Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 29 September 1886 — Page 2
fir
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aKPS^trar our five stores—the Milliutty Store, the two Dretemaking Eitablig&ments the Merchant Tailoring E-tab-lhl»in«tnt and the Dry Goods Store proper—the she!yes are running over with new goods, in richness and provision unusual. Se it is in each department. In the Cloak Department, for example, the display of drapery in all forms of Cloaks and Wraps will arrest even passing observation. We do not know that we have ever been so fortunate aa we have this season in securing such a variety ef garments, in style, quality and price. Decidedly the general improveBent in business is here reflected, and. fa most pleasing shape! We shall be {lad to have our friends witness it every day this week. Come, ''shop" with us! You know when you go shopping, that does not necessarily mean that you buy. It incloses looking the coids all over, pricing, and go home to "think about it,"
L. S Ayres"& So.,
INDIANAPOLIS.
UMUEL HANNAFOKD, tAROHITECTr (llnolnnatt, O-
engajei on new court arose, ante, is prepared to give attention in this vicinity. Address home dlreot or £5. B. Stanfleld, superlnntof new court house, Terje Haute, cCMna. '.JJJI'JL •HS
/OB THE SEASON OF 1886. ihe St. Louis Exposition ^Knights Jemplar *•^1* Conclave, S St. Louis Fair, /jtled Prophets Parade,
Jrades Display,
tM
Mid ether attractions wlll iorm seven week* of continued (enjoyment: and that all may particl-wrr-o pate the &• m. Dh«* we
fl4ianapolis Hi
r-
&-
•tit fcejfe
Will Sell Tickets to0
sl.LOIISAi BHIRN.
At Special LowBates ^emmencing Sept. Sand Closing October 2 Id.
AH M00 LONG. Sew South Side Ghipese Laundry
Washing and lroniuv Jone with n-al» asas send dispatch. PKIOBB: flhlrta.« Oaffa, 4e
lOo: Collars, 2e: l)rftW6Tfl 6Cs
Vadershlrts, 9e. Handkerchiefs, Se All kinds of work done cheap: Co! .«•. nd onfls Ironed bv maobtne-
ifcAHROAD TIME TABU
All trains arrive and depart frofia Dnlos *pwt, Ohestnct and Tenth strents, ax «Mt I. A St. Ii. *r Trains marked thus (Bideaete J-'cep-
W Oara attached dally. Trains j^erkea films (H) denote' Hotel Oaru attaohed. trains marked thus (B) denote Bnflet para attaahed. Trains marked tnns ran dally. All other trains run dally ndayi excepted.
W VANDAlAA IxKB. •J&r*!®, *, buai, fvrs from JCaat-Faat JiOSam 1.80 am
JO. 13 am
.... 8.06 pm
inaianawolla Ao.... e.46
vafor w- At—faciflo£x*(8).. 1.43am Mail Traia 1008 a a Fsst Ex 8.18 pa
Fust Mall*(s) Uaoam
frosa *r«K-Day Kx »{H)....«» 2,il stKx* l.iaam ,» 1
na
ixjuisy. fast 13 40 nt
FistMaUnaj. l.Xaan
«T»t -Day Kx »(H) ?.8Spaa
V- Fast Ex l.H a in. saujes Hall and Aoe.. .7.15 a a •*1 «w CinijUjulsv, fast 18.86 p~
V.AJJI UUUlSTi ii FastMall»(SU
LDai
froaa Nth-Mall Train„....„...ll.nym Aooommodatlen. 7.9S ffl ra l«r Nth—Mall Traln...,™..„ t.0Ca a
a
Aaoommodmtloiu tlfipa
4YANBYILLB ft TKKRK HACT®. RASKvnxa xoira. r.tram 8th—Nash ft Ex*(EMka)*.8#a
Kv IndEx •(P)...13:30 Chi 4 Ind Bx *(SCie.ei pat
«e Mr B'th—Chi A N Gx*sC 6,00ana Ev A IndEx *(P). 3.'JO no a A N. Ex»(S*B.. IS.C 5p I
®TAN8TILL.H A INDIAN iMUB. Jr. &ua 8th—Mall and Hx ..^.^, 156 Aoo«mmodatio&„ 8.11 a
mijtiMttt* Mi
9
»a«h. A O. Kx»(81Jfli8S .»8«KlSai K.AO.KX.*
1XJJJTQ1H MTDTiAiro, N W—MaU A Aee*n ... 106 pm torN V-lUU and An1!..MsB
pT4 BKKLISBBOCTJ HCWAKAPOUB S*. JUOT3 rt.
OWNER
atatk mnd
1»JM—WI AWO.
Day Kx *(8)... .lJiMsia Limited 3.08
J?7- Mauoon Aoc'n... 8.18 ps KYA8tLKx»jB). I.86am
iMattoon Aectk.., 8.16 pm HTA8tLKx*m)l T8 am
Jrcaa Wert-NTExpreaa*!®-!Z»a n» Indianapolis KxM 7.18 a a* *teaaaka%f ^»«n *||i S fit* to» aan-§TBlxpreaanS)~^.^am
BAIL1F'EXPRESS-.
tfao. M' Allen, i-Proprieto*
WBL!JOAT!ON OFFICE
i6 South Fifth St., Printing Htmte Bqtiaje
enteral at Second-Clasi Matter at the iWoffice of Terre Haute, Indiana.*,
XBRMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Daily Expreee, per week ,.f 16 per year... 7 60 iix months............ 8 75 ten weoka 1 50
Issued every morning except Monrfaf a&d delivered by carriers*
IEBKS FOB THE WEEKLY. 5ne copy, one year, in advance. tl 26 Dae copy, six months.. 66 for clubs of five there will be a cash dlsjonnt of 10 per cent, from the above rates, or if prof erred. Instead of the oaab, a copy of the Weekly Express will be sent free for the time that the club pays for, not less than six months.
