Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 3 April 1886 — Page 2

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L. S.

j:

WB ABE SHOWING A STOCK OF

BEAUTIFUL

TAMBOUR. APPLIQUE,

GUIPURE D'ART, BRUSSELS, NOTTINGHAM

CURTAINS.

As usual, for lack of room and facilities for doing this "business, we are compelled to jnaKe the prices do the work, and ladies will effect a considerable saving by purchasing these goods from us. Come and see.

INDIANAPOLIS.

N. B. New Arrivals: Spring Wraps, Jersey Waists Fancy Jackets, etc.

SAMUEL HANNAFOBD,

ARCHITECT,

Cincinnati, OBeing engaged on new court house, Terre Haute, Is prepared to give attention to work in this vicinity. Address home -tfllce direct, or M. B. Stanfleld, superintendent of new court house, Terre Haute, Indiana.

THE PRINCESS SPOOL HOLDER."

qV \HO\Mf\vsVQ\.\a

ln^Car^^tUwhed^aUy.8drains Vnarlied

thus (H) denote Hotel Oars attached.

Buntayi Moeptedfther

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SfcSflP.S'S'j'

M. C. WOODS & CO.,

7 Bast Market Street, Indianapolis, Ind.

Immediate Belief—Permanent Cure. '|"HE QBE AT INTERNAL RHEUMATIC 1. remedy and only positive cure for Acute or Chronic Rheumatism, Gout, Neuralgia, riclatica, Lame Back, etc. wasburne's Salicyllca Is ten years established and has oured more person in that time than all the so-called •'Specifics" and •'Cures"com CCPDCT blned. Theonly dissolver of OCOI1C I

the

poisonous

Uriel Acid -which exists in the blood of all those troubled with Rheumatic Disorders. Endorsed by physicians and thousands of eared patients. Write for testimonials ^^hd! advice free• 81.00 a box 8 boxes for

Hold by druggists. Ask for

"Washburne's Sallcylica and accept no other, or send to us. WASHBURNE BALICYLIOA M'F'G CO.. 2S7 Broadway^ New York.

NO MORE in

*2* SURE CURE. 0

arrive and depart from Union

oept l'a St. L.°

811

trallls rnn

VANDALIA LINE. t. h. i. nmaioir,

Ar. from East-Fast Mall *(8) 12:18 am Pacific Ex *{8) 1.30 am Mail Train.. 10.12 an

Fast Ex »H) 2.06 pao

.m Indianapolis Ao... 6.45 pm for West—Pacific Ex »(8)_ 1.42 a a Mall Train 10.18am

Fast Ex *(8) 2.18 1* il*(8

Fast Mall*(8) 12.20 am

from West—Day Ex »(H) 2.1S Fast Ex *. 1.42 a it Cln ALoulsv, fast 12.40 pa

Fast_Mail*(8}........ L20 am *(H) 2.33 pa

Fast Mr"*""

L"ve for East—Day Ex fast Ex 1.51 air Mail and Acc 7.I6 a

Cln A Lonlsv, fast 12.55 Fast Mail«(8) 1.30 am T.

A I,.

Division,

Ar. from N'th—Mall Train 12.90 pit r. Accommodation- 7.86

Ar. from S'th—Nash

A O

Ex«(84B) 4.56 am

Jfiv ft Ex_ MkOO am Ev ft IndEx *(P)... 2:25 n. Chi ft IndEx *(8)_10-J25

L've for S'th—Chi ft N Ex *(8)„. 5.15 am Ev ft HEx J0.30 am Ev ft IndEx *(P). 8.20 & ft N. Ex*(8ftB.. 8.20 ir

EVANSVILLE ft INDIANAPOLIS. Ar. from S'th—Mall and Ex 1L00 an Accommodation... 8.15 am L've for S'th—Mall and Ex...„„._ 8.00 IB

Accommodation... 6.00 am

GHlUAttO ft KABTERN ILIONOIS. DAXVILL1LIS1, Ar. from Nth—T. H. Aoo'n 10.0s am

Ch. ft T. H. Ex. 8.15 a C. ft Nash Ex *(SU 4.15 am 9.15

N. ft C. Ex.'fSftHf

L've for N'th—T.H. ft Ch. EX..... -8.45 am Watseka Ao. 2.27 Nash ftja Ex*(8)_10.50

N. ft 0. Ex.«(8AB)75.00 am

ILLINOIS MIDLAND.

Ar. from N W—Mall ft Aoo'n 5.06 L've for N "W—Mail and Aoo*n_.„ RJ0 am HEE LINE ROUTE. nrsIAKAPOUB ST. LOtJIB.

