Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 14 April 1886 — Page 3
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
Ibis powder never varies. A marvel of polity, strength and wholesomeness. "jr® economics than the ordinary kinds, and cannot be so! din competition with the multitude of lov test, short weight alum abate powders. Sold only in cant.
Xil* Sa PATENT MOLDED
LA ROSE CORSETS
These Gopsets are molded, and are /warranted to /retain their flue form and finish no matter
r_how
long In use,
"ley will not stretch or break ,' over the hips, and are uf such exquisite shape as to enable the wearer to use size smaller than of any ordilary corset. iThese Corsets lean be re 1 turned by the "purchaser if not fonnd
Perfectly Satisfactory in every ree-
and its price refunded by seller. Made to ',y of styles and sold everywhere at pojm ••s, from 75 centx npwinl.
PVM'VVB CO He» *«&.
MARVELOUS
DISCOVERT!
Positively Remove* .Bone spavin, Ringbone, SpUnfc or Uurb,
ELECTRIC
In 48 Honrs. Without Pain, or Sore.
This is the Great* est -Wonder of the Nineteenth G'en. tury, astonishing, ai it does, the entire Vet' erinary world.
Bend for Clrena lars giving Peal, live Proof.
Price) 92. Large Hoxe*i $3.
Sent to any address on receipt of price. Dr. GUT CHEC1KI, 30 & East 14th St.
New York.
ORDER YOUR
OOAL, COKE
AND
WOOD
OF
EATON,
723 Ham St.
E. M. SMITH,
945 Main Street, Continues to sell at the following prices:
0 A
Brazil Block, well forked, 8o per bushel. Brazil Nut, double screened, 7o per bushel.
Brazil Slack, 4o per bushel. Bhelburn Lamp, best lor grate, 7£o per bushel.
Hard Uoal, Chestnut and Btove, #7 per ^Bituminous juump, well forked, 6}$oper bushel
Delivered tj Any Par oi the
City.
Terms cash. Telepnone 1".
W. B. OX.ITT, J. H. Wlimits, J. M.CU
CLIFT. WILLIAMS & C9
MANUFACTURERS OF
Sash, Doors, Blinds, &c.
AND.DEALERS IN
1
Lumber, Lath, Shingles, alas* Paints, Oils and Builders Hardware,
Kulbeiry St., Corner Ninth
iTKitKE HAUTE.""5"
1\C A hVW its CAUSB8 and CUKE, llCHrfitwO by one who was lwu i| twenty-ei^ht years. Treated by most ot the aotedspeclallstsof thedaywith no uetit. Cured himself In three mouths, and since then hundred* of others by same process. A plain, and successful home treatment. Address T. 8. PAGE, 128 East 28th St., New Ytoak City.
INDIANVEGEfABLE
PILLS
CURE
All Billons
Complaints.
Xhev are perfectly safe to take, being mrrnwf.T VKQETJLBUK and prepared with the greatest care trom the They relieve thesufffcreratonoe by^jryASt off all Imparities through the bowel* All/,druggist*. ^Twenty-five cent, as ot.
INDIANA STATE NEWS.
Hollopeter & Donovan, of Richmond, finisher of slate mantels, failed yesterday.
Morristown is on the boom. Fifteen new buildings are in progress of erection there.
On the first Sunday in May forty-eight converts of the colored Baptist church at Jeffersonville will be baptized.
A mail sack stolen from the depot platform at Fowler, last January has just been found, but its yaluable contents are gone.
Emmett Widdup/ salesman, is short $850 in his accounts with the firm of D. K. Zeliar & Co., of Richmond, for whom he travels.
The great revival at the Methodist church at Thornton, under the leadership of Rev. Mr. Clearwaters, is in its six teenth week of progress.
The greenback prohibitionists of Howard county have nominated for representative the Aaron Walker, a Christian minister and noted religious debater.
The members of the Twentieth Indiana regiment are arranging for a grand reunion in JLogansport July 1 and 2, for the celebration ot the anniversary of the battle of Gettysburg.
A tusk of the extinct American elehant was found imbedded in the safld at ennett's Point, near Vevay, a few days ago. The tusk is eight feet long and nine inches in diameter at the root. Two years ago a similar tusk was found in the same neighborhood.
phi Me
YAL A.KING POWDER CO., 106 Wall street, New York.
Thomas J. Vanosdol died very suddenly on Sunday morning, at his residence near Pleasant Postoffice, Switzerland, county. He was in his seventy-second year, and was a much respected citizen. He leaves a widow and one child, Captain A. D, Vanosdol, of Madison.
E. P. Washburn, retiring trustee of Madison township, Montgomery county, is over $1,300 short in his accounts of his two terms. His bondsmen have paid the deficiency. He is a republican, and the newly elected trustee is a republican also, and a Methodist minister, Rev. S. C. Shanklin.
Nicholas Wedding, eldest son of ex County Commissioner John R. Wedding, of Barr township, Deviess county, has been jailed on a charge of burning a house belonging to Wm. H. Hunter, one of his neighbors. He has a wife and five children, who, since his incarceration, are dependent upon the county for support.
The feeling over the removal of the Greensburg postoffice developed in the display from the window of the old postoffice of a cartoon exhibiting the new postmaster and some of his friends in an unpleasant light. It caused considerable bitterness, and at night the old room was broken into and the picture removed. A reward has been offered for the parties breaking in, and many threats are made
that they shall be prosecuted tor burglary. of the building, Mr. Eward, the owner claims to have located ties.
some of the par-
MATTOON STIRRED UP.
