Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 29 May 1887 — Page 4

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|J ^.,.. €&'

•3» fc- L**

Our 75c

latliav Hat

Our $2.75

LIGHT STIFF HAT

For $2.

Our Line of

CHILDREN'S STRAW HA1S.

mrth Street Hatter and Furnisher.

sargains

-IN-

BOOTS,

300 Main Street.

"jr.

B.

Cljvt,

J. H. Williams,

J53

j.

NoMg NwSl

SHOES

-AND-

SLIPPERS.

Look at Some of Our Prices

Men's Seamless Congress, $1.25. Women's Kid Button Shoes, $1.25. Misses' Kid Button Shoes, $1. WotneA's Toe Slippers, 50c. Ohild's Shoes, 4 to 7, 50o. Children's Shoes, 7 to 10A, 85c. Youths' Shoes, High Cut, $1.

HANDSOME SOUVENIRS

Given to all our patron?.

It Will Pay You

To trade at

M. Clift.

HOT imrmuci

Manufacturers of

Sash, Doors, Blinds, &c.

And Dealers In

LUMBER, LATH, SHINGLES, GLASS, PAINTS, OILS and

Builders' Hardware.

MULBERRY ST., COR. NINTH, Terre Hanto.

DRUNKENNESS jr

the Iilqnor Habit Positively Cared by Administering Dr. Haines' Ooldon Specific. rt can be given in a cup of coffee or tea without the kuowledge of the person taking It Is iibso'utely harmless ana will effect a permanent mid speedy cure, whether the patient is moderate drinker or an alcoholic wreck. Thousands of drunkards have been made temperate men who have taken Golden specific in their coffee without their knowland to-day bel'eve they quit drlbJcIng of (heir own free will,

it nkvkk fails.

The

svsteiu once impregnated with tho Specific it becomes an utter impossibility for the liquor uppetite to exist. For sale by James IS. Somes, Druggist, cor. Sixth asd Ohio streets Terre Uaute, end.

AWARSSEDT

Cnrea PlenrU?,

Rl)earnUrn, Lumbago, Bftck&cbe, Weakneis, Coldfl In the Chest and aU Aches aadbtntos.

GT I ISI E

vr«t of imitation# under elmllw soQDtltnciMuee.

ASK fos

Ul.VSOft'B

A3TD TAKE

•—UTaUlV—

HEBESTIK

E IT S

7hen

QJ:

J4?a

cure I do not taean me^rely to

toe tfiietb for tlcuo &od then bare thom iCii «gaiaf.djaeass..gfa

1 laoftu radical cure. I lu

-•ads a?? FITS, KPniaw

ileal cure. 1 have

uaUsu sJCKNivas"

a"

UNDEVELOPED

°i

rarrant my remedy to cure the worst Msea. x-jmse others have failed 1* no reason tor now rccelvtnp a cure. Send at once for a voMsc and a Free Bottle of my Infallible emedy. Give Express and P. O. it costs you otMnsr for a trial, and I will cure

too.

Ad-

r-^ Dr. H. O. ROOT. 138 P«arl St.. New YotSL

PARTS

•iHly enlarged and str»n(thenti. Full artU oaled) free. BKIB MKD. CO., BnftslO, M. T.

UJUOftttE BEI98, Jobber In all grades of

ll'MIW UiNICMIN CiU

'.T,ee, Northwest cor. tiird and Main Sts. SUPKKME LIGHT •U the Finest Illuminating Oil In the Market.

MOST PERFECT MADE

Ussd by the United States Government. Endorsed Dy the heads of the Great Universities an&Bnblic Food Analysts as The Strongest, Purest,aad most Healthful. Dr. Price's the only

Powder that does not contain Ammonia, Lim« or Alum. Dr. Price's Extracts. Vanilla,

issrfMiB'KS&areaffiatrDAILY i.XPHESS.

'4«Oi Bf. Altai,

PUBLICA IS South Fifth It-

Proprietor

ON OFFICE Printing Hons* Sqcers

•'Ural a» Second-Ctu tte. afiAe of Terrs Haute,

ct fit &*'•**• i&lf},

TERMS Or SUBSCRIPTION. Daily Bepr*, per week...-. I 15

44

per year 7 SO six months 3 75 ten week* 1 50

Issued efetj morning except 8fonl«r aad fel'ft-sd hv

csjtIsjv.

TfcKKfc rOB THK W2KKLY.

}r&copy, oat juii, in advance fi 35 •ce copy, six 66 for elub® of

five

tfmre will be a oaeb

kt

iUs-

•o&at of 10 vcr cent. from the above rsias, oi if preferred tustaad at the carb, & civr of the -/.j-sfcly Kxprees will iy» seat. frso fur l). 5im* •iat the clnb pays for, !«f tb«r '.h umtLa.

A

xxAtrrifox.

gift.

S- a special arrangement ith th« pubUaiirr» of Farm and Fireside, can, for a sfcurt tiros, offer a beautiful gift in concwetion wills xv aper to sverv subscriber, It is a tna^'cer'.

