infractions fr same. In add tion to plain directions and perfect illustrations of the varlons stitches, and Instructions in different kinds of fancy work, the magazine will contain many usiful and elegant designs for a great variety of articles not affected by changes of fashion. It is so admirably adapted to its purpose as to be lnylspensable to the work-t»ble' of every lady. A nil slse cnt paper patera, of which don can make yonr own selection from any design illustrated In the magazine, free of cost, exhaustive notes on fashions with full dtscripelon ot those illustrated, a department of recipes that have been practically tested berore publlcatlon. a department on housekeeping and dressmaking, two pages of select music (an architectural design, a department of agriculture, besides novels, novelettes, stories, history, biographical sketches, poetry, notes on music, art, literature, scientific mlsoellany and onrrent events of the day by the best magazine writers. The mechanical production of the book will excel that of any other £2.00 magaaine published. The twelve booke during the year will constitute a volume of over one thousand pages. Price 13.00. A sample copy

cents. Liberal terms to olub raisers. Address,

1

PROFESSIONAL CARDS.

DR. J. H. BEESON,

DENTIST.

Office. 430%, northwest oorner Fifth and Main streets. Teeth extracted without pain.

T.€.BALL,M,D.

LIMITED TO

THROAT, LUNGS

AND—

Nervous

Mtewmntiain, Spermator-

J:- Diseases,

Room 19, over Postofflce, 22% south Sixth street. to 12, and3 to5 p.m.

DR. F. a BLEDSOE,

DENTIST

Office, N«. 106} South Foortb Street

la. H. BABTHOIiOXXW. W. H. HAU.

Bartholomew & Hall,

DENTISTS,

COB. OHIO AND SIXTH STREETS, (Oversavings Bank.)

TERBE HAUTE, IND. 'i

I. H. C. BOY8K,

Attorney atLaw,

No. 5031-2 MAIN STREET.

COAL HAS ADVANCED!

And Will Still 6» Higher.

LAFAYETTE MALL0RY

Can fill yonr orders promptly with the oeebratea Wllkesbarre, Lehigh Anthraoite, the best coal that comes to the western market. The Nlckle Plate Block is best this market. Ninth and Main streets.

.iwjurrAQoniTtf

MISSOURI

8TBA|I

and Women of good

Exclnslrfl Territory Gud— sample Washer to be *»tnmer«» I and •F»!—. merit make# it phenom

er

PIANOS-ORCANS

The dsnand for the improred KASO» Hwg IASOS ii now so lim that a second addition la tae factory has become lmperatiT®, Do not require ga»quarter as much tuning aa Pianos on tbeprsvaSBag reet-pln lyatem. Consult Catalogue, free.. 100 Styles of OMAs.ia to |M0. for Cnh.ls«r PajmcnU, or Bented. Ilaron ft Hamlin Organ and PtaaoCOb,

HIV TOBK S BOSTON ^CHICAGO.

Send 10 cents postage, and we will mall you free a royJ, valuable sample box of goods that will put yon in

A GIFT!

the way of miking more money at once, than anything else in America. Both sexes of all ages can live at home and work in spare time, or all the time- Capital not reqaired. We will start you. Impay sure for those who start at

STINBON & CO., Portland, Maine,

«utnaga«lne," will

.. ..jtuing fashions ln

GODETPS LADY'S BOOK, P. O. Box, H, Philadelphia.

The Wonder of tht 19th Century!

Do 70a near Glasses and wish to do without themi

ACTINA

Cures Diseases of th-

r'ye

Phcenix Foundry Machine Works

BTABLffiHSD, 1888. HSCOBPOEATED, 1879k Manufactory and Dealers te Bvsrythla* Relating te

Machinery Power, Cast and Wrought Iron Work,

RKPA1BIN6 PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO

213 to 235 North Ninth St, Near Union Depot, Terre Haute, Ind.

STOVES! STOVES! STOVES!

Pearl and Agate Tea and Coffee Pots

FOR HOLIDAY GIFTS, AT

Zimmerman's, 648 Main Street

After Oculists

Faff.

