Daily News, Franklin, Johnson County, 2 November 1889 — Page 2

4

THE DAILY NEWS.

VOL. I.. .No. 77.

AN IXPKPEXDBKT NEWSPAPER, Published Every Afternoon Except Sunday, IY THE

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DOUGLAS 0. SMITH. Maniffing FAUor.

&tr W W HOJ5B No. 181. *r Reader* of the

Daiiy

Km leaving the

eit? at any time can bare the paper mailed to them. Addrcw will be changed a* often a* deaf r^-Vf.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1889.

St. Uh ih r'iort* a very decided Mhock 'of earthquake this morning which destroys Iter Hmnee# for the Worlds Fair.

A WOMAN* in I'aria hospital can see two different seta of object* at the same time. And yet then* are persons who claim that women can never see but one side of a question.

Tub Morning Express by losing its tamper and indulging in vulgar and undignified language ha* made it irrtiwwwibla for the Saw* to engage in any further con trove my at present.

In the slang dialect of the day, Congressman Cannon wants the Speakership go that he can Hhoot off bin mouth. But the gentleman from Maine thinks he can Heed his title clear to thia same position.

Whkv out of court theCronin jurymen amuse themselves by winging gospel hymns and holding Bible meetings. Compared to their duties during the day these amusements seem like wild and hilarious dissipation.

Ktoiuks are toll to the effect that wealthy Californiana bathe in champagne. this is an excellent idea. Instead of drinking the liquor and bathing in the water let the custom become general to bathe in the champagne and drink the water. .Steady drinkers would (ind thl# a great Having of money.

ty^

Ij? pursuance of 1hh intention to give full credit to the Urn!* President Harrison haw issued a proclamation appointing Thursday, the -Nth, as a day of national thanksgiving. }uay and Wimamaker and Dudley and Huston and the rest will please read this proclamation carefully and not attempt to arrogate to themselves any portion of these Thanksgiving ceremonies.

Ki.khtwh ian.h are engaged in numerous experiments to prove, tluit electrical currents are generated in the heart, that two people holding each other by the hand give evidence of electric shocks and much more to the same elleet. This is a woeful waste of time. Any «eventeen year old lny or girl can give the scientists points on this subject. As a generator of electricity the heart cannot lie surpassed and thoee who wine in ixintact with the current newr fail to ln knockei silly.

Ixissaid that Priucei^ Huntington* Hatxfekit will never be rewivetl in (ierttian court circles betntuse her father was a grocer. Her husband, now that she haa BOttlcil up lite debts, can be retvivet notwithaianding his tarnished reeonl. It i* different in snune resixwte in this eoun* try. A man's tattered reputation will never kwp him out of our twat society but neither will his wife's father keep her out if «he has enough money to pay her entrance f»x«. We have ottr little social weakmnise!*, the same a.* they have in other countries,

Titts ineudwrs of camp when jnit Ujou the witness stand in the lYonin trial adopt the well-worn tactics of losing all rtvtllection of Ja»t event*. Thi» sometimw haa qnite the contrary eil'wt U|hwi the jun from what la intended. If a man attempts to evade a »jueation hi« lu»ait*n« nat-1 urallv aupjKm' that he knows more la

w!l.

t»r«t«ctol (torn the wKmhwi *i«h

great deal of ditltcnlty dt»e» not reeeivtxl from the lightermen in the the suspicion which ttpon the Clan-j ent «tril^. na*(t«eK. I 7 7 1 a a a

NY hkn Ute Lord Mayor of London and

Cardinal Manntnf «n€«««d»4 in for thirty vwot or more. I have not the irreat strike titer flatted themselves found a single patient injuml by its titet.ov h«i

Now the cable announces lb** the dock employes will go on a*Mi*er strike. The May^r and Oardioal »tU begin to underhand what the employer* ot labor Ic ug ago learned, that the of a Wife—I aee, that vo«r neighVx few c«nta in the way of wages, ia 1 wnj^in. !lns\^-W»at wit this

«»j- T:'!ss

of ti»n© ill not setU* ?i,H.red him now. And I don't labor question. Tlt^ uteM th«* inuit .n todaW»le with IT any mor*, trouble in the ranks u«- worku«^)»i^ eitlm.—IjoweH Citim^n,

are too deep seatel to be permanently settled on any basis. The condition of these people is in a state of evolution from the serfdom and slavery of the past to a plane higher than any they have yet been able to reach. It will require the wisdom and experience of several generations to adjust, in a manner that will give mutual satisfaction, the !de differences that now exist between capital and labor. Kg