A BEAUTIFUL GIFT.
By a special arrangement with the publishers of Farm and Fireside, we can, for a short ame, offer a beautiful gift in connection with jr paper to every subscriber. It is a magnificent engraving entitled "The Morning 0}reefing." A few years 6go such a picture conJd not be purchased for less than $5 or 10,' and the engraving is jest aB valvable as though yon paid a large sum for it. JChe price of the Weekly Express for one
(yearis.
FDaCATUB DOWNING, of Vermillion.
REPUBLICAN COUNTY TICO.T,
.., _____
I 2.®
Judge of Superior Court, $. HENBY C. NEVITT? mm County Clerk,
-V
*4
ii
JOHHC.TfARItEN.^ 4',t? gonjjty Treasurer, FBA.NKLIN C. FI8BECK.
(p.
[v liw
srp
Auditor,
.., JAMES V. MATTOX./, Sheriff, BANSOM B. BBOTHEBTOH. |ft
ik
Recorder, 6f
(jEVI HAMMEBLy.^jj.
Prosecutor, ••".
DAVID W. HENBT.
Commissioner, Second District^ BICHABD. J. SPARKS. "iCommissioner, Third Distriet, I aANFOBDF. HENDEBSOh.""J
Representative, WESLET GLOVEB.^X,! Bepresontative.
^v BENBY vCLAY DICKEBSON -ii, Surveyor, f, FBANK TUTTJuE.' S#a$QfB
Coroner,
PETEB KOBNMANigw
8 [JDBLICAN STATE TICKET.
Fqr Lieutenant Gover^t.
KOBIUiT 8. BOBERTSON, of AUen eounty. For Secretary of State, CHARLES F. GRIFFIN, of Lake county.
For Auditor of State,
-j?, BR0CE CABB, of Orange county,
5
628 MAIN STREET.
For Treasurer of 8tate,
J. A. LEMCKE, of Vanderbug oonnty. For Judge of the Snpreme Court, BYRON E. ELLIOTT, of Marion oonnty.
For Attorney General,
I/O 1ST. MICHENEB, of Shelby oounty, For Clerk of the Supreme Court, W1L jM T. NOBLE, of Wayne, oonnty.
Hor Superintendent of Public Instruction, HARVEY M. LA FOLLETTE. Boone connty.
Persons leavirg t"vrn (he season, and summer travelers, can !:s\o the Express mailed to them, postpaid, !nr 15 cents a weeV the address being changed as ofr#^ desi:--.i»-^*^ —1
Murderers and suicide are fi tfully on the i~c*?sse in Paris. Behi- .i^egy tragedy is the unbridled license has made the vice of France a by-* the enormities of a nation who, fepry said, have expunged "not" from tLc most important commandments.
its apj»»9tment8. and its hpg^irt bartroom. "Hie Majjgfield l^on me, prer.feumably|®nedi^ajbeJ^aa* having paid the _price_, of folly, and sstted bimself with infamy, he will pose, hereafter, as a model df all tile virtues. He informed^Iioraiwrfl®atoffiat heaiMred to maintain the respectable reputation of his hotel and desired Violet Cameron to seek other quarters. There Is no crear ture so hard"and intolerant as a reformed cake.
25
.'oe price of Farm ahil if neside for oca 'yearis..... 60 Eta raise ef an engraving is folly 3 50
|a4lotal H36 By paying to data, asd one year in advance, we will give all of the above, worth $4.25 FOR ONLY #1.60, that yon get this Elegant Engraving FBEE by paying lees than the price of the Weekly Kzprees and Farm and Fireside alone for one
f&er, subscriber to the Weekly Express Is given FBEE a oopy of the Express Almanac beautifully illustrated and full of valuable information.
Postage prepaid in all eases when sent by Subscriptions payable in advance.
Where the Express is on File. In London—On file at American Exohange in Europe, 449 Strand.
In Paris—On file at- American Exohange. in Paris, 36 Boulevard dee Capucine.
WEDNESDAY, BEPTEMBEB 29,1886
REPUBLICAN TICKET.'
t. For, Congressman, & .'JAMES T. JOHNSTON, of Parke
por Joint Representative.
1
The young woman with the hoi promises to become the prominent of the age. She has broken loose this time in Jersy City. The viciii a calloused reporter, and the efl the lash were not so painfpl as they would have been had he been a thin skinned preacher or some other shrinking kind of a private citizen.
Uj
*.
Much fault is found with Mr. John ston's grammar. The Sentinel had speech said to have been reported verbatim, over which it made exceedingly merry. Bepnblicacs have also been employing a stenographer, and one of Mr. Lamb's recent orations was about equal to any of Mr. Johnston's efforts in the particulars of rehetorieal and grammatical deficiencies.
