Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 1 April 1889 — Page 3

Prepared only

FOR

SALE—The Vigo Circuit Court having vacated the sale of The Scudder residence, the same will be re-offered at private sale on April 10, 1869. and

if

FOR

I1

]VR

I1

rOR

For Weak StmnadL—Impaired Dipstion—Hsonbml liwr.

CLABK— Miss May, at the family residence. 834 north Sixth street, yesterday at 1230, of consumption, aged 20 years.

Funeral

will

occur to-day at 2 30.

Friettds of the

family are

an office and assume exclusive control of our business. Goods well known, In universal demand, and pay a net profit of fifty to one hundred per cent. Address, with credentials. THE UNION COMPANY, Broadway and Astor Place, New York.

WANTED—and

SOTA BY ALL DRUGGISTS.

PRICE 25 CENTS PER BOX.

invited to attend.

ANNOUNCEMENTS.

All those who have signed for shares In the new building and loan association, and also those who wish to sign for such, are requested to attend the meeting at Germanla Hall Friday evening, April 6, to pay $1 per share and also to adopt constitution and by laws and elect officers.

V**

THE COMMITTEE.

[Gazette copy 9t]

WANTED.

MALE HELP WANTED.

WANTED

Gentlemen of good address to

solicit salary from $66 to $100 per month. Call or address Fred Armstrong, Room 3 Savings Bank Block, Terre Haute, Ind.

WANTED—A

position as laborer. Inquire at

411 North Fourth street ANTED—Work as house cleaner. Inquire at 413 North Fourth street.

WANTED—A

flrst-class salesman to handle a

paying business publication no bojk canvassing exclusive territory outfit free. Address Rand, McNally & Co., Chicago. SALESMEN WANTED—Permanent employment O at good weekly wages an excellent chance. Write at once to Fred E. Young, nurseryman, Rochester, N. Y.

WANTED—General

agent for this city, to open

Reliable men and women as so­

licitors collectors for the Industrial Life, of Indianapolis Immediate benlftts no lapses good termB.

Apply

at Room 4 Savings

Bank Building between the hours of 8 and 10 a.

m.

and 7 and 9 p. m. J. M. TAYLOR, General Agent

f- FEMALE HELP WANTED. I*£*

WANTED

4

-Housekeepers to know they can be furnished reliable help. Employment procured on short notice. Employment Ofllce* 430 Ohio street.

WANTED—Ladles

of good address to solicit

salary from $50 to $75 per month. Call on or address Fred Armstrong, Boom 3 SAVINGS Bank Block, Terre Haute, Ind.

ANTED-A lady to solicit salary $66 per month/ Address "X,'J this office.

WANTED—Homes

for two children one about

6 years

old,

the other a boy baby about 4

months old. Inquire of Joshua Hull, poor farm.

TX7AFTRD-Seeon HianR gootfs.clothtng, etc. bought and sold. Bargains always on hand. 3. E. GREEN, 326

and 328 Ohio street.

TIT ANTED—Everybody to bring their tools, scissors, knives, cleavers, etc., to No. 10 north Third street and have them ground In best manner. Also

saws dressed for

carpenters,

butchers, and others. Repairing of all kinds. JOHN ARMSTRONG.

FOR SALE.

not then sold, at public sale on April

29,1889 For particulars

see notice of adminis­

trator's sale and apply to Francis V. Bichowsky, administrator. OR SALE-Good

family

horse and buggy. In-

quire at 635 North Sixth street.

FOR

SALE—Saloon known Patsey's Arcade, No. 13 North Third street,as at a bargain. Apply to Patsey Madlgau.

SALE-A good

six-room

1'TOR

house near the

corner of Sixth and Chestnut streets at a bargain. FRED A. ROSS & CO.

SALE—Six building lots, each 30 feet front, well located In TueU and Usher's addition, for $840 one-third cash, BALANCED easy terms. Two and a half acres on Sixteenth street, near Oak. New house

of

three rooms on South Fourth

street lot 30X141 easy terms. FRED A. ROSS & CO., fUDU A. W.| v/TOB SALE—Old papers at

ific

per hundred, In-

quire at Dally Express offlce.

SALS—A No. 1. Daiton Cam pump. InQUlre at Phoenix Foundry.

