Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 14 July 1889 — Page 2

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DIED.

HALL—William, son of Charles and BosaHaU. died at 8:26 p. m. yesterday, aged 3 weeks and 4 dais.

Funeral will take place to-day at 430 p, m. Interment at Woodlawn. Friends of the family are invited to attend without further notice.

VAN VALZAH—At 1030 o'clock Friday morning, died Mrs. Margaret Caroline Van Valzah, aged 42.

The funeral will take place from the family residence) on the corner of Demlng and Sixth streets, at 3 o'clock Sunday afternoon, interment at Woodlawn cemetery. Friends of the family are invited to attend without further notice.

^ANNOUNCEMENTS.

^TTENTION EX-PRI80NEBS.J

A meeting of Union ex-prisoners of war will be held In Council Chamber, this city, Monday evening, 15th lnst, at 730 o'clock. Important business. By order of L. 6, ADAIR, President.

IVIJJEND NOTICE.

Notice is hereby gtven that the trustees of the Terre Haute Savings Bank have this day declared a semi-annual dividend of two and a half per cent, on all sums of two dollars and upwards which shall have been on deposit for six months, and a proportionate rate on like sums that have been on deposit for three months previous to July 1. payable to depositors on and after July 25th, 1889. All interest not drawn out will be credited on account and draw interest from July 1st.

Main streets.

LEWIS B. MABTIN, Secretary.

TKBKK HAUTE, Ind., July 1,1889.

WANTED.

WANTED—Allat

the ladles to attend the summer

sale of fine Oxford ties, slippers and latest style line shoes McWllliams', Eleventh and Main streets.

WANTED-Everybody

to know that we have

Cherries, (ireen Peas, Green Beans/

if *'.•* New Beets, Pie Plant, ,V Spinach,

Wit

Kale, :j New Badlslies,

!1'

Kinest Flour. Canned Tomatoes,

A' ''. Canned Corn, fe *.y Canned Peaches, Maple Syrup,

WANTED—People

WANTED-Ahome

WANTED—A

W

FOR

18SS

Sorehum, Golden Drip Syrup,

rtc- Select Teas, Select Coffees. Select Dried Fruits And the choicest ot everything needed for the table HICKEY ft BBESSETT,

»v

*4 X*

Twelfth and Main streets.

to stop complaining and

call and see the bargains, if ever there were bargains, in boots and shoes at McWllliams, Eleventh and Main streets.

WANTED—Farmers—Call

January 13,1

W

at the Tool works

and see our picket fence wily 50c a rod.

WANTED.—A

copy (of the DAILY EXPRESS of

ANTED—Day board in exchange as part pay on a piano. Inquire at Kussner's Palace of Music, 628 Wabash avenue.

1*7"ANTED—People to buy their stove wood at W the Sandford Tool Works at one-half the rice It can be bought elsewhere.

WANTED—Livethe

men in every state to become

members of Southern Detective Agency established 1880. Address lock box No. 923, Wichita, Kas.

for four children a boy

4 months old three girls, aged 1 month,, mon-hs and three years. Inquire at Charity Organization OlUce, 601% Ohio street.

WANTED—Ageneral

reliable and energetic man to

take the city agency In Terre Haute tor an old and well established accident Insurance company good wages guaranteed the right party. Address J. B. Wlckard, State Agent National Accident Association, Indianapolis, Ind.

ANTED— Issors. knives, cleavers, etc., ground in best manner. Lawn mowers put in order. Also saws dressed for carpenters, butchers, aiwi others. Repairing of all kinds. John Armstrong, No. 10 North Third street.

W

ANTED—Pong You, Chinese laundry, Thirteenth and Main streets. First-class work.

WA

rANTED—Indeed! Well, what Is wanted? A pair of those Wardwell hand sewed congress or ball shoes for $3? Think of It, only $3 at McWllliams' summer sale, comer Eleventh and Main streets. "YITANTED-Carpenters, builders and contractors vv to know that the beet place to buy lime, hair and cement is at Belman A Steeg's, oorner Ninth and Main streets.

pair of those splendid congress

shoes for gentlemen, which are being sold for only $1.25. How Is that? We have them. McWilliams', Eleventh and Main streets.

ANTED—Second-hand goods, clothing, etc. bought and sold. Bargains always on hand. J. K. GREEN. 326 and 328 Ohio street

it

hr^.i

FOR SALE.

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SALE—COW—A good, gentle milch cow will be sold very cheap, as the owner does not need her. Apply ut second house south of Hulman street on Twenty-llftii street.