Precisely the same thing is true of the na tional government with the possible exception that probably the fad equivalent of a bushel mere of bad ceal in the way of public documents drifts into this office through the mails pehen the congressman from this district is a Deaocrar than when he iaa Republioan.^jj|3asetts* .'•uvwi
Bl
far 8th—Mail and Kx. 8.00 am AcoommodaUon_ 825
DC CI OA QO A EASTEBN ILLINOIS. DAjrvnxB Kara, J.ttom Nth—T.H. Aoc'N
JC.M
am
Oh. A T. H. Kx.„... LISp O. A Naah Bx *(8)_ Mtm N. A O. Kx.»(8Ari)m Kpm
H..A Oh. Kx.„.,_K. .16 am Wataeka Ae. S. J5
Is this to be taken as the Graaette's esti[mate of Mr. Lamb's services as ooogresftimanT ...
The next connty anditor, whoever- he is, ena^it to stop these sales, that do not eell, and, ae far as the Gazette is concerned, it doee net intend to to print another oner of them with the legal rata aa it now ia, and lor the simple reason that Ita space is too valuable.—| Gazette.
If the Gazette's space is too valuable to do the county advertising at the legal rate how can it afford to give four columns of jt valuable space to airit grievances. 3#.
The pore and spotless Stokee. who murdered Jim Fisk in a quarrel over Jooe Mansfield, lias reformed. He runs a ho-
ko.pll tel that it noted for the maguiSoattce
i'l k:
Frank WhiUng. notoriou# foot»p!td was shot-dead white trying to escape from the northerHpi-niientiarjf. He had been a terror to tie residents of Indianapolis, where he formerly lived. The possibility of »«cb tuan reforming is a vain hope. Alier aer Vins ont his feentence he would have returned to hia evil ways wi renewed energy, poekibly adding murder to an already lesgthy list of crimes.' A. violent death was inevitable, and Coming t»ow,-it has saved the state the.heavy expense cf other prosecutions. A. thoroughly depraved and vicious oharater is better, under the groudd than on top of it. There, nature, at least can utilize him to worthy ends, which society could not do.
A Terre Haute mechanic has a few words to say in reply to a tariff article in the Cincinnati Enquirer, and it must be admitted that the mechanic has the best of the argument with the free trade journal. The free Ir^de papers make a grave mistake when they express the opinion that the majority of workingmen are free traders. The greater dumber are close students. If the Demo, cratic party would cease its straddling of the tariff question, and come out and engage in a fair fight for free trade, it would be badly whipped. Free trade is not a populrr theory in the United States, "and never well be, ss long as the majority of the people are compelled to earn their bread by the sweat of their brows.
This rale (to let the parties interested or their attorneys, place the advertising where they pleased,) has not been adopted nor followed by theshei*i3* in the past, bat it oan and should be. His only advertising has beea the sale of property when a mortgage has been foreoloeed. The plaintiff in tke suit, or his attorney, who are the parties interested In having the property sold for at least as muoh as the judgment and costs, ought to say where the advertising should be don£ This frill re lleve the sheriff of considerable work and expense, lor it is work at whioh he makes nothing, and will be more satisfactory to the public. This rule, which the Gazette. means to see adopted and enferoed, stripe the sheriff of all advertising patronage and makes it finan cially of no concern to any paper who is sheriff.—Gazette.
What sudden streak of reform is this that has struck the Qazette? It is not many moons since it concocted a scheme to have the Democratic majority in the eouncil pass a' resolution giving the city advertising to the Gazette alone. And this was done .at the Gazette's instance, after it had shared equally with Republican papers in the advertising given out when Republicans were in centrol of the City. "When the Devil was sick, the Devil a «aint woald bfc when the Devil waa well, the Devil a Baint was he."^
The election of a Democratic president was followed by ay complete paralysis of business. Capital is as sensitive as the mercury in a barometer which indicates unerringly approaching atmospheric disturbance. 1lie -extent of the mischief which could be accomplished by Democratic, meddling with the tariff, was to be demonstrated. It made every manufacturer in the country remove every dollar that could be spared from his business, whioh was reduced to the smallest possible scale, and place it where it would be safe, in the event of wide-spread commercial rpin. They now perceive that be hind the chief executive and the Democratic majority in the house, is a staid and reliable Republican majority in the senate, ready io interpose its potent ar%between any ruinous measures of so-called reform that threaten the vital interests of the government. While it will Dot and has not interfered with the distribution of party spoils. While it does not interfere with the appointment of notorious traitors to prominent positions, it will permit no tampering with laws that have been enacted for and have resulted in the advancement of the material welfare of the people. This explains why there is a hopeful revival of business why the labor out-look is good why, as1 the Philadelphia Record perceives, houie. «hop and mill bmldera crowded with 'ork, with the sauie happy condition of ffairs in the heavier industries. Were che Democratic party invested with unlimited power, and its wild and unpractical theory of free trade in force, every oill and factory in the country would be closed and distress and suffering prevail that would surpass, if possible, that other great Democratic panic in 1836-40.