Depot Corner Sixth and Ttppeeanoe BtrteU.

Ar from East—Day Ex *(8).„ 10.08 am Limited *(8).2.00 Matloon Aoo'n... 7.43 pm

N ft St Ex *(8). 1.03am

ij'vs tor Wan—Day Express *(8)„10.£« am Limited Mattoon Aoc

8.05

oc'n... 7.45pm

N

N YAStL Ex «(S) 1.05 a •NY Express •(§).« 1

Ar from Tut-N

~ianapoi

JSao

Indianapolis Ex.. 7. IS a

N Limited *05 '.8 (8

Day Express *{8:

1.28 pm 3.46 IB L27am

Indianapolis lixl"7^*30 am

L've ifor But—N Express

0Utb.reak'

lnS

da"y

Istrlkers

at

•L've for N'th—Mall Train 6.00 ate Accommodation- 8.45 nc EVANSVILLE

A

TERRE HAUTE.

HASHVH.U LIN*.

.1^- .v

DAILY EXPRESS. Creo. St. Alien,

propria*

PUBLICATION OFFICE 4 South Fifth St., Printing House Square

entered as Second-Clcut Matter at the Posiot)lee at Terre Haute, Indiana,

terms of subscription.

lit

ly Express, per week S 15 per year 7 50 six months 3 5 ten weeks....™ 1 50 leaned every morning except Monday and delivered by carriers.

TERMS FOB THE WEEKLY, One copy, one year, paid In advance..31 25 Jne copy, six months

to

For clubs of five there will be a cash icount of 10 per cent, from the above tes, or if preferred instead of the cash, loopy of the Weekly Express will be sent cree for the time that the clubs pays for, lot less than six months.

For clubs of ten the same rate of aissounte and in addition the Weefcly Express free for the time that the club pays

not less than six montts. For clubs of twenty-five the same rate ft Idiecount, and in addition the Daily Exa ress for the time that the club pays for, aot less than six months.

Postage prepaid in all cases when sent oy mail. Subscriptions payable In adranee.

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

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

SATURDAY, APRIL 3,1886.

REPUBLICAN TICKET.

rom township tbcstbs. JOHN C. BEICHERT. FOB TOWNSHIP ASSESSOR. FREDERIC F. CORNELL. POB JUSTICES OF THE PEACE. ABRAHAM B. FELSENTHAL, ALEXANDER THOMAS, JAMES HOOK, SAMUEL C. LOOKMAN, CALEB GABTBELL.

FOB CONSTABLES.

ANDREW J. TH0MP80N, BENJAMIN F. BE AG IN, DAVID W. CONOVEB, FRANK M. SPARKS, JAMES L. DAVIS.

Evansville can paraphrase Josh Billings' saying about tight boots. A city in a bankrupt condition forgets all miseries except its financial affairs.

Governor Oglesby took the wise course. A trained statesman and soldier knows what it means to call out the troops. If he sends the militia to East St. Louis there will be actual need of their presence and they will be sent there for business,

Senator Harrison gave the senate the benefit of a practiced lawyer in the handling of evidence. The senate, and the country hearing from it, was so aston ished at the idea of anyone breaking loose from the traditional oratorical, pyrotechnic style of argument that the senator enlisted more than ordinary interest in what he had to say. What he said was conclusive in its arraignment of the sham, which, while there as abundance of proof, had not until near the end of the debate, when the Indiana senator took the floor, been so clearly demon-

that he has a laudable purpose in view in his Knights of Labor organization. He hopes to put that order on the same relation with the employers that exists between the Locomotive Brotherhood and the Locomotive Firemen and their employers. These two have progressed to an extent beyond the strike period in their purpose. recognize them and rarely have any trouble with them. They are trades unions. Powderly seeing their success, no doubt is inspired to secure for uni versal labor as much benefit. Neither the engineers or firemen in those organizations favor strikes indeed they are opposed to strikes. So is Powderly, and so were the originators of the Knights of Labor.

The present strike was ill-advised and threatens to become criminal in the worst i, but there is hope that the extreme result will not be reached. Yet even if there are instances of violence a lesson will be learned. John Brown's raid was lawlessness. Still his soul goes marching

streets, ex-Jon. It is wrong to expect ultimate evil

di8aatrous and

as 11

Trains Marked6thus^)

al«m-

may be. It is cheering andcon-

kn0W that

thou«h

8orae of

ha^e

these

resorted to the desperate

means of the anarchists that they are not

anarchists in heart and purpose. The anarchist 1b one who begins a strike or public movement with bloodshed as the watchword. It is not so with these strikers. After three weeks of quiet struggle to gain a point meaningkfood for families, they grow desperate and sanely do desperate deeds.