IOR SALE—Fruit jars of all kinds and sizes at M. D. Kaufman's china store, 407 Main st, opposite Opera House.

FOR

SALE—Five lots In the east part of city at a bargain. FRED A. ROSS & CO.

SALE-Lots near Collett Park only a few more choice ones left Increasing rapidly In value. RIDDLE, HAMILTON ft CO. TTK)R SALE Headquarters for fruit jars and _F jelly glasses of all kinds Is at M. D. Kaufman's china store, 407 Main street, opposite Opera House.

IOR SALE—Stove wood $1 per load delivered any place In the ctty. SANFORD TOOL WORKS.

FOR

SALE—Huntington lime best on the mar ket also plaster, hair and the best brand Portland cement sewer pipe. Belman ft Steeg, Ninth and Main street JfOB BALE—Old papers at 'Ac per hundred, suit

able for housecleanlng purposes. Inquire at Dally Bxpnaaoflloe.

FOR RENT

FOR

RENT—Three unfurnished rooms on first floor, for light housekeeping, for rent to parties without children at 312 North Sixth street 'OR RENT—Brick house of six rooms oi

Eighth street, near Cherry. 1. H. C. ROYSE, 517 Ohio street

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&

Schloss,

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MONEY TO LOAN.

MONEY

TO LOAN—AM reagonaWe tewn. RIDDLE, HAMILTON ft CO-

FOR TRADE.

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trade for city propem.D A_

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WORLD OF TRADE AND LABOR.

Ireland has 200,000 women lacealters. Michigan now has a state board of arbitration.

Most of the laborers in Buenos Ayree are Italians. The trade-union sentiment is growing in the South.

The labor press is agitating the organization of. a presB association. New Orleans complains of the ship loads of Italians being landed there.

Chicago has had fewer strikes this season than any season in recent years. The unions at San Francisco will establish a central employment bureau.

Pennsylvania miners will make another effort to break down the pluck-me stores.

The shoemakers' national union has absorbed nearly the whole body of K. of L. shoemakers.

The Pottstown (Pa.) Ellis steel company cut the wages of 2,000 men 10 and 15 per cent, on July 1st.

The New York furniture workers' union has consented to allow its members to demand $15 a week.

Farmers are organizing exchange clubs throughout the West, with a view of doing away with the middle man.

President (tampers says the eighthour agitation is growing everywhere, and that many business men are aiding it.

AHopedale company makes screws 55-100 of an inch in diameter, of an inch long, and with seventy threads to the inch.

France has some of the oldest trades' unions in the world. The Paris carpenters' union, for example, has been in existence for 600 years.

The carpenters' union has made wonderful gains throughout the country in the matter of membership, reduction of hours and increase of pay.

The Union Pacific railway submitted the difference between the company and its engineers and firemen to arbitration, which resulted in an increase of wages to both.

The American flint glass workers' union, with a membership of 5,955, has an annual income of $100,000. There are lees than one hundred non-union men in the entire trade.

The head men of the K. of L. are faring well at the hands of the administration. A. M. Dewey, editor of the official journal has been appointed to one of the best positions in the government printing office.

In England a convention representing 250,000 coal miners agreed to accept another advance of 5 per cent, on July 1st, and a similar increase on October 1st. There is talk of a sliding scale of wages, nine hours a day, and eight hours for underground men.

Council Bluffs barbers have adopted resolutions against Sunday work. There is a law in Connecticut prohibiting barbers from working on Sunday, but until recently it has been a dead letter. On Sunday laBt a Hartford barber was arrested for having his shop open and had to pay a fine of $1 and costs.

One of the curiosities at the Paris ex-, position is a triumph of the founder's art. Tn the maehine hall is a casting weighing ten tons. This piece de fonderie is hot intended to serve any useful purpose, but merely intended to show what can be done by patternmakers, molder and founder. As regards intricacy of detail it has never been surpassed.

Profefesor Denton, who has been making investigations concerning the necessity of good lubrication for slide valves, mentions a valuable fact. He states that in a locomotive he had cut down the supply of oil to the valves from one pint in seventy-five miles to one pint in 160 miles—the result of this change being that, as soon as the valves got hot, two men could not hold the reversing lever in place when the catch was taken out of the notch.