Senator Voojhees' speech last night was
a
very tame adair. Thit assertion is not made with rHsan spirit, but is a plain statement of a fact. He was not received with that warmth which he is accnstomed in Terre Haute. His assertions were wide of tbe facts, and if condensed, as the Indianapolis Journal Bays, could be expressed in one assertion, "You're another." TBTe did not grapple with political questions with bis usual tenacity, and his timidity led his hearers to believe that the Republican platforms have about taken all the fight out of him. His claim that the Republican party has never ne anything for the workingmen would not deserve passing notice if made by a man less prominent in American politics. Mr. Voorhees has sat in the halls of the national legislature for many years, and it is a fact that lie has opposed all measures which the Republican party has advocated and enacted into laws intended to benefit the workingmen* It is to the Republican patty that an credit Is due for the vast amount of excellent legislation in the past twenty-five yeark At no point can thf hand writing of the Democratic party be dboersid. His argument laat night will be accepted as poor pleadings for ihe party he represents, and shows that the Democratic party has a'-sblutely no grounds upon which to jit tnd. Ftom thft tenpirot his remarks he .evidently %gets that tbe Democratic
9s#
party| w' in that the Bep licanfarjf is no longer responsible na&mal ^egietaiioh. He dsclafed self a friend of the lroslBngrasnrand asserted that he was rused among them, and that.he knew "thAHtenfe. sympathies
who toil, why ia it that so, te* have received favors at Jus handstand the bulk if the good things givetfto'tlMr non-pro-' ducing class. Although Ms syinpatiee are with the toilers, he allows them all to remaitun the shops and fields. The sen ator directed attention to alleged, frauds perpetrated by the
The appearance of ex-Senator McDonald wa? a surprise. The people of Terre Haute enjoyed an Axoellent opportunity to compare two distinguished Indianians. The ex-senator's argument was as lame as the senator's. He attempted to explain the gerrymander, and sought to justify the-action df the Democrats by a-iijrting that the Republicans, in the past, enacted a similar law. Bnt even if that were true, it would not justify a law disfranchising 100,000 voters, and giving a Democratic vote double the power of a Republican vote.
There was a vast difference between the treatment by the administration .of Senator Voorhees and the late Vice President Hendricks. When Mr. Hendricks was nominated for the vice-presidency he hesitated to accept. It would certainly add no honors to Hendricks name, and he knew it. Before he wrote his letter of acceptance he dispatched one of his most trusted friends to confer with Mr. Cleveland. This friend asked Cleveland that if Hendricks accepted, and the ticket was elected, if the patronage of Indiana would be given to Mr. Hendricks. Mr. Cleveland replied that Mr. Hendricks could have any thing he asked for, and said that Mr. Hendricks' name would add great strength to the ticket. In that campaign how different the actionb of Hendricks and Voorhees. Mr. Hendricks was working for the success of the Democratic party and Mr, Vopthees to secure control of the Indfona legislature for Jiis. personal ends. After Democratic advancement Mr. Cleveland's manner toward Mr. Hendricks suffered a great change. Let us see how Mr. Hendricks: recommendation of Democrats to office fared. He was snubbed on all sides. At last the contest narrowed down to the In dianapolis postoffice. Mr. Hendricks recommended Mr. ones, -an old friend, Bynum, one of the drippings from the Democratic pot, had his ihan. Vilas, the postmaster genera!, who had been raised out of obscurity by the prestige the name of Hendricks had givejn the Democratic cause, wrote a note tp Mr. Hendricks ask ing him to withdraw the name of Mr, Jones. The Indiana leader was indignant. With his bgow as dark as a thun der cloud, and his lips ready to declare war, he called on the president and Baid "Mr. President, is Mr. Jones to receive the appointment? Must this question divide us?" The Buffalo accident was astounded he was scared. He realized that if he refused the request that the vice president would declare war against the administration. "You "hall have the appointment, Mr. Hendricks," said :he president, and ihat was the only crumb that the great Indianian, the man whom the Indiana Democracy worshiped, and the only man in the Democratic party in Indiana who had carried the state in a presidential year since 1860, received from the administration that, but for the prestige cf his name, would not be in existence. The insulting note he received from Vilas was never answered. In fact, Mr. Hendricks never, spoke to the upstart but once afterward. The great stateman was stricken with death. All Indiana was in mourning. The Democracy was in sackcloth and*ashes the Republicans bowed their heads in acknowledgment that a great citzen was gone. How did Cleveland act? Hendricks was given funeral almost equal to that of Morton's. Only one thing was wanting, the presence of Cleveland. But the stout, ablebodied president was afraid to come. He feared4 a railway accident, that he would lose his life, or that he would be assassinated, or that if he shonfd die there might be anarchy. He professed to believe that his life was the only barrier between the great American peo pie and anarchy, a people who had suffered the loss of greater men than hey without the anihilation of the government. That was the last act of disrespect the president showed Hendricks, for the earth closed over the remains of the man whose' shoes Cleveland was not worthy to buckle who towered' above him in intellect, statesmanship and morality as the giant oak above the sapling.'
On the other hand how has Mr. .Voorhees fared-^-sumptuously! Everything he has asked has been granted. He asked that Mr. Lamb be nominated for United States district attomey, a man whom the United States 'senate would have refused to confirm had Mr. Lfftnb the necessary courage to allow his name to go before tEstt .body. Then Thoe. Hanlon, a ward worker, of New Albany, was made collector for the Terre Haute district, and he was rejected on charges preferred against him by members of his own party. Then General Manson was appointed to the pdfeition through the influence of Mr. Voorhees for the purpose of stabbing Governor Gray. Then Mr. Voerheea placed the patronage of the Xighth congressional district at the disposal of Mr. Lamb, a man whom a gnat many of the members of the Democratic party refuse to suppeiton s:.c..u-it of many failings. And how has that patronage been disposed
that was placed in the hands of Mr. Lamb. Men, totally unfit foe office? and ttetoaiQuftlrsoforyeas,
n: .|r
tootloJA.
Republican party. This
subject fan been worn threadbare, and the place where the Democracy alleged that corruption existed they found honesty. The Republican party has nothing to explain. It does not beg for oblivion. There was a time when the Democratic parly begged-that the people forget its past life. The Republican party does not ask this, bnt it insists that live issues be discussed. There are' enough in Indiana to attract the attention of the people, and it is on these that the Republicans seek to enlighten the people.