FOR RENT.

^OR RENT—A suit of rooms at corner of Sixth and Cherry streets, for gentleman and wife. Convenience aud elegance not to be equaled In the city. None but respectable parties need apply. Enquire at 463 north Sixth street

FOR SALE.

SALE—Big stout work horse for sale F* cheap. L. Perdue, No. 30 north Fifth St

MONEY TO LOAN.

*ONKY TO LOAN—In

any

'n all parts

of

amount at lowest

tVl MTM. Desirable real estate

for sale ortrade

the city. JAM4S D. BIGKLOW. Opera House.

MONEY

TO LOAN-In sums to suit the borrower, on the most favorable terms, as low AS 6 per cent interest, on long or short time, with privilege of partial or even monthly payments on .the principal.

RIDDLE, HAMILTON & CO.. Sixth and Main.

ONEY TO LOAN—On small per cent on diamonds, watches.Jewelry. Blumberg,413 Ohio.

G-M-D

St

Dr. Pierce} Golden Medical Discovery, IS the ONLY DOECCINE of its class

that

is JNAR-

mntoed to benefit or cure

I IlilDDIIlTn I in all diseases for which I WAnltMUI. I it

is

recommended or

the money paid for it

will be PRPMPY refunded. Golden MEDIO Discovery cures all humors, from the comrm PIMPLE, blotch, or eruption, to tho woret STFUIA,

OR

blood-poison, salt-

rheum or TETTEIKESEMA, Erysipelas, Feversores, HIP-JOIITTJ-OASE, Scrofulous Sores and Swellings. Bntargv Glands. Goitre or Thick Neck, andEating U^

OR

ulcere.

Golden Medical «covery cures Consumption (which is Scrc.(A

OT

FOE Lungs), by

it is

its

wonderful blooa -INFYING-, invigorating, and nutritive PROJ*^ JF taken in time. For Weak Lungs. £TINFF of Blood, Shortness of Breath, Cata, JN the Head, Bronchitis. Severe CO^^STHMA, and kindred affections,nllMI

_r,_reign

lecoons,

remedy. It

At. thfi B© 4

ea

r^reign rem

promptly cures the ee^ coughs. For Torpia "ousne* or Liver Complaint/' PY^P^D indigestion, it is an unequaled remedyby druggists.

839NU3r

«"""•*AJ?

by TuOS.BEECHAMj St. Helens^LanciMhire^EDglAnd*

B. F. ALLEN & CO., Sole Agents

FOB UNITED STATES, 36S At 367 CAKAL ST., HEW TOBK, Who (if your druggist does not keep them) will mail Beecham's Pills on receipt of price—but inquire first. (Please mention this paper.)

DIED.

NEIGHBORHOOD NEWS NOTES. Galeaburg (III.) charges peddlers a license of $25 a day.

Daring a storm this week a cow was killed by lightning, at Newton. A clothing merchant at Danville uses genuine greenbacks as price marks on the goods displayed in his show windows.

While shoeing a horse, at Mat toon, Saturday, William McDuffia came near being killed by being kicked and trampled upon.

The thermometer stood 20 deg above zero at Danville Saturday morning, and the pounds near there were covered with a thin ice.

Mt. Carmel Register: A nnvkber of the calisthenic class in the Mt. Carmel high school fainted when the teacher gave the command: "Dress up in front."

Walter tiockett, a hotel keeper at Westville, went into a stable at Danville Friday afternoon to get some feed and was severely bitten by a dog supposed to be mad. Ha started for this city to try the effects of the madstone.

Friday evening a horse driven by Michael McGinsey was frightened by steam escaping from Kelley's shaft, near Danville, and jumped into a pond used to supply the engine with water. The wagon was upset and two ladies who were in it came near losing their lives by drowning. This is the second horse drowned at that place within the past six weeks.

Brazil Times: The case of Stigler vs. Wolfe for 9500 damage, was tried Friday, when the strange tricks of lawyers prevailed on the part of counsel for defendent. The defendant, Wolfe, is in Arkansas, and not a single witness appeared for him, but on the examination and cross-examination of plaintiff's witnesses, and argued by the attorneys, the case was submitted to the jury, who found for the defendant.