The International Delegates had a nice quiet little time at the Indiana capital yesterday with plenty to eat and drink and speeches galore. Their honors, our foreign visitors, make very handsome and graceful addresses, showing a much letter know ledge of our country than we possess of theirs. In our desire for an interchange of commerce and increased means of intercourse by ship and rail they seem inclined to meet us half way. One amusing feature of their speechmaking is the never failing supply of taffy which thev deal out to the women of this country It is the foreign ide of gallantry and if our women could get a chance they would return all these pretty speeches with interest. Our American men are not in the habit of wasting much valuable time in gushing over their countrywomen but they treat them with more honor and consideration and protecting care than do the men of any other nation in the world. They express their love and esteem in actions rather than words. There i» a measure of discontent and rebellion among our women against certain restrictions which are the last relics of the bigotry anil prejudice of the past, but these are only healthy indications of a progressive age. The women of America are notjonly the most fortunate in birth and opportunities but they are also the happiest women on the globe.

Horror* of I.omloii"* Nliim*.

On the other hand, in (ireat Britain it is impossible to go through any of her large cities any time, day or night, without seeing drunken men and women. This, of course, is in the slums, such as Whitechapel in London, where are collected the foulest, filthiest beings 1 ever na w. In one short street which we passed through we got glimpses through the doors of the dirty dens these wretches occupy. Heaps of humanity—men, women, and children—were in'one mass, the children half smothered bv the drunken parents. All along the streets, on door steps, in allevs, men and women and boys and girls who never knew what a home or parent is, were crouched together trying to sleep. The policemen did not seem to mind them, and amid all this ruin were saloons —or public houses, as thev are called there- crowded with men and women half crazed with drink. These people never work thev steal, and when they can not steal they* starve. These saloons do a great business and are no doubt owned by some highly respected 1/mdoner who neither knows nor cares how he gets his wealth as long as he gets it. This class, next to the British (lovernment is partly to blame lor this horrible condition of affairs. Luxury and wealth, misery and want, debauchery that hell might blush to own, stagnate in the heart's cote of a nation that claims the Bible and Christianity as the secret of her power. Her majesty the Queen of (ireat Britain wss once ri nee the secret asked by an Abyssinian 1* of her power. She is said to have pointed to the Bible. If she were asked to point out the cause of this horrible misery, to what would she point?*—.William Milligail.

It on II Till Tribute lo Woman. "If we have been everywhere admiring the wonders offered by this Nation, great above all things by the freedom enjoyed by her citizens, it is more grateful to us to contemplate the spectacle here offered by this institution destined to youth and beauty by this magnificent institute where woman's moral endowments are perfected, her heart educated and her intellect developed, thus preparing her for societv and for the uome. W omau is not to-day, certaiuly, what she was in antiquity, in her abject position—-the slave of man—but the temlereat I6ving companion and his leat friend, And among modern women none take a higher rank and, indeed, justice comjH'ls me to say the American woman stands at the very head of her sex for her virtues, for her independence, her individuality and for all those qualities which makv her the equal of man in intelligence and force of character, and the superior in every other quality. To her, with her virtues, no less titan to the opposite sex, do the Tnitetl States owe that freedom and prosperity which is the admiration and the wonder of all nation^/'—Signor Zelayea, delegate from Honduras.

HU pn»M»lo«. .V M.W It»\ L.

4

I «ak* ray Uvinjr from «a,v vole*," T»io 1

1

".rfc.

A* tv ul meat, JnM after dark. "AVett.£**' -St." "Artd jwrt «h »i. lUvr-***: -I-

T*

than he is willing to tell and that endeavoring to shield himself or hi# friend?). This has as much weight with the jurv as if he made direct replies to the qm^ioaa aaked. Tl»e etridenw thus! to go on astrike on ..

!\0 replfcd, at wi.it a Q,

Or v« a (mi.

"Not *o •, fhc km.I "lt

iTi 'it* k«. s-*r. dat*

Mjf rofrp I* not

Harper

Ktilt Htrlklns

In I-ondott.

,[ ixuxtwx, Novemlwr 1.—The lighter-

.\Somlav next. Tlie tk* knten wdl pro!*-

Hkowiac,

to tbo

Mid

h»\-e now practiced without

FACTS ABOUT WHALES.

1II Known About the [Largest Animal Than About Small lnscct*.