0

..—iiled "T) Horning

Sre. A few y-ror» &^o each picture OjaJd rurt bo pnrohasod for leea ther t! or $10, md cbo «:i4fnkvin^ is Jrat as vsloobin ne though pju paid a large mini for it. the prioe of th* Weekly Gxpraee fur one yeorla (1 35 l'is pries of Farm and Kirtwidfl fur oca air Is 50 fhe value of

^ngravinz folly 2 CO

Total *4 25 By paying to date, and one year in advance, we will Rive all of the above, worth ft.ZB TOR ONLY 91.Be, Jo that yon get this Elegant Engraving FREE tj paying less than the price of the Weekly fixpreee and Farm and Fireside alone for one fW

Poetage prepaid in all eases when sent by mall. Subscriptions payable In advaBoe.

Where the Bxpnaq Is on Flls. (a London—On fie at American Exchange a Kji.tpe, 449 Strand.

PMis—On file at American Exchange in flarit, Boulevard dee Capnoine.

Crying Babies

are made

Good Natured, Healthy, Hearty, by the use of

food

Babies do not ery if they are satisfied, and they cannot be satisfied it they arcs not properly nourished by their food, or if it produces irritation of stomach or bowels.

Very many mothers cannot properly nourish their cbi Idren, and the milk of many mothers produces bad effects in tho child because of constitutional disease or weakness.

For all such cases there is a remedy in

XAOTAXED FOOD.

Hundreds of physicians testify to its great value. It will be retained when even lime water and milk is rejected by the stomach, hence it is of great value to all invalids, in either chronic or acute cases. 150 MEALS for an Infant for $1.00. BASILY PREPARED. AtDruggistB-25c.,B0c., SI. Valuable pamphlets sent on application. [25 Wells,Richardson & Co., Burlington, Vt.

A species of dude has been nnearthed in the South that wears a hoopskirt on each leg to keeps its trousers from "kneeing out."

The National Brewers Association have contributed $5,000 to an anti-prohibition fand in Texas, whioh may be regarded as that mnch toward the Democratic •tat* campaign fund.

New that Editor O'Brien has departed the Orangemen can begin repairing their pavements. In their search for missiles they must hare torn! up 'several hnndred miles of sidewalk.

New Albany is kicking egainst the wooden roof ot the government bnilding. In Terre Haute the psople are not such high kickers as the New Albanians, and take their wooden roofs and floors without grumbling.

of an inferior man.

A Missonrs artist is trying to collect $42.75 due him on a portrait of Governor Stewart which is to hang in the executive mansion at Jefferson City. If it is as bad as most pictures of that sort $42.75 ought to cover the bill.

All the work at Wellesley college is done by the 300 girl students. To even up matters there should be an educational institution for boys where they would do all the wood-splitting and coalheavinp. Our yirls are beicg overciiltivsted.

George William Curtis tbiuks that in the npxt campaign the best man will win, irrespective of psrty. There is one excellent feature about Mr. Curtis' opinions and that is, that they are opinions merely and nothing more. They have long ceased to carry any weight with them.

Having solved the matrimonial problem in "He Fell in Love With His Wife," E. P. Roe has turned his genius to other convulsions of nature, and ha8 taken up the Charleston earthquake. In diana trusts that he will not overlook her gas walls. "The dasher" would for

Ji?

title thatwocld attract T0,006«4odttld erf, at least, and entire localities many places. Think about it, Mr. Roe.

When the tramp who subsist? on cold snacfcs and miscellaneous stealings, enjoys life and envies Metbuseleb, and we read of a young man like Frederick H. Brooks, of Barlington, Iowa, who wss worth $75,000 and was impelled to b'ow oat his brains on account of' unrequited love, it must be admitted that there is a good deal in the law of compensation.

The differences.that arise out of the late war are more potent than the principles of Christianity it appears, and the Northern and the Sonthern Presbyterian assemblies will not unite. The Northern assembly is to be congratulated upon its refusal to make any concessions to the South that woald require a sacrifice of its loyalty to the union.

4Some

of the

greatest patriots the country has ever produced l'ave been Presbyterians and the majority of them in the North aw staunch Republicans,