The New York Journal of Commerce, which favors industrial schools, says of those institutions: ''They might well be founded and conducted at the expense of the several trades. It would pay enormously to the trades if they had schools in which girls and boys were eduoated for the labor in those trades. The regular course to the door of any industry, any workshop, would be through a school. The result of such a system would be a constant supply of skilled workmen, any one of whom at the age of 18 would earn higher wages for himself and more profit for his employer than is now earned by the average workman of 40. Industrial education instead of the present diffuse, inapplicable, and useless sort of education would thus be a blessing to the laborers and laboring class first, to the capitalists and employers next, and so to the whole community. And the laborer who had been educated to his trade and had pursued it conscientiously would be infinitely better fitted to represent his fellow-citizens at the capitol than are nine-tenths of the men now sent to legislatures and congress. One eduoated, skilled, and able mechanio is worth more to his country than a hundred half-educated lawyers, physicians or other professional men."

The Wheelmen.

The wheelmen are circulating a paper for signatures of wheelmen who wish to join the league. The intention is to or­

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ganise ^a league, all of wh shall be members

Cleveland'! Startling Show of Wealth In Indlridaal rtniiwioM. CLEVELAND,

O., July 13.—Mr. H. M.

Flagler said a short time ago that Mr. John D. Rockefeller's income had reached $9,000,000 a year. This startling statement, coming from a man aa well informed aa Mr. Flagler regarding the affairs of the Standard oil company, was the basis of a careful inquiry among brokers and well informed financiers aa to the wealth of Clevelandera generally, and it can be safely said that there aim no less than aixty-three millionaires within the limits ef the Forest City, to say nothing of immense estates owned jointly by heirs.

Mr. Flsger's statement regarding Mr. Rockefeller's income would make the head of the great Standard oil trust worth $150,000,000 on a 6 per cent, basis. He said his own income was $3,000,000 a year, and estimated Colonel Oliver Payne's wealth at about twenty-two million dollars. But the Standard oil people are not the only wealthy residents of Cleveland whose holdings are represented in seven and eight figures. Selah Chamberlain is worth $16,000,000, most of which is invested in the best of railway securities, and the S. V.'Harkness estate, divided but a short time ago between Mrs. Anna M. Harknees and three sons, is said to have footed up $28,000,000. The combined wealth of Jeptha H. Wade and his grandson, Homer Wade, who has already inherited an immense fortune, is certainly not leas than $7,000,000. It is only a wort time since the East Cleveland street railway company, in which Mr. Wade is the prime mover, offered a clear million for the three atreet railroad lines controlled by the Hathaways and Robinsons. The developments in street railways have turned attention to Mr. Wade's real eatate interests in the east end of Cleveland, and it iB only of late that it has become generally known that he owns twelve miles of street fronts in that neighborhood. The Wade Park property alone will eventually cover a street frontage of nine or ten miles. Scores of other Clevelandera who long ago passed the single million point are put down for amounts ranging from twe to five times that figure. Charles A. Otis, W. J. Gordon, John Huntington, Charles Brush, Samuel Andrews, Judge Stevenson Burke, Senator H. B. Payne, John L. Woods and Dr. H. H. .Little are millionaires Beveral times over.

FOURTEENTH OF JULY.

A Day That Every liberty-Loving Frenchman Retards with Patriotic Remembrance. The French residents of Indianapolis will celebrate the centennial of the fall of the Bastille to-day, at Riverside park. Addresses will be made by Superintendent of Public Instruction LaFollette and others. "I have been asked why we celebrate on Sunday," remarked a Frenchman to a reporter. "It is for the very good reason that the 14th of July happens to come on a Sunday this year, and the 14th of July is the day on which to celebrate. It is strange to me that there is so little known in this country about the Bastille, what it represented, what its destruction signified and all that. The Americans of 1789 knew the French better than do the Americans of to-day. That was, perhaps, because the obligations owed by the Americans were then recent. We had just helped them through with the revolutionary war. But the French sent the keys of the Bastille to George Washington, and they are now in this country. The Bastille was a state prison, built in 1383, so when it was destroyed it was over four hundred years old. It stood in the streets of St. Antoine, and in all those 400 years it is said but two prisoners ever managed to escape from it. This was in February, 1756. One unhappy prisoner was confined in those dreary walls foi fifty-four years. "It was on Sunday, July 12th, 1789, that the revolution began it was the people against the king and the favored classes. Royal troops were moving, and the people were warned to keep indoors. It was Camille Desmoulins, poet, editor, orator, who, mounting a table in a garden, cried out, The hour is come it's now either death or deliverance forever. To arms!' And a thousand voices echoed the cry. The blood of the city rose to boiling heat that evening. The shops of gunsmiths- were broken open and their contents taken. On Monday there was no work done in Paris except by blacksmiths making pikes, and women making red, white and blue cockades. Americans and Frenchmen should be all the closer together on that account—with us, as with you, the red, white and blue is the emblem of liberty. There were 28,000 muskets in the celler of the Hotel des Invalidee, and the people, attacking the hotel, broke in and got them. Then, having got so many arms, the cry was raised: 'To the Bastille!' At 1 o'clock in the afternoon the attaok began, and at 5 o'clock the great fortress was surrendered. Along the streets in triumph were carried the seven prisoners found in tbeiBastille also seven heads on pikes, also the keys of the captured fortress. One of the released men had been a prisoner thirty years, and four of the tigners. whole of the night of July 14th the