Of all the modern

The toothed whales really have not much use for their teeth, as they can not chew any thing with them. They are merely a rowof points that serve to gr»p a fish or other kind of prey, and hold it until it can work it down its throat. The teeth are only on the lower jaw. There are no molars among the teeth, and they can not grind the food. Then the jaw is not hung so that it

can do

TERRE HAUTE DAILY NEWS.SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1889.

scientists engaged in

the work of investigation, perhaps none have adopted a field more peculiar and entertaining than Prof. Frederick W. True, of the National Museum. Prof. True is a young man, but he has already spent five years of his career as a scientist in looking up one subject—whales. '•The reason that my attention was directed to this subject particularly," said Prof. True to a Washington Post reporter, "was the fact that so little was known to scientific men concerning whales. The works on zoology either treated

the whale

with a few generalizations or ignored it altogether. My purpose has been

to

cover

this field as well as it possibly can be done with such' sources of information as are available. I spent four months in England and the continent of

of

specimens. "Only about eighteen species of the fiftysix that frequent the coast of North America are well known, and

the majority Jo these

are of forms which have long been under observation. The

number of

species whose

habits, variations and distribution are thoroughly understood is still smaller. The life of the whale is passed with but little of it being visible, and it is not an approachable animal. What is known

of its life has

been obtained at long ran re, and many errors have thereby crept in. All the romance about thrilling adventures in the capture of the whale have had their day. It is still regarded as a dangerous occupation, but nothing like what it was* in the past. You will hear no more stories of hand harpooning and the smoking line running out over the bow, the boit towed by a leviathan at lightning speed, and all those details that illuminated the old-time stories of the sea. Now whales are killed with a bomb lance, fired

at a moderately long range. It carries an explosive substance that detonates when the lance enters the body

in*

as any other

projectile,

of the

whale.

That is the modern way. The whale is generally harpooned afterward in order to make it fast, and unless this is attempted before the whale is dead it is not attended with any danger." •'What are some of the popular fallacies in regard to whales J" "In the first place the greatest of them all is that the whale is a fish. It is a mammal with none

of the characteristics of a

fish, except that it exists in the water. An animal that nurses its young, and has rudimentary hind legs, could hardly correspond to a fish in any respect. In almost every cut

of a whale you will see the animal spouting a tremendous volume of water from his blow-holes. This is purely an imaginary habit on the part of the whales.

The blow-holes of

the whale

the nostrils

rises in the air.

This has been

any thing more than snap. The

whalebone whale uses the fringe of whalebone around the upper jaw in lieu of teeth. It strikes a school of shellfish, which abound in great numbers in the sea, and when it gets them in its mouth it closes its jaws. The water

is squeezed

at a feast

correspond to

of other animals.

When it

comes to the surface to breathe, it expels the air from its lungs

with a violent effort

Its nostrils are apt to be slightly under water, and the result is

a column of

mistaken in

the distance by sailors for a column of water. When a whale had been harpooned so that its lungs had been penetrated, it is likely that the whale spouted blood and water through its nostrils, and this has confirmed the original error when the sailors observed it at close range. "Another popular error," continued Prof. True, "is that all

whales furnish

is

worth several

out and the

whale swallows every thing that is left." "How large an object can a whale swallow?" 0.}' ris? "The throat of the largest specimen is not more that three inches and a halt in diameter." "Have any species been exterminated "From what wo know, it is not probable. For a few years tho right whale disappeared totally from the North American coast. None were stranded, and there was no evidence that any more were

in

exis­

tence. A year or two ago one or two specimens were seea, and now they are reasonably plentiful again. Whether thoy disappeared because they were pursued by man or for some other reasou wo can not establish. That they totally disappeared, however, is conclusive. "1 ho fact is, that when a certain

kind of whale becomes so

as to be in

danger

scarce

of extermination it

birth

With the

then

becomes unprofitable to ehase it, and

the

opportunity for a renewal of tho breed is favorable." ^T "Do they breed rapidly?" "One or two at a birth is the rule. The smaller varieties generally bear twins, and a single one at a

is probably the case

greater

varieties. The

infants are

born pretty well able to take care of themselves, though they are carefully nursed by the Mother until they are swift enough to provide themselves with food. It is the belief that the mother floats on her side on top of the water when nursing, so that the young can suckle with their blowholes out of water. Whether this is true or not I do not know. A female with young is very wary and difficult to approach, so that very little can be gathered oa this point from actual observation.'' _j "Do whales ever steep!"" "That is one of the many things that we do not know, ftperm whales have been known to He on the water motion less for a considerable period, but it can only be guessed whether they are asleep or not. A whale could not sleep under water for any length of time. It has a capacity for storing a great dead of air in the bkK vessels that fill the neck and are found well down through the body but at the furthest this could not last it more than a half hour, when it would have to come to the surface to blow. It is assurr.- that many of the lower formsof life »..\i»r «leep but in the c»#eof the whale I do know that that point has ever Investigated. It will be a

long

my sev-

I would

walk fiftv

enty-seventh year, tt£il«« to««e «tch an unnatural phenome* non.- Min Higpntottwu. F. F. R. C. S.