Tbe recent raid on the Walton hoase in Chicago with its horrible revelations, his 'ed to the discussion of the question, as to whether any good can result from tbe publication of vice. When the resort raided is a Clark street dive, or a den on south State street, and the wretched friendless inmates are dragged to police ststidns in tbe patrol wagon, this question is never asked. The spectacle of degraded, brutalized women under ar rest is too common to attract any notice or excite any comment, and there is nolhiDg said of the barm that may be done through publishing accounts of such scenes. But when the place overhauled by the police has an outward as pect of respectability, and the surprised occupants represent the wealth and so cial distinction of the city the same old hue and cry goes forth in regard to the harm that will ensue from such a revelation of hidden vice. It is true th*t the good name of many a man and woman will be blasted that families will be disgraced and husbands and wives separated, but it is only one of a thousand instances where the few must be sacrificed that the many may be saved. Those sacrificed in the present case have no one to blame for their downfall but themselves. They have plunged headlong into vice, wilfully and wantonly to gratify the instincts of depravity. They have not the excuse of the miserable wretches who seek vainly, in greater misery, an escape from the pangs of want and starvation. Vice thrives in concealment aa vermin that breed and multiply in the dark, leaving their haunts only when they are opened to the air of Heavan and the light of day. Although it may offend sensitive ears, and delicate natuies the social evil must be spoken of plainly and without reservation in the pulpit and by the press. Suppose the fact1 in question had been carefully suppressed and the few who were nrrested were spared the just con sequences of wrong-doing the place would have continued to be what it has been in the past,a death trap in which thousands would have gone down to rain. Its real character has been made known, and the revelation shows that it is in no respect entitled to greater consideration than has been given like places that have uol had tbe protection and patronage of m^ney and alleged aristocracy. The work should continue nntil every place ot tke kind, in Chicago and elsewhere, shares the fate of the lev dives that are eventually raided out of existence.

Memorial Day as a national festival, now takes equal rank with that ia which the anniversary of American independence is celebrated. Oae is set apart for especial rejoicings, and the successful establishment of a republic, in the faee of almost unsurmountahle difficulties is recalled in the midst of triumphant rejoicings. More than a centurr has lapsed since the colonies became free none are now living who can give personal testimony concerning tbe incom parable courage, patriotism, self sacrland determination which were required in the war whioh thirteen itrug gling colonies waged against the mother country, which had a great army rein forced by allies at its command, armed disciplined and equipped. Facts have been handed dawn in the traditions of families, who, with each succeed ing genation, are lesi and less impressed by the deeds of their forefathers. Tbey have become apart of history now so remote that subsequent events have diminished their interest and their importance. When the graves of revolutionary heroes are remembered on Memorial Day, it is almost in the same spirit with which those are revar-

George Washington Childs is a bigger enced for their virtues and for their great man than the college that has just made deeds who have lain in the dust for him an L. L. 3D. Titles and degress are centuries. With the civil war it is superfluities where men are superior to |wholly different, lhat crisis dates them and they add nothing to the ability new beginning in otir history it was the

decisive stiuggle in which truth and error, wrong and justice th it had been in antagonism from the first establishment of the government, met and measured their strength. It was d- creed tbat right should survive, and that justice should prevail, an 1 the brief period ot two score years has not obliterated from the public heart and mind the terrible cast of tbat contest. There are those surviving who are still able to recite tbe story of suffering, peril, death, through which the nation walked, bleeding and clothed in'the habiliments of woe to final peace. There ato hundreds who are p.ble to toll of tbedangersof battle, the fatigue of the march, the elow torture o! starvation in rebel prison pens, and as time advances their story loses nothing of thrilling interest, or of the quality of tragedy. At this especial season these impressions are intensified. The liviBg army, who survived the dangers of war, who lived to see the fall attainment of that liberty for which they imperiled tbeii lives, stands drawn up ia review before those who lie ia [their graves, done with the turmoil of eonfliet, and wrapped in the repose of eternal silence. Upon tbe living army time has l.id its!

have'fallen the. weariness, of Bat It Is in its contemplation of the dead with which it is hen contrasted, rather than in the bodily presence of the living that the debt of the nation to its defenders is more deeply realized. Death is tbe cocsummate sacrifice, and the dead who may yet be remembered by their owa generation, receive a peculiar reverence which is accorded only to those who have laid down their lives for their fellewmen. It ia when it is brought to these annual remembrance, when flowers and eloquence, and funeral dirges add their influence to its solemnity that the real meaning of Memorial Day, and the obligations of the people to its deliverers' are fully, comprehended. For this reason it should never bs permitted to fall with neglect, but should be more and more widely observed with each succeeding year, that that liberty and justice may be preserved and perpetoated, which we have received from them as a sacred in hwitance.

VOICE OF THE PEOPLE

The Salvation Army's Oath

To fte Editor of the Bxprets: Hra: Have not the Salvation Army missed the mark in expressing so mnch resentment at what has been called an "attack on the red Jersey f' The writer of thtf not unfriendly criticism, expressly intimated that in his opinion the ladies of the army are honest, good women, or are trying to beoome each tbat they are earnestly engaged in the discha- ge of what they regard as sacred duty, and that their willingness to forego the pleasures of personal adornment that they might more folly indentify themselves with the cause they have so mnch at heart, affords the best possible proof of their sincerity.

Bnt of the motives of the gentlemen members of the army in making red shirts the symbol of theii cause, I decline to take so charitable a view. Now, Captain Thompson looks su well in hisnsatlv fitting officer's coat, that he can have no sufficient excuse for coming to chnrch disguised ae a coal miner or looking as if he bad hastened into the presence of the pnblio before completing his toilet.