There is, however, no adequate grounds for fear of a revolution. The ballot is left open to all classes to right their wrongs. The man who betrays the men who cannot spare time to watch his performance of the duty imposed upon him by them will be, found out. The process of righting the wrongs of oppressive monopolies may be slow in action but the result is sure. The distinction between a Gould 1 ailroad speculation and a legitimate railroad business will be recognized. Even the strike now going on emphasizes this fact.' The Gould system captured St. Louis and the southwest several years ago. It was a big stock jobbing scheme. To-day the people are paying tribute to Gould because he succeeded then. As disease seizes on the weakest organ of the human body, so the outbreak first attacked the Gould system. There is, it is true, no more reason for this strike to extend to other roads than lor "a cold in the head" to cause a sore throat but the man with a sore throat knows and will remember whence it came.

The experience will suggest the remedy. If the trouble is not prevented at the time of the next exposure, at least we hope that its evils will be mitigated, and, having faith in the adage that experience is the best teacher, we believe good will yet come out of this present evil.

The One Wise Democrat-

Chicago News. Senator Voorhess was the wisest democrat of them all when be voted last January for the admission of Dakota to the union. He was the

onlT

N Limited *fS). 1.80 sa

democratic senator who voted for the bill,

th«

others voting against it for the reason that

J)*7 Express •(8). a.47 pa it would add republican votes to the electoral

fipv»nHl\r

secondly, to manner the these daWe fin

:-,r~

college, though, of course, this was not the reason they gave publicity for their votes. Now Senator ViKirhees has introduced 8 bill looking to the admission of democratic Montana, and he is the only senator on the democratic side who can vote for the bill without inconsistency, since, if Dakota deserved not to be admitted, Montana certainly should not be.

They Shonld be Vaccinated.

Yreka (CaL) Union. The Monnt Shasta brass band was ont the day of the races and the boys rather surprised our people with the progress they have made within the last few weeks. Their new pieces are very catching.

Hear, Heat-

Chicago News. There is not an honest workman in the world who will not inwardly rejoice that the man Noonan who deliberately wrecked a train and endangered lives at Kansas (Sty was shot for his pains.

A "Sassy" Georgian.

Macon (Ga.) Telegraph. Were Mr. Cleveland's neck forty times as big as it is, and his backbone three-ply, he will have to choose between the democrats and mugwumps.

A Barking Orb.

San Antonio (Tex.) Times. That dark and dim jonmalistio orb known as the San Antonio Light still barks at the heels of the city council.

Arbitration in Jones' Case-

St. Louis Post-Dispatch. It is now thought that Senator Jones would be willing to arbitrate the trouble that is detaining him in Detroit.

A Disoouraging State

of

Affairs.

Independence (Iowa) Conservative. News are scarce this week. REVENUE COLLECTIONS. The Haute

Big Receipts at the Terre Office for Nine Months. The internal revenue receipts of Terre Haute district for the three quarters of the fiscal year ending March 31st greatly exceeds the receipts for the corresponding quarters of the fiscal year of 1884. For the three quarters of 1885 ending March 31st, the receipts were as follows:

First quarter: July, 1885 $ 85,341 45 August, 1885 125,985 05 September, 1885 112,022 17

Total I 293,848 67 Second quarter: October, 1885 $ 142,814 22 November, 1885 144,918 56 December, 1885 145,917 84

Total $ 483,650 62 Third quarter: January, 1886 $ 102,405 66 February, 1886 100,748 40 March, 1886 189,597 80

Total 842,751 86 Summary: First quarter $ 298,848 67 Second quarter 433,650 62 Third quarter 842,751 86

Total I... $1,069,751 15 The receipts for the three quarters of 1884 were as follows:

First quarter: July, 1884 ....$ 111,481 05 August, 1884 77,754 74 September, 1884 78,466 67

Total

Second quarter: October, 1884 November, 1884 December, 1884

.$ 262,702 46

88,785 40 28,109 13 93,100 08

Total f. 154,944 56 Third quarter: January, 1885 $ 114,068 01 February, 1885 79,194 65 18R5 99,408 21

Summary:

First quarter $ 262,702 46 Second quarter 154,944 56 Third quarter 292,670 87

T°tal ...$ 710,817 89 Three quarters, 1885 f. ....$1,069,751 151ain

The railroad companies,-: -tue great difference between the three I transacted in Dublin) absorb .about threequarters of 1885 and 1884 can be attri-1 fourths of the time, so that pressing En buted largely to the idleness of the dis-1 glish business has to stand over. b°.r'£.d OP™" fr CUito* The aged larger this year than during the I

in detail were as follows: Lists 38 02

Beer

I0,b93 87

Spirits 124,827 80 Cigars 3^50 45 Tobacco 609 54 Speoials 880 62

Total $189,597 80

Said March to April, Gieme three hoggs upon yon hill And in the space of days three I'll find away to gar them die. The first a bitter blast did blaw, The second it was sleet and snaw, The third it cam Bae full a freeze The birds' nests they stack te the trees: But when the days was past and gane The three puirhoggs came harplin hAma,

the first three days of April.

T.

t/Ure'

Before the Hall.

Lire.

I can see you soon advancing Through the ball-room and the dandnfr. Where the social stars axe prancing

To a soft, voluptious air I can see the smiles of greeting, See eyes kindle in the meeting With your own, that seem entreating.

Lady fair.

Ahl too well I know how snaring Are your glances to the daring Just last August I was swearing

No one oould with you compare Yet I did not call you cruel ', When you jilted me, my jewel N I a to ok el

Lady fair.

'rf —[Ernest De Lancey Piereon. Cornell university now has sixty instructors and officers and 638 students.

Dartmouth students petitioned to have the college reading room opened on Sunday, but the trustees unanimously refused.

One of the principal bull-fighters in Spain is a candidate for the new parliament at the town of Tudela, and is likely to be elected.

Cases of lead poisoning in Paris have been traced to bread and flour, certain holes in the millstones which ground the grain having been filled np with lead.

Three tombstones bearing the dates 1686, 1712 and 1746, respectively, were found beneath an old building demolished in Boston a few days ago. The stones were in a perfect state of preservation.

Mexicans have a passion for mirrors, and a traveler says that the interior of some of the city houses look like steam boat cabins. He remarks also that mir rors are among the commonest articles in the pawnshops there.

A line of soundings just completed across the South Pacific from New Zealand to the Straits ot Magellan, by Com mander Barker, United States navy found 3,000 fathoms near Chatham Island, the greatest depth.

The French and Germans are still pecking at each other. The mayor cf Chateauneuf has just been condemned to 50 francs fine and 100 francs damages for calling an Alsatin a Prussian. The judges held that the epithet was une in jure.

The ice of Fresh pond, near Cam bridge, Mass., is 'cut almost wholly for export to India. A late fire destroyed the ice houses in which a supply was stored, and the Hindoos will have to cool theit lemonade with ice from some other lake.

A new gold country is said to have been discovered by a shipwrecked French sailor in Patagonia, between the, straits of Magnellan and the river Gallegoa. The man had collected from the sands a little fortune when taken off the coast by steamer.

The amount of Coal in the Pittsburg region is estimated by Professor Lesley of the Pennsylvania geological survey, at 30,000,000,000 tons. About 11,000,000 tons are now taken annually from the bed,.of which two-thirds are bituminous coal and one-third anthracite.

A Bangor newspaper says that so many fortunes were made by Bar Harbor (Mt Desert) real estate speculators that many of the adjoining islands and parts of the sea coast are being bought up by capital ists in the hope that some day the spots will be in demand as summer resorts.

J. F. Copeland's "Old Bill" is not as famous as Stonewall Jsickson's "Old Sor-

llme

tracted long since general attention and, I °f

trk a-ffostf in a cultivation of the ocean

affect ave

"thl™h

tf™

8t7I?'

osgerel hnes inthe

Th^B d^y^th^re Uh four hours, is computed to have amouni

This is manifestly an imperfect venion I has just been built with sixteen axles Tt poem called the "Com- was made for the

of the lines in the buivu uc utm. »n„

the above account March borrowed hoggs ^eet

March said to April I see three hogs upon a bid But tend your first three days to me, And I'll be found to gar them dee. The first it shall be wind and weet, Then next it shall be snaw and sleet. The third it shall be sic a freeze, Shall gar the birds stick to the trees. Bat when the borrowed days were gane, The three silly hogs cam hirplin h«m«». This the the

was modified to correspond with the new I Express, style, according to which the cold days

HeFcar

a pleasant old age near Corinth, Ga. He is 42 .years old and quite bald as to neck and tail.

In 1799 the parliament of Great Brit-

a"

Three quarters, 1884... 710,817 89 I home affairs were concerned, of about Difierenoeinfavorof 1885 $ 359,438 26 SoS^nd'tTe^'i^f IreW'(tSn

to transact the business, 80 far as

lns 01

same time of the previous fiscal year. I taken on their velvety bloom. Wild The collections for the month of March flowers have sprung up on the hills.