Wife—I aed that vtmr neighbor Bonda

yaie be U:we know all that it

necessary to fcuti A ah it the rovers of the sea. it is, ife ^ed, atraajre that, white the external and mu ss pecubariti«*s and the life-history of -asberles.* insects

Ti» Ct«M Wilit* KM Slrae*. White k»d be cleaned by dip-! plaga perfee^.y (Scan white fia&nel cloth ta a UUteand then rubbing the doth over a of white snap alter doing Um mb the kid gently and 4ihg»atty, a*d 'jtees'a wis! be. white again. A* the HatuHst becw«ues aoied change for a fjfin

nrjtat S

oujthlr investigated, maay of these great Sboald a snake attempt to crawl over the heaats have bwa ea:i.~ely neglected."

V*

,,' **.**,

A CONSIDERATE MOTHER.

Calls Her Guests to Winner to Prevent the Children Bating Too Much. I was amused by the story of a party that was recently given by a well-known Boston society woman at her cottage by the sea, writes Arlo Bates in the

certed by any thiug that happens. She has a flock of children that are

her, and exeept that it

will spoil every

will

spray

How a KentucUluii Identified Himself at a City Hank. A story about being identified at a bank is

related

by the Chicago

1

Providence Jour­

nal. She is a woman of the sort that furnishes continual stories to her friends. She never does any thing in just the way that, is expected, and she

is

never discon­

not unlike

has apparently

never entered into the scheme of life of either parent to do any thing whatever to check any of the natural impulses of childhood.

On the occasion referred to the company hart been bidden for eight o'clock, and, of course, iu the usual social fashion they

came

Europe in the study

half an hour or an hour later. They were, indeed, not all assembled when the hostess was summoned from the parlors by a servant. In a few moments she returned with an expression of tragic woe struggling with a laugh on her handsome and always good humored face. '•Really." she said to the company in general, and to those who chanced to be nearest iu particular, "it is too provoking. You will have to come out to supper now, for the children have eaten up the biggest part of the ice cream already, and if we don't go now there won't be any left.

Be­

sides,'' she added,as if it were a consideration which had just struck her as an afterthought, "the children will be dreadfully ill to-morrow if they eat any more."

And with laughier her friends trooped out to secure whatever supper remained undevoured by the children, and to save those interesting prodigies from completely ruining their digestion by further gorg-

SUCCESSFUL DINNERS.

Congenial Guests as Necessary as Tempting Delicacies. A well-known caterer writes in the Chi­

cago Tribune: 1

am

frequently asked

fashionable people who

by

are up in other

things what is the first step necessary to a successful and satisfactory dinner. My answer is, first and foremost, be careful in the selection of the guests. No matter if you prepare a feast worthy of a conquering

hero, unless the

spirits about tho

table are

congenial it will be a failure. One ill-bred man

thing. Of

course every body can't talk well, and it is a good thing that this is

so.

posed of magpies

A dinner com­

would not be such a

one

as you would wau to go to more than once. But there should always be one good talker at least in a dinner party, and if he is the only one, so long as he isn't a bumptious fool and the others are good listeners, your dinner

in any thing, and

the table. Too

too

Cj

a GO

not be a failure. I think Oliver

Wendell Holmes must have been a splendid fellow at the table. And if I am informed correctly he is the man who said he had an admiration for the audacity of the man who knew how to talk across the table. It is your common senses unconventional man who is popular. You never want to be too conventional

much stiffness is as

mych

ing a Banquet

whale­

bone. The two great classifications among whales are the toothed and the whalebone varieties. The sperm whale #s a toothed whale, and the right whale is a whalebone whale. The whalebone in a good-sized whale

hundreds of

fourteen is about the

you

dollars.