Are yod suffering from that &». common of all diseases

Are yon trouDlef with

Deafness, Neural?!* Hay Fever,

Or SEVERE HI AX 4.CHE?

If so, WHY NOT investigate Aitina? this will coat

A General Agent wanted for every city and town in the United States. Send for catalogue containing all information. Remit money by registered letter, check, I Iraft, or P. O. Order to "AC3TINA" OOMPANYI ,i —rsous PBOPBISTOBS:— 88 FITTH

aVeHUU,

near Fourteenth Street* K* Y#

Pleasejmentlon this paper.

FROFB8SIOKAL.

J. ALBERT WILLIAMS, M. D„

Graduate from two of the leading mbdical colleges in this country, attendant of the best hospitals 4, and Woman hospital. New York city late physician to tee Detralt Head, Throat and Chast

institute, and Physician to Diseases of Wemea, has opened a permanent office on Sixth street opposite postoffioe, Terre Haute, Ind., far the cure of all the various diseasee THROAT, CHEST and diseases of WOMEN. In ths treatments CATABRH, THROAT DISEASES ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS, CONSUMPTION, and LOSS OF VOICE, we adopt the mast improved system of medicated inhalation and ether appliances which bring the remedisa into direct contact with the organs diseased. It Is conceded by all learned physidans to be the only system by which those diseasee can be cured. It has established their entire curability, and has reecned thousands from the grave. There is a cure for any aai all afflictionsof the Throat and Lungs—a cure that may be safely relied upon with all oon4dshoe and hope. It ie reliable, oertain, direst and permanent in its effects. Improvement te seen and felt from ihe first hour of treatment, I care not how much yon are suffering. I wish it to be clearly understood that when I advocate inhalation as a method of treatment I do not mean any one, two or a dosen specific medicine. Inhalation rightfully applied must be thoroughly understood awl medicine prepared for eacti individual

CATARRH

That early and disgusting malady with its multiplicity of symptons: the sore throat enlarged or ulcerated tonsils, the remarkable tendency to contract a cold, hoarseness, haabiqg cough, hard and dry conghs, profuse expectoration, hawking, suckinjg and drawing down the palate. All this train of evils is controlled by the newfremedies without resorting to the barbarous practice of burning, blistering or stnpifying the senses with opium. I have the best treatment and appliances that ever came to this city.

Testimonials at the office.

CONSULTATION FREE. New Advertisements.

When I eavfiire 1 do nit mean uierei/ to~5U a time and then bare them re tarn wain, I mean a radl eal care. I bare made the dlaeae* ot PITS, XPIIJtrST or FALLINGSlCKNMSa Bfe-longttndy. lwamntny temedr to en* tbe worst eaeee. Beeanes other* ban failed lj no raaeon for not noir receiving a enre. Send at oaee

tot

a treatise and a free Bottle ef my Infallible

itmedy. Olre Kxpraea and Poet OBloe. It eoete yoe Bethink for a trial, asd I will cure yon. Address Br. H.O. BOW. 1M Pearl St., NewTerk.

CONSUMPTII

I hare a pcjlttve remedy for the abore df~ see thooeandaof eaeee of tbe wont kind standing baTe been eared. Indeed, so strong talteeffleaey.tbatlwllt eendTWO SORI together with a A LU

A BI.BTBBATISBen thli

toanrsufferer. OlTeexpreseandP. O.addnsa-. DB. T. A. SliooilX.MirearlSt., Hew forir.

Newspaper Advertising Bureau No. Spruce street, New York.

IS!

i*

^4

10

C8AL. COKE. WOOD.

BUY TOUK-

Winter Coal

WHIUTGUGAJT ICT IT AT

SUMMER PRICES. JBABDand SOFT COALt- WQ09 AND COETEM A. EATON, 723 MAIN ST.

ANDREW R0ESCH, SAWrHilMO, 'LOCK & GUNSMITHINB,

SCALE REPAIRING, Etc.

Canal Street* North of Maim*