The Coles County Grand Jury Down On Her Raffles and Lottery Schemes. Mattoon, 111., April 13.—Judge
Hughes opened the Coles County Circuit court at Charleston to-day. In his charge to the grand jury, he directed their attention to several Matloon merchants who, during the dull times following the holidays, disposed of some of their surplus stock by rallies, and reminded the jury that in doing so the merchants had plainly violated the law, and should be indicted. He was even more pointed in his remarks against a great lottery scheme inaugurated in this city during the last few months under the auspices of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. The lottery, or "Gift Enterprise," as it is styled, has issued tickets amounting to $125,000 on their face, and many of which have already been disposed of. There is quite a flurry in Mattoon this evening over the prospect of the probable action of the grand jury in the matter.
Rockvllle Ripples.
Special to the Express. Rockville, Ind., April 13.—The republican convention for the nomination of a corporation ticket was held last night at the court house, with a large attendance present. The ticket put in the field compose the following: For marshal, James K. Meacham clerk, Si L. Good treasurer, A. H. Cheney trustee, Third district, Will Maxwell trustee, Fifth district, John L. Noel. Jo B. Cheadle, editor of the Frankfort Banner. was here over Sunday, with James W. Beadle and family. Arrangements are being made to connect the Parke hotel drainage with the court house sewer. This will be a big improvement for the hotel and save much unnecessary expense to the proprietors. Walter C. Cobb, secretary of Chicago and Indiana Coal Railway company, was in town yesterday. He left at the recorder's office the master in chancery's deed for the Chicago & Great Southern railway from Yeddo in Fountain county to Chicago, made to H. Porter, for record. His road now virtually owns the line from Brazil to Chicago.
Clay County Coal Miners. Brazil, Ind., April 13.—The monthly pay of miners of the Brazil district occurred to-day. It was unusually light, nor the outlook for the summer encouraging. From July to February inclusive the monthly pay has averaged $175,000, the output aggregating from 5,000 to 6,000 cars. Daring the last two months there has been a drop of considerably more than 50 per cent., which distributes about $60,000 among 34,000 miners. The early completion of the Chicago & Indiana coal road it is thought will improve matters by placing our coal at markets further northwest than Chicago. The miners indulge in frequent complaints, but no public meetings have as yet been called to consider the situation. The yearly scale of prices goes into effect May 1. The scale was arranged through arbitration, and it is important that it should stand.
Clay County Temperance Agitation. Brazil, Ind., April 13.—J. E. Martin,
President of the Vigo County Temperance Union, whose temperance work among the miners of the Brazil district for tie past three months has met with such wonderful success, has just closed his work at Harmony with 408 signers. He obtained 330 at Knightsville, 685 at Carbon, 300 at -Fontanet, 206 at Coal Bluff. Total, 1,930. Most of the signers are miners. Mr. Martin is apuddler at the Terre Haute Nail Works.He will give up his position and take charge of the societies he has organized. He has been invited to Brazil, and will begin work here Saturday. He gives an interesting account of his work, contain many wonderful instances of reformation aunong individuals and communities. He has so far addressed about half the miners in the district, nearly all addressed signing
Vincennes' New Public Building. The Vincennes Sun says: "Postmaster Kackley informs us that Mr. Cobbs' house bill appropriating $75,000 for a public building in this city, passed the Senate Saturday, and only awaits the President's .signature to become a law. Mr. Kackley received from the Supervising Architect of the Treasury yesterday a list of interrogatories concerning the business transacted in his office—the amount of revenue derived, annual
crease, number of clerks employed amount of floor space used and the pri of building lots in the city. This has business appearance about it, and Vincennes is looking up.
FARM AND HOUSEHOLD.
Road Making and Drainage
One of the most important subjects to occupy the minds of the rural population is that of roads. Another is drainage, in connection with roads, for without drain age no road, whatever the material, can be permanently good. In fact there are situations that must be understood before the road is made. Such places are, first, all hollows that are sprouty, or that are underlaid with hardpan or other material impervious to water.
The other classes are springy and boggy hillsides. All such situations should first be thoroughly underdrained. In fact, the writer is of the opinion, from practical experience, both in underdraining farm and garden land, and from observations on roads that have been underdrained, that in all districts where the natural soil must be used both tor the substratum and the surface of the road, one or more lines of four-inch tile is a valuable auxiliary where laid along the line of the road. It is no less useful where gravel, stone, or other ballasts forms the superstructure. The importance of underoraining roads will be apparent to all who have ever witnessed the quick drying of the soil and its solidity, over and near underdrains on the farm.
Where to place the underdrains along the road is a question not entirely settled. The probability is that one line should be in the center of the track. Where drains are placed near the edges of the road, these places dry first, and take the travel in muddy weather. If this plan is adopted a line of tile must be laid near each side of the road, and that portion of the ditch within eighteen inches of the top should be of small, broken stone, small gravei, or coarse sand. This will prevent the whole from becoming impervious to water through puddling. If only a single line of tile is used, it should be certainly filled with stone, or gravel, except the last eighteen inches, just over the tile. This should be sand or friable loam.
If the tiles are laid in the ditches they should be under the deepest part, or next the side furthest from the center of the road. In this case a fair wagon-track will be found next these tiles, along the side of the road, in wet weather.
