Daily Tribune, Volume 17, Number 1, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 1 December 1902 — Page 4

Dullv

Sunday

J37.50,

wm-.

A REPUBLICAN NEWSPAPER.

published by Th$ Trjtoune Company at 961 Wabash Avfc* Daily, Sunday and Weekly.

lone Distance Telephone No. 3tS—Private Exchange. Citizens' Telephone No.

SIS.

Entered at postoffice at Terre Haute, Ind., as second-class matter

Daily and Sunday, per week, by carrier cents Daily and Sunday, per month, by mail ....45 cents Daily and Sunday, three months, by mail Daily and Sunday, six months, by mail Didly and Sunday, per year, bv mail .»o.40 veekly,

TERRE HAUTE, IND., MONDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1902.

Daily Average Circulation for October

Era-y report from Porto Rico l'eaffirms the good tidings of the prosperity that has come to the people of that island as a direct consequence of American rule. Porto Rico is booming as she never did before and her citizens are simply dazed by what is going on about them, their wildest dreams of good times being more than realized. Cuba in the meantime, is fast losing all the benefits that accrued from the period of American occupation and is speedily returning like the sowthat was washed to her wallowing the mire. The prospect before her under the regime of "independence" is a far from pleasing one.

The awful truth is out. Mr. Bryan is more of a Populist than he is a Democrat and he is more of a plutocrat than either. During the last campaign in Nebraska he gave $750 to the Pop committee and only $600 to the Democratic committee. This is considerably more than he was worth when Republican prosperity began yet it is only a drop in the bucket today. Mr. Bryan has prospered and is still prosper-

On January 1st another payment on the state debt will be made, a payment of $200,000. Auditor Hart announces that within four years the debt will be wiped out and there is no doubt that his prediction will be fulfilled provided the present administration is continued in power for that length of time. The Republican party has accomplished great results in Indiana since it took chargc of affairs in 1895.

Hen

-strictly in point.

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4 cents

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per year. ...50 cents

8,122

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There is a mean colored man down in Virginia. He is an oetoroou and is generally mistaken for a white man, a fact which he undertakes to turn to advantage in a rather novel way. The laws of Viprfor different cars for the whites and blacks afiu a^ho negro is allowed in the white folk's car so is a white person barred from riding in a Jim Crow car. The deceptive individual in question boarded a Jim Crow car the other day and being mistaken for a white man was ordered out. Refusing to go he was put off and now sues the road for $10,000 damages. Thus do discriminating laws turn to vex their authors.

Senator Bill Johnston, who misrepresents the counties of Montgomery and Putnam in the legislature, announces considerable noisy pomposity that lie will seek to have the law repealed'which vacates the office of that sheriff who permits a mob to take a prisoner from him. Johnston stoutly maintains that the law "amt right nohow,"' but he fails to elucidate further. His classic explanation will hardly suffice, potent and logical though it be. '"Deep rooted partisan prejudice" will rule in the legislature and the law will be left on the statute books.

The school authorities of Iowa complain that it is difficult for them to secure the requisite number of teachers, the scarcity being easily accounted for, however, when it is considered that the average monthly salary paid in Iowa is

uly $31. Under the law in Indiana the lowest salary paid is while the average is much higher. Eveii in Indiana. however, those communities that pay low salaries experience difficulty in securing the service of competent teachers and the tendency in every direction is for increased remunOration for this service.

The Utah opponents of the senatorial aspirations of Mr. Reed Smoot have made record of five hundred cases of polygamy openly tolerated by the authorities of that state. It is not now claimed that Mr. Smoot is a polygamist but it is maintained that he is one of the heads of the church which openly sustains the abominable practice in disregard of law and decency and that as such he is unworthy to sit in the upper house or our national legislature. Evidently there is nqt smooth sailing ahead for the aceoinplishmed Mr. Smoot.

hin&<6£eo]sj to be rapidly disintegrat-[U&df-t!