Beven were foreigners. Through the night of

Btones

of the

prison

wall—and the walls

were nine feet thick—came down with a sound of thunder, and in the morning there was only a heap of ruins to mark the spot where this monument of royal cruelty had stood."

A peculiarity of Hood's Sarsaparilla is that while it purifies the blood, it imparta new vigor to every function of the body.

SB... '.",7

meaben

of the national league:

tainty. MILLIONAIRE* XANT11X18 OTIB.

lOO ODD FLANNEL AT 50c A.

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THE TERSE HAUTE RTPItlMW, 8UNDAT MOENING, JULY 14. 1889.

SBTAIOB WASHBUUrt CIBDR.

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NBW YORK, July 13.—8tor»ae whioh have been widely publiahed -over the country in letnenoe to the financial embeu—msnt ot Senator W. D. Waahburn, of Minnesota^!* made the aubjeot of aa authoritative statement here today by Thomas Dowry, ot Minneapolis, who naa been hie bnninsss associate Senator Washburn sailed for Europe on Wednesday, before the publication of the stories affecting his credit. Answering an inquiry about the alleged sale of Senator Washburn's house to him for $40^)00, whioh the senator was said to require to pay interest on his debts, Mr. Iiowry said: "There is no truth whatever in the statement. Senator Washburn's house is not deeded to me and never has been. I never loaned him $40,000 to pay interest on his loans, and never waa advised that he was in need of that amount for such a purpose. As to buying the senator's house, I can frankly say that it is about all I can do to support the one I now live in." "What ia there about Senator Washburn's trdvble?." "It has alt passed. A few months ago he waa somewhat embarrassed, owing to the fact that hia time waa occupied in politics instead of paying close attention to his various business interests. He, however, promptly converted securities which he had in hand, and paid all maturing obligations. Senator Washburn ia finannially sound, and his moral and personal integrity is such that he would sacrifioe the last dollar he possessed, including his homsstead ana all personal posBsssions, to pay lOO cents on the dollar. This he would do, too, despite the efforts of political enemies to bring about a destruction of his credit, which has been attempted by tho publication of these storiss after he had sailed for Europe, and when he could not reply to them."

Beat Katate Transfer®.

John Hopewell to J. B. Griffin, 60 feet oil of the e, side of lot 66 In Jewett's addition 800 00 Margaret Jones and husband to W. A.

Morris, acre* in the w. side, s. w. H, s. w. 14 of section 13, town 12, range 8. 800 00 Mary E. Bayles to W. 6. Bayles. part n. w. u, n. e. Vi, lying east of E. ft T. H. railroad In section 26, town 11. range 9 800 00 Amelia Batz and husband to John Mc-

Mahan, s. of 60 feet off then, side of lot 1 In subdivision of lot 68 900 0 Ed ttllbert et ux. to Marx Myers et al., tract lsnhfeet by 127 7-10 feet ins. e. ... corner of Fourteenth and Main streets 6,876 00 Anton Hulman et ux. to Joeephua Collett, lot 66 In Hose's addition 3,600 00 Thomas F. Donham et ux. to Mary Early, 30 feet front on South Sixteenth street

In lot 29 of Jewett's subdivision 1(000 00 Firmln Nlppert to Moses and IMiac Pierson, B.i| lot 8 In block 4 In Nippert's subdivision... 287 00

Total .114,882 00

Capltola and Black Donald. An incident which recalls one in the famous story of the "Hidden Hand" ia now located in Philadelphia. A lady of that city, standing, late at night, before her mirror, saw in it the reflection of a man under the bed. The house doorkey lay on her bureau as usual. Carelessly picking it up, she seated herself by an open window until a polioeman passed under it. She dropped the key in front of him, at the same time quietly signifying her meaning. He came upstairs, and sure enough there a brutallooking fellow was, who was promptly nabbed. Then, the lady being safe, her presence of mind gave out, she fell into a faint, and the next call was for a doctor.—[Washington Post.