In the underdraining of roads, where the cost would be too great to tile the entire length, all low places should certainly be drained, and an ample outfall must be provided by carrying a drain along the lowest outflow until it may be brought to and carried off through some natural channel. It is altogether better, however, to drain the entire road up-hill and down, carrying the water off at every depression leading away from the road and this, aside from the fact that thus all water passing down through the soil is quickly carried away, really much water is in a measure forced down through the soil, thus preventing it running over the surface. Hence much washing of the road, in a broken country, is avoided, and where water stands in possible ruts on worn places it is quickly drawn down to the tiles below.
Barn Stables.
Every year new stables, barns, and other outbuildings are going up, either to replace worn-out structures or to furnish additional space for stock. In planning, the prominent idea to be kept in^ mind is the definite use for which the building is intended. There is no more unsound idea in the building of a combined barn and stable than in allowing the breath and other effluvia to pass into the fodder and other food of the stock. In other words, the ventilation of the stables should not pass through the mow or the barn.
In the building and arrangement of the stable warmth is the essential integer, and, the ventilation being correct, the stable cannot be made too ti^ht. Probably nine stables out of ten are built with the floors raised above the earth, and so the wind has full sweep beneath the floor. The effect is, the animals are constantly being chilled as to their feet and limbs, reacting on the whole body. All stables should be laid on solid walls, and the stable floor, instead of being laid upon bearings, should be let into the sills of the structure, upon bearings laid directly on the ground. The scantling, thus laid, will last as long as the floor, and as a rule fully as long as when let into the sills.
If drainage underneath is intended, this must be done before the floor is laid, and the pipes for this drainage should not be less than six inches in diameter. It is worse than useless to lay such drains unless there is considerable fall and ample means for flushing, when necessary. In fact, as a rule, stables in the country are better without drains, except along the floors. It is preferable that the liquid manure be absorbed with dry clay, or other similar material, for thus the most valuable portion of the manure is saved.
The floors of the stables are usually made of thick plank. They aie by no means the best. The foundation may be six inches of broken stone, thoroughly pounded and solidified. On this is a thin layer of gravel laid and pounded smooth on this again a good cement of sharp gravel, sand, and cement is laid. When finished it should be kept moist for some time before it is used—if for three months it will be better. On such a floor comparatively little water will eep all speet and clean.
Now if the stable is laid with a wellmatched floor alone of seasoned plank thoroughly driven home, and if it is ceiled in from the rest of the barn, where only a portion of the floor is used as a stable, there will be danger of contamination of the flood of the animals by any effluvia therefrom.
Farm Notes and Comment*.
Seventy-six per cent ot the raw cotton produced in this country is exported. A farmer should be the architect of his own barn, but when he builds his house he ought to leave the arranging of the interior to his wife.
In Spain, when a person eats a peach or a pear as he passes along the road, he immediately plants the seeds. Fruit trees are plenty and free to every passerby.
Commission Colman thinks the experimental tea farm in South Carolina had better be abandoned. No doubt of it until American labor comes down to five to eight cents a day.
Every farmer shoald aim to raise all the possible products of the climate for his own use. Herein lies the independence of farm life. He grows every supply for his table, so far as his soil and climate admits, under his own eye. He is dependent on no one for the necesities of life, or even for the luxuries of his table .Many farmers in places where their land is swept by fierce winds find it profitable to plant apple trees in masses large enough to nake a wind-break on the side of the farm most exposed. The apple tree branches low down, and, if bordered by a fence four or five feet high on the windward side, the ground will be covered with snow almost as perfectly as it was in the original forests. lb the process of drying grass into hay most of the volative oils which give green herbage its delicate flavor ana odor are lost. But some farmers have found that
enough dry straw to absorb moisture not only preserves the flavor of the hay, but a portion is communicated to the straw, makiDg it much better for milch cows. It is possible that farmers may yet take to sowing sweet vernal grass for the sole purpose of flavoring their wipter's supplies of dry hay or straw.
Prof. Dodge says the richest agricul tural districts do not necessarily produce the largest yields of corn per acre. The worn-out soil of New England, well cultivated and enriched, has yielded in the last five years an average of 30.8 bushels to the acre, while the Missouri valley, with all its natural richness of soil for growing corn, falls below this 1 per cent, and the Ohio valley, with almost equal natural resources, drops nearly 5 per cent, behind. The middle states are very nearly on the same footing as the New England states.—very true, but in New England corn is raised at a vast expenditure of manure and labor. In Illinois an average of 100 bushels per acre on eighty acres has been raised.
Household.
BROW1MD
potatoes. .'I
Boil in their skins, dry off and peel, set in a baking-pan in the oven, and as they heat butter three times at intervals of five minutes to glaze them.
HASHED POTATOES, BROWNED. Pare an4 cut potatoes into dice lay these in cold water half an hour stew tender but not soft in hot salted water turn this off and cover the potatoes with a cup of hot milk in which you have melted a tablespoonful of butter cut up in a teaspoonful of prepared flrar. Turn all into a greased pudding or pie dish and brown lightly in a quick oven.
LADY CAKE.
One and a half curs of powdered sugar, half a cup of butter, two tablespoonfuls of milk, whites of five eggs, two even cups of sifted prepared flour, one teaspoonful of bitter almond flavoring. Rub butter and sugar to a cream, add the milk and flavoring, then whites and flour alternately. Bake in jelly cake tins, and when they are cold divide by layers of whipped cream, sifting sugar on top.