Times of a Kentuck-

ian whose farm was adjacent to a river. There he raised fruit and vegetables and instead of sending them to market by the railroad or in his wagons he built a raft on which he loaded the produce

and floated

the

whole crop down the stream to the big city. There he had

you twas pretty quick traveling, but it ain't half so sudden as the slide you'll take into etarnity ef you don't hand over that money might)'sudden^

other representatives

cle" Henry Logan, the messenger of the Register of the Treasury. He is a colored man, past seventy, as punctual as the hands of a clock, and as trustworthy as a burg-lar-proof safe. His principal function is to carry checks, warrants,

The

no difficulty in disposing of

the

entire load at good prices and in payment he received a check for a handsome amount. A check was only so much worthless paper in the place where he lived, and so before going home the raw-boned Kentuckian entered a bank to

have it cashed.

dressed in a suit

whiskers were unkempt and

appearance

He was

of brown

jeans, his

his

marked

an' as

to whar I

am from, why, I air from Bush bottom, up river." "Well, how in thundep do you expect me to know if what

you tell me is true. How

did you get down here?" "Git here! WaH, now, I jest jumped onto a rainbow and

slid

here, mister. An' I tell

It

A Negro Who Handled Billions. Few if any persons in this country have handled more money, and

bonds,

etc., to and

from the Register's office, where they have to be signed. He has been doing this work for twenty-fiveyears, with scarcely a day's absence during ail that time. He has handled a large part of

the bonds

and cur

reucy issued by the Government, and the warrants that have been drawn upon the treasury. The aggregate in dollars, if

Henry" had been paid at

Cleveland's administration and bids fair to remain unui lite infirmities of age compel 1 his retirement. I

"11. .1:1 II

K!«ctr»ci»y for Saalte*.

A report comes by way

of

Germany that

a novel use of electricity has been made in I India for the prevention

of

the intrusion of

I snakes into dwellings. Before all the doors and around the bouse two wires are laid,

wiress he receives a shock of electricity, which either Whs or frightens htm into a hasty retreat*

A Hlch-Trieed

The British Museum has bought for £V 850 the splendid prayer-book which bekmged to the late Lad wig 11 .at Bavaria, and which in adorned with copies of the decoratkms of the famous so-called "great chorda tnwut-

ffte Dailf ICtm Jhs* mm my.

COUGH SYRUP.

NEW MOVE. NEW MEDICINE.

CASTOS COUGH SYRUP

At vour grocer's. In order that the people may more qnicklv become acquainted with the merits of this valuable remedy it is being introduced through the agency of the retail grocer.

For Catarrh, Hay Fever, Rose Cold, Headache and Cold in the Head. This remedy has no equal. Trial size, 20 cents Kegular size, 50 cents, Samples free. For side bv.all grocers. Manufactured bv

S DR. J. C. CASTO, No. 210 Main street.

GUNS.

pv

A A

mJ

No Money

Why Samuel Jennings

especially at

bad. as

boorishness. Unless you are giv­

proper

number for a dinner, and for an afternoon tea there should never bo more than eight women. If these general ideas which I have given

are carried out, the object

of your dinner being social entertainment, you needn't bother yourself so much about the menu.

HE GOT HIS MONEY.

desert regardless of conscquences.

frigate was at anchor in Barbadoes, had sentries forward and aft, and an armed guard-boat which was rowed around her during the night. At one o'clock in the morning, wheu the guard-boat was ahead, in my shirt and trousers I slipped out of a port on the gun deck, and swam seaward before the wind until 1 was beyond the circuit of the guard-boat, and then made for

the shore and began to feel

general

In

belied his prosperity. The

cashier looked at him doubtfully. "You will have to be identified," he said. "Wall, I reckon not," replied the farmer. "That check air payable to me an'.I mean to have the money." **'Si "But I don't know" you. Who'are you, anyway?" "My name air the same as is gned to the rear eend o' that air check,

swimming along

the ship channel, where I rested

about ten minutes. "A brigantiiio belongiug-toBoston, Mass., was at anchor in the vicinity, and when I left the buoy I swam for her, but I had not made much progress bofon/ a shark seized me by the left hand and dragged me under water. 1 had left my knife on board and was entirely dcfenseles -. I kicked him, but he would not let go. I then set my right foot against his mouth, determined to haul my hand away or haul

it off,

my

throat

checks, bonds and

of money

than "Un­

rr7i

'V v* ).

IN A SHARK'S JAWS.

Left

a Part of Hia

Body iu Carlisle Bay.