Vincennes Commercial: William Mulford claims that while plowing on the Bailey farm near Lawrenceburg, on Saturday, he turned over a rock covering a den of serpents, and in a moment half a hundred snakes, of all Bizes and descriptions, were squirming around the legs of the horses and over the plow. Tho horses ran away. Afterward Mr. Mulford and his neighbors killed thirtyseven snakes, whUh failed to make their escape.

NEWS OF THE RAILROADS.

Important Decisions In Courts and Actions of Officials. The brakemen receive 10 cents lees on a trip and the conductors 25 cents on the middle division of the O. & M. sine* the change of the division.

The "Q" road reduces the shop hours of 500 men, at Galesburg, to-day, from ten to eight hours. There is to be a general out in wages of the men along the line, but the salaries of the general officers are not to be touched.

Colonel C. C. Matson, late Democratic candidate for governor of Indiana, has been appointed assistant solicitor of the Monon railway, at a salary of 82,500 per annum. His duties will be confined principally to the southern division of the road.

Indianapolis News: The C, H. & D. railroad company will begin to tranfer its through freights over the Belt road April 1st. When that is begun every road entering the city will be usiDg the Belt for this purpose, and the Union tracks through the center of the city will be relieved.

Mr. Charles A. Cairns, ohief clerk to Qeneral Passenger Agent Mr. D. B. Martin, headquarters Cleveland, will on April 15 remove to Chicago, to euter the services of the Chicago, St. Paul & Kansas City railway as chief clerk to Mr. W. R. Busenbark, recently appointed general passenger agent.

The Minnesota railway commissioners ordered that the upper berths in sleeping cars should not be lowered when not occupied. The courts have decided that if a person purohases but one. berth, a lower one, he is no more entitled to the whole section than if the upper berth were occupied, and thus the commission's order is overruled.

The time prescribed for beginning the construction of the E. & W. will be up Monday and contractors have arranged to do enough work to hold the subsidy of $115,000. The construction will not be pushed rapidly till the elections for subsidies along the line come off. Richmond is apprehensive that failure to carry these will kill the project.

Mr. E. R. Bryant celebrated the twen-ty-fourth anniversary of his agency for the Star Union freight line on Thursday by conducting his business as usual at the old stand on Main street Twentyfour years is a long time to remain in the service of one company, and speaks the best word that could be said of the ability of Mr. Bryant to conduct the company's business here.

Jehn Dorsey. the Chicago & Atlantic engineer who ran his locomotive into a passenger train at Koutz last Ootober and killed one of the passengers, besides injuring several others, must be tried on the charge of manslaughter. When Dorsey waB brought before the Porter circuit court for trial an indictment charging him with manslaughter was quashed by Judge Field in a decision that at the*time attracted much attention. It is this decision that has been reversed by the supreme court

D. B. Martin, of the Bae line, says when the iraffia arrangements for the consolidated lines have been completed it is the intention of the management to place in the St. Louis-Cincinnati daily service a fast solid vestibuled train, with all the modern equipments. The train is now being equipped. New vestibuled sleeping cars are also being constructed for the St. Louis, New York and Boston daily service. These cars will be especially designed for summer travel.

Logansport Journal: Mr. W. A. Keene, of St. Louis, was registered at the Murdock Sunday. This gentleman was making a peculiar overland trip, and had

come to this city directly from Lafayette. He ia taking a view of the lughways and 'byways along the tow path of the old WabaBh & Erie canal, with a view of the final construction of the long tallrad of tow path railroad from Fort Wayne to Attica. Mr. Keene is a representative of the Keene Brothers, construction company, and states that work on this road will positively be commenced in the course of two or three months. He had walked the distance from Attica to this city, following the old canal, and started on his tramp towards Fort Wayne yesterday morning. There have been ao many reports of the building of the canal road that until ground is actually broken _on the line it will scarcely be safe to build any hopes on the new road.

The Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers will soon cause to be introduced into the Illinois legislature a bill prescribing requirements for all persons who shall be put in charge of looomotive engines in the state. The bill declares that all applicants for positions as engineers shall be of sound mind, steady habits, able to read and write and at least 21 years of age. Three years experienoe locotnotiv® fireman is also necessary. In case the requirements of any company demand the promotion of a fireman to the position of engineer, he shall be recommended by at least three competent engineers, on the road where the application is made. The applicant shall then be subject to examination by a board -appointed by the master mechanic of the road on which the promotion is to take place. If the applicant is found worthy of promotion, the bill provides he shall be put in charge of a switch or freight eagine and Berve one year in freight service before he can be put in charge of a locomotive in the passenger service. Fines of five hundred to one thousand dollars are to be levied on railroad companies not complying with the act.

Chicago Herald: Western railroads have been hit hard ciuriDg the last two years. Their securities have declined under a steady selling pressure. Prices for the leading granger stocks yesterday touched the lowest point yet reached, and there is apparently no reason to expect any improvement until there has been further liquidation. The decline in the stocks of Western roads tributary to Chicago in the last two years, compared with the price current yesterday, makes the following interesting showins: Burlington, declined from 156 to 89%, Atchison, from 119 to 43 Rock Island, from 140.% to 89% Northwestern, from 128 to 102% St. Paul, from 95 to 61K- Even Alton, which has not been traided in to a great extent, being held for investment, yesterday sold at 125, a break of ten points from the last previous sale several months ago. The severest decline has been in the stocks of the southwestern roads, but the Bame causes which have produced the big drop in Southwestern stocks—low rates and an overaupply of roads—are active in the Northwest, and it is believed to bo only a question of time whei) the roads in that territory will be as deeply in the hole as are the Burlington and Atchison in the Southwest. This view is emphasized by the fact that in addition to the low rates and excessive competition the Northwestern roads will this summer have but little tonnage because there is a decrease in grain in that section. The crop last year was almost an entire failure.- Railroad officials are feeling very despondent over the outlook. They say ratee are being well maintained on the present basis, but there is little tonnage Moreover, prices are too low for corn to move to market, and the prospect eeems to be that a large part of last year's crop will be carried over by farmers until next year.

STRAY INFORMATION..

Superintendant Diall has hit upon an ingenious and excellent scheme for separating the gas from the water which flows from the abandoned gas well. It will be recalled that there was a considerable volume of gis in the water while the well waB being drilled, and that at times this made it next to impossible for the drill men to work over the hole. There was at that time no convenient method for separating the gas from the water, and after the well was abandoned nothing was done with either water or gas until a short time ago. Mr. Diall then went to work to separate the gas from the water and utilize it at the gas works about a square away, in making Bteam. The result is that he has rigged an apparatus whichjcompletely separates the water and gas, and in a few days the piping necessary to convey gas to the boiler furnace at the gas works will be in place. The outfit consists in the main of a 24 foot boiler of 40-inch diameter, which on end. InBide of this an eight sided mast rises about twenty feet, and on the eight sides of this arms sticking out in all directions are nailed at short distances apart. By means of a six-inch pipe the water is conveyed to the top of the boiler, where it enters, being oon fined by the pipe extension about four feet within the boiler. It Tihen falls on the protruding arms and is Completely broken up. At the bottom is an outlet, and by an elbow arrangement of pipe the water is carried about four feet above the bottom of the boiler to prevent the gas escaping and then carried off to the river bank. In the process of breaking up the water as it falls over the arms, the gas is liberated and collects in the four feet of open space at the top of the boiler. By an outlet in the top, this is led off and conveyed to any desirable point. A valve in the pipe regulates the pressure, and completes the apparatus. At present the gas is allowed to burn from an escaj pipe, and gives a 10 foot flame. It will be conveyed to the gas house in a few days, and Mr. Dial!, eays will be sufficient to make all the steam used about the works. Nothing is being done with the immense volume of water, and it seems that a valuable power is being lost. Mr. Diall says the pressure is sufficient to carry the water to the highest point of ground in the city. The burning of the gas at night serves to illuminate the surroundings Eeveral squares away.