"ie willow have swollen and

Boxes of succulent asparagus have been sent to market. The fig trees are putting out fruit buds. Larks are singing in the fields. The whole landscape is carpeted with verdure.

Great rivalry as to speed exists among the sailing ships that annually take grain and flour to England from Oregon and California. The distance is 18,000 miles, and three crack ships competed this year,

The Three Cold Days of April. Few weather phenomena in this coun-1 the winner, Lucknow, making the voyage try are more remarkable, and seem at I Southampton in 100 days, and the secpresent less easily explained, than the °n^K^hlDeQueenstown in 116 days,

"borrowing days," as they are called, be­1 tween the 10th and 14th of April, when usually the temperature falls considerably below that due to the time of year. The cold at this time is at any rate, sufficiently marked—first to have at.

Theosophe,

and Ellora, "a seeress of the Santuarv

have been looking into the future, and I JP-S' ,in£

J?, ™idly ^ming, they say, when if

in a an no is

lonS

not days) tons, from Essen to Spezsia, in Italy by way of the St. Gothard tnnnpl

It is only the Evannvilla

1

8 1 8

indicated the true position of these cold trade. But if the entire businem days, for in the temperature curve de-1 community would show the enterrived from three-quarters of a century of prise which the merchants of rival accurate observation at Greenwich the cities are now displaying, by advertising depression corresponds exactly with the I liberally, the whole community would days which before the change of style I share the general prosperity

were the 1st, 2d and 3d of April.—R. H. I follow. Onr merchants are a solid and Proctor, in Knowledge. worthy class of men, but they have got

~.~I I into a groove from which they must exc. t. minister to France, the Hon. R. tricate themselves if they wish to compete M. McLane, recommends Bed Star Cough I with rival establishments in neighboring

man will be enabled to live with great Mr. Wells has especially quali­| fied himself for treating it by.

ll?e

^a»

and the

wi"

eijhtr Yeare. 8"" Mdnfall io Sew Eoglmd in Sou, throD*h"arefal

these three colds days of April I -February is declared by meteorologists I observations made during a residence

^ere Iwho have studied it to have been unpre-

i, ., I from the clouds, chiefly during twenty-1

The second is snaw and sleet, J™8 greatest between New London and I The third ie a peel-a-bane Providence. Andrew^Carnegie's new book, "Tri And freezes the wee bird's neb lae stane. Persons who have a superstitious dread ^era.f!cracy

18

I came in

There are four months in the year tbat I

have five Fridays each changes of the

longest and shortest day of the year each I pe°ple- For royalty and its surround falls on a Friday. At Krupp's, in Essen, a railroad truck

:-1

special purpose of

and weighs nearly 136

way true! axles are divii

TkI

Gothard tunnel. The I "J

enrves of the road. I

Good Advice.

The Express' columns were never so heavily I taxed to accommodate the advertiser*.

The othf i? good and getting better.—[Terre°Haute) shipment is not yetconclud«£

a re in

wonij

cities. If they would only try a free use

4

WISE AND OTHERWISE Crazed in-Jail. was committed to

of printers' ink for one year, and do it systematically, the experiment would certainly prove a revelation to them. —[Evansville Journal. fee C' CITY FINANCES. City Treasurer Fitzpatrick's Beport for the Month Ending March 31st.

City Treasurer Fitzpatrick has prepared his report for the month ending March 31st, and will snbmit it to the council at the meeting Tuesday. The report shows that taxes are being paid, and that there is a surplus of $21,631.37 in the treasury. During the month 200 interest coupons of the city funding bonds Were paid, amounting to $5,500, and the first coupons of the $30,000 high school bonds, amounting to $750 were ahjo paid. The following is the report:

General Fund^ BECEIPTS.

Balance on hand March 1st $ 13^459 85 Taxes collected 28,784 71 Benefits

175

Land redemptions "112 45 License collections 41 50 Markets 10 00 Miscellaneous. 114 25

Total ........$87,697 76

DISBURSEMENTS.

Vrsrnma redeemed $ 9,832 64 City funding bonds interest coupons redeemed 5,500 00 Commission on same 13 75 High school bonds interest redeemed 750 00 Balance on hand 21,631 37

Total $37,697 76 ,r Cemetery Fund. RECEIPTS. Balance on band March 1 $ 1,460 84 Collections—Highland Lawn 99 98 Colle.tions—Woodlawn 229 00

Total $ 1,789 82 DISBURSEMENTS. Warrants redeemed—Woodlawn.... $ 47 85 Warrants redeemed—Highland 84 36 Balance on hand 1,707 61

Total $ 1,789 82 City Funding Bond Account. RECEIPTS. To balance, March 1 $ 4,244 84

Total $ 4,244 84 niSBUBSEUSNTS.' Warrants redeemed .$ 4,289 00 Balance on hand.