1
!emoci*ta. It should no longer cause akonishment that so many respectable Democrats cannot support the ticket they have fought for so long. Instead of a united party (be Democracy is broken and divided in almost every district in the state. The men who stood by Governor Hendricks are clashed to the earth with shame to see their party so prostituted. Hie tone of the eastern press, Democrats and Republicans, is teems with slurs at Indiana. They realize that Indiana has fallen into the hands of cut-throat politicians and political bummers. The tone is as though the Democratic party had been run through a sieve, and all the corruption and-£tthlhat could not pass through the screen was dumpened into the offic b, and it must be admitted that they, are not faj from being right.
The wholesale druggists are counseling together in Minneapolis. The leading topio, aa usual, is the means of restoring the duty on quinine, ono whioh it is needless to saj every citizen of Indiana wfil combat to the bitter end. If onr staples mnet be subject to duty, between bread ard quinine, let it be the staff of life. Just at this season, in the Wabash valley, public sentiment is in favor of the cheapest possible quinine.
The heatqpaoimen of Boee Elizabeth Cleveland's literary work, thus far, is her card of Oianks, which was published in a Utica paper. It is addressed to the neighbors who helped extinguish the flames of the burning "Weeds." It has a directness, sympathy and feeling not apparent,in her more ambitioas efforts, and is free from that painfnl repetition which must be discouraging to pnnlishers who pay by the word.
The public is beginning to weary of the newspaper portraits of Mrs,Cleveland, Edith Eingdon and Cfcronimo. Sullivan, in his embroidered dressiag-dewn and moraing unmentionables, woald be refreshing for a change.
.VOICE OF THE PEOPLE.
3
O. The Tariff Question. TXBRK HAUTE, Ind., September 27. To the Editor of the Express.
.f3*
and ncibne-l&ceived an appointment whlah shaped its improvements tack„ 3
t'i--.
TKen glance over the appointments in IXoljmfn's dktrict.t For shame that Indiad&'Bhofctld BB Bo-disgraced. Bounders
SIB: The Cincinnati Enquirer of Saturday sets before its readers an elaborate editorial]on the tariff, which Beems to be intended as an introduction to a aeries of learned' essays on that endless topic, and as the writer makes two or three astounding lies, the basis of what it proposes to say, will the Express kindly favor me with space for a word in reply
The Enquirer asks what a protective tariff is, and, in reply, proceeds with the illustration ''Our duty upon copper is 25 cents per pound. No copper is imported. We not only snpply the demand in our country, bu( export large quantities of the metal. As none is imported, •o revenue accrues to the govern ment. The copper -mining companies aid this 25 cents per pound to the .oost of production as clear profit ant} to control the foreign market can eell this copper for that mnoh less than the cost of production. American copper can be bought in Europe for less than here at home."
Now, with the exceptions noted, the foregoing paragraph may be taken as true. Our duty on copper is not twenty-five cents a pound nor anything like it. The mining com panieS don't sell in the home market for the foreign price and twenty-five cents aponnd added, and much less do they sell in any foreign market for twenty-five cents less than the home price. We do import copper and we do get revenue from it, and Ameriosn oopper is not cheaper in Europe than it is t»t home.
If we bear in mind the fact' that the Enquirer writer has taken oopper as exemplifying a principle that, he will tell us, applies to more than foar thousand artiolesfrom which revenne is collected, we shall see without much delay how big and black his case will become, how wise and learned the man must be, how fair and how honest he is, end with what keen discernment ho has chosen hiB example.
Let ns see then. We are told that the price of domestic oopper, likethat of all other artiolee produced at hqmwis the foreign price with the duty added ana that in this case the dutv is twenty-five cents a pound. We are further informed that the irine owners are extorting from the home consumers, an excess of a reasonable profit, that this twenty live cents on every pound they mnst use, and that snch iniqnitious gains are the common rewards of those who are so situated that they may reap the full benefitof the dishonest operation of onr tariff law£ But there must be some mistake in the matter, for the Enquirer's calculation would make common ingot oopper about thirty-five cents a pound, while its price in£hicago has not reached ten cents a pound for many months, and if mine owne. sell to foreigners for twenty-five cents less than they get at home, they must give a bonus bf fifteen cents and a ohromo with every pound they export. The trnth is that ths editor of the Enquirer oan bny, at the mines a thousand tons of copper at the rate of three pounds for the amount of money whioh he says is the mineowner's profit on one pound.
Is it not astonishing that the editor ef great metropolitan daily would deliberately write such a mass of monstrous falsehoods to bolster np the Waning banseof Calhoun ism bnt a. dyed-in-ths-wool Bourbon oan be depended npon for anything likely to injure his own country. In his next Saturday's essay he had better turn his attention to brass. Or, for a change, he might till his readers a little trnth. He might tell them that under the benefioient operations of a tariff, made to produce revenne and to secure to oar ewn citi-. zens the benefits of their own markets,
worker, *.