The Tom -Taggart maehini^ ing Not fnly ha^it^f^^tS overcome its opposition, but its leaders are fighting among themselves, some of them being in a stpl^gg otigi Theife is an old saw which assures us tUt

certain* class of men fall out a cer­

tain other class get its dues, and this seems an instance

The Marion county grand jury has indicted twenty fellows who sold their votes at the recent election and that they will all be disfranchised seems a positive certainty. They ought to be and the only regreat is that at the same time a similar fate cannot be visited upon every man guilty -of that iniquitous offense. 5. *1 «. ii'ioW

There are now over six hundred and ten millions of dollars in gold in the treasury of the United States, a snug little sum that was never in evidence during the administration of Grover Cleveland, who is so dissatisfied with the manner in which the government is how being. operated,

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The report copies from Washington that about February first the post office department will have some more money io spend on the development of rurai free delivery in Indiana. yjgo county should pass up her plato early in the feast. Too long already have her interests been neglected. v.

The price of silver keeps right on dropping just as if there wasn't any such thing as a divine ratio. And strange to relate the price of wheat persists in staying away up there.

Of one thing the sheriff of Sullivan county may rest~nspurod. The people of. Indiana are against him in his fight for -•einstatement. 3S& \7

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Robert C. dowry's Beginning. f-

The December Success, contains an interesting interview wit^Rohert C. Clowry, president of the Western Union Tele' g|fpH'#empani? j# jtells .$& eafcy life. Of his first position, Mr. Clowry said: "I had been living with my mother oil a farm in Will county, not far from Joliet, and, having reached the age of 15, 1 thought it time to start out in the world for myself. Ever since I first heard of the telegraph, I was fascinated with its workings, and at that time my chief ambition was to be able to send a message over the wires, "'What kind of work do you want to do?' the operator asked me. I replied that I didn't suppose I was capable of doing anytliittg but carry message?. 'Well,' he said, 'we don't pay boys anything the first six months but, if you want to work, you will have a chance to learn the business. When you're in the office you can easily pick up the knack of operating the keys, and, eventually, you'll get an office of your own.' "I hadn't expected to earn any money at first,' so I told him I was ready to begin work at once. That was the beginning of my experience in the telegraph business." "But, if you received no money for s:x mohths, how did you live in Joliet during that time?" I asked Colonel Clowry. "I was able to earn money by doing various odd jobs around town, and of course my expenses were very low. For awhile 1 used to get my own meals. I had learned-to do plain cooking at home, and it was no hardship for me to fry an egg or broil a piece of steak. Joliet was a very small town in 1852, and I had never been accustomed to luxurious living at home. I had to work long hours at the office. I was the only messenger, and had all the work to do, so I hardly had time to be homesick. After my life on the farm, Joliet was a regular metropolis in my eyes and I found much to interest me. Of course, I was discouraged at times. I was very young to be away from home and dependent on my own resources, and it was only natural that I should occasionally get "the blues. But for "the most part I was wrapped up in my work and occupied with ambitious plans for the future." "Were you able to learn telegraphy in a short time?" "Yes, it sfcemed to come' natural to me. I always liked mechanics and didn't rest until I knew the function of eveiy key and lever connected with the instruments in the office. Within two months I was able to send and receive a message, and in four months I was quite as expert as the regular operator. He was surprised at the readiness with which I learned, and remarked one day that I wouldn't remain a messenger long. This encouraged me, of course, but I had not the least idea how soon I should be given an office of my own."

What the Ship Trust Means to America. J. Pierpont Morgan's shipping trust, and its final consummation in New York, have necessarily interested Englishmen more than Americans, and there has been much rejoicing in London that the great magnate, by the terms of the trust, did not sweep the English flag from the Atlantic. Indeed. Over there, it has been called an ^English victory over America, but the fact remains that Mr. Morgan and his business associates in America have secured complete control over eightj British ships, some of them the largest sffloat. Shipping people on this sik know that these ships will carry the British ^Qtiise is illegal for them to carry the Stars and Stripes. In the present state of public sentiment on trusts, Mr. Morgan is not likely to ask congress to grant his shipping trust a subsidy, and, without a subsidy, an American registry and the American flag on English ships would be of no great advantage to them. He has no sentiment on the subject. England cannot go to war with America, and, if she should go to war with another power, Mr.

Morgan

that she would have to pay him well for the use of his ships under her flag. The material point to England is that the control of more than two-third» of the ships on the North Atlantic has passed out of her hands and gone into the hands of two big American railways, and that America, instead of stopping at the sea, now reaehes Liverpool, and is likely, in the near future, to get possession of the English railways.