Farewell to the Bustle.

The variety of eolor at the Marlborough house was extraordinary, but the dresses were more simple and much ls6s extravagant than in former yean. The party was interesting from an aesthetic point of view, as it marked the epoch of the entire abandonment of the fashion which for many years decided that ladies' gowns were to have an artificial excrescence behind. Every one, with few exceptions, wore perfectly plain akirts, with little or no. trimming, and as flat behind as in front—a fashion most becoming to slight figures.—[Edmund Yates in the New York Tribune.

THE FAIR SEASON OF 1889

The following is a list of county and district fairs to be held in Indiana, this year, with the location, date and secre"tary's name of each:

COUNTY PAIRS.

Boone—Lebanon, August 19 to 23, E. Darnall, secretary. Clark—Charlestown, September 2 to 6, W. H. Watson, secretary.

Clinton—JPrankfort, August 26 to 30, Joseph Heavilon, secretary. Daviess—Washington, September 23 to 28, James 3. Lavelle, secretary

Dearborn—Lawrenceburg, August 20 to 25, Dr. C. B. Miller, secretary. Decatur—Greensburg, August 27 to 31, Ed Keesing, secretary.

Dubois—Huntingburg, September 16 to 21, W. D. Hamilton, secretary. Elkhart—Goshen, September 24 to 27, C. L. Landgreaver, secretary.

Fulton—Rochester, September 4 to 7, Charles Jackson, secretary. Gibeon—Princeton, September 9 to 14, S. Vet. Strain, secretary.

Grant—Marion, August 27 to 30, Ed Caldwell, secretary. Green—Linton, September 2 to 6, D. J. Terhune, secretary.

Hamilton—Noblesville, August 26 to 30, Will H. Craig, secretary. Hancock—Greenfield, August 20 to 23, Charles Downing, secretary.

Harrison—Corydon, September 9 to 13, J. W. H. Littell, secretary. Henir—New Castle, August 13 to 17, Frank M. Millikan, secretary.

Huntington—Huntington, September 17 to 21, Leon T.-Bagley, secretary. Jackson—Brownstown, September 23 to 27, W. L. Benton, secretary.

Jay—Portland, October 1 to 4, L. L. Gilpin, secretary.

-AND-

Monday Morning, July 15tli.

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Jift— Witt fltatloa,Pept»»hfr 3

21,WJ&Young, esoretary. Knox—VinoMinae, September to October 5, Jamie W. fimino, secretary.

Like—Crown Point, Oetober 1 to 4, Walter Allman, aecratary. LaPorte—Laporte, September 10 to 13, Geoife CI Dorland, secretary.

Lawrenoe—Bedford, September 10 to 15, If. ELStout, aeeretarr. Madison—Anderson, September 2 to 6, Edmund Johnaon, secretary.

Monroe Bloomington, September 16 to 20, George P. Campbell, secretary. Montgomery—Crawfordsville, September 9 to 13, F. L. Snyder, secretary.

Newton—Morocoo, September 10 to 14, SheL Smith, secretary. Noble—Ligonier, October 8 to

ll,

Eli

B. Gerber, secretary. Owen—Spencer, September 9 to 14, Matt Matthews, secretary.

Parke—Rockville, August 19 to 24, W. H. Elaon, secretary. Perry—Rome, September 30 to October 5, Walton

Wheeler, secretary.

Pike—Petersburg, September 2 to 6, A. EL Taylor, secretary. Porter—Valparaiao, September 24 to 27, E. S. Beach, secretary.

Posey—New Harmony, September 16 to 20, E. V. Johnson, secretary. Randolph—Wincheeter, September 3 to 6, John R. Engle, secretary.

Ripley—Osgood, August 12 to 16, E. H. Row, secretary. Rush—Rushville, September 10 to 13, Chaa. F. Kennedy, secretary.

Shelby—Shelbyville, September 3 to 7, E. E. Stroup, secretary. Spencer—Rockport, September 23 to 28, Henry Hoch, secretary.

Spencer—Chrisney, September 30 to October 5, T. R. Austin, secretary. Steuben—Angola, September 24 to 27, F. McCartney, secretary.

Sullivan—Sullivan, September 9 to 14, J. M. Lang, secretary.

Martindale, secretary. Vermillion—Eugene, September 2 to 6, J. S. Grondyke, secretary.