The prospect is that lawn tennis will soon become as popular in this city as in cities farther east, where it predominates over all outside sports, for both ladies and gentlemen. The number of clubs for the coming season is already larger t^ian last year, and as yet the weather has permitted very little playing. About all the accessible lots in fit condition for good playing have been taken, and a club recently had some trouble in finding a convenient location for its courts. The residence lawns are being pressed into service wherever owners are willing, and when a little warmer weather is at hand, tennis ballB will be flying very freely. The city has no professional team, but there are four gentlemen in the north end who have made mora than a local

reputation, and* thajr wfl! than likely have a ofoooteeta

with cluba from

other citae during

the summer. The four a» Proteason Waldo, Ames and Wickersham, of

Rose Polytechnic faculty,

the city, and equally,

good aa any in

the state. It is located

in

Seventh street, and the

there three afternoons

the rear

Mr. Townley's residence

of

leaders, has quite

each week.

The South End cluboompoeed of

society

a

reputation

and

the*

ladies and gentlemen will continue to play during the coming eeaaon. There will be several courts at the Polytechnic, and three courts in the r«r of Mr. Peddle'* residence on north Center street A club will also play on the vaoant lot near Sixth and Doming streets. Private courts will also be quite plentiful.

During the last, few days there have not been so many applicanta for madstone treatment as a week or ao ago, and Mra. Taylor has been able to about recover from the nervousness attending the treatment of patients. On Wednesday Thomas Lacey, a resident c^Riley, came up in a distressed frame of mind as the result of a dog-bite, and applied for treatment, but Mrs. Taylor was not well enough to apply the atone. He returned the next day, and the stone wss applied but did not adhere. No word has yet been received from Mr. Geo. Kirk, of Rusbville, but it is presumed the children are getting along all right. There eeems to be a vague idea that the madstone is as large as one's hand. A lady, on seeing the stone a few days ago, remarked: "Why, I expectea to see a stone large enough to kill a man with." The stone is not larger on the upper and lower face than a silver quarter, and from a quarter to half an inch thick. The method of application is to scatch the skin from a placfron the flesh between the wound and heart, and then bind the stone to the raw flesh with a cloth. In an hour's time the cloth is unbound, and, if the stone adheres, the arm, if arm it be on which it is placed, can be turned with freedom and the little stone will not drop off. The only use of the cloth is as a safeguard to prevent a possible accident to the stone. The blood, flowing to and from the heart, passes the stone, and it is supposed to take off the poison.

The drills at the oil well are still going down, and Saturday had reaohed 1,100 feet. The rock they are working inJs of a sandstone variety and very hard, only 100 feet being made during the week.

Real Estate Transfers.

J. D. Beard et ux., el al. to & T. Beard, s. VI of n. e. 4, except 18 acres,

of

sec-

tlon 19, town 10, range 8 2,000 00 Francis A. Moore and husband to B. T. Beard, undivided Interest In n. MI of E. e. 54 and in S.

of

n.e. of section

9. town 10, range 8 700 00 H. H. Bondlnot et ux. to W. C. and 8. F. Ball, part of inlot 13 the same being 4 feet and 7 Inches of said lot on Fifth street 500 00 W. H. Soale et ux. to Andrew Grimes,. quit claim deed, undivided tfcof inlots^ 9 and 10, in outlot 31, In Burnam's subdivision 100 00 Andrew Grimes to W. H. Soale, undivided FT of s. w. 54 of n. W. of sectlon 14, town 13, range 8 204 00 I. H. C. Hojrse to D. C. Anstermlller, part of Inlot 101, LA Rose's subdivision 675 00 Sheriff Vigo county to B. Van Sell and

A. H. Donham. e. of

s.

& J4

of

sec-

tlon 6, town 13. range 7 000 00 J. J. Brake et ux. to B. Van Sell, quit claim deed, e. of a.

e.

of section,

6, town 13, range 1 69 85 James Carltoers et ux., et al. to Thomas H. and Frances A. Cartthers, tract In.

S. w. 54 of n.w. 14

of section

18, town 13,

range 7 50 MJ Sarah E. O'Boyle et al. to Preston —nuBBCj,t»n ot thfti lulBiisl lu tlratpari of n. e. 54 of n. w. Vi of section 19, town 12, range 8, lying south OT^JIE national rood and In that part of to©

S. e. 54 of section 18. same, town and range lying south of the same road....

2,285 70

Auditor of Vigo county to Bose and Fink Murphy, 50 feet oflTof the north side of lot 11 in Wilson's addition to Terre

Haute, the same having been reported delinquent in the name of G. F. ManChester in 1879 12 76

Total R7077 3I VR

Bucklen'a Arnica Salve.