This acco Ulit of how a man felt and acted when in a shark's jaws is told in the Boston Commercial

Bulletin: Samuel

Jennings was

a native of Cape Cod. When he was nineteen years of age he was impressed on board the British frigate Milford in Carlisle Bay,

and was

so badly use# that he was

ever on the lookout for a chance to desert. Flogging, starving and semi-starvation were the usual treatment received by the foremast men. His description of what he endured was a repetition of the scenes sketchedIby Dr. Smollett in "Roderick Random." Sickness received no sympathy even from the surgeons. It seemed tho settled policy of her captaiu that when men were sick, the sooner they were consigned to the deep the better for the service. Jennings, in a letter, says in substance: "On the 26th day of March I, made up my mind to

After I had partly

recovered, being of no further use on board the frigate, I was sent ashore, w&ere I received

much kmdne&s, and when

forwarded to Cape Cod."

it

could be figured out, would go up into the billions. Express companies are paid a fixed sum per mile for every thousand dollars they transport for the government, and if "Uncle

the

same rate he would now be rolling in wealth. He receives a salary of #720 a year,and cm this modest income he has been able to buy a ~ne and raise a large family. Uncle Henry held his place all

through

A

7

313 OHIO STREET,V*

N

mm

that I was safe.

the

shore 1

one of Captain Gillam's

fell in wit

buoys, which

and then

he

opened his mouth and seized part of my foot and held both hand and foot firmly in his jaws. I did not leave oft striving to clear myself. I punched him with my right hand, but to little purpose, and had almost given up in despair, for all this time I was under water and nearly drowned, when ho let go and I rose to the surface bleeding, more dead than alive. "The shark had left me, and after clearing

of water I shouted for help.

A boat was sent from a ship near by and 1 was taken on board, and from her was transferred to the hated Milford. Dr. Cutter, of Boston, and a surgeon from the shore took off my arm first and then part of my foot. They proposed to tie me to a plank to keep me steady while they operated upon me, bi I begged they would not, and they let me have my own way, and after giving me a glass of wine I endured the amputation without wincing.

well

was

The Way Wo Ku*h Things.

Bays an Englishman: "You Americans are getting so that, you have no interest for anytime but the present. Years ago we used to think we wer a pritty wide awake when we coined the phrase men of the dav.1 But, bless me, you only care to know about 'men of the hour.' And I expect you will very won ignore every body but men of the minute. The American people live ou the sharp point of the pass* Ing moment, and seem to enjoy it,"

We ai^ told that To per cent of Americat's fntnre rulers attend no church that 85 per cent, oi saloon frwjoenters are of BUILDER AND OONTRAOTO (hi. daw: that WO per pen I. of the

mam

A white ribbon worker criticises the author of 'Looking Backward" for entirely ignoring the costly waste of the liquor traffic and clinging fast to has wine and cigars in the delectable land of his dreams, predicting tmlv that if thia deadly curse' were once admitted, there wonkl be an end to millennial pawtbilitfcs.

that employ our courts are committed by eperaa. men under 30 years of age and that the Interior Finish, Cabinet Making worst of social vices is allnring to destroc-1 Carved Wood Mantels, tion more of the rising generation than Bouse Repairing, Btc. can be counted. Statistics may not be interesting but they are certainly sometimes serious.

\Vs

Indicatef the new fall BlyJcs arc In and wp arc prepared with our fall and winter ovcmmiK, all wool, from $* up, and pufh to unit all -ht*M'x. nt priccH to *uit everybody. Wo Invite yuiir in pct'lion before making your purehawa.

Jr 5. ji. filler,

522 WabftSh Ave.: Near Sixth St.

TOWN LEY STOVE COMPANY, —r

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i&TJS, SLATK OR I HON HOOFING.,

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lias the only place that gives you a guarantee on Cnns. Sells ammunition lower than any othe'r place and does repairing cheaper.

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No Gunee.

CLOTII Kit.

JVT. H.. MILLER,

Cloltiler. Merchant Tailor and Gents' Fur-'

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522 Wabasn Ave., Near 6th, Norm Side.

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TINWARE Or

House furnishing Good!,

At Lowest Prices, Call on

TOWNLEV STOVE COMPANl

WHOLESALE and RETAIL,

009 WABASH AVENUE,

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CONTRACTOR.

E. M. CORNELL

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419 WALNUT STREET, TERftE HAUTI

UNDERTAKERS A3¥D EMBALMEI

aoawtir*. Mje*. jait» j.ffissit. BLACK A NISBBT,

Undertakers and Embalmer^ 26 XOKTH FOURTH 87.. TERRE HACTK. •or A» nails will receive prompt atieatk1 Open day and night.