BOO
res
and hundreds of articles, better in qaality and lewer in price than are manufactured in an other oountry in the world,, are new prodaoe 1 at home. That among these are the common cotton goods worn in every household in the United States, and that if these hundreds of millions of yards ate made and sold at less than half the tariff on the sane cooda and this in spite ef the Bourbon theory that the home price is the foreign price with the dnty added. He soight tell them that there is nothing in the way of the continnal prosperity of onr oountry except the faot that the people who have money are afraid of ita old enemiee, and in proof ef this he might mention the faot that within a week froai the day when it becatae certainly known that the confederate congress at Washington woald be unable to disturb our present tariff laws, confidence be gan to return, minidg stocks advanced, rail road shares appreciated in value, exchanges increased, smoke from thousands of idle chimneys began to salute the rising son, busy hammers began to make that music which insures bread to the children of workingmen, and the signs of returning prosperity were everywhere. He might 'whisper it,4oo, that bnt for its shameless alliance with the three disreputable elements of the country, the saloon element,' oar ignorant and virions foreign element, and that other eleaent whioh in all that it does, keeps step with the mnsic of the rebel yell, his party woald have no more chance of being ever called to govern tlda oountry again than Satan has of bong 'promoted to his old place at the right hand of the Almighty. C.
Fair Ground SnrroandlDra.
To the Kditor of tbe Express. DKA* Sat: Visitors of the lite connty fair mnst have noticed how mndh the grounds were benefited in appearance aad convenience by tfce new toads tneantly opened by the township Lrilateo*. The extensive improvements to our fine fair grounds made jointly by the county and Agricnltnral society-will lead to a more general use of the £roand& than even before, fhe entrance moat oaed will be that on {he west side, opening on one of the new roads. No dmbt the trustees fnU^ inteud to mains the wast road as good aa it ought to be for the entrance and boundary of what ia almost a public park bnt if it ia to be done, why not pat the two new roads in or* der for the tell travel, aad at anoef
Property-holders, whd gave pp a number of of good land for the rcada, the eomiaiele irisepntup the new teeing for the eionete fair grounds and Out Agziealtaral tbtr
to suit tbe see the roads
shape sooner than they are likely to
be,~bat which cmght to Bebefon a fortnight passes. Youra, etc., Darrnu
POLITICAL POINTS*
B. S. Hopkins, superintendent of tbe Jefferson public schools., is mentioned as probable Prohibition candidate for congress in that district.
The Republican campaign was opened at Noblesville on Monday evening. Judge D. P. Baldwin, of Log&nsport delivering a finished and masterly speech.
The Hon. James T. Johnston will make a thorough canvass of Montgomery county, this -week, where he is exceedingly popular, politically and personally.
The Republican judical district composed of Shelby and Johnson counties met at Fairland on Monday and nominated the Hon. Gabriel Overstreet, of Franklin, for prosecuting attorney.
On the occasion of Senator Harrison's speech at Logansport between tsentyfive and thirty gray headed veterans were present who had voted for his grandfather. They were made vicepresidents of the mee^ng and given seats immediately in front of the speaker.
George P. Haywood, candidate for prosecuting attorney in Tippecanoe county, has been a life-long Republican and is said to possess all tUe qualifications for the position. Although his election is almost assured, he has entered upon an active canvass and is doing his share of the work previous to tho election. The Courier regards him as a pros ecutor that will honor himself and the county.
The Lafayette Times, which is Demo Cratic, is exceedingly generous in its estimate of Senator Harrison. It pronounces him a man of decidedly ability, deservedly occupying a prominent place in the United States senate and, although an ultra partisan, having honest convictions. It also terms him "in every set of the word a clean man," and perceives in him a future Republican candidate for the presidency.
Over 1000,000 battles of Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup are sold every season, and thousands of persons saved from an un timely grave. The price is 25 cents.
Orth Stein In Jatl.
Franoisco (Cal.) Sunday Chronicle. O. H.JStein, the peripathetic journalist who has gained such an unsavory record as a homicide in the East and a forger on this coast, wss lodged in the city prison last night by T. B. Whitr, marshal of El Paso, who booked his prisoner en route to Texas, where Stein is wanted to answer to a charge of forgery. Life in prison had made the prisoner none the less dudish. He wore tight-fitting clothing and the usual pair of gold-rimmed eyeglasses adorned his nose. Stein was arrested at San Jose by the authorities of that city. Armed with "a govern jr's requisition and the necessary credentials, Marshal White arrived in San Jose about a week ago. £tein delayed his departure from tbe "Garden City" until yesterday by suing out writs of habeas corpds, but the cases were all beaten and the Texan ofilial given" charge of his man. It was irn possible to make out a case of forgery against Stein al San Jose, althou there was enough evidence to hold him for obtaining money under false pretenses, It is charged that at El Paso he forged a check on the New York Sun, which he passed upon George E. King and obtain ed $75, and for this crime he will be tried in that city.
Mr. Thcs. McDonald, of Baltimore, Md., recommends Salvation Oil "with all his heart" for rheumatism.
And Now He Thinks Perhaps He Will, Senator Voorhees was asked last week if he was a candidate for the presidency says an exchange. He replied: "Every body is, and after a man has been in national politics for a quarter of a century he begins' to pick himself out for that place. I're reached this point, bat it is only a harmless amusement. The Democratic party has taken to playing the 'Duchess of Gerolstein' lately, and is given to eccentricities in the way of promoting privates. We old fellows are of no account any more."
Natural and refreshing sleep follows the use of Bed Star Cough Cure. Price, 25 cento.
Literary Life Anticipating Writers. New York Tribune. The public is becoming a little tired of the publisher of Literary Life. He doesn't seem to do anything but announce anew cover for his magazine. It has already had more covers than two ordinary magazines wonld know what to do with.