Total.

Ex-President Hayes will shortly make his debute 8'i a magazine writer, having been persuaded after considerable urging to write a brief article on his favorite topic of education in the 8014th. The paper is shortly to be published in one of our popular periodicals, the manuscript being already in the editor's hands.

Edward Everett Hale has written an account of the Boston "Vacation Industrial Schools," in which hundreds of girls are each summer trained in cooking, house-keeping, embroidery, drawing, carpentry, etc. It will appear in the next St. Nicholas, in connection with a story by Charles Barnard, illustrating one girl's experience in the Schools.

Mrs. Craik, the author of "John Halifax, Gentleman," claims that it is pos. sible for a great novel to be written and yet not be a love story. Her readers will have an opportunity to judge of her own success in that line in the novel, "King Arthur: not a Love Story," which ap pears in the April Harper's. She bases the interest of her novel on maternal love.

Mr A. R. Hart, the senior member of the New York firm who will publish Gen. Logan's forthcoming book in May next, has gone to Washington to spend a

to

have seen some wonderful things. Tlie 18u.~,Jecl, by his thorough familiarity IX 60Pl6 tO cIIOW,

there

the first thr^ days ^themonS, ££Io'rdT WanTtelZ II ^ouTsTntefn^^ SnXd

»^|wuS^SuI*ow.

80Cial

llf?°

thoroughly Friday year. It though born in Scotland, and a firm lover Friday, will go out on a 'h0 "old home," is a thorough repubFriday, and will have fifty-three Fridays. 'ica.n

in

*?ea' I t»„

under very favorable circumstances.

gen.e^1X arf a^°ut

88

ings he has not nothing but contempt, and his comparisons of monarchical forms and observances with republican simplicity and his scathing comments will be read with interest not only here but in England. Indeed, the work may be said to be intended primarily for Kritirh readers—to open the eyes of the masses in the United Kingdam to the

1"

truck is seventy-six feet lone anil .u. h^dcrfulBdvaneement—physical, moral, wiij sna ue|,„j and intellectual—of the United States into groups of four ,, which easily adapt themselves to the

dnrinK.tfe ha"century,

meQt

an sdvance-

either little understood or wilfully misrepresented in Europe.

The Apple Eating Foreigner*1. For some reason the total shipment of

Do you value the health and comfort children? Then guard them croup by taking hold of that or cola at the start, and relieving the inflammation with Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup. If they have the whooping-cough do what you can to alleviate their pain by giving them Dr. Bull's Cough 8yrup. All children love it.

The Hog Pack.

The total number of hogs packed in the United States during the year ended March waa 11,263,567.

Public men in American recommend St. Jacobs Oil as the great pain-cure.

:1

00

5 84

$ 4,244 841 Mich.

LITERARY.

All.

volume. Mr. Hart's visit to Gen. Logan is also made in the interest of a prominent magazie, to which it is expected that the General will shortly contribute an interesting article.

The most extraordinary precautions are being taken by the publishers of General Grant's memoirs to prevent stray sheets of the second volume, which is now printing, from getting into the hands of newspaper reporters. The task of safely guarding the millions of sheets which compose the enormous edition of the second volume is by no means an easy one, as the magnitude of the undertaking has made it necessary to dis. tribute the work to several firms. The volume was set up, the plates made and duplicated by J. J. Little & Co., of Astor place, and a large part of the edition is printed in the same building. Mr. Met calf, who made the idex to die memoirs, received a check for $500 from Messrs. Chailes L. Webster & Co. in payment for the labor and care bestowed up it— probably the largest*sum ever paid for a work of this sort. "The Popular Science Monthly" for April will contain the first of a series of articles by the Hon. David A. Wells on

a minister of the Holies," I "An Economic Study of Mexico." Be-

s'^es

heing the best-prepared man, perthe

Joseph Burke who jail for assault and battery on Saturday last by order of Justice Stark of Fonwas discharged Thursday morning, his fine^ having been remitted. Shortly after his incarceration his wife, Anna Bnrke, was also tent down from Fontanet on a charge of provoke, preferred by her sister-in-law. On Wednesday evening she displayed unmistakable signs of insanity and by ten o'clock she began to beat theirs of her cell door m: rav.\ loudly ,! ng on Turnkey £),- oane open be: 1 (II and release her. She proclaimed t'i it the jail corridere were filled with relatives who, witli poison were tryingto break into her cell and murder her. All night, at brief intervals she continued her ravings and early Thursday moraine Dr. W. G. Crapo was summoned and after examination pronounced her nnfit for incarceration in the jail. Brosecutor Henry also visited Mrs. Burke and at Dr. Crapo's suggestion ordered the woman's release. Her husband took her to Fontanet Thursday evening. 1

River Notes.