The best salve in the world for cuts bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions, and positively cures piles, or no My required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Prioe 25 centa per box. For sale by W. C. Buntin.

Marvelous Success.

Ballard's Horehound Syrup has been a marvelous success from its inception. There is no cough it will not relieve. It is guaranteed to relieve all throat and lung ailments and for croup, sore throat, whooping cough, and all coughs its action is very remarkable. Ask for Ballard's Horehound Syrup and take no other kind, and you will not be disapointed. Sold by J. E. Somes, Sixth Ohio streets, and J. & C. Baur, Seventh and Main streets.

William's Australian Herb "ills. It you are yellow, Billious constipated with hesdaohe, bad breath, drowsy, no appetite, look out your Liver is out of order. One box of theee Pills will drive all the troubles away and make anew being of "you. Price 25 cents. Sold by

E. Somes, Sixth and Ohio Street, ana J. & C. Baur, Seventh and Main street.

In 18831 contracted Blood Poison of BUO type, and was treated with mercury, potaBli aild sarsspsiilia mixtHres,crowing worse all the time. 1 took 7 small bottles S. S. S. which cored me entirely, and no sign of the dreadful disease has returned.

/i

ui

life.I refused the

Props.

the

and Mr.

Towaley. Their court

H. P.

is the finest in

of

on north

gentlemen play

oifer the twoi

J. C. NAHCZ,

Jan. 10, '89. HobbyvllH Ind. .My little niece had white swelling to snch an extent that she was confined to the bed for a long time. More than SO pieces of bone came out of her leg, and the doctors said amputation WAS the only remedy to gave her

operation

and put licr on

S.S.S.

and she is now

NP

and active nnd in

as good health as

any child. Miss AMNIX GEESUSO. Feb. 11, '89. Columbus, G&. Book on Blood Diseases sent free.

SWIFT SFKCDIC CO. Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga,

T.. J. WELCH, FAMILY GROCER.

Feed, Wood and Coal.

S. EL Corner Seventh and Poplar St.

PATENTS

MAOTON BROS.

Stoves and Mantels.

Finest line of dale ad MIMSMta asanas In the city. medal attentka «Ma

1$

W-

MS

A

Established 1861. J. H. WIL LIUIS, FresMent

GET

FINEST FBBSH AND CUBED

Hundreds of imitations—dangerous to fabric and hands ^—are tugging away at the props, which have put and still hold Pyle's Pearline in its present enviable position. It's the standard—pure-i-effective—harmless—a necessity in millions of homes. These imitators take names end-' ing in INE—to deceive—peddle their goods from house to house—claim them to be "Pearline"—"same as Pearl-" ine," or good as Pearline." Beware of them—one wash may ruin your clothes. Their methods alone should denounce them—evidently they do—for the consumption of Pearline increases each day. It does away with the drudgery of woman's hardest work

Every grocer sells Pearline. JAMBS PYLE, New York.

Important to Our Readers.

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THE WEEKLY EXPRESS,

TERRE HAUTE. IND.

v:V

Geo M. Allen, Prop.

J. M. CLOT, 8ee*» and Tree*

CLIFT & WILLIAMS CO.,

MAMCrACTOBBRS or

Setst], Doors, Blinds, &c.

AN1 DEALERS IM

Lumber, LatH, Sfcingles, Glass, Paints, Oils, and Builders' Hardware, (lOTtt. •l.U. ••Bwirr Btrwf. Tmrw Hwte, lad.

Your Meals

JEFFERS & HERMAN,

MANUFACTCMR3 OF

A I A E S

Phaetons, Landaus, Coupes, Buggies, etc.,

lOOf. 1003, 1005 and 1007 Wabaah TERRE 91, 4, «. 8, lO, 1*. 14, 16, 18, SO and 29 Tenth Street,

VJOSBPH HOBS. Proprietor.

mnn

MEATS

f'sh„aE.Same

RIITTPRI

FBESH

CREAMEBY PU M. C. IfOUTZAHN, 1O0 Soutl| Sixtli Street*

At Winem.ller's CAFE,

No. 17 SOUTH FOURTH ST.

The New York Graphic.'

A, New nd Influential Factor in Republican Politics.'