DEVILED BEEF IN BATTER.8* Out slices of underdone roast beef and lay them for an hour in a mixture of half a cup of vinegar, half a teaspoonful each of salt and made mustard. Turn them over and over several times to absorb the dressing. Lay oh a clean cloth press with another to take up the liquid and dip in a batter made in the proportion of one egg, half a cup of milk, and two tablespoonfuls of prepared flour, with a little salt. Fry in dripping or lard, drain off the grease and serve.
BREW1S.
One even cup of dried bread crumbs, a pint of milk, a quarter teaspoonful of salt, two tablespoonfnlB of butter. Save crusts and broken slices from day to day. When you go to bed, the night before you wish to make brewis, spread these bits in dripping pan and set in the cooking oven to dry. Take them out in the morning and crush with the rolling pin into rather coarse crumbs. Heat the milk, salt it, and when it boils stir in the crumbs gradually until you have granulated mush. It should not get stiff. Now, put in the butter, stir and beat until hot and serve in an open dish. Eat with sugar and cream.
SCALLOPED COD, HALIBUT OR SALMON. Two pounds of cold boiled fish, two cups of milk, one even cup of crumbs, twef tablespoonfuls of prepared flour, and two of butter, pepper, salt, and a tablespoonful of fine minced parsley, two eggs. Pick the fish fine with a fork, heat the salted milk in a saucepan, rub the flour and butter together, stir into milk, with pepper and parsley, and pour this on the beated eggs. Strew the bottom of a baking dish with crumbs, put in a layer of sauce, then one of fish, another of sauce, and so on until the ingredients are used up. Cover with the rest of the crumbs and bake, covered, until it bubbles all over, then brown.
CORNMEAL DODOERS.1
One quart of Indian meal, one quart of boiling milk, two tablespoonfuls of sugar, half a yeast cake dissolved in warm water, one tablespoonful of lard and the same of butter one even teaspoonful of salt. Scald the meal with the milk, stir in the sugar and the ehortning, and when it is almost cold beat in the yeast. Let'it rise all night. Beat up again one hour before breakfast, and set it for a second rising. Heat a dripping pan, grease well and drop the stiff batter on it by the spoonful. Let these be an inch or two apart, that they may not run into one another, and shut up in a quick oven to bake. They should be rougn on top and higher in the middle than at the sides. If the batter runs, add a very little flour. It must be stiff enough to stand in a heap. Eat very hot.
LARDED LIVER.
Wash afresh calf's liver and soak it for an hour in cold water slightly salt. Wipe dry and with a sharp knife make perpendicular incisions clear through the liver about an inch apart. Into these thrust strips of fat salt pork long enough Ufproject on both sides. Into the bottom of a pot or saucepan put a tablespoonful of minced onion, some chopped parsley or other sweet herbs, pepper, and a half cupful of strained tomato juice. On this lay the liver Bprinkle as much onion on top as there is below, cover very light" ly, and set at one side of the range where it will not reach the boiling point under an hour. Gradually increase the heat, but never let it be strong, for two hours more, when uncover the pot for the first time to test with a fork if it be tender. It should be so tender that the fork enters as easily as into the crumby heart of a well-baked loaf. Take out the liver and keep hot while you strain the gravy, thicken with a great spoonful of browned flour wet in cold water, and when it add a glass of sherry. Pour over the boils liver. Carve the latter horizontally. It is as good cold as hot.
J. P. Morris, cashier of Girard House, Philadelphia, Pa., writes, November 27, 1884: "For the past twelve years I have been a sufferer with what is known to the medical profession as lumbago. Having been recommended, about five yean ago, to try Allcock's Porous Plasters, I did so, and was more than astonished at the result. I found almost immediate rslief on their application. I wear one constantly now, and would not be without them. I consider them invaluable."
Japan, according to the new census, has a population of 38,500,000, or about tbe same as that of the United States in 1870. In area Japan is about three times the size of Pennsylvania. ,,imK.
"A little fire is quickly trodden out Which, being suffered, riven cannot quench."
Procrastination may rob you of time, bnt by increased dilligence you out make the loss but if it rob you of life the loss is irremediable. If your health is delicate, your appetite fickle, your sleep broken, your mind depressed, your whole being out of sorts, depend on it you are seriously diseased. In all such cases Dr. Pierce's "Golden Medical Discovery" will speedily effect a genuine, radical cure—make a
putting clover and other grasses into barns new man of you and save you, (ion} the while rather green and mixing with them tortures of lingering disease.
CIVZL-8EEVICE XEF0B1L
Civil-em vice reform comes hard, because the evils against which it is aimed have been long intrenched in the body politic and can only be removed by heroic treatpent. Because as abuse is of long standing, however, is no reason why it should betolerated, and the assertion of such a principle ia without rhyme or reason. Diseases which afflict the human body are not looked upon as blessings because long endured, nor should those which afflict the state be considered so. Eveiything which is inconsistent with the most perfect working of the body and government must be gotten rid o£ Such, at least, is the belief of Mr. W. D. Murphy, of No. 310 Yandes street, Indianapolis, who has recently been cured of rheumatism of twenty-five years' standing by that great remedy, Athlophoros. Age gave the disease no charm his eyes, and he swept it away at the, first opportunity. He himself tells all about the matter In this way:
My rheumatism dates way back about twenty-five years. I first contracted it in the war, in which I served four years and six months. After returning home from service the disease seemed to assume a periodical form. I would have at least two severe attacks every year, but even between these attacks I would suffer all the time. These attacks prevented me from gettin, about, and many times I could not wali or get ou. of bed. They would catch me in the legs so that after standing awhile I would feel suddenly weak and in danger of falling."