The Rosed ale came in from Merom Thursday with a heavy cargo of corn and about twenty passengeis.

The river was risirig rapidly Thnsrday, and at a late hour yesterday evening was "coming up" perceptibly.

The Jcker club, with several guests, went south Thursday, at 1 o'clock, for 1 several days' hunt The trip may possi blv extend as far south as Merom.

Johns, Steele & Co. are receiving large consignments of heavy, uncut timber from the north regularly. The river said to be in good condition for logging.

The river mm along the entire front are making strenuous objection to the presence of the ruins of the old sewer extending into the river at the foot of Ohio street. It serves as a dam, and south of it an eddy is created that causes a continuous tilling in along the shore, and prevent* the improvement of the landing at the forit of Walnut sUeet. An effort will be made to have the obstacle re. moved.

My wife was taken with a severe attack of rheumatism and suffered intense pain. After taking six doses of Atblopnoros the pain was entirely gone and the swelling nearly all reduced. R. B. Watson, Supt. Am. Dist. Telegraph Co~ Detroit,

Edwin Booth has added a new character to his repertory—that of grandfather. You ask me to write of my darling's mouth, As sweet as the breeze from the spicy south, Which, laden with sighs from orange groves, comes, You ask me to write of her teeth and her gums You ask me to write—but really I won't 'lis enough that she use?SOZODONT.

On the Toilet Tables

of the beau monde, that delightful and healthful elixir, SOZODONT, is always found. There is nothing comparable to it for rendering the teeth spotless, and preventing their decay. Those who use it exhale fragrance when they open their mouths.

Thomas Nast has bought a half interterest in two valuable Colorado mines.

^AbsolutcX

from Opiates, Eti

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WILLIAM CANDIDUSt

fJJILLIAM CANDIDCS, engaged lesdfnsr tenor for the coming CiaclnnaU Xadeal Festival, in his career has been identified witB some of the chief opera houaes of Germany. Mr. Candidus is an American by birth. He born in Philadelphia in June, 1840, of German parents. His father was a piano key-board maker, and the son followed him in the trader Until he grew to manhood his musical activity was confined to singing with a German men's chorus. At the breaking out of the war he entered the army, served two years, and returned home. Ho took up his residence in New York, became an active member of the Arion and Lledsrkranz Societies, and in i860 attracted considerable attention by his sinking of the music of Max in a performance by the Arion, of Der Freischutz. In 1872 he re-

lry Steu

MARK.

TRADE

as a singer. His first successes were scored at Weimar, as one of the leading tenor* ot

where he sang in operas and concerts. He was then engaged as or som'oF1874^75 he sang alternately in Berlin and Hanover. He was next engaged at Hamburg, and the season of 1879-80 he was at Her Majesty's, in London, where he created a furore by his impersonation of the characters of Lohengrin and Florestan. In the fall of 1880 he entered upon an engagement at Frank, fort on the Main. He sang at the Sangerfest, in Chicago, in 1881. He took the leading tenor rOles in the Musical Festivals of 1882, in Cincinnati, Chicago and New York, and he has won much distinction by the various rOles he has attempted in the American Opera at New York this winter. His voice is sympathetic, clear, and powerful his intonation Perfect and he is a trained musician. ..

Berlin, and during the toa.

PROFESSIONAL CARDS.

TKY COMPOUND

O E N

Weak Lnngs, Throat Troubles, Bronchitis, Rheumatism,

TARRH of or throat. DRC.T.BAIL, 22% South Sixth street, Boom 10, over

Postofflce.

Office hours—9 to 12 a. m., 1 to 5p, m.. 7 to 8 p. m. Sunday, 9 to 11 a. m.

DR. J. H. BEESON,

DENTIST

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

It,

H,

BABTHOIiOICXW.

COB. OHIO AND SIXTH STREETS, (Oversavings Bank.)TERRE HAUTE, IND.

OB. F. O. BLEDSOE,

3Z5E2STTIST

Office, SS South Fourteenth St.