Vigo—Terre Haute, August 26 to 30, Charles C. Oakey, secretary. Wabaah—Wabash, September 24 to 27, E. W. Poweli, secretary.

Warren—West Lebanon, August 19 to 24, A. Cadwallader, secretary. Warrick—-Booneville, October 7 to 12, Wm. L. Barker, secretary.

Washington—Salem, September 4 to 7, A. W. Beal, secretary. DISTRICT FAIRS.

Acton Fair Association—Acton, Marion, September 10 to 24, T. M. Richardson, secretary.

Arcadia District—Arcadia, Hamilton August 19 to 23, J. T. Driver, secretary, Bridgeton Union—Bridgeton, Parke. August 5 to 11, D. Seybold, secretary.

Carmel District—Carmel, Hamilton, August 21 to 23, E. B. Murphy, secretary.

En astern Indiana Agricultural—Kendallville, Noble, September 30 to October 4, J. S. Conlogue, secretary.

Fairmount Union—Fairmount, Grant, September 16 to 20, E. H. Ferree, secretary.

Fo 'ountain, Warren and VermillionCovington, Fountain, September 16 to 20, R. W. Miles, secretary.

Franoesville Agricultural—Francesville, Pulaski, October 1 to 4, W. A. Brewer, secretary.

Henry, MadiBon and Delaware—Middletown, Henry, August 6 to 9, F. W. Cooper, secretary.

Kentland Fair Association—Kentland, Newton, September 3 to 6, F. A. Comparet, secretary.

Knightstown District—Knightstown, Henry, August 27 to 31, L. P. Newby, secretary.

Lawrence District—Lawrence, Marion. September 3 to 6, W. B. Flick, secretary, Loogootee District—Loogootee, Martin, August 27 to 31, C. S. Wood, secretary.

Miami and Fulton—Macy, Miami, September 11 to 14* J. Coffing, secretary. Montpelier Tri-County Montpelier, Blackford, August 13 to 17, J. G. Brannum, secretary.

N. Carlisle and Farmers' Union FairNew Carlisle, St. Joseph, September 4 to 6, W. H. Deacon, secretary.

New Roes Agricultural—New Ross, Montgomery, August 12 to 16, J. D. Hoetetter, secretary.

Northeastern Indiana—Waterloo, DeKalb, October 6 to 10, M. Kiplinger, secretary.

North Indiana and Southern Michigan—South Bend, St. Joseph, September 16 to 20, C. G. Towle, secretary.

Northern Indiana and Southern Michigan Exposition Association—Warsaw, Kosciusko, September 16 to 20, H. D. Ileagy, secretary.

North Manchester Tri-County—North Manchester. Wabash, September 30 to October 3, B. F. Clemens, secretary.

North Salem Agricultural and Horticultural—NGrth Salem, Hendricks, September 2 to 6, S. R. Davis, secretary.

Orleans Agricultural—Orleans, Oiange, September 25 to 28, John J. Lingle, secretary.

Poplar Grove Agricultural, Horticultural and Mechanical—Poplar Grove, Howard, October 1 to 5, R.T. Barbour, secretary.

Remington Fair Association—Remington, Jasper, August 27 to 30, E. H. Briggs, secretary.

Rush and Shelby—Manilla, Rush, August 13 to 16, H. C. Pitts, secretary. Sheridan District—Sheridan, Hamilton, September 1 to 7, W. J. Woods, secretary."

Southern Indiana District, Mount) Vernon, Posey, September 23 to 28, Ellwood Smith, secretary.

Switzerland and Ohio—East Enterrise, Switzerland, September 10 to 13, ~T. H. Madison, secretary.

Urmeyville Agricultural—Urmeyville, Johnson, October 1 to 4, S. W. Dungan, secretary.

Vermillion Joint Stock—Newport, Vermillion, September 30 to October 5, Lewis Shepard, secretary.

Warren Tri-County—Warren, Hunt-

Merchant Tailor and Clothier, Corner Main and Fifth Streets.

IJPSIPIP

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iagton, September 3 to 7,liMie F. Beard,

"hhl»toii «nd (Hark—Psion, Wariington, September 17 to 20, William T. fitter, Moratory.

Wayne, Henry and Randolph—Dalton, WayneTSepUmber 10 to 13, J. B. DenII ia. niirtnj

Xenia District—Xenia, Miami, August 20 to 23k J. W. Eward, secretary.