Wrote a Book While Waiting for His Wife. Madame de Genlis, in a work on "Time," tells us that the famous Chancellor D'Agueaseau, observing that his wife always delayed ten or twelve minutes before she came down to dinner, and. reluctant to lose so much time daily, began the composition of a work which he prosecuted only while thus kept waiting. At the end of fifteen years, a book in three quarto volumes was completed, which ran through three editions, and was held in high repute. Madame dn Genlis profited by this example. Having to wait at the dinner hour in the Palais Royal for Madame de Chartres, who was always fifteen or twenty minutes late, she utilized the

THE PIRATE'S CORNER.

In days gone by—twenty-four hours.

The first printing press—-when Adam kissed Eve.

The youth's budding mustache gets called down.

A cheap fiat might be called "sweet and low."

The vaudeville actor's "stunt" doesn't prevent hissing full-grown.

Even the quarrelsome musical composer is a pieceniaker.

iih exciting game of cards can sometimes be classed as a "red hot poker." r---:•

The soprano is a "high roller" when she trills in her upper register. .-•••• *-, ~Vl v" v-

The police are not exactly what we would call "the force of circumstances."

knows,

time

lection of poems from eminent authors. It is told of a German critic that he could repeat the entire "Iliad" of Homer with scarcely an error. How many years, tlunk you, did he spend in depositing the immortal epic in his brain? Years he had not to spare, or months, or weeks, or even entire days, for he was a physician in the full tide of practice but he contrived to store in his memory the twenty-four books of the old bard of "Scio's rocky, isle" in the brief, disconnected snatches of time while hurrying from one patient to another. Dr Mason Good, a celebrated English physician, performed a similar feat, having contrived to translate the whole Of Lucretius during his long walks in London to visit his patients.

hy eopying a se­

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The most noted••pveaeher -is.\ not the onewho,..preaches from the riiOst notes. ft 4

"6eaintf'*l3efore .age' is generally the rule on the human

Some people believe''they are in the best society so long as he

Lot's wife turned to salt, but nowadays woulen more „n^peppery.t,

She was mad enough to tear liei hair 5 And grind her teeth also, But site curbed h«fr angry passion,

For they So8$ too much, you know.

This new process of making silk without the services of the worm will not cause the worm to turn.

Although the foot ball will soon be at an end, the base ball war will rage in the newspapers all winter.

Twelve ltifen will submit to a government test of chemically prepared fapd, and yet it is saW there is no heroism now-

NORMAL GRADUATE IS EDUCATING THE FILIPINOS

AMERICAN INFLUENCE GOOD

Former Terre Haute Man Says Educators Go Bravely on While Critics Carp at Home.

T. D. Anglemeyer, a graduate of the Indiana Normal school, who has been teaching in the schools in the Philippines for more than a year, has written an article for the Normal Advance summarizing the work accomplished under the system planned by Dr. Fred W. Atkinson, of Massachusetts, first superintendent of the schools of the archipelago, and incidentally scored the critics in the United States. The archi-. pelago is divided into seventeen divisions, and some of these are so large that it takes two months for a division superintendent to visit his schools. During the last year 1,000 trained teachers have been teaching in 400 towns. There is and for some time will be, much work to be done outside the school room. This will consist of securing native teachers, securing school supplies, persuading presidents and councils to repair and erect school buildings, ah of which work is left largely to the teachers. "With regard to the American teachers who have been employed in the schools, it can be said that most of them are more than satisfied with their work and surrounding^," says Mr. Anglemejer. "Some who came were unfitted for the work by age some came to have a good time, and others to seek other work. These have given the impression that the teachers have a hard time. Aside from a considerable number who have been asked to resign, and a few unable to stand the conditions of life here, most of the teachers will complete their terms of service. It is true that there have been some unfortunate rulings that have caused complaint, but in the establishment of a new government here such things are unavoidable. "In fact, it is remarkable how much has been achieved in all departments of the government in the past months. To me the most discouraging feature is the hypercritical attitude of certain factions in the United States. Instead of supporting the-policy that is doing everything possible for the good of the islands and coping with all kinds of difficulties, these persons offer endless criticisms, but fail to tell what they wo*uld do in the case. We are' pleased to remember that these unhappy critics are a long way off, and, while they are thinking up 'nice things' to say about the management of the Philippines the good work goes on liefre."

SAYS¥E WILL STAY

Deputy Sheriff Messlck Says He Was Offered Better Position But Could Npt Accept.