Was it during one of these attacks that you used Athlophoros?" Mr. Murphy was asked.
Yes that's the time and that's when it did its work for me. I saw it advertised and sent to B. Brehm, the druggist on Columbia avenue, for a bottle. It was in the afternoon I took the first dose and then at night I took another. I slept soundly that night. The next morning when I awoke I had no pain. I took a few doses more, only using about two-thirds of a bottle altogether and my rheumatism was all gone. That is over a year ago and I have only felt a little twinge of the pain since, but nothing to speak of."
Do you know of any others who have used Athlophoros?" "Yes. I have recommended it to many different persons. My confidence was so great in the medicine that in several instances I have bought bottles of it and given them to people, saying at the time that if it did not do its work they need not pay for it but there is not a single case in which I did not have my money within a week. There is Mrs.
Wright, an aged lady
of seventy, living a few miles from here, who, after suffering from rheumatic pains for fifteen years, was entirely rid of all pain by three or four bottles of Athlophoros. I recommended another lady,who was supposed to be suffering from dyspepsia, but who in reality had neuralgia of the stomach, to try Athlophoros, and it soon cured her. My neighbor, who had a severe attack of neuralgia, his face being swollen out of all shape, was cured by a few doses. My confidence in Athlophoros is very- strong, and I believe that if any one suffering with rheumatism or neuralgia will take it right it will cure ninety-nine .cases out of a hundred. It is worth $100 a bottle to every sufferer from rheumatism."
If you cannot get Athixjphoros of your druggist, we will send It express paid, on receipt of regular price—one dollar per Dottle. We prefer
Athlophoros
Co..
112
Vh.11S'reet,
Paris has 450 ments.
New York.
VARIETIES.
lithographic' establish-
Judge of a government by the men it produces. Judge of a man by his deeds, a tree by its fnuts, a medicine by its resalts. Time, tried and true is Dr. Bigelow's Positive Cure, which contains all the good qualities of all the best cough remedies without the defects of any of them. A safe and speedy remedy for coughs, colds and all throat and lung troubles. Sold by all druggists in fifty cent and dollar bottles. Healing to the lungs. Safe and pleasant for children.
A Spanish newspaper has been started in Kansas City.
Care for Files.
Piles are frequently preceded by a sense of weight in the back, loins and lower port of the abdomen, causing the patient to sup|ose he has some affection of the kidneys or neighboring organs. At times, symptoms of indigestion are present, flatulency, uneasidtos of tke stomach, etc. A moisture like perspiration, producing a ytry disagreeable itching, after getting warm, is a common attendant. Blind, Bleeding and Itching fPiles yield at once to the application of Dr. Bosanko's Pile Remedy, which acts directly upon the parts affected, absorbing the tumors, allaying the intense itching and affecting a permanent cure. Price 50 cents. Address The Dr. Bosanko Medicine Co., Piqua,'tO. Sold by Ceok, Bell & Lowery
Anew English dictionary is coming out with 240,000 words.
A Reliable Article
For enterprise, push, and a desire to get such goods as will give the trade satisfaction Cook, Bell & Lowery, the druggists, leads all competition. They ell Dr. Bosanko's Cough and Lung Syrup, because it is the best. medicine on the market for coughs, colds, croup and primary consumption. Price SO^cents and $1. Samples free.
In Berlin a statue of-Lessig is to be put up at a cost of some_$80,000. The best on earth, can truly be said of Griggs' Glycerine Salve, which is a sure, safe and speedy cure for cuts, bruiser, scalds, burns, wounds and all other soree. Will positively cure piles, tetter and all skin eruptions. Try this wonder healer Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. Only 25 cents. Sold by all druggists.
Thousands of peach and other trees in the Sacramento valley are dying from defective drainage.
Liver Pills.
Use Dr. Gunn's Liver Pills for sallow complexion, pimples on the face and biliousness. Never sickens or gripes. Only one for a dose. Samples free at Gook, Bell & Lowery.
A Portugese woman gave birth to a child while riding in a road cart in the streets of Petal ma, Cal.
Credit is due the German women and physicians for first using Red Clover blossoms as a medicine. Best results are obtained when combined with other medicinal roots and herbs, as in Dr. Jones' Bed Clover Tonic, which is the best known remedy for all blood diseases, stomach and liver troubles, pimples, coetiveness, bad breath, piles, ague ana malaria diseases, indigestion, loss of appetite, low spirits, headache and all diseases of tbe kidneys. Price 50 cents, of all druggists.
By a Japanese process, seaweed is made into paper so transparent that it may be substituted for window glass.
THE MARKETS
CHICAGO REVIEW.
OnuM.lprillS.lM,
FLOUB—Doll sad unchanged aotith*ni winter wheat floor $t M04 75 miol S4 50(34 75 aoftqviag wheat, $8 7004 Minn—ow paten U, 4 664*5 M.
WHEAT—Opened strong, closed weak and
NEW GOODS IN GREAT VABIETY AT THE NEW YOBK & AND 10 CENT STOR12 325 MAIN STBEET.
lower April 78o No. S spring, 7S07fie So. •prine. 64£ 68c. 0#BN—Doll and eaay 88X@86o.