^iyery men will find St. Jacobs Oil indispensab'e in the stable. It cures lame-
The Drift of the Argument*
Pnuaaeiphia Herald. "Man aad wife," says a writer on Eiatri money, "should learn to pnll together." this doesn't mean that when she grabs yon by the hair yon should grab hers, we fail to understand the drift of his writer's argument.
Tree Enough.
Life. The English government may understand its own bnsine*? better than we do: bnt seeding a Bailer to Ireland seems very like carrying coals to Newcastle.
GERMANIM
Cumi
Ejiewaatlra, Honr
Bitkiekt, HcaSaeka,
rmni.nn a.Toaxun ca»«tww, ma.
WIIiLIAM CI.IFF J. B. SLOT. c. r, oun
TEERE HAUTE
Boiler Works
CLIFF A CO., Proprietors*
•7/ kannfaetorers of -,2 \L Botlern, Smoke ^tuika, Tanks, Ke. Stop on First street, between Walnut nt
Poplar.
TERRK HAUTE, UTDIAHA.
K^palrlsg promtlv attended to.
New Advertisementa, To ADVERTISERS
HsL of 1400 newspapers divided into STATES ARD SECTIONS will be sent on illcatlon—fBKB. those who want their advertising to pay, we can offer no better medium for thorough and effbetlve work than tbe Tarions Beotions of onr Selcet Local Lift
GEO. P. BOWEIX CO,
j'-wsaasa^
iPFTried in the Crucible.
Aboat twenty yean I disceverwl a ^tUe
V-
Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey
and
Duffy's Formula.^/-
rife
"«fc
For Malaria.
18 Canaatxa ST, KUXABSTK,
t»to sgrer®ed peSple, and they prcTS?tt to any other sttaralant.
OcntlemeB—I h*d been for years suf nfthebnfs,andreeelvadno permanent, In tne hands of a pbvslelan. brought on hemorrhages, but aL ».y0rUU^ am feeling better UN! teve in six yearw 1 regain Its power urcunng malaria as'{§ tUsg wonderful. J. H. BOON!
rS<
THE DTJTFT
BOM
SILVER!
GOLD! GOLD I
DIAMONDS! DIAMONDS!
The firm of H« F. Schmidt & Co., hafing dissolved partnership, the old stock of jewelry, watches, clocks and silverware has been sold out, and in a few days I will open with an
ENTIRE NEW STOCK
Of all the latest goods in the Jewelry Line which will he offered at popular prices. New fixtures and new^ecorations.fpThe public cordially invited to call and see me.
H. F. SCHMlDTtf 403 Main Street...
FI.
Jirs—Asar
J.
Sirs—My trouble Aas been chronic malaria. 1 was completely ruu down no appetite, afcln yellow, constant languor find weakness. 1 tooktjoar IrutTy'g l'ure Halt Whiskey and Dottft Formula, ana could not ask to reel better than do. 1 gained pounds ihe first week. 1. K. HtfWLAS U. 118 JAOKSOB ST., PaTsasoN. N. .1.-
Fare Halt Whlske And that all the ma been expelled: raj appetite has returned and a gradual lnorease in weight and strength baa ta\en place. JOHN DOTTY.
Dear Sirs—As a result of using your lultY*s Iskev and Duffy Koroiuhi I And that all the malarial feelings I had tture
ELIZJlBXTU,
N J.
+B PxsaST.
men—I have roun your Dufly's Pure Slalt Whiskey .ermula In breaking up ttae clitlls wltb which I bad been troubled for
found the greatest relief
In "tie use ofyour Duffy's Pure Halt and Italy's For and fiver, with 12 years. 1 h«rel)een troubled alio with my. Innasana blood solttlug, which hs» also been reueveisL A. J. 0t,EK80N. 322 YORK 8T., W. FHTLA.,.&--I had malarial fever, whlcaferas old ancifencuinonla. FtoU-cod-llver oil, but dKJ notlm-
tlent
dansp
BAI/TIMO:
Otnt WHISKBT IS SOLD OITLT W BOTTUES, Kavaa nr BTOK.
OLD
CATARRH CUllE,
300,000SlneleBO3 by OLD SAUL, in person who has traveled all over the •United States. OK 'Of Srucelsts or Mall. •OLD BAUL COMP X. fTZz •BALTIMOHE, MD.
1NEA.N
ft ii ii
INVALIDS
w»U«Si tovilu»iit«pfc^Ch6lej40rlr
9
MARK.
JHUH
iVLn|
Baqtdm no cooking. Our Book, mailed flree. BoatCL-, 1
and Feeding of Infanta. BouanT
OOODAUI OB.
Warranted absolutely purs Cocoa, from which the excess of Oil has been removed. IthasAr«« tbnet th «ttrtnffiA of Cocoa mired with Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar and is therefore far more econom leal, cotttng Ui$ than one cent a cup. It Is delickms, nourishing strengthening, easily digested admirably adapted for in'? as well as for persons
In healc'
Sold by Owetrs everywhere,
f, BAKER CO., Wester, Mais,
SAGINAW H'F'O CO., gaginsw, Mlchtjan,
1WORII
7R01£ TKCffl
OLD MAN!
a K. («FFOBD, tbe Veterinary Surgeon, 412 N. Fifth Bt., feels now so reen* yeratatf in health as to give his time and servioes again to the pro/eeaioa. He i« el! known here, after twenty-two of practiee-Jn th a to re'orjoa. :Dirooni
-jy|-QTH PBOOF BAGS
BLANKETS, FDBS AND WOOLENB,
VXOIMUJUI
A
oa my cheek, and the ioetore pre-
MBnced it cancer. hava Wed a Bomber of pi-5icU3u, bui without receiving any penafrMBt benefit. Among the number were one or two &£>«elalists. 11m mediciue they applM waa like fire to the sore, causing rateaso pais. I saw statement in the paper* telling what S. 8.8. had done for others similarly afflicted. I procured some at once. Before 1 baa need the second bottle the neighbors could notice that my cancer waa Seeling up. My geneial health had been bad for two or three years—1 ban a haoking cosgn ana spit Mood ccntlnnully. I bad a severe para in my breast. After takings!* bat'' of S. 8. S. my coogh left me and 1 grew stouter than I baa been for several years. Hy ,cer has healed over all out a little spot about the size of a half dime, and it la rapidly -^appearing. I would adriM •vary one with cancer to give S. 3. S. a fair trial.