It may be, too, that the faots harly warrant eo much eemplaint abont persecution as the srmy constantly indulge in. In trntb, this talk is carried on to snoh an extent as to exoite a faint snapioion that good people have their little weakness and vanities as well as the wicked, end that some of then) are so anxions to ve across to bear, for the lovo of Jesus, that a refusal to persecnts them a little world be positively cruel.

A

few nighte since the

writer bad the pleasure of listening to the most earnest and successful little speech he hhs heard from any member of tho army since they came to the oity. This piece of eloquent invectivs was 6xeited by an attucir on what the writer took to be a hat, but which the lady, better informed in such matters, oalled a poke bonnet!

Then, if this opposition makes the men bers of the army moie earnest and eloqnent, if it serves to advertise them, if it adds to the interest the pnblio takes in them and in what they aredjing, and if, above all, it give them something to bear for the sake of their great Master, why shonid they complain

Agnostic.

Tbhre^Haute, May 28, 1887.

The One Weak Spat.

Burnet (Tex.) Hero. The arast trouble with Amerioan journalism is that the men who just know how a newspaper ought to be ran are, unfortunately, en gaged in some other business—driving stage, digging post-holes, hsrding sheop, or acting as dapnty sheriff.

The Pope as a Politician.

Chicago Times. The pope is now anxious for a reconciliation with King Humbert. The pope is one of tho busiest of politicians. There is more politics at the vatiean than there is at the oapitol bnilding at Washington during a session of con

A Lesson at the Collision.

Chicago Tribune. In the collision between the steamers Brittannic and Celtio, the former received muoh the worse damage. Cheered by this omen Mr. O'Brien can look to the future with renewed hope.

Bismarck Bowls Them Out.

Philadelphia Beoord. M. Goblet struck ont and M. Bouvier comes to the bat bnt old Pax Vobiscnm Boalanger seems to be the only player that can bat Bismarch's ball.

Aa Illuminated Prospect.

Chisago News. Now that the city has a gas inspector once mere the street lamps will resume their strap gle against the rival radiance of the cheap cigar.

A DEED AS WAS A DEED.

How Property Owners Did More Than They Intended.

There is an ofiset in _Sixth-and-a half street at the crossing of Deming street The property owners of that locality have been desirous for some time to beautify the point. In order to do this it was suggested that the corners of the two lots diagonally opposite should be rounded. The owners of the two lots consented to make the improvement, and several days ago executed a deed to the city of Terre Haute of the corner of the lots. The record shows the transfers to have been made by Anthony G. Blake and Mary J, W(" eiss. The two deeds are nlike, with the exception that the numbers of the lots are different. Each deed states that the property conveyed lies without a cir cle whose radius is twelve feet, the circle tassing through two points twelve feet istant from the corner of the lots. As the deeds read the entire lot is conveyed to the city with the exception of the twelve foot circle. The intention was to simply transfer to the city the corner of the lots to be rounded. The mistake is more serious than at first supposed. The deeds have been spread upon rccord and the city owns the two lots with the exception of the two circular tracts. The mistake is so apparent that it will be an easy matter to rectify it. However, this will have to be accompanied by the council deeding back to Mr. Blake and Mary Weiss all of the lots except the corner lying with out the circle. The transaction has been gossiped about considerable around the court house and has caused a great deal of amusement. The incident serves as an illustration of the great care that should be exercised in drawing up instruments so tbat there may be no mistaking the records.

Setting of Criminal Cases.

Jndge Mack was on th? bench in Ci:cuit court yesterday morning in an insan itv case. The jndge devoted some of his time to setting down criminal cases for trial. Tht-rc are a number of persons whi have criminal charges against them. Toung John Montgomery will be given a hearing Thursday next. Court will not be in session Monday, and the jury was discharged until Tuesday morning. Then was nothing done in the Callahan case, and no date has as yet been set for trial. Mr. John E. Lamb, Callahan's attorney, has been in Washington for the past week. Judge Allen, it is understood, will set the date for trial Upon Mr. Lamb's return from Washington.

Hoods, Sashes

and all woolen garments take the colon of Diamond Dyes with surprising esse,

.. and the brilliancy and durability of the

h: nd it is bowed and broken eyes have shades always satisfies. 32 colors. 10 a grewa dim the trembling hand has eents sach. Sold every whan.

ThennM something peealiaxly fhanst in being among old friends, those who have known yon from childhood, and your parents sibd grand parents before you. You have no credentials to present, no recommendations to offer your his* tory is accepted, your virtues appreciated your faults condoned aa they never can and never will be by strangers. When one takes up his sojourn in anew locality he is like a traveler who most present his pass-ports at every torn. If he happsn to have spent life one before this, the suspicion 'with which he is regarded, to which he wss never subjected before, are wonderfully disagreeable, although he knows it isnerfsctly natural. A sun's individuality is the man himself he clings to this, as he clings to life, be cause it is in reality all there is in existence. When he is toiu up from when he hss taken root, and forcibly removed, to live or die in unfamiliar soil, hie desire to be known and accepted for what he is worth, or poosiblf for a little man tl he is worth, is only another manner of the immortal protesting against It is the straggle of individuality for recognition, as the fight against death ia the struggle of the body against diasolu tu».