OATH—Drill SWOttXe. BYE—Firm No. 8, 57@59c. BAfcLKY—Dull No. 60c.,, FLAX SKKD—No. 1, $1 06. FORK—Opened 21Q25o higher, declined UKSlSc, nllM and dosed qniet •91069 IS. —Active and eaay and 9){c lower ti 87}f.
BOXED KEATB—Steady dry salted ahonlden, |4 00@4 10 hart nb sides, $6 27%@ 5 SO short clear sides, $5 60@5 65.~
WHISKY—Steady «1 14. UTTEB—Lower, creamery, 29{$3l%c daiiy, 14@34e.
EGGS—lOJieilc. AFTERNOON BOARD—Wheat Weaker Hay. *7 61 8-16.
COBN—Easy May, 87J*e. OATS—Unchanged, FORK—Lower May, t9 10. LARD—Q or hanged. CATTLE—Receipts, 5,400 head shipments, 1,200 bead stronger and active shipping steers, 1,300 to 1,500 pounds, $3 90Q6 00 Blockers and feeders, 12 70fi4 60: bulk, $2 SX ©8 00.
HOGS—Beoeipts, 16,000 head shipments, 8,000 head strong, and 5c higher rough an mixed, $4 06A4 40 peeking and shipping, $4 80@4 55.
SHEEP—Rfcoeipts, 5,500 head shipments, 1,500 head weak, and 25c lower natives, $2 50@6 00.
DRY GOODS.
BBW YORK, K. Y., April 18.—The exports of domestio cottons for the past week was below the average, bnt that ia future usual to the period of the season for shipments. The movement for tbe week was 2,672 packages and since January, 64,876 packages, against b5,252 packages some time last year. The market continues very steady with new business confined toaotnal requirements. In underwear: there is fair trade. -'iv
NEW YORK,''
NEW YORK. N. Y., April 18.—Flour— Dull and declining common to good extra western and state, $8 85@8 55 good to cboioe do., (8 60@5 25 common to cboioe Ohio, $8 15@5 20 patent Mihnieota extra good to prime, $4 75@5 10. ^Jheat—Lower No. 2 spring, 90^c No. 2 red, 92%o, afloaa No. 1 white, 95o. Corn—Lower No. 2, 45%@46c elevated 47J^o afloat. Oata—Moderately active mixed, 87@89)fo white, 40ft46c. Coffee —Options a shade lower April and May $7 15. Sugar—Firm more active refined steady. Tallow—Steady and quiet. Eggs—Qniet and steady. Pork—Steady and qniet. Lard— Higher $6 22%. Butter—Dull and weaker 15@82c Elgin creamery, 84c. Cheese—Steady as 8^010*0.
CINCINNATI.
CINCINNATI, Ohio, April 18.—Flour— Dall and unchanged family, $8 80(^4 10 fancy,* $4 15@4 40. Wheat—Firm No 2 red, 88@90c. Corn—Easy No. 2 mixed.. 37©87}£c. Oats—Steady No 2 mixed, 81%o. Bye—Firm No. 2, 69£o. Barley—Quiet and unchanged extra No. 8 spring, nominally at 50658c. Pork—Dull $9 75. Lard—Doll and nominal $5 80@5 90. Bulk meats— Barely steady: shoulders, $850 short clear sides, $5 87J^@5 40. Bacon—Firm and ul*r changed shoulders, $4 87%short rib, $6 00 short clear, $6 20. Whisky—Week fl 10 sales of 504 barrels of finished goods on this
Butter—Easy and unchanged northwestern extra creamery, 85@36c good to me creamery, 25@86c good to prime rell, 10@12c. Hogs—Quiet common and light, $3 45@4 80 packing and butohers', $4 00@4 50 receipts, 1,178 head shipments, 707. Eggs—Weaker 9@10o. Cheese—Firm and unchanged prime to choice cured Ohio taotsry, 9@10%o.
TOLEDC. ,"'
TOLEDO. Ohio, April 13.—Wheat—Firm and dnll 85687c. Corn—Steady 39o. Oats —Nominal 8g%c. Clover seed Quiet 9 18.
HEW YORK MONEY AND MARKET.
NEW YOBK, N. Y., April 18.—MoneyEasy at 2 per cent. Exchange—Firm |[email protected].
Governments—Closed firm. Currency—Sixee, $ 1.27% bid 4's, oonpon, $1.26% bid 4%,s, oonpon, $1.12% bid.
The stock market opened firm, and on good buying for the first few minatee prioes advanced fractionally, bnt this waa lost by the first call on some hammering of the leading speonlativee by the bear oliqnee. Toward midday the bulls began bidding prioes up, and succeeded in establishing an advance of to per cent, bnt the improvement had no sooner been recorded than the bears made another drive at the list, and at the present writing values are within a fraotioQ of the lowest figures of the morning, •RALY HOUSE STOCK YARDS,
Cows and heiferu. 8 25to8 76 Common butchen' staff 8 00 to 8 25 Steers..., 4 00 tc 4 25 Bulls 2 25 to 8 00 Sheep 2 75 to 8 50 Hogs..., 8 50 to 4 00
PINBOW RUPTURE
RSb'l£*
'impln. sate, reliable and a perfeot retainer. It 1 lflt Truss. Worn Day and Night and ia pnsenoe forgotten. Bend for circular with testimonials from grateful offerers cored by this rp. otiinoe. Address Central Medical and Burslcs tnstltute 980 Locust St., St. Xioula, Mo.