Kaa. NANCY J. MoCONAC GHKY, Aahe Grove, Tippecanoe Co* lad. Feb. 16,1888. Swift's Specific ia entirely vegetable, and seeaa to cure cancers by |wdng cottbBt*f*. tram the blood. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free.
THS SWEPT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer *. Atlanta. 6a.
.A
LEGAL
N
oiicE
A
ted and
rove.
key an at once. nave belle ceress I did In.
I cannot say too unuen in they-ravar. WL£LINDEHEWSB
97 HOXSNW ST., Brc
ras
troubled*vrt"
bed a great dea :ed to use your I
Sbc eoughed a great deal ln-tbe mor commenced to use your Duffy Pure pat It toelpedni id she ,w am happy ly cured. She still continues
and she tturasst It 1: lrBaw Beet Fonama 11 am happy to lnloi
hls-
I «5u«or
It and prepared It a^noe nlorm you her cough yas I to' jjie
Sk«y as a tOStc- I bavo rccon
I H. €. ROY8JE,
flp mn
fl II
r,
-ft
j^Si-
TOTTOITRE8IDE»T.
[No. 14,488.]
State of Indiana, connty of Vigo, in the Vigo Circuit court, May term, lwf, Joseph E. Dyas, administrator of the estate of Jonathan Young, deceased, vs. Henry Oreenawalt, et al. Foreclosure.
Be it known that on tbe 18th day of August, 1888, it was ordered by the court that the Clerk notify by publication said Henry Greonawalt, aa non-resident defendant of the pendency of this aotlon against lilm.
Baid defendant is therefore hereby notified of tbe pendency of said actios against him, and that the same will stand for trial Oolober 11th, 1886, the same being at September term of said Court in the year 1886.
MERRILL N. SMITH, Clerk.
PPLICATION FOB LICENSE.
The undersigned will apply to the botrt of connty commissioners#at their next regular session, whioh commences on tbt first Monday 1. Septem ber,1880, for license to retail spirituous and malt liquors In less qnantit es than a quart at a time, with the privilege of allowing the same to be drank on my premises. My p'.aoe of business is located at 704 Lafayette street, Lot number 2, Don lean's sub* division, in tbe oily of Terre Haute, Harrison township, Vi^count^Indla^^
PROFESSIONAL CARDS. C. O. LINCOLN. DBNTISr. Extractlngind arllflcial teeth speelaltlea. All work warranted. Operation es the natural eth carefully performed. Office, 19J4 South Sixth street, opposite postoffice, Terre Haute.
I3SrS"CJRA.3SrOH31
—AND—-
Mortgage Loan
No. 603 1-2 MAIN STREET.
W. H. HAM D.D. 8. W. B.
1/tS.
MA1X,
IK D.8
Drs. Hall A Hail,
DENTISTS,
(Sneceesors to Bartholomew St HalL)
m% OBJ* ST., TKBBK HADTK, ISI*.
Elizabeth Eaglesfield,
ATtOBSKY,
!'5
Boom 1, Savings Bank Block,
General Law Business.
Special attention £i-rrn oolleetlonsJ
UK. E. A. (.ILLBTT, DENTIST, REMOVED
"-'Has
601D MEDAL, PABIS, 1878,
BAKER'S
From the corner of Sixth and OhX*. a 106 north Sixth, first door nortn of I»t list cbnreh.
Aide yunr retailor for K13 Oris^nnl 931 Beware of lmtta£oE3. Kone Genuine nuleaa hear
UiartUaScaMf*
JAMES MEANS' @3 SHOE.'
HadeinBnt^Co^^^ftgS
VM*
WILSON
WASHBOARDS.
These Washboards are made witb a Bent-Wood rim. The Strongest boards and best washers in tht world, for sale by all dealers Taks no other.
any State cr Tecritoty*
«»«M» bmim higher in LUo
A, P. KIVITS,
326 Main Street, SOLE AGENT FOB TERBE
LADIES' AKO GENTS
3i.
ForProteetlonof .t
oa
MTHTL.
I
oasMtttyaa
triEXJSthsmany otl»r in tbe wo wS^VbowSarlt will tall yoo tbe aalTujam.
HAUTE.
4
£ats dyed,, pressed and reeliaped to or d. in the lH .aet style and on
S FICRTE8T ITOTIOK
CJ t?(I 'H. 3d St. -vi "*-s. H. evMUliner #dii* ted-
J. 1), O A feUS.,
-f»IANO TUNEB,
Relerenofti.—"r: f. Wm. ZaiM, Anton Stude, B. C. Jt- oouroe, H. Mart on# and Mia. Fraaeo# a*l» lsy.. tral Book Store, fits Malt) airrbf 1