I. H. C. BOVHK,

Attorney at Law,

Ho.

All

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Grand Ladies' and Children's Matinee at 2 p. m. daily. Evening Performances at 8 p. m.

503 1-2 MAIN STREET

PENNYROYAL PILLS "CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH.' The Original and Only Genuine. B*' alwftr* li'i Bewsre of woi-thlcM ImJutlon*. I»i:. Mile to L/ O.'ES. A«k your Dr

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Telephone 290. Old Reeman Building. I

M. A. BAUMAJf,

House and Sign Painter,

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LADIES' AND GENTS' Hats dyed, pressed and reshaped to or der in the very latest style and on

SHORTEST NOTICE.

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Milliner's work solicited.

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aelor In Patent D. O. W"H»nd Rook on Patents Fr««,"GR

I CURE FITS!

When I ssy cure 1 do rot mean merely to stop them for a time and then have them return again. I mean a radical cure. I have made the dtsease ot KITS. EPILEPSY or FALL.NG BICKNES8 a lifelong study. I warrant my remedy to cure the worst oases. Because others have failed is no reason for not now receiving a cure. Send at once for a treatise ard a Free Bottle of my infallible cure. Give Express and Poa(office. It costs yon nothing for a trial, and I will cure you.

Address H. G. KUOT, 183 Pearl St., N.

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CONSUMPTION,

I hare a positive remedy for the nbore dleease by It oee thousands of cases ol the worafi kind and

Spruce N. Y.

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DENTISTS,

bjlta.~

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•undtnffbare been cored. Indent, Mmronglsmr feltS In itaefficacy.thnt 1 wl!I nemtTWO BOTTLES FREff* together whnaTAlXABtBTBBATTSE on this to any sufferer,

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PROFESSIONAL.

i. ALBERT WILLIAMS, M. D.f LATE OF NEW YORK CITY. (Graduate from two of the leading medical colleges In this country.)

Attendant

'ew York

Hud reception

rooms opposite Postoffiee, oa Sixth street, Terre Haute. Ind., for the purnoae Si

all diseases of the Head,

Throat,Chest and diseases of women. Catarrh, Throat Disease, Asthma, BRONCHITIS AND CONSUMPTION.

We adopt the latest and most Improved system of inhalation and other appliances 5rhl£h/,?.avS never been used west ot New

JT *L/ity before. Improvement Is seen and felt from the nrst hour of treatment, I care not how bad yon are suffering.

H?"..'.'. WILLIAMS an old physician with fifty years' experience, will treat all Chronic Diseases

The report for 1885, of this city has Just been published and furnished much valuable information important to all. The chief point in the tab'es of this resort I wish to direct attention to. is the Tearful number of deaths caused by diseases of the Throat and Lungs. More than fifty distinct maladies were concerned in cauRing this saoriflce of human life, and yet nearly oue-half the deaths were caused by disease of the throat and lungs. It means that evory second or third person we meet in the streets of business and plessure is doomed to a premature death by diseases of the throat ano lungs. Some falling this year and some next and soon. Rtich Is the esson taught by the experienoe of the* past treatment. The stomach has b£en made the reoeptaole of medicine intended to aot on the Inner surface of fheiungs, It has been nauseated demoralized and paralysed by medicine until it has been rendered Incapable of doing It necessary work digestion, have shown on from the reports of my patients how quick inhalation produces a change for the better. No other treatment has ever accomplished such results.

CATARRH, that disgusting malady with its multiplicity of symptoms the sore throat, enlarged or ulcerated tonsils, the remarkable tendency to omtraot a cold, the hoarseness, hacking cough, the

best appliances that ever came to this city. No other system of practice haa ever cured.

References from some of the best people in the city who have been cured. CONSULTATION FREE.

GENTLEMEN!

I have Everything New in

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-FOB-

(Spring Suitings

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W. H. ROUTZAHN

Cor. 0th. and JMTain.

rjlHOROUGHBEED JEKSEY.

PEDIGREE OF

LITCHFIELD. Jr. Registered No. —. Born May 3d, 1882. Description, solid brown. Owned by

.i its of ., dam.

Jfo Whlow's Laugl 11507 LHehfield C74 dam, dam Ta© Yoong Widow ir Vir© Gnild 1917 dam, Argo^ ^e•

Lawrenoe 14U dam, Effle 31W sire, Lawrence, lmpc

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Lady Mary, imported ins.

ANDREW R0ESCK, SAW yrtJCNCS-, LOCK & GUNSMITHING,

SOALE REPAIRING, Eta.

Quasi Street, North of Mala.

1A 3-J,