Skillful treatment given all kinds of snrafasP —~")oal sages.
POST OFFICE DIRECTORY
Office, No. 30 South Sixth Street.
*»(,
OXTIOE HOUR9.
General Delivery from 7:80 a. m. until 00 p. m. Lobby and Stamp Department, from 30 a. m. until 8:00 p. m.
Money Order and Registry Office, trom 8:00 a. m, until 5:00 p. m. On Snnday the office is open from 9:06 a. m. until 10 a. m. No money order oi register business transacted on Sunday.
MAILS CLOSE,
EAST —Indianapolis and through east— 12 night, 12 noon, 1:40 p. m. and 8:90 p.m.
T. H. A I. Railroad, way station, :8:00 a. m. and 1:40 p. m. 1. A St. L. R. R., way station, 12 night and 3:30 p. m. Toledo, Wabash A Western, easl iof Danville, 111., 10:15 p. m. Carbon, Ind (through pouch), ta. m.
WB3T—St. Louis and through west, 12 •night. 9:40 a. m. and 1:40 p. m. Vandalia H. R., way station, 9:40 a. m. and 1.40 p. m.
I. A St. L. R. R. way station, 9riT a. nw Illinois Midland, way station, 6:00 a. m. Toledo. Wabash A Western, west at Danville, 111., lo:15 p. m. Charleston, 111., (through pouch), 12 night. Mattoon, I1L, (through pouch) night. srls, (through pouch) 12 Paris, 111, nignt.
NOTH—Chicago, 111., 9:40 a. m., 10:15 p. Chicago A Eastern Illinois, R. R. way stations, 9:40 a. m.
Danville, I1L, (through pouch), 10:15 p. m. T. H. Logansport R. R. way stations. SaO a. m. Rockvllle, Ind., (through pouch), 3:00 p. m. Northern Indiana, Northern
Ohio and Michigan 12 ulght and 1:40 p.m.
BOTH—Kvansvl lie and stations on T. H. AS. R.R., 12 night and 3:00 p. m. WorthlngUm ana stations odIT.
H.*S7E. R.R.,2d0p. m. hack Lime.
Pralrleton, Prairie Creek. Graysvlll and Fairbanks—Tuesday, Thursday I an Saturday, 7:00 a. m.
CITY DKLIVKBY.
The Carriers leave the Offloe for deliver and collection, over the entire olty, 8:45 a. m. and 1:20 p. m. Over the business portion of the City «:45, a. m., 11 a. m., 1:90 p. m., 4K» p. m.
The mall is oollaetad from Street Letter Boxes on Main street, from First to Twelfth streets, north on Fourth to Cherry, south on Fourth to Walnut and south on First to Poplar, and on Ohio between flrstand 8txth", every week day between Sand ta. m., between 9 and a. be-
luoiatiuj tween 13 and 1 p. m. and between 7-JO and wi p. m. All other boxes are oolleeted twice a day, between the hours at 7100 and 10 a. m.', ana between 00 and 6:00 p. m.
On Snnday the Poet Offieela open from S to 10 o'clock a. m., and persons eel ring their mall can call at the window designated by the number of their carrier.
Snnday oolleotlons over the entire eity ire made between 4:20 and feSO p. in., and 1 acaln in the business part of the city between 7 -JO and 8 o'clock, y. m.
a UIUWI v« in m^u wi JOHN F. BEGAN, P. M. guaranteed
Repairing promptly done..,
Vuvywm 0MmIi Bmwmt qf -thytfeiana —rwie Write for lnfbraatlon. Give
Abdominal gaupan ters. Bedi .he treatment of uterine Weaknesses, Coi cade to special order. AddresB
mentsnd were restored to bealth by nee of
STOCK
First or Second Stages of
CONSUMPTION, BRONCHITIS, CATARRH, or
Throat Trouble?
TRY DR. BALL'S
22% South sixth street, Room 19, over Postoffice.
Office hours—9 to 12 a. m., 1 to 5p. m., 7 to p. m. Sunday, 9 to 11 a. m.
DR. J. H. BEESON,
DENTIST
Offloe. 430%, northwest oorner Fifth and Main streets. Teeth extracted withoat pain.
L. H. BARTHOLOMEW W. H, BAU
Bartholomew & Hall,
DENTISTS,
OOR. OHIO AND SIXTH 8TKKETBX
(Oversavings Bank.)
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
DR. F. O. BLEDSOE,
3DB3STTIST
Office, SB 8ontb Fourteenth St.
I. H. C. BOY8K,
Attorney at Law,
No. 5031-2 MAIN STREET.
AH MOO LONG.
New South Side Chinese Laundry'
'J '623 MAIN STBEET. •:,
Washing and Ironing done with' neat* aess and dispatch. PRICES: ,V TJ&M Shirts, lOo: Collars. 3a Onfls. 4c. Drawers, fle: Undershirts, 8c. Handkerchief^ ah kinds ot work done cheap: Collars and enffta ironed by machine:
W. H. HASLET,
No. 310 Halo Stmt
Honey loaned on article, of value. Unredeemed pledges for sale. Watch and cloek repairing. All work
IRON WORKS,
MANUFACTURERS OF
Steam Engine^
Automatic Revolving Coal Screens,
Coal Shaft, Flourlmd Saw Mill Machinery, Bank Cafe, Cina Mills. Castings of all kinds, Cold and Hot Water Pumps, Ste^ir Pumps, House Front?, Iron Columns and all kinds of Architr a* tural Iron Work.