Donn Piatt haa retired from the editonhip at Belford's Magazine. Hia name ia atill kept up, but the publishers aome time ago intimated to Colonel Piatt that they desired to change the policy of the magazine, and conaideted that could be beat accomplished by placing another than Colonel Piatt in editorial charge. Piatfa mental and physical health are wrecked.

Ia Neuralgia Killing Ton by Inches. If you area sufferer from this excrut atingly painful disease, or if you have sick headache, sore throat, lame back, floated feet, acaldsor burns, try Ballard's Snow Liniment. It ia an unfailing cure for all pain. It possesses sterling merit and haa been recommended from one to another, until it has found its way into every state in the union. Sold by J. E. Somes, oorner Sixth and Ohio, and J. & C. Bauer, oorner Seventh and Main.

A Fair Offer.

You are earnestly requested by the Ballard Snow Liniment Co., of St. Louis Ma, to give Ballard'e Horehound Syrup a trial for consumption, coughs, colds bronchitis, croup, whooping cough, etc. It is only recommended for diseases of the throat and lungs, and for those troubles it certainly has no equal in the world. Its Bales have been as marvelous as its its cures have remarkable. It has been recommended from family to family until ita fame haa spread from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Try it and if it does not cure you your money will be refunded. Sold by J. E. Somes, oorner Sixth and Ohio Btreet, and J. & C. Bauer, oorner Seventh and Main street.

Forced to Lmre Home.

Over sixty people were forced to leave their homes yesterday to call for a free trial package of Lane's Family Medicine. If your blood ia bad, your liver and kidneys out of order, if you are constipated and have headache and anjunsightly complexion, don't fail to call on any druggiat to-day for afree sample of this grand remedy. The ladies praiaeit. Everyone likes it. Largest package 50 cents.

William's Anatrallan Herb Pills. If you are yellow, Bjllioua constipated with headache, bad breath, drowsy, no appetite, look out your Liver ia out of order. One box of these Pills will drive all the troubles away and make anew being of you. Price 25 cents. Sold by J. E. Somes, Sixth and Ohio Street, ana J. A C. Baur, Seventh and Main street.

One Hundred Ladles Wanted

And 100 men to call on any druggist for a free trial package of Lane's Family Medicine, the great root and herb remedy, discovered by Dr. Silas Lane while in the Rocky mountains. For diseases ef the blood, liver and 'kidneyB it is a positive cure. For constipation and Hairing up the complexion it does wonders. Children like it. Everyone praises it. Large-size package, 50 cents. At all druggists.

5?jacobs 01^

For Strains and Pains. NEW AND STRONG FACTS. Cane and Cratch. Cuairmltoa, 0., Juatt.'it.

Mm! Witt MMlM* fcMk tor two aratkii walk** witb em ui crmtch wu emnt tf JkMks Oil —wtin la

JHO.BaamnBiBsss.••«»*•.

Strained Back! LAUO. 0IL», MM, IMS. SaSwMI wttt stnlmrttMka weeks ptla vm •ette, mi on (Hi *w» bottlw St. AMM

SU wUek nn« a* f^ala nw. BUST UlIUBI. Wmr IB Tears. WuMitfa, Tq.. Jam* S«. 'H. •u alnt of ui at

tot

Sfttu pin wMk

•Mnitaet Mttntto wltt It anr tw* |MM H* St. J»erts

oll-z**i£$wklt.

AT DBCOOIRS AMD DKALXBS.

TNI CHARLES A. V0SKLER CO.. BaMswrs, M.

BBIAMSU CAS1. For two years I had' rheumatism so bod that It disabled mc for work and conilncd me to my bed for a whole year, daring which timo 1 could not even raise mj hands to my head, anu

for 3 months coald not move myself in bed, was reduced in flesh from 193 to 89 lbB. Was treated by best physicians, only to grow worse,

•om the effects of Swift's Specific.

JOHN RAT,

Jan. 8, 1889. Ft. Wayne, Ind. Books on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free, FT SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga.

SIXTH POINT

You should read THR CHICAGO DAILY NHWS bccausc, being a family newspaper, it's against the salotm. The home and the saloon arc forever opposed. There can be no neutrals in this war. But THB DAILY NBWS is temperate in temperance. It isn't a prohibition organ—it's not sure prohibition is the best way of treating the evil—but it believes in prohibiting the saloon keeper from ruling and ruining in American socicty. II you would read, and have your family read, a newspaper which

Eigher

Our

laces the interests of the home than those of the saloon, read THE CHICAGO DAILV NBWS.

Remember—Us circulation is 220,000 a day—over a million a week—and it costs by mail 25 cts. a month, four months fi.oo,—one cent a day

MAtY90^

THE GENTLEMAN'S FRIIRD.