The other day, while driving in the country, the friend who

During a recent visit to a town not many miles from Terre Haute, I had an opportunity to inquire into the work and methods of the Salvation Ariny The recruits are from a class who have bad little intellectual and less moral training. There, undoubtedly, it has done great actual good, whether permanent or temporary, time must show. It has always been a favorite theory of mine, that the Almighty does not disregard the feebhst impulse toward right living, in any of his creatures. Those to whom much has been given much, we are assured shall be required, and from those to whom little has been giveu little shall be required. This is the sum and sub stance of the pacific doctrine of Christianity. It is true that the doors of the church are open to all that admission will be denied to none, yet there are men

failed. Men have joined it who hsvs been sober during their admission to its ranks, a longer period than ever befon in their whole lives, and during this tims have cared for their wives and children as becomes honest men. Women who were scorned, have been reclaimed

feeble moral Stamina requli stages of reformation. The most substantial proof that the work has borne good fruit is that tbe business of saloon men has been lesssned by half, and the fines in the i'olice court have been pro)ortionately less than have ever been mown in the history of the town. If it is only for the time is thst mnch food actually acquired, which the recordng angel shall place to the credit of the poor creatures who have had no chance against the terrible odds of ignorance, poverty and heredity, three Tactora in the problem of life, that an answerabls for almost all the faults and failures of humanity. It is true that many of their utterances are painful to an ear

uju*being, Ctit

of Lafayette.

wfs

with me

stopped at a farm hi use to get a drink. Presently she came round tbe house carrying a young lamb ic er arms, to show it to me. It gave a --ty like a wail' ing child and I at onco concluded that it was its appealing hum voice, and not its amiable countenance th.-.t bias made the lamb, with painters and poets, asym bol of innocence. If, instead of its plain tive bleat, it barked like a dog, mewed and spit like a cat, or growled like other species of Felide, it too, would be accused of the malaoe and wickedness that are attributed to them. Even when enraged it can only bleat, and the increased staccato of its tones in anger are not very different from those in which it snnonnces that it is at peacs with all the world. By the way, a friend who is a physician and drives about the country a good deal, gave me a peculiar instance of abnorm'al lamb nature that came under his observation recently. The animal in question had been reared "by hand," the mother having died in its early infancy. As it grew up it became devotedly attached to the dogs about the place. It went with them on all their jaunts, and slept with them under the house. When people approached the premises the dogs would rush out and bark, and the lamb would scamper out with them, and with aa agressive a "ba-a" as a lamb could possibly utter. -It was a modern instanse of the millenium, dogs and lamb lying down together as amicably as if they were not natural enemies.

mo"

now.

Las

..

It seems incredible that, with an army of wrUers, the north central states have never been canvassed for the "material" which is wrought into fie'ion. There is not a town or village in Indiana that has not its odd character, its romance, its unfathomed mystery. This, properly worked up, with a background of Indiana scenery, its still,- deep forests, streams and fields, its picturesque villages andl towns, ought to lorm a pntty substantial framework for the gnat American novsl itself. Mis. Gatherwood is the only one who has undertaken it, and her eftorta hsve been -so successful that they ought to encourage others, though they have less genius than she. I do not mean to suggest another outbreak of the dialect epidemic from which the reading public has already suffered grievously, but a presentation of Indiana life, as it exists among the educated. This would bs not only profitable, but a sort of missionary work, enlightening the conservative readers ia the East, who imagine lhat Indianapolis

X1

the thonegbfaiee MABTH.KMX7T.

HORSB TALK

During tbe put few day. the horns have beea arriving at the grounds mesa

A

back

uiuo mc lucu century, and it is safe to presume the per

and women who could not be persuaded I formance was made under saddle.

to cross its throehold. It is not because they believe themselves unwelcome, bat because their own poverty and ignorance are too cruelly contrasted with the intelligence and prosperity, and, possibly, the superior virtue of the average church member. In this community oflmyein 2:28}, andthesseond waa deai which I write, meetings have I between her and Beppo in 2:28. Between been held nightly for many months. 11815 and 1842 then is a difference of Their converts are quiet and orderly !twenty-eight yean, and if the performthe citizens of the place have never mo-1 ance of Sweetlipe was authsntio, Lady a a their way. They have even assisted on occasion, and have admitted the army has accomplished a work in Field and Farm which the churches, nndeniably, have

Frank Van Fees offers to trot Harry Wilkes agsinst anything for $10",000, or |il Ind., S64, adhered to." will back him to trot in 2:12i [reporter asked Colonel rhe beautiful mare Modesty wss bred I son what effeet the to Isaac Murphy the same afternoon she I would have on canal

won her race at Louisville love and war close together. W. H. H., who won a 25 to 1 race atj Latonia on Tuesday, wss bought by Eugene Leigb, of St. Louis, from Rafael Lisle last week for $275.