The COMMON SENSE ENGINE AND EAGLE PUMP a specialty. Dealers in Wrought Iron Beams and Channels, Leather^ Rubber and Chain Belting Bolting Chests and Cleaning M*? chinery of everydescription used in ficur mills.
Cor. First and Walnut Sts., Terre Haute.'
.:•! tV'S HIIRO RUBBER TRUSSES Will successfully retain the most difficult lonn ej Uernla or Kaptare, with oomrort and safetj tbombyresalUajt in a radical care. tomai8tnre,may be used in baton* I perfectly tc form of bodr, are wwnwTthpati
1
venience by tbe youngest child, most o? -he laboring man, entirely osoMia, «mr, smddtd wtpUamiium, baC(HlhiO and Hlwmy* reliable.
ot -he laboring man, entirely atoUlmg 'all*
Mw. Mynctaiu, md JNdieai fMXrmp*. Overt cttnos—Bew iir's,"madooii by our roods dnnnff the «rea.iainly stamp 1847ChMtsst8t fee Correct and' SkUfal Mechanical TieahnmiM mm OR RUPTURE A 8PE6IAL1 Consisting' in the correct adaptation of a ndtal traastoeuhindividual case,KaSwflilPtli'iilSl
Represents onr "Radical OnuBtJg Sbtilt 'Ha vitk niwltinimiw n»l mi, muxmsfiilli iibbiTMiIihihi —'—ted and almost hopeless cases. Adopted rad lively need by the Surgeon Pen, of u. a. Army.) its proper use. a a a a & W. firm B. Sag— ifuo, trtUani ftrhr, W. B. rne«uq«. flr.rHwnai f.JMai, fill,WiMfcinyWw, P.ftJfwriii|Fla»,.nnSStiKli»yp^«W
Complete assortment, with careful adjustment, fer sale by WM. H. ARMSTRONG 4 CO. dealers In Surgieal, Dental and Optical Instruments, TERRE HAUTE, IND.
Phoenix Foundry Machine Worts
lle AaedMen. thousand oases they absolutely restore piematdrelr aged and broken down man to the full enjoyment of erfeet and fall Manly Strength ana Vixoroas Health.
186&T 1 IBOOBPOBATBD, 1879, jfjumtactmen and Dealen la Bvarythlng Bel sting te
Machinery Power, Cast and Wrought Iron Worlr*
BEPUBDTtt PBOMJPTLI ATTENDED TO
213 to 235 North Ninth St., Near Union Depot, Terre Haute, Inf.
mail«d to
Avoid the
toted for Years in nz&ctioDSof the •taunts of lite ere aadnptdly fains
To tapes who suffer from the many obsomedlssases ^xooaht about by Indiscretion, Bxposnre, Over-Brain York, ortoo free Indulgence, we ask that you send us oar njune with statement of your trouble, and secure TTtTALM|CKAOBKBBRamflillln«ydR»MpM«^a.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
HAJE YOU FAILED
IN BEING CURED OF
A S A
TREATMENT:—4m X0Bth.9l.TT0
Km.IB.
HARRIS REMEDY CO., In aomr.tMai street. BT.iopia.ya
THE NATIONAL TRIBUNE,
WASHINGTON, D. C.,
Is one of the lees than half-a-dosen roaliy great family papers in the country. IT 5 THE ONI.Y ONE
Published at the National Capital. IT IS THE ONLY ONE Devoted to the History of the Wsr. IT IS THE ONLY ONE
Devoted to tbe Interest of Kx' Soldiers and Sailors. IT 18 THE ONLY ONE
That Makes a Bold and Persistent Fight for Their Rights. IT IS THE ONLY ONE
That Continually Insists on Justloe Being Done the Country's Defenders A Splendid Eight-page, 66 Colunn Paper. Printed on line white paper, edited with single ability, and filled with the most interesting matter that oan be proov red Only fl a Year—Two c\ Week.
Mend for Sample Copies. Sample Q~ples Free. Address,,
THE NATIONAL TRIBUNE, WASHINGTON, D. C.
wiiuAK ours1. J. X. eiin. c. r, curr
TERRE HAUTE MTV*
CLIFF & CO., Proprietors
Manufacturers of
Bollera, Smoke Stacks, Tanks, Eto,
Viop on First street, between Walnut and Poplar, 't TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA.
V?
1
Repairing promtlyattended to.
W. L. DOUGLAS
Best material, perfect fit, eqsals tar IS ortSshoej overy pair warranted. Take none unless 1 "W. L. Douglas' tMO Shoe, warranted." Congress, Button aad Lace If yon canaot get these sboes from dealers, and t^SS^W ton. Msss.
Whose VITAIJTV is f»l KXIIACHTEU or Po»er Pit
find a perfect and re
Kl» ma orfffina
ED aad WAST
need bore. All
drains promptly fforr(oflfae or by mS with "litx eminent Sooiors FREE CtVIALB AGEftCY, No. 174 FsftonStrwt. Nov Yoriu
IWmtACENTSTOSEII
TBS
Men aad Wooms of good Exclusive Ter*itoi7 One beret the won trinsio
MISSOURI STEAM
Washer
j*MnitBI6 money. InIta phenentaal snwss. srsrj
ANDREW R0ESCH, SLA.W yiX-TKC*,
LOCK & GUNSMITHINBr
SCALE KEPAIJUNe, XtS.
Oaoal Street, Worth of Main.