Deputy Sheriff Everett Messick informed a Tribune reporter yesterday evening that he would not leave the sheriff's office, *and that the announcement was premature. He says that he was offered a better position at a better salary, but that he could not leave the office while the sheriff was in the hospital sick. He said that if circumstances had been di#«rcnt, he would have accepted, as the position offered him is not a political one and would be more secure. He says also, that the report that he is displeased with any feature of the force of deputy sheriffs is a mistake. s-

LUKER DISAPPEARS'1

Effingham Man Came Here Towyisit and That Was Last Seen of Him.

Mr. C. J. Luker, formerly of Effingham, 111., who was visiting friends here suddenly disappeared for parts unknown after being here several days.

Big Sunday Meeting.

The Sunday meeting of the Y. M. C. A. yesterday afternoon, was a record breaker, and the program was an interesting one. The principal feature was a i»"'t.uie by State Secretary England, :which was, very entertaining. The heating apparatus is not yet in working Order and on tljas account the i/om was too chilly-, for comfort. The afternoon meeting was followed by the Bible a a 7

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The Christian Revival.

T]*e revival services at the Christian cl/Orch' were largely' attended yesterday morning, and' in the evening, the church was crowded and many Were turned away. liev. Mr. Sellers preached a powerful sermon and several accessions were made to the congregation. one of the potent features of the revival is" the chorus of fifty voices. It. has been decided to continue the meeting for at least another week.

Caused Surprise at Sullivan. The announcement that Mi's. Lola Burr, of Sullivan, and Claude Taylor, *©f Anderson^ were^Jnftrried in Indiaife apolis on Friday, came "as a surprise to" the friends aqd relatives of the bride aifooni. Mrs. Burrjafcone of the popu. lar belles of Sullivan, aflpthe groom lefr here recently to take charge of the dry goods section j?f-,- an' Anderson department store.

Powder

Used by people of refinement for over a quarter of a century.

EXTERMINATE DISEASE

AMERICAN SANITARY CONGRESS MEETS THIS WEEK

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A

LEADS GOOD HEALTH LEGION

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Sanitary Experts of Western Hemisphere Will Discuss Their Work at Washington This Week.

WASHINGTON, Dec. 1.—The general sanitary convention of American republics will be held in this city during the present week, beginning Tuesday. This convention is called in accordant with resolutions passed at the meetii^ of the second international American conference held in the City, of Mexico last January. Its object is to encourago friendly co-operation between health organizations of the several republics in the matter of quarantine and sanitation.

With regard to quardntine, the deliberations of the convention wrill have in view adequate protection against the introduction of disease from one country to another, while making quarantine of suph a reasonable nature that it may be maintained with as little annoyance to persons and hindrance to commerce as possible. The deliberations of the convention will Yiave in view such sanitation of sea ports as will cause epidemic diseases to disappear and to make such diseases more manageable and capable of suppression in the event that they should be introduced.

There .will be reports from the delegates of eacii republic, which reports will contain a summary of the sanitary and quarantine laws, with an account of the health organizations of the republic, a descriptive account of the quarantine stations and their management a review of the prevailing diseases, with special reference to yellow fever, malarial fever, typhoid fever and tuberculosis a consideration of the special danger to which each republic is subjected with reference to its proximity to neighboring republics, and finally such special sanitary work, as is now in progress or may be proposed.

LEGISLA"nVEDISTftlCTS

Much Importance Attached to the Proposed Move To Redistrict the State.

No little importance ts attached to the reapportionment of the state for legislative purposes which will be taken up at the approaching session of the general assembly, and a forecast of the figures that must be considered by the reapportionment committee brings out some interesting facts. Many changes may be made in both the representative and senatorial districts, but especially in the latter. and While the exact result of the work of the legislature cannot be predicted, comparisons can be made that will show where the most important of these changes may occur.

According to the enumeration-of the voters in the state compiled by the auditors of the several counties last year and certified to the auditor of state, there are 679,074 white male inhabitants over twen-ty-one years of age and 16,272 colored total, 6.94,3-16. The average for each congressional district is 53,411. There are 103 members of the lower house and fifty of the senate, consequently the average for each representative district is 6,843 and for each senatorial district twice that amount or 13,836. The enumeration of 1S96 showed a total for the state of 627,022 and the legislative apportionment was made on a basis of 6,270 votiers to each representative district and 12,540 to each senatorial district. The apportionment is made so that each district will have approximately its proportion of the voters, although, of "course, the division cannot be niado an exact one. -_Tr_' ^f

Revivals Do Good Work. Rev. McKihneV of Clay City, Ind began a series of revival services at the Free Methodist church on Walnut street, Friday night, assisted by Eev. Adams, traveling evangelist, of Ohio conference.