E. T. Jennings, of Middlebury, Vt., bought of A. A. Kitzmiller, at Lexington, the b. c. Tom Hendricks, 8, by Red Wilkes, dam by Curtis Olsy price $2,100.

The Twin City sssocistion, Minneapolis, had decided to oiler a puns for Harry Wilkes and Oliver K., but wen unable to get the horses, Budd Doble declining] to enter Oliver K.

The earliest trotting performance in this country that is on record is that of Boston Blue, who, at Jamaica, L. I, in 1818, won a purse of $2,000 by trotting a mile in 3m. Thres minutes in those days wss a very fair rate of speed measured by the a land of to-day, and 2:82 was immeasurably better, if the following] statement from the New York Weekly Museum for July 15, 1815, is correct. We sn indebted to Mr. Daniel J. White, one of Brooklyn's devoted roadmen, for the extract, which reads as follows: "Fast trotting—This afternoon, at Flatbush, the gny mare Sweetlips, formerly belonging to Thomas Sargent, of Philadelphia, trotted a mile in 2m. 32*. The bet was against time, snd the wss allowed 2m. 55s. to complete the mile." Only this and nothing more. Light wagons wsn unknown in tbe esrlisr part of ths

If

true, it was a creditable piece of work. The first time 2:30 was beaten by a trotter was at ths old Beacon course, Jnly 4, 1843, in the saddls race betwesn Lady

iaau

GSE OBDOB.

A Rockville paper contaioa ths following Everybody who nadsis familiar with the great trotting hone, Joe Davis, winner of the grand $10,000 stake rsce st

for the time at least, and haye received I Hartford, Conn., who made the remark the aid and encouragement that thoee of I able record of 2:17J, and who proved a 12S!f Ki?L_f.n '••W" •"»»*1 uin in the firat ... I cents.

wmiU.this

cultivated to the niceties of language in

and accordeansr its knee drill and like accompaniments, appear grotesque to one who must be reached through impressive services, a grand liturgy and solemn music. But to these poor souls, they have a language and a meaning. Each must mterpnt for him self tbe living snd saving truth which any

religious form conveys."The followers of I

bonanza for his owners. Every dsy can be seen on the streets one of the original ownen of this gnat horse, and the man. under whose skillful training and man-1 TTt)LMA#l PABK. ipulation of the "ribbons" the great flyer made his record. Gee Grimee, tbe manager of the present sssson of races in

city, is one of the most thorough

acquired, which the record-1 horsemen in the country, and if fast gain ing a national reputation as a driver. They never get too wild for Gee to hold, and if a horse has any speed at all, it will be made to show under his training. No driver in the country hss won mon nose than he, and in the events of to-day and to-morrow hia superior honemanahip will be shown to advantage. He is thoroughly in love with his profession, hss a

fine string of fiyen and will be heard

creed and sermon and its tambourines frequently during (he gnat events of the present sesson. A reporter of the Racer went through the stabls of Mr. Grimes, and a prettier string of horses he never saw. They u*. a at

strin: Little Em, bay man 8 yean old, has

rec®fd

of 2:18.

Christ, the ignorant, unlettered fisher-1 Rose Standisb, bay mare by Robert man, who were his first disciples, must McGregoiy, 5 yecrs old, trotting record

have made" much the same impression upon the Pharisees accustomed to the stately sacrifices and ceremonials of the temple, that these to-day make upon charch people. It is trne that they have not the simplicity and directness of the primitive Christians, but they an working with precisely the same class of people who first followed the Nazanno. I have always loved to believe that it is the motive that is regarded, and the truth, in whatever form it may be asserted, that will be taken into account when the final reckoning is made.

2:30. Edwin Q., soirel gelding, 7 yean old, by Chicsgo Voluntser, has a rsoord of 2:36.

Mellie G., gny more, 5 yean old, by Dr. Herr, sin of Joe Davis, 2:174, hss made a record of 2:34$.

Black Diamond, black gelding, by Chicsgo Volunteer. John Lindley, sornl gelding, 6 years old, by Hassbletonian Tranby.

Edith Hambletonian, bay mam 6 yean old, by Robert Bonner. The following are the raouen:

Comanche, chestnut mare, by dam. Baritone, bay gelding, by imported Billet, dam Manhattan, by imported Leamington sged.

Mollis Msson, bay mare, 3 yaare old, by Ramadam. Laura Keene, bay man, 3 years old, by Ramadam.

Blnsb, brown mare, 4 years old, by Ramadam. Nettie Arnett, sorrel man, 4 yean old, by Ramadam.