COMPLETE REORGANIZATION. HEW MANAGEMENT.

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GRAPHIC PUBLISHING CO.,

39 and 41 Park Place, NewjTork.

Scribner's Magazine

For 1889.

The publishers of SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE aim to make it the most poDular and enterprising

Interesting will be

by

several

very

teresting

best fishing grounds

Incorporated 1888

of

HAUTE. IND.

GEO. J. MAYER,

IJJ^ is south Meridian Street, Send lor Catalogue. Indianapolis, Ind.

Phcenix Market,

CT822 NORTH .SIXTH STREET.

of

periodicals, while at all times preserving Its high literary character. 25,000 new readers

have been

drawn to It during the past six months by the increased excellence ot Its content* (notably the Railway articles, and It closes Its second year with anew Impetus and an assured surcess. The Illustrations will show some new effects, and nothing to make SCRIBNER'S MAGAZRNE attractive and

neglected.

THE RAILROAD ARTICLES

will be continued

striking papers one especially In­

by Ex-Postmaster-General Thomas

A CORRESPONDENCE and collection

L.

James on "The Railway Postal Service." Illustrated. MB. ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON'S serial novel "The Master of Ballantrae," will run through the greater part

of

the year.

Begun in November.

of manu­

script memoirs relating to J. F. Millet and a famous group of modern FRENCH PAINTERS will furnish the substance

of

several articles.

Illustrated.

Articles on ART SUBJECTS will be a feature. Papers are arranged to appear by Clarence Cook, E. H. Blashfleld, Austin Dodson, and many others.

Illustrated.

ILLUSTRATED ARTICLES

of

great variety,

touching upon all manner of subjects, travel, biography, description, eta, will appear, but not of the conventional commonplace sort.

The brief end papers written last year

bound In

by Robert

Louis Stevenson, will be replaced by equ illy interesting contributions by different famous authors Mr. Thomas Bailey Aldnch will write the first cf them for the January number.

Many valuable LITEABY ARTICLES will appear a paper on Walter Scott's Methododg of Work. Illustrated from original MSS., a second "Shelf of Old Books,"

by

by

Mrs. James T. Fields,

and many other articles equally noteworthy. Illustrated. Among the most Interesting In the list of scientific papers for the year will be a remarkable article

Professor John Trowbridge, upon the most recent developments and uses of PHOTOGRAPHY. Illustrated.

A class of articles which has proved of special Interest will be continued by a group of papers upon ELECTRICITY In Its most recent applications,

by eminent

authorities a remarkable paper

on DEEP MINING, and other Interesting papers. Unique illustrations. FISHING ARTICLE8 describing sport

In the

will

appear. Salmon, Wln-

nlnlsh, Bass, and Tarpon are the subjects now arranged.'"The authors are well-known sportsmen. A SPECIAL OFFEB to cover last year's numbers, which Include all the RAILWAY ARTICLES, as follows: A year's subscription (1889) and the numbers for 1888, ...... HBO A year's subscription (1889) and the numbers for 1888,

cloth, 16.00

$3.00 a year 2S cents a number

CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS,

743-746 Broadway, N. Y.

BELFORD'S MAGAZINE,

DONN PUTT, EDITOR.

WITH

THE DECEMBER NUMBER BELFORD'S MAGAZINE enters upon Its second volume. Due attention will continue to be given to the fields of fiction. Besides the complete long novel, by authors of national reputation, there will be found In the pages of Belford's Magazine, during the coming year, short stories, sketches

travel, descriptive articles, and arti­

cles of timely Interest to everyone. The Editorial Department and Book Reviews will also continue to be Interesting and entertaining features.

What the Press has to say of Belford's Magazine.—"Belford's Magazine Is good enough to make the new magazine a formidable rival of the older monthlies. The fiction of the number touches the high-water mark

of

excellence."—N.

O. Picayune. "Most interesting. The complete story is worth twice the cost of the magazine. The reviews of recent literature

by

ers, Chicago,

the editors are terse, clear,

and excellent"—Chicago Inter-Ocean. For sale by all Book and Newsdealers. Subscription price, $2 60 a year. 2G cents a number. Subscribe now! Belford. Clarke &

Co.,

Publish­

New York, San Francisco.

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