The revival at Sit. Rose'St. E. church still continues in interest.

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fl* Uncle Sam Settling. Today has been pay day for the employes of this revenue district and-Chief Deputy Collector John R. Robinson was busy making out and delivering checks. The monthly pay rool of the district aggregates $9,200 and of that sum $8,000 .comes to Terre Haute.

Llghtfoot's Close Call.

John Light foot, a traveling man, white Posey co.Mi}ty last week qame near ^meetinflf wiih ^serious accMeftte'He was in an outhouse when In some manner lie slipped and fell to the bed of a creek several feet below.

Consumption can certainly be cured. Not all cases, but very many. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is ifie

medicine.

J.C. AjrerO#., fcowall. JCan.

INCREASE MAY NOT BE EFFECTIVE FOR SOME TIMiE"

WAS NOT AGITATED

Wmm

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Employes Resejrve Thplr Opiinion of Advance Until»Mbre"ls Known of Its Extent^'!?^^

The men at the Vandalia shops who will likely be affected Ly the raise in pay are inclined to regard it less seriously than others. There has been no masked agitation, for any advance and the men are inclined to be dubious as to the authenticity of the statement that there is a raise coming. .A raise is always welcome and the men are afraid to hope, for fear that they will wake up and find it all a pipe dream. There is nq doubt now however as to the fact that there will be a raise. Mr. Downing finally confirmed it yesterday, and the raise will date from ..Nov. 21st. a^ stated in

Stktr

urday's paper. Of course it will be some time before the percentage of increase can be determined as the advance will be an individual raise, and not horizontal along the whole line. It is the idea of the company to re-arrange their scale on a more equitable basis. This will require the raising of the pay of.some, while others will not be affected at all. Such a readjustment is necessary quite frequently, as minor positions become more important, and consequently more worthy of higher pay,

su

ARE AGAINST TIPPING

United Waiters of Paris Are Against ^a Custom Which No Longer Profits Them. -rja.. f..

•«,.

A letter from Paris, France, says "Down with tips,"' was the c.y at a meeting held, last night in a room of the Labor Exchange. It was not, as might have been supposed,, a gathering of hotel habitues and frequenters of cafes. On the contrary, the battle cry, "A bil le pbiirboire," aj been raised by those who receive the tips. The meeting numbered some 2,000 waiters from the biggest cafes of Paris, who had knodke^l off work for the evening to protest against the pourboire. Eloquent gar con Sj one after the other addressed the assembly, and vehemently denounced the tip system. 5"

The new campaign got up by the waiters of Paris does not wholly arise from a sudden fit of self-sacrificing virtue on their part. The lact is that the tip system is far from being an entirely profitable one for them. When a customer, after paying 3d1 for a half pint Of beer, leaves Id (the customary percentage) for the waiter, it is a mistake to imagine that the latter pockets the coin. He goes off to drop it into a special money box. The latter is emptied of its contents at closing time, or at regular intervals. ?v ,.

Originally the entire proceeds of the tips used to be- shared by the waiters, who were alsO salaried. Nowadays the owners of cafes -tiot only pay no wages to their garcons, but draw a percentage of the money received by the latter in pourboires. A customer who supposes that he gives a penny to the waiter is "in reality bestowing on him a gratuity of a halfpenny, and paying not three-pence, but threepence-halfpenny, for his small beef. Moreover, the waiters are required to advance to the cafe keeper the latter's share of the tips at the beginning of eveiy day's work. Whether or not the amount of gratuities received reaches the estimated total, the fixed sum paid to the owner "for expenses," that being the term employed, remains in any case his property.