Lottie^ Kempeter, bsy mare, 5 yean

Dubya Praphylaette Flold. Use it in every sick room. Will keep the atmosphere pare and wholesome resnoving all bad odon from any

Sonne. Will dsstny all dl tion from all fevers, and dkssssa.

germs, infsoaU contagions

The eminent physician, J. Marion Sims, M. D., New York, says: "I am convinced that Prof. Darbys Prophylactic Fluid is a most valuabls duinfsctant"

,0

».f

The followiag opinions were rendsred MajrM: enAvm. aoue—rowans or

prepaiattaaafer^k* Ism ns Sense M187 Board,etc., VS. John W. Ful-

work. Friday Moatgomaqr, of Oo'liaagravel nad prooeediag, to pay the Iambus, brought ssven. Tbey are Toss 1 cost cl tho improvement in caas the Foster, Flora H. and Van Faslsy, asms I esssosment prpvss iasafident. and Irwin Boy, St Patrick, Pamul aad 1(8-1 The board may, of its own motion Bine Line trottara. Nearly all the hotsss I and withoot a pstition, direct the levying in the Bockvilla raoss Friday will belof aaadJitiooal simimiat (4) The hsre, and when the entries for trotting I board caaaot of itsslf make the asee sand pacing events does on next Toesday msnt, but notice most bs given and the night at 11 o'clock these will be in and I matter referred to the viewers or comon their way here in the mails—entries I sslttes. bsariagthe mailing postmark at an hoar oocirrr—-TanASunxa—DKFAixiATioir— sarlier than 11 p.m., May 81stbeing le-| Aonrr

These are from fifty to seventy bag^sslKaox C. C. Afirmd. Mitchell, J.— along the boaae Ursteh in the snue I Whea a coonty auditor had drawn war* on tbe tieamer for thefull amount ranTfuL I •,TWal

-ootjntt

EUIott»April

-n- .v-- -2^ Tks yc*r"i,« I™*1 toads, did not repea frequently than amy week yet The fonasr sets covering- that subje t. Pro honss that eosseia now have bsen in aesdian under the act of 1877 are not training elsewhere aad coase hers only to affectsa by the later statute. (2.) The

«, 1885,

,nBd

The street cars^ran to the records of his office to belong to a ^ri!r?i ava l?ai^L^ township, the board of commissioners The grove woe new peenpy

which appeared by

B0

rela'ion of trust to such town-

™vS! P'P funds, aad the' county is not liable

course tbe grounds an free to the public ground tbat the defaulting treasurer wssita agent, forwhoes delinqusncy

tbe grounds an nee totnei Dr.Clark, of Chiwgo, the.

sMaea'a laeaam Iam 1 iWa^t ff

has Indulcsd a rich man's fancy for fast borsss, and has visited all the prominent ace eoarsss in the eoaatry, and says none hss more natural sdvantages than the one here.

sons

Bair expresses mueh surprise in reto Johnston's 2:001 being hatred free-for-all races. Tommy Dunbar is to have Gossip Jr.. 2:14, in his stable this ysar and will drive him through the cireuit.

The followiag decision wss rsesatly rsndered by the Supreme oourt of the state "Morris Frank et al. vs. Evansville Sc Chicsgo Railroad Company. Pike C. C. Affirmed. Howk, J.—Whan lands had been taken, occupied and ussd under the series of laws which provided for the construction of ths Wabslsh A Erie canal the estate taken in such glands is an estate ia fee simple, and not a meie ca-ement. (Water Works Company vs. Burkhardt,

An Express

R. N. Hud-

lands

this vicinity. He replied that the decision wss simply in secordance with other decisions by ths 8upreme eourt The same queetion has been befonthe oourt several times and the court hss sfflrmed the Burkhardt decision. In the decision, ths one given above the Bark hardt decision, is adhered to. Col. Hudson ssid the questioa wss settled long ago He boagnt up a large tract of Wabash Erie canal lands under the Burkhardt decision aad dispossd of them lster. Had the decision been other than what it wa a great deal of trouble would have beea caueed.

Heal Estate Trusters.

Goldsmith, inlot 6, administrator's subdivision 1,050

Total.... ,.$6,375

Divorce Oases.

A number of new divorce cases hsve bsen filed in the cinuit court Clarissa S term an sues for divorce from her husband Silas 8term an. Samuel Cock asks for a divorcs from his wife Sarah Oook A third case is that of Martha A. Brown against William A. Brown.

Bad far Both.

Ladies of weekly constitution and The 1 delicate physique who attempt to suckle

aa well as enfeeble and Injure their chil dren. Lactated Food is the bsst sustenance for the little ones, as many physicians and mothers testify. n-f

Lord Colin Campbell, who was recent-

oourt, together

with a statement of his affair*. His liabilities an placed at £9,000, including £6,000 law costs in ths cross suit for divorce in which the Duke of Marlborough appeared as one of the co-defen dants. Lord Colin being assessed by ths oourt with the duke's costs.

A NASAL INJECTOR free with each bottle of Shiloh'a Catarrh Remedy, Geo. Reiss^ druggist.

AMUSEMENTS.