Malydor Perfection Syringe free with

bottle.

Prevents

and Slcct

in

1

to

it.

every

MrMara.

Cures rhwa

4 days.

for

Ask your Bragg!st

SenttoanyaddressforSl.ee. Far

OUUCK

A

sj-

t-

sale

by

CO., Draggiats, TERRE HAUTE. IND.

HOTEL* ORLEANS

SITUATED ON

SOUTH SHOBB

Spirit-* «—kake

Will be under the personal supervision of H. LBLKND. and will be open for the reception of guests, June first in each year. Visitors will find

•THE ORLEANS*

is first class in all of its appointments, beinff well supplied with gas, hot and cold water baths, electric bells and all modern improvements, steam laundry, billiard halls, bowling: alley, etc., and positively free from annoyance by mosquitoes. $ound frip Excursion tflclcets will be placed on sale at the commencement of the tourist season by the Burlington, Cedar Rapids ft Northern Railway and all connecting lines, atlow rates, to the following points in Iowa and Minnesota: Spirit Lake, Iowa: Albert Lea, Waterville, Kinneapolia, StVPauL Lake Jtinnetonka, White Bear Lake and Duluth, Minnesota: Clear Lake, Iowa Lake Superior points Yellowstone Park ""1 points in Colorado.

Write for "A. Midsummer Paradise" to the General Ticket and Passenger Agent, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and for Hotel Rates to H. LELAND, Spirit Lake, Iowa.

C. J. IVES, J. E. HANNEGAN, rm.ua Ow'IThtot warm, tint

IS THE ONLY COMBINED

SOAP CLEANER POLISHER

LEAVES SKIN SOFT

AND

SMOOTH.

CLEANS AND POLISHES ALL METALS AND WORK

5CENTSACAKE.AWOOD

WITHOUT SCRATCHING. SK YOURGROCCR.

TkS MODOCTIIIPOU HIHIN6 CO. CiMlaaiti,ll.

ABSHAI/S SALE.

Notice Is hereby given that, tn pursuance of an ordinance passed by the Common Council of tUe ctty of Terre Haute on the 10th day of March, 1870, I will sell at the public pound of said city, on the 15th day ot July, 1889, unless claimed and all charges paid before that time, the following described property: One dark bay mule and one light bay mule, found running at large In the streets of said city in violation of said ordinance. Sale between the hours of 9 a. m. and 4 p. m. of said day. A. J. THOMPSON,

City Marshal.

M. A. BAUMAN,

Painting, Graining, Glaming, Catoltnlnlng and Paper Hanging,

NO. 18 SOUTH SIXTH STREET. (Residence, lira Chestnut street) Tour Patronage Respectfully Solicited.

WORK PROMPTLY HONS.

THE NORWOOD,

Fourth Avenue and Klngsly Street,

A S A

Full view of the ocean. Terms moderate for June, July and September. S. N. SEVERANCE.

OHIO MILITARY ACADEMY, PORTSMOUTH, OHIO.

Thorough and practical courses of study. Boys prepared for college or government academies. Commissions In a foreign army procured for our graduates. Infantry, cavalry and .artillery drills. For catalogue, address

COL. A. J. WEAVER, Supt.

A. J. GALLAGHER.

PLUMBER,

Gas and Steam Fitter,

424 Cherry Street. Terre Haute

V' Solicitor of

AMERICAN PATENTS

PAUTS

FOREIGN

Journal Building, IHDIANAPOLI8 V" 0°

,OV-

FOR MEN ONLY!

DflCITIVF For LOST or FATLIWO MAMHOOD: rU9l I General and HEKVOUS DEBILITY fill Tl Weakneaa of Body and Mind: Effect* ofErroraor Eicewesin Old or Young. Mart. Kobto MSHOOD fell Rralsml. How to hlim ud "ta«Wlile. WKAB,IWIWVRMlrKD OWMSI8 FARTSof loD*. Absolutely HOIK THKATBKNT-fe«aU la a *uf. •«a tMllfr froa 47 Slab*, TerrlUrtw, aad Korelga IwatrlM. faaeaa wrltetfeffa. Book, ftollMplaaatloa, aad uraataaalM ItaM) few. AMrew MEIICAl CI.. IIFFAli, I. T,

O. E. DUFFY, 607 Seventh Street, Washington, D. C.

..'-V

For Inventions promptly secured. Reference, bypermlsslon, to Hon. Wm. Mack. Address

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