Paris -nraiters are now up in arms against this system. One garcon, more enterprising than his fellows, started the movement. He had the idea of bringing an action against his former employer to recover sums paid as "expenses" to the latter, and, rather to his own surprise, won his case. This set all the Paris waiters thinking. Hence the mass meeting. The 2,000 garcons unanimously decided to bring similar actions against their employers. Further, they determined to have printed quantities of tiny leaflets setting f^rth the drawbacks of the tip system, In a few days one of those papers will be handed to each customer with every drink he orders. Parisians generally will certainly not be opposed to the suppression of the pourboire. Ife is not Very likely, however, that customers will gain in the long run. The chajtces are that if cafe tips are abolished the bock will simply be charged four, instead of three pence, and, as is plainly the case in the evolution of things Parisian, the new" regime will be identically the same as the old^ under^ another name.

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Degree Work Tonight.

'"-Social lodge of F. & A. M., will have an interesting meeting tonight. Three candidates will be given third degree work, after which light refreshments will be served The annual election of officers for the lodge will take place on the night -of December 8.

A TIME LY S GG E ST ION This is the steaSdn of the yter wheithe prudent and careful housewife replenisheft'her sup'ply of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. It is certain to be nested before the winter is over, and results are much more prompt and satisfactory when it is kept at hand and given as soon as the cold is contracted and before it has become settled in the system. In almost" every instance a severe cold may be warded off by taking this remedy freely as soon as the first indication of the cold appeal's. There is no danger in^#vfi!kr it tp .children Jor^t contains no harmful substances. It is pleasant to take—both adfults. and children like it. .Buy it and you will get the best. It always cures. For sale by all druggists.'--.

The easy terms offered at the Auction Sale of building lots at Glass Park, should interest many young ladies and younsf men to become real estate owners. By the time tKe tot is paid for its value will have increased givingg large per. cent on investment..

Handsome, large, roomy.

drawer Cfirffarii er —would be cheap at $6.50 our price

Now is the time to purchase youi Christmas Presents. 0,7

Handsome Velour Couches eithdf® ir red or green shade, only

-$4.98

SILVERMAN'S*

699 WABASH AVE.

TEETH

We Extract Teeth Without.Pain. A

The New York Dental Parlors of Terre Haute is a reliable and dependable dental office. \\rhat..They^dvertise is the Truth, and when tlicy say Teeth Extracted Painlessly jjou can depend upon it that you can go there and have your teei^h extracted absolutely without pain. Many, many others have gone before you.

REMEMBER.

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Dr. Rciss' New York Dental Parlors are directly over Pixley's 512% Main street. Four dentists employed. Lady attendant.

CURfiDVJ^Y

White Ribbon Wed

No taste. No odor, Can be siven in gla of water, tea, or coffee without patient's knowlwagetr^^

White Ribbon Remedy wllj cure or de» stroy the diseased appetite/ for alchoioh stimulants, whether the paJSeht is^a confirmed inebriate, "a tipplerf* 8btia drinto er, or drunkard. Impossible for any om to have an appetite for alcoholic liqtion after usinc While Ribbon lYemedy. IN DORSED BY MEMBERS 0?|*W. 0. T. tl Mrs,, Moore, press superint Jident-f of th« YV. C- T. U., .Ventura, Ca have tested White Ribbqn Rei. obsx'nate drunkards and thd been many: In many cases/ was *glyepi. secretly. I cheei tnend aiid indorse White Members of our union are I delimited find a practical and economical treatment to aid us in our temperance work."

..

writes: "1 edy,on verj cures hav [he .Jtem&dj ill jig recomion liemedjr,

Druggists or by mail $. 1.Trial lpackas

fr?fe:Tj^ivtffitins

kig

Mrs. A. M. Ttownjftnd (tc.

y.ears secretary of the Womrns Ghristlat Temperance Union), 218 TREMOjWT ST., Temperance uniurw, us t,*.. BOSTON, Mass. Sold at Bauf's Pharmacy corner Seventh and Main stneets

Rubber.

full £$pply and all s|z«j and Leather Half and WholBgj VBpSS" Repairing|21# 'rufdfleable Iroh Soles and He Men, Women and Children (gap pair ar^d UP

Dressings and Paste Folisra Tr Cx Black Trade. Everything V* Supply line. Out of town -54 promptly. ppi&r.

We can teach you to save

527 Ohio 8t. Near Si»«

-The Fellow You Can't

J. C. RUTHERFORD,

PUBUICRACTICARINTER.

New Phone 948. 665 Next door to T*ibune

Try ThG'l.ribune's.p.O® Column. 3'

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