MUSIC FESTIVAL. Opening of Hulman Park.

Newly Befitted and Bnlarged. Grand Orchestra of

85 MUSICIANS 35

Assisted by Fifteen Eminent Musicians an4 Soloists from Chicago and Indianapolis, and the celebrate Fagot Soloist, from

Thomas' Orchestr, of Cincinnati,

I JUNE 6, and 7.

Two Grand Concerts Dally: Admission, 25c ChiMnn, 10c. For furtbw particulars see programme.

WIIXIAll CUFF, J. B. CUFF, C. V. OUR,

TERRE iAUTE

CUFF 4 CO., Proprietor*. Manufacturers ot

Boilers, MeStacb, Tails, Ete.

bop on First Street, Between Walnut sad Poplar. TBKBBHAUTK, INDIANA.

Repairing promptly attended to.

Mantelsl Mantelst Slate aid il All Stria.

The saUle Is nspeetfflUy Invited to exsmine sar stock. Also a niee line of Oookins Stoves.

HANION BROS. SIS Main

MOTH PBOOF BAGS!

FerpreteeUoaaf

Blankets, Fart and Woolens,

1m. WaOLBSALS AMD KHTAIL.

i.a. BtolCAN M*

mm

Maia*.

t-r--

"5|i

-r-4

r,

FAULTLESS

FAMILY MEDICINE

I have used Simmons Liver Begulater for many year*. jt made it my only family me a* My mother before me was v*- na tal tott. It Is a safe, good and i.x -de medicine tor any disorder of the system, aad If IB? in time is a great preventive of Jlck-» aeas. often reoommend it to ay.. Mends, and shall continue to do so.

BXV. JAMM M. Boixbfs, Pastor M, E. Chursh. ••-tbFaMeidrve. v-

4 1

Li --st ton An DociosE' mis satid bt ALWAYS

xn?t*e

81MHOMS UTBB

KBeuiafo) iii

rax

3MBSE7 Sow

a

Charles Stockhun to Samuel T. Pletat, inlot 19, T. H. Nelson's subdivision $ 825 Bernard Eshman et ux. to Marganthe Hausman, inlot 56, Gilbarfs place 1,500 Elisabeth !•. Newton and husband to Herman Hnlman, part inlot 3, ia eutlot66, 2 acres 3,000 Lucia E. Putnam to Charles H.

aovu.

I have faanl

0Muverl

lator the beet «bh medicine I writ used fjr anrtjLjt* at may bimmi have used lTTb luuigestkm. CH| Diarrhoea and BUiionsness and toonl it to relieve immediately. After eat* (8 tns a hearty supper, If, on going to bed, I take abont a teaspoonfal, I never feel the effects ot the sapper eaten. OvtnO.SPAHKs

Passengers and Baggage

Transferred between Depots, Hotels aad Private Besldenees.

Pranpt aod Reliable Servlee Qearaiteei Omnibuses, Csrrisges and Picnic Wa for Private Service.

Call Boxes SSS Wabash avenue champ* Stable, Telephone Night Offlee, National Hease,

WM. GRIFFITH, Supt.

^nofesssonal CARDS

LINCOLN & HAYNES,

No. 19J 8#UTH SIXTH STREET,

Opposite Postoffiee. Terre HaaSe, 1M.

I. ftft. C. ROITSR

USTStJI^AUTOHS

-\ND

Mortgage Loan,

Xj. 5)7 OHIO STRMC1 S UiV, D. 8. W.B. MA11*D. D.A,

^rs. Ball A *all,

DENTISTS,

saoasasors to Bartholomew a HaU.) kitk ST., rjpnTtw BAUTB, IS a*

»*n. E. A gillktt,

DENTIST,

HAS REMOVED

ftcm tbe comer of Sixth and Ohio, lei 1# north Sixth, first door nortn of Say* «i n'anreh.

PENNYROYAL PILLS

'CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH."

iamsA

PATENTS

-1.1). OWES,

PIANO TUNER,

te^wgsHabmly. OOee-OsnMrWkl

I. H. O'SULLIVAH,

Dealer in

Vina Teas, Ooglsoe. Itsple

t" 1

-ft-*

S 5

$

-5S

45

Bx-Mayor Macon, Go. .v. our

|SF*Only genuine hss ofwrapper. J. H. ZBILIN ft CO

Price »l.

tl

SolePiepr'af Philadelphia, ia.

•roiIAioaqo.iu.

OALLi JLV

Central Hall!

781 MAIN STREET.

Km fBp$td

or ftwMifc WiM

FOB FAMILY USB.

jae" PRACTICAL

Sralalag a Specialty. SatJ Wen Churaateed.

r,f-

Special prioss per doses bottles for par* ties, etc.

ARNOLD METER.

H. S. COPELAND,

426 CHEHBY 8TBEET.

Terre Haite Traasfer Co.,

', oaice, ese Wabash Ave. j""

"il'

-1-

v,, 3

*90-' rrf-lh-